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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -
Michael Young
was just trying to put the ball in play. He did a lot more than that, and seconds later the
Texas Rangers
were celebrating a comeback victory.
Young hit a ninth-inning leadoff homer off reliever
Kyle Farnsworth
and the Rangers rallied from two runs down to beat the
Kansas City Royals
6-5 on Sunday.
Young ripped Farnsworth's 1-0 pitch 427 feet into the seats in left-center for his first career game-winning homer. Young
leaped into the air as he approached home plate, diving into a group of teammates there to greet him.
''It felt good,'' Young said. ''Hitting a home run was the last thing on my mind, facing a guy who's got really good stuff.
I was just thinking contact, get on base, and set the table for the guys behind me. It was cool ... when it helps the team
out, it's always a good feeling.''
The Rangers were searching for something positive after losing seven of their previous eight and dropping the first two games
of the series to the Royals by a combined score of 14-3.
''We needed it,'' Young said. ''Fortunately we got some breaks there in the eighth and tied it up. Hopefully we can get some
momentum out of this win and take it on the road.''
The Rangers trailed 5-3 when
Andruw Jones
doubled off reliever
Ron Mahay
in the eighth. Jones went to third when Royals first baseman
Mike Jacobs
booted
Hank Blalock
's grounder, and he scored on
Nelson Cruz
's ground out off
Jamey Wright
to make it 5-4.
Blalock went to second and
Chris Davis
followed with a pinch-hit single, with Blalock scoring when Davis' sharp grounder glanced off the glove of second baseman
Alberto Callaspo
. Callaspo recovered the ball and threw home, but Blalock's slide avoided the tag from catcher
John Buck
.
Frank Francisco
(1-0) pitched a perfect ninth for the win.
Ian Kinsler
, who homered and went 2-for-4, was standing next to Davis on the top step of the Rangers' dugout when Farnsworth threw the
second pitch to Young. Davis and Kinsler grabbed each other as the ball sailed into the seats, then sprinted onto the field
to await Young's arrival.
''The most fun is waiting for him to get to the plate because after that it's just chaos,'' Davis said.
Farnsworth said missing the strike zone with his first pitch proved disastrous.
''You don't like getting behind in the count,'' Farnsworth said. ''You have to throw a fastball and that's what he wants.''
Farnsworth has struggled early as the losing pitcher in three of the Royals' five losses.
''He hasn't gotten off to a good start,'' Kansas City manager Trey Hillman said. ''He's made improvements to his delivery.
But he's had more tough outings than positives. We've seen some good things out of him, but to do what we want to do,
Kyle Farnsworth
has got to perform for us.''
Royals starter
Kyle Davies
recovered from a four-walk first inning to pitch three-hit ball over six innings, leaving with a 5-3 lead before the bullpen
faltered.
Davies fell behind 2-0 in a shaky first but righted himself to allow three runs, strike out eight and walk five.
Jacobs and
David DeJesus
homered and drove in two runs each for the Royals, who had won five of six entering Sunday's game.
Texas starter
Vicente Padilla
allowed five runs and eight hits in five innings with five strikeouts and one walk.
Davies had trouble finding the strike zone in the first, walking four with Kinsler and Young executing a double steal. Blalock's
sacrifice fly and
David Murphy
's bases-loaded walk gave Texas a 2-0 lead.
''I tried pounding the fastball but I just couldn't locate it,'' Davies said. ''I should have gone to the breaking ball. I
needed to make the adjustment a little sooner. It went a little too far in the first inning.''
Jacobs' two-run homer in the second tied it at 2-2.
Kinsler's homer in the second put Texas ahead 3-2, but DeJesus' RBI single in the third tied it at 3.
Buck's RBI single in the fourth gave the Royals a 4-3 lead, and DeJesus' solo homer in the fifth made it 5-3.
Meanwhile, Davies settled in after Kinsler's homer, retiring 14 of the next 16 batters.
Notes: Hillman said right-hander
Zack Greinke
is on track to join the game's elite pitchers. Greinke tossed his first major league shutout in beating the Rangers on Saturday
night, extending his shutout streak to 34 innings dating to last season. ''He's on a roll,'' Hillman said. ''That was about
as good as it gets. I think Zack can be one of the premier pitchers in the major leagues.''. ... Davies threw 37 pitches (22
balls) in the first inning. ...Texas C
Taylor Teagarden
made his third start of the season, striking out three times. Regular C
Jarrod Saltalamacchia
has been struggling at the plate, batting .176 after 11 games, but manager
Ron Washington
said Saltalamacchia has improved at calling a game and blocking balls in the dirt. ... Texas slugger
Josh Hamilton
struck out seven times in the three-game series.
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