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Royals drop second straight game against Indians

RoyalsLonnie Chisenhall hit his first career grand slam, Scott Kazmir pitched into the seventh inning and the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 on Saturday night.

Chisenhall’s homer in the sixth broke open a 1-0 game and hit off the facing of the second deck in right field, landing in Kansas City’s bullpen.

Kazmir (5-4) allowed two runs in 6 1-3 innings for his first victory since June 21 as the Indians won for the fifth time in seven games.

Miguel Tejada’s RBI single in the seventh broke a streak of 22 consecutive scoreless innings for Kansas City, which has lost four in a row. Alcides Escobar’s infield hit with the bases loaded added two runs in the inning.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City gets shutout in series opener at Cleveland

RoyalsCorey Kluber kept the Cleveland Indians in the game long enough to get to Kansas City’s bullpen.

Kluber pitched into the eighth inning and pinch hitter Michael Bourn had a big two-run double, leading the Indians to a 3-0 win over the Royals on Friday night.

Cleveland got its first hit of the game against Bruce Chen in the fifth inning, but Kluber and two relievers made sure a three-run seventh was enough. Carlos Santana had an RBI single before Bourn came up his clutch swing.

Kluber (7-5) allowed three hits and struck out eight in 7 2-3 innings. The right-hander, a bright spot in a rotation that’s struggled most of the season, worked out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the fifth.

”He certainly stays composed,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. ”For a young pitcher, that’s a big compliment.”

Joe Smith recorded the final out in the eighth and Cody Allen struck out Jarrod Dyson with the bases loaded for his second save. The five-hitter was Cleveland’s American League-leading 12th shutout.

Allen was subbing for regular closer Chris Perez, who had appeared in five of the previous six games. Perez was on the disabled list from May 27 to June 26 with a sore right shoulder and missed time in spring training because of the injury.

Allen knew before the game that Perez was unavailable but wasn’t sure if he would get the call in the ninth.

”I thought it was going to be Joe,” Allen said. ”I knew the possibility was there.”

Composure was also a key for Allen. After allowing two singles, he walked pinch hitter George Kottaras but struck out Dyson to end the 32-pitch inning.

”I was trying to make one good pitch at a time,” Allen said. ”Obviously, I didn’t want to get into a bases-loaded situation but that’s where I was.”

Chen pitched six innings of one-hit ball in his first start of the season. Santana’s leadoff double in the fifth was Cleveland’s only hit off Chen, who struck out four and walked one while throwing 97 pitches.

Cleveland’s lineup seemed to wake up after Chen was pulled. Tim Collins (2-4) gave up singles to All-Star Jason Kipnis and Nick Swisher to begin the seventh before being relieved by Aaron Crow.

Santana then lined a single to center. Dyson charged the ball and made a strong throw home but Kipnis slid around catcher Salvador Perez’s tag and touched the plate with his left hand.

Mark Reynolds, mired in a 2-for-31 slump this month, reached on a bunt hit to the left of the mound to load the bases. Bourn, batting for Ryan Raburn, then singled to right-center to give Cleveland a 3-0 lead.

Reynolds is known for putting up big home run and strikeout numbers, making the bunt quite the play at the time.

”That caught everybody on the Royals, in the stands, in the press box and me by surprise, but it might have won us a game,” Francona said.

Kluber got out of big trouble in the fifth. David Lough started the inning with a triple but held at third when Alcides Escobar grounded out to second. Elliot Johnson walked and stole second before Dyson walked.

Alex Gordon, who hit a grand slam off Kluber in Kansas City on July 2, struck out. Kluber fielded Eric Hosmer’s slow roller to the left of the mound and ran to first for the putout.

Kluber has been able to pitch out of several jams in his 15 starts in his first full season in the majors.

”I stepped back and took a deep breath,” he said. ”All I can do is calm down, execute pitches and get out of it.”

Gordon drew a one-out walk in the eighth. Kluber, who won for the fourth time in his last five decisions, was removed after striking out Hosmer and received a loud ovation from the crowd of 24,077.

Chen replaced struggling right-hander Luis Mendoza in the rotation. Chen was 3-0 with a 2.41 ERA in 19 relief appearances before being moved to the rotation.

”I did everything I could to help us win, but Kluber was just a little bit better,” Chen said ”Sometimes you have to give credit because he made some great pitches and pitched out of some tough situations.”

— Associated Press —

Royals blow early lead and lose finale against Yankees

RoyalsDerek Jeter walked to home plate, toyed with his batting gloves, stepped into the batter’s box as fans chanted his name and legged out an infield hit.

A feeling of normalcy returned to the Yankee Stadium. The captain was back after a nine-month layoff.

But, perhaps, only for a few innings.

Jeter singled on his first pitch of the season, then felt a tight right quadriceps and was pulled for a pinch-hitter in the eighth inning of New York’s 8-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Thursday.

He scored a run and went 1 for 4 with an RBI groundout as the designated hitter in his return from a broken ankle sustained in last October’s AL championship series opener. After icing the leg, the 39-year-old was headed to a hospital for a scan.

In a season thus far memorable for sidelined stars rather than sustained success, the Yankees anxiously awaited the test results.

”It’s not frustrating, yet. We’ll see. They MRI everything around here,” Jeter said. ”I hope it’s not a big deal.”

Known for trying to ignore most injuries, Jeter vowed not to this time. Sort of.

”I can’t trick the tests,” he said, before adding: ”I always play.”

He played through September and into October last year with what was called a bone bruise. The left ankle finally gave out in the AL championship series opener against Detroit.

”I don’t think it broke because I was 38. I think it broke because I continued to play on something that maybe I shouldn’t have,” Jeter said.

The possible setback is not what the Yankees were hoping for in a season also hampered by significant injuries to first baseman Mark Teixeira, Curtis Granderson and Francisco Cervelli.

”It’s kind of what we went through this year,” manager Joe Girardi said. ”So hopefully it’s nothing, it’s just some leg tightness and he’ll be ready to go.”

Andy Pettitte (7-6) settled down after another shaky first inning to win consecutive starts for the first time since April. Lyle Overbay hit a go-ahead, two-run single in a four-run fifth against Ervin Santana (5-6) as New York overcame a 3-0 deficit and split the four-game series.

New York cut short the star shortstop’s rehabilitation assignment in the minor leagues after just four games following injuries Wednesday night to Travis Hafner and Brett Gardner, who hit for Jeter in the eighth. Jeter found out about 11 p.m. in Scranton, Pa., went back to his hotel, waited for his equipment and caught a ride to New York. He arrived about 2:30 a.m., fell asleep 90 minutes later.

And then woke up about 6:30 a.m. – only partly because of the early schedule he had been on during his rehabilitation routine.

”Couldn’t fall back asleep,” he said. ”I was nervous going into the game. It’s almost like it’s opening day for me, even though we’re in – what are we in, July now? I lost track of the months.”

Jeter batted second in his first big league game since Oct. 13. He said after the initial injury he would return by opening day, then fractured the ankle again in April during his rehab and missed the first 91 games of the season.

Jeter turned on a 95 mph fastball in the first – ”I had my mind made up yesterday that I was going to swing at the first pitch” – and sent a three-hopper up the third-base line that fell from Miguel Tejada’s throwing hand. The crowd of 40,381 screamed ”De-rek Je-ter! De-rek Je-ter!”

Jeter’s ankle got more tests when he raced to third on Robinson Cano’s single up the middle and came home without a throw on Vernon Wells’ sacrifice fly to right.

The Yankees’ all-time hits leader grounded out in the second and again in the fifth, when second baseman Johnny Giavotella made a diving stop to prevent an RBI single. That’s when the quad tightened.

Jeter hit a sharp grounder to shortstop with the infield in during the sixth. Alcides Escobar bobbled the ball as Luis Cruz scored from third, and Jeter was thrown out as he jogged up the first-base line.

”He looked the same,” Santana said. ”Very aggressive.”

Jeter had not been introduced at Yankee Stadium by Bob Sheppard’s recording in 271 days, since he sprawled onto his stomach while trying to field Jhonny Peralta’s 12th-inning grounder up the middle, immobile on the infield dirt and yelled out in pain.

”It’s awesome to have him back out there. He’s so positive,” Pettitte said. ”We need his leadership ability.”

Jeter went 1 for 9 in his tuneup at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. After initially saying Jeter could play shortstop in Friday’s series opener against Minnesota, Girardi said he likely would DH again if healthy.

”I think it’s easy to say that you would expect with his age and a double break that I think he’d lose a step or two or half a step, but I think he’s moving extremely well from what I’m told,” general manager Brian Cashman said.

Girardi’s task will be preventing Jeter from playing too much.

”I think Derek would run himself out there the next 70 games if it was up to him,” Girardi said. ”W(equals)e have to pick days off, and we have to pick DH days.”

Kansas City took a 3-0 lead in the first when Salvador Perez hit a two-run double and Lorenzo Cain had a sacrifice fly. The Royals’ only other run was unearned, set up by Pettitte’s throwing error on a second-inning bunt.

New York closed to 4-3 in the second when Austin Romine hit an RBI double and scored on Eduardo Nunez’s single. After Overbay’s two-out, go-ahead hit, Zoilo Almonte and Nunez followed with run-scoring singles for a 7-4 lead.

With Jeter in the lineup, his teammates seemed to relax.

”The fans were great, gave me a nice ovation,” Jeter said. ”It’s been a long time.”

— Associated Press —-

Home Run’s hurt Kansas City in 8-1 loss at New York

RoyalsOnce the New York Yankees finally broke through with the bats, they turned it into an easy night for Ivan Nova.

Robinson Cano hit a three-run homer, Lyle Overbay added a grand slam and New York snapped out of its offensive funk with an 8-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday.

”We needed that really bad,” Cano said.

Nova delivered another impressive pitching performance and the Yankees, held to one run each of the previous three days, stopped a three-game slide.

But it wasn’t all good news. Depleted by injuries all season, New York had two more players get banged up in slumping Travis Hafner and speedy Brett Gardner.

Hafner came out of the game with a bruised left foot, while Gardner departed with a bruised right leg after getting hit by a pitch for the second time. The team said X-rays on both were negative and they were day to day.

Hafner got hurt while swinging in the indoor cage during the middle innings. He cranked the pitching machine up near 100 mph and fouled one off his foot.

”Just kind of a freak incident,” Hafner said, adding he thinks he should be all right. ”That’s a first.”

Said manager Joe Girardi: ”I don’t get summoned to the cage very often.”

Gardner also walked twice and scored two runs. He reached base all four times from the leadoff spot.

Nova (4-2) yielded only four singles and a double in eight innings for his second win in three solid starts since returning from the minors. He struck out six and walked two.

”He has that kind of stuff that he can be one of the best in the game,” Cano said.

The right-hander was coming off his first career complete game, a three-hitter against Baltimore last Friday that included 11 strikeouts.

”Same thing. Pretty good downhill with his fastball, really good curveball and mixed in a few changeups. I mean, that’s kind of the formula for him. When his fastball’s like this, he’s going to get a lot of outs,” Girardi said. ”It should help his confidence. … He’s back on track.”

Cano and Overbay both connected off Wade Davis (4-8), who dropped his third consecutive start.

”I fell behind when I was in the stretch with runners on. I left bad pitches up in the zone,” Davis said.

With the Yankees still waiting for injured stars Derek Jeter, Curtis Granderson and Alex Rodriguez to return, Girardi said he wasn’t particularly tempted to shuffle his makeshift lineup in an attempt to spark the offense.

”What would you suggest?” he asked a reporter before the game. ”This is what it is.”

No changes necessary on this night.

Gardner drew a leadoff walk in the first and scored on a wild pitch. With two outs in the third, Cano stayed back on a 1-1 breaking ball and drove it just over the left-center fence. It was the 21st homer of the season for Cano, the American League captain for the Home Run Derby next Monday night across town at Citi Field.

Cano singled to start the sixth and New York loaded the bases with none out for Overbay. He lofted a full-count pitch a few rows deep to the opposite field in left for his fourth career slam and first since May 10, 2006, with Toronto.

”The little things set us up for those big hits,” Overbay said. ”I’m just glad I put a swing on it and put it in the outfield for (at least) a sac fly. I can’t remember how many times I’ve struck out with the bases loaded.”

Davis crouched in disappointment next to the mound and was pulled from the game. He allowed eight runs, matching a career high, and six hits in his second ineffective start this season against the Yankees. They tagged him for seven runs and seven hits May 10 during a three-game sweep in Kansas City.

”Wade threw fine. The numbers don’t always tell the story,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Meanwhile, Nova was cruising thanks to a 93-95 mph fastball and sharp curve. Helped by Luis Cruz’s diving grab at third base, he retired 12 straight before loading the bases with two outs in the fifth. After a visit from pitching coach Larry Rothschild, the right-hander set down Alcides Escobar on a shallow fly.

Cano doubled off the very top of the right-center wall in the seventh, but was thrown out by Lorenzo Cain trying to stretch it into a triple.

Cano also had some fun with double-play partner Eduardo Nunez on a second-inning popup that was caught by the shortstop on Cano’s side of second base. Cano casually folded his arms in mock disbelief as the ball descended and then shot Nunez a nasty look before cracking a smile.

Eric Hosmer hit an RBI double with two outs in the eighth for Kansas City.

— Associated Press —

Royals rally for second straight win at Yankees

RoyalsJames Shields caught a break, thanks to Lorenzo Cain and a fleet of Kansas City fielders.

Shields escaped early trouble when Cain ran down a deep drive with the bases loaded, Billy Butler and David Lough backed their ace with home runs and the Royals handed the New York Yankees their third straight loss, 3-1 Tuesday night.

Cain contributed four nifty catches, and Shields appreciated each gem by the speedy center fielder.

”He seemed like he ran a little more than he usually does,” Shields said. ”I told him maybe I’ll pay for a massage.”

Said Cain: ”Sounds good to me.”

Defensive replacement Elliot Johnson ranged a long way for a late grounder and Kansas City backed Shields (4-6) with a pair of double plays. Fittingly, the game ended on a fine, twisting grab by another defensive sub, third baseman Mike Moustakas.

Beset by a lack of run support, Shields had won just once in his previous 12 starts, and came in with a losing record despite a 3.23 ERA and ranking among the AL leaders in several pitching categories.

Shields gave up five hits – including three consecutive singles to start the game, and four in the first overall – in seven innings. He struck out five, walked two and retired his final 13 batters.

”Forget the record. The record has nothing to do with how he’s pitched,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”He’s been as good as you would hope a No. 1 starter can be.”

Shields improved to 8-15 against the Yankees after overcoming a rocky start. Brett Gardner led off with a bunt single and Ichiro Suzuki and Robinson Cano also singled for a run. New York loaded the bases with one out, but Shields fanned Lyle Overbay and wiggled out of trouble when Cain ran down Eduardo Nunez’s fly far into the right-center field alley.

If that ball eluded him, Cain agreed, ”the game is out of control.”

CC Sabathia (9-7) gave up seven hits in his second complete game.

Once again, the Yankees had trouble scoring. They’ve managed exactly one run in each of their last three games – not since 2005 had they scored one run or fewer in three straight, STATS said.

”Any time you put four hits in an inning, you think you’ll get more than one run,” manager Joe Girardi said.

As for Sabathia and the Yankees’ staff, ”I think they are pitching pretty good. They’re throwing pretty good ballgames. We’re just not scoring runs for them,” Girardi said.

The hitting slump left the Yankees with a three-game home losing streak for the first time since they dropped four in a row in late July 2012.

Lough led off the sixth inning with a tying home run and Butler opened the seventh with a go-ahead shot. Butler hit 29 homers last year and was an All-Star, but has slumped this season – he came into this series with six homers before connecting in the first two games.

”Got one yesterday, got one today,” Butler said.

Greg Holland worked the ninth for his 22nd save, and second in two nights.

The Royals are trying to win a series at Yankee Stadium for only the second time since the beginning of the 2000 season. Thanks to Shields and the bullpen, they’re 2-0 in this four-game set.

Shields didn’t give up a hit after the second inning, sometimes pitching in rain and even hail.

”It was nice to settle down,” he said.

Sabathia allowed only one hit until Lough homered. Butler’s shot was the 20th homer yielded by Sabathia this season, second-most in the majors to the 21 off Kansas City’s Jeremy Guthrie.

Doubles by Alcides Escobar and Eric Hosmer gave Kansas City an insurance run in the ninth.

— Associated Press —

Guthrie, Royals win series opener at New York

RoyalsJeremy Guthrie was on a roll – against the Yankees, no less. Neither hail nor sun shower was going to stop him. No way.

Guthrie neatly handled a nemesis and a 59-minute delay to pitch into the seventh inning, Billy Butler homered and the Kansas City Royals held on to beat New York 5-1 Monday night.

”Tremendous competitor,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said of Guthrie. ”He showed it today – to endure an hour rain delay and go out and throw at the level that he threw.”

All-Star Alex Gordon, David Lough and Johnny Giavotella each had RBI doubles, and Alcides Escobar added a run-scoring triple to help the Royals end a five-game skid against New York.

”It’s been tough every year I’ve been here to come in and get a win,” Butler said. ”It means a lot.”

Guthrie (8-6) gave up three hits over six innings, albeit to a Yankees lineup that had only four players that were with the team on opening day.

Leading 5-1, closer Greg Holland was needed in the ninth when Lyle Overbay walked and Luis Cruz singled to start the inning against Luke Hochevar. Holland gave up a hit to Chris Stewart to load the bases. But Holland struck out Eduardo Nunez, Brett Gardner and Zoilo Almonte to end it for his 21st save.

”Holly’s been lights out for us,” Yost said.

Guthrie twice struck out the newest member in pinstripes, Travis Ishikawa, before Overbay homered pinch hitting for the first baseman who was claimed off waivers from Baltimore on Sunday. Overbay’s 10th of the year was New York’s first long ball in six games.

”Not an easy lineup to pitch, too,” he said. ”Obviously they have their injuries now and are missing a lot of keys so you go out there and try to attack them as best as you can.”

Entering 4-9 with a 5.15 ERA against the Yankees in 17 appearances – 15 starts – Guthrie left with runners on first and third and two outs in the seventh. Tim Collins relieved and struck out pinch-hitter Nunez to protect a 3-1 lead.

Aaron Crow relieved Collins in the eighth with two on, two out and got Vernon Wells to ground out to second.

The Yankees have lost two in a row after a season-best six straight wins.

With the sun reflecting off the windows of a building beyond center field, rain and hail sent fans scurrying for cover in the bottom of the third inning. The quick moving cloud was gone before Phil Hughes (4-8) threw his first pitch of the fourth. Hughes retired three straight with the faintest of rainbows arcing over the scoreboard, then the rain returned.

After Guthrie got an out with his 37th pitch, crew chief Dana DeMuth called for the tarp. As ”Singin’ in the Rain” blared over the PA system, the grounds crew struggled to cover the increasingly muddy infield, getting stuck halfway then pulling the huge sheet off and starting again. The biggest cheer of the night – until Overbay’s homer in the seventh – came when the crew finished the job.

Guthrie’s previous outing was delayed by rain at the start for over 2 hours, 30 minutes, then for 12 more minutes in the seventh by a power outage. He was better prepared for the break this time.

”After last game I was trying treat it a little bit different, be a little more focused,” he said.

The right-hander threw every 10 to 15 minutes in the batting cage to stay warm, treating the time as if it were a game.

Guthrie completed the fourth on six pitches.

Adam Warren replaced Hughes to start the fifth. Hughes gave up two runs and four hits in his abbreviated outing.

”He had already thrown a lot and with him coming back second, it would have been an hour-and-15-minute break for him,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. ”I wasn’t real comfortable bringing him back after an hour or so.”

Hughes would’ve liked to stay if only because he finally felt as if he had got in a groove after the second.

”It’s tough. I felt like I really found something,” he said. In the third and fourth innings I felt pretty good, but that’s baseball.”

Passed over for the Home Run Derby last year at the All-Star game in Kansas City by AL captain Robinson Cano, Butler sent a drive the opposite way to right field leading off the second. Fans relentlessly booed Cano at Butler’s home field during the competition last July. Captain of the AL home run team again this year, Cano again did not choose Butler – the Orioles’ Chris Davis and Detroit’s Prince Fielder were his first two picks announced Monday. But it would be hard to object this time. Butler’s long ball was only his seventh – and he’s not on the All-Star team.

An out later, Mike Moustakas lined an opposite-field double to left, and Lough made it 2-0 with a shot that just landed fair down the third base line for a double the opposite way.

Royals center fielder Jarrod Dyson helped preserve the 3-0 lead in sixth when he made a diving catch of Almonte’s sinking liner in right-center with Gardner on first.

”I think the game was won with the Dyson play,” Guthrie said.

Giavotella drove in a run in the seventh, and Gordon and Escobar had back-to-back RBIs in the ninth.

— Associated Press —

Royals get clobbered by A’s in series finale

RoyalsJosh Reddick homered and drove in four runs for the Oakland Athletics on Sunday. Jed Lowrie had three hits, including a homer of his own.

So when Eric Sogard went deep, who really cared?

”There was no home run tunnel or anything,” the light-hitting Sogard joked of a rather muted home run celebration that awaited him after rounding the bases during a 10-4 win over the Kansas City Royals. ”They were probably surprised I hit one.”

Sogard went without a homer in 260 at-bats, since April 27, 2012.

It was that kind of day for the Oakland offense, though. The A’s pounded out 15 hits, and everybody in the starting lineup except Chris Young had one against the Royals’ haphazard pitching.

”We got some runs early,” said Josh Donaldson, who had a pair of hits. ”Then it seemed like every time they got a run our offense would answer right back.”

A.J. Griffin (7-6) rebounded from a miserable start against the Cubs to go five innings for the A’s. The only damage he allowed came on solo homers by George Kottaras and Alex Gordon.

Jesse Chavez earned his first career save with four scoreless innings of relief.

”Saved the bullpen, that’s all I was trying to do,” Chavez said.

Luis Mendoza (2-5) allowed five runs in the second inning for the Royals, and was yanked to a round of boos after retiring just four batters. It was the right-hander’s shortest start in exactly five years – since an outing on July 7, 2008, when he was still with Texas.

”He fell behind early, which puts you in a defensive mode,” Kottaras said. ”Once he falls behind, hitters can look for a pitch in a certain zone and took advantage of it. It happens.”

It’s happened twice in a row now: Mendoza gave up four runs on six hits and four walks in just four innings his last time out against Cleveland. He hasn’t won since June 14 at Tampa Bay.

”A rough outing really for our pitching staff today,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Mendoza’s struggles began with a single in the second by Yoenis Cespedes. John Jaso added a one-out walk and Reddick’s line drive to left gave Oakland a 2-0 lead.

Mendoza struck out Chris Young before another double by Sogard and back-to-back singles by Coco Crisp and Lowrie knocked him from the game. Chen came in from the bullpen and gave up another base hit to Josh Donaldson before finally getting out of the inning.

Kottaras got the home crowd energized with his homer in the second, but the A’s refused to let the Royals engineer another five-run comeback like they did Thursday against Cleveland. Jaso’s one-out single set the table for Reddick, who launched his fourth homer of the year.

After a breakthrough year in which he hit 32 homers, Reddick had been scuffling until he got to Kansas City. He was hitting just .210 with three homers and 25 RBIs in his first 57 games, but found the expansive outfield off Kauffman Stadium to be to his liking.

”Reddick’s been swinging the bat really well here recently,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said, ”and that’s the next step, to start driving the ball.”

Gordon, who missed the first game of the series after a scary collision with the outfield wall earlier in the week, validated his first All-Star nod a day earlier with his homer. His ninth of the season came with two outs in the fifth inning.

Lowrie answered it with a solo shot of his own in the sixth.

The Royals tried to rally again in the bottom half off A’s reliever Jerry Blevins. Mike Moustakas hit an RBI double and Miguel Tejada an RBI single in which he beat a throw to first with a head-first slide. Chavez ended the rally when he retired Eric Hosmer with the bases loaded.

Sogard’s two-run homer in the seventh ended any thoughts of another Royals comeback.

”We’re in the middle of a tough stretch,” Yost said. ”It started here. We’re 3-3 in this tough stretch. The Yankees are tough, a four-game series. And it’s going to be a tough three-game series in Cleveland. We’ve got to continue to play good baseball if we’re going to be successful this next week. We’re going to have to grind it out and try to find a way to win some ball games.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas City’s Gordon & Perez selected to MLB All-Star Game

RoyalsMajor League Baseball announced Saturday that Kansas City Royals outfielder Alex Gordon and catcher Salvador Perez have been named American League All-Stars.  Both Royals will be making their first All-Star appearances at the 79th annual Midsummer Classic at Citi Field in New York on Tuesday, July 16.  Both Gordon and Perez were elected to the team via the player vote.

This marks the first time since the 2003 All-Star Game that the Royals have had more than one player representative.  Gordon is the first KC outfielder to be selected to the team since Jermaine Dye in 2000, while Perez is the first Royals’ catcher to be named an All-Star since Darrell Porter in 1980.  Porter was also selected in 1978, but did not play, while the only other catcher in franchise history to attend the All-Star festivities was the first Royal All-Star, Ellie Rodriguez in 1969.

Gordon, a six-year veteran with Kansas City, is batting .290 with 15 doubles, 8 homers and 46 RBI in 81 games.  He came into play Saturday leading the American League in 2-out hitting (.374), tied with Alex Rios for the league-lead in outfield assists (8) and was 10th in the league with 29 multi-hit games.  He had a 12-game hitting streak earlier this season and had walk-off hits against Toronto (April 14), the Chicago White Sox (May 5) and Atlanta (June 26).

Perez is in his second full year in the Major Leagues and is hitting .302 with 15 doubles, 4 homers, 36 RBI in 71 games.  He ranks second among A.L. catchers in batting average (.302) and is third in the league with a .403 average with runners in scoring position.  He has thrown out 10 would-be base stealers, which is tied for third-most in the American League.  He had an 11-game hitting streak from June 5-15 and has 21 RBI since June 1.

— Royals Media Relations —

Dyson helps Royals rally past Oakland

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals are starting to embrace quite the never-say-quit mentality.

Trailing in the seventh inning? No need to worry.

Game tied in the eight? Perfect position.

Jarrod Dyson delivered an infield single with the bases loaded and two outs on Saturday, and stingy closer Greg Holland preserved the Royals’ scrappy 4-3 victory over Oakland with a perfect ninth inning that gave Kansas City its first win over the Athletics this season.

”Sometimes games aren’t going to go our way, but we aren’t going to hang our heads,” said Dyson, who snapped an 0-for-11 skid with three hits. ”We’re going to keep battling. You can see it in here, see it out there. Everybody is working hard every day.”

The Royals had rallied to tie the game on a sacrifice fly by Eric Hosmer in the seventh, and then loaded the bases on an error and a pair of walks by reliever Ryan Cook in the eighth.

Dyson, hardly known for his power, showed bunt on his first pitch from Cook (1-2) before hitting a grounder deep behind second base. Shortstop Adam Rosales fielded it cleanly but didn’t even bother with a throw as pinch runner Alcides Escobar scored the go-ahead run.

It was an error on Rosales that kept the inning alive.

”It’s going to stick with me for a little while,” he said.

Aaron Crow (6-3) worked the eighth and Holland handled the ninth for his 20th save, wrapping up Kansas City’s first win in five tries against Oakland this season.

”They’ve been grinder games. Their pitching staff is very, very good. Their starting rotation is very good,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”We just scrapped it. We scrapped it out.”

Mike Moustakas homered and Billy Butler drove in a run for the Royals, while Alex Gordon walked three times and reached on an error in his return to the lineup. He’d missed the last two games after a scary collision with the outfield wall Wednesday night against Cleveland.

”Once I got the Adrenaline going and did some work, it felt pretty good,” Gordon said.

Josh Donaldson homered and drove in two runs to lead the A’s, who struck right away when Josh Reddick sent an RBI single to center field in the first inning.

The Royals tried to get the run back in the bottom half when Miguel Tejada singled and reached second on a groundout. Moments later, Elliot Johnson hit a grounder toward third with two outs and appeared to be safe when the throw pulled first baseman Brandon Moss off the bag.

Umpire Marty Foster ruled him out, though, and never wavered from his decision despite some rather animated objections from Yost and first base coach Rusty Kuntz.

A bright sun and flat sky started to cause problems after that.

The A’s had two aboard with one out in the third when Donaldson hit a high popup down the right-field line. Johnson chased it from second and outfielder David Lough sprinted in from right while Hosmer tried to camp under it from first base – all to no avail.

The ball fell in fair territory, allowing John Jaso to score for a 2-0 lead.

In the bottom half of the inning, Dyson led off with a weak pop foul behind the plate, but Jaso couldn’t locate the ball in the sun after discarding his mask. The A’s catcher comically had to cover his head with his glove while the ball plopped onto the field next to him.

Dyson followed with a single to right, and after a stolen base and errant pickoff throw, he scampered home from third on Butler’s groundout to get the Royals within 2-1.

Moustakas added his two-out homer in the fourth to tie the game, and Donaldson’s solo shot leading off the sixth restored Oakland’s one-run cushion. The Royals knotted the game again when they loaded the bases with one out in the seventh and Hosmer hit a sacrifice fly to center.

Jarrod Parker wound up going 6 1-3 innings for the A’s after leaving his last start with tightness in his right hamstring, but it was the bullpen that let them down.

”That was a very poor game,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. ”The way we started and the way we ended. A very bad game for us.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas City loses series opener to Oakland

RoyalsTommy Milone shut out the Kansas City Royals for eight innings, and then got in just enough trouble in the ninth to ensure that Grant Balfour would have a nice, easy save chance.

A save that will go down in Oakland history, too.

Balfour gave up a run-scoring single to Billy Butler before retiring the final two batters of the game Friday night, preserving the A’s 6-3 victory and notching his 40th consecutive save to tie Hall of Famer Dennis Eckersley’s franchise record.

”You know, it’s an accomplishment. Definitely,” Balfour said. ”I don’t like to look into it too much – I’m superstitious, obviously. But I never knew about this, and it’s not something I set out to do. It just happened. I still have a lot of work to do.”

Balfour has 22 saves this season to match the mark that Eckersley set from Sept. 15, 1991-Aug. 7, 1992, this one helping the A’s (51-36) win for the seventh time in their last nine games.

”That’s pretty remarkable, but when you look at Grant, it’s not surprising what he’s able to do,” Milone said. ”That’s pretty cool for him. I’m happy.”

Happy enough to get into trouble in the ninth for him?

”We can go there if you want,” Milone said, grinning. ”Yeah, I guess.”

Milone (8-7) was in control before Alcides Escobar and Eric Hosmer drove in runs to get the Royals within 6-2 with one out in the ninth. Balfour came on and gave up the single to Butler, but he managed to retire Lorenzo Cain and Mike Moustakas to end the game.

”Like him, I don’t like to talk about it a whole lot, but you’re asking me the question,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said of Balfour’s save streak. ”Pretty phenomenal.”

Milone, who had been battered in his last three starts, outpitched Wade Davis (4-7) in another strong night from Oakland’s pitching staff. The A’s had put together 18 1-3 innings without giving up a run before the Royals plated their three in the ninth.

Milone was two outs shy of racking up Oakland’s third shutout in its last eight games.

”A tough eight innings. Tommy Milone was really on top of his game,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”What makes him so tough on nights like tonight, he can command his fastball to both sides of the plate, but when that changeup is on, it’s almost unhittable.”

The recent history for Milone and Davis pointed to runs-a-plenty on Friday night. Milone had been struggling lately, and Davis was yanked after one-plus inning last Saturday.

So naturally, the two of them took turns mowing through hitters.

Milone retired his first 11 batters, and only twice allowed a ball to get out of the infield through the first three innings. The left-hander finally gave up a single to Hosmer with two outs in the fourth, but that was it until David Lough’s two-out single in the sixth.

”We were just trying to take pitches and try to see as many pitches as possible,” said the Royals’ Lorenzo Cain, ”but he was pounding the zone.”

Davis only needed 10 pitches to get through the first inning against Oakland, and the right-hander set down nine straight before Josh Reddick’s double in the third. Eric Sogard came through with a timely single to shallow left field that gave the scrappy A’s a 1-0 lead.

Davis cruised through the fourth, and then issued a leadoff walk to John Jaso in the fifth. Reddick followed with a triple to right, and he scampered home on Coco Crisp’s sacrifice fly.

The A’s added three more in the ninth, two of them when Cain misplayed a line drive in right field that bounced off his glove – ”I just flat-out missed it,” he said.

The Royals tried to rally in the ninth behind back-to-back doubles by Lough and Escobar, and consecutive singles by Hosmer and Butler. But the unflappable Balfour got Cain and Moustakas on harmless groundouts to record his historic save.

”I hope you’re not jinxing him by talking about it,” Reddick said with a smile.

— Associated Press —

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