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BALTIMORE(AP) The
Kansas City Royals
played an entire game without an assist, a rarity in the big leagues.
Far more commonplace is Royals ace Zach Greinke pitching well and not having a win to show for it, which is exactly what occurred
for the fifth time this month in Baltimore's 7-3 victory Wednesday night.
The last team to go a game without an assist was Tampa Bay on May 17, 2003, also in a loss - eight innings in the field -
to Baltimore, according to STATS LLC. Only five teams in major league history have done it for at least nine innings in the
field.
The Orioles hit only two grounders, both of which were handled by first baseman
Billy Butler
before he touched the bag himself.
Greinke, meanwhile, pitched six innings of five-hit ball and left with a 3-2 lead. But Baltimore went ahead with a three-run
seventh that kept the AL ERA leader winless in July.
''We have found a way to lose a lot this month no matter how it is. Just been a real bad month for everyone,'' said Greinke,
referring to the Royals' 7-17 record in July.
Adam Jones
homered and drove in three runs,
Nick Markakis
also had three RBIs, and the Orioles got a decent start from 21-year-old
Chris Tillman
in his major league debut.
Tillman yielded three homers, but those were the only runs he permitted over 4 2-3 innings. Tillman gave up only five homers
in 18 starts this season with Triple-A Norfolk.
''I feel like next time I'll be a little more comfortable up there,'' he said. ''I'll have my feet underneath me. Hopefully,
my breaking stuff will be there.''
Greinke went 0-3 in five starts this month despite allowing only nine runs in 32 innings. Unfortunately, Kansas City scored
six runs in July while he was in the game.
In this one, Greinke permitted two runs in the first before limiting Baltimore to one hit over the next five innings. By the
time he left, he had thrown 116 pitches.
''Greinke is as tough as anybody in the big leagues, but we worked him,'' Orioles manager Dave Trembley said. ''We got his
pitch count up and we worked him.''
Although Greinke's ERA rose slightly to 2.08, his seven strikeouts moved him past
Steve Busby
into eighth place on the Royals career list with 661.
Alberto Callaspo
,
Miguel Olivo
and
Mike Jacobs
homered off Tillman, who allowed seven hits and a walk before leaving to a standing ovation from the crowd of 19,741.
''That was pretty special. It feels good,'' the right-hander said. ''I've heard a lot about these fans here. Getting into
the dugout and the guys even joking with me then, it was definitely a good feeling.''
Tillman was the fifth Orioles starter to make his debut this year - and the only one who didn't earn a victory. But Baltimore
has won each of those games.
Robinson Tejada (1-1) followed Greinke and promptly walked the first two batters in the seventh. Jones then doubled in a run
off
John Bale
, and Markakis followed with a line-drive single that easily cleared the drawn-up infield.
Markakis and
Aubrey Huff
added RBI singles in the eighth.
Matt Albers
(2-4), who rescued Tillman with two on in the fifth, gave up one hit in 2 1-3 innings and
Jim Johnson
worked two innings for his second save.
Greinke was fortunate to get out of the first inning in a 2-0 hole. After
Brian Roberts
led off with a single, Jones homered to left - his third first-inning drive in as many games. Baltimore then used a double,
a walk and a hit batter to load the bases before
Gregg Zaun
struck out.
Tillman got off to a good start by retiring the side in order in the first, but Callaspo and Olivo hit solo homers in the
second to tie it. Callaspo's homer extended his hitting streak to a season-high 11 games.
Jacobs' 14th homer put the Royals up 3-2 in the fourth.
NOTES: Cincinnati was the last team to go without an assist while playing at least nine innings in the field, in 1997. ...
To make room for Tillman, the Orioles put LHP
Rich Hill
(shoulder) on the 15-day disabled list. ... KC RHP
Gil Meche
(back strain) threw 52 pitches in a simulated game Wednesday and could be sent to the minors for a rehab assignment if he
feels OK Thursday, manager Trey Hillman said.
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