I can't bear to watch them anymore. Blow 'em up. They're terrible. The Royals were up 7-2 in the top of the ninth,
at home, against Cleveland and gave up 11 runs, four of them unearned. My God.
As the
Star put it, "It was an astonishingly complete and absolute collapse."
Never, in the 37-year history of the franchise, in over 5,800 games, has the team given up 11 runs in the ninth inning.
"This is the worst," first baseman Mike Sweeney said, "I've ever been through in my 10 or 11 years here. The absolute worst. I don't ever remember anything like this. This was a heart-breaking loss."
It was worse than that. At one point in the ninth they were up 7-6, with 2 outs, with a man on first, when Cleveland pinch-hitter, Jeff Liefer lofted a high fly ball to left.
"When I first hit it," Liefer said, "I thought it might have a chance. I saw him settle under it and was like, 'Darn it.'"
Not to worry, Jeff. The Royals have left fielder Chip Ambres out there. The ball clanged off of his glove. Cleveland second baseman Ronnie Belliard scored from first with the tying run. Two other errors, by shortstop Angel Berroa and right fielder Emil Brown, led to three other unearned runs.
MacDougal inherited a 7-2 lead when he entered the game in the ninth. He had not allowed more than two runs in any of his previous 49 appearances. . . .
MacDougal immediately gave up doubles to Blake and Grady Sizemore before Coco Crisp lined an RBI single. That closed the margin to 7-4.
MacDougal struck out Peralta but surrendered a double to Travis Hafner that sent Crisp to third. Victor Martinez then punched an RBI single into right. Crisp scored; Hafner stopped at third. Belliard hit a pop into short center that Berroa missed for his second error of the game. This one allowed Hafner to score. But Berroa recovered in time to retire pinch-runner Ramon Vazquez on a force at second base.
Still, the Indians were now within one run at 7-6.
That's when Liefer, batting for Ben Broussard, hit a fly into the left-field corner that Ambres reached with no problem. The error allowed Belliard to score the tying run. Liefer wound up on second.
The Indians sent 14 hitters to the plate against closer Mike MacDougal and Jimmy Gobble. They collected eight hits, including six against MacDougal, 2-4. Those eight hits included four doubles and a homer.
The Indians had four doubles against MacDougal before Gobble served up a three-run homer to Jhonny Peralta that capped the scoring.
Just Sickening.