A's Offense Sputters In 1-0 Loss To Royals
Ned Yost's Kansas City Royals did just enough to beat one of Oakland's best pitchers.
Up next is Jon Lester in what could be a far tougher task.
Raul Ibanez homered on Sonny Gray's lone mistake, breaking his own franchise record for oldest Royals player to clear the fences and leading Kansas City past the A's 1-0 on Friday night.
The 42-year-old Ibanez connected in the fifth inning for his fifth homer, giving Jeremy Guthrie the lone run he needed for Kansas City's first victory at the Oakland Coliseum since April 10, 2012.
"It's not something we've done a whole bunch lately. A 1-0 win, we should be very excited," Guthrie said. "It means you pitched well, you played good defense and you got a big hit from somebody and tonight it was Raul. 1-0 wins are big wins."
The Royals went 1-5 against the A's last season, including 0-3 on the road.
Gray (12-4) hung tough in a pitcher's duel with Guthrie. The right-hander struck out seven in seven innings and didn't walk a batter for the first time all year.
"There's no doubt about it, with the pitching matchups we're facing in this series, this was a huge win for us," Yost said.
Gray had his five-start winning streak snapped with his first losing decision in eight outings dating to a June 13 home loss against the Yankees.
"The past is the past and you move on," Gray said. "Obviously I had a good month. That doesn't matter."
Guthrie (7-9) struck out six in six innings to win his second straight outing following a three-start skid as the Royals beat the team with baseball's best record for their third straight win and eighth in 10. It could get tougher Saturday, when Lester makes his A's debut two days after being traded by the Boston Red Sox.
The A's struggled to get anything going and lost for the third time in four games a day after trading two-time reigning Home Run Derby champion Cespedes to the Red Sox for Lester and Jonny Gomes.
Guthrie struck out the side in the sixth, retiring Brandon Moss and Jed Lowrie on consecutive called third strikes.
Nori Aoki doubled leading off the game and advanced on a wild pitch, but Gray retired the next three batters in order to avoid damage.
ROYALS BULLPEN: Kansas City's bullpen delivered again. The steady pitching has been key in winning a recent run of close games.
Greg Holland followed scoreless innings by Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis for his 30th save in 32 chances - and third in as many games.
Yost had planned to stay away from Davis, then changed his mind.
"It's one of those situations where you're in a 1-0 game with a tough pitching staff over there, you know there's not going to be a lot of runs scored so you want to go on with your best guys," Yost said.
Royals: First baseman Eric Hosmer, who will be out three to six weeks after sustaining a stress fracture of the third finger on his right hand Thursday, is likely headed to the disabled list Saturday. Manager Ned Yost said more testing is likely but a hand specialist has already evaluated him.
"It's a non-displaced stress fracture," Yost said. "That means it doesn't need to be casted, doesn't need surgery, just needs time to heal. He's a pretty quick healer, but it's probably going to be a 3-4 week ordeal."
Athletics: Center fielder Coco Crisp received pain-relieving trigger-point injections in his strained neck over recent days but missed his fifth straight game.
Royals: Left-hander Jason Vargas (8-4, 3.31 ERA) is set to come off the disabled list and make his first start since July 8. He underwent an appendectomy the next day after he experienced discomfort.
Athletics: Lester pitches on seven days' rest after getting scratched Wednesday ahead of the trade deadline. Lester (10-7, 2.52 ERA) is 4-0 with a 1.07 ERA over his last eight starts.
"I feel great," Lester said. "Having a little time off sometimes is good."