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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted at 2:09 p.m., Sunday, April 12, 2009

MLB: Royals rally with 2 outs in 8th to top Yankees 6-4

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Joba Chamberlain's season debut went just fine. It was the pitchers who followed him that cost the New York Yankees.

John Buck homered and drove in three runs, helping the Kansas City Royals rally past New York 6-4 on a rainy Sunday to avoid a three-game sweep.

The Royals scored three runs with two outs in the eighth inning off relievers Jose Veras and Phil Coke (0-1), spoiling a solid start by Chamberlain.

"I still have to be more consistent. I let fastballs get up. When the weather started getting out of control, you have to slow the game down and not get ahead of yourself," Chamberlain said. "The bullpen has done a good job so far. There's no second-guessing the bullpen."

With the Yankees clinging to a 4-3 lead, Damaso Marte retired the first two Kansas City batters in the eighth before Veras was brought in to face pinch-hitter Billy Butler.

Veras walked Butler and was lifted for Coke, who gave up a double to Brayan Pena that scored pinch-runner Tony Pena Jr. with the tying run.

Alberto Callaspo added an RBI single. Buck, who had three hits, doubled home Callaspo with the final run.

"I blew the game," Coke said. "I didn't give myself a chance by getting ahead of the hitters. When you don't do that, you give them a chance. I don't have any excuses. I stunk it up pretty bad and ended up costing Joba a win."

Joakim Soria earned his third save by striking out the side in the ninth. Juan Cruz (1-0) worked a perfect eighth for the win, helped by a diving catch in right field from Willie Bloomquist.

"We came back and got it done," Royals starter Gil Meche said.

Chamberlain, who made 12 starts last season before going on the disabled list with rotator cuff tendinitis and then going back to the bullpen, held the Royals to three runs — two earned — and four hits in six innings. He struck out five, walked one and hit two batters with pitches.

The right-hander came out after throwing 88 pitches, 56 for strikes.

"Joba was pretty good," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "His velocity was great. Joba could have gone out again, but we thought that we had it set up. We just never got to Mo (Mariano Rivera)."

The Yankees took a 4-3 lead with a three-run seventh. Nick Swisher and Hideki Matsui opened the inning with singles, followed by Xavier Nady's RBI double. Royals first baseman Mike Jacobs committed an error on Robinson Cano's bouncer, allowing another run to score. Nady came around with the go-ahead run when Melky Cabrera grounded into a double play.

Meche held New York to three hits through six innings before giving up three runs in the seventh.

"For me, a 3-1 lead going into the seventh inning, it's a situation we should have the game under control, especially the way I was rolling for a while," he said. "They just started hacking first pitch, got some balls in play. Swisher didn't hit the ball too hard, broke his bat, base hit. Then Matsui rolls over in the hole. Nady just hooked it down the line. I just tried to keep it under control as much as I could. I knew they were going to get some runs."

The Royals took a 3-1 lead with two unearned runs in the fourth thanks to Swisher's two-out error at first base. Callaspo's grounder went between Swisher's legs, scoring David DeJesus, who led off the inning with a walk. Buck singled home Mark Teahen, who was hit by Chamberlain's pitch, for the other run.

Buck had a solo homer in the third.

"Me and Brayan have an advantage already because we are catchers, so we're cool already," Buck said, laughing.

Brett Gardner, who led off the game with a single and stole second, scored the first Yankees run on Meche's wild pitch.

Meche went seven innings, allowing four runs and six hits with six strikeouts and two walks.

"It was a great feeling just to help my team win. I'm very happy," Brayan Pena said.