Fermin hits winning single in 11th inning, Royals beat Rockies 4-3 and drop Colorado to 4-18

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Freddy Fermin hit a winning single in the 11th and the Kansas City Royals rebounded from a blown two-run, ninth-inning lead to beat Colorado 4-3 on Tuesday night and drop the Rockies to 4-18.
Daniel Lynch IV (3-0) pitched a hitless inning as part of a five-hitter, sending Colorado to its ninth loss in 10 games. The Rockies are 1-12 on the road.
Jacob Stallings put Colorado ahead 3-2 with three-run double after Carlos Estévez walked the bases loaded with two outs in the ninth.
Salvador Perez singled off Seth Halvorsen starting the bottom half, advanced on Maikel Garcia’s double and scored on Michael Massey’s sacrifice fly.
With automatic runner Mark Canha on second starting the 11th, Tyler Kinley (0-1) intentionally walked Bobby Witt Jr., who extended his hitting streak to 14 games with an eighth-inning single. Kinley threw a wild pitch and intentionally walked Vinnie Pasquantino, and Fermin lined a single to center.
Drew Waters homered in the sixth off Ryan Feltner and Kyle Isbel bunted for an RBI single in the eighth that drove in Waters, who slid home ahead of the glove flip from first baseman Michael Toglia.
Key Moment
With runners on second and third in the 10th, Mickey Moniak was picked off third base by Fermin, the Kansas City catcher.
Key Stat
Kansas City has gone 17 games without scoring more than four runs, the longest streak by an AL team since the Royals' 19 straight in 2018. Kansas City has scored four or fewer runs in 22 of 24 games this season.
Up Next
Rockies RHP Chase Dollander (1-2, 7.36 ERA) and Royals RHP Michael Lorenzen (1-3, 4.57 ERA) start Wednesday night.
Champ Bailey eager to see Travis Hunter play offense and defense in the NFL but knows the obstacles
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Take it from Hall of Famer Champ Bailey, the last true two-way star to come out of college, Heisman winner Travis Hunter will have his hands, feet and head full trying to play both wide receiver and cornerback in the NFL.
“It’s easy to just say, ‘Oh yeah, he can go play both,'" Bailey said. "Well, there’s so much preparation that goes into playing one thing. So, you’ve got to consider what is it going to take to do everything all the time like he did in college?”
Digesting two playbooks.
Navigating concurrent position meetings.
Convincing coaches that switching back and forth from one side of scrimmage to the other won't diminish his effectiveness or learning curve on either side.
Then, there's the mental toll, the physical toll, the emotional toll.
"It’s almost unrealistic when you think about it," Bailey said. “But, we’re looking at one of the greatest athletes we’ve ever seen. It changes your mindset to think he could possibly do this. I’m not going to rule it out.”
Few can relate to what Hunter did in college and will try to do in the pros better than Bailey, who won the Bronko Nagurski Award as the nation’s top defender in his final season at Georgia in 1998, when he picked off three passes and also starred on offense, catching 47 passes for 744 yards and five touchdowns.
Bailey, however, would play almost exclusively at cornerback in the NFL after being drafted seventh overall by Washington in 1999. During his 15-year pro career, Bailey saw just nine targets at wide receiver.
Five of them came in 2000 when he caught three passes for 78 yards to go with his five interceptions. But Norv Turner was fired midway through his second season and his replacement, Marty Schottenheimer, squelched Bailey's ambitions to dabble in the offense.
“So, it’s all about timing,” Bailey said. 'What if he was my coach my first year? I would have never played offense."
Bailey suggested that for Hunter to really get his chance to try being a two-way player in the NFL, he'll have to land with the right team, the right coach, the right teammates, the right scheme — on both offense and defense — the right schedule and the proper amount of patience.
Hunter is widely expected to get drafted second overall by the Cleveland Browns — who need help at both of his positions — on Thursday night after the Tennessee Titans take Miami's Cam Ward as their new quarterback to kick off the 2025 NFL draft.
Hunter told the Browns, and every other team he met with, not to bother selecting him if they're not going to let him line up on both sides.
Deion Sanders, the Hall of Famer who played defensive back and wide receiver in the NFL — he had two interceptions and a touchdown catch in 1996 for Dallas — was Hunter's coach at Jackson State and Colorado and had no qualms about letting Hunter play both ways.
Sanders, however, allowed Hunter to take several days off after games to recuperate, a luxury he won't have in the NFL.
Last season, Hunter caught 96 passes for 1,258 yards and 15 touchdowns and collected 35 tackles, 11 pass breakups, eight forced incompletions and four interceptions while allowing just one touchdown.
Hunter logged a whopping 1,484 snaps, by far the most in college football last season. Next up was Florida center Jake Slaughter at 800 snaps. By way of comparison, NFL Defensive Player of the Year Patrick Surtain II played 978 snaps in 17 games last season, all on defense.
It's unlikely Hunter will be able to play every snap in the NFL, Bailey said, so the biggest decision for the team that drafts him is which side will be his primary position? Scouts are divided on whether it would be best for him to be a cornerback who gets a handful of offensive snaps or a wide receiver who occasionally gets into some sub-packages on defense.
“It’s rare to have corners with length and athleticism and ball skills all wrapped up into one. He has that. So, any defensive-minded coach is going to say, ‘We want you over here,'" Bailey said. “But you can’t ignore that he had 1,300 yards this past year. That’s a significant amount of yards to ignore in his production on offense."
Which position is primary will have an enormous impact on Hunter's career.
“Fit is everything,” Bailey said. “There are so many moving parts to this.”
Bailey added that Hunter needs a head coach who won't allow his offensive and defensive coordinators to fight over him and he said that if the position meetings for defensive backs and wide receivers are held at the same time, Hunter will be putting in hours of overtime every day to catch up.
Then there's the negotiating the learning curves on the field.
“You've got to learn how to communicate with your safeties, your other corners, anybody that's on your side. Once you get that down and you understand the terminology of the defense, you can pull back a little bit from the mental side of it — a little bit — if you're playing offense," Bailey said. “But, it's risky, it's risky. Because you leave some stuff out there. It's just he has to put in more time."
What would be easier, to be a fulltime cornerback and part-time wide receiver or vice versa?
“It's both hard,” Bailey said. “That's my thing. Doing one by itself is hard."
One thing Bailey is sure of is that Hunter needs to take his shot at playing both ways while he's young.
“If I had to bet on it, I would say he'll be at one position down the road,” Bailey said. "I don't know what it would be because he's so exceptional at both. But right now with his youth and his bounce, he's a great athlete right now, he's fresh.
“You don't want to wear him out but you also want to utilize what you have.”