Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and the Boston Red Sox.
Boston arrives in Kansas City with the kind of modest win streak that feels bigger because of where both teams have been living. The Red Sox are 21-27, still trying to claw back into the AL East conversation, and they have opened this series with 3-1 and 7-1 wins after spending more than a week stuck under four runs. Kansas City is 20-29, last in the AL Central, carrying an eight-loss-in-nine-games stretch and a home skid that has turned Kauffman into a restless place. Wednesday’s setup is cool but playable—64 degrees around first pitch, sliding into the low 60s—and the series has become a clean test of whether Boston’s offense has actually found a pulse or simply caught a Royals team at the wrong moment. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and the Boston Red Sox.
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.
Wacha is the part of the Royals case that has to be taken seriously before the current form starts doing too much work. He brings a 4-2 record, 2.83 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 47 strikeouts and seven starts of at least six innings, with the same veteran machinery that has kept him useful for years: changeup feel, cutter usage, enough four-seam command to steal counts, and a knack for turning traffic into soft contact. The catch is that the supporting card is not as dominant as the ERA/WHIP pairing. His FIP sits in the low 4s, his xFIP and SIERA are both in that same neighborhood, and the .215 BABIP/83.7% strand-rate combination leaves room for regression if Boston keeps putting competent swings in play. Connelly Early is the shakier arm on paper at 3-2 with a 3.21 ERA, 1.20 WHIP and 45 strikeouts, because the underlying profile has more teeth marks: a mid-4s FIP, elevated walk risk, a 13.0% barrel rate and too many belt-high mistakes. That does not make Boston safer on the mound. It makes the question more specific: is this Royals lineup, in this form, equipped to punish those mistakes for nine innings?
Duran’s Tuesday night is why this Boston angle finally has a face. The season line still needs honesty—.189/.262/.331 with five homers and 10 steals through 43 games—but a double, two walks, a three-run homer and four times on base gave the Red Sox the version of Duran that changes how an inning feels from the leadoff spot. He is the right cover athlete because the bet is built on Boston looking more alive, more athletic and more functional than it did a week ago. Wilyer Abreu supplies the steadier bat at .294/.363/.444 with a .358 wOBA and 123 wRC+, while Willson Contreras gives the lineup its clearest damage source at .258/.361/.479 with 10 homers, a .221 ISO, .371 wOBA and 132 wRC+. That right-handed thump matters against Wacha, who has been especially tough on left-handed hitters, and it keeps Boston’s case from relying only on Duran, Abreu and Masataka Yoshida solving the changeup/cutter lane. The Sox do not need another 15-hit eruption to justify the side; they need a functional top half, one Contreras swing in leverage, and enough pressure to reach Kansas City’s bullpen with the game still tilted.
The Royals’ best argument still wears No. 7, and that is the first thing Early has to survive. Bobby Witt Jr. is the most dangerous player in the matchup, a .300-level hitter with extra-base juice, 15-steal speed, elite hard contact and the ability to make a routine single feel like a scoring threat. Maikel Garcia is the other pressure point, especially against a lefty, because he can get the Royals into the kind of first-inning traffic that makes Early’s command feel fragile. The problem comes after that first punch. Vinnie Pasquantino and Salvador Perez remain central to the run-production plan while both are underperforming badly, Kansas City has totaled only 25 runs across its last nine games, and the Royals’ baserunning has become its own opponent: 15 caught stealings, seven pickoffs and 19 outs on the bases through 49 games. For an offense already hunting for clean innings, those are brutal little taxes. A Garcia/Witt ambush can beat Boston; asking the rest of this lineup to repeatedly cash that traffic has been the broken part of Kansas City’s season.
Red Sox vs. Royals pick, best bet
The market keeps circling back to the simplest ticket. Red Sox F5 at -105 strips away Boston’s late-game advantage and turns the handicap into a direct Wacha solve, which is not the best use of the edge. Red Sox team total Over 3.5 asks the lineup to prove Tuesday was more than one good night against a veteran starter who can still work into the sixth. Royals team total Under 3.5 at plus money has appeal, but Early’s barrel rate makes that ticket vulnerable to one Witt swing or one Perez mistake-punishment inning. Full-game Under 7.5 fits Kansas City’s offensive rut, then gets messier once Early’s hard-contact file and the Royals’ bullpen usage enter the picture. Boston ML at even money keeps more win conditions alive: 3-2 if Wacha is sharp, 4-3 if both starters bend, 5-3 if Kansas City’s bullpen cracks again. It also prices Boston like the first two nights were decorative rather than relevant.
Best bet: Red Sox ML (+100). Playable to -115. The cleanest failure mode is Early leaving too much in the middle of the plate for Garcia, Witt and Perez while Wacha turns Boston’s left-heavy order into early-count rollover contact. The stronger read still points toward Boston because Kansas City is asking too much of too few functional bats, giving away too much on the bases, and leaning on a starter whose ERA is doing more of the market’s work than the full underlying profile. The Red Sox have the better current form, the cleaner late-game pitching setup, and enough lineup pulse for Duran, Abreu and Contreras to make an even-money road price look short.
Final score projection: Red Sox 4, Royals 3.
Best bet: Royals (-110) vs. Red Sox
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