KANSAS CITY, Mo. -AP- Jason Hammel worked out of the stretch exclusively for the first time in his career. It certainly won't be the last.
Hammel allowed three hits over six innings for his first win with Kansas City, Eric Hosmer sent a two-run homer splashing into the fountains behind the fence in right-center field and the Royals beat the Cleveland Indians 3-1 Friday night.
Hammel (1-3) struck out six and walked two, ending a six-start winless streak dating to Sept. 19, when he defeated Cincinnati for the Chicago Cubs.
 
Jason Hammel gets 1st win for Royals, 3-1 over Indians
 
Hammel, who left the World Series champions as a free agent to sign a $16 million, two-year deal with Kansas City, failed to get out of the fourth inning in his previous two starts.
The right-hander opted to work from the stretch instead of the windup, hoping to simplify his way to better results.
"It's something I had experimented with on the side and just committed to it," Hammel said. "In the windup, there are a lot of pieces that have to go right, a lot of moving parts and the timing is going to be everything. With the stretch, everything is up and down, two movements up and down and you're going to the plate.
"I'm a tall guy and lanky, so it's got to be perfect on time every time. Obviously, we'll continue that. That was the first time."
Rookie Scott AlexanderJoakim Soria and Kelvin Herrera combined for one-hit relief. Alexander induced three straight groundouts in the seventh, Soria struck out Brandon GuyerRoberto Perez and Carlos Santana in the eighth, and Herrera allowed Edwin Encarnacion's two-out double in the ninth before retiring Jose Ramirez on a groundout for his fourth save in five chances.
Encarnacion homered in the fourth -- he has four home runs in 21 at-bats against Hammel.
Hosmer, who had three hits, homered in the fifth off Danny Salazar (2-3) with a drive that would have traveled 458 feet unimpeded, according to Major League Baseball's Statcast. Whit Merrifield had singled leading off.
"When we got the big double-play, we wanted to make sure we knew what we wanted to do with Hosmer," Indians manager Terry Francona said. "We wanted to throw a fastball high and out of the zone to see if he'd chase. Obviously we didn't do that."
Hosmer finished a triple shy of a cycle.
Alcides Escobar added an RBI double in the sixth off Nick Goody,
Salazar (2-3) gave up two runs and eight hits in 4 2/3 innings, striking out seven and walking two.
"I was trying to throw a fastball up, and I miss situation," Salazar said of the homer to Hosmer.
 

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