Late collapse sends KC to 10th straight loss
KANSAS CITY -- The anatomy of a 10-game losing streak often includes a fair share of bad luck. And right now, the Royals are getting a bellyful of it. The Royals -- one pitch, maybe one inch from finally stopping this April bleeding -- were instead stung again, this time
KANSAS CITY -- The anatomy of a 10-game losing streak often includes a fair share of bad luck. And right now, the Royals are getting a bellyful of it.
The Royals -- one pitch, maybe one inch from finally stopping this April bleeding -- were instead stung again, this time by a windblown, two-out, two-run triple off the bat of Seattle’s Mitch Haniger against right-hander
Worse yet, center fielder
In the 10th, Daniel Vogelbach hammered a home run and the Mariners walked away with an improbable 7-6 win against the reeling Royals.
Kansas City manager Ned Yost and his players were virtually speechless afterward, trying to describe the latest tough-luck loss.
“I mean,” Yost said, “it has to turn around.”
Outfielder
“We can go out there and … put a BP pitcher out there, and guys are going to make outs because it’s hard to hit a baseball. It’s just that other teams can’t seem to do any wrong right now. And it’s wild, it’s wild to see.
“That pitch Boxberger made in the ninth was a good pitch -- changeup down and away, might have even been down in the zone, and any other day that’s an F8. But he rode the wind a little bit, just enough to get off the top of Billy’s glove and … it’s crazy to see what’s happening, it really is.”
The horrific ending wiped out several feel-good stories from earlier in the game.
Royals right-hander
“The wind kind of shifted at that point and just kind of carried it out,” Lopez said. “I was surprised. On a normal day, that’s just a fly ball to right. That’s the way it is right now.”
"With the way the wind was blowing, it may have carried a little bit, but off the bat I definitely thought it was an out today,” Boxberger said.
Yost agreed: “I definitely thought it was an out.”
Not for these 2019 Royals.
Jeffrey Flanagan has covered the Royals since 1991, and for MLB.com since 2015. Follow him on Twitter at @FlannyMLB.