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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- As the ball soared into the night and
sliced away from Carlos Lee, nobody could appreciate his plight
more than Johnny Damon.
Nobody wanted him to miss more than Damon, either.
"We needed the runs and we needed a win tonight really bad,"
Damon said after Kansas City beat Chicago 10-7 and stopped the
White Sox's team-record road winning streak at 12.
Damon, the Royals left fielder, came to the plate against
20-year-old rookie Jon Garland with the bases loaded and two out in
the second.
His line drive into left caused Lee to come in a step, then race
back to his left as the ball kept slicing. As the crowd roared, it
glanced off his outstretched glove and Damon steamed into second
with a three-run double that tied the game 4-all.
"It's a tough ball," Damon said. "It starts back toward you, then runs away from you. Fortunately, he didn't make the play and
we got three runs."
Jermaine Dye marked his All-Star selection with a home run and
Mark Quinn and Dave McCarty also homered as the Royals recovered
from an early 3-1 deficit to beat the White Sox for the fourth time
in five meetings.
Garland, 20, lost in his major league debut. He went three
innings, allowing seven runs on eight hits and one walk. Jerry
Spradlin (3-2) got the last eight outs for the win.
"I just left some pitches up and that's what happens with a
good-hitting team when you leave them up," said Garland (0-1). "I
think I had pretty good stuff. Even some good pitches got hit.
Being here is a dream come true."
Ray Durham and Jose Valentin began the game with home runs for
the White Sox, hitting solo shots on Chad Durbin's first three
pitches.
"Three pitches, two home runs. I guess that's better than
having them hit three-run home runs," said Durbin.
After the second home run, Durbin was thinking of only one
thing.
"I remembered the score was 14-10 last night and I thought, 'I
know we'll score some runs. Just get back in the dugout as quick as
you can,' " he said.
Chicago's road winning string was the longest in the majors
since the 1984 Detroit Tigers opened with 17 straight.
"We've really come together as a road team," said Chicago
manager Jerry Manuel. "We can't win them all on the road."
Mark Quinn and Dave McCarty also homered for the Royals, who got
just their sixth victory in 21 games.
Paul Konerko's RBI single made it 3-0 before Mike Sweeney's
infield out scored Damon in the bottom of the first.
Frank Thomas' 25th home run put the White Sox ahead 4-1 in the
second.
Dye, Kansas City's first position player voted as an All-Star
starter since Bo Jackson in 1989, homered in the third. He tied
Jackson as the only Royal with 21 home runs prior to the All-Star
break.
Later in the third, McCarty hit an RBI double and scored on a
single by Jorge Fabregas for a 7-4 lead.
The Royals got another run in the fourth on Sweeney's
double-play grounder, then went ahead 9-6 when Quinn led off the
fifth with his 10th home run.
Quinn appeared to have a leadoff homer in the second, but was
sent back to second when a spectator leaned over the railing in the
left-field bleachers and caught the ball.
McCarty homered in the seventh for the Royals' 10th run.
The White Sox got a run in the fourth on an RBI double by
Magglio Ordonez and in the fifth on Herbert Perry's sacrifice fly.
In the seventh, Lee's RBI single made it 9-7.
Ordonez went 3-for-3 with two walks.
Game notes
Dye got a huge ovation when he came to the plate in the
first inning, a few hours hours after his All-Star selection was
announced. ... The spectator who reached over the railing to catch
Quinn's ball was quickly escorted out of the park by security
guards. ... The White Sox have batted around 17 times. ... The
combined age of the starting pitchers was 42.
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