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DETROIT(AP) Jim Leyland is out of answers.
Not only did his division-leading
Detroit Tigers
drop a fifth straight game to the last-place
Kansas City Royals
, 11-1 on Tuesday night, he has to fill another spot in his patchwork rotation.
Jarrod Washburn
lasted just one inning - the shortest start of his career - and gave up four runs before it became obvious that his sore left
knee wasn't up to pitching. The Tigers lost
Nate Robertson
(groin) and
Armando Galarraga
(elbow) last week, while
Dontrelle Willis
and
Jeremy Bonderman
have been unavailable for almost the entire season.
''I don't have any information for you right now, because I don't have any information for myself,'' Leyland said. ''I have
no idea who is going to pitch. We'll get together and try to figure something out.''
Washburn (9-9) struck out
David DeJesus
to start the game, but
Willie Bloomquist
doubled and
Billy Butler
and
Miguel Olivo
walked to load the bases.
A passed ball allowed the first run to score before
Alberto Callaspo
hit a three-run homer into the Kansas City bullpen in left-center field.
''When you've got a pitcher on the ropes like that, you have to finish him off,'' DeJesus said. ''Even though he's hurt, we
still have to play the game.''
Washburn finished the inning, but was replaced by
Zach Miner
for the second, and fell to 1-3 with a 7.33 ERA in eight starts since being acquired from Seattle on July 31.
''Shortly after the strikeout, we could tell he was in pain,'' Leyland said. ''We'll see what happens, but it seems pretty
obvious to me that, at this point, he's unpitchable.''
The win was Kansas City's fourth over Detroit in the last eight days, and Robinson Tejada's second in less than a week.
''The Tigers aren't as at full strength as Jim would like them, and we understand that,'' Kansas City manager Trey Hillman
said. ''But they are still playing for something, and we don't feel sorry for them, just like no one feels sorry for us for
being in last place.''
Tejada (3-1) allowed one run and two hits in five innings after shutting them out for six innings on Sept. 9.
''I don't think I'm an ace or anything like that,'' Tejada said. ''I'm just going out there and throwing the ball, and I've
gotten the opportunity to beat them two times in a week.''
Detroit had its only chance to get back into the game in the third inning, putting runners on second and third with one out.
Tejada, though, got
Carlos Guillen
to pop out and
Magglio Ordonez
to fly out.
DeJesus made it 7-0 with a three-run homer off
Casey Fien
in the fourth, and Olivo added an eighth run in the fifth when he tripled and scored on Callaspo's sacrifice fly.
The Tigers got on the board on Guillen's RBI single in the bottom of the fifth, but Tejada struck out
Miguel Cabrera
with the bases loaded to end the inning.
''He gets a lot of swings and misses because there's such a difference between his fastball and his changeup and because his
curveball is moving all over the place,'' Royals catcher
John Buck
said. ''Once we got off to the big lead, he loosened up.''
Olivo hit Kansas City's third three-run homer off Bonderman in the seventh, ending Detroit's hopes of a second straight late-inning
rally. Detroit beat Toronto 6-5 in 10 innings on Monday, scoring three times in the ninth and once in the 10th.
''Someone asked me if I thought the win last night would give us momentum, and I said the same thing I always say,'' Leyland
said. ''There's no momentum in baseball - there's just the next day's pitcher. Kansas City won't get any momentum from tonight
- it will just depends how the pitching goes.''
NOTES: Ordonez triggered his $18 million option for 2010 with a fifth-inning groundout. The at-bat was his 1,080th plate appearance
since the start of the 2008 season - the number he needed to automatically activate the sixth year of his contract. ... Leyland
took
Brandon Inge
, Ordonez and Cabrera out of the game after five innings with Detroit losing 8-1. ... The game drew 20,422 fans, the smallest
crowd at Comerica Park since 20,212 saw the Tigers play the
White Sox
on April 15. ... Play was delayed briefly in the top of the seventh when a shirtless fan ran onto the field. He was tackled
by security in left-center. ... Tigers closer
Fernando Rodney
served the second and final game of his suspension for throwing a ball into the stands at Tampa Bay on Sept. 4.
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