Keller solid into 7th, but Royals fall to Bucs

Righty allows 4 runs, strikes out 7; O'Hearn, Gordon drive in 2 each

September 18th, 2018

PITTSBURGH -- broke into the Royals' rotation in late May after spending the first two months of the season in the bullpen. He's only solidified the role in 19 starts since, becoming one of the most dependable arms on Kansas City's staff.
The rookie right-hander wasn't as sharp as he would've liked early on in the Royals' 7-6 loss to the Pirates at PNC Park on Monday, allowing runners in the first four innings. Keller described this outing as a battle, but he settled in after making adjustments and finished with seven strikeouts while allowing four runs over six-plus innings.
Keller departed with a lead, but was saddled with a no-decision as the Pirates won in walk-off fashion on ' RBI single to left field in the ninth inning.
"I obviously didn't have my best command today, especially early on," Keller said. "But the changeup started to come on late, so I tried to roll with that. I felt like I had a few more innings, and then that seventh inning -- base hit up the middle and then kind of a cheap hit right there got me out of that game. But definitely a grind one."
Keller, 23, was originally drafted by the D-backs in the eighth round of the 2013 Draft. After spending his 2017 season with Arizona's Double-A Jackson affiliate, the right-hander was selected by the Reds in the Rule 5 Draft last December before being immediately dealt to the Royals.
Keller has been especially good over his past seven starts, posting a 4-1 record with a 2.40 ERA. He's been efficient with his pitch count as well. Monday was the fourth straight start in which he completed six or more innings, and the 11th time he's done so this season.
"He got us into the seventh. Did a great job by doing that," Royals manager Ned Yost said. "[He] threw the ball really, really well. … I thought he put us in a position to win."
Working with a one-run lead in the third inning, Keller served up a out-out single to , who scored on Corey Dickerson's RBI single to left field. Frazier later broke the tie when he drove in a pair with a long double to right field in the fourth.
The Royals used a small ball approach to rally against Pirates right-hander Joe Musgrove in the fifth inning. Kansas City strung together four singles -- including RBI knocks by and -- to tie the game before 's RBI double and 's sacrifice fly opened a 5-3 lead.

Keller pitched a perfect fifth inning and worked around a two-out single in the sixth. Clinging to a two-run advantage, he returned to the mound for the seventh despite having thrown 99 pitches.
"I felt good," Keller said of the decision to pitch beyond the sixth. "And then obviously Ned asked me if I felt good going into the seventh inning, and I said, 'Yeah.'"
Keller didn't last long in the inning. He gave up back-to-back singles to and , ending his night as left-hander took over. Hill gave up an RBI single to Josh Bell to cut the Royals' advantage to 5-4, but got out of the inning with the lead.

MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Stallings walks it off: Leading 6-4 in the eighth inning, Royals right-hander gave up consecutive two-out singles, followed by Marte's RBI triple to tie the game. After Kansas City's offense was retired in order in the ninth inning, righty came out to pitch the ninth.
Lively worked around a leadoff walk by inducing a double play, but issued a two-out free pass to before giving up a single to to put the winning run in scoring position. In the ensuing at-bat, his 77.7-mph curveball was met by Stallings' bat at the bottom of the zone and driven to left field for a walk-off single.

SOUND SMART
O'Hearn launched a solo home run to right-center field off Pirates left-hander in the eighth inning to give the Royals a 6-4 lead. It was the first career home run Brault had given up to a left-handed batter.
"We watched video; [he throws] a lot of sliders to lefties," O'Hearn said. "I got a slider and just tried to not pull it, just tried to stay through it. The numbers [for] me against lefties aren't great, but it was good to get one there and build some confidence."

YOU GOTTA SEE THIS
Keller also contributed with a bat in his hand on Monday. Leading off the fifth inning, he got ahead in the count, 1-0, before connecting on a 92.7-mph fastball from Musgrove and driving it to right field for his Major League hit.
"I fouled off one early, like the previous [at-bat], and I was just trying to get another heater," Keller said. "I put a good swing on it. I know I was super late, but luckily it squeaked through the hole."

UP NEXT
Left-hander (1-5, 6.19 ERA) will make his second start since coming off the disabled list against the Pirates at PNC Park on Tuesday at 6:05 p.m. CT. The southpaw faced the White Sox last time out, allowing a pair of earned runs on two hits over five innings and earning a no-decision. Right-hander (13-9, 3.37) will start for Pittsburgh.