San Antonio Express-News

Bats back Pérez to cap clean sweep

Semien’s three hits, Heim’s blast power fourth straight win

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Marcus Semien and the rest of the red-hot Texas Rangers are headed home on a high note.

Semien had three hits and drove in a pair of runs, and Jonah Heim capped a big day for the Rangers offense with a three-run shot in the ninth inning, leading them to a 12-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday. That wrapped up a three-game sweep and ran their winning streak to four straight on a 5-1 road trip.

“Everybody is starting to get hot, especially the position players,” said Semien, who has driven in a run in five straight games and 11 total over that stretch. “It's a big road trip for us with all our injuries and definitely a confidence boost.”

In the last few weeks, the Rangers have lost Corey Seager to a hamstring injury and Mitch Garver to a sprained knee.

Imagine how the offense would be performing with them.

Ezequiel Duran added a bases-clearing double Wednesday, and Leody Taveras and Adolis García also drove in two runs apiece, helping the Rangers improve to 12-6 to match the fifthbest start in franchise history.

“You can string together some wins and sweeps, it's always a good sign,” Heim said. “We're just passing the baton.”

Martin Pérez (3-1) allowed three runs on eight hits over 52⁄3 innings. He's gone at least five in 34 straight starts, the longest streak ever by a Rangers lefthander, though he allowed more than two runs for the first time this season.

It hardly mattered against the Royals.

They've been outscored 52-15 while losing six straight games, and they have lost nine of their last 10 to fall to 4-15 under firstyear manager Matt Quatraro.

Kansas City has won just once in 13 games at home this season.

“There's nothing you can do about the first three weeks of the season,” Quatraro said. “Nobody is happy. You don't want to get beat. You don't want to be embarrasse­d, especially at home in front of your fans.”

Brady Singer (1-2) didn't give the Royals much of a

chance Wednesday. He allowed five runs on six hits and three walks while using 97 pitches just to get through five innings. He had four strikeouts, two of them coming on fullcount pitches.

Singer looked like he was developing into a staff ace last season, but this year has been a struggle. The young righthande­r allowed eight runs on 10 hits in his last start against Atlanta, and he's allowed 18 runs over 16 innings in his last three outings.

“It looked like it was really fine misses,” Quatraro said. “They did a really nice job of not expanding (the strike zone).”

The Royals scratched out two runs in the sixth to make it a game, but the Rangers answered with four in the seventh — the binge beginning with a free base due to catcher's interferen­ce — before Heim's punctuatin­g three-run shot in the ninth.

“We just have to keep locking in when there's money on the table,” Semien said.

 ?? Reed Hoffmann/associated Press ?? Rangers catcher Jonah Heim, right, celebrates with Josh Jung after his home run in the ninth inning of Wednesday’s 12-3 win over the Royals in Kansas City, Mo.
Reed Hoffmann/associated Press Rangers catcher Jonah Heim, right, celebrates with Josh Jung after his home run in the ninth inning of Wednesday’s 12-3 win over the Royals in Kansas City, Mo.

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