Teahen ends HR drought of 250 at-bats

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Mark Teahen wasn't counting days or at-bats, but he was aware he had not homered in a long time.

Teahen homered for the first time in more than two months and the Kansas City Royals took advantage of three Toronto Blue Jays errors to win 6-2 on Monday night.

Teahen, who led the Royals with 18 home runs in 2006, hit his sixth home run in the first inning, ending a drought of 250 at-bats without a homer. Teahen's previous home run was May 29 against Baltimore.

''It feels nice to get it out of the way,'' Teahen said. ''I try not to think about it, but it had been too long, so it's nice to get on the board. I wasn't counting at-bats or anything, but I knew it had been a long time.''

Said Royals manager Buddy Bell, ''Maybe this will get him on a little roll. I hope he doesn't start swinging for the fences now.''

''Well, I'm going to,'' Teahen said and laughed. ''No. I know my approach. I'm a line drive hitter and home runs happen when they happen. As long as I stay within my approach, they'll happen more often than they have been.''

Teahen hit .407 (11-for-27) during the seven-game homestand.

''I feel like the last couple of weeks I'm getting back to hitting my pitch,'' Teahen said. ''I've been driving the ball a little bit better as a result of that.''

The Royals took advantage of fielding errors by Aaron Hill and Lyle Overbay in the third to score two unearned runs and grab a 3-2 lead. Hill's error on Tony Pena Jr.'s grounder to second started the inning. After David DeJesus walked, Pena was caught stealing, but Esteban German followed by singling DeJesus to third. Teahen then hit a one-hopper that Overbay couldn't field, allowing DeJesus to score. German scored on Billy Butler's groundout.

Hector Luna couldn't handle Pena's grounder to third to start the fifth. DeJesus was then hit by a pitch for the 15th time. After German bunted into a fielder's choice, Butler's single scored DeJesus.

Ross Gload stroked a two-run triple in the seventh off reliever Brian Tallet, scoring German and Teahen.

''Gload's hit was big, it gave us separation,'' Bell said.

Left-hander Odalis Perez, who had lost his previous two starts and was 2-4 in his past nine, picked up the win, allowing two runs and eight hits with one walk and three strikes in five innings before being replaced by Joel Peralta. It was the 14th time in 25 starts that Perez has gone fewer than six innings.

Perez (7-11) worked out of a bases loaded jam in the fifth by striking out Frank Thomas to end the inning.

Jesse Litsch (4-5) allowed five runs -- two earned -- in 6 2-3 innings, giving up six hits, while walking two and striking out two, to take the loss.

Alex Gordon grounded into a double play to end the fifth with the bases full.

Four Kansas City relievers -- Peralta, Jimmy Gobble, Zack Greinke and Joakim Soria -- held the Blue Jays to one hit and no runs over the final four innings. The Kansas City bullpen has a 0.51 ERA in the past five games.

Thomas doubled to lead off the second and scored on Curtis Thigpen's single. Reed Johnson and Alex Rios doubled in the third to produce the other run.

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