Rockies offense, bullpen falters in rout by Royals

US

The final line won’t show it, but Tanner Gordon nearly worked a storybook outing in his MLB debut. There was no sugarcoating a dismal day for the Colorado Rockies offense and bullpen, however.

Brady Singer quieted the Colorado bats, and the Kansas City Royals avoided a weekend sweep Sunday afternoon at Coors Field with a 10-1 victory in front of 32,180.

Gordon pounded the strike zone, which helped him work efficiently but may have also cost him a quality start. His final line: Five runs on eight hits in 6 1/3 innings. His performance was a reminder of the thin margins that come with pitching at this ballpark.

The 26-year-old Gordon threw just 16 balls in his 78 pitches. He had four strikeouts and no walks.

“There were a lot of good things to draw from (Gordon’s start),” Rockies manager Bud Black said. “He was attacking the zone. He wasn’t picking at the corners, wasn’t nibbling. He was aggressive with his stuff.

“That’s an outstanding ball-strike ratio. A ton of strikes.”

Kansas City did all the damage necessary in the second inning. Gordon allowed back-to-back-to-back singles, only one of which was hit particularly hard to yield the first run.

The big moment came on a 1-2 pitch to Maikel Garcia. Gordon threw Garcia a changeup at the bottom of the strike zone, but the Royals third baseman put it off the top of the fence and into the left-field seats for a three-run homer and a 4-0 advantage.

Beyond the second inning, Gordon was nearly flawless until the seventh. There were a few hard-hit balls right at Rockies defenders, but Gordon yielded only two singles — an infield hit and a weak-contact blooper to right field over the next four frames.

Gordon went back out for the seventh, but an MJ Melendez solo homer to right field and a bunt single ended his day with one out.

“It was a lot of fun,” said Gordon, who had more than 30 friends and family members in attendance. “After I threw the first pitch, all the nerves kind of settled and I was able to go out there and throw as many strikes as I could.”

Singer, a first-round pick by Kansas City in the 2018 draft in the midst of his best season with the Royals, cruised through six innings before also running out of gas in the seventh.

Nolan Jones singled home Jake Cave to break up the shoutout, but Aaron Schunk’s long fly ball to left field with two runners on landed in Melendez’ glove just short of the wall. Singer’s final line was one run allowed on six hits in 6 2/3 innings.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

When will the power return? Weary Carolinas residents long for relief after Helene's fury
‘Everyone has abandoned us and now Iran has, too’
Astronomers detect a planet near Barnard’s star, which is relatively close to Earth
Watch Tim Walz’s closing statement from the 2024 VP debate
Overturned NJ tanker truck smashes cars, multiple injuries

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *