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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Sitting in the Kansas City dugout watching
Scott Baker
go for a no-hitter,
Willie Bloomquist
and the Royals wondered aloud how to hex the Minnesota ace.
''We were trying every way possible to jinx him every inning,'' Bloomquist said.
Whatever they did right before the seventh inning sure worked.
Bloomquist ended Baker's no-hit bid with a single,
Jose Guillen
connected for a three-run homer in the same inning and the Royals rallied past Minnesota 7-5 on Sunday.
Guillen's three-run shot accounted for the first runs off Baker (0-4), who flirted with Minnesota's first no-hitter since
1999. But he gave up five consecutive hits in the seventh and failed to record an out as the Royals overcame their largest
deficit this season to take two of three in the series.
It was the second time Baker had a brush with history against Kansas City. He took a perfect game into the ninth inning on
Aug. 31, 2007, at the Metrodome before issuing a leadoff walk to
John Buck
and allowing a one-out single by pinch-hitter
Mike Sweeney
.
The right-hander finished that game with a one-hitter. This time was a much different outcome.
''A little frustrating, obviously,'' Baker said. ''Just try to take what you can take positively from the outing and just
kind of go from there.''
Guillen drove in four runs, and Kansas City starter
Gil Meche
(2-2) lasted six innings and a season-high 116 pitches after leaving his previous start at Toronto with lower back stiffness.
''When they've got a no-hitter into the seventh inning and we get five runs, that says a lot that the guys haven't given up,''
said Meche, who also started opposite Baker during his 2007 one-hitter.
Delmon Young
's RBI single in the sixth gave Minnesota a 4-0 lead.
Until that point, Baker's lone blemish was a second-inning walk to Guillen. Baker then retired 15 straight before Bloomquist's
leadoff single in the seventh.
Mark Teahen
followed with a single and Guillen hit his third homer on an 0-2 pitch to pull the Royals to 4-3.
''The game did a 360 on us,'' Twins manager
Ron Gardenhire
said. ''I don't know if he hit a wall. It looked like he just couldn't make a pitch after he gave up that one hit. A tough
day. Bake threw the heck out of the ball.''
Mike Jacobs
and
David DeJesus
singled to chase Baker, who struck out four and left to a standing ovation. Still, he wound up with a loss.
''Didn't seem like they ever gave up or ever gave in,'' Baker said. ''They made me battle the whole game, made me throw a
lot of pitches.''
Luis Ayala
gave up
Alberto Callaspo
's two-run double to left-center, putting the Royals up 5-4. Guillen added a run-scoring double in the eighth and
Coco Crisp
hit a sacrifice fly in the ninth.
Guillen has three homers since coming off the disabled list April 24.
''He's a cornerstone there in the middle of the lineup and he's an RBI machine,'' Royals manager Trey Hillman said. ''It's
nice having him back.''
Horacio Ramirez
and
Jamey Wright
each worked a scoreless inning before
Joakim Soria
pitched the ninth for his sixth save in six chances.
Soria gave up a run when pinch-hitter
Joe Mauer
singled to score
Denard Span
.
Notes: The Twins activated RHP
Jesse Crain
(shoulder) from the DL and sent C
Jose Morales
to Triple-A Rochester. Earlier in the day, Gardenhire said Morales played well with Mauer out injured. But with backup C
Mike Redmond
ready to get back in the lineup, the Twins didn't need a third catcher. Redmond, who turns 38 on Tuesday, has been bothered
by a sore shoulder and hasn't played since April 25. ''He could catch today if needed,'' Gardenhire said. ... Bloomquist made
his first start at shortstop this season after starting in left field, right field and at second base. He's hit safely in
five straight games. ... Kansas City got its sixth comeback win of the season. ... Callaspo has hit safely in 15 of his last
16 games.
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