Friday, August 29, 2025
Thirty-Two Franchises: Kansas City Chiefs
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Thirty-Two Franchises: Los Angeles Rams
Sunday, August 17, 2025
Thirty-Two Franchises: Arizona Cardinals
Friday, December 20, 2024
Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story
We have a new NFL-themed Hallmark movie this year. It's called Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story. Of course it's about the Chiefs, because Hallmark is in Kansas City. Here's the set-up: Alana Higman is a 20-something woman whose parents met when their parents both bought season tickets to the Chiefs back in 1967. The two families have been obsessed with the Chiefs ever since, and they own a store that sells Chiefs memorabilia. (It's called "KC Corner," and it has this really cool sign where the "KC" looks like the KC on the Chiefs' helmets), along with two arrowheads.
Anyway, Alana is going to take over the store. She tells her family that there's someone coming to the score on Tuesday that she wants everyone to meet. They all think that she's finally met a guy -- but no, it's someone from the Chiefs' Fan Engagement operation. The family is up for Chiefs Fan of the Year -- if they win, they get a special tour of the stadium and sideline passes. The family is excited.
Monday, August 26, 2024
2024 College Football Preview: Classic Big 8
Monday, February 12, 2024
NFL23 Update: Hail to the Chiefs (Again)!
And deservedly so! For my money, not I of the previous LVII Super Bowls was any more entertaining than last night's event featuring the Patrick Mahomes, Andy Reid, Travis Kelce, Harrison Butker, Chris Jones and the rest of the victor Chiefs; the worthy San Francisco 49ers; Taylor Swift and (hopefully) her future in-laws; Jim Nantz and Tony Romo; Andra Day, Post Malone and Reba McEntire; Dan Marino; Usher and Alicia Keys, and the rest. Starting at about 5 Central, I watched with my family virtually every second of CBS's remaining five hours of TV coverage from Las Vegas, and, my gosh, I felt so thankful to have gotten to experience the thing.
Wednesday, July 20, 2022
1975: U.S. of Archie
If you're skipping church this Sunday morning, July 20, 1975, you could take a last, fleeting look at U.S. of Archie, on Channel 12. Here's a clip from the 16th of 16 episodes produced, "The Wizard of Menlo Park."
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
1975
It's Sunday, April 13, 1975, and everyone's just mad about Harry. Even Bobby Knight ...
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Missouri v. Kentucky
Ken Pom has the Tigers winning this game 69-65. I don't see how UK can possibly score 65 points off of Mizzou, but we'll see what happens.
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Oh, Kentucky
It's back to the capitol and (real) legislature for the Kentucky Council of Churches "to pray for government officials and act on behalf of Kentucky’s most vulnerable citizens."
Way to ruin an entertaining @Imaginedragons half-time concert with the weird rantings of a tired, has-been like @LilTunechi... One act still rising...The other, not so much...— Matt Bevin (@MattBevin) January 8, 2019
Paducah and McCracken County officials talk prioritizing economic-development activities such as arts support and airport expansion, via WKMS.
KFVS is all excited about the possibilities of flying from Cape to Barkley Regional, and so am I.
Hiring in Fulton.
Suicides, fatal auto accidents, homicides and overdose deaths were down; SIDS and drownings, up—for a net decrease of 78 deaths from 2017 to 2018 in Warren County, per WKYU FM.
Christmas19 parades: Scottsville, Dec. 7.
Monday, February 15, 2016
What's On TV (In Kansas City) Today (1970)?
The Sunday night after the Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl, a rerun of the game was telecast over KCMO-TV, the CBS affiliate in Kansas City. That seemed logical and innocent enough, but it turned out that KCMO had blithely ignored the admonition aired during the game that no reproduction of the telecast could be shown without permission from the football commissioner's office. When officials there heard about the unauthorized rerun, they quietly requested and got the tape from the station, which apparently realized that it might be vulnerable to possible legal action.
Time passed, and after awhile people in Kansas City began asking the station to run the tape of the game again and advertisers began lining up to buy spots on the show. But nothing happened. Finally E.K. Hartenbower, general manager of KCMO, went on the-air and explained that there would not be another rerun because the NFL would not give permission for it. The NFL, never terribly popular in AFL-oriented Kansas City, lost points, and Commissioner Pete Rozelle, even though he had not been involved in the affair (the player draft and the federal gambling investigation having prior call on his time), was being test-run as a potential villain.
Then things began to smooth out. The league office decided to give permission for a rerun when Kitty Clover potato chips, which paid a modest fee for the right to use the tape, agreed that no commercials would be used except for fund-raising appeals for Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City. And KCMO said it would donate the time charges for the telecast to the hospital fund.
Everybody was happy. Kitty Clover had a nice dignified promotion, KCMO was on the side of the angels, Chiefs fans could relive their glorious victory and the NFL was back in the good graces of its new constituents. The mollifying rerun was scheduled for Feb. 15, and by happy coincidence Pete Rozelle was due in town Feb. 16 to speak at a dinner honoring the Chiefs.
It is so, so great to have back SI Vault! By the way, if you end up digging into that issue, be sure to check out Dan Jenkins in Italy with ski-star Billy Kidd. The story is exactly as rollicking as the phrase “Dan Jenkins in Italy with ski-star Billy Kidd” would suggest. Thanks again, Sports Illustrated.
Friday, January 1, 2016
What's On TV Tonight (1970)?
Are you ready for some more football?
Here's our queen ...
And her court ...
Here are Al DeRogatis and Jim Simpson with NBC's call ...
Here comes the band ...
Here's Billy Graham for the prayer ...
Here's the national anthem ...
Here are some cheerleaders ...
Here are your quarterbacks ...
Let's get this party started!
Thursday, November 5, 2015
World Series: Game Five
Some baseball seasons are better than others, of course, and on paper this was a pretty boring season. There weren't any interesting pennant chases to speak of during the regular season. The N.L.C.S. was a four-game sweep for the Mets. The A.L.C.S. went six games, but I never felt like Toronto was going to overcome the 2-0 hole into which it fell at the beginning. And the Royals wrapped up the Mets in only five games.
And yet -- and yet -- those bald facts are somewhat misleading. In their divisional series with the Astros, the Royals were down 2-1 in games and 6-2 in runs heading into the 8th inning in Houston. At the time, I thought that series was over. But the Royals stormed back with five runs in the 8th, and two more in the 9th, for a 9-6 victory. In Game Two against the Blue Jays, the Royals were down 3-0 going into the bottom of the 7th -- and Blue Jay pitcher David Price had retired 18 Royals in a row. The Royals put up five runs in the 7th, and rolled to a 6-3 victory that blew the series open. Against the Mets they were down 4-3 in the 9th in Game One -- only to win 5-4 in 14 innings. In Game Four, they were down 3-2 going into the 8th -- but won 5-3. That's four come-from-behind victories in the playoffs -- and each one significantly changed the dynamic of the series at issue.
Furthermore, by this point, observers had noticed the Royals' ability to make great late-inning at-bats -- to drag out games, fouling off pitch after pitch -- to put pressure on the other team's defense. Down the stretch, neither the Astros, the Blue Jays, nor the Mets had been able to get off the field in the late innings without giving up key runs.
So in the last game of the year, the Mets' fans put their hopes in Matt Harvey -- their starting pitcher. They needed him to do the sort of thing that Madison Bumgarner did last year for the Giants, when he gave up one run in 21 innings -- finishing the Series with two wins and a Game Seven save. And for eight innings, Harvey was magnificent -- giving up zero runs and only 4 hits, with 1 walk and 9 strikeouts. So it is not surprising that the Mets crowd pleaded for Harvey to pitch the ninth -- or that Harvey wanted to do so himself. After all, the Mets bullpen had already blown two saves in this Series. The huge cheer when Harvey came out of the dugout for the ninth was one of the biggest of the year.
But Harvey was more tired than he or the Mets' fans realized. He got two strikes on the very dangerous Lorenzo Cain -- but couldn't retire him. Cain reached on Harvey's second walk of the game. By this point, the Royals had figured that the Mets could do nothing to stop them on the base paths, and Cain quickly stole second. Meanwhile, Met manager Terry Collins decided to let Harvey pitch to at least one more batter. That batter was Eric Hosmer, who was 3-20 in the World Series up to that point. Now, however, Hosmer whistled a double over the head of Michael Conforto in left. Cain trotted home to make the score 2-1, and the Royals had the tying run on second with no outs.
Collins replaced Harvey, bringing in ace closer Jeurys Familia. But I think everyone who had watched the playoffs knew that the Series was pretty much over. It doesn't do much good to bring in a relief pitcher against the Royals if the tying run is on base -- they don't need hits to get that run home. Sure enough, Mike Moustakas hit a grounder to first -- and Hosmer zipped over to third. Now, with Salvador Perez at the plate, the Mets brought the infield in to cut off the tying run at the plate. A strikeout would have been huge here -- the Blue Jays had two big strikeouts at the end of Game Six of the A.L.C.S. when they had the tying run at third and the winning run at second. But the Royals don't strike out in these situations. Instead, Perez managed to poke a soft grounder toward the left side of the infield. David Wright, the Met third baseman and perennial All-Star, bravely cut in front of back-up shortstop Wilmer Flores to make the play himself. With no one covering third, Hosmer danced toward home. Wright looked at Hosmer -- freezing him about 60 feet from the plate -- and then zipped a throw to first in order to nail Perez. Hosmer broke for the plate.
Now this should have been the end of the game. Met first baseman Lucas Duda had the ball with enough time to throw out Hosmer. But Hosmer knew that it would take an almost perfect throw, and first basemen aren't often required to make perfect throws with the entire season on the line. Duda's throw went wild, Hosmer slid home, and the game was tied. The Royals had needed two runs to extend the game. They had gotten them with only one hit.
And so, for the second time in the Series, the teams went to extra innings. I never thought the Mets were going to score, and it didn't look as though they thought so, either. The Mets were a great story this year -- a fun, dramatic team who parlayed some amazing pitching and the offensive spark of late-season pickup Yoenis Cespedes to the National League Pennant. But the Royals knew how to pitch to Cespedes, who batted .150 in the Series, and who left Game Five after he fouled a ball off his knee in the bottom of the 6th. And the Royals had figured out the rest of the Met attack as well -- in the last 21 innings of the season, the Mets got only five runs and 10 hits. The Mets no longer had the spring in their step that had carried them so far. They looked cold, and tired, and beaten -- a team simply waiting for the coup de gras.
The end came in the 12th inning. By this time, the Mets were down to Addison Reed, who is normally a set-up man. Salvador Perez -- who batted .364 for the Series and got the MVP Award -- led off the inning with a bloop single to right. Perez was replaced by the speedy Jerrod Dyson, who promptly stole second. Alex Gordon's grounder advanced Dyson to third. And then the Royals sent up pinch hitter Christian Colon -- a guy who played only 43 games all year, and who had no other at-bats in the 2015 post-season. Everyone was expecting another grounder, but Colon laced a single to left, scoring Dyson and putting Kansas City up 3-2. At this point, the Mets fell apart a little bit, and the relentless Royals led 7-2 before being retired in the 12th. The season had gone on too long for everyone except Kansas City and its fans, and it was a relief to watch the Mets go down quietly in the bottom of the inning -- thus triggering a well-deserved celebration by the Royals.
No one believed in Kansas City last year -- but it took an all-world performance by Bumgarner to keep them from the title. This year, they had stormed to the best record in the American League, and had gotten better and better as the playoffs went on. In the last two seasons, their record in the post-season is a blistering 21-9, and the Giants are the only team to beat them. It may seem lucky on paper, but it doesn't feel like luck when you watch them. The Royals are very deserving champions, and they gave this post-season a significance that we will remember for some time. Next year, we'll instinctively yell at our favorite players for not running out a grounder, or for swinging at a bad pitch, or for making a silly play in the field -- and we'll wonder whether, in the age of sabermetrics, these type of old-school concerns are still relevant. But then we'll remember the Royals, and recall that there are still benefits to playing the game with smarts, hustle, and fortitude.
World Series:
Kansas City beats New York 4-1
Sunday, November 1, 2015
World Series Game Four
But meanwhile, strikeouts rose as teams began interpreting James's teachings to mean that they should put together a whole team of sluggers who would swing for the fences in every at-bat. Strikeouts are, of course, the worst way that a team can use its 27 outs, as they provide no chance for errors and no opportunities for runners to advance. The Blue Jays scored 891 runs this year -- far more than any other team in baseball. And they did so mostly with lots of home runs. However, in their last game of the season -- Game Six of the A.L.C.S. in Kansas City -- they really needed only one run to keep their dream alive. Trailing 4-3, they had runners on 2d and 3d and no one out. Almost any ball in play would have been sufficient to keep Toronto's season alive. Instead, the Blue Jays got a strikeout, a strikeout, and a ground out. So long, thanks for playing.
While the Blue Jays struck out 56 times in the A.L.C.S., the Royals struck out only 35 times -- fewer than six strikeouts per game. And that's been the story of these playoffs so far. The Royals -- especially in the late innings -- rarely seem to swing and miss. They keep fouling and fouling and fouling, and then they eventually make contact. Sometimes the ball goes right at a fielder. Sometimes the other side makes a great play. But over time, balls start to sink in, and the next thing you know Kansas City has come from behind and won another game.
Mets fans are heartbroken over Daniel Murphy's key error in last night's 8th inning -- and there's no doubt that it hurt the Mets badly. But let's not forget that New York has gotten its own share of breaks in this series. We've played four games so far -- two were blowouts, with one won by each team. So the difference in the Series is that Kansas City won the two close games -- Games One and Four. In each of those games, New York had a late lead. And both times, the lead was a direct result of a Kansas City miscue. In Game One, an eighth-inning error by Eric Hosmer put the Mets up 4-3. Last night, Alex Rios lost track of the number of outs at a key moment, thus allowing Wilmer Flores to score on a sacrifice fly with no serious effort to throw him out. That run was the reason New York led 3-2 going into the eighth. So New York has gotten its share of luck. However, in both of those games, the Mets bullpen was incapable of holding the lead, while the Royals bullpen was lights-out. For a New York team that lived off of its pitching all year, these are particularly painful ways to lose. But to someone who watched the Mets all year, they are proof that Kansas City is by far the best team New York has played.
We shouldn't over-simplify the lesson here about Kansas City's putting the ball in play -- the Royals have pop in their bats as well. Alex Gordon's game-tying homer in the 9th inning of Game One was the most important blow of the series so far. But after watching San Francisco's patient batters win the title in 2010, 2012, and 2014, and after seeing the Royals go 20-9 in post-season play over the last two years, we hope that some of the more simplistic assumptions associated with "Moneyball" will be abandoned. The old guys weren't wrong about everything -- putting the ball in play is a good idea, and packing your team with a collection of Mark McGwires is a mistake.
World Series:
Kansas City leads New York 3-1
Saturday, October 31, 2015
World Series Game Three
The New York baseball fan is both passionate and shrewd, and certainly not prone to despair over a 2-0 deficit with the next three games in Queens. Of course Kansas City was going to be tough at home, in front of its own fans -- but let's see how the Royals do on the Big Stage in New York. If they can handle the pressure, fine, we'll tip our caps and acknowledge their quality. But if they can't, then the Mets can get right back in this thing.
Thus thought the New Yorkers, and last night they had a very pleasant evening. Old hero David Wright whacked a two-run homer in the bottom of the 1st to put the Metropolitans up 2-1. The Royals fought back to take a 3-2 lead after two. But in the bottom of the 3d, former Yankee Curtis Granderson lined a two-run shot into the right field corner to put the Mets up 4-3. By this point, the Mets were finally getting some good pitching from Noah Syndergaard, who held the Royals to three runs through six innings. And then the Mets blew the game open with a run in the fourth, and four runs in the bottom of the 6th -- the big blow being a two-run single by old hero David Wright. So the Mets were up 9-3 after six, and that turned out to be the final score, and the last three innings were a big party for the New York fans. We like to think of New Yorkers as cold and indifferent to sentiment, but they love their home town at least as much as anyone in Paducah or Mayfield, and tonight was an evening of joy for them.
So now tonight's game takes on enormous importance. If the Royals can win tonight, they will regain control of the series and be very tough to beat. But if the Mets can win again, we will be looking at a best-2-out-of-3 for the title, and anything could happen then.
World Series:
Kansas City leads New York 2-1
Thursday, October 29, 2015
World Series Game Two
So Cueto entered Game Two as a bit of a mystery figure. But once he faced National League opposition, he reverted back to ace form. Cueto completely dominated the Mets last night, pitching a complete game that allowed the Royals' bullpen to recover from the 14-inning struggle of Game One. Even better, he gave up only one run on two hits. Meanwhile, the canny Royals were taking the measure of Jacob deGrom. In his second year in the majors, deGrom pitched really well -- 14-8 with an E.R.A. of 2.54. In the playoffs, he went 2-0 against the Dodgers and 1-0 against the Cubs -- allowing only 4 runs in 20 innings. But as the Mets' pitchers are learning, the Royals are not the Dodgers and the Cubs. After four quiet innings, and the Mets leading 1-0, here's what Kansas City did in the fifth:
1. Alex Gordon walks
2. Alex Rios singles to left (runners on first and second, no out)
3. Alcides Escobar singles to center, Gordon scores (runners on first and second, no out)
4. Ben Zobrist grounds out to first (runners on second and third, one out)
5. Lorenzo Cain lines out to center (runners on second and third, two out)
6. Eric Hosmer singles to center, Rios and Escobar score (runner on first, two out)
7. Kendrys Morales singles to right (runners on first and third, two out)
8. Mike Moustakas singles to right, Hosmer scores (runners on first and third, two out)
9. Salvador Perez grounds out to third (three outs)
That's nine plate appearances, one walk, five singles, and four runs. So long, thanks for playing. I would like to think that the Nats and Dodgers would learn from this example that you can score without hitting home runs, but I know better.
After the big fifth inning, Kansas City rolled to an easy 7-1 victory. The Royals now lead the Series 2 games to zero, and that heart-breaking loss by the Mets in Game One is looking bigger and bigger. The Mets are going home to Queens, and they better figure out what to do pretty quickly.
World Series:
Kansas City leads New York 2-0
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
World Series Game One
1. The Mets, looking more and more like they were up past their bed time, went down 1-2-3 in the top of the inning. Chris Young, the Royals' pitcher who is scheduled to start Game Four, went 3 innings, allowed no hits, walked one, and struck out four. He completely dominated the Mets.
2. In the bottom of the 14th, David Wright made a throwing error on a hard-hit ground ball by Alcides Escobar. Escobar was safe. Three pitches later, Ben Zobrist lashed a single to right, and Escobar zipped over to third.
3. The Royals weren't going to blow a situation where they had men on first and third with no outs, and they did not. Ancient Mets pitcher Bartolo Colon intentionally walked Lorenzo Cain to load the bases, but Eric Hosmer -- whose error had put the Mets on top a long, long time ago -- lofted a sacrifice fly to right to bring home the game-winning run.
So the Royals win the first game by 5 to 4 in fourteen innings -- the longest Game One ever played in the World Series.
It's obviously too early to know which way this Series will go, but to me, this felt like a bad loss for the Mets. The Mets have a pretty decent offense, but pitching has been their calling card down the stretch. In their games with the Dodgers and Cubs, once they got you down, you were basically done for. But tonight they blew a 3-1 lead, as Matt Harvey gave up two runs in the sixth. And their closer, Jeurys Familia -- who has been lights out for months -- blew a 4-3 lead in the bottom of the ninth. After that, the Mets' only other threat ended on a strikeout by hero David Wright in the 11th. And then Wright's error set up the loss in the 14th.
It's bad to lose any game -- but it's particularly bad when the strengths of your team let you down. Now the Mets trail for the first time in the post-season, while the never-say-die Royals have pulled out another come-from-behind win.
World Series:
Kansas City leads New York 1-0
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
The World Series: Kansas City v. New York
There is no significant history between the Royals and the Mets, but there is some interesting sports history between Kansas City and New York. Kansas City didn't get started as a big-time sports town until 1955, when the Athletics moved to Kansas City from Philadelphia. (The last game ever played by the Philadelphia Athletics was an 8-6 win over the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium.) But the Kansas City Athletics were not only a bad team, they became notorious for their habit of making generous trades with the Yankees, to the point where some observers mocked them as New York's farm club. Finally, the Athletics left Kansas City after the 1967 season, and went to Oakland.
But by this point, Kansas City was regarded as a major-league city. The Dallas Texans had moved to Kansas City for the 1963 season, and the new Kansas City Chiefs played in Super Bowl I. So it wasn't surprising that Kansas City got a new major league baseball club -- the Royals -- for the 1969 season.
For Kansas City -- like other cities of similar size (Baltimore, Oakland, Pittsburgh) -- the late 1960's marked the beginning of a golden age in sports. And so, for the only time in sports history, there were big-time games between Kansas City and New York. On December 20, 1969, the Chiefs went to Shea Stadium and knocked the Jets out of the AFL playoffs. Joe Namath went 14-40, throwing no touchdown passes and three interceptions. It turned out to be the last time Namath quarterbacked the Jets in the playoffs -- the team wouldn't return to the post-season until 1981.
The Chiefs faded within a few years, but starting in 1976, the Royals and Yankees had one of the great post-season rivalries in baseball history. In five seasons from 1976 to 1980, the Royals and Yankees met in the American League Championship Series four times. They played 17 games against each other -- the Yankees winning 9, and the Royals winning 8. It was that close. The Yankees won the pennant in 1976, 1977, and 1978, but Kansas City got revenge in 1980 -- winning its first pennant in franchise history. George Steinbrenner was so unhappy that he fired Yankee manager Dick Howser -- who promptly went to Kansas City, where he managed the Royals to their only World Championship in 1985.
At that point, the Royals were on top of the baseball world. But after the 1986 All-Star Game, Howser was diagnosed with a brain tumor. He died the next year, and the Royals went into a steep decline that only ended with their return to the playoffs in 2014. Meanwhile, the 1986 World Series was a dramatic shootout between the Mets and the Red Sox -- a preview of the last 20 years of baseball, which have been often been dominated by the rivalry between New York and Boston.
Now the wheel has turned, and once again Kansas City will share the spotlight with a New York team. For those of us who can still remember the 1985 and 1986 World Series as if they happened last week, it doesn't seem like it's been all that long. But for fans of the Royals and Mets -- two of the best and most loyal fan bases in the sport -- it has been a long trip through the wilderness. For one of those fan bases, that trip is finally about to end.
Here's how the Royals and Mets have done in the World Series:
Kansas City (1-2): 1980, 1985, 2014
New York (2-2): 1969, 1973, 1986, 2000
Sunday, October 25, 2015
MLB Playoffs: Day 15
LORENZO CAIN'S BIG RUN
Growing up in the small town of Madison, Florida, Lorenzo Cain ran everywhere. He ran to catch the school bus. He ran around the playground at recess. He ran errands for his mother, who raised him and his brother after his father died. He liked running, and he was good at it.
By the time he entered high school, Lorenzo was one of the fastest kids in town. He hoped to use his speed to play basketball -- his favorite sport. But being fast wasn't enough for him to make the high school basketball team. So he decided to try out for the baseball team. He had never cared much for baseball -- he didn't even have a glove. But he could hit -- and his speed made him a great defensive player. Within a few years, he was playing baseball for Tallahassee Community College -- and then he was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers. By 2010, at the age of 24, Lorenzo Cain was in the majors!
The next year, however, the Brewers traded Lorenzo to Kansas City. This appeared to be a dead end. The Royals had been a great power in the 1970's and 1980's, but the franchise had fallen on hard times. Some experts thought it was impossible to build a winning franchise in a town of Kansas City's size. But Lorenzo didn't give up. In 2011, he played only six games for the Royals. In 2012, he played 61 games. In 2013, he was playing almost every day.
As Lorenzo played more games, the Royals were getting better. In 2014, he batted .301 for the season -- his first year as a .300 hitter. The Royals stunned the baseball world by winning the American League pennant for the first time since 1985. In the World Series, Lorenzo batted .308 and played great defense in center field, but the Royals lost in seven games to the Giants.
Many experts thought that the Royals' 2014 season was a fluke, and that they wouldn't be back in 2015. But Lorenzo and his teammates knew better. In 2015, Lorenzo batted .307 and made the All Star Game for the first time. The Royals won 97 games -- the most wins of any team in the American League -- and returned to the playoffs. After beating Houston in the first round, they needed to get past the Toronto Blue Jays and return to the World Series.
In Game 1 against Toronto, Lorenzo drove in a run in a 5-0 win for Kansas City. In Game 2, he singled and scored in a come-from-behind 6-3 win. Toronto won Game 3 by the score 11 to 8, but the next day, Lorenzo got two walks and two singles as Kansas City won 14 to 2. The Royals needed only one more win to clinch another pennant -- but the Blue Jays beat them 7 to 1 in Game 5. So the teams traveled to Kansas City for Game 6.
It was a great game. In the bottom of the 1st, Ben Zobrist homered to left to put the Royals up 1-0. Another home run from Mike Moustakas in the 2d gave Kansas City a 2-0 lead. But Toronto fought back with a home run from Jose Bautista in the top of the 4th to make the score 2 to 1.
The score remained 2-1 until the bottom of the 7th, when the Royals got a run on a single, a groundout, and another single to make the score 3 to 1. Now only six outs from the pennant, Kansas City sent out Ryan Madson to protect its lead. Madson was normally a great relief pitcher, but in the top of the 8th, he gave up a single to Ben Revere and a long home run to Bautista. Suddenly, the game was tied at 3. Kansas City was forced to bring in its closer, Wade Davis, to retire the Blue Jays.
And then, after Toronto was retired in the 8th, it started to rain. Hard. So hard that the umpires had to stop the game. For over 45 minutes, Lorenzo and his teammates watched the rain, waiting for their turn to bat in the bottom of the eighth. Finally, the rain stopped and the players returned to the field. None of the Kansas City fans had left, and they cheered as Lorenzo Cain came up to bat in the bottom of the 8th.
He knew that the Royals needed to score now. Davis was Kansas City's best relief pitcher, but he couldn't be expected to go more than one more inning. If Toronto won this game, anything could happen in a Game 7. If the Royals wanted to go back to the World Series, they needed to score in the bottom of the 8th. But Toronto knew this, and had inserted their own closer -- Roberto Osuna, who had 20 saves with an E.R.A. of 2.58 in the regular season.
As the lead-off hitter, Lorenzo knew it was important for him to get on base. Osuna was a tough pitcher, and soon Lorenzo had a count of one ball and two strikes. But Lorenzo would not give up. He watched two balls, and then faced a full count. Osuna threw a difficult pitch. Lorenzo fouled it off. Osuna came back with another. Lorenzo fouled it off. The crowd cheered Lorenzo's determination. Finally, Osuna's next pitch missed the strike zone. Lorenzo was on first with a walk!
The next batter was Eric Hosmer. Lorenzo danced off first -- hoping for the chance to use his speed on the base paths. Hosmer worked the count to 2 and 2, and then hit a long, slicing fly to right. Bautista, the Toronto right fielder, raced toward the ball, determined to hold Hosmer to a single. With a spectacular effort, he reached the ball and hurled it back toward second base.
But Lorenzo had left first as soon as the ball was hit, and he was almost to third base by the time the ball landed. Meanwhile, because Bautista had been off-balance, his throw to second was sailing higher than usual, staying in the air for a few more precious seconds. Looking up, Lorenzo saw the third base coach frantically waving him home! He didn't stop for a moment, but turned on the speed, trying to beat the relay from second. Ryan Goins, the Toronto second baseman, saw that Lorenzo was trying to score from first on a single -- and quickly zipped the ball home to stop him. It was too late -- Lorenzo beat the throw. Thanks to his great speed and determination, the Royals had taken the lead on a walk and a single!
Now it was up to Davis to defend the lead in the bottom of the 9th. At first, he struggled, and the Blue Jays soon had runners on second and third with no one out. A single would give him the lead. But then Davis bore down. He struck out Toronto pinch hitter Dioner Navarro. Then he struck out Ben Revere. Then he got Josh Donaldson to ground out to third. The game was over, and the Royals had won 4 to 3. Thanks to Lorenzo Cain's big run, the Royals had won the American League pennant for the second year in a row. Next up, they faced the National League Champions -- the New York Mets.
National League Championship Series:
New York beat Chicago 4-0
American League Championship Series:
Kansas City beat Toronto 4-2