LIVE 9th Aug 18
STL 8 +125 o7.5
MIA 3 -135 u7.5
Final Aug 18
MIL 7 +106 o8.0
CHC 0 -114 u8.0
Final Aug 18
HOU 0 +133 o8.0
DET 10 -145 u8.0
Final Aug 18
TOR 2 -102 o7.0
PIT 5 -106 u7.0
Final Aug 18
SEA 7 +104 o7.5
PHI 12 -112 u7.5
Final Aug 18
BAL 6 +107 o8.0
BOS 3 -115 u8.0
Final Aug 18
CHW 13 +187 o9.0
ATL 9 -206 u9.0
Final Aug 18
TEX 3 +114 o9.0
KC 4 -124 u9.0
Final Aug 18
LAD 3 -278 o11.5
COL 4 +248 u11.5
Final Aug 18
CIN 4 -112 o9.5
LAA 1 +103 u9.5
Final Aug 18
SF 4 +125 o7.5
SD 3 -136 u7.5
Final Aug 18
CLE 3 +107 o9.0
AZ 1 -116 u9.0
Bally Sports Network, MLBN

Detroit @ Kansas City preview

Kauffman Stadium

Last Meeting ( Sep 17, 2024 ) Detroit 3, Kansas City 1

The Kansas City Royals look to their "special" talent -- Bobby Witt Jr. -- as they hope to avoid a sweep by the visiting Detroit Tigers.

The Royals (82-70) are clinging to the second wild card in the American League. The Tigers (79-73) trail Kansas City by three games and the Minnesota Twins by 1 1/2 for the final wild-card spot.

During his strong season, Witt's baserunning is sometimes overlooked. While he leads the majors with a .331 average and ranks among the leaders in home runs (32), extra-base hits (86), runs (123) and RBIs (108), he also ranks high in stolen bases (30).

"Just trying to get an extra 90 feet," Witt said. "I want to get into better scoring position for the guys behind me. Just trying to get to the next base, trying to score, by whatever way."

Witt stole his 30th base of the season in the first inning on Tuesday, becoming the first shortstop in major league history with two seasons of 30 homers and 30 steals. He hit 30 home runs and stole 49 bases last year.

"He's the best player in baseball," left-hander Cole Ragans said of Witt. "He's incredible, a special talent, a special human being. It's a joy to get to watch every single day."

Following Tuesday's 3-1 loss, a somber Witt acknowledged the milestone but was ready to move on.

"It's pretty special anytime you get to be the first, but that's over now," he said. "On to tomorrow. Anytime you lose it's frustrating. We didn't come this far just to come this far."

"Anytime you're doing something in the history of the game for the first time ever, is remarkable," Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. "I would guarantee he would trade that 30-30 for a win tonight and that's another reason he's so special."

The Royals got some good news ahead of Tuesday's 3-1 loss in 10 innings regarding right-handers James McArthur and Michael Lorenzen.

McArthur suffered a right elbow sprain in Monday's 7-6 setback to Detroit, exiting in the middle of a seventh-inning at-bat.

"He's got a grade one UCL sprain, which is probably the best news we could have hoped for," Quatraro said. "We're going to shut him down five to seven days, just depending on how he feels. We're very hopeful that it's not a season-ending injury."

Lorenzen, who has been sidelined with a left hamstring strain, had a throwing session Tuesday.

"Assuming everything goes smoothly today with him playing catch, we have him scheduled for a live BP on Saturday," Quatraro said.

Kansas City right-hander Alec Marsh (8-8, 4.52 ERA) will oppose Detroit lefty Tarik Skubal (16-4, 2.50) in Wednesday's series finale.

Marsh won his only previous start against Detroit, allowing three runs on five hits in six innings on May 21.

AL Cy Young candidate Skubal is 2-9 with a 5.05 ERA in 14 appearances (12 starts) against Kansas City. His latest loss of the season came at the hands of the Royals on Aug. 2, allowing five runs on seven hits in 6 1/3 innings.

Detroit's bullpen was stellar in the two series wins, shutting out Kansas City after the fifth inning on Monday and holding the Royals hitless after Tommy Pham's one-out single in the fifth.

Pitching in his third straight game, Jason Foley recorded his 25th save Tuesday. He has converted 10 straight save opportunities.

"Everyone's done a hell of a job lately, especially with how much (everyone is) having to throw," Foley said. "They've relied on us a lot. We've done a great job."

--Field Level Media

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About Units and “ROI”

Units are a standardized measurement used to determine the size of each of your bets relative to your bankroll. For example, if you have a bankroll of $200 and you bet 5% of your bankroll each time, each of your units is worth $10. A bettor with a $2000 bankroll who bets 5% per bet has units of $100. We use the number of units to standardize the amount the trend is up or down across different bet amounts.

ROI is the best indicator of success and measures how much you bet vs. how much you profited. Any positive ROI is good in sports betting with great long-term bettors sitting in the 5-7% range.

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