Royals chase Boyd early, then hang on to beat Tigers 12-9

DETROIT (AP) -- Matt Boyd was pulled before he retired a single batter, and the Detroit Tigers spent the rest of the game trying to find anyone who could keep the Kansas City bats quiet.

No luck.

Boyd allowed five hits and four runs before being taken out, and the Tigers went on to lose 12-9 to the Royals on Sunday, falling 1 games behind Baltimore in the race for the American League's second wild card. Victor Martinez hit a grand slam for Detroit, but the Tigers were already in a substantial hole by that point.

"In a game like this, you are hoping to get a big hit to get back into the game, and we got several of those," manager Brad Ausmus said. "It just wasn't enough to overcome runs, and frankly, you are almost never going to overcome 12 runs."

Kansas City started the game with a single by Billy Burns, a triple by Merrifield and a double by Kendrys Morales before Salvador Perez's two-run homer made it 4-0. It was the first time the Royals' first four hitters combined for a cycle since Sept. 30, 2006, also at Detroit.

Boyd (6-5) lasted only one more hitter after Perez's homer, giving up another hit before being pulled. The Tigers' loss cut Cleveland's magic number to clinch the AL Central to one -- the Indians start a four-game series in Detroit on Monday night.

Boyd said he understood "100 percent" why he was taken out so quickly.

"I might have been able to work myself through it, but the margin of error is zero right now," he said. "Every run is important right now and so is every game."

The Royals led 7-0 after Cheslor Cuthbert and Raul Mondesi hit consecutive homers in the third.

Dillon Gee (8-9) got the win in relief, and Wade Davis pitched the ninth for his 26th save in 29 chances. Miguel Cabrera came up as the tying run but lined out to shallow left field to end it.

Plate umpire Dan Iassogna ejected Cameron Maybin from the Detroit dugout during that final at-bat.

Martinez hit a grand slam in the third to make it 7-4, and the Tigers loaded the bases again that inning, chasing starter Edinson Volquez in the process. But Andrew Romine's bunt attempt with two outs was fielded easily by reliever Peter Moylan, and the force at home ended the inning.

Detroit tried several former starters in long relief -- Anibal Sanchez, Shane Greene and Mike Pelfrey all pitched -- in an attempt to keep the game close, but the Royals kept adding runs. Alex Gordon's two-run homer in the sixth made it 11-5.

Kansas City let the Tigers creep back into it by the end. Justin Upton hit a solo homer in the seventh, and Detroit also scored two runs on wild pitches, the second of which made it 11-9 in the eighth.

The Royals held on, though, to avoid being mathematically eliminated from the postseason chase.

Maybin had four hits for the Tigers.

VERSATILE

Kansas City's Whit Merrifield played first base for the first time this season. He's also played second, third, left field and right field.

"It's always fun to switch up the angles for me, see the ball from a different perspective," he said. "I got a couple balls. I didn't get to pick one."

MARATHONS

The 3-hour, 51-minute game was Detroit's longest nine-inning contest of the season. The Tigers played 3:50 against the Royals on Saturday.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Tigers: RHP Jordan Zimmermann, who has been dropped from the rotation as he struggles to come back from neck problems, pitched for the first time since Sept. 10. He pitched the last three innings in relief, allowing one run and four hits.

UP NEXT

Royals: After an off day Monday, Kansas City starts RHP Ian Kennedy (11-10) against Minnesota RHP Jose Berrios (2-7) on Tuesday night.

Tigers: Detroit sends RHP Buck Farmer (0-0) to the mound Monday against Cleveland RHP Corey Kluber (18-9).