If anybody had any doubt that two of the worst teams in baseball were locking horns tonight, the fourth inning would have provided all proof needed.
Josh Fields led off the inning with a double to left-center off Gil Meche, and Jim Thome followed with a walk. Jermaine Dye then hit a flyball to semi-deep right field. Mark Teahan parked under it, Fields bluffed, and Teahan threw to third.
Fields could've made it safely had he committed, because Teahan's throw missed the cutoff man and led Jason Smith to the outfield grass to retrieve it, especially since Smith didn't handle it cleanly.
The problem was that Thome only saw Fields fake the tag to third. He didn't see Fields retrieve to the base, and thus Thome arrived at second as Fields made his way back to that very same bag. Thome was tagged after a brief rundown, while Fields stayed put.
Of course, since these were the Royals, they didn't get out of the inning unscathed. Meche got a groundball to third that should've ended the inning, but it instead went through Smith's legs and into left field. Fields came around to score the Sox's first run of the game.
Fields actually scored both of the Sox's runs, doubling in the sixth, advancing to third this time on a deep fly to right by Dye, and scoring when Darin Erstad beat out a double play by half a step.
That would be all the action from the Sox offense. Fields was the only one with a good idea of what Meche was throwing. The Sox did little against him, and even less against the Kansas City bullpen. Buddy Bell used four relievers to record six straight outs to end the game.
Gavin Floyd took the loss in what ended up being a fourth straight quality start, although he was a couple of inches away from watching that streak come to an end.
With runners on first and second a full count to Ross Gload, Floyd threw a get-me-over curveball. Gload lined it the other way and barely missed the chalk. A couple of inches to the right, and one run would've scored -- maybe two. Of course, those runs would've been unearned since the inning began with a Juan Uribe error. Instead, Floyd walked Gload to load the bases and got Billy Butler to ground out.
Take what you will out of Floyd's outing. He settled down after the Royals scored their entire night's output in the first inning, starting the game off with four straight hits, three of them well-struck. Floyd rebounded to strike out the side, but he had to work his way out of trouble often. He stranded runners in scoring position in the second, third, fourth and fifth innings.
He did keep the ball down, but also gave up his fair share of hits. Normally Floyd can't succeed when he doesn't have his best stuff, but the Royals do excel in giving teams plenty of chances to get themselves off the hook.
Record: 65-86 |
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