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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"To Sung Woo, Thanks For Everything! Rany Jazayerli"

42 Comments -

1 – 42 of 42
Blogger Drew Milner said...

Rany, last night was not the Royals first shutout of the season, it was the first complete game shutout.

August 11, 2014 at 12:27 AM

Blogger Rany said...

That's what I meant. In the old days - like, before 2005 - the term "shutout" implied the complete game when applied to a specific pitcher.

August 11, 2014 at 12:44 AM

Blogger Danny said...

Beautiful. Just beautiful.

August 11, 2014 at 1:02 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany, your heart is showing....and so is mine, Thank You Rany and thank you Sung

August 11, 2014 at 2:23 AM

Blogger sedated ape said...

A guy visits the US and sees a baseball game. Good for him, and he seems like an okay guy, but why exactly is that the best story in 29 years?

Or a story at all?

August 11, 2014 at 5:26 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I am going to miss this blog.

August 11, 2014 at 6:31 AM

Blogger Jazzbumpa said...

Rany -

This is beautiful.

Not only a genuinely heart-warming story, but so well written.

While your Royals are soaring, I've been watching the Tigers slog into the pit of despond, and it's a sad thing to see.

Everything is going sour.

Good luck to your team. Wish I could see that first pitch tonight.

Cheers!
JzB

August 11, 2014 at 8:15 AM

Blogger Michael S. said...

Sung Woo is not just a story. He's a phenomenon!

August 11, 2014 at 8:29 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Best article Rany has ever written....and I enjoy em all.

August 11, 2014 at 8:34 AM

Blogger Robert said...

Rany's going positive?

Welp, the winning was fun while it lasted.

August 11, 2014 at 9:52 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Forget a shout-out from Obama. He's a White Sox fan. He's more likely to attack a Royals first base coach than shout-out to a Royals fan.

August 11, 2014 at 10:08 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Best Sports article ever about a man seeking and attaining his dream. Watch out #Mellinger and the nan once known as #Babb..

August 11, 2014 at 10:48 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Love it . . . thanks for writing about what most of us are feeling today.

August 11, 2014 at 11:12 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

OUTSTANDING,Rany! So, if, on the wings of the Sung Woo juju, the Royals become Champions of the World, you still shut down your blog?

C'mon, Rany ... can we just get along?

August 11, 2014 at 11:33 AM

Blogger juniors22 said...

One of the best pieces I've ever read...here's to Sung Woo and bleeding Blue!!! #whatdreamsaremadeof

August 11, 2014 at 11:53 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Great stuff, Rany. I am not a Royals fan and not really much of a baseball fan at all anymore, but this is really something special.

August 11, 2014 at 12:03 PM

Blogger Chris said...

Rany, you referenced the movie, "Major League." I keep on imagining Sung Woo Lee walking down out of the stands and being lifted up on the shoulders of Sal Perez with the whole team surrounding him as the Royals win the AL Central.....

August 11, 2014 at 12:18 PM

Blogger Dean Compton said...

That was lovely. Tears everywhere! If the Royals keep winning, we can't let him go home, right?

August 11, 2014 at 12:50 PM

Blogger giantslor said...

"A guy visits the US and sees a baseball game. Good for him, and he seems like an okay guy, but why exactly is that the best story in 29 years? Or a story at all?"

If you've read this entire piece and still have to ask, then you'll never understand.

August 11, 2014 at 2:11 PM

Blogger giantslor said...

One reason this story is as big as it is, is that KC loves its team and its city, but after so many decades of being outclassed by other teams and cities, we feel insecure. So when this foreigner from 6,000 miles away comes here just to love our team and city with us, we feel flattered and validated and proud. Could you see this story happening in NYC? Not a chance.

August 11, 2014 at 2:23 PM

Blogger AlcidesEscobarJustWantsToDance said...

Here goes nothing, I was born in 1987 in New York City to a couple of New Yorkers (dad a lifer and mom a decade in). My first game, and I don't remember this, but the pictures are about the cutest I can claim, my dad had me close my eyes and walk out the upper deck concourse, open my eyes at the count of three, to take it all in with a rush. Yankee'd from head to toe, my young self was scoping heaven. With eyes the size of saucers, I could hardly control myself. He still loves to tell that story. When I was 3 we moved to Kansas City. I grew up a huge Yankees fan who casually followed the Royals because they were convenient and simply enough, I've never been able to get enough baseball. I have always loved the game. It's "America's Past Time" and I'm not a communist. It was great to be a Yankees fan back then. I still remember watching those late nineties teams and remember losing my head, running and screaming around the house, when they hit back to back to back homers in the 1997 playoffs. All they did was win. It was easy to cheer them on. I was still a kid back then. A stupid, shallow kid lacking in life's philosophy department. Life isn't just about winning. It is about keeping going in the face of tough breaks and let downs, taking some lumps, goal setting, hard work, all regardless of outcomes. Journey not the destination and all that jazz. That's what it's all about, at least to me anyways.
Hyperbole maybe, but I became an adult when I renounced my Yankee allegiance and learned to love the Royals. It took an understanding of the beauty of struggle, the tyranny of oppression, the stark nature of modern MLB economics, and the righteous zen acceptance of what a "hometown" really means. I was born in New York. I grew up in Kansas City, thank God. What I'm getting at is this: being a Royals fan has never been about success on the field. Obviously. They would have gone the way of the dinosaur by now if that were the case. Being a Royals fan is about being a part of a unique community of desperate romantics. We love the Royals because they are ours and we are theirs. They persevere. In the face of larger markets, better financed teams, more savvy front offices, vastly more talented squads, year in year out, we are all there, hoping the season gets interesting after the All Star Break, still there the next spring when it doesn't. Remember the constant 100 loss seasons and years of contraction talks? Not fun but we survived and look where we are now. I tear up at highlights nowadays and we're not even in the playoffs yet! I have always seen in the Royals the perfect representation of the KC I grew up in. Scrappy and lacking of pretension, eternally sunny and in most ways inexplicably content. A city with a great history, a lackluster present, but a stubborn optimism for what the future could bring. But now, as the city has grown in notoriety, with hoards of young professionals flocking to KC to settle down, with the rebirth of Downtown, Crossroads and Westport, hell, with Google, we are on the rise. It's an exciting time to be in KC and to be a part of the Kansas City Renaissance. This on the field resurgence is perfectly timed with the revitalization of the city.

August 11, 2014 at 3:06 PM

Blogger AlcidesEscobarJustWantsToDance said...

We seem to be regaining that classic KC swagger. The lyrics to "Kansas City (Here I Come)" are no joke. This used to be the capital of cool in the Mid-West. Paris of the Plains and all that. With the kind of patience one would expect from someone with mental deficiencies or a masochistic streak, we have all stuck in there with the city and the team and it's so exhilarating to have it all start to pay off in more ways than simply building more and more character year after year. I'm tired of building character. I want wins. I want to see patriotic bunting at the K. I want to blow an obscene amount of money on playoff paraphernalia. I want to see non-stop baseball coverage during the Chiefs regular season. This is an old school baseball town dammit and it's so great to see that shine through once again. Though a lot could still happen to derail, yet again, our prospects for meaningful baseball, right now we are rolling and we should all be filled with pride, for the team and the city.
In closing, this super fan from Korea story is remarkable. The outpouring of love he's received only makes sense in Kansas City and that's what makes it special. I've traveled all over the place, but KC is where you find the least showy, most heartfelt, generous, and friendliest people in America. Biased of course, but, it's well known around the country. His reception has showed the true heart of the city and the vigorous humanity of its fan base. He had no business being a Royals fan all these years. Really none of us have. But like Sung Woo Lee, we hung with it, waiting for the mountain top view after years of arduous climbing. Unlike the myth of Sisyphus, it looks like this might be the year the boulder doesn't roll back down. If it does, and we again fall short, I know I'll still be following spring training next year, filling my time again with checking blogs and hoping once again that this year, we could see playoff baseball in KC for the first time in my lifetime. Something tells me, the most thrilling gut feeling of my life, that our "best in the majors" defense, bullpen, and base running could be the difference maker this year. I wouldn't take any catcher over Perez, any short stop over Escobar, any left fielder over Gordon, and any 8th/9th inning combo over Davis/Holland. That has to count for something, right? It is also nice to know that if we do in fact make the playoffs, every team's fan base on the outside looking in will be rooting for us. No one has a bone to pick with the Royals. A terrible, yet somehow gratifying product of decades of sub-mediocrity, I know, but we could really give a lot of hope to people everywhere who are beaten down and struggling to compete in a tough new world. We embody American Heartland humility, determination, and goodness.
Somewhere, Paul Splittorff is calling the games for Ewing Kauffman and Buck O'neil. They're having a blast and so are we. No matter what, this has been the best season of my life. But unlike the others, I don't feel so silly for thinking there's a chance we could win the whole thing. It feels amazing right now.
Thanks for taking the time to read this insanely long post but I feel as though I've been waiting 27 years to put it into words. Thank you Rany for everything you do and have done. You're an inspiration. We've got the biggest series in a generation with a four game homestand against the best record'd team in baseball and I expect we'll win it and take first place, so surreal... GO ROYALS!!!

August 11, 2014 at 3:06 PM

Blogger Chad L said...

Fantastic article Rany. Been following you on twitter for the past couple of years and never miss you on 810. Didn't know until today that you used to call Wichita home. Appreciate your love of the Royals from down here in my hometown. Go Shockers! Go Royals!

August 11, 2014 at 3:55 PM

Blogger @edcfromkc said...

I loved this. Thanks RJ!

August 11, 2014 at 3:57 PM

Blogger formerbagger said...

It's tough to follow a commenter like Alcides Just Wants to Dance, but Rany you have been an incredible voice for the years of torment Royals fans have endured. It clearly goes deeper than most people realize as they traverse the process (I stole that word from who else.) One can take the attitude that even a blind squirrel gets a nut now and then, but if you can't invest emotionally in the team now, you never will. Realistically, win, lose or draw they have given us something this year. I will miss your blog Rany if no one can convince you to continue, but understand why you might want to retire it. Winning isn't everything, but it beats the Hell out of 29 years of losing.

August 11, 2014 at 4:10 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany- I love two things about that article. Your sentimentality and the fact that the first comment was from someone on a technical correction.

Ultimately- if Rany is in and is going to enjoy the ride there is no reason everyone else shouldn't just relax and enjoy each game. Like life- a baseball season is a journey to be relished slowly- but it sure would be nice to somehow get to that destination this year.

August 11, 2014 at 4:54 PM

Blogger Deo Prentice said...

This is the best thing since Joe Poz. Thanks Rany...for everything.

August 11, 2014 at 5:22 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany, thanks for your heartfelt article. It made my day! Sung Woo Lee came along at the right time. As a Royals fan since 1976, it's the first time in a long while I have a feeling that the Royals can get to the post-season and win. Go Royals!

August 11, 2014 at 9:29 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

The Sung Woo Lee story is very nice & complimentary to KC & the Royals. But, Please lets not overdo it. A important story is how long has been since Ned has made a glaring error. Good job Ned! Just set back & enjoy the ride. Still scared that our lack of plate discipline will come to haunt us down the last 1/4 of the season. How did we trade for Josh W. after the deadline, don't understand the rules even though I like the trade. GO ROYALS!

August 11, 2014 at 10:52 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Rany logic
Royals lose = I was right all along and I'm smarter than the GM

Royals win = supernatural forces

August 12, 2014 at 1:39 AM

Blogger danielle said...

This brought tears to my eyes. Love!

August 12, 2014 at 8:04 AM

Blogger danielle said...

One comment, however...
>>>Appeared on the Jumbotron in the middle of the fifth inning.

Um, Rany, that would be Crown Vision. :-D

August 12, 2014 at 8:06 AM

Blogger twm said...

A Royals playoff appearance might be the perfect coda for this blog. Here's hoping the Royals can give you a perfect sendoff!

August 12, 2014 at 8:18 AM

Blogger Swoonin' A's said...

It's all about karma.
I truly believe the reason the Royals won the sixth game in '85, and thus the Series, was because Reggie Jackson, that former Damned Yankee, as part of the ABC crew assigned to the losers, rooted on the Royals from their locker room in the ninth inning as they rallied to beat the Cardinals.
And if the Royals get 'er done this year, it'll be because of Sung Woo Lee. Royal blue sky's the limit.

August 12, 2014 at 10:53 AM

Blogger John Viril said...

God, this reads like a baseball movie.

Down-and-out baseball team who hasn't made the playoffs in 29-years gets inspired to take first place due to visit from a goofy fan from S. Korean that reminds everyone that baseball is supposed to be fun.

Now we need to get Hollywood Royals fans like Jason Sudekis and Paul Ruud to make the project.

August 12, 2014 at 4:13 PM

Blogger GregN said...

Someone referenced the White Sox above, thought you should see that (most) of us are pulling for the Royals too. Rany is quoted liberally.

http://www.southsidesox.com/2014/8/12/5993921/royals-back-in-first-place-and-with-feeling-this-time

August 12, 2014 at 4:32 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Cardinals fan here. What a fantastic story! Great job KC showing this guy Midwestern hospitality, it will surely be the trip of a lifetime!

August 12, 2014 at 9:29 PM

Blogger MATTHEW ROSE said...

Rany, lovely, beautiful piece in The New York Times today (from your blog). Living in Paris and watching the Mets these many years (I was born in NY) has been wonderful, frustrating, and painful so I can relate to your team and Lee. Terrific stuff, thank you.

If you send me your address, I'd be very happy to send you ome of my baseball art stamp sheets – Rubens Rounding Third. It's a celebration of art and baseball...

Best,

Matthew Rose / http://matthewrosestudio.blogspot.com/

August 13, 2014 at 7:43 AM

Blogger AJ Polo said...

Royals rallied w/ Kratz(acquired for Valencia in a trade that everyone called stupid), Colon(drafted by Moore over likes of Harvey, Sale & several other higher ranked prospects), Dyson(kept for D & base running, shunning an OF upgrade at trade deadline) & Aoki(acquired off-season in a deal that was looking horrible a month ago), topped off by 2-run 1B by Butler(all were begging for him to be traded for N.Franklin who was later used for Tigers to acquire Price, the trade we considered our doom)... Got a clean 8th from Davis after a fantastic outing by Shields(both acquired in controversial Wil Myers trade)... Moral of the story... Don't EVER DOUBT THE NOW IMMORTAL DAYTON MOORE!!!

August 14, 2014 at 4:27 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

I guess that is ONE way to look at it.

August 14, 2014 at 6:56 PM

Blogger Kris Alan Higdon said...

Is this what you write when you can't bring yourself to write good things about your "favorite" team that is on an incredible run despite your "expert" analysis to the contrary?

August 15, 2014 at 9:10 PM

Blogger Fast Eddie said...

Detroit is falling apart

August 23, 2014 at 2:00 PM

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