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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"The Legacy Of The 2014 Royals, Part 1."

19 Comments -

1 – 19 of 19
Blogger Mark LaFlamme said...

That's a beautiful piece. I'm still going through the alternate universe scenarios, personally. At least once a day, I imagine that Perez had managed to connect with one to produce one of the most dramatic walk-off wins of all time. When he was at the plate, although I had almost no confidence at all in Sal, I thought it was going to happen. I thought it was destined to happen. I was so sure that we were going to win that game, that went it was over, I don't think I truly understood for a full ten minutes. Gah! It's still that weird mingling of pleasure and pain to think about, like poking at a sore because the sting of it is kind of cool. But whatever. Like you, I recognize that we went as far as we possibly could without actually winning the thing. Tying run ninety feet away, winning run swinging the bat. Not to mention that everything after that crazy wildcard game was hot, dripping gravy. We shouldn't have been there at all and look how far we went. But yeah. Still hurts. I can't imagine it will ever stop hurting completely.

November 24, 2014 at 12:56 AM

Blogger Dave Hogg said...

I guess the 2006 Tigers don't qualify because they were favored in the World Series, but I'd have them on the list. Three years removed from 119 losses, hadn't had a winning season in over a decade, and had the Magglio Ordonez homer as a all-time great fan moment.

November 24, 2014 at 11:01 AM

Blogger Rany said...

They were really close, Dave - I could easily see them on the list. Part of my concern was that after dominating the league for four months, they really collapsed at the end before sweeping through the ALDS and ALCS.

I also may or may not still be holding a grudge over their season-ending sweep at the hands of the Royals that kept us from drafting David Price.

November 24, 2014 at 11:10 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Excellent piece, enjoyed every word. I've got to ask this question that has been bugging me since Sal feebly popped out to end game seven. And let me state, it's easy for me to be critical when I'm sitting in a reclining chair watching the game with a few buddies and not in the batter's box or coach's box with millions of fans watching, screaming and gnawing in their fingernails.
In Sal's at bat, it was obvious he was going to only get chin high fastballs and pitches outside of the strike zone. You could see it in the way Posey set up behind the plate. Why couldn't one of the base coaches see this? Or a coach on the bench? And why didn't they call a timeout, slow down things for Salvy, and speak to him for 30 seconds.
"Salvy, he's not throwing you strikes. Take a pitch until he throws you a strike. Take a deep breath and get back in there."
I think this (1.) could have gotten Sal into a "hitter's count," and (2.) could have possibly take Bumgarner out of his rhythm.
Alas. Great season and a terrific march through the playoffs. Can't wait for opening day in 2015!

November 24, 2014 at 12:51 PM

Blogger sedated ape said...

thought you were gonna quit the blog at the end of the season, or was that like the other times you gave up on the team over the years?

November 24, 2014 at 3:29 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

How about the 1994 Montreal Expos?

November 24, 2014 at 3:29 PM

Blogger kcghost said...

Rany, good to hear from you again. As always a very enjoyable article.

November 24, 2014 at 4:11 PM

Blogger Mark said...

Was the 1965 World Series the most non-competitive ever? Seriously, it was like both teams got swept.

The Twins have played 12 home games in their WS history and have won 11.

Fine article, Rany.

November 24, 2014 at 5:10 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

I agree with Joe. It seemed to me as I was watching Salvy's AB that he was rushed, the place was going nuts and my impression was Salvy was jacked up like crazy. Somebody should have called a timeout and calmed him down. Bumgarner said he was almost out of gas so make him throw a few. But still, man what a great month!

November 24, 2014 at 6:49 PM

Blogger BobDD said...

If Salvy had gotten a hit, everyone would be recalling how jacked he was, how zeroed in, how alive with intensity, etc. He was destined we all would have said. But with his injury he had to over-commit and Bumgarner pretty much owned the laws of physics at that point. Inevitable.

November 24, 2014 at 10:00 PM

Blogger John said...

I had forgotten just how freakish that 2007 Rockies run was. Tony Gwynn Jr. beating the Padres in the biggest game of the season to that point. Vinny Rottino (I had to look him up), a player who played 18 games and had 24 at-bats in three years for the Brewers, winning a game the Rockies needed the Brewers to win. And Trevor Hoffman, a guy that some people think should be in the Hall of Fame someday, melting down not once, but twice, in spectacular fashion.

All that said, the 2007 Rockies weren't really anymore of a fluke than any other NL pennant-winner would have been that season. They were a very ordinary team, but the 2007 National League was a compressed league--in fact, the Rockies and D-backs tied for the most wins with 90. The Cubs won the Central with 85 wins. And then the Rockies had to play the team that really was the best team in baseball, with an ace pitcher who was on the same kind of roll as Bumgarner this year.

Teams like that can sneak through if there's no dominant team in a league at the time. The '59 Dodgers and Chisox were both that type of team, although the Dodgers became a great team a couple of years later.

November 25, 2014 at 6:57 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany, you can make the argument that in the 1980 World Series, there were actually THREE blown leads. Dennis Leonard got staked to a 4-0 lead and couldn't hold it.

November 25, 2014 at 11:33 AM

Blogger Drew Milner said...

Why didn't the coaches say this to him all season long?

November 25, 2014 at 12:31 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

I'll admit up front that I'm way too bias to answer the article's question (hint: the 2014 Royals would be #1 with a bullet). However, I can speak to the secondary topic in the article about "a fan's pain" in the wake of the Game 7 loss.

For the entire playoffs leading up to the World Series (and even WS Games 1-6), I kept telling myself, "Regardless of what happens, win or lose, we had a great season just to get here." I think that's how I kept from having numerous heart attacks along the way (probably 10+ in the Wild Card game alone) and being okay with a loss, in a game or a series. Game 7 was really the first time I didn't stick to that mantra. I think it was because it was the first time in the World Series that we could have eliminated the Giants which made my brain do a 180 degree turn into the thought process of, "Damn, we can actually be World Champions." (admittedly, the thought did enter my mind after we went up 2-1 in the series but I purposefully pushed it out of my mind being a lifelong Royals fan always expecting the worst and not wanting to stupidly set myself up for failure/disappointment) After Sal popped out to end it, I let myself morn for a few days and just be sad. But I also started reminding myself of that mantra I had for most of the playoffs which, in turn, has helped me come to grips with how everything turned out.

I write this (probably too long) post to express my appreciation for what the 2014 Royals team did and gave us long suffering fans (and give myself a bit of cathartic relief). But also to try to put it in perspective for other Royals fans as well and maybe help those still feeling the sting.

Rany, I look forward to Part 2+ of this topic but will still be sad when you do decide to stop (especially since this is one of the most important/meaningful offseasons in my memory for the team).

November 25, 2014 at 12:56 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany, I implore you to rethink your decision to stop writing here about the Royals. This will be a huge loss for us fans.

November 25, 2014 at 10:34 PM

Blogger will_severns said...

Found this on YouTube of an overzealous Royals fan. Thank you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGg5Hs6Zuy4

November 28, 2014 at 3:20 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The 2008 Rays had he misfortune of languishing in suspended animation as World Series losers for the longest time of any team in history.

Already down 3-1 to the Phillies, it looked like pretty much a sure thing that the gig was up for the new kids on the block.

Then Game 5 was suspended in the middle of the sixth inning due to heavy rain, the Rays went back to their hotel that Monday night with very little hope.

They continued to be down 3 games to 1 all of Tuesday, as Philly's inclement weather refused to relent.

With the Rays still down 3 games to 1 all through the day on Wednesday, the teams finally took the field for all of 3 1/2 innings that night just to make everything official.

Who wants to go out to the ball park for only 3 1/2 innings, anyway? In a World Series, no less?

After all those gloomy rainy days of being behind 3 games to 1, it was hard for Rays fans to feel anything but down before the Phils finally put them out of their misery.

After watching such a s-l-o-w motion wreck there was absolutely no way for Rays fans to avoid having a bad taste in their mouths.

November 29, 2014 at 12:57 PM

Blogger Drew Milner said...

A bunch of us saw MadBum putting snot on the ball.

November 30, 2014 at 11:43 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I would rank the 2014 Royals ahead of the 2007 Rockies because how the Rockies were swept in the World Series negates what they did enough to make the Royals' postseason run more spectacular. The antics the last couple of days of that season, I didn't even remember until re-reading it. That is pretty cool, but the excitement of the Wild Card game against the A's alone made this a remarkable season by itself. On top of that, the Royals had the best possible record a team could have in the postseason without winning the World Series, not to mention the World Series going to game seven and having the tying run on 3rd base in the bottom of the 9th, at least to me, is greater than Rocktober.

December 1, 2014 at 2:39 PM

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