CLEVELAND -AP- Jorge Bonifacio's two-run double off Andrew Miller broke an eighth-inning tie and lifted the Kansas City Royals past the Cleveland Indians 6-4 on Friday night.
The Royals entered the game with the lowest winning percentage in the AL, but rallied from an early 4-0 deficit.
Brandon Moss hit a three-run homer in the fourth and Mike Moustakas' solo home run in the fifth tied the game.
Lorenzo Cain started the winning rally with a single off Bryan Shaw (1-1).
 
Bonifacio's hit caps Royals' rally in 6-4 win over Indians
 
 
Miller got Eric Hosmer to hit a ground ball, but shortstop Francisco Lindor booted a backhand attempt for his fourth error of the season.
Miller retired Salvador Perez on a foul out, but Bonifacio's double to left-center scored both runners.
Mike Minor (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings. Joakim Soria struck out Edwin Encarnacion with runners on second and third to end the eighth. Kelvin Herrera allowed a two-out single in the ninth, but struck out pinch-hitter Austin Jackson for his 10th save.
Jose Ramirez hit a two-out homer in the second. Lindor, Michael Brantley and Carlos Santana had RBI in Cleveland's three-run third, but starter Mike Clevinger couldn't hold the lead.
Both homers came off Clevinger, who is replacing injured staff ace Corey Kluber in the rotation.
Moss' two-out homer got Kansas City back in the game. Moustakas tied it with one out in the fifth.
Both teams were rained out Thursday -- the Indians at home against Cincinnati and the Royals in New York. Clevinger and Royals starter Ian Kennedy had their starts moved back a day.
Clevinger allowed four runs in five-plus innings and a change could be coming soon in Cleveland's rotation. Kluber made his first minor league rebab start Friday, throwing five scoreless innings for Double-A Akron.
Kennedy allowed four runs in five innings and remained winless since Sept. 11.
For the second time this month, a squirrel ran on the field but play was not interrupted. The squirrel scurried around the outfield during the bottom of the sixth before being shooed through a doorway in the center field wall by ballpark workers after the inning.
 

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