Major League Baseball
Cleveland 3, Kansas City 2
When: 3:15 PM ET, Sunday, October 2, 2016
Where: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
Temperature: 73°
Umpires: Home - Bill Miller, 1B - Ed Hickox, 2B - Greg Gibson, 3B - Mike Estabrook
Attendance: 29475

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- The Cleveland Indians real celebration erupted about a half hour after they shook hands on the field after beating the Kansas City Royals.

Yan Gomes homered in his first at-bat since coming off the disabled list and Josh Tomlin pitched effectively into the eighth inning as the Indians nipped Kansas City 3-2 Sunday.

The Indians crowded around a clubhouse television to watch the end of the Toronto Blue Jays-Boston Red Sox game. A Blue Jays' victory means the Indians would not play a makeup Monday in Detroit and give them home field advantage for the American League Division Series against the Red Sox.

With the Blue Jays taking a 2-1 lead in the top of the ninth, the Indians watched as the first two Red Sox hitters grounded out in the bottom of the inning.

"One out to go," shouted Francisco Lindor, who drove in the Indians' go-ahead run in the eighth inning.

Then, the clubhouse grew quiet as the Red Sox got a walk and a single. When Jackie Bradley Junior grounded out to end the game, the clubhouse broke into cheers.

Next the Skylar Gray's song, "I'm Coming Home," was played in the clubhouse as some of the players started laughing. The Indians will open the ALDS on Thursday at Cleveland with Trevor Bauer starting, instead of at Fenway Park.

The Indians, who take a 94-67 record into the playoffs, did not have a losing streak of more than three games.

"That's harder than it looks," Indians manager Terry Francona said. "It's a long season, and that's something I'm really proud of the guys about. They should be proud of themselves for that."

The Indians went 14-5 against the Royals this season. The 2015 World Series champion Royals ended the season with four straight losses and finished at 81-81.

"We were just one win away from having a winning season," Royals manager Ned Yost said. "We had four cracks at it at the end of the year and just couldn't get it. Offensively, we just couldn't do it."

Lindor's sacrifice fly in the eighth scored Carlos Santana with the go-ahead run. Santana walked with one out and stopped at third on Jason Kipnis' second double of the game before scoring on Lindor's fly out to right fielder Paulo Orlando.

Tomlin, who went 0-5 in August, limited the Royals to two runs and six hits over 7 1/3 innings, throwing 64 strikes in 88 pitches. He struck out three and walked none. Tomlin (13-9) will start the third game Saturday of the American League Division Series against the Boston Red Sox.

"I've never really experienced the postseason," Tomlin said. "So I know I will be ready when that time comes. We knew we put ourselves in good position."

Left-hander Andrew Miller got the final two outs of the eighth, while Cody Allen worked the ninth to log his 32nd save.

Royals starter Ian Kennedy (11-11) gave up three runs on four hits, two walks, two hit batters and a sacrifice fly in 7 2/3 innings, his longest outing since Aug. 20, but took the loss.

"It's a frustrating way to lose on a day like today when I felt like I had good stuff," Kennedy said. "One mistake, I gave up a home run and it kind of cost me. Overall, I was really happy how the outing went. At least, I gave our team a real solid chance."

Gomes, who suffered a fractured right wrist when hit by a pitch on Sept. 14 while rehabbing with Columbus in the International League, homered for the first time since June 25 at Detroit in his first at-bat.

While the Indians and Gomes were wondering what his pain threshold would be while hitting, he quickly answered that by depositing Kennedy's first pitch over the left field wall after Tyler Naquin was hit by a pitch in the third inning.

"I should give it to the trainers," Gomes said after his home run ball was retrieved.

The Royals got on the board quickly with Jarrod Dyson lacing a double to right on Josh Tomlin's first pitch and scoring when Whit Merrifield doubled to left on Tomlin's third pitch. Merrifield went to third on a Kendrys Morales ground out but was stranded there. Salvador Perez flied out to center but not deep enough for third base coach Mike Jirschele to wave him home.

Dyson and Merrifield were at the corners with one out in the third, but Morales grounded into a double play.

Rookie Cheslor Cuthbert led off the Royals fifth with his 12th home run, driving a Tomlin changeup out to left-center to snap an 0-for-12 skid.

NOTES: Indians RHP Corey Kluber threw 15 to 20 fastballs in a bullpen session, his first time off the mound since hurting his quadriceps in a Sept. 26 start. ... RHP Dillon Gee, who was hospitalized for two blood clots after a Sept. 25 relief appearance at Detroit, was in the Kansas City clubhouse. He is scheduled for thoracic outlet syndrome surgery on Oct. 11. ... RHP Danny Salazar, who has not pitched since Sept. 9 because of a forearm strain, could be on the Indians ALDS roster and used in relief. ... 1B Eric Hosmer was not in the Royals' lineup for the second straight game because of a wrist issue. Manager Ned Yost said it is not serious, just needing rest. ... C Salvador Perez, who was not in the Kansas City lineup Friday and Saturday because of leg issues, served as the Royals DH.
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
Cleveland   Kansas City
Josh Tomlin Player Ian Kennedy
Win W/L Loss
7.1 IP 7.2
3 Strikeouts 3
6 Hits 4
2.45 ERA 3.52
Hitting
Cleveland   Kansas City
Jason Kipnis Player Whit Merrifield
2 Hits 2
0 RBI 1
0 HR 0
4 TB 3
.667 Avg .500
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
Cleveland 4 1 9 .133 9 6 3 2 0 0
Kansas City 6 1 11 .194 9 5 2 1 0 0