Rangers hold off Royals

? For Francisco Cordero to get the save in Texas’ harrowing victory over Kansas City hardly seems fair.

Second baseman Alfonso Soriano should get at least partial credit for the Rangers’ 3-2 win over Kansas City on Tuesday night.

The quick-thinking second baseman almost single-handedly bailed Cordero out of a bases-loaded crisis in the ninth. First he went to his left to stop David DeJesus’ grounder and came home for a forceout on Ken Harvey.

Then, with the bases loaded and one out, Soriano repositioned himself because he figured Cordero was about to throw a breaking ball to Mendy Lopez.

He did, and Soriano made a one-handed pickup to his right, dashed to the bag for the second out and then fired to first to complete a game-ending double play.

“I hit it hard. I can’t hit it better than that,” Lopez said. “He made the difference.”

Acquired from the New York Yankees in a blockbuster deal that put Alex Rodriguez in pinstripes, Soriano is a major reason the Rangers are 12-8 and tied with Anaheim for first place in the AL West.

“The guy walks in the door every day with a smile on his face,” manager Buck Showalter said. “His teammates love him.”

Soriano also had two singles and an RBI.

“You have to be ready before the play comes,” Soriano said.

When DeJesus was at the plate, he knew Harvey, the runner at third, was no sprinter.

“I’m thinking maybe the hitter will hit a ground ball to me,” he said. “You hit it hard, I want to go to the double play. But if you hit it slow, I want to go to home plate because the runner is a little slow.”

Just before Cordero delivered to Lopez, Soriano subtly shifted his position.

“I move up a step because I think he will pull it. That’s why I made that play,” he said. “If he hits a slow ball, I want to go to home plate because I know they’re running.”

R. A. Dickey allowed four hits over 6 1/3 innings as Texas broke a nine-game losing streak in Kansas City.

Dickey (3-1) walked three and struck out one as the Rangers won for the sixth time in seven games and beat the Royals at home for the first time since Sept. 2, 2001. Cordero got his sixth save in six opportunities.

Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Royals pitcher Kevin Appier will be out four to six weeks because of a strained muscle that could be related to his elbow surgery. Appier came out in the second inning against Minnesota on Friday night. He lasted only 15 pitches against the Twins before leaving because of a strained muscle in his right forearm.

Jeremy Affeldt (0-2) pitched well for the second straight start, going seven innings and giving up two earned runs. It was the 10th loss in 12 games for the reeling Royals.

“We will change this thing around,” Royals manager Tony Pena said. “There’s no question about it. This ballclub, I believe is way too good to be playing the way we’re playing right now.”

In the eighth inning the Royals loaded the bases with one out and made it 3-2 when Jay Powell walked DeJesus on four pitches.

But then Mike Sweeney, who hadn’t batted in a week because of a sore right wrist, grounded into a 5-2 forceout and Powell got Tony Graffanino on a called third strike.

But Soriano was not only good on this night. He was also lucky.

With one out in the third and Hank Blalock on second following an RBI double, Soriano hit a sharp grounder that was headed straight to Royals second baseman Graffanino. But the 6-foot-4 Affeldt stuck out his left foot to stop the ball and deflected it into right field, giving Soriano an RBI single and the Rangers a 2-0 lead.

Carlos Beltran led off the Royals’ fourth with his second straight single, moved up on an infield out and scored on Matt Stairs’ RBI single to make it 2-1.

The Rangers loaded the bases with no outs in the seventh on two singles and first baseman Harvey’s fielding error but got only one run.

Soriano, who was 2-for-3 and is batting .351, struck out on three pitches. Then Herbert Perry made it 3-1 with a sacrifice fly and Brian Jordan struck out.

Notes: The Royals learned RHP Kevin Appier will miss up to six weeks with a strained muscle in his right forearm. The problem may be related to the elbow surgery he had last winter. … Jordan, signed in the offseason but on the DL since late March with a strained ligament in his left knee, went 0-for-3 in his first start for Texas.