Kansas City Royals end 30-year wait for World Series

Ned Yost’s side come from behind at Citi Field to secure 4-1 series win over New York Mets

The Kansas City Royals celebrate after their 4-1 World Series win over the New York Mets. Photograph: NYT
The Kansas City Royals celebrate after their 4-1 World Series win over the New York Mets. Photograph: NYT

Kansas City ended a 30-year wait for a World Series title as the Royals reigned over Major League Baseball with a 7-2, 12-inning victory over the New York Mets on Sunday.

A pinch-hit single by utility infielder Christian Colon scored the go-ahead run off reliever Addison Reed in the 12th and the Royals added four more runs in the inning as they captured the best-of-seven series 4-1.

The visitors swarmed into the middle of the diamond in the hushed Citi Field stadium for a celebration by the mound where closer Wade Davis had struck out the side to end it.

Catcher Salvador Perez was named Most Valuable Player of the Series after batting .364 with two RBIs, three runs scored and a .391 on-base average, and expertly handling a pitching staff that more than held their own against the vaunted Mets hurlers.

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“It is unbelievable we feel like a family here and we knew we were going to do something special this year, I felt it in spring training,” Perez said. “Now I don’t feel pain, I don’t feel nothing. I am ready to celebrate.”

The Royals’ triumph was all the sweeter coming after their agonizing Game Seven loss in last year’s World Series to the San Francisco Giants and a large contingent of blue-shirted Royals supporters crowded around their dugout to share in the joy.

"The heart, the desire, and their competitiveness and their character showed through every single game," Kansas City manager Ned Yost said about his players.

It marked Kansas City’s first Fall Classic crown since their 1985 triumph against cross-state rivals the St. Louis Cardinals.

The Kansas City comeback kids trailed 2-0 heading into the ninth but rallied to tie the game, ruining the shutout bid of starter Matt Harvey and handing closer Jeurys Familia his third blown save of the series.

At the end of eighth, the crowd chanted “Harvey! Harvey!” hoping to see him come out to pitch the ninth, and the Mets ace ended the suspense when the bearded 26 year old ran from the dugout to the mound to Citi Field cheers.

Harvey, who had dueled with Royals starter Edinson Volquez in the tense battle, walked leadoff hitter Lorenzo Cain, who promptly stole second base. Eric Hosmer followed with a line-drive double to left that scored Cain to make it 2-1.

Mets manager Terry Collins then called in Familia, who was charged with blown saves in Game One and Game Four.

Familia got Moustakas to ground out to first as Hosmer raced to third. Perez hit a grounder to third baseman David Wright, who bluffed Hosmer back toward the bag before throwing on to first base for the out.

But as soon as Wright released the ball, Hosmer broke for home and first baseman Lucas Duda’s throw to the plate came in wide as Hosmer slid in safely to tie the game.

The title-clinching victory was Kansas City’s remarkable eighth come-from-behind win of the postseason.

“What they accomplished this year was nothing less than spectacular and very, very special,” manager Yost said. “They just don’t quit, they’ve got a lot of heart, they’ve got a lot of character and they never think they are going to lose.”

Mets manager Terry Collins was gracious in defeat.

“I congratulate the Royals. They played absolutely great,” Collins said. “We couldn’t get it done, and we’re hoping to get another chance at it.

“I just told he players, I’ve done this for a long, long time and this is the most fun I’ve ever had in all the years,” said Collins, at age 66 is the oldest manager in the majors.

“I’m very, very proud of them.”