"I get a kick out of watching a team defense me. A player moves two steps in one direction and I hit it two steps in the other direction. It goes right by his glove and I laugh."
--Rod Carew, Minnesota Twins second baseman and batting champ
The Kansas City Royals were purchased as an expansion franchise by
pharmaceutical magnate Ewing Kauffman in 1968
and played their first season the following year. The American League
granted the expansion team to replace the Kansas
City Athletics, who moved to Oakland after the 1967
season. Early Royals stars included 1969 Rookie of the Year Lou
Piniella, Amos Otis, Paul Splittorff, Cookie Rojas and Hal McRae. In 1971,
the Royals had their first winning season, with manager Bob Lemon guiding
them to a second-place finish.
In 1973,
the Royals moved from Kansas
City Municipal Stadium to brand-new Royals Stadium (now Kauffman
Stadium). The stadium, which featured deep outfield walls and
artificial turf, gave future stars such as George Brett and Frank White
their first break as many of Kansas City's veteran players had difficulty
playing on turf. The Royals quickly became successful, winning three
straight division championships from 1976
to 1978
under manager Whitey Herzog.
The Royals (led by manager Jim Frey) made their first World Series
appearance in 1980,
losing to the Philadelphia
Phillies in six games. That same year, Brett flirted with a .400
batting average and won his second batting title.
In 1983,
the Royals were headed for a second-place finish behind the Chicago White
Sox when they were rocked by a drug scandal. Leadoff hitter and center
fielder Willie Wilson, power-hitting first baseman Willie Aikens,
power-hitting outfielder Jerry Martin, and starting pitcher Vida Blue, who
had been released on August 5, were charged with attempting to purchase
cocaine. The four were charged in October 1983, pleaded guilty, spent
three months in prison (becoming the first active players in sports
history to serve a prison sentence) and were suspended by commissioner
Bowie Kuhn for the entire 1984
season. The four appealed and were permitted to return on May 15. In
response to the scandal, owner Ewing Kauffman founded the Ewing Marion
Kauffman foundation to give back to the community, allowed Martin to
depart via free agency and traded Aikens, retaining only Wilson's
services.
The youth movement paid off more quickly than expected. Relying again
on Brett's bat and the young pitching of Bret Saberhagen, Mark Gubicza and
Danny Jackson, the Royals won their fifth division championship in 1984
(although they were swept by the eventual World Champion Detroit Tigers in
the American League Championship Series) and went all the way to the World
Series again in 1985
under manager Dick Howser, beating the cross-state St.
Louis Cardinals in the so-called I-70 Series in seven games.
Royals
1974 Royals
scorebook.
1987
proved to be a rather bittersweet season for the Royals. The Royals won 83
out of 162 games (a seven win improvement from 1986). The Royals wound up
finishing only two games behind the eventual World Champion Minnesota
Twins in the Western Division. But sadly on June 17, 1987, Dick Howser
passed away after a year long battle with brain cancer. Howser's #10 soon
became the first number that the Royals ever retired.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Royals developed young stars
such as Bo Jackson and Kevin Seitzer and made some free-agent acquisitions
but always fell short of their early success. Most of the team's
highlights centered around the end of Brett's career, such as his third
and final batting title in 1990,
which made him the first player to win batting titles in three different
decades, and Brett's 3,000th hit.
The 1993
death of Ewing Kauffman left the franchise without permanent ownership
until Wal-Mart executive David Glass purchased the team for $96 million in
2000. Escalating salaries made it difficult for the Royals to keep their
young stars, and the small-market club usually chose to trade players such
as Kevin Appier, Johnny Damon and Jermaine Dye, for whatever they could
get rather than lose them to free agency.
In 2003,
manager Tony Pena, in his first full season with the club, guided the
Royals to their first winning record since the strike-shortened 1994
season.
Royals
1986 Kansas City
Royals yearbook honoring the '85 World
Series champions.
Picked by many to win their division in 2004
after faring surprisingly well in the free agent market, the Royals got
off to a disappointing start and by late June were in rebuilding mode,
releasing veteran reliever Curt Leskanic before financial incentives
kicked in and trading veteran reliever Jason Grimsley and superstar center
fielder Carlos Beltran for prospects, all within a week of each other.
In 2005, the Royals continued their youth movement, with six of their
starting position players, three of their five starting pitchers, and
their setup man and closer all under age 30 and one of the smallest
payrolls in the major leagues. After a disappointing start for the second
straight season, Tony Pena resigned May 10, 2005 as manager after a 8-25
record. The Royals then named bench coach Bob Schaefer interim manager up
until May 31, 2005, the day the Royals announced that Buddy Bell would
manage for the Royals. Schaefer would end up having a 5-12 record in 17
games managed. After Bell's hiring, Schaefer was moved back to the bench
coach position.
As if they could sink any lower, on August 9, the Royals had a 7-2 lead
against the Cleveland Indians going into the 9th inning, but committed
three errors allowing the Indians to score 11 runs to win 13-7, extending
their historic losing streak to 11 games. The Royals ended their losing
streak at 19 on August 20, 2005, 2 losses away from the American League
record with a 2-1 win over the Oakland
Athletics. They would have had to lose for fully another week to have
a shot at dubious immortality.
Unfortunately, they still ended the season 56-106 (.354), the worst
record in the franchise's history. They were 43 games out of first place.
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