Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and the Kansas City Royals.
Comerica Park has turned into a good place for Detroit to breathe again, and they’re ready to ride that momentum. The Tigers come into this one at 8-9, the Royals at 7-10, and Tuesday’s 2-1 game already showed the tone of the series: tight innings, thin margins, and a Kansas City offense still struggling to turn baserunners into actual damage. Detroit has won four straight and opened the season 6-1 at home. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and the Kansas City Royals.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
Detroit is hitting .236/.325/.364 with 72 runs, while Kansas City sits at .216/.304/.331 with 55 runs. On a per-game level, the Tigers are at 4.38 runs scored and 3.75 allowed; the Royals are at 3.38 scored and 4.06 allowed. That is the cleanest structural edge in the game. Kansas City has now been held to two or fewer runs in eight of 17 games, including six of its last seven before Tuesday and then another one-run effort in the opener. The Royals keep asking their pitching staff to throw nearly perfect games. Detroit does not need that kind of purity.
Seth Lugo (SP) has absolutely been the better starter so far, with enough verve that it Detroit’s lineup might struggle more than usual. He brings a 1.53 ERA and 1.08 WHIP into the game, while Jack Flaherty (SP) sits at 5.14 and 1.64. But the deeper contact profile puts some air under Lugo’s ERA and keeps the door open for Detroit. Statcast has Lugo at a .261 wOBA allowed but a much rougher .347 xwOBA, with a 90.7 mph average exit velocity, 42.9% hard-hit rate, and 10.2% barrel rate. Flaherty’s page is louder in the wrong direction—.353 wOBA, .395 xwOBA, 91.8 mph EV, 55.3% hard-hit. Which is to say, Detroit doesn’t own its own mound tonight. The handicap lives in the full-game ecosystem: Lugo has pitched better, but his contact quality says Detroit can still find scoring windows; Flaherty has been shaky, but Kansas City’s lineup has not consistently punished shakier pitching.
Kevin McGonigle (INF) has opened the season slashing .311/.417/.492 with a 162 wRC+, a .181 ISO, and more walks than strikeouts through 17 games. He’s flipped the top of the order into a consistent extra-base engine. He already has eight extra-base hits and has reached base in 15 of 17 games, which matters against a pitcher allowing a .347 xwOBA and a 10.2% barrel rate. Dillon Dingler (C) has provided pleasant secondary damage, hitting .271/.314/.550 with three home runs, 12 RBI, and an .864 OPS, backed by a .279 ISO and strong recent form—7-for-19 over the last seven days with five RBI and just 1 strikeout. That gives Detroit more traffic and lift than it expected. Even the lower-impact pieces have contributed situationally: Zack McKinstry (INF/OF) is at .195/.271/.296, but with six walks and three steals, giving the lineup some ability to extend innings without needing extra-base hits every time through.
Royals vs. Tigers pick, best bet
Kansas City’s problem is simply that the big bats aren’t whatsoever producing. Maikel Garcia (INF) has been one of the few stable pieces, hitting .288/.358/.457 with two home runs, eight RBI, and an .815 OPS, plus a .169 ISO that gives him some gap power. Bobby Witt Jr. (SS) is still creating opportunities with a .270 average, .365 OBP, and eight stolen bases, but he has zero home runs, a .317 slugging percentage, and just a .682 OPS, which strips a major part of his usual impact. The middle of the order is bereft of power, too. Vinnie Pasquantino (1B) is sitting at .211/.284/.333 with an unbelievably-low .122 ISO, while Salvador Perez (C) is at .219/.258/.344 with a .125 ISO and declining contact quality. That group has combined for paltry extra-base damage, which shows up in the team results: Kansas City is averaging 3.38 runs per game and has been held to two or fewer runs in eight of 17 games. Without consistent middle-order production, even traffic from Garcia and Witt has struggled to turn into multi-run innings.
A functioning middle order would be positioned to cash that in. Kansas City has not looked like that offense. Tuesday was the exact picture of it: the Royals loaded the bases early, scratched across one run, and spent the rest of the night stranded in the same shallow water. The lineup can still beat this ticket if Witt starts a chain and Pasquantino or Perez finally drive the baseball with authority, but the broader sample says Detroit is facing a lineup with a low scoring floor.
The late-game shape only strengthens the full-game case. Detroit’s bullpen has a cleaner finish right now, with Will Vest (RP) striking out all three hitters he faced Tuesday and Kenley Jansen (RP) recording save No. 479. Royals coverage has been far shakier on Kansas City’s relief picture, and that matters in a game where one run may separate the sixth from the ninth.
Best bet: Tigers ML (-131), playable to -140. The way this dies is easy to see: Lugo carries his early-season form another turn, Flaherty gives up one loud inning to Witt or Perez, and Detroit spends the night chasing a 3-1 score. That is a real path. The stronger one still runs through Detroit’s deeper offensive floor, its home form, and a bullpen bridge that has been better equipped to cash a close game.
Projected score: Tigers 4, Royals 3.
Best bet: Tigers (-130) vs. Royals
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