The Royals turned a tight early deficit into a runaway in a hurry Monday afternoon, burying the Phillies 15-1 at Kauffman Stadium and taking the rubber game of the series behind a barrage of hits, homers and a little slice of club history.
Kansas City scored in every inning, only the second time that has happened in team history. The first came in 1998. By the end of the day, the Royals had piled up season highs with 22 hits and 15 runs, and they had done it with just about everybody contributing.
The opening inning set the tone. Trailing by a run when they came to bat, the Royals batted around and put up six runs against All-Star left-hander Cristopher Sanchez.
Nick Loftin and Starling Marte delivered RBI singles after Philadelphia failed to finish off a double play, and then Luke Maile delivered the swing that blew the inning open. In his first major league plate appearance this season after being called up from Triple-A Omaha last week, Maile drove a Sanchez changeup to right center for a three-run homer that bounced off the top of the fence.
That first inning alone gave Kansas City more runs than it had scored in any of its previous 11 games. It also came against a matchup that had looked less than ideal on paper: the Royals entered with a 6-20 record against left-handed starters and a 10-18 mark in series finales, the third-worst in baseball.
The power kept coming. Salvador Perez homered in the second, and Lane Thomas added a solo shot in the fourth. Perez’s blast was the 314th home run of his career, putting him three away from tying George Brett’s team record.
Sanchez’s afternoon unraveled quickly. He was pulled after getting just one out in the fourth inning, having allowed career highs in runs, earned runs and home runs.
The Royals kept hammering once Philadelphia turned to the bullpen, with Tyler Tolbert launching his first home run - and first extra-base hit - of the season in the fifth. By then, Kansas City had scored in every inning and owned a 10-1 lead.
Tolbert finished with five hits, the first five-hit game by a Royal since Hunter Dozier in 2022.
This wasn’t the first time the Royals had gotten to Sanchez. In his only previous start against Kansas City, in 2023, he gave up six earned runs in five innings. Monday brought a much bigger mess for the Phillies, whose frustration spilled over in the sixth when Kyle Schwarber was ejected by home plate umpire Alan Porter after striking out for the third time.
Noah Cameron had to work through an uneven start on the mound for Kansas City, throwing 58 pitches over the first two innings before settling in and finishing with seven strikeouts.
The Royals now head to New York for a three-game series against the Mets starting Tuesday, with Seth Lugo set to start the opener at 6:10 p.m. Central. After that, Kansas City goes to Baltimore for three games that will carry the club into the All-Star break.
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Jac Caglianones Home Run Derby Moment Just Got Even More Personal
Jac Caglianones rise has already given Royals fans plenty to track, and now the first basemans All-Star week will come with a little extra spotlight. The 2024 first-round pick announced he will take part in the Home Run Derby ahead of the MLB All-Star Game, a nod to the kind of power that has made him one of the most watched young hitters in the organization.
His June surge helped push him onto that stage, and the Derby will now carry a personal twist that makes the moment even bigger for him and his family. Caglianone has made clear how much this means beyond the baseball itself, and the setup adds another layer to what should already be one of the more intriguing events of All-Star week. [Read more 🡒]
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It also gives the Royals a familiar kind of summer spotlight, since Caglianone is the clubs first Derby participant since Bobby Witt Jr. in 2024. For a team that has spent much of the year leaning on his everyday presence and loud contact, the Derby offers a national showcase for the part of his game that has already made him one of the most watchable hitters on the roster. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Turned A Routine Comebacker Into Their Worst Nightmare
A routine comebacker in the first inning at Citi Field turned into a mess the Royals will want to forget, with Kansas City handing the Mets an opening that should have been harmless. Carson Benge put the ball in play, and what followed was the kind of defensive sequence that can unravel a game before it ever settles in, especially for a club trying to keep early innings from getting away.
The odd part is how rare it was, too. Three errors on one play is the sort of breakdown that almost never shows up on a major league scorecard, and for the Royals it left an immediate stain on a night that had barely begun. Even in a sport built on routine, this was the kind of mistake cluster that can linger long after the inning ends. [Read more 🡒]
