Cueto, painting the corners and showing off his wide variety of
deliveries, went the full nine innings in posting the first complete
game in the World Series by an American League pitcher in 24 years
in windy, chilly conditions at Kauffman Stadium.
Not since the Minnesota Twins' Jack Morris beat the Atlanta Braves
in a 10-inning, Game Seven victory in the 1991 World Series, had an
American League hurler turned in such a performance.
"He was electric tonight," said Eric Hosmer, who supplied a clutch
two-out, two-run single in the fifth inning to give the Royals their
first lead of the game.
"It was the type of outing we needed, especially after the way we
used our bullpen last night. So just a huge outing from a big time
player."
Kansas City used seven pitchers in the 14-inning, 5-4 Royals victory
in Tuesday's Game One, but Cueto gave the entire bullpen the night
off with his dominant performance.
The dreadlocked righthander was locked in a pitcher's duel with Mets
ace Jacob deGrom until Kansas City came to bat in the fifth after
New York had grabbed a 1-0 lead in the fourth.
DeGrom had yielded just one hit over the first four innings but a
lead-off walk to Alex Gordon got it started and five singles later,
three of them after two outs, it was 4-1 for the home team and a
three-run burst in the eighth made it a rout.
FRUSTRATED METS
Mets manager Terry Collins was frustrated by his pitcher's
performance.
"It's the World Series. We've got to make pitches and we're not
making them," said Collins. "All of a sudden the ball's over the
middle of the plate. I don't know why.
"We win because we ride our starting pitching. When they struggle,
we're going to struggle, and that's what's happening."
Cueto, added by the Royals in a trade deadline deal in July, retired
15 batters in a row before giving up a two-out walk to Daniel Murphy
in the ninth before getting Yoenis Cespedes to fly out to right to
end it.
[to top of second column] |
The stocky Dominican had served as an ace with the Cincinnati Reds
before the impending free agent was sent to Kansas City in a trade
deadline deal in July.
Cueto delivered mediocre results for the Royals and was battered by
the Blue Jays on the road in the playoffs, giving up eight runs in
two innings.
But he was at his best when pitching at spacious Kauffman Stadium,
winning the clinching game at home in the AL Division Series against
Houston by retiring he last 19 batters in a two-hit outing over
eight innings.
Cueto showed again there was no place like home, when he confounded
the Mets with his deliveries, turning his back to the batter,
sometimes speeding up his motion and other times inserting a
hesitation before unleashing a pinpoint pitch.
"Tonight was everything we expected Johnny to be," said Royals
manager Ned Yost. "He was on the attack. He kept the ball down. He
changed speeds. It was just a spectacular performance by him."
The victory took the Royals, who lost last year's World Series in
seven games to the San Francisco Giants, halfway to winning their
first Fall Classic crown in 30 years with the series shifting to New
York for Game Three on Friday.
(Writing by Larry Fine in New York; Editing by Steve Keating.)
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