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Gordon, Royals rally past Rangers
KANSAS CITY 6, TEXAS 5
 


By Marc Bowman
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Ticker) -- Alex Gordon hit a first-inning
homer and scored the go-ahead run on an eighth-inning sacrifice
fly Thursday, leading the Kansas City Royals to a 6-5 victory
over the Texas Rangers.

After Alberto Callaspo singled to lead off the eighth, Gordon
doubled to put runners at second and third. The Royals forged a
5-5 tie when pinch runner Tony Pena Jr. scored on a wild pitch
by Frank Francisco (1-2).

Gordon, who advanced to third on the wild pitch, scored on Jose
Guillen's sacrifice fly to make it 6-5.

"We're just happy to get a win," Guillen said. "It's been
tough. This team hasn't been real good at moving runners, so I
was trying to move the runners. How many times have we gotten
runners on base and we don't move them? We get four or five
runs, but it's never enough. You can never have enough runs.
We'll go five or six good innings and then we stop. We've got
to be smarter. We've got to do the little things that will help
you win."

Gordon also blasted a two-run homer - his seventh of the season
- in the opening frame for the Royals, who salvaged the finale
of this three-game series.

"He's getting back to the way he was a few weeks ago," Kansas
City manager Trey Hillman said. "He's been a little bit worn
down lately. It certainly helps to have that bat in the lineup.
You want to keep him in a comfort zone."

"I wasn't going to walk him," Texas starter Eric Hurley said.
"(The count) was 3-2. If he beats me, he beats me. He's a good
hitter. I got the ball up a little and he hit it out of the
ballpark."

Following two days of meltdowns in which they allowed 15 runs in
six combined innings, the Royals' bullpen allowed one run but
held on.

"It was good to see us come back," Hillman said. "The pen guys
had been successful up to this point. It's just good to see us
feel like we can come back and finish off a game. We still have
to figure out how to execute pitches better than we have,
obviously, recently when we've gone through some tough losses."

Ron Mahay (2-0) collected the win by retiring the final two
batters of the eighth inning before Joakim Soria pitched a
perfect ninth for his 15th save in 16 tries. Soria had been
unavailable earlier in the series due to a strained left glute
muscle.

"I just tried to focus on doing my job and put my mind on other
things," Soria said. "I wasn't thinking about anything else but
trying to help my team and do my best. I'm a tense guy and
sometimes that's good."

"It does help having Sorie available," Hillman said. "Not only
from a health standpoint, but from the fact that he was
available today and able to take the ball makes a big
difference, I thought. We'll continue to monitor the (glute)
problem, but hopefully that tightness, that soreness is over
with."

The Rangers had taken a 5-4 lead in top half of the eighth, when
Brandon Boggs scored on David Murphy's sacrifice fly.

Rookies played a large role in the contest. In addition to
Murphy and Boggs' contribution, Texas' German Duran clubbed a
three-run homer to give the Rangers a 3-2 second-inning lead in
support of Hurley, who was making his major league debut.

"It was a poor sequence to Duran," Kansas City starter Brian
Bannister said. "We were throwing hard pitches to him, and I
missed out over the plate. The No. 9 hitters can swing the bat,
but mostly, if you don't change speeds and cross them up a
little, Kinsler, Young, Hamilton - those guys are going to get
you, but you want to have a better sequence against the No. 9
hitter."

Ian Kinsler followed Duran's homer with a solo shot to push
Texas' advantage to 4-2.

"He had been trying to throw away at first," Kinsler said. "He
threw a slider off the plate and tried to come back in with a
fastball but he left it up a little. It's definitely the goal
of our offense to respond. It's big for our pitchers, mentally,
and especially after they throw up a zero."

Hurley pitched six innings, allowing four runs and six hits
while walking none and striking out three.

"I thought I threw the ball well," Hurley said. "In the first
inning, I was nitpicking a little. It was a little bit of
nerves, maybe, thinking, 'This is the big leagues,' and trying
to make perfect pitches. I was trying to get ahead of hitters
and get ahead aggressively. I feel pretty good all the way
around."

"I thought he was great," Rangers manager Ron Washington said.
"I thought as the game progressed he relaxed a little bit more
and he got better as the game progressed. He threw strikes, and
I don't think he walked anybody. He put the ball in play, and
that's what you want to see. All I wanted him to do is keep us
in the game, and he certainly did that."

Royals rookie shortstop Mike Aviles connected for his first
career homer - a two-out, two-run shot to tie the game at 4-4 in
the fourth inning.

"It was a first-pitch fastball," Aviles said. "I was going up
there trying to be aggressive and get one in the gap, thinking
that we could score a run and cut it to 4-3. It just so
happened to go out. Tying the score was a good thing.
Fortunately, things worked out for us today."

Bannister threw a career-high 127 pitches over seven innings,
allowing four runs and six hits with no walks and four
strikeouts.

"It was a gutsy performance by Banny," Hillman said. "We needed
that."

"I really wanted to take the pressure off of the bullpen,"
Bannister said. "They've been great for most of the year. I
wanted to push my limits a little today. It was a tough outing,
but we battled through it. It makes it all that much better
when you win."

 
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