Royals seek second straight win against White Sox
The Kansas City Royals will go for back-to-back wins for only the third time since the start of June when they face the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday night at Guaranteed Rate Field in Chicago.
Kansas City (33-73) is coming off a 4-2 win over the White Sox in Tuesday night's series opener. Ryan O'Hearn and Brett Phillips each slugged his first home run of the season -- with O'Hearn's shot coming on his first big league hit -- as the Royals won for only the fourth time in 11 meetings against the White Sox this season.
O'Hearn will try to stay hot after the team promoted him from Triple-A Omaha on Tuesday afternoon. After his milestone home run into the right-field bleachers, members of the Royals' bullpen bartered with a fan who caught the baseball. They retrieved the home run ball by giving the fan a separate ball signed by the team's relief pitchers.
"It's surreal, man," O'Hearn said to The Athletic. "It's been a lot of years in the making, and a lot of hard work going into this."
White Sox right-hander Dylan Covey (4-6, 5.40 ERA) will try to quiet O'Hearn and his teammates when he takes the mound for his 14th start of the season on Wednesday. The 26-year-old is looking to bounce back from a rocky outing Thursday against the Los Angeles Angels, when he allowed six runs on nine hits in 4 2/3 innings.
Covey is 0-4 with a 6.04 ERA in five career starts against Kansas City. In his only start against the Royals this season, Covey gave up four runs and seven hits over six innings and took the loss in Kansas City's 5-2 victory on April 28.
The Royals will counter with right-hander Jakob Junis, who will make his 20th start of the season. He will pitch a short drive from his hometown of Sterling, Ill., and nearby Rock Falls High School, where he starred on the mound.
The 25-year-old Junis (5-11, 5.06) allowed seven runs (three earned) on nine hits in 4 2/3 innings his last time out against the New York Yankees on Thursday. He has 101 strikeouts in 110 1/3 innings this season but has been hurt by 25 home runs allowed.
Junis' only previous start against the White Sox came this season, when he gave up six hits and six runs and walked two while striking out five in 5 2/3 innings April 26. He took the loss in Chicago's 6-3 victory that day.
As expected, the White Sox did not sell of key players before Tuesday's trade deadline.
"I didn't anticipate, to be honest, anything else was going to be occurring at this particular time," White Sox manager Rick Renteria said to reporters, according to the team's official website. "But there's always surprises and you deal with them when you reach that point. For us, today was nothing new, so we just keep moving forward."
The Royals will devote much of their focus to younger players in the final two months of the season.
"We've got our eye on everybody, obviously," Royals general manager Dayton Moore said to The Athletic. "We're continuing to look internally for players that can help us going forward. We're far from satisfied with how this season has transpired. And I'm responsible. I'm responsible for the win-loss record of this team."