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Yankees vs. Royals score: Giancarlo Stanton helps New York take 2-1 ALDS lead over Kansas City

The New York Yankees defeated the Kansas City Royals in ALDS Game 3 on Wednesday night by a 3-2 final. The Yankees, in turn, have now secured a 2-1 advantage in their best-of-five series. The Yankees can punch their ticket to the AL Championship Series with a victory on Thursday night in Game 4 -- the Royals, meanwhile, can force a winner-take-all Game 5 on Saturday. On the other side of the bracket, the Tigers also took a 2-1 lead over the Guardians and will similarly look to clinch Thursday.

Here are three things to know about the Yankees-Royals Game 3 and a look ahead to Game 4.

1. Stanton goes off

Yankees DH Giancarlo Stanton has quietly been an accomplished postseason hitter throughout his career. He entered Wednesday having batted .250/.319/.596 with 11 home runs and 25 runs batted in over his first 29 postseason games. He added to those marks in Game 3 by notching three hits, including a run-scoring double and the go-ahead home run in the top of the eighth inning. Take a look:

Stanton became the first Yankees player to hit a go-ahead run in the eighth inning or later of a postseason game since Raul Ibanez did it in the 2012 ALDS, according to MLB's Bryan Hoch.

Perhaps the most remarkable part of Stanton's night occurred after the single, when he stole his first base in nearly 500 games. That's not an exaggeration: Stanton had not swiped a bag since August 3, 2020, against the Philadelphia Phillies. That was 498 games ago, regular season and postseason, according to CBS Sports HQ's research staff.

In other words, Stanton did it all on Wednesday.

2. Judge's struggles continue

Whereas Stanton went off on Wednesday, fellow slugger Aaron Judge continued his prolonged postseason slump. 

Judge went 0 for 4 with a walk and a strikeout, the K coming on a questionable check-swing ruling. Nevertheless, Judge will now enter Thursday with the highest strikeout percentage in postseason play history (minimum 210 plate appearances) at 33.4%, again according to CBS Sports HQ's research staff.

Judge's struggles date back multiple postseasons. In fact, he's now 7 for his last 51 with two home runs and three runs batted in since October 2021. 

3. Both bullpens do work

Managers Aaron Boone and Matt Quatraro took advantage of Tuesday's day off by leveraging their relief corps in an aggressive manner on Wednesday.

Boone lifted starter Clarke Schmidt with two outs in the fifth inning, turning to a combination of three relievers: Clay Holmes, Tommy Kahnle, and Luke Weaver. They cumulatively surrendered no runs on two hits and a walk. They recorded just one strikeout, but the Yankees will take the topline result all the same.

Quatraro allowed Seth Lugo to complete five innings of work. He then trotted out six different relievers over ensuing four innings. That parade included Angel Zerpa, John Schreiber, Sam Long, Brady Singer, Kris Bubic, and Michael Lorenzen. All together, they allowed one run on two hits and four walks. They punched out three.

Of all those relievers used, only Bubic threw more than 20 pitches. (He tossed 26.) As such, Boone and Quatraro should be able to turn to their bullpen as needed in Game 4.

4. Series continues on Thursday

The Yankees and Royals will meet again at Kauffman Stadium on Thursday night for Game 4. With a win, the Yankees will advance to the American League Championship Series. They'll take on the winner of the Detroit Tigers vs. Cleveland Guardians ALDS. As it stands, the Tigers will enter Thursday with a 2-1 advantage of their own. 

A Royals win, meanwhile, would force a Game 5 on Saturday at Yankee Stadium.

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Live updates
 

Nothing to say.

 

Big Christmas with the Grinch gloves.

 

We are in the top of the second, and we've already had one pitching change and one pinch-hitter.

 

Guards threatening

Cleveland now has two on to begin the second. Clearly Cleveland's scouting report says "swing early" against Hurter.

 

Back-to-back singles against Mr. Hurter have the Guards in business.

 

Tigers take 1-0 lead

Detroit is up early against Alex Cobb and the Guardians, staking out a 1-0 lead in the first inning.

Parker Meadows led off with a single and later advanced to second base on a fielder's choice. Meadows then came around to score on a Riley Greene single. Take a look:

This after Montero had a six-pitch first inning. Safe to say the vibes are good in Detroit right now.

 

...or for the cats.

 

Tigers already have action in the bullpen. Lefty Brant Hurter is up. I fully understand and appreciate the strategy, but bullpen games are for the birds.

 

He's 37, so it's officially Al Cobb instead of Alex Cobb. 

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Meadows with a leadoff single to begin the bottom of the first.

 

Six-pitch first for Montero. Tigers up to bat.

 

The Tigers are in the discussion for best home uniforms in MLB, it says here.

 

Montero gets a lazy fly off the bat of Kwan to start the game. One down.

 

First postseason game in Detroit since the 2014 ALDS. What a ridiculous series that was. The team that started Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, and David Price got swept by the team that started Chris Tillman, Wei-Yin Chen, and Bud Norris.

 

Just about go time in Detroit.

 

Where to watch Game 3

Date: Wednesday, Oct. 9 | Time: 4:08 p.m. ET
Location: Comerica Park (Detroit)
Channel: TBS, truTV | Live stream: Max
Probable pitchers:  RHP Alex Cobb (CLE) vs. RHP Keider Montero (DET)
Odds: CLE -110 | DET -110; over/under: 7.0

USATSI
 

Game 3 starting lineups

Here are the starting lineups for the Guardians and Tigers in ALDS Game 3.

Kyle Manzardo is at DH for Cleveland:

Game 2 hero Kerry Carpenter is batting second for Detroit:

 

Wednesday's best bets

Matt Snyder is taking a look at the odds and making picks every day throughout the 2024 MLB playoffs. He's expecting another low-scoring affair between Cleveland and Detroit.

MLB predictions, picks, best bets: Fernando Tatís stays hot for Padres, Mets ride vibes to beat Phillies
Matt Snyder
 

Biggest questions for Wednesday's games

Good afternoon, baseball fans. It should be one exciting day of baseball. For the last time this October, we will have four playoff games. Today's slate sees the Phillies and Dodgers -- baseball's two best teams in the regular season -- facing elimination. The Mets and Padres have the chance to punch their tickets to the NLCS.

In the American League, the series lead is on the line in Detroit and Kansas City. We're about 45 minutes away from first pitch at Comerica Park, so let's ask and answer some big questions about Guardians-Tigers, Phillies-Mets, Yankees-Royals and Dodgers-Padres.

2024 MLB playoffs: Biggest question for each NLDS, ALDS game Wednesday with two eliminations on the line
Matt Snyder
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