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Kansas City beat Detroit to finish three-game sweep

Jeremy Guthrie pitched effectively into the eighth inning and Alex Gordon homered to lead the Kansas City Royals over the Detroit Tigers 2-1 Thursday night for a three-game sweep.

Prince Fielder had three hits for the slumping Tigers, who remained three games behind the first-place Chicago White Sox in the AL Central. The teams begin an important three-game series Friday night in Detroit.

Royals rookie Kelvin Herrera worked around a walk and a single in the ninth to earn his first career save, coaxing slugger Miguel Cabrera to ground into a game-ending double play.

Guthrie (3-3), who did not give up a hit to the White Sox until the eighth inning on Aug. 19 in his previous Kauffman Stadium start, held Detroit to one run on 10 hits — nine of them singles. He walked none and struck out three.

Guthrie has made eight starts for the Royals since they acquired him in a July 20 trade with Colorado for left-hander Jonathan Sanchez. He is 6-12 overall.

Gordon hit his 10th homer leading off the sixth and extended his hitting streak to eight games.

The Royals loaded the bases with none out in the fifth, but converted that into just one run. Mike Moustakas doubled to start the inning and Jeff Francoeur singled on the 10th pitch to snap an 0-for-19 streak. After Eric Hosmer walked to load the bases, Johnny Giavotella’s groundout to shortstop Jhonny Peralta scored Moustakas.

Rick Porcello (9-10) lost his fourth straight start, giving up two runs and eight hits in five-plus innings. He struck out four and walked two.

The Tigers snapped a 17-inning scoreless drought with a run in the eighth when one-out singles by Fielder and Delmon Young chased Guthrie. After reliever Tim Collins struck out pinch-hitter Jeff Baker on three pitches, Peralta delivered a run-scoring single.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose 8-1 at Washington in series opener

Bryce Harper hit his third home run in two games, Jayson Werth homered for the first time since May, and Edwin Jackson struck out 10 Thursday night as the Washington Nationals padded their NL East lead with an 8-1 win over the punchless St. Louis Cardinals.

The Nationals opened an 11-game homestand with an overwhelming performance against a wild-card contender that failed to score an earned run for the third straight game.

Jackson (8-9) was so dominant that three of his strikeouts required throws to first because the Cardinals were chasing balls in the dirt.

The victory moved the Nationals 5 1/2 games ahead of idle Atlanta.

Jaime Garcia (3-6) allowed six runs for the Cardinals, whose streak of 28 scoreless innings ended in the eighth.

— Associated Press —

Chen throws gem as Kansas City beat Detroit 1-0

The Royals proved Wednesday night just how fickle baseball can be.

One night after roughing up Tigers ace Justin Verlander to win a stunning shootout, Kansas City saw crafty veteran Bruce Chen go eight innings in an equally surprising pitcher’s duel with Anibal Sanchez. Eric Hosmer’s shank single in the fourth score the lone run in a 1-0 victory.

“That’s baseball. That’s why this game is so great,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We won the game on an 80-foot bomb in the Bermuda triangle. That’s baseball.”

Indeed, Hosmer managed to get just enough of Sanchez’s pitch to drop the ball between the mound and second base, and that was enough to score Mike Moustakas from third base.

Try that for fickle.

“Isn’t it amazing?” Hosmer asked. “You can go up there and hit three lasers at guys, and then have a hit like that and it ends up deciding the game.”

Greg Holland earned his ninth save with a shaky ninth inning, allowing a leadoff single to Andy Dirks. Jarrod Dyson likely saved the tying run with a diving grab in center, and after Prince Fielder singled, Holland struck out Delmon Young and Jhonny Peralta to end the game.

The star of the game, though, unmistakably was Chen (10-10), who lasted eight innings for the first time since his last two starts of last season. The 35-year-old left-hander hadn’t even gone seven in his past 11 outings, though he had been pitching better of late.

Sanchez (2-4) matched him most of the night, finally looking like the guy the Tigers thought they were acquiring in a July trade with Florida. He allowed seven hits in seven innings.

“Chen pitched a great game. A great matchup — Chen and Sanchez — and Chen was just a little better,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “Chen throws this when you’re looking for that, and vice-versa. He knows what he’s doing, obviously.”

The Tigers came to town hoping to make up ground on the AL Central-leading White Sox, but the third-place Royals have gotten the most of them so far.

Kansas City battered Verlander, the reigning AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, in the opener Tuesday night, scoring eight earned runs in 5 2/3 innings. Moustakas then delivered the go-ahead RBI double in the eighth to give the Royals a 9-8 victory.

They did it with pitching and defense Wednesday night, getting Chen’s best start of the year and turning a pair of inning-ending double plays to help him out.

“I felt really good. I felt like my teammates played really good defense,” Chen said. “After the third inning, I didn’t have to shake off anything. Everything was working.”

Everything was working for Sanchez until the fourth.

Moustakas doubled down the right-field line with one out and Hosmer came to the plate with two outs. He managed to catch a pitch so close to the hands that it popped over Sanchez’s head like a knuckleball, and dropped with a thud between the mound and second base.

Sanchez tried to grab it while whirling toward first, but he just about whiffed on the pick-up and Hosmer had an RBI single. Brayan Pena grounded out to leave the score 1-0.

“It’s part of the game, a blooper like that,” Sanchez said. “I have to take it. You have to go back to the mound and get the next guy out.”

Meanwhile, Chen was getting just about everybody out.

After giving up a leadoff double to Austin Jackson, the left-hander pitched 1-2-3 innings in the second and fourth, and got help from Moustakas in starting inning-ending double plays to get Kansas City out of the third and fifth.

The most perilous situation came in the seventh, when Miguel Cabrera scorched a pitch to center for a leadoff double. Cabrera advanced to third on Fielder’s flyout, and Chen hit Young with a pitch to put runners on the corners with one out.

Relying on his deep repertoire of off-speed stuff, Chen struck out Peralta and then watched Moustakas charge a grounder to third by Jeff Baker and throw him out to end the threat.

Chen retired the side in the eighth before Holland slammed the door in the ninth.

“Outstanding,” Yost said. “Chen was surgical with his stuff today. He was sharp, he was extremely effective. And then Holland was there to finish it off.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get shut out again by Pirates

A special season on the verge of collapse, the Pittsburgh Pirates steadied themselves behind Pedro Alvarez.

The third baseman stayed hot, blasting his 26th homer of the season and driving in three runs as the Pirates rolled to a 5-0 victory over St. Louis on Wednesday night. Alvarez’s three-run shot in the third gave him seven home runs and 23 RBI in 15 games against the defending world champions.

“I was just out there trying to compete,” Alvarez said. “It’s just one of those things.”

The win, coming on the heels of a 9-0 rout over St. Louis on Tuesday, pulled Pittsburgh within one game of the Cardinals for the second NL wild card spot. It also gave them a needed boost as September neared.

Searching for the first winning season and playoff berth in two decades, the Pirates appeared in trouble after losing six of seven following a 4-3 defeat on Monday.

Instead, they bounced back with a resiliency that’s been their calling card all year and has them playing important baseball into September for the first time since Barry Bonds was patrolling the outfield at Three Rivers Stadium.

“We had to get back on the right track,” right fielder Garrett Jones said. “We were in a little rut there where for whatever reason we couldn’t get back on the winning track and things weren’t going our way. We stayed positive, stayed confident and knowing we could turn things around.”

Wandy Rodriguez (9-13) worked six tidy innings for Pittsburgh to pick up his first victory as a starter since being acquired in a trade last month. Rodriguez walked three and struck out three while helping the Pirates shut out the Cardinals for the second straight night.

“You go against that offense and you put 18 zeros on the board in 18 innings, I couldn’t be any prouder of them,” manager Clint Hurdle said. “Offensively we found a way and had some two out big strikes. To finish the last 48 hours, we’re going to battle.”

Joe Kelly (4-6) struggled with control problems during five rocky innings, giving up five runs on eight hits.

The victory helped the Pirates take the season series from St. Louis 8-7, not an insignificant number with both teams battling for a postseason berth. If the two clubs are tied for the second wild-card spot at the end of the regular season, the Pirates would have host the play-in game.

The playoffs don’t begin for another five weeks. Pittsburgh, however, remains intent on being a factor until the end.

“We can definitely use these two wins as a sparkplug for games to come,” Alvarez said.

Particularly if the former first-round pick continues to develop into the lineup-anchoring power hitter the team envisioned when it drafted him four years ago. Alvarez certainly feasted on St. Louis pitching this season, going 23 for 58 (.396).

He gave Rodriguez all the offense necessary in the third. Coming to the plate with two on and two out, Alvarez drilled an 82 mph curveball from Kelly into the right field seats. The ball left the park so quickly Alvarez barely had time to break into his home run trot before it landed.

“I let the hottest hitter on their team beat me,” Kelly said. “I was down 3-1 and hung a breaking ball to a good hitter. I made a bad pitch and he made me pay.”

The blast gave the Pirates a 4-0 lead and Alvarez made it 5-0 in the fifth when he doubled with two outs and scored on a single by Josh Harrison.

Rodriguez took advantage of the cushion. He came in 0-4 as a starter with the Pirates after being acquired from Houston on July 24. His only victory came in two relief innings during Pittsburgh’s 19-inning marathon win in St. Louis on Aug. 19.

Hurdle blamed part of Rodriguez’s problems on the pressure of trying to validate the trade. Hurdle urged the veteran lefthander to relax, and Rodriguez looked at ease playing with a sizable lead for the first time as a Pirate. The Cardinals managed just three paltry singles against him and never got a runner to third.

“I feel very comfortable when I see the score 4-0,” Rodriguez said.

The Cardinals played without catcher Yadier Molina, who sat out as a precaution following a brutal collision at home with Harrison on Tuesday night. Molina suffered neck, shoulder and arm soreness after Harrison crashed into him trying to score from second.

Tony Cruz started in Molina’s place and had two of St. Louis’ five hits, but the Cardinals failed to muster any offense as their scoreless streak reached 21 innings.

“We’ve seen quite a bit of this this year, it’s been a lot of feast or famine,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “It’s hard to understand it because we certainly have the ability to put something up there every night.”

— Associated Press —

Royals extend contracts with Idaho Falls and Burlington

The Kansas City Royals announced Wednesday that the club has extended its Player Development Contract (PDC) with the Idaho Falls Chukars through the 2014 season.  In addition, the Royals extended their agreement with the Burlington Royals through the 2014 season as well.  Idaho Falls has been affiliated with the Royals organization since the 2004 campaign while Burlington, who has already clinched the East Division of the Appalachian League, has been a part of the organization since 2007.

“We are extremely pleased to be able to continue our relationships with both Idaho Falls and Burlington,” said Royals’ Director of Minor League Operations Scott Sharp.  “We are fortunate to have tremendous ownership and front office staffs along with great facilities in both cities to assist us in developing the next wave of Major League players.”

“The Chukars are very pleased that the Royals have expressed their desire to continue their relationship with us, and we are very proud to continue to be a part of their organization. It’s a great day for Chukars Baseball and for our fans,” said Chukars President/General Manager Kevin Greene.

“Burlington Baseball Club is ecstatic to continue its relationship with the Kansas City Royals,” said Burlington General Manager Ben Abzug.  “We have enjoyed our partnership with the Royals, and look forward to many more years of providing a home for the development of future Royals Major Leaguers. Burlington is lucky to be affiliated with such a dynamic organization on the rise that values the player development process so highly.”

— Royals Media Relations —

Royals pound Verlander in 9-8 win over Detroit

Mike Moustakas had three hits and three RBIs and the Kansas City Royals roughed up Justin Verlander in a 9-8 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday night.

Verlander, the reigning AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, was charged with eight earned runs, matching his career high, in 5 2/3 innings. It was the third time in Verlander’s career he had surrendered eight earned runs and first since April 6, 2009, at Toronto.

Jhonny Peralta hit a tying solo homer for Detroit in the eighth, but the Royals responded in the bottom half.

Billy Butler hit a one-out single for his third hit of the game and was replaced by Lorenzo Cain, who swiped second. Salvador Perez then fouled out against Brayan Villarreal (3-4) and Phil Coke came in to face Moustakas, who doubled down the right-field line to give the Royals a 9-8 lead.

Aaron Crow (3-1) got the win despite allowing Peralta’s 10th homer and Greg Holland worked out of a jam to earn his eighth save in 10 opportunities.

Austin Jackson led off the Detroit ninth with a walk and advanced to third on a groundout and wild pitch. After Miguel Cabrera struck out and Prince Fielder was walked intentionally, Delmon Young hit Holland’s next pitch just outside the right-field pole. Tigers manager Jim Leyland wanted it reviewed and after looking at replays, it was ruled a foul ball. Young lined out to left on the next pitch.

Jackson went 3 for 3 and scored three times for the Tigers, who stayed 2 games back of the AL Central-leading White Sox. Fielder and Young each had two RBIs.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis gets blanked on the road at Pittsburgh

Josh Harrison provided the pop. Pedro Alvarez provided the power. The reeling Pittsburgh Pirates eagerly accepted both.

Alvarez homered twice and drove in four runs after Harrison barreled into St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina and the Pirates rolled to a 9-0 victory over the Cardinals on Tuesday night.

While Alvarez crushed his 24th and 25th home runs of the season, it was Harrison’s violent collision at home plate with Molina in the second inning that sent the message the struggling Pirates aren’t quite finished just yet.

Harrison broke from second on Jose Tabata’s single to right with two outs and dashed for the plate. By the time he got there, Molina had the ball in his hands. The second baseman lowered his left shoulder and plowed into the catcher’s head. Molina somehow held onto the ball to end the inning

It also ended his night.

Molina got up slowly and went to the clubhouse with neck, back and shoulder injuries and was replaced by Tony Cruz. Watching Molina walk off the field was difficult, but Harrison insisted he had no choice.

“There was no way to slide around him,” Harrison said. “I felt my only way was to go through him.”

Molina, who complained of a headache afterward, doesn’t believe the hit was malicious.

“I never saw the guy coming,” Molina said. “I was concentrating on catching the ball. I never saw him coming, but the real pain was in my head. I don’t know if he was (targeting) my head or not.”

The play seemed to energize the Pirates, who snapped out of a weeklong funk and drew within two games of St. Louis for the NL’s second wild-card spot.

“It can spark a team,” manager Clint Hurdle said. “But it will be up to us to play better baseball than we’ve played lately and play along the lines that we did tonight.”

Having the streaky Alvarez heating up once again certainly helped. The third baseman hit a two-run homer in the third to give the Pirates a comfortable lead, added an RBI double in the fourth then hit a 469-foot blast to center in the sixth.

“The second one, the ball looked like it was going to hit the (Clemente) Bridge,” Hurdle said. “That’s 400 and I don’t know how many. That’s a whole bunch of feet. It goes to show you he can shrink a ballpark.”

It was more than enough offense for James McDonald (12-6), who gave up two hits in seven efficient innings, walking one and striking out six to beat the Cardinals and Jake Westbrook (13-10) for the second time in the last two weeks.

Using his curveball to keep the surging Cardinals off balance, McDonald looked like the pitcher that was one of baseball’s biggest surprises during the first half of the year, not the one that has stumbled at times over the last six weeks.

“I think it’s just part of the growing process,” catcher Mike McKenry said. “He’s just starting to come into his own. He had a tremendous first half and every pitcher struggles at some point and he just happened to struggle at the wrong time. He just enhanced it and we just had to take the world off his shoulders.”

McDonald had little trouble against the Cardinals’ surging lineup, surrendering only a two-out single to Molina in the second and a two-out double to Jon Jay in the sixth. Other than that he was flawless, allowing Pittsburgh’s weary bullpen to get a needed break.

Playing with a cushion for once didn’t hurt. The Pirates came in losers in six of their last seven since a dramatic 19-inning victory in St. Louis on Aug. 19, forced to play catch-up most nights while the starting pitching faltered.

This time, the Pirates jumped out early.

Garrett Jones hit a sacrifice fly to give Pittsburgh the lead and the Pirates continued to build. Alvarez hit a two-run shot to the notch in left-center to make it 3-0 in the third and got things started in the fifth with an RBI double to score Andrew McCutchen.

McKenry added a run-scoring single to make it 5-0. Westbrook exacted a little payback by drilling Harrison in the leg with a fastball, drawing a warning to both dugouts from home plate umpire Adrian Johnson.

Harrison took no offense at pitch, calling it “a part of the game.” He didn’t stay at first for long anyway. Clint Barmes followed the plunking with a two-run single the Pirates were up 7-0.

That was more than enough for McDonald. The Cardinals failed to get a runner to third while McDonald was in the game while getting shut out for the second time this month and the seventh time this season.

Westbrook has been a key part of the Cardinals’ rise during the second half, winning six of his previous seven decisions. He could do little right on a night the Pirates snapped out of their swoon in a big way.

The veteran right-hander gave up seven runs and 11 hits in five innings, tying a season high with four walks while striking out two. He threw just 61 of his 103 pitches for strikes.

“I haven’t been very good the last couple outings and I can’t ask the offense to pick me up that big like they did last start,” Westbrook said. “It’s just a matter of figuring it out.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas City loses series finale against Red Sox

All the offseason work, rehab starts and minor league outings finally paid off for Daisuke Matsuzaka.

Matsuzaka returned from the disabled list with his best start of the season and Cody Ross drove in three runs, leading the Boston Red Sox to a 5-1 win over the Kansas City Royals on Monday.

Starting the season on the DL after Tommy John surgery in June, Matsuzaka (1-3) earned his first big league win since May 16 of last season.

The Japanese right-hander made eight rehab starts before he rejoined the rotation in June, but went back on the DL in early July with a strained neck muscle. Then it was back to the minors for another five starts.

“I tried back in June and I didn’t get the results I wanted. I didn’t feel like I’d be able to come back strong again this season,” he said through a translator. “I went back to my final two rehab starts and threw the ball really well. I knew if I could do that up here the results would come.”

Matsuzaka gave up an unearned run and five hits, walking two and striking out six over seven innings in just his sixth start of the season.

The Red Sox took three of four in the wraparound series and won for the second time in three games since trading Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett and Carl Crawford to the Dodgers on Saturday in a salary-dumping, nine-player deal.

“Obviously he’s going to get another start — two, three, four or five,” Boston manager Bobby Valentine said. “He might finish strong throwing like that.”

Jacoby Ellsbury had a solo homer and a double for Boston, which opens a nine-game West Coast trip Tuesday night against the Los Angeles Angels.

It was the first time Matsuzaka’s pitched more than six innings.

“When I had to go back on the DL in July it was very disappointing, especially when I didn’t expect my body to react the way it did,” he said. “But the encouraging part was it wasn’t my elbow. I didn’t know if I’d be able to come back strong this year, but I felt better than I did before I had Tommy John.”

The Red Sox won for just the seventh time in 19 games.

“He threw his slider inside on right-handers really well,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I mean he really executed that pitch well a number of times. So when you’re sitting, looking out, away on him and he throws that slider that starts at you and breaks back on the corner of the plate, it keeps you off-balance really well, and that’s what he did.”

Luke Hochevar (7-12) took the loss, giving up five runs and eight hits in his second complete game this season.

Boston broke a 1-1 tie on Ross’ two-run single in the third. Scott Podsednik and Dustin Pedroia each singled before Ross hit a drive high off the Green Monster, but he was thrown out trying to stretch it on Alex Gordon’s throw.

In the sixth, the Red Sox added two runs off Hochevar. Ross had an RBI double off the left-field wall. He beat Gordon’s throw, sliding into second before scoring when newly acquired James Loney singled to make it 5-1.

Loney went 1 for 4 in his second game after coming in the trade with Los Angeles.

Matsuzaka, in the final year of a six-year, $52 million contract, mostly spotted his fastball with a slider and cutter to keep the Royals hitters off balance.

He was most impressive when he worked out of a first-and-third, one-out jam in the sixth, getting Mike Moustakas swinging on a tailing 94 mph fastball to end the inning.

“He was throwing a good cutter,” Kansas City designated hitter Billy Butler said. “He was locating and had pretty good velocity on his fastball whenever he needed it.”

The Royals took advantage of an error, scoring a run without a hit to take a 1-0 lead in the first. Jarrod Dyson opened the game with a walk, stole second and advanced when second baseman Pedroia was charged with an error when he didn’t catch a somewhat high throw. Gordon followed with a sacrifice fly.

Ellsbury’s homer in the bottom half, a drive that bounced on the top of a short right-field wall and into the stands, tied it 1-all.

— Associated Press —

Lohse wins 14th game as Cards slip past Pittsburgh

Mike Matheny was almost in awe when he talked about Matt Holliday’s home run.

“He killed it,” the St. Louis Cardinals manager said. “It’s hard to hit a ball that hard the opposite way but it was still going up when it hit the seats. He really hit it.”

Holliday’s homer was not only impressive but important as it broke a sixth-inning tie Monday night, and along with Kyle Lohse pitching five scoreless innings for his eight straight win, it helped lead the Cardinals to a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Holliday led off the sixth inning with his 24th homer, a drive to right field off A.J. Burnett that put St. Louis ahead for good at 3-2.

“It always feels good to hit the ball on the barrel, especially on a pitch up in the strike zone,” Holliday said. “It was an important game for us. It’s not to the point of the season where it was a must-win game but it was a good game to win.”

St. Louis, which has won six of seven, moved 2 1/2 games ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who lost 10-0 at Colorado, for the second NL wild-card berth. Pittsburgh fell three games behind the Cardinals with its sixth loss in seven games.

Lohse (14-2) pitched five innings before being lifted following a 34-minute rain delay in the top of the sixth. He allowed two runs and five hits while striking out three and walking none.

“It was a really tricky to decide whether to leave Kyle in the game,” Matheny said. “The rain delay wasn’t all that long but he was at 83 pitches and he had run the bases. I just thought it was the right call to take him out.”

Lohse has not lost in 13 starts dating to June 15 and raised his career record against Pittsburgh to 9-2. He had an RBI single in the fifth inning.

Lohse did not fight Matheny’s decision to lift him, especially after being thrown out at home plate while trying to score from first base on Matt Carpenter’s double to end the top of the fifth inning.

“I don’t want to ever come out of a game but it was the best thing to come out,” Lohse said. “I didn’t feel as strong as I normally would.”

Pirates center fielder Andrew McCutchen thought the rain delay worked to St. Louis’ advantage because he felt Lohse was ripe to have his winning streak snapped.

“He wasn’t locating as well with his pitches as he normally does,” McCutchen said. “We were able to jump on him and get a couple runs off him in that one inning. We probably would have had another chance at him but that changed with the rain.”

Burnett (15-5) gave up four runs, three earned, and seven hits in 5 2/3 innings with three strikeouts and one walk. He lost at home for just second time this season in 10 decisions and 13 starts.

“I felt good but I made two bad pitches at the wrong time,” Burnett said. “Had I maybe thrown a hook to (Lohse) or kept the ball lower against Holliday then maybe things turn out different.”

Holliday, Allen Craig and Skip Schumaker all had two hits for the Cardinals as did McCutchen, Pedro Alvarez and Clint Barmes for Pittsburgh.

The Cardinals added a run in the sixth after Holliday’s home run as Yadier Molina hit a sacrifice fly to make it 4-2.

The Pirates drew within a run in the seventh inning on Barmes’ RBI double. They put runners on first and second in the eighth but closer Jason Motte came in and escaped the jam by getting Josh Harrison to hit into an inning-ending force play.

Motte retired the side in the ninth for his 31st save in 36 opportunities.

St. Louis had tied the score 2-2 in the fifth inning as Shumaker hit a run-scoring double and scored on the single by Lohse.

The Pirates scored the game’s first two runs in the fourth on RBI singles by McCutchen and Alvarez after neither team produced a hit in the first 3 1/2 innings. Alvarez has 17 RBIs against the Cardinals this season.

“It hurt when they scored right after we did,” Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle said. “One of (Burnett’s) strengths all year has been the shutdown inning.”

Instead, the momentum shifted to the Cardinals and Lohse can’t help but think their current hot streak is coming at the right time for the defending World Series champions.

“We’ve felt for a long time that we’ve been due to play like we’ve been playing the last week or so,” Lohse said. “We’re playing really well now and it’s the perfect time because we’re coming down the homestretch. It’s the right time of the year to win games like this.”

— Associated Press —

Royals lose Sunday to new-look Red Sox

With a well-placed ground ball up the middle, James Loney showed he can fit in at Fenway Park — just like Chavez Ravine.

Loney hit a tying single in his Boston debut, Jacoby Ellsbury drove in the go-ahead run an inning later and the revamped Red Sox bounced back from a nine-player trade and a 12-inning loss to beat the Kansas City Royals 8-6 on Sunday.

“I’m glad I’m here. It’s one of the best atmospheres in baseball,” Loney said after getting his first AL hit in his first game following the deal that brought him to Boston. “It felt good getting that opportunity, having a chance to deliver. I just want to keep that up.”

A day after he was the only major leaguer coming to Boston in a deal that sent Josh Beckett, Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Nick Punto and more than $250 million in salary to the Los Angeles Dodgers, Loney went 1 for 5. Pedro Ciriaco had three hits, scored twice and drove in two runs for the Red Sox, who won for just the fourth time in 12 games.

Loney also made a nice pickup at first base on a short-hop throw from third baseman Ciriaco, but grounded into a rally-ending double play in the bottom half.

Pedro Beato (1-0) allowed two runs in two-plus innings but got the win on the same day he was called up from Triple-A Pawtucket. Mark Melancon pitched the ninth for his first save.

Will Smith (4-6) allowed five runs — four earned — and nine hits in five-plus innings for Kansas City.

Lorenzo Cain hit a three-run homer as the Royals scored four times with two outs in the fourth to take a 4-2 lead.

“That’s the mark of a team that battles, those two-out rallies,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I don’t know if I’d rather have bases loaded with no outs or bases loaded and two outs. We seem to score more runs. We had an opportunity to score a lot more there.”

Ciriaco hit a solo homer in the fifth, then Ellsbury singled, advanced on a grounder, stole third and scored on Loney’s single to center. Ellsbury’s RBI single in the sixth — after the first of two costly errors by shortstop Alcides Escobar — gave the Red Sox the lead.

“I’m trying to field the ball in front of me,” Escobar said. “It’s hard for me right now. I try to play hard with my defense. I know I can hit right now. I feel really bad right now, two errors in one game is bad for me.”

It was 7-4 in the seventh when the Royals loaded the bases with nobody out to chase Beato. Craig Breslow came in and struck out Johnny Giavotella before Eric Hosmer hit a sinking liner that right fielder Cody Ross lost in the sun.

He charged in, ducked, and at the last minute stabbed out his right arm to make the catch; Billy Butler scored from third to make it 7-5, but Ross, as he fell, hit the cutoff man with just enough force to keep the other runners from advancing.

Tony Abreu singled in another run, then Cain struck out looking to end the threat.

Dustin Pedroia added a solo homer in the eighth for Boston.

Boston starter Felix Doubront, who was activated from the disabled list (bruised right knee), struck out seven in five innings, but was charged with four runs and six hits. He is winless in his last five starts.

— Associated Press —

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