Royal Oak Tribune

Detroit struggles on defense, falls to Royals 2-1

- By Noah Trister

Brady Singer took the mound in the bottom of the first and struck out the side.

The Kansas City right-hander already looked like he was in a nice rhythm — and the way Detroit’s Matthew Boyd matched him, this turned into a quick afternoon at the ballpark.

Singer pitched seven impressive innings, and the Royals took advantage of some defensive sloppiness by the Tigers in a 2-1 victory Saturday. The game was over in 2 hours, 10 minutes — the shortest nine-inning contest in the major leagues this year — although Singer was apparently too focused to notice.

“I had no idea how quick the game was,” he said.

Willi Castro homered for Detroit in the fifth, but that wasn’t enough to overcome Kansas City’s two runs in the top of that inning. Singer (1-2) allowed three hits and struck out eight.

Scott Barlow worked the eighth, and Josh Staumont pitched a perfect ninth for his first career save.

The shortest previous nine-inning game this season, according to the Stathead tool at BaseballRe­ference.com, was actually the previous night, when Minnesota blanked Pittsburgh 2-0 in 2:17.

“You see the pace that was played today,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “Both pitchers had great pace, and that comes with the catchers knowing what to call and having the pitcher in rhythm.”

Boyd (2-2) was on the wrong end of this pitcher’s duel, allowing one earned run and three hits in eight innings. It was the fourth straight quality start for the left-hander.

The Tigers have lost eight of nine.

“We’re better than how we’ve played, and we’re getting it handed to us pretty often right now,” Hinch said. “Our guys are pretty frustrated.”

The Royals did not have a baserunner until Jorge Soler doubled to lead off the fifth. With men on first and third and one out, Andrew Benintendi hit a grounder to first. Jonathan Schoop threw to second for the force, but his throw was a bit high and took away any chance of a double play. Soler scored to make it 1-0.

Michael A. Taylor followed with a single to right, and Victor Reyes threw to third to try to catch Benintendi. The ball bounced past third for an error on Reyes, and Boyd wasn’t in position to back up the throw. The unearned run that came home on that play was ultimately the difference in the game.

“I think it’s just us figuring out ways to win,” Royals manager Mike Matheny said. “Today it was pressure on the bases, in my opinion caused some things to happen.”

Kansas City went down 1-2-3 in every other inning but the fifth.

Castro’s homer to right came on the Detroit infielder’s 24th birthday.

 ?? RAJ MEHTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Detroit Tigers’ Matthew Boyd pitches to a Kansas City Royals batter during the first inning of Saturday’s game in Detroit.
RAJ MEHTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Detroit Tigers’ Matthew Boyd pitches to a Kansas City Royals batter during the first inning of Saturday’s game in Detroit.
 ?? RAJ MEHTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Detroit Tigers catcher Wilson Ramos tosses the ball to Jonathan Schoop during the first inning of Saturday’s game against the Kansas City Royals in Detroit.
RAJ MEHTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Detroit Tigers catcher Wilson Ramos tosses the ball to Jonathan Schoop during the first inning of Saturday’s game against the Kansas City Royals in Detroit.

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