Royals

Royals clobbered 11-4 by Indians, fall to .500 before White House visit

Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Ian Kennedy watched one of his four home runs allowed Wednesday, this one by Cleveland’s Carlos Santana to start off the fifth inning.
Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Ian Kennedy watched one of his four home runs allowed Wednesday, this one by Cleveland’s Carlos Santana to start off the fifth inning. skeyser@kcstar.com

A monitor inside the Royals clubhouse displays the schedule over the next several days, with the logos of opponents stationed next to each day of the week. For Thursday’s slot, pictures of President Obama and the White House have replaced the usual team emblems, representing a midweek destination.

But fewer than 24 hours before they celebrate their 2015 World Series championship with a visit to the nation’s capital, the Royals supplied a reminder of their precarious position in 2016.

Cleveland tagged Royals starter Ian Kennedy for four home runs, more than enough fireworks in an 11-4 series-clinching victory on a hot, humid Wednesday afternoon at Kauffman Stadium.

The Royals, 47-47, fell to .500 for the first time since June 10, and when they arrive in Washington later Wednesday night, they will sit nine games behind the first-place Indians in the American League Central.

“That’s not the way we had planned the series to go,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said.

Two days ago, members of the Royals thought a comeback win against the division leaders could fuel a second-half surge. But the you’re-only-as-good-as-your-next-starting-pitcher adage trumped that, at least temporarily.

On Tuesday, the windmill of options in the fifth spot in the rotation turned to Brian Flynn, and the Indians chased him from the game with three early runs.

It grew worse.

Kennedy served up four home runs in Wednesday’s series finale, each more majestic than the last. The Indians sent 11 hitters to the plate in a seven-run fifth inning, and hit three baseballs that left the yard.

“I was falling behind on guys, and they made me pay for it,” Kennedy said.

Carlos Santana led off the fifth with a home run to right field that whizzed over the top of the bullpen. Right fielder Paulo Orlando didn’t even offer a courtesy trip to the fence. Three batters later, Mike Napoli sent a two-run shot to left center, prompting Royals manager Ned Yost to pop out of the dugout and take the ball from Kennedy.

By the end of the inning, Indians outfielder Tyler Naquin had more home runs (two) during a two-hour span on a hot Kansas City afternoon than the Royals have since the All-Star break (one). Naquin drove in six runs.

“He hit a couple homers off us in spring training. I was really, really impressed and continue to be impressed with him,” Yost said.

During a game in which he struck out eight, Kennedy moved atop an undesirable leader board. He has allowed 26 home runs this season, tied for the most in the American League. He shares the honor with Royals starter-turned-reliever Chris Young, who managed 2  1/3 scoreless innings Wednesday.

Most home runs allowed by Royals pitchers

Ian Kennedy, who gave up four homers Wednesday, and Chris Young have each allowed 26 home runs this season. They are five more home runs allowed from tying for ninth-most given up by a Royals pitcher in a single season.

PitcherYearHR
1. Darrell May200438
2. Tim Belcher199837
3. Jeff Suppan200036
Paul Byrd200236
5. Dennis Leonard197933
Brian Anderson200433
Bruce Chen201233
8. Jeff Suppan200232
9. Larry Gura198231
Tim Belcher199731
Darrell May200331
Jose Lima200531

The man Kennedy shared the mound with Wednesday — Cleveland starter Carlos Carrasco — provided a polar opposite. Carrasco silenced the Royals for six innings, allowing only three base runners. He improved to 7-3 and lowered his ERA to 2.31.

The Royals clipped the scoreboard for four runs against the Indians bullpen in the eighth inning, highlighted by an Alex Gordon double that hopped to the right-field wall.

Before the game, Yost said the Indians’ deep rotation triggered his belief that they would be a dangerous team in 2016. With Yost in the opposing dugout, the Indians frontline starters proved him right.

Corey Kluber fired seven shutout innings Monday. Danny Salazar allowed just two runs across 6  2/3 innings Tuesday. Carrasco kept the Royals off the scoreboard Wednesday.

A first-place formula for the Indians this season.

A series-winning formula in Kansas City this week.

“Their pitchers came out and threw really good this series,” Hosmer said. “(We) just got behind in all the games and couldn’t find a real way to get back in it.”

Indians 11, Royals 4

Cleveland

AB

R

H

BI

W

K

Avg.

Santana 1b

3

1

1

1

3

1

.255

Kipnis 2b

4

1

2

1

0

1

.285

Gonzalez 2b

1

0

0

0

0

0

.200

Lindor ss

4

1

0

0

0

3

.299

Napoli dh

4

1

1

2

0

3

.249

a-Uribe ph-dh

1

0

0

0

0

1

.213

Ramirez 3b

3

1

0

0

2

0

.291

Chisenhall rf

4

2

1

0

0

1

.300

Davis lf

4

2

2

1

0

0

.263

Almonte lf

1

0

0

0

0

0

.143

Naquin cf

4

2

3

6

1

0

.324

R.Perez c

4

0

0

0

1

2

.000

Totals

37

11

10

11

7

12

 

Kansas City

AB

R

H

BI

W

K

Avg.

Escobar ss

2

0

0

0

0

0

.256

Merrifield 2b

1

0

0

0

1

0

.275

Cuthbert 3b

3

1

2

1

1

0

.298

Hosmer 1b

3

0

0

0

0

1

.299

Wang p

0

0

0

0

0

0

---

b-Gordon ph

1

1

1

1

0

0

.204

Herrera p

0

0

0

0

0

0

---

Morales dh-1b

4

0

0

0

0

1

.253

S.Perez c

2

0

0

0

0

1

.277

Butera c

2

0

2

1

0

0

.306

Orlando rf

4

0

0

0

0

1

.311

Eibner lf

4

0

0

0

0

2

.266

Dyson cf

4

1

1

0

0

1

.259

Colon 2b-ss

4

1

1

1

0

0

.253

Totals

34

4

7

4

2

7

 

Cleveland

101

270

000

11

10

0

Kansas City

000

000

040

4

7

0

a-struck out for Napoli in the 7th. b-doubled for Wang in the 8th.

LOB: Cleveland 8, Kansas City 5. 2B: Naquin (9), Cuthbert (12), Colon (4), Butera 2 (9), Gordon (8). HR: Kipnis (16), off Kennedy; Naquin (11), off Kennedy; Santana (21), off Kennedy; Napoli (22), off Kennedy; Naquin (12), off Moylan. RBIs: Santana (54), Kipnis (52), Napoli 2 (67), Davis (35), Naquin 6 (29), Cuthbert (32), Colon (9), Butera (9), Gordon (16).

Runners left in scoring position: Cleveland 4 (Lindor, R.Perez, Uribe 2); Kansas City 4 (Hosmer, Morales, Orlando, Eibner). RISP: Cleveland 3 for 8; Kansas City 2 for 10. Runners moved up: Orlando.

Cleveland

IP

H

R

ER

W

K

ERA

Carrasco W, 7-3

6

1

0

0

2

6

2.31

Otero

1

1

0

0

0

0

1.20

Adams

0.2

5

4

4

0

0

7.20

Manship

0.1

0

0

0

0

0

2.96

Crockett

1

0

0

0

0

1

10.80

Kansas City

IP

H

R

ER

W

K

ERA

Kennedy L, 6-8

4.1

6

7

7

1

8

4.28

Moylan

0.1

4

4

4

2

0

4.24

Young

2.1

0

0

0

4

3

6.61

Wang

1

0

0

0

0

0

3.69

Herrera

1

0

0

0

0

1

1.69

Inherited runners-scored: Manship 1-0, Young 2-0, Young 2-0. HBP: Kennedy 2 (Chisenhall,Lindor).

Umpires: Home, Ryan Blakney; First, Cory Blaser; Second, Jeff Nelson; Third, Doug Eddings. Time: 3:16. Att: 33,455.

This story was originally published July 20, 2016 at 4:39 PM with the headline "Royals clobbered 11-4 by Indians, fall to .500 before White House visit."

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