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Royals rally past Oakland for 3-2 win

Will Smith, a 23-year-old left-hander, made his ninth major league start Wednesday night and pitched like a veteran.

Smith went seven strong innings, Chris Getz doubled home the go-ahead run and the Kansas City Royals defeated the Oakland Athletics 3-2.

Smith (4-4) limited the A’s to two runs and five hits, while striking out five and walking one. In winning his past two starts, Smith has allowed four runs and 11 hits in 14 innings.

“Will did a good job of battling without his best stuff,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I thought his fastball was flat at times. He battled through the sixth and seventh and kept us in the game. Early in the game, he was struggling to get the ball down with all of his pitches.

“The thing that was so impressive about tonight’s game, a young pitcher on the mound without his best stuff and he’s competing his tail off and keeping his club in the game and that’s a tremendous sign for a young pitcher to be able to do that. I was very impressed with that. He ended up getting us through seven innings. There were times I wasn’t sure we could get him through the fifth.

“When you’re a young pitcher and you don’t have your best stuff, you know it and you tend to fight yourself in those situations. You try to be too perfect and just end up getting your brains beat in. But this kid went out tonight and competed his tail off.”

Smith acknowledged his stuff was lacking.

“You’re not going to have your best stuff every single night,” Smith said. “So it’s a battle sometime and tonight was a battle. I had zero fastball command. It was really spotty. Sometime it would be there and sometimes it wouldn’t. I was just struggling with that. I had to battle through it. We had some amazing defense. Our defense is unreal.”

With two outs in the seventh, Eric Hosmer, Lorenzo Cain and Getz hit consecutive doubles, the first Kansas City extra-base hits of the game. Cain, who was in a 2-for-24 skid, doubled home Hosmer to tie the score.

Left-handed reliever Sean Doolittle was brought in to face Getz. After fouling off five pitches with two strikes, Getz stroked an opposite-field double on the 11th pitch to bring home Cain.

“I don’t know if that’s the best at-bat of the year, but it’s darn sure in the top five. An 11-pitch at-bat against a tough left-hander to drive in the winning run was a great job,” Yost said.

A’s starter Brandon McCarthy (6-4) lost for the first time since April 21, snapping his career-best six-game winning streak. McCarthy, who is 6-1 with a 2.45 ERA in his past nine starts, gave up three runs, two earned, and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings, while walking none and striking out four.

“It stunk,” McCarthy said. “It was a bad loss for us across the board. These are games we expect to win and games we have been winning all year. I’m not happy with myself. There are a lot of things I could have done better. Giving up runs, I don’t like to do that. I don’t like doing it late in the game. I don’t like doing it with two outs.”

The Royals scored an unearned run in the first. Alcides Escobar, who reached on a fielder’s choice, stole second and advanced to third on catcher Derek Norris’ throwing error. Escobar scored on Billy Butler’s grounder to Josh Donaldson, who threw home high and late.

The Athletics tied it in the second. Chris Carter led off with a double and he stopped at third on Donaldson’s single and scored on Brandon Moss’ single.

Donaldson, who was recalled Tuesday from Triple-A Sacramento, homered just inside the left-field foul pole in the fourth inning to give the A’s a 2-1 lead.

Greg Holland worked around a leadoff single in the ninth to collect his fourth save in five opportunities.

— Associated Press —

Wainright helps St. Louis take down Arizona

Adam Wainwright allowed two runs in six innings and the St. Louis Cardinals got home runs from David Freese and Allen Craig in a 5-2 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday night.

Rafael Furcal’s two-run triple in the sixth gave the Cards a three-run lead.

St. Louis homered twice for the second straight game and will go for a sweep of the three-game series behind 12-game winner Kyle Lohse on Thursday night.

The Cardinals are 5-0 against the Diamondbacks this year and have won seven straight dating to last year.

Wainwright (11-10) was 0-3 in April before starting to regain his form. He’s 4-0 with a 2.04 ERA in his past five starts.

Arizona’s Paul Goldschmidt hit a homer estimated at 456 feet, longest by an opposing player at seven-year-old Busch Stadium, in the fourth.

Goldschmidt’s first homer in nine games came on a drive that soared over the visitor’s bullpen in left. The distance of the homer is the fourth longest overall at Busch, and is 13 feet shy of Matt Holliday’s stadium-record homer off the Cubs’ Ryan Dempster on July 20.

Joe Saunders (6-9) allowed five runs in six innings, the first time the lefty gave up more than three runs in 11 road starts. He entered with a 2.49 road ERA, fourth-best in the league.

The Diamondbacks (58-59) have lost eight of 11 and dropped below .500 for the first time since they were 49-50 on July 26.

Freese ended an 0-for-20 slump with his 16th homer after Carlos Beltran doubled with two outs in the fourth to put the Cardinals up 2-1.

Craig hit his 18th to right-center in the fifth and the Cardinals got three straight hits from the bottom of the order capped by Furcal’s liner into the right-field corner in the sixth.

Furcal was moved to the bottom of the lineup last week while battling back issues and a slump. He also doubled in the third for his first mulitihit game since July 24.

Edward Mujica and Mitchell Boggs each worked a scoreless inning. Jason Motte finished for his 27th save in 31 chances.

— Associated Press —

Guthrie, Royals blank Oakland Tuesday night, 5-0

Jeremy Guthrie learned in June what not to do against the Oakland Athletics.

Guthrie allowed only three singles in seven innings, and the Kansas City Royals rolled to a 5-0 win over the Athletics on Tuesday night.

Guthrie, who struck out a season-high eight, ran his scoreless streak to 15 innings, the longest streak of his career. He has yielded eight hits and struck out 14 in his past two starts, victories over the A’s and the Chicago White Sox.

Guthrie (5-12) is 2/3 in five starts with the Royals, who acquired him in a July 20 trade with Colorado for left-hander Jonathan Sanchez.

In a June 12 start against the A’s at Colorado, Guthrie allowed seven runs and eight hits, including three home runs and two walks in five innings.

“When I pitched against them earlier in the year every pitch I threw was the exact wrong pitch at the wrong time,” Guthrie said. “So I had a nice blueprint on what not to do. I don’t think I threw too many duplicate pitches of what they punished me.

“I gave up an awful lot of hits and an awful lot of long home runs in a short amount of time. They gave me a blueprint on how to do a better job.”

A’s manager Bob Melvin noticed the change in Guthrie’s plan.

“He’s a guy we handled pretty well in Colorado.” Melvin said. “He’s coming off his best game this year, and he might have been riding some confidence from that. But I’d like to think we could get some better at-bats against him. We didn’t have a lot of good at-bats tonight.

“He worked ahead and had a good downward plane on his fastball, good movement.”

Guthrie, who is eligible for free agency after this season, could be pitching his way into the Royals’ plans for next year.

“I just felt along with Dayton (Moore, general manager), three or four starts and that would get him back on track,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He’s definitely on track. It’s not really fluky stuff. You can see where this could be extended out start after start. I’m really liking what I’m seeing right now.”

Guthrie was 4-11 with a 6.31 ERA as a Rockies starter. He credits Royals pitching coach Dave Eiland for helping him with adjustments.

“Had I not come over here and been able to work with those types of people, I might still be banging my head and still be making the same mistakes.” Guthrie said. “It wasn’t about getting settled in as much as it was getting better and making some adjustments.”

Tim Collins and Greg Holland completed the shutout for Kansas City. Collins struck out all three batters he faced in the eighth inning, boosting his total to 77 — a Royals’ strikeout record for a left-handed reliever.

The A’s failed to get a runner past second base and were shut out for a major league-leading 14th time.

Alex Gordon and Eric Hosmer delivered run-scoring singles in the Royals’ five-run fifth inning that also featured sacrifice flies by Chris Getz and Billy Butler.

Kansas City also scored an unearned run after Oakland second baseman Jemile Weeks failed to handle Alcides Escobar’s bouncer. That allowed Lorenzo Cain, who had walked, to score.

A’s rookie right-hander Jarrod Parker (7-7) was pulled after 4 2/3 innings. He gave up five runs, five hits and two walks. Parker is 2-4 with a 6.15 ERA, and batters are hitting .309 against him in his past seven starts.

He was 5-3 with a 2.46 ERA and an opponents’ batting average of .209 against him in his first 13 starts.

In the third inning, Josh Donaldson and Coco Crisp singled, but Donaldson was put out in a rundown between second and third. Right fielder Jeff Francoeur earned his 13th assist on the play, tying him for the major league lead among outfielders.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis rolls past Arizona in series opener

If this was Joe Kelly’s last turn, he’s leaving with his head held high.

The rookie right-hander pitched into the seventh inning of what could be his final start before Jaime Garcia comes off the disabled list, and the St. Louis Cardinals got home runs from Matt Holliday and Jon Jay in an 8-2 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday night.

“I love him in the rotation,” second baseman Skip Schumaker said after getting two hits and turning a dazzling double play to his left on a short hop to rob Miguel Montero in the second. “I don’t obviously manage but he’s making it really difficult on everyone to move him out.

“We think the world of him.”

Montero hit a two-run homer for the Diamondbacks, who have lost four of six to drop to .500. They are 0-4 against the Cardinals this season.

Ian Kennedy (10-10) made throwing errors on consecutive sacrifice bunt attempts to help the Cardinals score two unearned runs in the seventh for a three-run cushion, and gave up both homers for a four-game total of eight long balls.

“I feel like the two of them were good pitches, but obviously not good enough,” Kennedy said. “It’s frustrating when you give up those solo home runs.

“Every once in a while, they add up.”

Kelly (3-5) gave up two runs in 6 1/3 innings and matched his career best with six strikeouts, lowering his ERA to 3.41 — trailing only Kyle Lohse’s 2.72 in the rotation. Garcia had eight strikeouts and three walks, throwing 93 pitches in five innings for Triple-A Memphis in his fourth rehab start Tuesday night.

Manager Mike Matheny swatted away a question about whether Garcia was ready to step in, saying “too early for that right now.” Before the game he said he advised Kelly to ignore speculation.

“Everyone else thinks about it a lot more than I do,” Kelly said. “It hasn’t really crossed my mind. Until someone tells me otherwise, I’ll just keep the same routine, same plan.”

Holliday’s two-run homer in the fourth reached the third deck in left just inside the foul pole to put St. Louis ahead. His 23rd homer topped last year’s total.

Jay hit his fourth of the year to open the sixth for a 3-0 lead.

Kelly had cruised through the middle innings Justin Upton singled to start the seventh. Montero homered to straightaway center on the next pitch, his 14th of the season.

In minutes, Kennedy doubled his season total of two errors through his first 23 starts and helped the Cardinals pull away. He was off-balance fielding Rafael Furcal’s sacrifice bunt and double-pumped an underhand throw that first baseman Paul Goldschmidt dropped after being screened to put two men on with none out in the seventh.

Kennedy then he floated a throw high over third base on what would have been an easy forceout on pinch hitter Shane Robinson’s sacrifice attempt to allow a run.

“We just self-disintegrated at the end of the game,” manager Kirk Gibson said. “We made two errors on two trivial bunt plays.”

Kennedy entered the season with three career errors in 100 starts. He’s 1/3 with a 8.59 ERA against the Cardinals in four career outings.

Allen Craig added a run-scoring groundout with the bases loaded off Brad Ziegler to make it 5-2 in the seventh. Pinch hitter Matt Carpenter was credited with a two-run double on a low liner that center fielder Gerardo Parra trapped and then tried to sell as a catch as the Diamondbacks began trotting off the field. Second base umpire Gary Darling, closest to the play, reversed third base umpire Paul Emmel’s call as the Cardinals kept running.

“I had a great view of it. I knew it was down,” Carpenter said. “You would have thought he for-sure caught it, the way he was acting.”

Kelly survived a pair of fielding miscues by Holliday and Jay in the first and third to keep it scoreless.

Holliday froze in his tracks in left and retreated too late on Jason Kubel’s double that bounced off the warning track with two outs in the first, but Kelly struck out Goldschmidt. Jay broke in from center on Stephen Drew’s one-out triple in the third and with a late dive got just the tip of his glove on the ball, but Kubel grounded into a double play.

Jay made a nice juggling catch at the wall to rob Drew for the last out in the fifth. The ball squirted out of Jay’s glove as he hit the ball but he re-gloved it while landing.

— Associated Press —

Royals fall to Baltimore in series finale

Manny Machado might want to brush up on his knowledge of Baltimore Orioles history, because the rookie continues to put his name alongside several of the team’s finest players in the franchise record book.

Machado hit his third homer in four major league games, Nick Markakis also connected, and Baltimore got four hitless innings from its bullpen in a 5-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Sunday.

Mark Reynolds drove in the tiebreaking run in the sixth inning for the Orioles, who earned a split of the four-game series.

Machado hit a two-run homer in the second off former Baltimore pitcher Bruce Chen (8-10). The 20-year-old tripled in his debut Thursday night, homered twice in his second game and doubled in a run Saturday night.

On Friday night, Machado became the youngest Oriole to have a multihomer game, breaking the mark set previously by Boog Powell. With his drive on Sunday, Machado joined Frank Robinson, Ray Knight and Lee May as the only players to get an extra-base hit in each of their first four games with the Orioles.

“That’s crazy. That’s the first time I heard it,” Machado said. “To be mentioned with Frank Robinson, one of the greatest third basemen, that’s just great. It’s a great feeling. I’m just fortunate.”

Brooks Robinson, not Frank, was Baltimore’s Hall of Fame third baseman. But Machado deserves credit for his humility, especially on the field.

Orioles manager Buck Showalter said Machado has “put some good swings on some good pitches and they’ve carried over the fence.

“I’d put myself in his shoes, I’m sure he’s having a blast. But he doesn’t want to do anything to upset the apple cart toward the other team. He’s been very respectful of the competition, and that’s something that we’ve tried to do all year.”

Mike Moustakas homered for the Royals, who went 4-3 on a road swing against the White Sox and Orioles. Kansas City has 15 home runs over its last eight games.

But the Royals had no answer for Machado, who went 6 for 16 with six extra-base hits and seven RBIs in the four games.

“I like him. I was impressed,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “The scouting reports that we got said he had a couple of holes in his swing. We couldn’t find them. He hurt us. He won two games for them against us with homers. He hit the ball to center field. He hits the ball to left field.”

Chen said, “He’s going to be a good player for a long time. We better get used to making good pitches to him.”

Baltimore went up 4-3 in the sixth. After Chen issued two straight walks, Reynolds greeted Louis Coleman with an RBI single to left. The Orioles added an unearned run in the eighth.

Luis Ayala (4-3) worked the sixth, and Troy Patton and Pedro Strop each got three outs before Jim Johnson finished for his 34th save in 37 opportunities.

“We’ve had a couple games where we had to use a lot of people,” Showalter said. “But we felt at the time we could keep it close and we could match up out of the bullpen the last four innings.”

Orioles starter Tommy Hunter gave up three runs and eight hits in five innings. The right-hander has yielded at least one home run in 10 straight starts, and the two walks were Hunter’s most in a game since April 24.

After stranding runners at the corners in the first inning, the Orioles took a 2-0 lead in the second. Reynolds led off with a walk before Machado hit a drive to center that umpires initially ruled bounced off the top of the wall. After a quick replay review, Machado broke into his home-run trot from second base.

Moustakas ended an 0-for-10 drought with a liner off the foul pole in right field leading off the fourth, and Brayan Pena added a sacrifice fly to tie it at 2.

The Royals got a run in the fifth when Alex Gordon and Alcides Escobar singled ahead of a double-play grounder by Moustakas. In the bottom half, Markakis knotted the score at 3 and ended Chen’s run of 11 straight outs with a drive to right on a 3-2 pitch.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose to Phillies in 11 innings

Juan Pierre took an Olympic-sized dose of inspiration watching Usain Bolt sprint to gold.

He took off on a 90-foot dash to his own finish line at first base.

No medals, just a needed victory for the Phillies.

Pierre beat out a run-scoring infield single in the 11th inning, lifting Phillies to an 8-7 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday.

“Once I hit it, I was like, `Get to the bag,” Pierre said.

Pierre hit a ball deep into the hole that shortstop Rafael Furcal made a great stab at and fired to first. Pierre, who enjoyed watching Bolt compete, just beat the throw to score Jimmy Rollins and help the Phillies win two of three against the Cardinals.

“I played with Furcal so I knew what kind of arm he had,” Pierre said. “Guys are saying he slipped a little bit and couldn’t get that much on the throw. He still got a lot on it, but not enough, and it happened to work out.

Rollins reached against Barret Browning (0-2) on a fielder’s choice. He advanced to second base on a grounder and then stole third.

Without that stolen base, the game was going to the 12th.

Without Erik Kratz, the Phillies were going home losers.

Kratz delivered again in the clutch for the Phillies with a three-run homer off Mitchell Boggs in the eighth that tied the game 7-all. He continued his role as unlikely star for the Phillies and delivered one of his biggest hits yet.

Chase Utley and Howard walked against Marc Rzepczynski to lead off the eighth.

Kratz then connected for the tying homer, his fifth, to left that sent the crowd into a frenzy.

The 32-year-old Kratz was a minor league journeyman pressed into the big leagues when reserve catcher Brian Schneider was injured. Kratz has become a fan favorite because of his instant production (9 of first 13 hits for extra bases) and feel-good story.

“You want to be the guy that gets called up,” Kratz said. “You’re not going to sit there and just stay complacent. You’re going to give everything you have and want to get your uniform dirty to win the game. You want to be asked to be put in that spot.”

So close to victory, the Cardinals head home with a tough loss to deal with as they try and make ground in their playoff push.

“Pierre showed his speed. I thought he would be out,” Browning said. “All losses are tough, but this one hurts a little more.”

Ryan Howard also homered for the Phillies. Matt Carpenter had three RBIs for the Cardinals.

Jeremy Horst (2-0) tossed two scoreless innings for his first major league victory in a game that lasted 3 hours, 53 minutes.

Kratz’s tying shot was the breakthrough the Phillies needed against a tough Cardinals bullpen.

Jon Jay hit a tiebreaking double in the eighth inning and Carpenter followed with an RBI single to make it 7-4.

Cardinals relievers had held the Phillies scoreless until the eighth after they scored four runs against starter Lance Lynn.

Howard, who missed 84 games after rupturing his left Achilles tendon while making the final out of the NL division series last October, had little to worry about on his home run trot. His solo shot to left-center, his seventh, tied the game at 4 in the fourth inning. The game appeared headed toward a back-and-forth high scoring game — and returned to that flavor over the final three innings.

Lynn entered leading the National League with a 6.77 run support average and his 23rd start of the season was trending that way.

The Phillies roughed up Lynn with a three-run first. Utley’s two-RBI triple made it 2-1 and Howard followed with a shot off second baseman Daniel Descalso’s glove for a run-scoring single.

Lynn, a 13-game winner, allowed four runs in five innings and is winless in his last three starts.

“We’ve had series like this all season and they are tough losses,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.

The Cardinals did what they could to put Lynn in position for win No. 14. Carlos Beltran doubled to right for his NL-best 83rd RBI in the third to cut it to 3-2.

The Cardinals scored the tying run in the fourth on a throwing error by Kratz and went up 4-3 on Carpenter’s RBI single to center.

Carpenter wasted little time putting the Cardinals up 1-0 in the first when he ripped one into the right-center gap for an RBI double.

Vance Worley has just one win in his last five starts and had another rough outing Sunday. He allowed nine hits and four runs in 5 1/3 innings — one start after he was chased by Atlanta in the fourth inning. He’s battled bone chips that caused a stint on the DL and a string of mediocre starts.

— Associated Press —

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