Royals ride 8-run inning to rout of Red Sox
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[August 29, 2016]
BOSTON -- The surging Kansas
City Royals are getting serious about this repeating thing.
No team has won the World Series two consecutive years since the New
York Yankees did it in 1999 and 2000. But the 2015 champion Royals,
seven games under .500 entering play on Aug. 6, are right back in
the picture.
And they are getting contributions from up and down the roster.
"If you're going to have any kind of sustained winning streak, it's
got to be everybody," manager Ned Yost said after his team's
eight-run inning led to a 10-4 win over the Boston Red Sox in the
rubber game of the three-game series Sunday night. "It's got to be a
different guy every night."
Raul Mondesi's three-run triple highlighted the Royals' biggest
inning in three years, and left-hander Matt Strahm pitched 2 2/3
innings of no-hit ball for the win.
Both are rookies.
The win, Kansas City's 13th in the past 15 games and 17th in 21,
kept the Royals within three games of an American League wild-card
spot.
Kansas City (68-62) is 5 1/2 games behind the first-place Cleveland
Indians in the AL Central.
"We never quit or put our heads down," Mondesi said. "Everybody was
playing hard, and that's what happens.
"I was just happy to help. And then the rest of the team kept
playing."
Salvador Perez hit his third homer in two games, his 20th of the
season, in the second inning, and Kendrys Morales had three hits for
the Royals, who rebounded from a 4-2 deficit after Yordano Ventura
failed to get through five innings.
"Ventura just never really got in his groove," Yost said. "He just
was kind of fighting himself all night long."
An error by center fielder Paulo Orlando on Sandy Leon's long fly
ball keyed Boston's three-run fifth, and Yost pulled Ventura for
Strahm, a lefty, with David Ortiz coming up. Strahm got Ortiz to hit
into the Royals' fourth double play in five innings, and the Kansas
City offense struck in the sixth.
Seven consecutive Royals reached base in the sixth. The rally chased
both losing starter Eduardo Rodriguez (2-6) and reliever Matt
Barnes, who faced five batters and retired none.
"As hot as they are and the momentum they've been able to create, it
was a tough, tough sixth inning, obviously, when you put eight runs
up on the board," Boston manager John Farrell said.
The loss was the fourth in five games for the Red Sox, who fell two
games behind the first-place Toronto Blue Jays in the AL East.
Boston (72-58) is a game ahead of the Baltimore Orioles for the
first AL wild card.
Rodriguez, making his first start since leaving his Aug. 16 outing
at Baltimore due to hamstring rightness, was in front before the
Royals rang up their biggest inning since Aug. 5, 2013.
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Royals pitcher Yordano Ventura (30) reacts after being removed from
the game during the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at
Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports
"I thought Eddie came out and was trying to establish his release
point," Farrell said. "He was a little erratic at times, in the
middle of the plate, particularly to Perez, first-pitch fastball to
get them up on the board. Then he settled in -- innings three
through five."
Rodriguez gave up five runs on four hits and four walks in 5 1/3
innings. Ventura permitted four runs (three earned) on seven hits
and two walks in 4 1/3 innings.
Ortiz hit his 31st homer of the season, tying Jimmie Foxx for 18th
place on the all-time list with 534, and Xander Bogaerts (16-game
hitting streak against Kansas City) had a two-run single in a
three-run fifth inning for Boston.
It was Ortiz's 49th extra-base hit at Fenway this season. In the
past four years, only one player -- the Toronto Blue Jays' Josh
Donaldson last year -- had more extra base hits at home in a season.
Donaldson had 50, and Ortiz has five weeks left to top that mark.
NOTES: 2B Dustin Pedroia, who had a streak of 12 straight hits --
one shy of matching the major league record, snapped in his final
at-bat Saturday, was out of the Boston lineup attending a family
memorial service. ... Boston's RHP Rick Porcello, 12-0 at home this
season and trying to become the first Red Sox pitcher in 70 years to
start a season 13-0 at home), faces RHP Matt Andriese in the Monday
night series opener with Tampa Bay. The pair matched up last
Wednesday in St. Petersburg. Neither Andriese nor Porcello, 3-0
against the Rays this season, got a decision in the Rays' win. ...
The Royals send RHP Dillon Gee to the mound Monday in the opener of
a three-game home series against the New York Yankees. ... The Red
Sox honored New England Olympians Tessa Gobbo, Elle Logan, Gevvie
Stone (all rowing), Abbey D'Agostino (track, 5,000) Mike Hixon
(diving) and Kayla Harrison (judo) before the game.
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