
CLEVELAND (AP) — Some batters hit for the cycle. Indians slugger Franmil Reyes nearly hit the cyclist.
Reyes homered twice, the first a second-inning blast that bounced out of Progressive Field and almost dinged a bicyclist pedaling on a street next to the park, and Cleveland beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-2 on Wednesday.
Reyes’ leadoff homer in the second glanced off the pedestrian bridge in left field and landed on the plaza area between the ballpark and Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse. The ball traveled an estimated 446 feet.
The homer got the attention of his teammates who marveled over the distance of the blast while watching from the dugout.
“It’s ridiculous,” Indians starter Zach Plesac said. “He sent that ball out of the stadium. I don’t think I’ve ever seen that. That’s incredible.”
Reyes said he hasn’t hit a ball out of the park during batting practice and was unaware the home run almost hit someone riding a bike. He does take note of the response he sees from his teammates as he rounds the bases after a long home run.
“After each homer I like to go to the iPad and look at their reaction and some of them were putting their hands right here (behind their heads),” he said. “It was pretty awesome.”
Reyes wasn’t done. He finished off Cleveland’s three-homer inning in the third with his 19th of the season, a 421-foot drive to center.
César Hernández and José Ramírez also homered in the inning for Cleveland, which avoided dropping under .500 for the first time since May 1. Hernández’s two-run homer gave Cleveland a 3-2 lead. He had a sacrifice fly in the fourth.
Kwang Hyun Kim (6-6) gave up all four homers and lost for the first time since June 20, breaking a stretch of wins in five straight starts. Reyes’ second homer ended the day for Kim, who allowed five runs in 2 2/3 innings.
Plesac (6-3) gave up two runs in five innings. He made his fourth start since coming off the injured list July 8 after missing six weeks with a broken right thumb.
St. Louis third baseman Nolan Arenado was hit on the right forearm by a pitch from Pleasc in the fifth. The All-Star third baseman walked around the home plate area and slowly went to first despite being in obvious pain while talking with manager Mike Shildt and a trainer.
Arenado took the field for defense in the bottom of the inning but was removed. The Cardinals announced he had a bruised forearm and is day to day.
Shildt said Arenado is optimistic that he’ll play Friday when the Cardinals open a three-game series against Minnesota as the pitch appeared to strike him on the back of his arm.
“Thankfully, it looks like it got mostly meat,” Shildt said. “The off-day tomorrow will help. He’ll get treatment. It got him pretty good.”
Dylan Carlson led off the third with his 11th homer. Yadier Molina’s two-out single gave St. Louis a first-inning lead, but Kim’s short outing was costly.
“He wasn’t able to get the ball on the ground,” Shildt said. “His velocity was down a tick. He lived up top too much and in the air a lot.”
PITCHING UPDATE
Indians pitchers Shane Bieber and Aaron Civale are on throwing programs but no timetable has been established for their return. Bieber (sore right shoulder) has been playing catch and has yet to throw off the mound. The reigning AL Cy Young winner hasn’t pitched since June 13. Civale (sprained right middle finger) threw off the mound Tuesday and appears closer to returning. He last pitched June 20.
“These are guys that are very important to us,” pitching coach Carl Willis said. “Sometimes it’s hard to be patient because we want them back so badly and they want to be back so badly, but we have to make sure we do it right.”
MILLER TIME
Cardinals left-hander Andrew Miller, making his first appearance in Cleveland since 2018, received a long ovation when he entered the game in the eighth inning. Miller was a key member of the Indians’ bullpen in 2016 when Cleveland came within a game of winning the World Series.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Cardinals: RHP Jack Flaherty, who has been on the injured list since June 1 with an oblique strain, is expected to make another rehab start next week. He struck out three in two scoreless innings Tuesday for Triple-A Memphis. Shildt said Flaherty threw 45 pitches, including 14 in the bullpen after leaving the game.
UP NEXT
Cardinals: LHP Wade LeBlanc (0-2) will start Friday.
Indians: RHP J.C. Mejia (1-6), who has lost his last four starts, will pitch against the Chicago White
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Michael A. Taylor’s two-out single in the bottom of the 10th inning drove Hunter Dozier home from second base as the Kansas City Royals beat the Chicago White Sox 3-2 on Wednesday night.
The Royals had tied the game at 2-2 in the bottom of the ninth when Salvador Perez hit his 24th homer, a solo shot to left-center off AL saves leader Liam Hendriks.
“I was just trying to do my job, hit the ball hard,” Perez said of his home run.
Scott Barlow (3-3), who took over in the 10th as the fifth Royals pitcher, struck out two and walked one. Ryan Burr (2-1) pitched the final inning for Chicago.
Kansas City opened the 10th when Hanser Alberto’s sacrifice bunt sent Andrew Benintendi to third. Dozier reached on a fielder’s choice and moved to second after shortstop Tim Anderson threw home to get out Benintendi. Taylor then singled to center for his fourth career game-ending RBI.
“I was just looking for a good pitch to hit,” Taylor said. “With two strikes, I’m not even sure what I hit right there.”
White Sox starter Lucas Giolito allowed one run on four hits in six-plus innings, walking one and striking out seven. Giolito is 5-1 all-time in Kauffman Stadium with a 2.74 ERA (19 earned runs in 62 1/3 innings). He has had 10 quality starts in his 10 starts in Kansas City, allowing no more than three runs in any of them.
“Sometimes there’s no justice in this game,” White Sox manager Tony La Russa said.
“I felt pretty good. I felt like my stuff was playing well, especially my slider,” Giolito said. “It was one of the best slider nights I’ve had this year. I want to build off that.”
Royals manager Mike Matheny was impressed with Giolito’s outing.
“We were getting no-hit,” he said. “We were having trouble making anything happen and he had it all working.”
Kris Bubic allowed two runs on five hits in six-plus innings for Kansas City. He walked one and struck out three.
The White Sox scored twice in the fifth. Bubic gave up singles to Andrew Vaughn, Leury Garcia and Danny Mendick on a hit up the middle that scored Vaughn. Center fielder Taylor’s throw home was off line, but catcher Perez threw to second. Garcia scored when Whit Merrifield chased Mendick back to first.
The Royals finally scored when Giolito allowed back-to-back doubles to Perez and Jorge Soler to start the seventh.
BLOWN SAVE, NO K
Hendriks, who had his sixth blown save in 31 chances, retired the other three batters he faced without a strikeout. That ended his streak of at least one strikeout in 17 consecutive games, the longest by a White Sox reliever since Tommy Kahnle’s club-record 26 games in 2017.
TRAINER’S ROOM
White Sox DH Eloy Jimenez left the game with groin tightness.
UP NEXT
The White Sox send LHP Carlos Rodon (8-4, 2.24 ERA) to the mound Thursday afternoon for the finale of the four-game series. The Royals will counter with RHP Carlos Hernandez (1-1, 5.72 ERA), making his third consecutive start after previously pitching out of the bullpen.