D.J. Carrasco and Emil Brown lead K.C. to its second straight win.
KANSAS CITY — Joe Torre thinks the Yankees need some of the spirit Kansas City is playing with.
Energized by the arrival of a new manager, the resurgent Royals beat old nemesis Randy Johnson 3-1 on Wednesday night, handing the Yankees their fourth straight loss and prompting Torre to call an angry closed-door team meeting.
Nobody would say exactly what Torre told the Yankees.
“It wasn’t a pat on the (backside),” said Alex Rodriguez, who went hitless for the second night in a row.
It’s the third four-game slide this year for the Yankees, who had won 16 of 18 before losing two in a row to Boston. Then they came to Kansas City, where the Royals’ record of 15-37 is the worst in the majors.
“I just didn’t like what I saw,” Torre said. “It’s just as basic as that. I’m unhappy. I won’t go as far as saying I’m discouraged.”
One thing Torre did mention was Jason Giambi getting caught in a rundown between second and third.
“We have to be a little more mindful, thinking baseball,” he said. “We’re flat and we need to do something about it.”
D. J. Carrasco (1-1) threw six shutout innings for his first major league win as a starter and Buddy Bell improved to 2-0 as the Royals manager. The Royals had not won a series against the Yankees since Aug. 11-13, 2003.
Carrasco gave up four hits, with two walks and two strikeouts, in what he called the best game of his career.
“That’s a world-champion caliber team there and to go out there and have good results like that, I’d say it’s my best outing ever,” he said.
“When you’re playing a team like the Yankees, everybody pretty much brings their ‘A’ game. Having a new manager come in at the same time, everything’s coming together.”
Emil Brown hit a two-run home run to help the Royals beat Johnson for the first time in 12 years.
Johnson (5-4), who has 251 major league wins, had been 9-0 with one save and a 3.03 ERA in 14 games — all wins by his teams — since he last lost to the Royals on May 21, 1993.
He gave up nine hits and three runs, with one walk and seven strikeouts as his career record against the Royals dropped to 12-7.
Johnson said Brown hit a flat slider.
“I put us in the hole right away,” he said. “You’ve got to tip your hat to Carrasco. He kept us off-balance.”
Carrasco was replaced inthe seventh by rookie Steve Stemle, who pitched two shutout innings.
Mike MacDougal allowed Bernie Williams’ homer and Robinson Cano’s double in the ninth before striking out Derek Jeter to record his fourth save in six opportunities.
Before then, the Yankees, the second-highest scoring team in the majors, had been held scoreless for 13 straight innings by a Kansas City staff that ranked last entering the game with a 5.60 ERA.
“(Johnson) can only do so much,” Torre said. “We didn’t get him a run until the ninth inning. A lot of times you see players get frustrated. And frustration doesn’t get it done.”
The great stretch of 16-of-18 is now fading into memory for the Yankees.
“We’ve been consistent, but in the opposite direction,” Torre said. “What we did over a three-week period, we don’t want that to be negated.”
It’s the first time the Royals have won three in a row against the Yankees since Aug. 18-19 and Sept. 7, 1999. On Thursday night, Bell’s seemingly re-energized team will go for its first home sweep of New York in 15 years.
The Yankees had only two runners reach as far as second before the ninth — doubles by Gary Sheffield in the third and Giambi in the fourthf.
“Obviously, if we play like this every night we’re going to be in pretty good shape,” Bell said.
“We’ll just see where this takes us. We’re playing the Yankees, they have been the best team in baseball for the past decade or so. We need to play well to beat teams like this. I was just hopeful we were going to play with some energy and some smarts and we pretty much have done that.”
Angel Berroa hit his first of two doubles leading off against Johnson. Brown, who has seven multihit games in his last 11 outings, drove an 0-1 pitch into the water display behind left field with two outs.
Berroa doubled again in the third and made it 3-0 on David DeJesus’ RBI single.
Typical of the improved play was Carrasco’s putout of Giambi in the fourth. After Giambi’s one-out double, he was trapped between second and third when Ruben Sierra hit a sharp grounder, which Carrasco snared. While Giambi stood motionless, Carrasco ran over and made the tag himself, perfectly executing the sort of play the Royals have struggled with all season.