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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Royals Today: 5/16/13."

19 Comments -

1 – 19 of 19
Blogger Unknown said...

I was a student at Washburn University from 1967-69, when Fred White and Gary Bender were both working at WIBW and broadcasting Washburn basketball games. Two classy guys, who went on to great careers in broadcasting. I love Denny Mathews, but Fred White was a tremendous sidekick. Thanks for all the great calls, Fred.

May 16, 2013 at 11:36 PM

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May 16, 2013 at 11:37 PM

Blogger Michael said...

Rany, you don't have to make excuses or tell us why you haven't written. We all know this blog comes way down on your list of priorities after family, day job, and the writing you actually get paid to do. You get nothing out of this blog, except the joy of writing about your favorite team. The passion that you have for them shows in your writing and that's why we keep coming back, no matter how long its been between articles.

Fred White was a spectacular announcer and I'll miss his voice on the radio. He truly is a Royals legend in my mind.

Sadly, I doubt the Royals give Lough the same playing time they gave Dyson. Unlike Syson, Lough does nothing spectacular, but most things he does adequately. I think his ceiling is that of David Dejesus. My guess is they play him more like how they played Mitch Meier. Which is not often enough. We will be stuck once again with Frenchy 5-6 days a week.

May 17, 2013 at 2:11 AM

Blogger Eric Bennaka said...

Rany,

Just so you know on your work page, it says you are a "taff" writer at Grantland. I know you're a perfectionist so I just wanted to let you know so you can fix it.

May 17, 2013 at 8:39 AM

Blogger Royals said...

Brett was not 35 in 1985

May 17, 2013 at 9:24 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Rany:

I too will really miss Fred White. He and Denny were great.

I live in Chicago too. I listen to the XM broadcast of the Royals games when i can and I assume when it is the Royals feed, I am listening to the local broadcast, because there are local KC commercials, which brings me to my question. Did I really hear a commercial by John Mayberry the other day for dental care where he said something to the effect "all my dental issues are now in the past" (which has to be a tongue in cheek reference to his "toothache" in the 1978 ALCS)? I, like Whitey Herzog at the time, am not amused.

May 17, 2013 at 10:19 AM

Blogger whereweare said...

Rany - I think you referenced the wrong Molina. Should be Yadier not Jose. Keep up the great work.

May 17, 2013 at 10:19 AM

Blogger twm said...

Pretty certain he meant Jose. Yadier hits well enough, and his throwing is excellent enough, that pitch framing is not a necessary component of his overall value.

May 17, 2013 at 2:39 PM

Blogger twm said...

Rany: Just listened to this week's podcast and want to say that you need to push back when Joe rants about the "confiscatory" policies of MLB. He describes MLB as some sort of quasi-governmental body, as an agent whose interference in the otherwise free market of baseball is in some ways objectionable. But of course MLB is a cartel, of which all MLB are members. Sure, from his perspective as a Yankee fan it might feel punitive (it is, after all, the Yankee tax), but these monetary policies are calculated to increase the product's appeal, and they are decisions voted on by all MLB teams. I am completely with Joe when he rants about teams who refuse to use their revenue sharing money on improving the team, but his libertarian aggressiveness is completely misplaced in discussing the original of the revenue sharing policies.

Oh, and also, he is dead wrong on the revenue component too. It still makes sense to talk about revenue disparity. Forbes just released their estimates for team revenue, and the Yankees' revenue from last season is estimated at $471 million, compared with the Royals at $169 million. Now, when it comes to player payroll this of course changes, as the Yankees are currently engaged in "Operation Less Than $180 Million". Two things about that though:

(1) The Yankees, in struggling to get under $180 million next season, will still outspend the Royals by at least $90 million, and that is only if the Royals spend up to the limit of what many believe they can afford. Granted, this is not the level of disparity it once was, but the ability to spend double what another franchise can afford in payroll (and, by the way, doing so with the understanding that for the next four or five seasons after that you can dramatically increase payroll without incurring as huge a luxury tax hit) is a massive competitive advantage.

(2) The imbalance is only going to increase as big-market teams sign more lucrative TV contracts. We are seeing it in LA right now, and we have already seen it in NY and New England. Sure the luxury tax will still be there, but this TV money is unshared money, and at a certain point that luxury tax becomes irrelevant, just as it once was for the Yankees.

May 17, 2013 at 2:56 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Anybody that would sign Mousse to a long term contract right now would have to be considered an idiot.

Dude has over 1100 career PA now, and is sporting a 243/.297/.388 line

If you throw in the growing likelihood that his above avg D last year was a mirage (he was never any good in the minors), what you have ladies and gents is a B.U.S.T.

At least Hoser gets on base.

May 18, 2013 at 2:18 AM

Blogger Drew Milner said...

I've mentioned this several times before, nobody has commented on it yet. I wonder if Hosmer needs a retouch on his Lasik. The first time, he didn't even notice that his eyes were bad, his Mother did. So apparently he doesn't have the ability to recognize for himself when his eyes are bad.

May 18, 2013 at 5:03 AM

Blogger Troy said...

Instead of signing Moose to a long term contract, he needs to be in the same car that takes Getz to Omaha. Moose is costing us runs and games - and let's not forget that Butler, Gordon, and DeJesus all needed the return trip to get their act together.

May 18, 2013 at 11:38 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Karabell and others have proposed this. Why not try Hoz in leadoff spot?

May 18, 2013 at 5:47 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for the link, Rany.

I was at that game when Willie Wilson hit that walk off inside-the-park home run.

I had organized a trip down from Nebraska for my extended family of over 20 people. My 12 year old brother-in-law, a devoted Yankees fan, was there to see his first ever Major League game.

Not only had the game run thirteen innings on a hot, steamy afternoon, there had been an hour rain delay before the start.

The Royals fell way behind early, against Tommy John in his prime, so things looked pretty hopeless. But they battled all the way back.

I had always thought the Yankees outfielders were dogging it at the end, and I think this video confirms as much.

Wilson's home run brought the crowd to its feet of course. It was one of the most exhilarating moments I have ever experienced in sports!

Until I looked over at my young brother-in-law, with a tear rolling down his cheek. At his first ever game, his Yankees had lost, and in such dramatic fashion.

May 19, 2013 at 6:43 AM

Blogger The Professor said...

That's sad for your young in-law, Dodger300, but take solace in the fact that whenever a Yankee fan cries, an angel gets his wings.

May 19, 2013 at 5:26 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Anybody know the origin and/or meaning of that hand gesture you see the guys doing after a big hit?

May 22, 2013 at 11:30 AM

Blogger Charles Winters said...

Getz in the leadoff spot again tonight? Frenchy playing against an RHP?

Yost is awesome.

May 23, 2013 at 4:42 PM

Blogger MoCrash said...

A lot of commentary wherever Royals fans congregate on the struggles of Hosmer and Moustakas, but little discussion of hitting coaches Frick and Frack (I know, Maloof and David, but why remember names of coaches who will have short MLB careers?). As there are players who are considerd AAAA types (maybe Giavetella falls into this category; we'll see), there are also such coaches -- guys who are good at preparing players in the minors, but are unable to adjust to the more refined MLB game.

Hosmer's getting on base, which is good, but he's been turned into a Punch-and-Judy slap hitter by taking pitches so deep that he can't get around and drive them. Moose is all motion at the plate, with momentum going the wrong way when the pitch is released and off-balance. These are both correctable, and it is the responsibility of hitting coaches to fix them, but thus far the Royals' bush leaguers haven't produced. Where is the accountability?

I'm often accused of beating the dead horse of Yost's clueless line-ups, so won't delve into it again -- except to note that another omission in Royals' talk is Miguel Tejeda. He's been dismissed because of his age and decline of recent years, but I'm seeing a reborn Miggy -- not to the level of 10 years ago, but still a professional hitter who puts together good ABs. Maybe he's an answer, maybe not -- but he's an option which is not being sufficiently explored.

May 24, 2013 at 3:32 AM

Blogger Bobinkc said...

Hey...wake up Rany and post something about this dreadful team.

May 26, 2013 at 9:31 AM

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