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Kansas City’s three-game win streak snapped by Red Sox

RoyalsJacoby Ellsbury matched a career high with four hits and drove in a pair of runs to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 5-3 win over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

Ellsbury had RBI-doubles in the fourth and sixth innings and also stole his major league-leading 42nd base.

Red Sox starter Felix Doubront gave up three runs on six hits and four walks in four-plus innings

He was replaced by Brandon Workman (3-1), who picked up his second victory of the week with 1 1-3 scoreless innings. Koji Uehara pitched a flawless ninth to collect his 12th save in 15 chances.

Royals right-hander Jeremy Guthrie (12-8), who had won his previous four starts, threw a season-high 123 pitches in seven innings, allowing five runs on 10 hits and a walk.

— Associated Press —

Royals use six-run sixth inning to rally past Boston

RoyalsJustin Maxwell homered and singled twice in a six-run sixth as the Kansas City Royals rallied for a 9-6 victory over the Boston Red Sox on Friday night.

The Royals have won 15 of their past 17 games to move seven games above .500, matching their best record of the season.

Maxwell, who the Royals acquired on July 31 from the Houston Astros for a minor league pitcher, homered leading off the second.

With the Royals trailing 6-3 in the sixth, he led off the inning with a single. The Royals sent 11 men to the plate in the inning against Red Sox pitchers Jake Peavy, Drake Britton and Pedro Beato.

Peavy, who was making his second Red Sox start since being acquired in a July 30 trade from the Chicago White Sox, yielded singles to Maxwell, Mike Moustakas and Alcides Escobar to start the inning. Escobar’s RBI single finished Peavy.

Eric Hosmer’s two-run single with two outs off Britton put the Royals on top 7-6. David Lough contributed a sacrifice fly, while Billy Butler doubled home Hosmer. Maxwell’s second single in the inning scored Butler with the final run.

Mike Napoli, a career .368 hitter off Royals right-hander Ervin Santana, cleared the bases with a two-out third inning three-run double.

That ended Santana’s night. He gave up six runs on nine hits, including David Ortiz’s 22nd home run in the third, in 3 2/3 innings, his shortest outing of the season.

Peavy lasted five innings, plus three batters, allowing six runs on 10 hits.

Francisley Bueno (1-0), who was just promoted Thursday from Triple-A Omaha, picked up the victory with 2 1-3 scoreless innings. He has two big league wins, both against the Red Sox. Britton (1-1) was charged with the loss.

The Royals’ 16-hit attack, included three hits each by Butler, Hosmer and Maxwell. Alex Gordon had two hits, including his 12th home run.

Greg Holland worked the ninth for his 31st save in 33 chances.

— Associated Press —

Chen quiets Red Sox as Royals win series opener

RoyalsBruce Chen outdueled Jon Lester as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Boston Red Sox 5-1 on Thursday night.

The Royals won for the 16th time in 20 games since the All-Star break. The Red Sox, who have the best record in the American League, lost for only the third time in 10 games.

Chen, who was making his fifth start since beginning the season in the bullpen, did not allow a runner past first base until the eighth and retired 11 in a row in one stretch. He gave up five singles, walked one and struck out two before leaving with two outs in the eighth inning.

Luke Hochevar got the final four outs for his second career save.

Lester (10-7), who came into the game with a 6-2 record and 1.64 ERA in nine starts against the Royals, needed 41 pitches in the first inning when Kansas City sent eight men to the plate and scored three runs.

A Jonny Gomes’ fielding error on Alex Gordon’s fly to left made two of the runs unearned. Lorenzo Cain, who opened the inning a double, scored on Gomes’ misplay.

Mike Moustakas’ two-out single to right with the bases loaded scored Billy Butler and Gordon to make it 3-0.

Rubby De La Rosa replaced Lester in the eighth and Butler hit his first pitch out to center for his 10th home run. Justin Maxwell homered with two outs to make it 5-0.

Lester, who was roughed up for six runs and 11 hits in 4 1-3 innings by Arizona in his previous start, shut down the Royals after the first, allowing just two more singles in seven innings.

Stephen Drew, who had two hits to extend his hitting streak to a season high nine games, singled home Gomes in the ninth for the only Red Sox run.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City sends Duffy back to AAA Omaha; call up Bueno

riggertRoyalsThe Kansas City Royals announced Thursday that left-handed pitcher Danny Duffy has been optioned to Triple-A Omaha, while left-handed pitcher Francisley Bueno had his contract purchased from Omaha and added to the Major League roster.  He will be in uniform (#67) for the Royals tonight when they take on the Boston Red Sox at 7:10 p.m.  In a corresponding move, KC has requested release waivers on catcher Adam Moore to make room for Bueno on the 40-man roster.

Bueno, 32, begins his second stint with the Kansas City Royals after signing with the organization as a minor league free agent on November 17, 2011.  He was 3-3 with a 2.93 ERA and one save in 31 appearances (30 out of the bullpen) for the Storm Chasers this season.  This includes a 2-0 record and an 0.87 ERA in his last six appearances.  He pitched in 18 games last year for the Royals, recording a 1-1 mark and a 1.56 ERA in 17.1 frames with two walks and seven strikeouts.

Duffy, 24, made his first Major League start of the season last night against Minnesota, working 3.2 innings and allowing two runs on six hits with two walks and seven strikeouts.  It was his first outing with the Royals since May 13, 2012, when he suffered an elbow injury that led to season-ending Tommy John surgery.

Moore, 29, had an 11-day stint in the Major Leagues with the Royals earlier this year.  He played in five games, going 3-for-10 with a double and a stolen base.  He was hitting .191 with 8 homers and 23 RBI in 41 games for the Storm Chasers.  Moore hasn’t played since leaving Omaha’s July 19 contest with an injury.

— Royals Media Relations —

Duffy, bullpen help Kansas City to series win over Minnesota

RoyalsThe Kansas City bullpen picked up starter Danny Duffy when he labored in his return from Tommy John surgery, keeping the Minnesota Twins guessing Wednesday night and sending the Royals to a 5-2 victory and series win.

Duffy struck out seven in 3 2-3 innings in his first outing since May 2012, but needed 93 pitches to get that far. He left trailing 2-1 on another humid night at Kauffman Stadium.

Louis Coleman (2-0) and three more Kansas City relievers managed to navigate the next 4 1-3 innings, and All-Star closer Greg Holland worked around a single in the ninth for his 30th save.

Royals pitchers combined to strike out 16.

Alex Gordon homered off Samuel Deduno (7-5) to tie the game once Duffy left. Alcides Escobar hit a go-ahead single later in the fourth, Lorenzo Cain hit an RBI single in the fifth, and Gordon drove in another run in the seventh with the 200th double of his career.

Deduno, who hadn’t lost in his last four starts, allowed four runs on 12 hits in 5 2-3 innings. He didn’t walk a batter for the first time this season.

Minnesota made sure that Duffy would work hard in his return to a big league mound.

Brian Dozier, whose leadoff homer set the tone in a 7-0 win Tuesday night, opened the game with a triple off the young left-hander. Brian Colabello worked a two-out walk before Ryan Doumit delivered an RBI single to give the Twins a 1-0 lead.

Doumit would leave the game in the fourth inning after feeling nauseous.

The Royals answered in the third when Brett Hayes, who’s filling in at catcher while Salvador Perez is out with a concussion, lined a double off the third-base bag. Deduno recovered to retire the next two Royals, but Escobar drove in Hayes with a tying single.

The Twins pulled back ahead in the fourth when Clete Thomas worked a walk and Dozier hit a two-out double that also knocked Duffy from the game. But the Royals answered again in the bottom half on Gordon’s homer – which snapped a 1-for-23 skid – and a series of singles by Miguel Tejada, Hayes and Escobar, the last of them allowing Tejada to score the go-ahead run.

Kansas City took some of the pressure off its bullpen in the fifth.

Hot-hitting Eric Hosmer doubled to lead it off, and Billy Butler put runners on the corners with a single. Cain followed with an RBI single that bounced off Deduno and into right field, bringing the Twins training staff out from the dugout to check on the pitcher.

He wound up staying in the game until getting two outs in the sixth.

The damage was already done the way the Royals bullpen was pitching, though. Coleman retired five batters to run his streak of scoreless innings to 16 1-3, and Tim Collins struck out the only three he faced. Aaron Crow escaped a jam of his own creation in the seventh, and Kelvin Herrera left runners that he had walked on second and third to end the eighth.

Holland ensured there would be little drama in the ninth.

— Associated Press —

Royals gets blanked by Minnesota, 7-0

RoyalsAndrew Albers still remembers exactly what he was thinking about as he drove the 40 hours from Arizona to Florida for one last chance at being a big league ballplayer.

”I just wanted a shot,” he said.

The left-hander made the most of his tryout with the Minnesota Twins that day two years ago, earning a minor league contract.

On Tuesday night, Albers got an even bigger shot at realizing his dreams when he made his major league debut against the Kansas City Royals.

Just like he did back then, Albers made the most of it. He allowed four hits while pitching into the ninth inning, leading the Twins to a 7-0 victory at Kauffman Stadium.

”It’s hard to put into words, but it was special to go out and have that kind of performance in your debut,” he said. ”Unfortunately, it’s probably not going to get much better from there.”

The first big leaguer from Saskatchewan in more than 20 years, Albers only allowed a collection of singles to one of the hottest teams in baseball, and at one point retired 15 straight.

He ended up two outs shy of his third straight complete game dating back to his days with Triple-A Rochester, and the first shutout in a big league debut since Detroit’s Andy Van Hekken did it in 2002. Casey Fien wound up finishing it up when Albers began to labor in the ninth inning.

”I didn’t want to go out there and take him out,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said, ”but he was completely out of gas there at the end. Wow that was fun to watch.”

The Twins took most of the pressure off Albers with a big night at the plate. Brian Dozier homered and drove in three runs, and Justin Morneau and Chris Colabello also went deep.

All that damage came against Shields (6-8), who even balked in a run during his worst start in nearly two years.

The former All-Star gave up three runs in the first inning and never settled down the rest of the evening, laboring through six innings on an uncomfortably humid night.

”Sometimes this can happen,” Shields said, ”but I’ve got to do a better job.”

The Twins hammered Shields right from the start. Dozier’s homer was the first leadoff shot for Minnesota since Denard Span went deep against the Phillies on June 12, 2012.

Jamey Carroll promptly worked a walk and Morneau, who came into the game hitting .371 against Shields, added a two-run shot later in the first to stake the Twins to a 3-0 lead.

Shields continued to struggle with his command in the second inning, walking Chris Herrmann to lead it off and then plunking Clete Thomas. Doug Bernier laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt to move both runners up, and Herrmann scored on Dozier’s sacrifice fly.

Colabello hit his third homer of the year in the fourth, and then plunged Shields into more trouble with a leadoff single in the sixth. Herrmann added a single to put runners on the corners, and a balk by Shields on a pickoff move to third base brought in another run.

Dozier drove in his third run of the game with a single to make it 7-0.

It was the first time Shields allowed at least seven runs since Aug. 21, 2011, when he was still with Tampa Bay. The three homers he allowed were the most since June 2 of the same year.

”He just had trouble getting the ball down,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”Command was the issue most of the night for him. After the second inning it got a little better.”

Albers couldn’t have gotten a whole lot better.

The first big leaguer from Saskatchewan since 1991, when Terry Puhl retired, Albers showed promise when he was drafted by the Padres in 2008.

But he needed Tommy John surgery the next year and was released before showing what he could do with a rebuilt elbow, finally ending up with the Quebec Capitales of the Can-Am League when he was healthy enough to pitch again.

Albers failed to impress in a pair of big league tryouts in Arizona in 2011, but he was willing to drive at his own expense to Florida for another try with the Twins.

His only other option was to head home to North Battleford and get on with life, Albers showed just enough to earn himself a job.

”For a guy who’s not a prototypical prospect, for them to stick with me the way they have, it’s pretty special,” said Albers, who was 11-5 with a 2.86 ERA at Rochester before getting called upon to replace fellow Canadian Scott Diamond in the Twins’ rotation.

”You dream about this,” he said, ”but you never know if it’ll actually happen.”

— Associated Press —

Guthrie, Hosmer lead Kansas City to blowout win against Twins

RoyalsJeremy Guthrie pitched a four-hitter and Eric Hosmer drove in a career-high five runs to help the Kansas City Royals rout the Minnesota Twins 13-0 on Monday night.

The Royals, who have won 12 of their past 13 games, scored a season-high 13 runs.

Guthrie (12-7) won his fourth straight start to log his 12th victory, which is a career high. It was his second career shutout and he lowered his earned run average to 3.94. The right-hander retired the final 13 batters, did not allow a Twins runner to reach third base and only two touched second base. He struck out seven and walked one.

The Royals sent 11 men to the plate in a six-run second inning, which was highlighted by Mike Moustakas and Hosmer stroking two-run singles. Moustakas collected two hits in the inning.

The inning, also, included Lorenzo Cain walking with the bases loaded and a Billy Butler run-producing single.

Hosmer hit his 12th home run in the sixth with Jarrod Dyson and Cain aboard.

Moustakas, who had two hits in the second inning, went 4-for-5, matching his career high for hits.

Kevin Correia (7-8) was pulled after two innings and 16 batters faced, allowing six runs on seven hits and three walks. Correia has been rocked lately, not lasting more than two innings in two of his past three starts. He has given up 14 runs and 24 hits in just 9 2-3 innings. It got so bad that infielder Jamey Carroll pitched the eighth for the Twins, his first career big league outing on the mound. He retired the Royals in order.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City wins series finale against Mets; finishes road trip 8-1

RoyalsThings are going so well for the Kansas City Royals these days they have even figured out how to turn the sun in their favor.

And on the road.

The Royals beat the New York Mets 6-2 on a sun-splashed Sunday, winning for the 11th time in 12 games and finishing a franchise-best 8-1 road trip.

Ervin Santana scattered five hits and allowed one run in six innings, and Kansas City was helped by a pair of flyballs that Mets right fielder Marlon Byrd lost in the glare. Both came during a three-run fifth, with one falling for a double and the other glancing off his glove for an error.

”The sign of a good team is when there is mistakes made on the field, we take advantage,” said third baseman Mike Moustakas, who hit a solo homer. ”That sun out there in right field was terrible. You saw outfielders on both teams struggling.

”Luckily we didn’t have as many flyballs hit over there.”

The Royals posted their best mark ever on a trip of at least nine games. They pulled out this series with two wins after losing the opener on Friday night on Eric Young Jr.’s game-ending homer in the 11th inning.

”It was a tough loss the first night,” outfielder Alex Gordon said. ”A good team bounces back and forgets about it and comes out and wins the next two.”

Santana (8-6) has three wins and a no-decision in his past four starts, giving up a total of four earned runs. He is 5-1 since the beginning of June and has posted a 1.27 ERA since the All-Star break.

”Keep the ball down, throw strikes, and that’s it,” he said. ”That’s what I know I can do.”

Zack Wheeler (4-2) lost for the first time in six starts. He gave up four runs – three earned – and issued five walks, three to George Kottaras, in five innings. The light-hitting catcher was the only Royals player who batted not to have a hit. He also was struck by a pitch in going 0 for 1.

Wheeler wasn’t nearly as sharp as in his previous start Tuesday at Miami when he carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning, but the rookie right-hander was hurt by the defense behind him and behind the plate by catcher John Buck.

”It’s too bad we couldn’t hit the ball that high today and get their right fielder involved,” Mets manager Terry Collins said. ”Had it been a cloudy day, it’s 1-1.”

Wheeler fell behind 1-0 in the fourth inning on Moustakas’ 10th homer, and the Royals batted around in the fifth.

The trouble started right away when David Lough lofted a fly ball that Byrd got under but couldn’t catch as he battled the sun. Lough didn’t run hard out of the box, yet still made it to second base with a double.

Miguel Tejada bunted him to third, but Lough was forced to leave the game because of right quadriceps tightness. With Eric Hosmer batting, pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson scored on the first of Wheeler’s two wild pitches in the inning to make it 2-0.

Hosmer walked, and Gordon lofted a fly to deep right field that Byrd tracked to the fence. He again struggled with the sun, and the ball hit his mitt and fell to the ground, sending Gordon to second on the error.

”It was bad position on my part out there,” Byrd said. ”I chalk it up to, ‘I need to get better with sun balls.’ I can’t misplay two balls in a game like that.

”It’s tough knowing you’re the reason you lost the game. Somewhere, somehow I need to figure out a way to catch those.”

Lorenzo Cain then lined a shot to right that Byrd pulled up on and bobbled. Hosmer, who had held up, nearly got lapped by the speedy Gordon as both runners scored almost side by side to give the Royals a 4-0 lead.

Wheeler threw another wild pitch, and Buck was charged with a passed ball as Kansas City reloaded the bases. Wheeler struck out Santana looking to end the inning.

”Picking it up and getting past stuff in the field is something I’ve always prided myself in doing,” Wheeler said. ”It didn’t happen today.”

The Mets got one run back in the bottom half on Young’s RBI single. However, Byrd’s tough day continued when he struck out with the bases loaded.

Kansas City tacked on two runs in the sixth after Gonzalez Germen relieved Wheeler. Hosmer’s RBI single drove in Dyson, who had led off with a double. Gordon singled to make it 6-1.

Santana was left in to take his at-bat in the seventh inning in a sacrifice situation. Santana’s bunt found a hole between the mound and first base, giving him his fourth major league hit in 25 career at-bats. He hadn’t had a hit since 2011.

Buck, awaiting the imminent birth of his son, had an RBI single in the eighth to make it 6-2.

— Associated Press —

Maxwell’s 12th-inning home run lifts Royals past New York

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals are getting a healthy dose of National League baseball on their first trip to Citi Field.

While some of them are familiar with that style of play, they are a bit out of practice with it.

Royals manager Ned Yost found the perfect time to use pinch-hitter Jason Maxwell, and he responded with the tiebreaking homer in the 12th inning to lift Kansas City to a 4-3 victory over the New York Mets on Saturday.

Kansas City squandered a two-run lead in the eighth inning, but got back to a winning way just one day after its nine-game winning streak was broken.

”I got ready like three different times,” the newly acquired Maxwell said of his fifth major league pinch-homer and first of any kind since joining the Royals last week from Houston. ”I think it helps that I have experience in this situation. My first home run was a pinch-hit grand slam, and I hit three pinch-hit home runs last year.”

Maxwell homered deep into the left-field seats leading off the 12th for the Royals, who improved to 8-2 in extra innings after losing in the 11th on Friday.

Maxwell hit a 3-2 pitch from David Aardsma, who had fallen behind 3-0. The New York bullpen had been perfect after starter Jeremy Hefner left after six innings, but Aardsma couldn’t retire the first batter he faced.

”You can’t get behind like that because then you have to give him something to hit,” Aardsma said.

The Mets lost hours after putting All-Star third baseman David Wright on the disabled list with a hamstring injury. Wright hurt himself running out an infield hit Friday night and is expected to miss 3 to 5 weeks.

”It’s disappointing,” he said. ”I kind of came to the realization that I wasn’t going to be able to play today and probably not the next day. I will hopefully get this thing healthy as quickly as I can and get back on the field.”

Kelvin Herrera (4-5) earned the win with three innings of relief in which he walked one and struck out three without giving up a hit.

”I was able to throw breaking balls for strikes, and my changeup was really good,” he said. ”I pitched 3 1-3 (innings) in the minors earlier this year, but this was my longest outing here. You have to be ready to pitch whenever you’re asked.”

Greg Holland got the final three outs in the 12th for his 29th save in 31 chances and 22nd straight.

Aardsma (2-1), filling in while closer Bobby Parnell is sidelined with a sore neck, blew the save in the ninth inning Friday night before the Mets came back to win on Eric Young Jr.’s homer.

”Role has nothing to do with that,” Aardsma said. ”It’s my pitches. It’s attacking first pitch. Up here I’m not thinking of anything about any role, I’m just trying to execute my pitches, and I didn’t do that.”

The Mets, 9-3 in interleague play, provided the comeback Saturday by scoring two runs in the eighth on Josh Satin’s two-run single against Aaron Crow.

Bruce Chen put the Royals in position to win, pitching six strong innings. He gave up four hits, struck out eight and didn’t walk anyone in his fourth start of the season – all since July 12 – to lower his ERA to 2.03. He is 1-0 with three no-decisions as a starter and has gone exactly six innings in each outing.

Chen even singled and scored a run in the Royals’ three-run third.

”That three-run inning ended up being really huge for us, and I was glad to be a part of it,” Chen said. ”It felt really weird running the bases, I haven’t done that in a long time.”

Chen’s only blemish was Daniel Murphy’s home run leading off the second inning.

George Kottaras got that run back to start the Royals’ three-run third by homering off Jeremy Hefner, who was originally scheduled to pitch Sunday. Because of bullpen injuries, the Mets are going back to a five-man rotation until Jonathon Niese returns from a shoulder injury.

Hefner also worked six innings, allowing three runs, eight hits – including the 20th homer of the season. He walked no one and struck out six.

Hefner is 0-3 with two no-decisions in his past five starts. He gave up a total of 21 runs in his previous three outings.

After Murphy gave the Mets a 1-0 lead in the second with his ninth homer, the Royals came right back to grab the lead.

Kottaras’ fifth homer just eluded leaping Marlon Byrd in right field. Chen, Lorenzo Cain and Eric Hosmer followed with singles to load the bases, bringing up usual designated hitter Billy Butler, who made a rare start at first base.

Hefner struck out Butler, but Alex Gordon gave the Royals their first lead of the series with a sacrifice fly to deep right. Miguel Tejada added an RBI single, the second of his three hits.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City’s win streak ends with loss to Mets in 11 innings

RoyalsEric Young Jr. homered with two outs in the 11th inning and the New York Mets overcame a blown lead to beat Kansas City 4-2 on Friday night, snapping the Royals’ winning streak at nine.

Young slammed a 3-1 pitch from Luis Mendoza (2-6) over the right-field fence for his first career game-ending hit and just his second home run of the season. It scored Omar Quintanilla, who had walked.

The Mets led 2-0 on a first-inning homer by David Wright, but New York’s beat-up bullpen couldn’t protect it as Kansas City scored single runs in the eighth and ninth innings to tie it.

The Royals, whose surge matched the team’s fifth-longest winning streak, were trying for their first 10-game run since they won 14 straight in 1994.

Carlos Torres (2-2), New York’s scheduled starter for Saturday, worked two innings for the win in the 4 hour, 7 minute marathon.

— Associated Press —

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