- Associated Press - Thursday, May 1, 2014

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Drew Hutchison was rarely challenged through the first six innings Wednesday night, breezing through an early swinging lineup of Kansas City Royals and keeping the game knotted 2-all.

The young Toronto starter finally ran into trouble in the seventh.

Alcides Escobar delivered a two-out, two-run double to give the Royals the lead, and their bullpen held on for a tense 4-2 victory over the scuffling Blue Jays.

Eric Hosmer drove in the other two runs for the Royals, whose bullpen blew a 2-0 lead for young starter Yordano Ventura before holding on to beat Toronto with a late rally for the second straight night. Kansas City won the series opener 10-7 behind a six-run eighth inning.

“It’s frustrating, but at the end of the day I need to do a better job to give us a chance to win,” Hutchison said. “I was in complete control going into the seventh. It comes down to that it’s on me and I need to get the job done.”

Kelvin Herrera (1-1) stranded runners on second and third in the seventh, and Wade Davis struck out Jose Reyes to leave the bases loaded in the eighth. Greg Holland worked around a double in the ninth for his seventh save in seven tries.

Drew Hutchison (1-2) allowed all four runs on five hits in seven innings for Toronto.

The 23-year-old right-hander, who missed last season after Tommy John surgery, kept the Royals mostly off balance until Escobar guided his double down the left-field line. Jimmy Paredes and Salvy Perez scored easily to give Kansas City the lead.

“I got ahead of him. I went right at him. I thought I made a good pitch,” Hutchison said. “That’s a situation where I expect myself to thrive and get the job done, but I didn’t.”

The Royals improved to 14-0 when scoring at least four runs - they remain 0-12 falling short of that mark. Meanwhile, the Blue Jays lost for the sixth time in their last seven games.

“It’s one of those games where we had opportunities but didn’t get the timely hit,” second baseman Chris Getz said. “Obviously, the name of the game is getting those timely hits, but they made their pitches. The strength of their team is the bullpen and defense. They came through.”

Toronto also lost outfielder Melky Cabrera in the sixth inning when he was hit in the left shin by a pitch from Danny Duffy. Cabrera needed to be helped off the field, though X-rays taken at the ballpark came back negative and a team spokesman said he was day to day.

The Royals manufactured a 1-0 lead through driving rain in the first inning with a double by Nori Aoki, a sacrifice bunt and Hosmer’s sacrifice fly. They tacked on another run in the fourth when Hosmer followed a double by Omar Infante with one of his own.

As long as Ventura was pitching, it seemed that would be enough.

The Blue Jays struggled to catch up to the 22-year-old’s triple-digit fastball, managing just two hits over five innings. But they were more successful at avoiding stuff off the plate, driving up his pitch count and forcing him from the game after five innings and 92 pitches.

“It was cold out there,” Ventura said through a translator, fellow starter Jeremy Guthrie. “Naturally, it was a little more difficult to command.”

That’s when Royals manager Ned Yost called on Duffy, who hit Cabrera in the left shin with his first pitch. Cabrera dropped to the grass in foul territory and stayed there several minutes, eventually getting helped through the dugout and to the clubhouse by the Blue Jays’ trainers.

Duffy proceeded to walk Jose Bautista on five pitches and was yanked for Aaron Crow, who gave up singles to Edwin Encarnacion and Juan Francisco that tied the game 2-all. Crow finally escaped the inning, and the Royals bullpen held Toronto down the rest of the way.

“You play 162 games. You’re going to see a lot of things happen,” Holland said. “The mark of a good bullpen is when you have guys pick each other up when they get in jams.”

NOTES: Bautista finished with 30 walks in April, matching Fred McGriff’s club record for a single month. … Blue Jays INF Brett Lawrie (sore back) was held out of the lineup. Manager John Gibbons called him day to day. … RHP Jeremy Guthrie starts the series finale Thursday night for Kansas City. LHP Mark Buehrle starts for Toronto.

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide