Giants-Chiefs, Week 3: Live updates

In-game updates

Tyrone Tray may be injured, he indicated his right arm while lying on the ground.

Injury updates

Uh oh. Graham Gano pre-game injury.

Pre-game updates

Yes, Andrew Thomas will be in uniform for the Giants.

Giants inactives

  • LB Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles (Calf)
  • LB Darius Muasau (Concussion/Eye)
  • DL Chauncey Golston (Ankle)
  • OL Evan Neal
  • TE Thomas Fidone II
  • DL Rakeem Nuñez-Roches Sr. (Foot)
  • QB Jameis Winston (3rd QB)

Chiefs inactives

  • WR Xavier Worthy (Shoulder)
  • CB Kristian Fulton
  • TE Jared Wiley
  • RB Elijah Mitchell
  • DE Michael Danna
  • C Hunter Nourzad

Follow all the action right here as the New York Giants host the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday Night Football in a meeting of 0-2 teams. Kickoff is scheduled for 8:20 p.m. ET.

The Giants have started 0-2 in three consecutive seasons. They are 9-27 since making the playoffs in 2022. The Chiefs are 0-2 for the first time since 2014. They have appeared in three consecutive Super Bowls, winning two of those.

The Chiefs are 5.5-point favorites, per FanDuel Sportsbook.

The Giants could get a boost from the return of left tackle Andrew Thomas, expected to make his season debut after surgery for a Lisfranc injury suffered in Week 6 of the 2024 season. The Chiefs will be without speedy wide receiver Xavier Worthy, already ruled out for the second straight week with a torn labrum suffered early in the Chiefs’ season-opening game.

See our Giants-Chiefs StoryStream for all of our pre-game, in-game and post-game coverage.


Highlights, key moments from Jaguars’ Week 3 win vs. Texans

One week after the Jaguars were unable to come up with key plays late in a loss to the Bengals, Jacksonville made those big plays on Sunday against the Texans.

The Jaguars‘ defense was stout the entire day, holding Houston to just 4.6 yards per play, while forcing three takeaways.

One of those turnovers came with the game tied late on a forced fumble by Tyson Campbell. Another came on Houston’s final possession in the form of an Antonio Johnson interception.

The Jacksonville offense would take its lumps with the run game struggling to get going and Trevor Lawrence averaging 5.6 yards per attempt with an interception.

However, when a big play was needed, Lawrence connected with Brian Thomas Jr. for a 46-yard catch and run that set up the late go-ahead touchdown.

That key conversion or late stop was missing from last week’s outing, but not this time around.

“Huge ability to stay the course,” said Liam Coen via Jaguars on SI. “You’re winning the game for the majority of it. They got and tied it up but even though obviously not playing our best football offensively, defense kept us in it. They played their tails off.

“Very proud of this group. They played their tails off and kept competing.”

Jaguars vs. Texans Week 3 highlights

Trevor Lawrence to Brian Thomas Jr.

Post-game locker room reaction

This article originally appeared on Jaguars Wire: Jaguars vs. Texans: Highlights, key moments from Week 3 win

Brooklyn Nets jersey history No. 24 – Reggie Theus (1990-91)

The Brooklyn Nets have 52 jersey numbers worn by over 600 different players over the course of their history since the franchise was founded in 1967 as a charter member of the American Basketball Association (ABA), when the team was known as the “New Jersey Americans”.

Since then, that league has been absorbed by the NBA with the team that would later become the New York Nets and New Jersey Nets before settling on the name by which they are known today, bringing their rich player and jersey history with them to the league of today.

To commemorate the players who played for the Nets over the decades wearing those 52 different jersey numbers, Nets Wire is covering the entire history of the franchise’s jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. The 25th of those 52 different numbers is jersey No. 24, which has has had a total of 20 players wear the number in the history of the team.

The seventh of those players wearing No. 24 played in the (then) New Jersey (now, Brooklyn) Nets era, guard alum Reggie Theus. After ending his college career at UNLV, Theus was picked up with the ninth overall selection of the 1978 NBA Draft by the Chicago Bulls.

The Inglewood, California native would play parts of the first six seasons of his pro career with the Bulls. He also played for the (then) Kansas City (now, Sacramento) Kings through their move to Sacramento, the Atlanta Hawks, and Orlando Magic before he was dealt to New Jersey for the final season of his NBA career in 1990.

During his time suiting up for the Nets, Theus wore only jersey No. 24 and put up 18.6 points, 2.8 rebounds, 4.7 steals, and 1.0 steals per game.

All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.

This article originally appeared on Nets Wire: Nets jersey history No. 24 – Reggie Theus (1990-91)

Travis Kelce outfit today: What Chiefs tight end wore before ‘SNF’ game vs. Giants

Travis Kelce outfit today: What Chiefs tight end wore before ‘SNF’ game vs. Giants
originally appeared on The Sporting News

Travis Kelce’s stardom goes well beyond football. The Kansas City Chiefs tight end is one of the league’s most popular players, drawing attention not only for his play on the field but also for his style when arriving at the stadium.

His pregame entrances have become a talking point in recent weeks—especially in Week 2, when he showed up for the Chiefs’ matchup against the Philadelphia Eagles wearing a suit jacket paired with shorts.

This week, Kelce and the Chiefs travel to Metlife Stadium to play the New York Giants on “Sunday Night Football.” The national spotlight and primetime backdrop could mean that Kelce shows up to the game with some creative outfit.

Here’s a look at how Kelce arrived to Sunday night’s game in New Jersey.

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Travis Kelce pregame outfit vs. Giants

Kelce arrived to “Sunday Night Football” with a much more traditional, yet still stylish approach. He wore a maroon suit with a white shirt and no tie, a more business-like attire than what he had on against Philadelphia last weekend.

MORE NFL WEEK 3: 

Credit where credit is due: Dino Toppmöller talks about how Bayern Munich included him in 2023 title celebrations

Current Eintracht Frankfurt manager Dino Toppmöller — who worked under Julian Nagelsmann at Bayern — spoke this week about Jamal Musiala’s goal on the last matchday of the 2022/23 season that clinched the 11th Meisterschale in a row. Toppmöller, like the rest of Nagelsmann’s crew, was let go in March when Thomas Tuchel was put into power, but he felt involved in that final goal and the celebrations.

Here is how Toppmöller remembers that goal: “It felt like we practiced that kind of finish a thousand times. I was absolutely thrilled with the goal, of course. The guys called me via FaceTime from the dressing room after the game and thanked me. That was a great moment. Two months later, I had the league medal in my mailbox as a thank you. That just shows you that you did a few things right.”

A classy move from Bayern to include Toppmöller in the celebrations and the honors of that record-setting eleventh title in a row. In addition to a winner’s medal in the mail, Toppmöller also received a manager job at Eintracht Frankfurt a couple weeks into that offseason, where he has been since.

‘The Streak’: A new documentary brings back fond old memories

Glenn Seninger, who was director of media relations when the Salt Lake Trappers won 29 consecutive games in 1987, poses for a portrait in front of Smith’s Ballpark in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025.
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Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

With the recent release of “The Streak,” a documentary film about the year a rookie league team in Salt Lake City won 29 games in a row, a winning streak longer than any other team at any level in the history of professional baseball, Glenn Seninger suddenly found himself transported back to a time when his hair was black, his future was unlimited and a salary of $550 a month qualified as a good deal.

It was 1987. Reagan was president. “The Simpsons” made its TV debut. “Les Miserables” opened on Broadway. Nike introduced Air Max I. And in Salt Lake City, Seninger, halfway through his junior year at the University of Utah, was hired, for the aforementioned $550 a month, to be the media relations director for the Salt Lake Trappers.

The Trappers were an anomaly in the baseball world, a professional team made up entirely of free agents, aka ballplayers no one else had drafted or wanted and were clinging for dear life onto their fading big league dreams.

The club had come to Salt Lake two seasons earlier, bankrolled by the $500 the owner, a Californian named Van Schley, maxed out on his Amex card. This was the last chance saloon, baseball style.

Glenn Seninger, who was director of media relations when the Salt Lake Trappers won 29 consecutive games in 1987, shows an old baseball card of him in front of Smith’s Ballpark in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025.
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Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Players got paid $500 a month (less than Seninger, who, for obvious reasons, kept his salary secret). They played 70 games in 73 days. A grind of a schedule. But there was no lack of ballplayers who wanted to be Trappers. The team held a tryout prior to the 1987 season and 200 hopefuls turned up, including, Seninger remembers, a kid who rode the bus from Pittsburgh for three days and showed up wearing overhauls and work boots. He threw faster than anyone there, above 90 mph, but still didn’t make the cut, nor did anyone else. Baseball can be a harsh mistress.

The Trappers played at Derks Field (later the site of Smith’s Ballpark), a cement relic of a stadium angled beneath the Wasatch mountains — offering arguably the prettiest view in all of baseball. Seninger shared a windowless office under the bleachers with Dave Baggott, the club’s new assistant general manager who played on the team the year before. (The same Dave Baggott who would go on to buy the Ogden Raptors and become a local minor league legend). They had metal World War II metal desks. It was an upgrade when Seninger showed up one day with a couch he’d bought on the way to work at Deseret Industries.

The ballclub was no frills. They gave free game tickets to a man who would retrieve balls hit out of the park during batting practice — because they couldn’t afford to lose the balls. The groundskeeper, Tom Hassett, slept at the ballpark during homestands. A regular called Foul Ball Bob held a pool each game, at a dollar per entry, on how many foul balls would go into the stands that night.

But as June bled into July, the “Bull Durham” vibe turned to another curiosity: the team that couldn’t lose. After starting out 3-3, the scrapheap Trappers beat and kept beating Butte, Great Falls, Pocatello, Medicine Hat, Billings and Idaho Falls — Pioneer League opponents that were run by big league franchises and filled with players who made the cuts the Trappers players didn’t.

Glenn Seninger, who was director of media relations when the Salt Lake Trappers won 29 consecutive games in 1987, poses for a portrait with a 1987 photo of Trappers manager Jim Gilligan holding the pioneer league championship trophy, in front of Smith’s Ballpark in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025.
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Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

It was when the Trappers closed in on the rookie league record of 19, set by Lethbridge, that people started taking notice. The radio stations that routinely rebuffed Seninger when he called in with Trappers updates, started putting him on the air.

The team was charmed. It seemed like everybody contributed, on and off the field. Seninger gets an assist for the day he took the team’s two Japanese players, Kouichi Ikeue and Yasuhiro Hiyama, to the Kyoto restaurant on 11th East and fed them sashimi. Ikeue pitched and won that night’s game.

Most memorable was the night the PA announcer in Pocatello lent a helping hand. The Trappers were losing 3-1 in the sixth inning, with dark storm clouds hovering, when the announcer said, “The Streak is over.” Seninger remembers Rafael Landestoy, the former big leaguer who was managing Pocatello, looking up at the announcer’s booth shaking his head with absolute incredulity. The black clouds parted, the Trappers won 9-4, their 23rd in a row.

By the time they set the new record of 28, eclipsing the record of 27 held jointly by 1902 Corsicana Oilers and, more significantly, the 1921 Baltimore Orioles, Derks Field was overrun by more than 10,000 spectators. ABC’s “Wide World of Sports” was there, along with the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, dozens of other out-of-town scribes and New York’s fabled sports talk show, WFAN, which was piping play-by-play announcer Randy Kerdoon’s broadcast back to the Big Apple.

The next night, The Trappers ran the streak to 29 with a win at home before finally coming back to earth with a loss the next night in Billings.

Glenn Seninger, who was director of media relations when the Salt Lake Trappers won 29 consecutive games in 1987, poses for a portrait in front of Smith’s Ballpark in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025.
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Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Somehow, 38 seasons have come and gone since then.

Soon after its release in August, Seninger — who has enjoyed a successful four-decade career in sales for Oracle Corporation since leaving the employ of the Trappers — made sure to see the new documentary on the big screen before it went to streaming.

“I thought they did a great job,” he says, giving high marks to the filmmakers. “And it was well overdue, right? If you remember, after the streak, there were rumors that Ron Howard was going to do a movie.”

His only complaint: the doc wasn’t longer.

“The hard part with that short amount of time is you just can’t include all the funny stories, introduce all the characters, talk about everything that went into the magic that was the streak.”

Nonetheless, the film got Glenn Seninger thinking about the old days. Sometimes that’s the best part.

Who is the Giants kicker? Graham Gano aggravates groin injury before ‘SNF’ vs. Chiefs

Who is the Giants kicker? Graham Gano aggravates groin injury before ‘SNF’ vs. Chiefs
originally appeared on The Sporting News

The New York Giants are facing a crucial game on “Sunday Night Football” against the Kansas City Chiefs, but a late injury could play a role in the result.

Giants kicker Graham Gano was a late addition to the injury report, appearing to aggravate an injury during warmups, but it was too late for New York to add another kicker to the roster. Therefore, the Giants went forward with Gano active in the game.

As a result, Giants head coach Brian Daboll may have to coach knowing his kicker is compromised. As Week 3 has shown thus far, special teams could be the difference between a win and a loss.

Here’s the latest on the Giants kicker situation.

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Who is the Giants kicker?

Normally, veteran Graham Gano serves as the Giants placekicker, as he has done since the 2020 season. However, before “Sunday Night Football” against the Chiefs, Gano aggravated a groin injury in warmups, forcing New York to list him as questionable for the game.

If Gano can’t kick in the game, then punter Jamie Gillan will be forced into action. in his career, Gillan is 1-2 on field goal attempts, as he made a 40-yard field goal and missed an attempt from over 50 yards in 2023.

A similar situation occurred last year when the Giants lost to the Washington Commanders in Week 2, 21-18. In that game, Gano got injured on the opening kickoff, altering the Giants’ plans for the game.

Washington beat New York despite failing to score a touchdown, as the Commanders produced seven field goals while the Giants had three touchdowns. However, since New York didn’t have it’s kicker, they never attempted a field goal and went for the two-point conversion on all three field goals.

Gillan, who was the punter last year as well, didn’t attempt a kick in that game.

MORE NFL WEEK 3: 

Micah Parsons: We s—t the bed today

Micah Parsons lost his first game since joining the Packers on Sunday and the defensive end gave a blunt assessment of what they did to fall 13-10 to the Browns.

The Packers led 10-0 with less than four minutes left in the game, but the Browns kicked a field goal before safety Grant Delpit picked off Packers quarterback Jordan Love and set the offense up inside the 5-yard line. A game-tying touchdown was followed by a Packers drive to set up a 43-yard field goal attempt that was blocked by Browns defensive lineman Shelby Harris. The Browns picked up 16 yards and Andre Szmyt kicked a game-winning field goal as time expired.

“Sometimes, just like today, you s—t the bed,” Parsons said. “That’s just the reality of it. It happens to the best teams. Even the best Super Bowl champs make mistakes, and they pay for it early. You go back to the history of the champions and who’ve they’ve played and games they should’ve won. It’s just part of the game, it’s just that competitive. It’s that hard to win. It’s hard as hell to win football games. When you win football games, it’s a celebration. But when you lose, it sucks.”

Parsons and the Packers will work to clean up their mess before they face Parsons’ former team in Dallas next Sunday night.

At the most crucial moment, the Mets are simply giving it away

If you want to believe the fates are somehow conspiring against the Mets as their wild card berth slips away, Jacob Young’s two spectacular catches at the center field wall in Sunday’s 3-2 loss to the Washington Nationals, one that included kicking the ball skyward to keep it from hitting the ground, played into that narrative.

As Carlos Mendoza said in amazement, “I’ve never seen that before.”

But if you’ve been watching these Mets play some dreadful baseball in recent days, weeks, even months, from their bad defense to boneheaded baserunning to the bats going silent far too often, you know that’s the furthest thing from the truth.

It’s not fate. The Mets have played poorly for much of the last three months — 17 games under .500 since June 13. And now it appears they’re also collapsing under the weight of trying desperately to avoid the embarrassment of missing the postseason with their star-studded roster and their gazillion-dollar payroll.

In short, there’s really no other way to put it: They’re giving it away.

How else to explain losing two of three games to the lowly Nationals at such a crucial point in the season, and playing raggedy defense when their focus should be as heightened as possible.

How else to explain failing to muster any real offense against Jake Irvin, one of the worst starting pitchers in the majors for the last several weeks, as evidenced by his 9.36 ERA over his last seven starts. Or the inability to score against the Nationals’ bullpen, whose 5.60 ERA coming into Sunday ranked dead last in MLB.

How else to explain all the defensive and baserunning miscues lately, to the point where a week ago Mendoza admitted, “We’re not playing good fundamentally right now.”

All of it only happens to a team as talented as these Mets when they’re playing tight, squeezing the sawdust out of the bat, trying not to make mistakes rather than playing freely.

And now the prospect of a full-blown collapse is more real than ever, after the Cincinnati Reds won their fifth straight game on Sunday to pull even with the Mets for the third wild card spot — but not really even, since they own the tiebreaker should the teams finish with the same record.

So in truth the Mets are suddenly behind, to the point where even winning their final six games, three in Chicago against the Cubs, and three in Miami against the Marlins, wouldn’t get them in unless the Reds cooperate.

In the Mets’ clubhouse on Sunday, Brandon Nimmo was doing a group interview when the Reds’ score went final, and he was asked if he could believe the Mets were now out of playoff position.

“Yeah, I can definitely believe it,’’ he said. “It’s been happening right in front of our eyes.”

Yes, the Mets have been sliding for weeks, letting teams like the Reds, the Arizona Diamondbacks, and the San Francisco Giants back into the race. And the closer those teams have gotten, the worse the Mets have been playing.

On Sunday, in fact, in what the Mets had to feel was a must-win game, they met the moment with a litany of mistakes early that contributed to a 3-0 deficit by the second inning.

There was Juan Soto getting picked off first base. There was a throwing error by Francisco Lindor that helped fuel the Nationals’ three-run rally. There was a fumble of a routine ground ball by Pete Alonso for another error.

There was also Sean Manaea giving up a two-run home run to a light-hitting backup shortstop named Nasim Nuñez on a flat fastball, which led reporters to ask him why, as Mendoza said, he again wasn’t able to elevate his fastball.

Said Manaea, after several seconds of thought: “I don’t know.”

Even with all of that, the Mets’ worst mistake in some ways, and one that epitomized their  play of late, was Cedric Mullins’ lack of awareness on the bases that proved costly.

It happened on a weird play in the fourth inning: with Luis Torrens on second base, Mullins’ fly ball down the left field line at first appeared to be caught by a diving Daylen Lile. But as he hit the ground, the ball came out of his glove, and according to Mendoza, third base umpire Jeremie Rehak made a safe sign, indicating the ball was in play.

With the ball in plain sight on the ground, and Lile writhing in pain, Torrens took no chances and went back to tag up, then ran all the way to score as the ball still stayed untouched on the ground. Mullins, meanwhile, said he saw no signal from the umpires (nor did first base coach Antoan Richardson), and because he saw Torrens tag up, “my assumption is that it was an out.”

So he lingered around first base, watching Torrens run. Meanwhile, Mendoza said, “We were all screaming from the dugout” to go to second. Mullins didn’t hear them, and only noticed when he finally started to go back to the dugout himself. At that point, umpires had called timeout, and though Mullins did go to second (he was tagged out, though Mendoza said they would have challenged), the play was ruled dead and Mullins was awarded first base.

Clearly Mullins should not have assumed, since he didn’t see a signal, and instead kept running. And it mattered when he was immediately doubled off first on Lindor’s line drive to Josh Bell. When Soto followed with a double to the right field corner, Mullins’ mistake loomed even larger.

Had the Mets’ offense come to life at some point, of course, the play would have been a footnote. Instead, it potentially had a major impact on the outcome. Another blunder that has become far too common for this ballclub.

And so now the Mets are up against it. In their quiet clubhouse the players insisted they still believe. But the tone of their comments shifted as the chasers now.

“We put ourselves in this position, we’ve got to find a way out of it,” said Lindor. “If we want to be where we want to be, we have to play better.”

“We can turn it on in an instant,” added Nimmo.

At this point, though, it’s hard to believe they can merely flip a switch. They’ve been a mediocre-to-bad team longer than they were a good one on this long and winding road of a season.

And most significantly, no matter what they do, they now need help.

Mets, Tigers continue late-season slides, putting postseason chances in significant jeopardy

The New York Mets are now in jeopardy of missing out on the 2025 MLB postseason after their 3-2 loss to the Washington Nationals on Sunday. 

With that defeat and the Cincinnati Reds’ 1-0 win over the Chicago Cubs, the two teams are now tied for the third and final wild-card playoff berth in the National League at 80-76. If the Mets and Reds finish the regular season with the same record, Cincinnati would win the tiebreaker with its 4-2 mark versus New York. 

[Get more Mets news: New York team feed]

The Mets finish the season with a six-game road trip, facing the Cubs and Miami Marlins. Meanwhile, the Reds split their final six games with a home series versus the Pittsburgh PIrates and then visit the Milwaukee Brewers to close out the regular season. 

Facing a nearly must-win situation, the Mets fell behind 3-0 in the second inning with Jorge Alfaro driving in Daylen Lile on a one-out single. Sean Manaea then got Brady House to ground out and looked like he might escape the inning with only run allowed. 

However, he grooved a 91-mph fastball down the middle of the strike zone, which Nasim Nuñez hit for a 2-run home run. That was Nuñez’s third homer of the season.

The Mets managed a scoring threat in the third with Luis Torrens and Cedric Mullins leading off the frame with consecutive singles, resulting in one run scored. But Francisco Lindor then into a double play. That especially hurt when Juan Soto followed up with a double. He was stranded when Brandon Nimmo lined out to left field. 

Lindor cut the Mets’ deficit to 3-2 with a solo home run to lead off the sixth inning. Soto then walked to put the tying run on base, but he was out at second on a grounder from Nimmo. Pete Alonso singled to give the Mets two runners on. However, reliever Mitchell Parker came in to get Jeff McNeil to pop out and struck out Mark Vientos

The Mets appeared to score the tying run in the ninth when Francisco Alvarez hit a deep drive to left-center field. Yet Jacob Young made a leaping catch above the fence to rob Alvarez of a home run. 

It was the Nationals center fielder’s second highlight grab of the game. In the fifth, he got a glove on Brett Baty’s fly ball to straight-away center field. Young initially didn’t catch the ball, but it caromed off his foot without touching the ground and he secured the out

The Mets, who led the NL East by 1.5 games on July 27, have lost 11 of their past 15 games to endanger their postseason chances. 

“We have to keep going,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “… A lot can happen.”

Another team that faces missing the postseason after a late-season freefall is the Detroit Tigers. Detroit faced squandering what was once a 15.5-game first-place lead on July 8. 

With a loss on Sunday combined with a win by the Cleveland Guardians (84-72), the Tigers (85-71) could have been tied atop the division with six games remaining. Not only was losing the division a very real possibility, but Detroit could get squeezed out of the postseason altogether by missing out on one of the AL’s three wild-card playoff spots, finishing behind the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Houston Astros. 

Yet for one more day at least, the Tigers are still in first place. They lost to the Atlanta Braves, 6-2, on Sunday, getting swept at home a 73-83 Atlanta team. Detroit starter Casey Mize allowed three runs in 5/23 innings, while the Tigers lineup couldn’t score against Spencer Strider in five innings. The Braves put the game out of reach with three runs in the ninth off reliever Tanner Rainey, who didn’t record an out.

However, Detroit was spared losing its division lead with the Guardians’ 6-2 defeat to the Minnesota Twins. That ended the Guardians’ 10-game winning streak and was only their fifth loss in September (16-5), potentially showing the Tigers some temporary mercy. 

Cleveland allowed three runs through seven innings, but Royce Lewis hit a 3-run, pinch-hit homer off Hunter Gaddis in the eighth to put the game out of reach. Sunday’s game was only the second in September in which the Guardians’ pitching staff had allowed more than three runs.