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Ned Yost has Underdog Royals back in World Series

Ned Yost
Ned Yost

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jeff Foxworthy figures he can wait just a while longer to go hunting with his neighbor and good buddy. After all, Ned Yost is a bit busy this time of the year.

He has the Kansas City Royals back in the World Series for the first time since 1985.

Yost has become one of the central figures of the baseball playoffs, with his often-questionable moves and steadfast belief in his team. And here’s the thing: That debatable decision-making has proven to be faultless during a perfect run to the Fall Classic.

Now, a fan base that coined the term “yosted” for any kind of screw-up is lavishing Yost with the kind of praise reserved for hometown heroes such as George Brett and Frank White.

Vision of Royals GM Dayton Moore Comes to Fruition

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City general manager Dayton Moore grew up as a Royals fan and was a teenager when he watched Game 7 of the 1985 World Series from a hillside outside the ballpark.

He’s now built a team going to the World Series.

With the same patience in his young players that Kansas City management has shown in Moore during an eight-year rebuilding process, the Royals are back on baseball’s grandest stage.

Now, he may find himself with other suitors, too. Moore began his career with the Braves, and the GM job there is still open. But Royals owner David Glass says he will do everything in his power to keep the architect of his team in Kansas City.

Royals Run to World Series has Kansas City Buzzing

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City fans who long ago became accustomed to having one of the worst teams in baseball suddenly find their team in the World Series.

Nearly three decades after beating St. Louis in the 1985 World Series, the Royals have embarked on an improbable playoff run that has them back in the hunt for a championship.

The excitement surrounding the team has created a whole new generation of Royals fans who are learning how to celebrate winning baseball for the first time.

Sports bars around the metro area shook Wednesday afternoon as Kansas City clinched the pennant right in the middle of happy hour. Thursday morning, fans gathered outside sports apparel stores hours before they opened, eager to buy newly minted AL Championship gear.

Cain is Able: Royals Center Fielder Wins ALCS MVP

Lorenzo-Cain-Kansas-City-Ro
Lorenzo Cain

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Lorenzo Cain has been selected MVP of the AL Championship Series after helping the Kansas City Royals to a four-game sweep of the Baltimore Orioles with a 2-1 victory Wednesday.

The Royals are headed back to the World Series for the first time since beating the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games in 1985, the last time Kansas City even reached the playoffs.

Along with making a series of splendid defensive plays in center field, Cain had eight hits in the series, matching the franchise record for an ALCS set by Willie Wilson in 1985 against Toronto.

Cain matched a Royals record with four hits in Game 2 on Saturday, and scored Kansas City’s first run in Game 3 on Tuesday night. He also laid down a key sacrifice bunt — the first of his career — that helped the Royals take a 2-0 lead in the first inning Wednesday.

Royals Hold Off Orioles 2-1, Finish ALCS Sweep

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — With more dominant defense, an opportunistic offense that plated two runs in the first inning and a bullpen that shut down the Baltimore Orioles once again, Greg Holland and the Kansas City Royals wrapped up a sweep of the AL Championship Series with a 2-1 victory on Wednesday.

Next stop: the Royals’ first World Series since 1985, when they last made the playoffs.

Kansas City hosts the first two games beginning Tuesday against the winner of the NLCS between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals.

Jason Vargas combined with three relievers on a four-hitter, with Holland earning his fourth save of the ALCS. It was the first time the AL East champion Orioles have been swept in 21 postseason series.

Royals’ Guthrie Apologizes for Post-Game T-Shirt

Jeremy Guthrie Kansas City RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Royals pitcher Jeremy Guthrie apologized on Twitter to the Orioles for wearing a T-shirt to his post-game news conference Tuesday night that read, “These O’s Ain’t Royal.”

Guthrie wore the shirt, a twist on the Chris Brown song “Loyal,” after Kansas City beat his former team 2-1 to take a 3-0 lead in their best-of-seven AL Championship Series.

The shirt touched off an avalanche of criticism toward Guthrie. Along with offending many Orioles fans, the shirt also ignited controversy across social media platforms because of the vulgar and derogatory nature of the song’s original lyrics.

Guthrie, a prolific user of social media, said in his apology early Wednesday that he did not consider the reaction the shirt might generate and did not intend to offend.

Royals Edge Orioles 2-1 to Take 3-0 Lead in ALCS

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Billy Butler drove in the go-ahead run in the sixth inning, and the Royals’ bullpen shut down the Baltimore Orioles the rest of the way for a 2-1 victory Tuesday night that gave Kansas City a commanding 3-0 lead in the AL Championship Series.

Third baseman Mike Moustakas made two marvelous plays as the Royals won their 10th straight postseason game, including all seven this year.

Kansas City will send Jason Vargas to the mound for Game 4 on Wednesday needing just one more win to reach their first World Series since 1985. Miguel Gonzalez will try to help the Orioles stave off elimination.

The game was tied 1-all until the Orioles’ Wei-Yin Chen put runners on the corners in the sixth. Butler followed with his sacrifice fly off reliever Kevin Gausman for the lead.

Winning pitcher Jason Frasor, Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis and Greg Holland each pitched a scoreless inning.

Royals’ Vargas, Orioles’ Gonzalez to Start Game 4

Jason Vargas
Jason Vargas

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals are sticking with left-hander Jason Vargas and the Orioles with right-hander Miguel Gonzalez for Game 4 of their AL Championship Series on Wednesday.

Rain on Monday night pushed each game in Kansas City back one day, creating a dilemma for Royals manager Ned Yost and Baltimore counterpart Buck Showalter.

Game 1 starters James Shields of the Royals and Chris Tillman of the Orioles would be on regular rest if they pitched on Wednesday.

Instead, the two managers decided to stick with their original Game 4 plans.

Vargas will be pitching for the first time since the Royals beat the Angels in the AL Division Series on Oct. 2, while Gonzalez will start for Baltimore for the first time since Sept. 28, his final outing of the regular season.

Night Ride: Playoff Games Push past 3 1/2 Hours

mlb bigNail-biting tension. Extra-inning excitement. Game-changing home runs.

Baseball’s postseason has offered up all the drama any fan could ask for this year — if you can stay awake long enough to see it unfold.

With playoff games now commonly pushing past 3 1/2 hours, sticking around from start to finish is becoming a time-consuming task like never before.

And even the players are noticing.

“They’re really slow. It’s tough to watch,” Baltimore Orioles reliever Darren O’Day said after the first two games of the AL Championship Series each lasted more than 4 hours, 15 minutes. “I understand it’s postseason, but these are just taking too long.”

The average time of the 20 postseason games played so far was 3 hours, 49 minutes. Five went to extra innings, including an 18-inning marathon between San Francisco and Washington that lasted a record 6 hours, 23 minutes. So those skew the numbers a bit.

But even the nine-inning games have averaged 3 hours, 31 minutes, according to STATS. That’s quite a jump from 3:02 during the regular season, which set a record for the longest mark in major league history.

That means games that start a little after 8 p.m. EDT are often closing in on midnight (or later) when they finally end.

“It’s past my bedtime, too,” said 91-year-old St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer Red Schoendienst.

The reasons?

First, advertising. Postseason commercial breaks are usually 2 minutes, 55 seconds — 30 seconds longer than a national telecast during the regular season, and 50 seconds longer than a typical local broadcast. So that adds about 8-14 minutes to each game right from the get-go in October.

Then there are the stakes.

With every pitch so important, players and coaches constantly huddle on the mound to talk strategy. Nobody wants to give away a sign or make that one careless mistake that could cost his team a chance to win the World Series.

Managers often make changes earlier in the game, matching up lefty-righty for any given situation.

And this year in particular, the speedy Royals are a culprit — through no fault of their own.

Four of their six playoff games have gone extra innings, and every time one of their jackrabbit basestealers gets on, play seems to grind to a halt as the opposing pitcher tries step-offs and pickoff throws to keep the runner close.

“Whew,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. “So much excitement. So much that goes on in those games. And they’re just naturally going to be longer.

“You look up at the clock and see it’s 7:30, quarter to 8, and you’re in the sixth inning. Wait a minute, did we start this game at 4? But you just play them. It’s the excitement of the postseason.”

Throw in expanded instant replay this year, and it’s a recipe for some long nights — both at the ballpark and on the couch.

“We have let the boys stay up as long as they could to watch the games,” said Laurent Roy, the father of two young Royals fans, 13-year-old Peyton and 9-year-old Hunter, in Overland Park, Kansas. “There have been some afternoon naps after school. This is a pretty special time in KC and we want the boys to have great memories of this run.”

Part of baseball’s beauty, of course, is that the game is played without a clock. All the anxious waiting only heightens the drama sometimes.

And whether it’s been the starved-for-success Royals and their extra-inning mojo, or the steady Cardinals and their string of go-ahead homers, no hard-core fan would dispute that many of these games have provided exhilarating entertainment.

But nobody outside the dugout has an endless amount of time to invest in a ballgame — including young fans with shorter attention spans in this touch-screen age of multitasking.

“These playoff games last longer than a football game. Really, they do,” Gary Horner of Fayetteville, Arkansas, said before attending Game 2 of the NLCS at Busch Stadium.

“It’s exciting and fun and all. When you are at the game, you don’t notice it being that long. But if you are at home and watching on TV, these games seem like they go an eternity.”

Well aware of the issue, Major League Baseball is examining ways to pick up the pace in the future, trying out several experimental rules this month in the Arizona Fall League for top prospects.

Some of them are fairly drastic — a limit on trips to the mound, automatic intentional walks, and a 20-second pitch clock, for example.

A few players have voiced concerns about the new ideas, expressing a desire for more input. And the obvious contradiction in October is not lost on them: Speed things up on the field, guys, while the networks run extra commercials.

“Three-minute breaks between innings — I’m not a big fan of those,” Giants catcher Buster Posey said. “Pace of play, three-minute breaks in between innings … uh, OK.”

Whether games will move faster in years to come remains to be seen, but baseball is certainly going in the opposite direction this October.

Over the past five years, nine-inning postseason games averaged 3 hours, 20 minutes — 11 minutes shorter than this season. It was 3:13 from 2004-08. And in a much larger sample, it was 3:14 from the time the playoffs expanded in 1995 through 2013, STATS said.

Nobody in Kansas City seems to mind, though.

“Someone just has to tell the Royals that it is OK to win in nine innings every once in a while,” Roy said.

ALCS Game 3 Postponed Because of Rain

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Game 3 of the AL Championship Series has been postponed because of rain.

The game was pushed back from Monday to Tuesday at 8:07 p.m. EDT. Game 4 was rescheduled Wednesday at 4:07 p.m. EDT and Game 5, if needed for Thursday at 4:07 p.m. EDT.

Kansas City leads the best-of-seven series 2-0.

Major League Baseball Senior Vice President Peter Woodfork says: “We want a game we know we can get through nine innings, hopefully play dry baseball, not risk player safety or uncomfortable fans.”

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