National Post

Royals’ comeback resurrects season

Defending AL champions rally from 6-2 deficit

- By Kristie Rieken

• Almost out of time and out of the playoffs, the Kansas City Royals realized they needed more than a big home run.

They needed a lot of hits — a maybe a little help, too.

The defending AL champions saved their season Monday. They took advantage when Astros shortstop Carlos Correa couldn’t handle a deflected grounder that might have been a double-play ball, rallying for five runs in the eighth inning to beat Houston 9-6, forcing their playoff series to a decisive Game 5.

“We always feel that we’re still in games, and we still have a chance,” first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “That’s the mentality for this whole entire team. It’s never quit, and the character we showed today. That’s what a championsh­ip ballclub does.”

Correa homered twice, doubled, singled and drove in four runs in Game 4 of the AL Division Series. Houston took a 6-2 lead into the eighth, but a tough error charged to the 21-year-old rookie keyed the Royals’ comeback to even the matchup at two games apiece.

“I missed it. That’s what happened,” Correa said. “I wish I was perfect. I wish I could do everything perfect, but I’m not. I’m human.”

Game 5 will be back in Kansas City on Wednesday night. Johnny Cueto is set to start for the Royals against Collin McHugh.

“Everyone that watched that game, everybody that was a part of that game knows how difficult it is to feel like that game was closing in our favour and then have it not go our way,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said.

“But it’s big-boy sport. We’ll adjust, and we will be ready to play,” he said.

Late in the game, a tweet from the account of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott congratula­ted the Astros on advancing to the AL Championsh­ip Series. Abbott later tweeted from his personal account: “No prediction­s. Just support.”

Kansas City opened the eighth with five straight singles off relievers Will Harris and Tony Sipp, with RB I hits by Lorenzo Cain and Hosmer making it 6-4 and leaving the bases loaded with no outs.

“Obviously, we’re pretty late in the game right there and down by four, so not one guy can get us back in this game. So we got to do whatever we can to keep the line moving,” Hosmer said.

Kendrys Morales followed with a hard, one-bouncer off Sipp’s glove. The ball took two more hops and got past the top of Correa’s mitt, rolling into centre field as two runs scored to tie it at 6-6.

“Just a weird spin on the ball and tough play,” Sipp said. “I’m sure it was tougher than it looked. Game of inches, and I barely missed it.”

Alex Gordon’s RBI groundout off Luke Gregerson later in the inning put Kansas City ahead. Hosmer launched a long, two-run homer in the ninth for insurance.

It was the second time in franchise history that Kansas City had rallied from a fourrun deficit after seven innings to win a post-season game. Last year, the Royals trailed Oakland 7-3 in the eighth of their AL wild-card game before eventually winning in the 12th.

“I felt real confident that we were going to make a game out of it,” manager Ned Yost said. “I just felt that the bats were going to come alive, and they really did in the eighth inning. I mean really did.”

Royals reliever Ryan Madson (1-0) gave up two home runs in the seventh and still got the win.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada