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MLB : Run Line Matchup
Tuesday 6/2/2015Line$ LineOU LineScore
CLEVELAND  CARRASCO )
 
KANSAS CITY  GUTHRIE )
-1.5  +115

+1.5  -135
-130

+120

8un
 
2
Final
1

CLEVELAND (24 - 26) at KANSAS CITY (29 - 19)
View Previous GameView Next Game
Tuesday, 6/2/2015 8:10 PM
CARLOS CARRASCO (R) vs. JEREMY GUTHRIE (R)
Board OpeningLatest
 Run LineRun Line
973CLEVELAND-1.5,+140-1.5,+110
974KANSAS CITY+1.5,-160+1.5,-130
Current Run Line FoxSheets
ATS FoxSheet
Run Line FoxSheet
 
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
CLEVELAND - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games24-26-6.325-244.50.2540.3310.4050.7364.40.2520.3120.4000.712
Road Games14-12+1.89-164.20.2450.3150.3930.7083.50.2310.2970.3650.662
vs Right-handed Starters14-15-5.515-134.70.2610.3400.4220.7624.70.2630.3170.4140.730
Past 7 Games4-3+0.44-35.60.2660.3420.4600.8024.00.2240.2920.4020.694
Grass Games24-26-6.325-244.50.2540.3310.4050.7364.40.2520.3120.4000.712
Night Games15-13+0.213-154.40.2410.3190.4000.7193.80.2380.2910.3810.672
Division10-17-9.414-124.30.2430.3160.3810.6974.90.2760.3340.4170.751
CLEVELAND - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games4.50.2540.3315016954301008470.4052191963332838235333733
Road Games4.20.2450.31526889218424270.393105911721618521171918
Righty Starters4.70.2610.34029984257607280.4221321181921822517222118
CLEVELAND - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.261.306154.7715614117611534-812570.6%
Road Games2.871.23269222255630773-38188.9%

KANSAS CITY - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games29-19+9.423-214.70.2780.3190.4190.7393.60.2330.3000.3640.664
Home Games17-7+8.511-114.70.2810.3250.4240.7492.90.2210.2840.3290.613
vs Right-handed Starters19-12+6.418-114.90.2820.3250.4290.7543.90.2380.3050.3940.700
Past 7 Games2-5-3.12-42.40.2070.2620.3170.5795.30.2580.3330.4630.796
Grass Games29-19+9.423-214.70.2780.3190.4190.7393.60.2330.3000.3640.664
Night Games19-12+6.215-154.40.2800.3140.4150.7293.50.2310.3000.3520.652
Division15-10+514-95.10.2860.3280.4320.7613.60.2260.2920.3350.626
KANSAS CITY - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games4.70.2780.3194816534599514370.4192111012782832543273715
Home Games4.70.2810.32524779219459160.4241095111521154197217
Righty Starters4.90.2820.3253110542976111240.429141671821720230142610
KANSAS CITY - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games1.871.040158.73633108115713810-314573.7%
Home Games1.490.94578.3131354420665-09190%
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
CLEVELAND - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
5/19/2015BAUER(R)@ CHI WHITE SOXQUINTANA(L)3-1W1357.5 unU991470
5/20/2015MARCUM(R)@ CHI WHITE SOXRODON(L)4-3W1558.5 evU670650
5/21/2015SALAZAR(R)@ CHI WHITE SOXDANKS(L)5-2W-1308.5 unU11111772
5/22/2015CARRASCO(R)CINCINNATILEAKE(R)7-3W-1757 unO11111650
5/23/2015KLUBER(R)CINCINNATIDESCLAFANI(R)2-1W-2357 unU450960
5/24/2015BAUER(R)CINCINNATIIGLESIAS(R)5-2W-1808.5 ovU8131663
5/25/2015MARCUM(R)TEXASKLEIN(R)8-10L-1309 ovO872931
5/26/2015SALAZAR(R)TEXASRODRIGUEZ(L)3-4L-1558.5 evU590881
5/27/2015CARRASCO(R)TEXASLEWIS(R)12-3W-1558.5 unO1780841
5/28/2015KLUBER(R)@ SEATTLEPAXTON(L)5-3W-1157 unO1080761
5/29/2015BAUER(R)@ SEATTLEWALKER(R)1-2L-1057.5 ovU320670
5/30/2015MARCUM(R)@ SEATTLEELIAS(L)4-3W1307.5 ovU6501190
5/31/2015SALAZAR(R)@ SEATTLEHAPP(L)6-3W1057 evO18171580
6/2/2015CARRASCO(R)@ KANSAS CITYGUTHRIE(R) 
6/3/2015KLUBER(R)@ KANSAS CITYVARGAS(L) 
6/4/2015BAUER(R)@ KANSAS CITYYOUNG(R) 
6/5/2015MARCUM(R)BALTIMORETILLMAN(R) 
6/6/2015SALAZAR(R)BALTIMOREJIMENEZ(R) 
6/7/2015CARRASCO(R)BALTIMOREWRIGHT(R) 
6/9/2015 SEATTLE  

KANSAS CITY - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
5/19/2015VENTURA(R)CINCINNATICUETO(R)3-0W-1206.5 unU960440
5/20/2015GUTHRIE(R)CINCINNATIMARQUIS(R)7-1W-1507.5 unO10409100
5/22/2015YOUNG(R)ST LOUISLYNN(R)5-0W-1107 unU11608130
5/23/2015VOLQUEZ(R)ST LOUISLACKEY(R)3-2W-1307 evU651450
5/24/2015VENTURA(R)ST LOUISWACHA(R)1-6L-1307 evP6601061
5/25/2015GUTHRIE(R)@ NY YANKEESEOVALDI(R)1-14L1058.5 evO8911470
5/26/2015VARGAS(L)@ NY YANKEESWARREN(R)1-5L-1058.5 unU442761
5/27/2015YOUNG(R)@ NY YANKEESPINEDA(R)2-4L1257.5 unU880981
5/29/2015VOLQUEZ(R)@ CHICAGO CUBSARRIETA(R)8-4W1358.5 unO1150862
5/31/2015VENTURA(R)@ CHICAGO CUBSWADA(L)1-2L-1106.5 unU480780
6/2/2015GUTHRIE(R)CLEVELANDCARRASCO(R) 
6/3/2015VARGAS(L)CLEVELANDKLUBER(R) 
6/4/2015YOUNG(R)CLEVELANDBAUER(R) 
6/5/2015VOLQUEZ(R)TEXASGONZALEZ(R) 
6/6/2015VENTURA(R)TEXASRODRIGUEZ(L) 
6/7/2015GUTHRIE(R)TEXASLEWIS(R) 
6/8/2015 @ MINNESOTA  
6/9/2015 @ MINNESOTA  
KEY GAME INFORMATION
CLEVELAND: CLEVELAND (AP) - While their AL Central rivals jockeyed during the offseason, one trying to outdo the other to improve their chances of winning a World Series title, the Indians watched.
That was the plan.
No, they didn't make any blockbuster trades, sign a big-name, big-ticket free agent or overhaul their roster with new faces. The Indians, who somehow stayed in contention last season until the waning days of September, didn't feel the need to make radical changes. It wasn't necessary.
The pieces are in place for Cleveland to have a special 2015 season.
''The team knows it,'' said second baseman Jason Kipnis. ''We got two winning seasons in a row. We had an 85-win season when we had about three guys playing good. The possibilities are there, the potential is there. That whole last year we never had more than a seven-game winning streak, never really got hot.
''We got the same corps. Same group of guys. We kind of want another chance at this again - and we're getting another chance.''
The Indians return virtually the same team that went 85-77 last season, finishing third behind division champion Detroit and wild-card winner Kansas City, which ended a postseason drought dating to 1985, won the pennant and pushed San Francisco to seven games in the World Series.
Watching the Royals inspired the Indians. And as he prepares for his third season in Cleveland, manager Terry Francona senses a different drive in his players.
They're hungry.
''Our veteran guys are trying to get better,'' he said. ''Our younger guys are excited to prove what they can do. I didn't see anybody just kind of go home and want to kind of keep the status quo. We're all excited about that.''
Francona said they're upping expectations both on performance and results.
''They're kind of at a stage where they're embracing trying to see if we can go up against some of these teams and, not only maybe hold our own, but maybe do a little more than that,'' Francona said.
There's no denying Francona's magical touch. The man who helped end Boston's supposed baseball curse, who got the Indians to the postseason in 2013, has an uncanny ability to convince players buy in to his program and get them to believe they can overcome any obstacles: injuries, payroll, low expectations, the Tigers lineup.
This spring, Francona didn't have to sell the Indians, who haven't won a World Series since 1948, on the idea they can compete. They already know that. Now it's a matter of taking the next step.
''When guys believe they can do it, and then they start to do it, then you see the confidence take over and guys take off, and you can accomplish a lot,'' he said. ''That's part of the fun of the season, to see how good you can get. I'd rather enjoy, as much as we can, the journey.''
---
KLUBER UBER ALLES
All Corey Kluber did in his first major-league season was win 18 games, re-write some record books, dominate almost every time he pitched and win the AL Cy Young.
The 28-year-old could do it again.
Seemingly programmed because of his consistent performances and composed demeanor, Kluber gives the Indians a long-needed and legitimate No. 1 starter capable of winning every time he gets the ball. He scares opponents and makes his teammates better.
The Indians have discussed a long-term contract extension for the right-hander, who isn't even eligible for arbitration.
---
YOUR TABLE, MR. BRANTLEY
Michael Brantley just might be baseball's most unassuming star, and he plans to keep it that way. The 27-year-old's breakout 2014 season - he batted .327 with 20 homers, 97 RBIs and a third-place finish in MVP voting - was followed by obligatory can-he-do-it-again questions.
Francona thinks Brantley might be poised for bigger things. The spotlight will find Brantley, but he's not craving it.
''He's so consistent at a high level that I don't see that going away,'' he said. ''He's so confident in what he's doing that I think he enjoys playing the game and the other things that come with it, I think he could take it or leave it. He has a really good understanding of who he is.''
---
BETTER BE BETTER
For the Indians to get where they want, Kipnis (.240), CF Michael Bourn (106 games) and DH Nick Swisher (offseason knee surgeries) need to bounce back and produce more than they did in `14.
No position player is more important than Kipnis, a 2013 All-Star who was injured most of last season.
''He can affect the game so many ways - steal a base, get a bunt down, hit a ball in the gap,'' Francona said.
KANSAS CITY: KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Every once in a while, Ned Yost will spin a story about his days on Bobby Cox's bench with the Atlanta Braves, back when the organization was winning NL pennants by the fistful.
Inevitably, Yost would start drawing comparisons to his Kansas City Royals - that they were building through the farm system in the same manner as the Braves, and Kansas City would embrace the franchise in the same way Atlanta did if it ever became a winner.
Last year, that narrative finally made sense.
After squeaking into the playoffs as a wild card, the Royals swept all the way to the World Series. If not for a virtuoso performance by Madison Bumgarner of the San Francisco Giants, the Royals might very well have been celebrating their second championship.
The postseason run led Yost to draw one more comparison when he arrived in Arizona for the start of a new season, and his players filed into the clubhouse for the first time.
''It definitely reminded me of that feeling in Atlanta,'' he said, ''when you came to spring training every year with the feeling that you have an opportunity to go to the World Series - instead of hoping, you know? And it's a different feeling.''
There is good reason for that feeling, too.
The Royals return most of the pieces from the club that ended a 29-year playoff drought, including one of the best bullpens in baseball history. And the pieces they did lose to free agency have been replaced with what could turn out to be upgrades.
Designated hitter Billy Butler is gone, Kendrys Morales signed in his place. Alex Rios is taking over for Nori Aoki in right field. Edinson Volquez was signed to fill the rotation spot of staff ace James Shields, who chased bigger money all the way to San Diego.
Even though a few faces have changed, the tenants that the Royals believe in have not: They will continue to rely on speed, defense and pitching to chase another playoff berth.
''Any time you're fortunate enough to keep those key pieces, you feel good,'' said Greg Holland, the Royals' All-Star closer. ''Yeah, we lost Billy and Shields and Nori, but for the most part, we're right where we need to be.''
Besides, the back end of the bullpen is still intact.
Kelvin Herrera harnessed his electrifying fastball to become a shutdown seventh-inning reliever last season. Former starter Wade Davis had a historically dominant year as the setup man. Holland further cemented his status as the AL's best closer.
''The way you tilt the field in your favor, in my opinion, is having quality pitching and really good defense,'' Royals general manager Dayton Moore said. ''Those are things that hopefully can show up every single day and perform for you.''
As the Royals approach opening day against the Chicago White Sox on April 6 at Kauffman Stadium, here are a few other story lines to watch this season:
THE ROTATION: Shields was the anchor in 2014, but he struggled mightily in the playoffs. So when the Royals signed Volquez to replace him, it was mostly met with a collective shrug.
Besides, the success of the rotation will more likely be determined by the success of young flamethrowers Danny Duffy and Yordano Ventura, both of whom have ace ability.
INJURY BUGS: The Royals stayed remarkably healthy last season. Will karma even out?
Second baseman Omar Infante already missed long stretches of spring training with a bone spur in his elbow that could require surgery next offseason. Left fielder Alex Gordon also got a slow start to the spring after undergoing wrist surgery this past offseason.
SLOW STARTS: The last couple of seasons, the Royals have gotten off to slow starts. They unsuccessfully dug out of a big hole two years ago, but pulled it off last season.
Considering every other team in the AL Central appeared to get better over the winter, the Royals can ill afford to let Detroit, Cleveland and Minnesota and the White Sox bury them.
RESTING SALVY: All-Star catcher Salvador Perez faded in the playoffs in part due to his heavy work load in the regular season, where he appeared in 150 games. Yost intends to give him more days off this year, though it's hard to take his bat out of the lineup.
BASEBALL TOWN: Did the World Series run turn Kansas City into a baseball town again? The club has been overshadowed for decades by the Chiefs, who play just across the parking lot in Arrowhead stadium. How will fans respond to having the reigning AL champions?
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER AL PREVIEW (CLEVELAND-KANSAS CITY) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

(EDITS)

*Indians-Royals Preview* ========================

By JORDAN GARRETSON STATS Writer

Cleveland (24-26) at Kansas City (29-19), 8:10 p.m. EDT

Few would have anticipated a disastrous outing for Jeremy Guthrie considering his recent showings, but he was historically bad his last time out.

He'll try to move past last week's ugly start and help the slumping Kansas City Royals against the visiting Cleveland Indians on Tuesday night.

Guthrie (4-3, 6.70 ERA) allowed a career-high 11 runs and four homers while getting three outs in a 14-1 loss to the New York Yankees last Monday. Thirteen of the 16 batters he faced reached base, and the right-hander became the second starter since at least 1914 to surrender 11 or more earned runs while completing no more than one inning.

He had won three straight starts with a 1.96 ERA.

"It was just one of those days for him. It happens," manager Ned Yost said.

Guthrie hasn't had much success against Cleveland, going 5-5 with a 6.14 ERA in 14 games - 12 starts. He last faced the Indians on April 28, surrendering four runs in five innings of an 11-5 road victory. He didn't get the decision.

Kansas City has fallen behind Minnesota by a half-game in the AL Central after dropping five of six. The Royals (29-19) have totaled six runs in those losses and managed four hits in Sunday's 2-1, 11-inning defeat to the Chicago Cubs.

Facing Cleveland might spark Kansas City's lineup, as the club batted .296 in taking four of the first six meetings. Eric Hosmer, 5 for 26 in his last eight contests, has hit .400 with 12 RBIs in his past eight matchups and has three homers against the Indians in 2015.

Mike Moustakas is 4 for 20 in his last six overall but 12 for 25 in the season series with Cleveland.

The Indians (24-26) have won 10 of 13 and have a chance in this series to get back to .500 for the first time since being 2-2. Cleveland has posted a 2.87 ERA in its last 13 games and the bullpen has been particularly impressive, allowing one run over 13 1-3 innings in the past four.

The relievers yielded one hit in 6 2-3 scoreless innings of Sunday's 6-3, 12-inning victory at Seattle.

Jason Kipnis doubled twice and finished May with 51 hits and 37 runs.

"But forget the month, I think he's an unbelievable player," manager Terry Francona said. "He does so many things to help us win. It's been like that for a while now. He's been a force."

Carlos Carrasco (6-4, 4.24) has won his last two starts, holding Cincinnati and Texas to three runs over 14 innings with 15 strikeouts. His 10.36 strikeouts per nine innings are a career high.

He allowed only a solo homer in a season high-tying eight innings of a 12-3 victory over the Rangers on Wednesday. Carrasco was backed by nine or more runs for the third time in his last four victories.

"You know what, I never think about that," he said of the run support. "I just continue to try to throw zeros."

Carrasco has won three straight starts twice, both in 2011.

The right-hander beat Kansas City 10-3 at Kauffman Stadium on May 6, giving up three runs in seven innings. The Indians had lost Carrasco's last eight appearances against the Royals, and he posted a 0-3 record and 5.09 ERA in that span.

Alex Gordon is 2 for 21 with 10 strikeouts off Carrasco.


Last Updated: 5/19/2024 9:44:45 PM EST.


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