Rookie Stallings caps Pirates' 7-6 comeback win against Royals

Royals center fielder Brian Goodwin leaps to make the catch on a fly ball hit to deep center field by Kevin Kramer of the Pirates during the seventh inning of Monday night's game in Pittsburgh.
Royals center fielder Brian Goodwin leaps to make the catch on a fly ball hit to deep center field by Kevin Kramer of the Pirates during the seventh inning of Monday night's game in Pittsburgh.

PITTSBURGH - Jacob Stallings has 19 hits in parts of three major league seasons, and the rookie third-string catcher has made a some of them count.

Stallings hit a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth inning to rally the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 7-6 victory Monday night against the Kansas City Royals.

It was Stallings' second career game-ending hit. The catcher also had one Sept. 23, 2016, against Washington as a pinch hitter.

After Jordan Luplow grounded into a double play, Kevin Kramer walked and moved to second on Kevin Newman's single. Stallings then singled into left field off Ben Lively (0-3) for his third hit of the game, scoring Kramer.

Stallings was not in the original lineup. He was told 2 hours before the game he would be subbing for ailing Francisco Cervelli.

"It was pretty similar to my other one, same spot and same kind of pitch," Stallings said. "It was good to help the team on short notice. It was fun to come through for the guys."

Stallings has spent the last three years shuttling between Pittsburgh and Triple-A Indianapolis while stuck on the organizational depth chart behind Cervelli and Elias Diaz.

"The biggest thing for me is staying ready," said Stallings, whose father, Kevin, was the University of Pittsburgh's basketball coach for two seasons before being fired in March. "On a day like today, when I'm not ready to play, I'm still ready. You get paranoid because you never know what might happen."

Stallings has made a good impression on Pirates manager Clint Hurdle.

"He puts his foot down early and hits the ball hard where it's pitched. Old-school hitting," Hurdle said. "He's done a very professional job on everything he's done."

The Pirates scored twice with two outs in the eighth inning to tie the game at 6. The first run scored when first baseman Ryan O'Hearn failed to handle a throw from third baseman Hunter Dozier on a grounder by Pablo Reyes. Starling Marte followed with an RBI triple.

Newman had three of Pittsburgh's 16 hits as the rookie shortstop extended his hitting streak to six games and helped the Pirates win for the ninth time in 12 games.

Edgar Santana (3-3) pitched a 1-2-3 ninth.

O'Hearn led off the top of the eighth with his 11th home run in 36 games since making his debut July 31 and gave the Royals a two-run lead.

Josh Bell drew Pittsburgh to 5-4 in the seventh with a run-scoring single.

O'Hearn's RBI double capped a four-run fifth inning and put the Royals on top 5-3 following consecutive run-scoring singles by Adalberto Mondesi, Alex Gordon and Salvador Perez.

Gordon doubled in the game's first run in top of the third inning and Corey Dickerson countered with an RBI single in the bottom half. Adam Frazier's two-run single in the fourth gave the Pirates a short-lived 3-1 lead.

Kansas City's Brad Keller allowed four runs and 10 hits in six-plus innings. Pittsburgh's Joe Musgrove also pitched six innings, giving up five runs and eight hits.

Keller got his first major league hit when he singled off Musgrove to lead off the fifth inning. It came in Keller's second career at-bat after he struck out in the second.

Keller was in line for his team-high ninth win until the Royals squandered the lead. He was selected from the Arizona Diamondbacks in the Rule 5 Draft in December after having never pitched above Class A.

Notes: Royals LHP Eric Skoglund (1-5, 6.19) makes his third appearance and second start tonight since being sidelined from May 26-Sept. 6 with a sprained ligament in his left elbow. Pirates RHP Jameson Taillon (13-9, 3.37) has allowed three earned runs or less in 19 straight starts.

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