KANSAS CITY, Mo. – For the first and quite possibly the only time in his career, the Kansas City Royals have parlayed Billy Butler's plodding foot speed into a win.
At 6-1 and 250 pounds, the burly DH does not run so much as he chugs.
But with the score tied with two out in the eighth on Sunday, Butler hustled to first base to keep the inning alive.
Then he hurried with all his might a few minutes later and was safe at third, allowing Eric Hosmer to cross the plate with the tiebreaking run in what turned into a 6-4 victory over Washington that ended KC's seven-game losing streak.
"All you can do is put the ball in play and dig. And that's what I did," Butler said with a grin.
With two out and Hosmer on first and the game tied 4-all, Butler hit a hard grounder that first baseman Adam LaRoche knocked down.
The ball rolled several feet to his right and when pitcher Craig Stammen was late to cover the bag, the slow-running Butler pulled into first with an infield single.
"The pitcher's supposed to get over there," Butler said. "They had to know I don't run very well. But all I could do was run, and I beat him after he didn't get off to a good start at first."