Royals

Red Sox rout Chris Young and the Royals 13-2


David Ortiz launched a solo home run in the fourth inning, one of three home runs by Red Sox hitters as Boston beat the Royals 13-2 on Sunday at Kauffman Stadium.
David Ortiz launched a solo home run in the fourth inning, one of three home runs by Red Sox hitters as Boston beat the Royals 13-2 on Sunday at Kauffman Stadium. JSLEEZER@KCSTAR.COM

The Boston Red Sox had home-run power, gap power, and every other kind of power that can be displayed in a 13-2 rout of the Royals before 37,975 on Sunday at Kauffman Stadium.

They hit for the team cycle with three home runs, two triples, eight doubles and three singles, and Mookie Betts nearly achieved the feat, lacking only a single.

Much of the damage, and all of the home runs, was absorbed by Chris Young, who had been the Royals’ top starter since joining the rotation in May.

“I needed to be better than I was,” Young said after the game. “I didn’t give the team a chance, and it’s disappointing. Over the course of the season, you’re going to have a few of them. It’s not enjoyable by any means.”

Young could live with the first two home runs. Hanley Ramirez hit a moon shot to left in the second, and David Ortiz’s blast in the fourth was career No. 476, passing Stan Musial and Willie Stargell for No. 29 on baseball’s career home-run list. Both came with nobody on base.

“Chances are the two solo home runs don’t beat you,” Young said, but Young (6-3) couldn’t contain the trouble in the fifth and that was his undoing.

Betts cracked a two-run homer to make it 4-0, and the Red Sox loaded the bases when Xander Bogaerts cleared them with a double.

“It wasn’t horrible until the fifth, then the wheels came off,” Young said.

Young walked to the dugout down 7-0 after 4 2/3 innings with his worst outing of the season. He had surrendered six runs in five innings against the Cleveland Indians on June 4.

Entering the game, Young owned a 1.98 ERA and had tossed 13 1/3 consecutive scoreless innings. That streak grew by an inning with a scoreless first and is the longest by a Royals starter this year.

“Nobody’s going nail it every time they go out there,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “It was just one of those days when he wished his fast ball command had been better.”

After Young’s departure, the Red Sox weren’t finished hitting or making history. They tagged Jason Frasor and Aaron Brooks for three runs each. Boston’s 13 extra-base hits were the most ever hit against the Royals and the eight doubles tied the record for an opponent.

The Royals (39-27) lost the series to the Red Sox but remain in first place in the America League Central by 3 1/2 games over the Minnesota Twins.

The homestand started with two victories over the Milwaukee Brewers, and the Red Sox arrived having lost eight of their previous 10.

But instead of getting fat on Red Sox pitching, which remains the A.L.’s worst by ERA, the Royals merely avoided getting swept with Saturday’s victory. They finished 3-2 on the homestand as they open a nine-game road trip Monday night in Seattle against the Mariners.

They will seek better clutch hitting on the West Coast than what was delivered Sunday.

The Royals had emerged from offensive doldrums that resulted in a 2-9 skid they dragged into June.

Over the previous six games, they banged out at least 10 hits and were hitting .358 and averaging 6.3 runs in that span.

Sunday, they couldn’t solve Red Sox starter Wade Miley (7-6).

Three times the Royals had multiple runners on, but the needed two-out hit never materialized.

In the first, Eric Hosmer and Kendrys Morales singled ahead of an Alex Gordon walk, but Alex Rios lined out to center.

Morales and Gordon singled to open the fourth, but Rios wasted his plate appearance by flying to shallow right. After Omar Infante grounded into a fielder’s choice, Christian Colon, who started at third base to spell Mike Moustakas, flew out to center.

Two more runners reached in the fifth with one out, but the Royals again couldn’t come up with the decisive blow.

Finally, with two outs in the ninth, Lorenzo Cain gapped a triple to right that scored Omar Infante and Drew Butera and the Royals avoided the shutout.

Meanwhile, Red Sox hitters were padding their statistics, and none had a bigger day than Betts.

The Red Sox leadoff man opened the game with a slow roller that shortstop Alcides Escobar charged, bare-handed and finished the Royals’ best defensive play.

The significance of the gem? Betts went on to hit a double, home run and triple. Escobar perhaps robbed him of a cycle.

Betts came up for a final opportunity in the ninth but few out to center field on Brooks’ first pitch.

It was about only failure by the Red Sox on Sunday.

Red Sox 13, Royals 2

TableStyle: SP-basebattersCCI Template: SP-basebatters

Boston

AB

R

H

BI

W

K

Avg.

Betts cf

5

3

3

2

1

0

.277

B.Holt 3b-2b

5

2

3

2

0

0

.318

Pedroia 2b

5

2

3

2

0

0

.307

1-T.Shaw pr-3b

0

0

0

0

0

0

.000

Ortiz dh

4

2

2

2

1

0

.236

H.Ramirez lf

3

2

1

1

1

1

.273

R.Castillo rf

1

0

0

0

0

0

.230

Bogaerts ss

5

1

3

3

0

0

.292

Napoli 1b

5

0

0

0

0

0

.203

De Aza rf-lf

5

0

0

0

0

3

.228

S.Leon c

4

1

1

1

1

1

.167

Totals

42

13

16

13

4

5

 

TableStyle: SP-basebattersCCI Template: SP-basebatters

Kansas City

AB

R

H

BI

W

K

Avg.

A.Escobar ss

3

0

0

0

2

1

.271

L.Cain cf

4

0

2

2

1

2

.294

Hosmer 1b

5

0

2

0

0

0

.298

K.Morales dh

4

0

2

0

0

1

.289

A.Gordon lf

1

0

1

0

1

0

.273

a-J.Dyson ph-lf

2

0

0

0

0

1

.253

Rios rf

4

0

0

0

0

0

.226

Infante 2b

4

1

1

0

0

0

.229

C.Colon 3b

4

0

0

0

0

0

.257

Butera c

4

1

1

0

0

0

.171

Totals

35

2

9

2

4

5

 

TableStyle: SP-basebyinningsCCI Template: SP-basebyinnings

Boston

010

153

021

13

16

0

Kansas City

000

000

002

2

9

0

a-popped out for A.Gordon in the 6th.

1-ran for Pedroia in the 8th.

LOB: Boston 6, Kansas City 10. 2B: Betts (15), B.Holt 2 (15), Pedroia 2 (13), Bogaerts 3 (12). 3B: Betts (4), B.Holt (4), L.Cain (3). HR: H.Ramirez (15), off C.Young; Ortiz (10), off C.Young; Betts (8), off C.Young. RBIs: Betts 2 (33), B.Holt 2 (18), Pedroia 2 (30), Ortiz 2 (31), H.Ramirez (37), Bogaerts 3 (30), S.Leon (3), L.Cain 2 (32).

Runners left in scoring position: Boston 4 (Ortiz, Pedroia, Napoli, S.Leon); Kansas City 5 (Rios 2, C.Colon, K.Morales, Hosmer). RISP: Boston 6 for 16; Kansas City 1 for 9. GIDP: R.Castillo. DP: Kansas City 1 (C.Colon, Infante, Hosmer).

TableStyle: SP-basepitchersCCI Template: SP-basepitchers

Boston

IP

H

R

ER

W

K

ERA

Miley W, 7-6

6

5

0

0

3

2

4.50

Ogando

1

0

0

0

1

1

3.41

Tazawa

1

1

0

0

0

1

2.97

Uehara

1

3

2

2

0

1

3.52

TableStyle: SP-basepitchersCCI Template: SP-basepitchers

Kansas City

IP

H

R

ER

W

K

ERA

C.Young L, 6-3

42/3

7

7

7

3

2

2.83

Frasor

1

3

3

3

1

1

1.69

Brooks

31/3

6

3

3

0

2

6.23

Inherited runners-scored: Frasor 1-0, Brooks 1-0.

Umpires: Home, Alfonso Marquez; First, Dan Bellino; Second, Tom Hallion; Third, Bruce Dreckman. Time: 2:58. Att: 37,975.

AP-WF-06-21-15 2115GMT

To reach Blair Kerkhoff, call 816-234-4730 or send email to bkerkhoff@kcstar.com. Follow him on Twitter: @blairkerkhoff.

This story was originally published June 21, 2015 at 4:25 PM with the headline "Red Sox rout Chris Young and the Royals 13-2."

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