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Guillen's homer gives Royals split against Yankees
KANSAS CITY 3, NY YANKEES 2
 


By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- Mariano Rivera was the last pitcher
Jose Guillen wanted to face. Guillen did not get his wish, but
guessed right and hit a home run that led to a victory for the
Kansas City Royals.

Guillen completed a spectacular series by homering off Rivera to
lead off the ninth inning Monday as the Royals edged the New
York Yankees, 3-2, to gain a split of the four-game set.

Guillen hit his fourth home run in the series and has homered in
three straight games for the first time since May 2004, when he
did it twice in a week for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
He batted .563 (9-for-16) in the series with 10 RBI and six runs
scored.

The Royals hit two homers off Rivera (2-2), who previously had
not allowed one since August 15. David DeJesus homered off
Rivera on Saturday, but Joakim Soria blew his first save and the
Yankees pulled out the 12-11 win, overcoming Guillen's grand
slam and seven RBI.

Monday's win was just the fourth for the Royals in their last 21
games.

"It's always fun when you win," Guillen said. "When you're
losing, it's not fun. You try to go there and try to help your
team win. We had a five-run lead and we lost it (on Saturday)
and it's not been easy for us. We won today, and it's a good
thing to go home with a win."

Two days after Saturday's slugfest, Guillen connected on an 0-2
cutter from Rivera. His drive barely cleared the fence in
left-center field and snapped a 2-2 tie.

"(Rivera's) the last guy I want to face coming into the ninth
inning," Guillen said. "I was hoping it was somebody else, but
I just put a good swing on that thing right there and he threw
me four cutters. I was just staying on it and I was just kind
realizing that he was going to come with that cutter."

"It was bad," Rivera added. "It was 0-2. The pitch wasn't
where I wanted it to be."

After homering, Guillen pumped his right fist and Rivera shouted
aloud in a rare emotional display.

"Mo's not used to giving up runs," Yankees manager Joe Girardi
said. "Mo has been perfect for us most of the year."

The Yankees (32-32) fell back to .500 for the 22nd time this
season, but not before they almost pulled out a third final
at-bat win in their last five games.

In the bottom of the ninth, New York had the bases loaded off
Soria, who allowed an infield single to Alex Rodriguez, walked
Jason Giambi with one out and plunked Chad Moeller with two
outs.

Soria, who had converted his first 13 saves before Saturday,
secured the win by retiring Melky Cabrera on a groundout to
first and just beating the Yankees' center fielder to the bag.

"I just tried to run to first base," Soria said. "Melky's a
fast runner. I was trying to run as fast as I can."

Soria's ability to escape the jam and Guillen's latest home run
enabled rookie Yasuhiko Yabuta (1-0) to earn his first career
win. The righthander came on with runners on first and second
to face Bobby Abreu and retired him on a groundout to end the
eighth.

That set the stage for Guillen, who faced three straight cutters
and fouled off two. On the fourth pitch, he hit his first
career home run in nine lifetime at-bats off Rivera, who for the
first time this year appeared in a game for a third straight
day.

"(Rivera) is what he is," said Royals manager Trey Hillman, who
also was Rivera's first minor league skipper in 1991. "I don't
need to tell you how great he is. It is nice to see what we did
against a guy with such a low ERA."

The late-inning drama came on a third straight day of 90-plus
degree weather at Yankee Stadium. Those conditions produced 32
runs in the previous two games, but the series finale belonged
to starting pitchers Luke Hochevar and Mike Mussina, who traded
zeros for six innings.

Bidding to become the first 10-game winner in the American
League, Mussina allowed Miguel Olivo's two-run home run in the
top of the seventh among seven hits in eight innings - his
longest start since a complete game in Detroit on May 31, 2006.
Mussina walked none and only threw 89 pitches.

Hochevar gave up a leadoff single to Johnny Damon, but then
retired 14 straight from the first through the fifth. He was
lifted after Rodriguez hit a long two-run home run in the
seventh. Hochevar allowed only four hits in six-plus innings.

 
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