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    Monday, April 29, 2024

    Major League Baseball roundup

    Kansas City's Jorge Lopez looks skyward as he heads to the dugout after being pulled after going into the ninth inning with a perfect game against Minnesota in Saturday's game in Minneapolis. Kansas City won 4-1. (Jim Mone/AP Photo)

    Royals 4, Twins 1

    Jorge Lopez was so calm on the mound that Royals catcher Salvador Perez didn't even realize the rookie had a perfect game going until the late innings.

    The right-hander came within three outs of perfection before Max Kepler walked leading off the ninth and Robbie Grossman followed with a single in Kansas City's win over Minnesota on Saturday night.

    "I was so close, and I think my heart accelerated a little bit," Lopez said.

    The 25-year-old made just his seventh big league start, his fifth for Kansas City since he was acquired from Milwaukee in the late-July trade that sent Mike Moustakas to the Brewers.

    Lopez (2-4) retired his first 24 batters before walking Kepler on a 3-1 fastball. Grossman then smacked a clean single to center field on a 1-2 changeup.

    "It was the first time he had to go to the stretch the whole game," Grossman said. "He made some quality pitches against me. I just got enough of the last changeup and hit it up the middle, and luckily missed his glove."

    Lopez was removed after 110 pitches, 11 more than his previous high.

    Ehire Adrianza hit a sacrifice fly off Wily Peralta, who retired Joe Mauer and Jorge Polanco on flyouts for his ninth save, completing the one-hitter.

    Lopez struck out four and went to five three-ball counts before the walk, including his first three batters of the game.

    "Last inning was when I got all the emotion," Lopez said. "I should have not thought about it, like, 'Let's just get another inning.' But that's experience from what we learned, and next time it will help get another win for the team."

    His perfect-game bid was preserved when Jorge Polanco's fourth-inning liner was caught by right fielder Jorge Bonifacio with a jump in front of the warning track, and when Jake Cave's liner was snagged by left fielder Alex Gordon with a sliding grab in the fifth.

    "Gordy saw the ball, looked at (center fielder Brian) Goodwin and looked back up and couldn't find the ball," Royals manager Ned Yost said. "He was like, 'I'm just going to run and hope I find it again,' and he did and made the catch. When he told me that I was like, 'OK, this might be one of those nights.'"

    Lopez was trying to become the second pitcher since at least 1900 to throw a perfect game within his first 10 major league starts. Charles Robertson was perfect in his fourth start with the Chicago White Sox in 1922.

    Kansas City has never thrown a perfect game and there haven't been any in the majors since Seattle's Felix Hernandez threw the 23rd in history, against Tampa Bay on Aug. 15, 2012. The gap between perfect games is the longest since Catfish Hunter's for Oakland against the Twins in 1968 and Len Barker's for Cleveland versus Toronto in 1981.

    Bret Saberhagen pitched Kansas City's most recent no-hitter, against the Chicago White Sox in 1991. There have been three no-hitters in the major leagues this year, by Oakland's Sean Manaea, Seattle's James Paxton and a combined effort by four Los Angeles Dodgers pitchers.

    Hunter Dozier hit an RBI single in the sixth off Jose Berrios (11-11), who gave up one run and three hits in six innings.

    Whit Merrifield had a run-scoring single in a three-run seventh off Tyler Duffey and scored on Adalberto Mondesi's double. Gordon added an RBI single against Andrew Vasquez.

    "I just sat there; I didn't want to move," Yost said. "My heart started pounding I think in about the eighth inning. When we scored those runs it made me feel better. Really wanted to get the fifth run there to try and give us a little more leeway in that situation going into the ninth."

    Minnesota moved closer to elimination from the AL Central race. Cleveland's magic number is five for clinching a third consecutive division crown.

    Braves 5, Diamondbacks 4 (10 innings)

    Braves shortstop Dansby Swanson made a diving stop on the outfield grass and cut down Nick Ahmed at home plate for the final out to preserve Atlanta's victory over Arizona in 10 innings.

    The Braves got two runs in the top of the 10th to go up 5-3. Freddie Freeman scored on first baseman Paul Goldschmidt's throwing error, and Ender Inciarte followed with an RBI triple.

    In the bottom of the inning, with runners at second and third, A.J. Pollock grounded a two-out single up the middle. Steven Souza Jr. scored from third, but Ahmed tried to come all the way around from second and was thrown out by Swanson to end the game.

    The victory boosted Atlanta's lead in the NL East to 3½ games over Philadelphia. Arizona fell 2 1/2 games behind first-place Colorado in the NL West.

    Kurt Suzuki homered for the Braves, who took advantage of four Diamondbacks errors.

    Chad Sabotka (1-0) got the final out in the ninth for his first major league win. With some difficulty, A.J. Minter picked up his 13th save in 15 tries. Andrew Chafin (1-5) took the loss.

    Rockies 4, Dodgers 2

    Kyle Freeland pitched six strong innings, Wade Davis worked out of a jam in the ninth and Colorado beat Los Angeles to remain atop the NL West.

    Chris Iannetta and Charlie Blackmon homered for the Rockies, and Davis allowed a run before striking out Yasmani Grandal with a man aboard to earn his 39th save. Colorado moved 1 1/2 games ahead of the second-place Dodgers.

    Chris Taylor homered for Los Angeles. Max Muncy hit an RBI double with two outs in the ninth.

    Freeland (14-7) lowered his ERA to 2.91 with another fine outing against a lineup of all right-handed hitters. He allowed one run and four hits and struck out eight for his seventh consecutive quality start and 20th of the season.

    Walker Buehler (6-5) allowed four runs and six hits in six innings.

    Athletics 8, Rangers 6

    Khris Davis hit his major league-leading 41st home run, Matt Olson homered to drive in the go-ahead run and Oakland beat Texas for its fifth win in six games.

    Olson broke a 6-6 tie against Chris Martin (1-4) leading off the eighth. Olson has a career-high 25 homers, one more than last year.

    Chad Pinder also homered, and Matt Chapman added an RBI double in the eighth. The A's, a big league-best 31-15 since the All-Star break, began the day a season-high 6 1/2 games ahead of Seattle for the AL's second wild card.

    Ryan Butcher (4-0) struck out Joey Gallo, his only batter, and Blake Treinen fanned two in a perfect ninth for his 37th save in 41 chances.

    Brewers 4, Giants 3

    Gio Gonzalez (8-11) received a standing ovation following an impressive first start with Milwaukee, allowing an unearned run and three hits over 5 2/3 innings.

    Gonzalez struck out seven and walked one in his first start since an Aug. 31 trade from Washington. The veteran left-hander was 0-3 with an 8.70 ERA over his final four starts with the Nationals. Gonzalez had 10 days between starts, though, and took it to the Giants, who lost their season-high seventh straight game and fell a season-worst seven games under .500.

    The Brewers pushed their NL wild-card lead to 2 1/2 games over the St. Louis Cardinals.

    Christian Yelich hit his 28th homer for Milwaukee, and Travis Shaw also got his 28th, taking Chris Stratton (9-9) deep in the first. Jeremy Jeffress recorded the final four outs for his 10th save.

    Nationals 10, Cubs 3 (first game)

    Nationals 6, Cubs 5 (second game)

    Bryce Harper hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning and Washington rallied past Chicago to sweep a doubleheader delayed more than 3½ hours by rain.

    Max Scherzer pitched a complete game and the Nationals took advantage of the sloppy Cubs in the opener. By the end of a long night, Chicago's lead in the NL Central was down to 2½ games over Milwaukee.

    Anthony Rendon's double scored Trea Turner to pull Washington to 5-4 in the seventh inning of the nightcap. Left-hander Justin Wilson (4-4) came on to face Harper, who sent a drive to straightaway center field for his 32nd home run. Harper also walked three times.

    Rendon had a solo homer and Adrian Sanchez added two hits and two RBIs for the Nationals.

    Wander Suero (2-0) got two outs for the win. Following an 89-minute rain delay in the middle of the eighth, Greg Holland worked the ninth to earn his second save in a game that ended at 1:44 a.m.

    Victor Caratini hit his first career grand slam off Nationals starter Jefry Rodriguez to give Chicago a 4-0 lead in the fourth. Cubs starter Cole Hamels left with the lead after allowing three runs in 5 2/3 innings.

    Bidding for a third straight NL Cy Young Award, Scherzer (17-6) gave up nine hits and struck out 11 without a walk in his 10th career complete game and second this season. He also had an RBI single, raising his batting average to .270.

    Jaime Garcia (3-7) took the loss in his Cubs debut.

    Indians 9, Blue Jays 8

    Roberto Perez homered and drove in four, Michael Brantley hit a two-run shot and Cleveland outslugged Toronto.

    Brantley returned to the lineup after missing the previous two games because of a sore left foot and went 2 for 4 with two walks as Cleveland inched closer to clinching a playoff berth. The Indians began the day with a magic number of seven to lock up their third straight AL Central title.

    Josh Tomlin (1-5) got two outs for the win and Cody Allen, Cleveland's seventh pitcher of the game, pitched around a one-out double in the ninth to earn his 26th save.

    Randal Grichuk homered twice for the Blue Jays, his fourth career multihomer game, and Rowdy Tellez hit his first career homer. The Blue Jays lost despite outhitting the Indians 18-11.

    Blue Jays right-hander Sean Reid-Foley (1-3) made his fourth career start and allowed six runs and five hits in 4 2/3 innings. He walked a season-high five and struck out three.

    Tigers 4, Cardinals 3

    Victor Reyes scored on a game-ending wild pitch with one out in the ninth inning, and Detroit beat St. Louis.

    The Cardinals, who entered with a one-game lead for the second National League wild card, have lost five of seven. The Tigers have won four straight.

    The Tigers led 3-1 with two outs in the top of the ninth, but Marcell Ozuna hit a two-run homer off Shane Greene (4-6) to tie it. It was Ozuna's 18th homer and third in two days.

    Reyes led off the bottom half and reached second on first baseman Matt Carpenter's fielding error. Bud Norris (3-5) walked Jeimer Candelario, and both runners moved up on Jim Adduci's sacrifice bunt. The Cardinals intentionally walked Nicholas Castellanos to load the bases with one out, but Norris bounced the next pitch and Reyes scored easily.

    Rays 10, Orioles 5

    Ryan Yarbrough struggled but got his 14th win, most among major league rookies, and Tampa Bay won its 10th straight home game.

    After reliever Diego Castillo pitched a scoreless first, Yarbrough (14-5) entered and allowed three runs and six hits in 3 2/3 innings. Twelve of the lefty's wins have come in "bullpen games" for Tampa Bay.

    The Rays will look to tie the franchise record for consecutive victories at home, set during the 2008 AL pennant-winning season, in Sunday's series finale.

    Baltimore's David Hess (3-10) made his scheduled start one day after getting hit in the left eye while playing catch with a football and allowed six runs — two earned — and seven hits over five-plus innings.

    Pirates 5, Marlins 1

    Josh Bell homered for the second game in a row, Ivan Nova got his first victory in a month and Pittsburgh beat Miami for its fifth consecutive win.

    In a game played in a steady drizzle, Bell connected off Brett Graves leading off the sixth for his 10th home run, down from 26 last year. Before his home run Friday, Bell had not driven in a run since Aug. 11.

    Nova (8-9) gave up three hits in six innings, struck out nine and walked three. He had lost three straight starts since beating San Francisco on Aug. 9 and had missed his previous turn for an undisclosed reason.

    Wei-Yin Chen (6-10) allowed three runs and five hits in four innings, dropping to 1-7 with a 9.13 ERA in 11 road starts. He is 5-3 with a 1.77 ERA in 12 home outings.

    Angels 12, White Sox 3

    Mike Trout homered twice and drove in five runs as Los Angeles defeated Chicago.

    Trout's 5-for-5 performance matched his career high for hits and raised his batting average to .314. Shohei Ohtani hit a bases-loaded triple and scored on one of Thyago Vieira's three wild pitches in a six-run ninth inning.

    The White Sox lost their fourth straight.

    Six of Trout's nine career hits against James Shields (6-16) have been home runs.

    Matt Shoemaker (2-0) gave up three runs over five innings in his second start since coming off the disabled list.

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