Severino Terrific as Athletics Survive Royals to Snap Skid

Luis Severino of the Athletics pitching against the Royals
Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images

Athletics 6, Royals 4

Luis Severino continued his sparkling season — when pitching away from West Sacramento, that is — pitching 7 2/3 innings of one-run ball to lead the Athletics past the host Kansas City Royals, 6–4, and spoil Alex Gordon’s induction into the Royals Hall of Fame Friday night.

The Athletics notched 11 hits, including two homers, and drew three walks to notch their first road win since a May 13 11–1 blowout win at Dodger Stadium.

“It takes big performances, and it takes team performances,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay told reporters after the game. “We got that. Our offense did a great job tonight. We’ve struggled a little bit with runners in scoring position. We were better tonight, even though we left some guys out there. Overall, to be able to get through the adversity, it takes a collective effort. We saw that tonight.”

Athletics – Royals Game Summary

As they’ve now done in 40 of their 70 games this season, the Royals scored first, doing so on a two-out Salvador Perez double to left-center in the bottom of the first. Recently acquired Athletics catcher Austin Wynns tied the game in the top of the second with a two-out solo homer to left — his first hit as an Athletic. A two-out, bases-loaded infield single by Nick Kurtz in the top of the third gave the Athletics a 2–1 lead, with a diving stop by Royals first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino keeping the hit from being a two-run single. It became 3–1 on the second pitch of the fourth thanks to a Luis Urias solo homer, his first roundtripper since May 10.

More scoring came in the sixth after the Athletics chased Royals starter Michael Wacha from the game. Tyler Soderstrom drew a two-out bases-loaded walk from reliever Steven Cruz before Max Muncy poked a seeing-eye two-run single up the middle. The Royals scored three in the ninth off Mason Miller, who was pitching in a non-save situation, to bring the score to 6–4.

What Went Right for the Athletics

Starting Pitching

Across his 7 2/3 innings, Severino allowed one run on six hits, walking two. Beyond the first inning, he only faced four hitters more than the minimum. Perhaps most impressive was that Severino had all this success despite recording only one strikeout. “For (Severino),” Kotsay said, “keeping the ball down tonight, getting some ground balls, turning some double plays behind him…at the end of the day, he understands what he needs to do to have success.”

The Top of the Sixth

The Athletics sent eight men to the plate in a three-run sixth to give them a comfortable lead. Three straight one-out singles — a liner to left by Denzel Clarke, a textbook bunt single to third by Lawrence Butler, and a hard liner to right by Jacob Wilson — loaded the bases. Two batters later, Tyler Soderstrom drew a two-out walk to plate the first run, and rookie Max Muncy brought home Butler and Wilson with his single up the middle.

Severino Quells the Potential Rally

Severino took charge in what could have been a tough bottom of the sixth. Maikel Garcia led off with a single up the middle and was retired on a force play at second from a sharp one-hopper off the bat of Vinnie Pasquantino. Due to a miscommunication, the Athletics did not get a double play out of it, but it did not seem to faze Severino. He retired the ever-dangerous Salvador Perez on a liner to short and Jac Caglianone on a low liner to the first baseman, ending the threat without the Athletics scoring a run.

What Went Wrong for the Athletics

Michael Wacha’s Changeup

Wacha struck out four Athletics with two-strike changeups. The victims were Lawrence Butler in the first, Nic Kurtz in the second, Denzel Clarke in the fourth, and Max Muncy in the fifth. Overall, he induced 17 swings and misses with that pitch.

Garcia

Maikel Garcia gave the Athletics fits, going 3-for-4 with a double and a run scored.

Command from Miller

Prior to Friday night, Mason Miller last pitched on Sunday. The flame-throwing closer has been underused due to the Athletics not have many ninth-inning leads to protect recently. When he entered the game, the rust showed. He uncharacteristically walked the first two batters he faced due to overthrowing, causing his pitches to go wild. Then, when he did get one over, it was a mistake over the middle, and Nick Loftin belted a two-run triple. He scored when John Rave, up next, cracked a sacrifice fly.

Looking Ahead

Severino (2–6) earned the win, with Wacha (3–6) taking the loss.

The Athletics (27–44) and Royals (34–36) will play the second game of their three-game series Saturday afternoon. Athletics left-hander Jacob Lopez (0–4, 6.00 ERA) will face lanky Royals right-hander Michael Lorenzen (4–6, 4.94 ERA). First pitch from Kauffman Stadium will be at 3:10 pm Central/1:10 pm Pacific.

 

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Evan M. Thompson, Editor-in-chief

Evan M. Thompson, Editor-in-chief

Evan is the owner and sole contributor of Thompson Talks, a website discussing the Big Four North American Pro Sports as well as soccer. As of Spring Training 2025, he will cover the Athletics. He also is our National Writer. His first and biggest love is baseball.

Evan lives in Gilbert, Arizona and loves history, especially of sports. He is a member of the Hemond Chapter of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR). He released his first book, Volume I of A Complete History of the Major League Baseball Playoffs, in October of 2021. His second book, Volume II of A Complete History of the Major League Baseball Playoffs (1977–1984) came out September 2024.

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