Highlights of Monday's MLB games
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[June 28, 2016]
June 27 (the Sports Xchange) - Highlights of Major League
Baseball games on Monday:
Cubs 11, Reds 8
Kris Bryant had a historic night at the plate with three home runs,
two doubles and six RBIs, lifting the Chicago Cubs to an 11-8
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Bryant became the first player in major league history to hit three
homers and two doubles in a game. His 16 total bases were a
franchise record.
Bryant, who went 5-for-5, homered in consecutive at-bats, including
a three-run homer in the fourth, then went deep again in the eighth
when he and first baseman Anthony Rizzo hit back-to-back homers off
Ross Ohlendorf.
Jake Arrieta (12-2) also homered as part of a 17-hit outburst by the
Cubs as they overcame a rough outing for the right-handed ace.
Making his first start against the Reds since no-hitting them on
April 21, Arrieta gave up five earned runs and walked five in five
innings.
Rays 13, Red Sox 7
Tampa Bay ended its 11-game losing streak, tagging Boston starter
Eduardo Rodriguez for nine runs in the first three innings and
cruising to a win.
The Rays hadn't scored more than six runs during the losing streak,
but had six hits in the first eight batters and a 9-0 lead after
three.
The Rays got a career-high five RBIs from designated hitter Nick
Franklin, who got his first three hits of the season after being
recalled Tuesday.
Indians 8, Braves 3
Lonnie Chisenhall and Jason Kipnis homered, Trevor Bauer turned in
his sixth consecutive quality start and Cleveland stretched its
winning streak to 10 games with an interleague victory over Atlanta.
The three-run homer by Chisenhall and solo blast by Kipnis gave the
Indians 21 homers during the winning streak, and they have outscored
foes 68-22 over the 10 games.
Nationals 11, Mets 4
Ben Revere had four hits and stole three bases, Danny Espinosa had
three hits and drove in two runs and Anthony Rendon had two hits and
drove in three as hit-happy Washington overcame an early 4-0 deficit
to record a win against New York.
The first-place Nationals are now four games ahead of the Mets, who
won two of three in Washington last month. Washington tied a
franchise record with six steals in the game and had 17 hits.
Every starter in the Nationals starting lineup had at least one hit,
while Bryce Harper had two hits after batting just .232 in his
previous 15 games. Daniel Murphy added two hits for Washington to
lift his average to .350.
Royals 6, Cardinals 2
Danny Duffy pitched eight impressive innings and Kendrys Morales
continued his torrid streak with four hits and two RBIs as Kansas
City topped St. Louis Cardinals.
Duffy's outing matched the longest of his career. He gave up two
runs in the first inning and nothing after that. He allowed six
hits, struck out eight and walked none.
Duffy (3-1), who walked four in his previous start and lasted just
4-2/3 innings in a no-decision against the New York Mets, lowered
his ERA to 3.24.
Dodgers 5, Pirates 4
The Los Angeles Dodgers rode a four-run fifth inning to a 5-4 win
over the Pittsburgh Pirates, who blew an early 4-0 lead as the
Dodgers (42-36) ended an eight-game losing streak at PNC Park.
Dodgers starter Scott Kazmir (6-3), one of six Los Angeles pitchers,
allowed four runs on four hits in five innings. Kenley Jansen
pitched in the eighth and ninth for his 22nd save.
Pittsburgh starter Francisco Liriano (4-8) allowed five runs, four
of them earned, on four hits in 4-1/3 innings.
[to top of second column] |
Rockies 9, Blue Jays 5
The Colorado Rockies erupted for six runs in the seventh inning
Monday to beat the Toronto Blue Jays.
The game was close for six innings with the Blue Jays building a 4-0
lead thanks to Devon Travis' homer in the first and Edwin
Encarnacion's three-run shot with two outs in the sixth.
Carlos Gonzalez lofted a three-run homer to right in the bottom of
the innings and Nolan Arenado put the Rockies ahead 5-4 with a
two-run single in the seventh.
Phillies 8, Diamondbacks 0
Cesar Hernandez had three hits, including two hits and two RBIs in a
six-run seventh inning, and Odubel Herrera tied a career high with
four hits in Philadelphia's victory over Arizona.
Hernandez singled off left-hander Robbie Ray (4-7) to open the
seventh inning and scored on Cody Asche's hit-and-run double into
the right-field corner to give the Phillies a 3-0 lead.
Ray was removed with an apparent injury to his pitching hand, and
the Phillies broke the game open with four more runs off relievers
Jake Barrett and Josh Collmenter to make it 8-0.
Maikel Franco and Hernandez had two-run singles in the seventh to
complete the scoring for the Phillies.
Athletics 8, Giants 3
Marcus Semien blasted a three-run homer off former trade partner
Jeff Samardzija in a five-run second inning and rookie Daniel
Mengden posted his first major-league win with 7-2/3 strong innings
as Oakland blitzed San Francisco.
Semien drove in four runs and Khris Davis two.
Astros 4, Angels 2
Carlos Correa's sacrifice fly scored Jason Castro from third base in
the top of the ninth inning, breaking a tie and helping lift Houston
to a win over the Angels.
The Astros rallied in the later innings after falling behind 2-0
through six innings. Mike Trout scored both runs for Los Angeles,
hitting a solo homer in the fourth inning and scoring from second on
a C.J. Cron single after reaching on a double in the sixth. Trout
also had a double in the eighth.
The Astros put together their winning rally in the ninth when Castro
hit the first pitch of the inning by Fernando Salas for a double. A
walk to George Springer and a single by Luis Vabuena loaded the
bases for Jose Altuve.
Rangers 9, Yankees 6
Texas was annoyed with one out in the top of the ninth inning when
New York asked for the tarp to be put on the field because Aroldis
Chapman could not grip the ball.
Nearly four hours later, the dugout erupted in jubilation.
Adrian Beltre and Elvis Andrus created the joy with two-run singles
off Kirby Yates and the Rangers left Yankee Stadium with a win in a
game that was twice delayed by rain for nearly four hours and ended
7-1/2 hours after the scheduled first pitch.
Chapman took the mound with a heavy downpour and could not find the
strike zone, prompting Yankees manager Joe Girardi to ask umpires to
put the tarp on the field. Play was halted at 10:40 pm and the
Rangers were angered.
Players were yelling at umpires about how they had to pitch in the
same conditions and Banister made his feelings known during an
animated discussion with umpires that featured several hand gestures
before he headed back to the clubhouse.
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