Suzuki redeems himself as Twins top Royals

? Kurt Suzuki rarely makes errors or hits home runs. He did both on Saturday night, and the homer made up for a bad throw that could have cost Minnesota another game.

The All-Star catcher went 2-for-3 with a solo homer and made an impressive slide into home plate that helped lift the Twins over the first-place Kansas City Royals, 4-1.

Suzuki redeemed himself for an errant throw in the fourth that allowed Nori Aoki to score after stealing third and give Kansas City a 1-0 lead. The mistake came with his starting pitcher, Phil Hughes, looking dominant and locked in a duel with hard-throwing rookie Yordano Ventura.

“The hardest part is Phil was throwing so good and for me to do something like that, that’s what really got me a little bit,” Suzuki said.

It was his fourth error of the season.

“It was pretty brutal,” Suzuki said. “It was just one of those things where you get your body moving too quick and I lost the ball probably about right before my arm started coming forward. I said, ‘This is not good.'”

It looked as if that run would be all the Royals needed to win their fourth straight. Ventura had dominated Minnesota’s lineup with his power for most of the night, consistently hitting into the upper-90s.

Hughes (13-8) allowed one run, seven hits and struck out six over 71/3 innings to outlast the young righty.

“You just don’t want to be the guy that breaks first,” Hughes said. “Obviously in a situation like that, I knew that one run might not be good enough and I had to at least keep it there.”

Ventura (9-9) threw six innings of one-hit ball before the Twins broke through in the seventh. With runners on second and third, Ventura threw a 99-mph fastball that shattered Danny Santana’s bat — but Santana reached base when Billy Butler tried to throw out Suzuki at home.

The throw was in time, but the tag by catcher Salvador Perez was off, and Suzuki scored.

Brian Dozier followed with his 25th double of the season to score pinch-runner Eduardo Escobar. Kennys Vargas chased Ventura two batters later with a sacrifice fly to score Santana.

“You got to put up more runs than one,” Butler said. “That’s not the way it is every night, but that’s the way it is tonight.”

Hughes has won three in a row after losing three straight starts. He also has allowed only three runs this month.

Casey Fien pitched to two batters in the eighth, and Glen Perkins pitched the ninth for this 31st save in 34 chances.

Suzuki’s HR surprises

Suzuki’s solo homer in the eighth off Aaron Crow was his first since May 20, a span of 217 at-bats. Asked if manager Ron Gardenhire said anything to him in the dugout, Suzuki laughed and said: “Yeah, he said, ‘What happened? Where’d that come from?'”

Up next

Kansas City’s Jeremy Guthrie (8-10) will pitch today against Tommy Milone (6-3) in the third game of this four-game series.