Google apps
Main menu

Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Royals Time Capsule, Part 1."

26 Comments -

1 – 26 of 26
Blogger ChasingMoney said...

I was fairly optimistic in the mid-90's mostly due to the success of the 1994 team. I'm so glad I didn't know what the future would bring.

January 6, 2009 at 6:50 PM

Blogger Minda said...

Now I'd like to see what Optimistic Rany had to say. Are you going to share Part II?

January 6, 2009 at 6:53 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am with you and Jeff. The 1994 team had me thinking good things about where we were headed, too. I never had any clue of the train wreck that was coming our way.

January 6, 2009 at 10:29 PM

Blogger Phil said...

Rany, I have a good news/bad news update for you.

First, the bad news. My company, which should remain nameless but won't, Cerner, has finally blocked your blog. This is something I realized only today... and considering I check your blog daily (often two and three times) means it is a very recent change. I've yet to figure out how to spend my time between Excel worksheets with your blog now unavailable. I'm no psychologist, but I believe I'm somewhere around the second stage of the grieving process.

However, the good news from this horrible turn of events is that to be blocked by said company's servers, you must amount to a colossal waste of employee time! Hooray! This is the kind of thing you write home to mom about.

In regards to your baseball prospectus excerpt; hilarious (in the Dr. Strangelove kind of way).

And lastly, I've noticed several posters of the XX chromosome type (such as Minda above). This too is a boon for your website... soon you'll have your wife contributing a ladies blog just like Mr. Bill Simmons.

January 6, 2009 at 10:37 PM

Blogger kcghost said...

I have always felt that the Saberhagen trade marked the true "End of an Era" for the Royals. You traded a CYA pitcher for a never-was (Miller), a has-been (Reynolds), and an a guy who might break-out after three average years. Basically it was a Sabes for Jefferies trade.

You don't trade a guy who your fans have a strong affinity for without getting something very good in return. Yes, Jefferies had two great years in St.Louis, but that was it. He then reverted to being just a guy.

If we had kept Jefferies and had he produced as he did in St. Louis if might have been a break even trade considering Sabes health issues over the rest of his career.

The Jefferies for Jose trade should have been considered a firing offense.

While we all lament the Allard Baird years we should really remember that things began to fall apart under Herk.

January 7, 2009 at 9:16 AM

Blogger OJ said...

I generally like Optimistic Rany except when he convinces me to draft John Bale (instead of Cliff Lee!!) in an AL-only league.

January 7, 2009 at 10:55 AM

Blogger pjbronco said...

I have to agree with kcghost: the disaster started with Herk. Allard Baird proved incapable of digging out of the hole they were in, but Herk was the worst evaluator of talent in the history of the Royals franchise.

January 7, 2009 at 11:29 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It wasn't that Allard was incapable of digging out, it was that Glass prevented him from receiving a shovel to dig with. If Allard had the resources and money that Dayton enjoys he would have been remembered in a better light. Allard was a good scout, a good Royals representative, and did a good job of selling the franchise to players. I would like to see him get another shot someday as I think he got a raw deal.

January 7, 2009 at 12:35 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have a friend formerly employed by the Chiefs front office. Scott Pioli is set to be named GM to be announced later this week. Terms have been agreed on by Clark and Scott.....final details just need to be ironed out. Herm and assistants are fired with assistants able to re-interview for their jobs through Scott. This is a good day for Chiefs fans.

January 7, 2009 at 2:41 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

A Felix Jose memory...

In the opening game of a "big" series against the White Sox (probably '94), he leads off with a triple against Jack McDowell, only to be promptly picked off of 3rd base seconds later. Yeah, dumb trade!

January 7, 2009 at 2:51 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Felix Jose -- one of my first non George Brett baseball cards -- I think a '94 Upper Deck card of him making a sliding catch in the outfield. As a little boy, i was confused as to how Felix Jose and Jose Lind had the same name. Anyways....

Minda can stay on this site if she wants... doesn't need to go to a girly site at all.

January 7, 2009 at 4:02 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

this post got me all nostalgic... about BP. as a long time jays fan i will always be sad about 85... but somehow the royals eventually became one of my favourite teams... anyways, i think i was introduced to BP in 97... DEFINITELY by 98.. it was the old books that looked like they were printed on typewriter... or am i imagining that. sadly my friend threw out all of his old books before either a) giving them to me, or b) donating them to the local (or even university) library

January 7, 2009 at 5:34 PM

Blogger Shelby said...

"...the Royals offense continued to suffer, and the team continued to finish around .500."


Man, that stings.

January 7, 2009 at 6:34 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Rany - thanks for humoring me and finally mentioning how terrible the Mark Davis deal was. I'll agree with your assessment that Storm was a DUMB signing, without question, however the Mark signing is still in my unwavering opinion the worst move EVER in Royals history. You're right - who knew he'd suddenly suck so bad? Regardless of whether we knew then or we know now, it doesn't change that he's the worst move ever, imo. Call me superstitious, but ever since he came around - and he's still a pitching coach for us in Rookie League ball - our team has been terrible, year-in and year-out. Hey, the Cubs have a goat to blame...I blame Mark Davis.

Finally, as for Herk - I agree with you guys. He was God-awful. Trading Sabes broke my heart. He was one of my favorite players as a kid - and still one of my favorite pitchers ever. I still remember screaming at the radio when Frank Thomas grounded to 2B to give Sabes his no-no - and when Kirk Gibson almost screwed it up for him. But back to Herk, it wasn't even just the Sabes deal - remember signing Cone, who only went on to win the Cy Young for us - and then promptly trading him AGAIN (this time to Toronto, I believe)? Who'd we get in that deal, does anyone remember? I can't recall. Let's also not forget the way that Herk treated Gubicza (sp?) at the end of his career...I think the only thing he did right was bring in Greg Gagne and Gary Gaighti (sp?...I just drove 8 hours from Fargo, sorry that I can't spell...brain's mush)...

January 7, 2009 at 11:53 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I firmly believe that most of Baird's problem stemmed from the horrific state of the franchise that Herk left.

Don't believe me? Here are Herk's first round draft picks (1990 to 1999):
Joe Vitello
Johnny Damon
Sherard Clinkscales
Jim Pittsley
Michael Tucker
Jeff Granger
Matt Smith
Juan LeBron
Dermal Brown
Dan Reichert
Matt Burch
Jeff Austin
Mike Paradis
Mike MacDougal
Kyle Snyder

How can any franchise survive such a crushing degree of incompetence in drafting?

Baird was brought in to a awful club with one of the worst minor league systems in baseball and then told he couldn't spend any money.

January 9, 2009 at 10:55 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just an FYI, in the second Cone trade we got the great Chris Stynes. Ouch.

January 9, 2009 at 12:08 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Stop dreaming of Orlando Hudson and Orlando Cabrera. Our middle infield help? Willie Bloomquist. Yes!

January 9, 2009 at 12:30 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

That 1989 team was actually very good, possibly the 2nd best team in baseball (yes the offense was abyssmal, but the pitching staff was sweet), unfortunately, that was before the WC and the best team in baseball was in our division.

As good as that staff was, it could have been even better, had we not traded away David Cone and Danny Jackson for a backup (and injured) catcher and a crappy shortstop.

January 9, 2009 at 2:03 PM

Blogger Jimmy Jack said...

FYI -- According to MLBTR, the Royals signed Willie Bloomquist to 2 yr, $3 Mil contract. And for some unknown reason Moore said his best opportunities were at 2nd and Center Field? What about Crisp? Not sure about this signing quite yet, veteran yes, but better than Callaspo? Guess we'll have to wait & see...

January 9, 2009 at 3:07 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey, i'll take Bloomquist over Tony Pena, Jr. Maybe now they can turn Tony into a pitcher!

January 9, 2009 at 5:03 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bloomquist was signed first for his versatility (he's played every position in the infield and outfield), and secondly to compete with Callaspo. This is a good, cheap signing.

For those that like to harp continually on OBP as if it's the only aspect you need to win, he had a .377 OBP last season.

January 9, 2009 at 5:45 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Willie Bloomquist. Career 322 OBP. On-base guy.

Someone's looking at last year's numbers and ignoring the big picture. Oops ...

January 9, 2009 at 8:16 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Rany, why is the Baseball Prospectus book on the 1980's on "hiatus"? What's the deal if you can share? Thansk.

January 10, 2009 at 6:29 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well excuse me for looking more at recent numbers than past numbers. His walk rates and contact rates both jumped last season. Was it a fluke? Possibly. But niether you nor I can say for sure. If he comes in and gives us a .350+ OBP in 200 or so at bats, I happen to believe he'd be a useful bench player.

January 10, 2009 at 11:07 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Shouldn't part of the job of the GM be to sell his owner on his ideas of improving the team? Maybe Allard could have done the Royals better with his real ideas, but as long as Glass wasn't buying into them, he was going to fail.

January 12, 2009 at 5:28 PM

Blogger royalfan said...

Concerning the Mark Davis FA 1990signing. I certainly did not foresee the complete disappointment that he was to become. I did however wonder why he was signed. I remember looking at his numbers for the year 1989 in comparison to our young closer at that time Jeff Montgomery. Except for number of saves ( Steve Farr had been put in a number of save situations for the Royals that year ) The numbers were almost identical. In looking back at them now on baseball reference Monty looks even better.

January 13, 2009 at 10:35 AM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

This blog does not allow anonymous comments.

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.