YESTERDAY IN POSTSEASON PLAY:
There
is something to be said about the persistent pressure that the Royals have exerted
on the Mets this series. Once again, mistakes cost the NL champions the game in
the late innings as hits continued to fall for the Royals and they did just
enough to take a daunting 3-1 series lead over New York. We will have to see if
the Dark Knight rises or if the Royals will prove to be the bane of his existence
in game 5.
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Royals Beat Mets
5-3
It just keeps happening. These Royals just hang around and
hang around and wait for one key mistake. Then they pounce. For the seventh
time this postseason, the Royals came from behind to win. Fueled again by a
patient offensive approach and a devastating defensive mistake -- this one by
Mets second baseman Daniel Murphy -- Kansas
City grabbed a 5-3 win in Game 4 of the World Series on Saturday night at Citi
Field. The Royals, up 3-1 in the Series, are one win away from their first
World Series championship since 1985. Game 5 is set for Sunday. Murphy may be
the most significant reason the Mets won the National League pennant, willing
them to victory after victory in postseason play. But his eighth-inning
fielding error on a routine grounder by Eric Hosmer allowed Ben Zobrist to scoot home with the tying run. Moments
later, Mike Moustakas singled
in the go-ahead run past the glove of a diving Murphy, and Salvador Perez knocked in another insurance run. Then
Royals manager Ned Yost called for closer Wade Davis to come in and get six outs, which he did.
Checkmate. Davis had the Royals' first two-inning save in postseason play since
Dan Quisenberry in Game 4 of the 1980 World Series. "We feel like if we
can keep the game close, we're going to find a way to win it," Yost said.
"Our bullpen is so dynamic, they give us a chance to win those type of
games. And it's a team that just looks for a little crack. If we find a little
crack, they're going to make something happen." Teams holding a 3-1 lead
in best-of-seven postseason series are 68-12 (.850) all-time, and 39-6 (.867)
in World Series play. No team has come back from a 3-1 deficit in the World
Series since the Royals in 1985. "When you win the first two games at
home, going into it your goal coming in here is winning two games here,"
Yost said of having a chance to clinch on Sunday in New York, before the Series
would go back to Kansas City. "But you know if you win one here, you've
got two games at home, where we're really, really tough." Trailing, 3-2,
entering the eighth inning, the Royals drew consecutive one-out walks against Tyler Clippard, prompting Mets manager Terry Collins
to call on closer Jeurys Familia to try
for a five-out save. The first man he faced, Hosmer, sent a bouncing ball to
the right side, where it scooted under Murphy's glove and into right field. As
the largest Mets crowd in Citi Field history (44,815) grew mostly silent,
Zobrist raced home. "I tried to one-hand it," Murphy said. "It
probably deserved to be two-handed. I just misplayed it. It went right under my
glove. They made us pay for it. It put us in a really bad spot, and that's
frustrating." The result was the second blown save of the Series for
Familia, who also served up a game-tying homer to Alex Gordon in the ninth inning of Game 1. "They
truly don't ever stop," Collins said of the Royals' offense. "They
have a very good lineup from top to bottom. They can do a lot of things.
They're athletic. So like I say, you've got to make pitches and you've got to
get outs when you have the opportunity." Familia's misstep undid the early
work of Mets rookies Michael Conforto and Steven Matz. The former became the third-youngest
player to homer twice in a World Series game, while the latter delivered
five-plus innings of two-run ball had New York poised to tie the Series. Right-hander
Chris Young started for the Royals and gave up two
runs through four innings, then Danny Duffy, Luke Hochevar and Ryan Madson (1-0) bridged the gap to Davis. "We
can smell it now," Young said. "But we know we have work to do
yet."
CURRENT
POSTSEASON PICTURE:
World Series
Kansas City leads Series 3-1
Kansas City at New York
Game
5: Sunday, November 1, at 8:00 PM
PHILS PHACTS:
Phillies didn’t have any tricks or treats to
report from yesterday!
THE BEGINNING:
The
Phillies finally put an end to the season finishing in last place in the NL
East with a record of 63-99. Given the departures, aging stars, injuries, and
bipolar performances, this has ended up being one of the worst seasons in
franchise history! However, there are some former Phillies still making
headlines in the playoffs this year.
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