Kolek’s 6.75 ERA against Walker’s .970 OPS creates obvious fireworks potential — but both teams have managed just 6 combined runs in two meetings. The run environment and recent execution point toward a different game script than the surface matchup suggests.
Stephen Kolek vs Andre Pallante: Kansas City Royals at St. Louis Cardinals Betting Preview
I’m targeting Under 9 runs in Sunday’s series finale, where two offenses have managed just 6 combined runs in their last two meetings despite one team sitting 13 games over .500 at home. The market has this total sitting at 9, but recent offensive execution and the specific pitcher-hitter matchups suggest we’re looking at a grind-it-out affair that stays comfortably under this number.
Kansas City has scored just 6 runs total in their last two games while dropping both contests, and despite St. Louis showing flashes of their offensive ceiling with Jordan Walker’s .970 OPS leading the charge, both lineups have struggled to execute consistently in this series. The pitching matchup pits two starters with elevated ERAs – Stephen Kolek’s 6.75 for Kansas City against Andre Pallante’s 4.46 for the Cardinals – but the run environment and recent form point toward a lower-scoring affair than the market anticipates.
Game Info & Betting Lines
- Date/Time: Sunday, May 17, 2026, 2:15 PM ET
- Venue: Busch Stadium (Park Factor: 1.00)
- Probable Starters: Stephen Kolek (KC) vs Andre Pallante (STL)
- Moneyline: Kansas City -102 / St. Louis -116
- Run Line: St. Louis +1.5 (-188) / Kansas City -1.5 (+155)
- Total: 9 (Over -115 / Under -105)
Why This Number Is Close But Vulnerable
The market is balancing legitimate offensive talent – particularly Walker’s power surge and Kansas City’s Bobby Witt Jr. batting .309 – against recent execution issues from both sides. Yesterday’s 4-2 Cardinals win featured just 6 total runs despite quality contact, and Friday’s 11-inning affair needed extra frames to reach 9 runs between teams that should be capable of more.
The concern for under backers is obvious: Kolek’s 6.75 ERA and tendency to allow hard contact, combined with St. Louis’ 4.64 runs per game at home. But that season average doesn’t reflect their recent struggles to cash in scoring chances, going 1-for-12 with runners in scoring position before Yohel Pozo’s walk-off hit Friday night. Line shopping this one is worth the extra minute — Bovada is still sitting on the opener while the rest of the market has moved.
What Separates the Pitching
Kolek’s arsenal creates immediate red flags with his 4-seam fastball sitting 94.3 mph but allowing a .498 xwOBA – hitters are teeing off on his primary pitch. His changeup shows promise with a 38.5% whiff rate, but at just 19.2% usage, he’s leaning too heavily on vulnerable offerings. The concerning trend is his 25.4% four-seam usage combined with that elevated contact quality.
Pallante counters with better command fundamentals, featuring a slider at 86.9 mph that generates a 38.9% whiff rate and limits hitters to .257 xwOBA. His 28.2% slider usage gives him a reliable out pitch, while his four-seam fastball at 94.6 mph shows better results than Kolek’s despite similar velocity. The gap isn’t just in the numbers – Pallante’s 42.1 innings this season versus Kolek’s 10.2 suggests greater reliability in extended outings.
For a deeper look at how we break down starter edges, see our MLB pitching matchup breakdowns.
The critical difference lies in contact management. Walker shows a .517 xwOBA against right-handed pitching, creating a potentially explosive matchup against Kolek’s struggling fastball command. But Kansas City’s lineup features Witt Jr.’s .452 xwOBA and solid depth, meaning Pallante can’t afford extended struggles either.
Genuine Concerns About This Under Bet
Here’s what keeps me awake about backing the under: Kolek’s meltdown potential is very real, and I’m genuinely concerned about whether his struggles will manifest as a quick blowout that actually hurts the under. When starters implode early and force teams into their bullpens, games often turn into slugfests as middle relievers throw batting practice innings. With Kansas City missing Matt Strahm and Carlos Estevez from their pen, a Kolek explosion could mean multiple innings of subpar arms facing Walker and company.
The Walker factor also gives me pause. His .597 xwOBA against lefties and 13 home runs suggest he can single-handedly wreck totals when he connects. More concerning is his 9.0% barrel rate and 33.2% hard-hit rate – these aren’t cheap runs we’re talking about. If Kolek’s fastball command wavers early and Walker gets 2-3 quality swings, we could be looking at a 4-5 run inning that puts this total out of reach by the fifth.
What really bothers me is the execution inconsistency. Yes, both teams have struggled recently, but what if that’s simply variance evening out? St. Louis has legitimate offensive pieces beyond Walker – Burleson’s .427 xwOBA and Herrera’s .370 xwOBA suggest depth that could break through against struggling pitching. Kansas City might be due for positive regression with Witt Jr.’s .452 xwOBA and quality contact metrics throughout their order.
Why I Considered Cardinals Moneyline Instead
The Cardinals moneyline at -116 actually presents compelling value when I break down the component matchups. Pallante’s arsenal advantages over Kolek are significant – his slider usage at 28.2% gives him a reliable weapon that Kolek simply doesn’t possess with his vulnerable four-seam approach. The home/road splits also favor St. Louis heavily, as Kansas City enters with a miserable 7-16 road record while the Cardinals have been strong at Busch Stadium.
What pushed me away from the moneyline wasn’t the analysis – it was the juice. At -116, the Cardinals need to win roughly 54% of the time to show profit, but with Kolek’s volatility, there’s too much variance in potential game scripts. If he melts down early, sure, St. Louis likely wins comfortably. But if he manages 5-6 serviceable innings and keeps it close, Kansas City’s quality lineup pieces like Witt Jr. and Pasquantino can steal games late. The risk-reward doesn’t justify the price when the total offers cleaner edges.
Run Environment & Game Shape
Busch Stadium’s neutral 1.00 park factor doesn’t suppress or inflate scoring, putting the emphasis squarely on execution rather than environmental factors. The market expects a moderate-scoring affair in the 8-10 run range, but recent game flow suggests something closer to 6-8 total runs.
The projected game shape favors extended at-bats working against both starters, but recent offensive execution suggests runs will come at a premium. Both teams have shown an ability to get baserunners but struggle with clutch hitting – exactly the recipe for a frustrating under sweat that ultimately cashes.
The Pick
Despite legitimate concerns about Kolek’s implosion potential and Walker’s power upside, I’m backing Under 9 runs at -105. The recent offensive execution issues from both teams feel sustainable given their season-long metrics, and while individual talents like Walker and Witt Jr. can influence games, the broader lineup depth and situational hitting suggest a game that stays comfortably under this number.
The key is trusting that recent form reflects genuine offensive limitations rather than short-term variance. When teams combine for just 6 runs across two games despite elevated ERAs from opposing starters, that points to fundamental execution issues that persist beyond just facing tough pitching. I’ll take the under and trust these offenses to continue their recent struggles.


