KANSAS CITY ROYALS
For a shining ten year period, the Royals successfully played the big time team in the small town market. Starting with their first division title in 1976 and culminating with their 1985 World Championship, the Royals were considered a model baseball organization from the owner through the front office to the manager, coaching staff and players on the field.
The Philadelphia Athletics moved to Kansas City in 1955 but after thirteen unlucky seasons, the A's continued westward to Oakland. Baseball plugged the gap left by the A's departure by awarding Kansas City a franchise under the aegis of pharmaceutical magnate Ewing Kauffman. The team was named the Royals as a respectful nod to the legacy of the legendary Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro League.
Not surprisingly, the Royals did not fare well in their first season, although they did begin their history with a stirring 4-3 win over the eventual division champion Minnesota Twins. They won only sixty-eight more games while losing ninety-three. Despite a roster heavy with veterans, it was a fiery first-year outfielder Lou Piniella who stole the spotlight by winning Rookie of the Year honors.
The Royals surprised the baseball world with a strong second place showing under Bob Lemon in 1971. Otherwise, the franchise's first four years at the major league level were undistinguished. The turning point came in 1973.
That's the year the Royals unveiled a third baseman named George Brett who would become the cornerstone of the franchise for the next two decades. Shortly thereafter, Frank White became the team's second baseman. Also that year, the Royals moved from creaky Municipal Stadium into Royals Stadium, a state-of-the-art facility with artificial turf and distant outfield walls.
The Royals tailored their team to succeed in the new ball park - Brett, White, Amos Otis, Hal McRae Al Cowens and Willie Wilson were all line drive hitters who could bunt and steal on the artificial turf and take the extra base on gap hits. They could also gobble up a lot of the spacious outfield when playing defense. Add to them the traditional slugging power of first baseman John Mayberry and the pitching excellence of Dennis Leonard and Paul Splittdorf, and the Royals became a big time baseball power.
Whitey Herzog managed the team to three straight division titles in 1976-77-78. They played and lost to the New York Yankees in all three American League Championship Series. When the teams re-matched again in 1980, the Royals finally got their revenge, sweeping the Yankees three straight, with Brett icing the series by slamming a homer in New York against ace reliever Goose Gossage. It capped an incredible season for the eventual Hall-of-Famer, who made a serious run at hitting .400 until a September slump "dropped" him to .390. The Royals lost the World Series to the Philadelphia Phillies in six games.
The Royals earned a post season berth in the strike shortened 1981 season, followed by two off years in a row. The 1983 season was particularly difficult as four regulars were suspended by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn after they were accused of trying to purchase cocaine. The original suspension would have had them miss all of 1984, but the suspensions were reduced, the players came back in mid-May and helped the Royals win the 1984 Division Flag.
Then came 1985 — Brett (.335, 30 HR, 112 RBI) carried a team on which Willie Wilson hit .278 and no other regular bested .260. The pitching staff carried the load, led by Bret Saberhagen, Charlie Liebrant and closer Dan Quisenberry. The Royals went 91-71, defeated Toronto in the A.L.C.S. and then dispatched their cross-state rival Cardinals in the World Series, rallying from a 3-1 deficit in games to win in seven.
Things have gone south for the Royals ever since. Popular manager Dick Howser was diagnosed with a brain tumor and could not finish the 1986 season. He died in June of 1987. Frank White retired in 1992 and Brett called it quits after the following season. He accumulated over three-thousand career hits and he is the only player to win batting titles in three different decades. Ewing Kauffman also died that year.
Since then the Royals have seemed rudderless. David Glass, a former Walmart executive bought the team in 2000, but the new ownership seems unwilling or unable to compete with the larger market teams.
As a result, the Royals have lost a number of star and budding star players including Carlos Beltran, Jermaine Dye, Johnny Damon, and Kevin Seitzer, retaining only Mike Sweeney as an anchor for a team that now knows much more about losing than winning.
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