Ankiel ignites Royals, 4-3

? A hard grounder to the shortstop hit right in front of him, and Rick Ankiel took off running. Even with a bobble, he was out 10 feet before the bag.

A homer and game-winning hit later, Kansas City’s new outfielder more than made up for it.

Shaking off his base-running blunder and some harsh words from his manager, Ankiel hit a broken-bat, two-run single off Daniel Bard in the eighth inning Friday night to lift the Royals to a 4-3 victory over the struggling Boston Red Sox.

“I made a mistake, but you’ve got to put that behind you and keep playing baseball,” Ankiel said.

He sure did.

Ankiel, who opened with a single in the second inning, made his base-running gaffe in the fourth after lining a double to the gap in right-center. Royals manager Trey Hillman didn’t chew out Ankiel right away, waiting until the next inning to firmly let him know that kind of mistake, especially on a team that can’t afford many blunders, wasn’t acceptable.

The pitcher-turned-slugger responded, following Billy Butler’s solo homer in the sixth with a solo shot on the next pitch, then jammed a two-out single over Scutaro’s head in the eighth.

John Parrish (1-0) got an out in the eighth for his first win since June 28, 2008, and Joakim Soria pitched the ninth to break Kansas City’s string of three straight blown saves.

“He did enough good things for us tonight,” Hillman said of Ankiel.

Boston got a long two-run homer from J.D. Drew and a solid initial outing by Tim Wakefield.

What hurt the Red Sox was their bullpen. Again.

Boston lost two of three to rival New York in Boston after its relievers allowed six earned runs and walked eight in 121/3 innings. The Red Sox did it again against K.C., making it three straight losses out of the bullpen and a disappointing start for last year’s AL Wild Card team.

“Right now, we’re just trying to find a good rhythm for everybody,” Wakefield said.

It all fell apart in the eighth.

Wakefield, back from offseason back surgery, baffled Kansas City’s hitters most of the night, allowing the homers to Butler and Ankiel and not much else. He left after seven innings, giving up two runs on six hits, the Red Sox leading, 3-2.

Hideki Okajima allowed a leadoff double to David DeJesus in the eighth, then was replaced by Bard (0-1) with one out. The right-hander walked Alberto Callaspo, who was replaced by pinch runner Willie Bloomquist, and struck out Butler to set up the showdown with Ankiel.

Ankiel, who opened the season 2-for-12, took two balls, then squeezed a floater to short left for the go-ahead run and a 4-for-4, three-RBI night.

Kansas City had one of baseball’s worst bullpens a year ago, turning nearly every game into a squeeze-your-seat adventure, posting a 5.02 earned-run average with 22 blown saves.

The Royals didn’t just pick up where they left off, they’re trying to one-up it: three straight blown saves, a 13.50 ERA, 18 hits and six walks in 9 1-3 innings.

It wasn’t exactly pretty, but the Royals ended the string.