Livan Hernandez, Nationals Defeat Royals 2-1

by

Jun 21, 2010

WASHINGTON — Livan Hernandez took
the mound coming off his worst outing of the season and with the
Washington Nationals mired in a losing streak. With a small adjustment
on the mound, he gave both himself and his team a lift.

Hernandez had his longest outing since
May 9, giving up one run and eight hits in seven innings to help the
Nationals beat the Kansas City Royals 2-1 Monday night.

Mike Morse and Cristian Guzman hit
solo home runs to provide all the offense Hernandez (6-4) needed. The
win ended the six-game losing skid – Washington's longest this season.

In his last start at Detroit,
Hernandez gave up eight runs on seven hits. He attributed the bad outing
to dropping his glove arm during his pitching motion, so much so his
forearm hurt after the start. Work in the bullpen with pitching coach
Steve McCatty fixed the issue, and Hernandez kept the Royals off balance
all night.

"Everything he threw was on the
black," Royals second baseman Mike Aviles said. "As a hitter, it makes
it tough to get any kind of hits or anything going when the pitcher is
on the corners. He went in, out, up, down – he does exactly what a
veteran pitcher does."

Before giving up eight runs to the
Tigers, Hernandez hadn't allowed more than four in an outing all year.
He's gone at least six innings in 12 of his 14 starts.

"It was a difficult ballgame. Kansas
City is a good hitting ballclub," Hernandez said. "I know a lot of
people were thinking, 'Eight runs the last game' – I know how people
think. It doesn't bother me."

After Hernandez left, the bullpen kept
the one-run lead intact. Tyler Clippard pitched the eighth, and Matt
Capps
struck out the side – all on called strikes – to get out of a jam
in the ninth for his major league-leading 21st save in 25 chances. Capps
allowed two singles in the inning and his last two strikeouts came with
runners on the corners.

Scott Podsednik had four hits for the
Royals, who have lost four in a row.

Hernandez's performance overshadowed
Bruce Chen (3-2), who had his best start of the year. In his fifth start
for Kansas City since moving from the bullpen, the lefty allowed two
runs and three hits in six innings, walking four and striking out three.

Morse gave the Nationals a 1-0 lead
in the second inning with his third home run of the year. Morse sent
Chen's 1-0 pitch deep into the left field stands above the visitor's
bullpen. Guzman broke a 1-all tie in the sixth inning with his first
home run of the year, a shot into the same bullpen. It was Guzman's
first homer since Aug. 23, 2009.

"It feels real good. It's been a
little grind here lately, it's been tough to win a ball game," Nationals
manager Jim Riggleman said. "We've been having trouble breaking it open
a little bit."

The Royals tied the game in the top
of the third, when Yuniesky Betancourt scored on a groundout by Jason
Kendall
.

Podsednik was left stranded on third
when Nyjer Morgan caught a deep fly ball by David DeJesus to end the
inning. Morgan tracked down the ball at the warning track, making a
catch on the run with his back turned away from the plate.

The Royals also ran themselves out of
some scoring chances. Kansas City was caught stealing twice and Alberto
Callaspo
was picked off at second by catcher Ivan Rodriguez.

"That doesn't shut down your
(running) game when a catcher throws well," Royals manager Ned Yost
said. "You've still got to try and score runs when you're not doing much
at the plate."

NOTES: Washington optioned LHP John
Lannan
to Double-A Harrisburg. Lannan, the opening day starter the last
two seasons, is 2-5 with a 5.76 ERA. The Nationals purchased the
contract of RHP Joel Peralta from Triple-A Syracuse. … This was the
Royals' first trip to Nationals Park. Kansas City last played in
Washington in 1971, against the Senators. … The Nationals haven't
given up a home run in their past five games, one game shy of the team
record set from June 4-9, 2009. … Royals RF Jose Guillen extended his
hitting streak to 16 games with a ninth-inning single.

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