|
||||
| ||||
|
|
#101 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 72: Road Work, Done Right
👑 Friday, June 20 • Game 1 👑 Six shutout innings set the tone as Kansas City steals Game 1 at Dodger Stadium. Kansas City Royals at Los Angeles Dodgers | Dodger Stadium Weather: Clear skies, 65° | Wind: Out to RF, 8 mph | Attendance: 52,216 | First pitch: 7:10 PM PT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) Caleb Ferguson hits the 15-day IL, so we made two moves that tell you exactly where my head is at: stop bleeding leverage innings and lean into what's performing. We've had our time with Jalen Beeks—so we waived/DFA'd him and brought Huascar Brazobán back up after a rework in Omaha. He's 35, sure, but the strikeout rates were there again, and he's on a minor league deal with flexibility. For now, he's our July pivot while we keep the trade board warm. We also called up Alec Marsh to give us another right-handed option in the bullpen, and we made the bench adjustment I've been circling for a week: Sam Haggerty down, Davis Schneider up. Haggerty's been serviceable, but the value hasn't been there. Schneider's been loud in Omaha—now he gets the runway. Then the schedule reminded us what this is: Dodger Stadium, a hot opponent, and a lineup that can turn one mistake into fireworks. You don't come here to “hang around.” You come here to land punches. Los Angeles Dodgers Series Snapshot Los Angeles entered this series 35–34, third in the West, two games back, and riding a six-game win streak. Offensively, they'd been plenty capable (top-five batting average in the NL), and even with some shaky run prevention, they were playing with momentum. Our assignment: disrupt that rhythm immediately and force them to play uphill. Projected matchups had some juice—Eflin vs Ohtani to open it—, and I wanted this first one badly. Set the tone, quiet the crowd, and make their bullpen cover innings. Here are the projected pitching matchups, our pitchers listed first: RHP Z. Eflin (8-1, 1.72 ERA) vs RHP S. Ohtani (5-3, 4.55 ERA) LHP C. Ragans (5-4, 3.56 ERA) vs RHP Z. Gallen (5-4, 3.72 ERA) RHP B. Singer (3-2, 4.18 ERA) vs RHP B. Miller (0-2, 6.33 ERA) The top 5 players on their team are: 1. SP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Age: 26, Overall: 75, Potential: 5.0) 2. RF Mookie Betts (32, 75, 4.5) 3. DH Shohei Ohtani (30, 70, 4.0) 4. SP Zac Gallen (29, 65, 4.0) 5. C Will Smith (30, 65, 3.5) Series Matchup Board — Game 1 • RHP Zach Eflin vs. RHP Shohei Ohtani It turned into a two-part story: • Eflin: six innings of command and calm — 6.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 9 K on 104 pitches. That's a frontline performance in a hostile park. • Ohtani: battled, but we got him with two big swings — Loftin's 2-run HR (2nd) and Payton's solo HR (4th). ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Dodgers (Game 1) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (Eflin shows the edge early): Eflin punched out Outman and Vargas, then worked around a Freeman single (and a wild pitch) without damage. Early sign: he had finish tonight—balls disappearing at the edges. 2nd (We strike first — and we do it our way): Payton took a hit-by-pitch, Massey walked, and then Waters lined a single—and when the throw came home, we beat it. That's the kind of “take the extra 90” pressure that travels. Then Isbel grounded into a double play, but it moved the runner… and Nick Loftin punished Ohtani with a 2-run homer (388 ft). 3–0 Royals, and Dodger Stadium went from buzz to murmur. 3rd (Eflin keeps the lid on): Quick inning, more strikeouts. Betts and Ohtani weren't seeing clean pitches. 4th (Payton adds the loud insurance): Mark Payton led off with a solo homer (396 ft) to make it 4–0. One swing, and suddenly Ohtani was pitching from behind all night. 5th–6th (Eflin’s clinic continues): Will Smith finally squared one up for a single, but Eflin kept the traffic from becoming a rally. In the 6th, Witt walked and stole second, but we didn't cash—still, we were forcing the Dodgers to keep playing a clean game. 7th (Handoff to Zerpa): We went to Angel Zerpa, and he handled the first wave—striking out Ohtani and working around a Happ double. Still 4–0, and it felt like the last six outs were going to be about staying away from one mistake. 8th (Dodgers finally land their swing): This is where it got loud: Gauthier walked, and James Outman hit a 2-run homer off Zerpa to cut it to 4–2. That's Dodger Stadium in a nutshell—quiet for seven innings, then one crack and the whole park wakes up. 9th (Lopez closes it, but not without sweat): Jacob Lopez took the ninth. Two walks put the tying run in the on-deck circle, but he punched out Will Smith and got the last outs without letting the game flip. Save #5, and an exhale. ________________________________________ Final Royals 4, Dodgers 2 Royals (4 H, 0 E) | Dodgers (4 H, 0 E) Player of the Game: Zach Eflin Royals scoring: • Loftin 2-run HR (2nd) • Payton solo HR (4th) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Eflin, Z. W (9-1) 6.0 2 0 0 2 9 0 104 1.60 Zerpa, A. 2.0 1 2 2 1 3 1 33 3.56 Lopez, J. SV (5) 1.0 1 0 0 2 1 0 24 2.99 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. Eflin is the backbone. When the road gets loud, and the opponent’s got momentum, he gives us professional innings with a calm heartbeat. Six innings, two hits, nine punchouts—that’s how you steal Game 1 in a place like this. 2. Our offense was light, but timely. Four hits, four runs. That's not sustainable as a lifestyle, but it wins you a series opener when two of those hits leave the yard, and you don't give away free outs. 3. The bullpen lane still needs tightening. Zerpa did plenty right, but the walk plus one mistake became a two-run jolt. Lopez got the save, but the ninth had traffic. With Ferguson down, this is exactly why Brazobán and Marsh are here—to give us more “clean inning” options when the game turns into leverage. 4. Schneider watch begins now. In a park like this, the margins show you what you’re missing. We’re going to need every ounce of bench value and lineup flexibility over the next 10 days. Around the League The transaction carousel keeps spinning: Tampa Bay acquired Tyler O'Neill from Washington in a multi-player package, and the Rays also flipped for Adbert Alzolay from the Cubs. Meanwhile, in Detroit, Dylan Beavers is expected to be out for another four months with a concussion. Summer attrition is here, and it's not slowing down. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 72 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#102 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 73: The Comeback Keeps Rolling
👑 Saturday, June 21 • Game 2 👑 Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)Another late push, another road win—Royals take Game 2 in L.A. Kansas City Royals at Los Angeles Dodgers | Dodger Stadium Weather: Partly Cloudy, 65° | Wind: Left to right, 9 mph | Attendance: 46,133 | First pitch: 6:10 PM PT ________________________________________ Game 2 in Chavez Ravine always feels like a lie detector. You can steal the opener with one good start and two big swings—then you find out the next night if you actually belong in the series. We had the momentum from the 4–2 win, but I didn't want “momentum” in our dugout—I wanted execution, because the Dodgers don't need many chances to flip the script. From the GM chair, this is also where the bullpen lanes get tested for real. We've been tinkering, shuffling, and reshaping. Nights like this don't care about your plan—they care about whether you can get the last nine outs without giving away oxygen. Los Angeles Dodgers Series Snapshot Los Angeles came in hovering around .500, but the lineup doesn't play like a “middle” club—too many power bats, too many guys who can punish one mistake. After we grabbed Game 1, the goal tonight was simple: keep them from getting comfortable, and make them win innings the hard way. Series Matchup Board — Game 2 • LHP Cole Ragans vs. RHP Zac Gallen The scoreboard tried to make this one feel decided early. Gallen was sharp and steady for most of the night (6.1 IP, 1 R), and Ragans took the body blows: Vargas got him in the 1st, and Betts landed the big one in the 3rd. But Ragans didn't fold. He stayed in it long enough for the offense to finally break through—and the bullpen to do its job in the margins. Ragans' final: 6.0 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 8 K. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Dodgers (Game 2) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (We threaten, they strike): Waters opened the night with a triple, Vinnie walked, and then we took two punchouts right down the gut—Witt and Payton both watched strike three with runners aboard. Bottom half, Ragans was rolling… until Miguel Vargas clipped him with a solo homer. Just like that: 1–0 Dodgers. 2nd–3rd (Gallen controls us; Betts breaks it open): Gallen started stacking Ks, and we couldn't string anything. Bottom 3rd, Ragans ran into the one inning that changed his line: a walk, a bunt that turned into a baserunner, then Mookie Betts crushed a 3-run homer. 4–0, and Dodger Stadium finally got loud. 4th–6th (We get traffic, no cash): We had hits—Massey and Pratto in the 4th, Vinnie walked in the 5th—but no payoff. Every time we got a crack, Gallen answered with a strikeout or a soft out. It felt like the kind of night where you're going to need a solo shot just to breathe again. 7th (Two solo shots flip the heartbeat): Then it happened—Kyle Isbel led off with a solo homer, and a few pitches later Drew Waters hit a solo homer of his own. Suddenly, it's 4–2, and the dugout went from quiet to alive. That's baseball: one inning, two swings, and the whole game changes shape. 8th (Massey pulls us within one): Michael Massey opened the 8th with a solo homer to make it 4–3. We kept pushing—Pratto walked, Loftin singled, and we even tried to force a play at the plate—but couldn't tie it. Still, we'd dragged the game back into our lane. 9th (The knockout swing in the late inning): This is where veterans earn their keep. Mark Payton doubled, and then Salvador Perez launched a 2-run homer to give us the lead, 5–4. One swing, one lead change, and you could feel the Dodgers' dugout deflate. Bottom 9, Will Klein came in to finish it. He walked Happ, uncorked a wild pitch to move the runner, then punched out Gauthier to end it. Stressful? Yeah. But it counts the same. ________________________________________ Final Royals 5, Dodgers 4 Royals (12 H, 0 E) | Dodgers (3 H, 1 E) Big swings: • Isbel solo HR (7th) • Waters solo HR (7th) + triple (1st) • Massey solo HR (8th) • Perez 2-run HR (9th) — the game winner Streak: Royals win streak reaches 7 Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Ragans, C. 6.0 3 4 4 3 8 2 102 3.52 Topa, J. 2.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 26 6.04 Klein, W. W (1-0) 1.0 0 0 0 1 1 0 17 3.41 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. We took their best punch and stayed upright. Down 4–0 in this park against a starter like Gallen, you can either drift into the night… or you can keep taking your at-bats like you're one swing away. We chose the second path. 2. This was “bullpen lane” baseball—and we passed the test. Topa gave us two clean innings to hold the line, and Klein finished with real air under his feet. That's the exact kind of leverage confidence we've been trying to build since early June. 3. Salvy's swing is the kind you remember in October meetings. Not because it's pretty—because it's timely. A catcher giving you the lead in the 9th on the road against a big-league closer profile? That's a spine play. 4. One note I'm writing in pen: we can't keep letting early opportunities die on called third strikes with runners on. That 1st inning could've changed the entire game shape. We won anyway—but that habit will cost us against the wrong opponent. Around the League Sources are buzzing that San Francisco and Philadelphia are in “vigorous” trade discussions—no names yet, but both clubs have reasons to shuffle as the calendar turns toward July. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 73 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#103 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 74: Eleven Runs, One Inning, No Answers
👑 Sunday, June 22 • Game 3 👑 The bullpen door swings open, and the Dodgers sprint through it—Royals routed. Kansas City Royals at Los Angeles Dodgers | Dodger Stadium Weather: Partly Cloudy, 68° | Wind: Blowing out to RF, 9 mph | Attendance: 38,143 | First pitch: 1:10 PM PT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) You win the first two in this park, and you can feel the temptation: play not to lose, get to the plane, take the series, keep the streak rolling. I didn't want that posture for a second. The message was blunt—keep attacking, because the Dodgers don't need an invitation to flip a game into a runway. From the GM chair, I also had bullpen math in my head. We've been living in leverage all week, and if today turned into a messy bridge, we'd pay for it. We just didn't expect the bill to come due all at once. Los Angeles Dodgers Series Snapshot Game 3 with a chance to put a bow on a statement road series. We'd already taken two—quieted the crowd twice—and all we needed was nine clean innings and one crooked number. Instead, the Dodgers hit us with the kind of inning that turns a series recap into a hard reset. Series Matchup Board — Game 3 • RHP Brady Singer vs. RHP Bobby Miller We actually got the start we wanted for a couple of innings. Singer kept their top quiet early, and we scratched first. But once the game moved past “starter vs. starter” and into the bullpen lanes, the wheels didn’t just wobble—they came off. Singer's line: 6.0 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 1 BB, 5 K, 1 HR (91 pitches)—serviceable, until the game detonated after he exited. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Dodgers (Game 3) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (A little traffic, no cash): Garcia beat out an infield hit, then got caught stealing—empty baserunner, inning gone. Early reminder: in this park, you can't waste outs. 2nd (We strike first… then eat the counterpunch): We actually played our brand for the first run: Payton singled, Massey walked, a wild pitch moved them up, and Isbel lined an RBI single to make it 1–0. Bottom half, the Dodgers answered with one swing: Betts singled, Smith singled, and Nick Castellanos hit a 3-run homer. Just like that: 3–1 L.A. 3rd (Quiet inning, but you can feel the game tightening): We got a Witt single, nothing else. Singer held them scoreless, and it felt like we were still in the “one hit flips it” zone. 4th (Massey runs one out—then they add one back): Michael Massey hit a solo homer to cut it to 3–2. That's exactly what you want when the game's on a wire. Bottom 4, they tacked on with pressure—Betts walked, stole second, Smith singled, and the run scored on a bang-bang play at the plate. 4–2 Dodgers. 5th–6th (We hover… but can’t land the tying punch): Vinnie singled in the 5th, Isbel blooped a soft single in the 6th—nothing cashed. Singer kept us within two, but the clock was ticking toward the bullpen handoff. 7th (The inning that broke the game and the mood): This is where the day went sideways fast. Singer exited, Brazobán came in, and traffic started immediately—double, walk, another double, more walks. Then we went to Veneziano, and it turned into an avalanche: Betts single, Freeman walk, Smith single, Castellanos walk, Gauthier single, an HBP, and then Miguel Vargas cleared the bases with a double. Eleven runs in the inning. Eleven. The kind of frame you just try to survive. Score jumped to 15–2, and it was damage control the rest of the way. 8th (More fuel on the fire): The Dodgers stayed on the attack—Betts singled, then Freeman hit a 2-run homer to make it 17–2. 9th (A couple runs, but it’s window dressing): Isbel walked, Loftin singled, Renfroe singled, then a wild pitch and a groundout brought in two. It moved the final to 17–4, but the result was already written. ________________________________________ Final Royals 4, Dodgers 17 Royals (11 H, 0 E) | Dodgers (13 H, 0 E) Dodger’s headliners: • Mookie Betts: 3-for-4, 4 R, 2 RBI • Nick Castellanos: 3-run HR + double (4 RBI) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Singer, B. L (3-3) 6.0 5 4 4 1 5 1 91 4.83 Brazoban, H. 0.2 3 6 6 3 0 0 33 6.75 Veneziano, A. 0.1 3 5 5 1 0 0 26 6.87 Marsh, A. 2.0 2 2 2 0 2 1 33 4.19 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. The 7th inning is a red flag, not just a bad day. We walked hitters, we couldn't land strikes in leverage, and once the inning tilted, we didn't have an “off switch.” That's not a box score issue—it's a roster construction issue, and it's exactly why the bullpen lane is still on my board every morning. 2. Singer did his part—then the game left the rails behind him. Six innings, four runs in this park is survivable. What followed was not. We have to get better at turning a starter's work into a clean finish, especially on the road. 3. Flush it, but don't forget it. We took the series momentum into today and got punched in the mouth. That's baseball. But the lesson is clear: our margin tightens when the bullpen has to cover too many “unknown” outs. The deadline is coming, and nights like this are the reminders that make decisions easier. Around the League Below are the current Royals players' standings for the American League All-Star Fan Voting (as of Sun., June 22, 2025) for the All-Star Game, which will be played on Tuesday. Jul. 22nd, 2025. Top overall: Jackson Holliday — 1,476,737 votes. In his all-time stats, Holliday is hitting .298 with 210 hits, 42 home runs, 146 runs scored, and 108 RBIs. SHORTSTOP 1. Gunnar Henderson, Baltimore Orioles: 1,433,891 2. Bobby Witt Jr., Kansas City Royals: 1,213,679 3. Carlos Correa, Minnesota Twins: 1,007,790 STARTING PITCHER 1. Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers: 876,779 2. Framber Valdez, Houston Astros: 818,641 3. Zach Eflin, Kansas City Royals: 805,349 4. Blake Snell, Boston Red Sox: 805,184 5. Gavin Williams, Cleveland Guardians: 728,767 And in Baltimore, Corbin Burnes threw shutout ball in a 7–0 win over Philadelphia—three hits allowed, five punchouts, one walk. A reminder of what “no breathing room” looks like when an ace has the ball. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 74 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#104 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 75: Coliseum Squeeze
👑 Tuesday, June 24 • Game 1 👑 Turnbull battles, the margin stays thin, and the A’s cash the key inning. Kansas City Royals at Oakland Athletics | Oakland Coliseum Weather: Clear skies, 62° | Wind: In from LF, 10 mph | Attendance: 12,568 | First pitch: 6:40 PM PT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) I needed the off day like air. That Dodgers finale didn't just sting—it rattled our bullpen confidence, and I'm not letting that rot in the back of the room. So I went full bull-in-a-china-shop: Beeks out (DFA/released), Veneziano and Brazobán sent down, and we opened the door for Sam Long and Andrew Suárez to take their turn holding real bridge innings. The uncomfortable truth from the GM chair: a couple of the contract extensions I approved (the “good on paper” group) aren't matching the results right now, and that's on me. The deadline's coming, and the margin for dead weight gets thinner every series. Lesson learned: If they are just above board and you have doubts, push them to free agency. We also quietly patched the upper minors with a few signings—depth has been pinched by long IL stints at Omaha and Double-A. Not glamorous, but necessary if we want the organization to keep breathing through July. Oakland Athletics Series Snapshot Three games at the Coliseum—big park, heavy air, and a club that plays low-scoring baseball better than people give them credit for. Oakland came in 35–39 and is sitting 4th in the West, and while the profile says “middle pack,” the bullpen can shorten games if you let them play from ahead. Tonight was about getting back to clean baseball after the West Coast turbulence: start strong, keep the leash short, and don't let one inning flip the whole night. Here are the projected pitching matchups, our pitchers listed first: RHP S. Turnbull (8-3, 3.67 ERA) vs LHP D. Peterson (3-1, 4.01 ERA) LHP J. Montgomery (9-5, 5.19 ERA) vs RHP M. Kelly (5-3, 3.73 ERA) RHP Z. Eflin (9-1, 1.61 ERA) vs RHP M. Spence (4-2, 2.57 ERA) The top 5 players on their team are: 1. CL Mason Miller (Age: 26, Overall: 65, Potential: 3.5) 2. LF Esteury Ruiz (26, 60, 3.5) 3. SS J.P. Crawford (30, 50, 3.0) 4. C Tyler Soderstrom (23, 50, 3.0) 5. CF Harrison Bader (31, 50, 2.5) Series Matchup Board — Game 1 • RHP Spencer Turnbull vs. LHP David Peterson It turned into a classic Coliseum grinder. Turnbull gave us a winnable start (6.0 IP, 2 ER, 7 K), but Peterson was sharper when it mattered and kept us from ever stacking sustained traffic. Peterson went 7.1, allowed 1 run on 3 hits, and handed the ball cleanly to the back end. Mason Miller finished it for his 18th save. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Athletics (Game 1) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st–3rd (A quiet park, a quiet game): Both starters settled in early. Turnbull pounded the zone and missed bats. We didn’t square much up, and Peterson kept us in that “one swing might do it” posture. 4th (First real threat, no cash): Isbel doubled to lead off the 4th, and we couldn't move him home. That's the kind of stranded runner that comes back to haunt you in this park. 5th (We strike first… then give it back): Top 5, we finally landed the punch: Mark Payton solo homer—1–0 Royals. Bottom 5, Oakland answered with exactly what I didn't want to give them: traffic. Crawford singled, Bader walked, Langeliers walked, and then Zack Gelof lined a 2-out, 2-run single to flip it to 2–1 A's. That was the inning. 6th (No response): We went down in order, and Peterson kept pitching like the lead belonged to him. 7th (Bullpen gives up the tack-on): We went to Angel Zerpa, and Oakland squeezed out insurance: Bader singled, Donovan got hit, Langeliers singled, and the runner scored at the plate—3–1. It wasn't loud, but it was a clean execution by them and a reminder that late runs are gold in this stadium. 8th–9th (Miller shuts the door): We had one last look in the 9th—Pasquantino doubled with two outs—but Mason Miller finished it. ________________________________________ Final Royals 1, Athletics 3 Royals (4 H, 0 E) | Athletics (6 H, 0 E) Royals scoring: Payton solo HR (5th) Oakland turning point: Gelof 2-run single (5th) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Turnbull, S. L (8-4) 6.0 4 2 2 2 7 0 93 3.66 Zerpa, A. 2.0 2 1 1 0 2 0 36 3.64 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. We got the start—we didn't get the offense. Turnbull gave us six innings that should keep you in the driver's seat, but we produced four hits and stranded the wrong chances (Isbel in the 4th, Vinnie in the 9th). 2. That 5th inning is a clinic in how one inning flips a night. Three baserunners, two walks, and one 2-out swing—Coliseum baseball. We’ve got to be cleaner with the free passes when the park is begging you to play a 2–1 game. 3. Bullpen reshuffle is still the right move—even on a loss. Zerpa gave up the tack-on, but the larger point stands: we're in evaluation mode with the bridge, and the only way out is reps in real air. Long and Suárez are here to take innings; we'll see quickly if they can hold them. 4. International pipeline keeps moving. Jason McLeod's Venezuela note matters: CF Carlos del Rey (17) gets assigned to the International Complex—contact profile that could play, but the glove is a limitation, and the bat will have to carry. Long horizon, but we keep planting seeds. Figure 1 — International Scouting Discovery: Carlos del Rey (KC International Complex) Perspective: Profile snapshot of Carlos del Rey, a 17-year-old Venezuelan CF signed via scouting discovery and assigned to the KC International Complex. Early read: a left-handed bat with contact/BABIP projection and enough arm strength to fit multiple outfield corners, while the defensive polish and overall certainty remain a long-horizon development bet. A classic “plant the flag early” move—low cost today, potential payoff later if the bat carries and the glove catches up. Around the League Weekly hardware: Jasson Domínguez took AL Player of the Week with a loud line, while Ha-seong Kim grabbed NL honors after an absurd .667 week. Power rankings still like us—Royals #2 behind Tampa Bay—despite the turbulence. That's a reminder: our floor is still high, but the bullpen lane will decide our ceiling. Here are the current team power rankings for Major League Baseball: Teams (Total Points, Tendency): 1) Tampa Bay Rays (118.0, +) 2) Kansas City Royals (117.0, ++) 3) Minnesota Twins (114.5, ++) 4) Boston Red Sox (113.1, ++) 5) Atlanta Braves (111.6, -) 6) St. Louis Cardinals (108.5, -) 7) Arizona Diamondbacks (106.1, +) 8) Texas Rangers (102.3, --) 9) San Francisco Giants (99.6, ++) 10) Cincinnati Reds (99.1, -) Also: Rafael Devers went full video-game—three homers, 8 RBI in one night. That’s one of those “baseball is ridiculous” box scores you just tip your cap to. Minor Leagues KC (DSL) Royals Ventura - All week long, Ivan Sosa was the talk of the Dominican Rookie League... his name and face were everywhere. So it was no surprise to anyone when he was chosen the Dominican Rookie League's Player of the Week for his exceptional performance. Sosa put up a solid set of stats, compiling a .522 average (12-for-23) and contributing 2 home runs and 12 RBIs to claim the honor. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 75 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#105 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 76: Monty Sets the Table; Bats Finish the Meal
👑 Wednesday, June 25 • Game 2 👑 Seven strong innings and a late offensive burst power Kansas City to a win at the Coliseum. Kansas City Royals at Oakland Athletics | Oakland Coliseum Weather: Clear skies, 58° | Wind: Right to left, 11 mph | Attendance: 13,229 | First pitch: 6:40 PM PT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) Last night felt like we were still wearing the Dodgers blowout on our sleeves. The bats never really made Peterson or their bullpen uncomfortable, and that's not a great look for a club trying to keep its footing in late June. Tonight I wanted stability—a starter who could give us length, so I’m not white-knuckling the bridge by the 6th. I'll admit it: I'm uncertain about the bullpen right now. Maybe I'm overthinking it. Maybe it's just one of those stretches where you keep handing the ball to guys and praying the inning behaves. But at this level, I expect a quick adjustment. If we can't get the relievers into a better lane soon, September's going to feel like we're trying to hold water in our hands. Oakland Athletics Series Snapshot Game 2 in the Coliseum—heavy air, big gaps, and a scoreboard that doesn’t move unless you earn it. We needed to play clean, avoid free outs, and take advantage of any bullpen seams Oakland showed late. The kind of game where one crooked inning decides everything. Series Matchup Board — Game 2 • LHP Jordan Montgomery vs. RHP Merrill Kelly Exactly the kind of matchup I wanted after last night. Kelly can grind you into weak contact if you get impatient. Montgomery's job was to keep the ball down, let the defense work, and get us deep enough that the bullpen only has to finish, not survive. Montgomery delivered: 7.0 IP, 7 H, 1 R, 0 BB, 4 K on 106 pitches, and he gave us the runway to win it late. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Athletics (Game 2) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (Oakland draws first blood): Montgomery actually started fine—two quick outs—then Gelof singled and Brosseau doubled. Oakland pushed a run across on a no-throw play at the plate, and we were down 1–0 before we'd even settled into the park's rhythm. 2nd–3rd (Kelly in control; Monty settles): Kelly had the edges early, and we were quiet. Montgomery responded by putting up clean frames and using the double play as a pressure valve. It wasn't pretty baseball—just controlled. 4th (Tie game, finally): Garcia singled, stole second, and then Bobby Witt Jr. doubled to bring him home. That's Royals baseball—turn one base runner into a run by taking the extra 90 and driving a gap. 1–1. 5th–7th (Missed chances, but no panic): We had traffic here and there—Waters single + Massey walk in the 5th, Massey walk + Loftin single in the 7th—but couldn't land the big blow. The key, though: Montgomery kept the A's from answering. The game stayed on a wire. 8th (The inning that decided it): This is where we broke the park open. Vinnie singled, Witt walked, Payton walked—bases loaded, and Oakland's bullpen finally cracked. • Salvador Perez ripped a bases-clearing double to put us ahead and turn the night. • Then Drew Waters followed with a 2-run homer (407 ft) to slam the door shut. Five runs, one inning, and suddenly that 1–1 grinder became 6–1 Royals. That's what I mean by waiting for the seam and then ripping it open. 8th bottom (One swing back): Oakland nicked one on a Denzel Clarke solo homer off Will Klein, making it 6–2, but it never felt like the game flipped back into danger. 9th (Witt puts the crown on it): Isbel and Vinnie singled, then Bobby Witt Jr. launched a 3-run homer (379 ft). That turned “win” into “statement.” 9–2. ________________________________________ Final Royals 9, Athletics 2 Royals (10 H, 0 E) | Athletics (10 H, 0 E) Player of the Game: Bobby Witt Jr. — 2-for-4, HR, 2B, 4 RBI Turning point: Perez bases-clearing double (8th) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Montgomery, J. W (10-5) 7.0 7 1 1 0 4 0 106 4.68 Klein, W. 1.0 2 1 1 0 0 1 16 4.38 Suarez, A. 1.0 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 0.00 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. Montgomery gave us the gift I asked for: length. Seven innings, one run, zero walks—exactly the kind of start that calms a team down after an ugly stretch. 2. We played patient until the seam showed—then we detonated it. The 8th inning was grown-man baseball: take the walks, keep the line moving, then punish the pitch you can drive. Perez and Waters turned a tight game into a walk-off feeling with nine outs still to play. 3. Bullpen lane note: Klein giving up the solo shot is fine. What matters more is that the bullpen didn't have to cover chaotic innings tonight. That's how we rebuild confidence—one clean finish at a time. Around the League Trent Grisham put on a show at Globe Life—three homers in a Rangers win over the Mets, the kind of “instant offense” game that makes the league scoreboard feel like a pinball machine. Detroit beat Atlanta 9–6, stealing some thunder from Matt Olson's 300th career homer—a milestone night that still ends as a loss, which is baseball in a nutshell. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 76 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#106 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 77: Extra-Inning Heartbeat
👑 Thursday, June 26 • Game 3 👑 Eflin deals, the ninth slips away, then Kansas City punches back. Kansas City Royals at Oakland Athletics | Oakland Coliseum Weather: Clear skies, 63° | Wind: Left to right, 9 mph | Attendance: 14,122 | First pitch: 12:37 PM PT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) I liked the way we responded last night—loud win, decisive, the kind that reminds a club who it is after a few weird pockets this month. The bigger picture is staring me in the face now: we head to Texas next, then home for a seven-game homestand (Miami + Cleveland), and suddenly it’s July with the Draft and All-Star break right around the corner. That's the stretch where you either have bullpen lanes… or you've got excuses. I'm not planning to carry excuses. Today's ask was simple: play the tight game clean—Coliseum baseball. Take the extra 90 when it's there, don't donate outs, and don't let one inning turn into an avalanche. Oakland Athletics Series Snapshot Getaway-day rubber match at the Coliseum. Oakland's a club that lives in the seams: long counts, sneaky extra-base hits, and the bullpen waiting to shorten the game if you let it get to the 7th tied. The way to beat that is to score first, keep pressure on their defense, and avoid free passes that turn into two-out damage. Series Matchup Board — Game 3 • RHP Zach Eflin vs. RHP Mitch Spence For most of the afternoon, it played like a chess match with sharp edges. Eflin gave us an ace's backbone: 7.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 8 K on 109 pitches. Spence punched too—5.1 IP, 2 R, 9 K—and he kept us from stacking the kind of traffic that makes this park uncomfortable. Then extras arrived, and the game turned into a one-inning sprint with a guillotine hanging over every baserunner. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Athletics (Game 3) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (A warning about giving away outs): Garcia walked, stole second, and then got picked off. Waters and Witt punched out, and we walked back to the dugout with that old taste: we had the inning started and still came up empty. 2nd (We strike first with speed + gap power): Mark Payton tripled to open the inning, and we immediately went to the bench lane—Renfroe pinch-ran. Then Michael Massey doubled to bring him home. After that, Nick Pratto singled, Loftin lifted a sac fly (runner tagged and scored), and we were up 2–0. That's Royals baseball: pressure, contact, productive outs. 3rd–4th (Eflin in command, but we can’t add on): Eflin carved through the first time and kept the A’s quiet. We had a Schneider single in the 4th and didn't cash. Nothing dramatic—just that nagging feeling we were leaving the door unlocked. 5th (Two-out damage flips the scoreboard): This is where Oakland did the exact thing I didn't want: they found traffic, then punished a mistake. Donovan got hit, Langeliers singled (and Oakland took the extra base), and then Denzel Clarke doubled to score two. Suddenly it’s 2–2, and the whole game tightens. 6th–8th (Eflin steadies, offense stalls): Eflin kept it level and got us through seven. Offensively, we went quiet—strikeouts, fly balls, nothing that forced stress. This is where a GM starts thinking about “how many of these games are we willing to play on a razor?” 9th (We load it… and waste it): Waters walked, Renfroe walked, Perez struck out, and Schneider walked to load the bases—then Pratto grounded out. Three runners left on, and I could feel the dugout trying not to show frustration. 10th (Waters hits the game open): Ghost runner at second, and we needed one clean swing. We got it: after Garcia walked, Drew Waters crushed a 3-run homer to put us up 5–2. It was his only hit, but it was the whole game in one snap. Bottom 10 got chaotic: Topa started it, the A's scratched one, then we went to Jacob Lopez with traffic. A wild pitch brought in a run, and a sac fly made it 5–4, but Lopez landed the last out, and we got out of town with the win. ________________________________________ Final Royals 5, Athletics 4 (10 inn.) Royals (6 H, 0 E) | Athletics (4 H, 0 E) Player of the Game: Zach Eflin Big swing: Drew Waters 3-run HR (10th) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Eflin, Z. W (10-1) 7.0 3 2 2 2 8 0 109 1.69 Topa, J. 2.0 1 1 1 1 2 0 22 6.17 Lopez, J. SV (6) 1.0 0 1 1 0 1 0 11 3.06 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. Eflin gave us October-caliber innings. Seven frames, three hits, eight punchouts. That's the kind of start that travels—and it's the kind you build a contender around. 2. We let the 9th inning slip through our hands. Bases loaded, tie game, and we didn't cash. Good teams still win those games sometimes—but that's the “fine margin” stuff that turns into postseason heartbreak if you don't clean it up. 3. Waters delivered the hammer. That homer in the 10th is what I'll remember when we're sitting in a meeting room later talking about “who shows up in leverage.” That was a backbone swing. 4. Injuries are starting to nibble. We lost Mark Payton midstream (injured running the bases), and Michael Massey also went down running. We'll bench Payton and shuffle the outfield; Massey needs the MRI before we know how serious it is. This is where having the right trainer matters—and Pat Rose has kept us afloat so far. Knock on wood, we don’t tempt fate by talking about it. Around the League Cleveland's bullpen plans took another hit: Emmanuel Clase is now expected to miss significantly more time and is slated for shoulder surgery after his rehab stalled. That's a reminder that the season doesn't just test talent—it tests durability and depth, every day you wake up. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 77 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#107 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 78: A Rally Without the Finish
👑 Friday, June 27 • Game 1 👑 A late surge makes Globe Life sweat, but Kansas City falls 6–5. Kansas City Royals at Texas Rangers | Globe Life Field Weather: Partly Cloudy, 85° | Wind: Right to left, 12 mph | Attendance: 40,130 | First pitch: 7:05 PM CT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) The medical news finally leaned our way: Michael Massey's scan came back clean enough—just a bruised shin, expected two days. Credit where it's due: Pat Rose has been a real edge for us this year, not just with treatment, but with how fast we're getting honest timelines. So we ran the practical version of the lineup: Loftin takes second, Pratto stays in the DH lane while Massey rests, and we keep the outfield patched with Waters in left and Renfroe in right while Payton is unavailable. We've got taxi options in the wings, but I'm not pulling that ripcord just to soothe nerves—this is still June, and our bench has earned trust all season. And then the other side of the board: Texas. First place. Hot. A lineup that makes you pay for one bad inning. Tonight was about staying out of the “crooked number” zone and making them win it the hard way. Texas Rangers Series Snapshot Globe Life plays slightly hitter-friendly, and the Rangers have been acting like it. They came in leading the West and riding momentum—a four-game win streak in our prep notes, and by first pitch, the league page had them pushing it to five with the way they've been playing. Offensively, they're a top-tier batting average club, and their record against us this season has been a thorn—3–0 coming into tonight. Projected tone-setter on the mound: Cole Ragans vs. Nathan Eovaldi. In a series like this, Game 1 is the lie detector. Here are the projected pitching matchups, our pitchers listed first: LHP C. Ragans (5-4, 3.72 ERA) vs RHP N. Eovaldi (7-2, 3.00 ERA) RHP B. Singer (3-3, 4.46 ERA) vs RHP W. Buehler (6-4, 3.82 ERA) RHP S. Turnbull (8-4, 3.62 ERA) vs RHP L. Gilbert (5-4, 4.16 ERA) The top 5 players on their team are: 1. LF Wyatt Langford (Age: 23, Overall: 80, Potential: 5.0) 2. LF Evan Carter (22, 75, 5.0) 3. SP Jacob deGrom (37, 75, 4.5) 4. SP Walker Buehler (30, 60, 3.5) 5. SP Nathan Eovaldi (35, 60, 3.5) Series Matchup Board — Game 1 • LHP Cole Ragans vs. RHP Nathan Eovaldi For four innings, it looked like we could control the room. Ragans punched out four and didn't allow a hit… then the night pivoted hard: Ragans left injured after 3.1 scoreless, forcing Alec Marsh into the fire much earlier than planned. Eovaldi wasn't pristine, but he held his shape long enough for Texas to land one big inning. That's what veterans do: survive until their offense gives them air. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Rangers (Game 1) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (Early jab): Eovaldi tried to steal a strike early, and Bobby Witt Jr. jumped him—solo homer to put us up 1–0. That's the kind of swing that quiets a park and tells a first-place club we didn't travel to sightsee. 2nd (Traffic, no cash): We drew walks from Pratto and Loftin, but a double play washed the inning out. That's a “duck on the pond” we didn't cash, and in this ballpark, you feel it immediately. 3rd (Manufacture and momentum): Garcia doubled, Vinnie singled, and we forced the play at the plate—runner SAFE—to make it 2–0. That was our brand: line-drive pressure and taking the extra 90 when the throw gets brave. 4th (The gut-check): This is where the night turned. Ragans recorded the second out of the inning, then left injured while pitching, and suddenly, we're managing outs, not innings. Marsh took the baton and got us through it—score still 2–0, but the plan was already shredded. 5th (The crooked number): Texas finally landed the hammer. Brandon Belt, pinch-hitting, hit a 2-run homer to tie it. Two outs later, Jose Barrero hit another 2-run homer to make it 4–2. Two swings, four runs, and the whole game flipped in one inning—exactly what I didn't want to let them have. 6th (They tack on the hard way): A Lowe double, a wild pitch moving him up, then a sac fly—5–2. That's Texas playing clean baseball: take the gift, cash the run. 7th–8th (We stall, they add insurance): We couldn't build a real threat, and Texas clipped us again in the 8th on Evan Carter's RBI double—6–2. That one felt like the door closing. 9th (The rally that almost stole it): To our credit, we didn't roll over. Waters and Pratto singled, Isbel doubled to bring one in, then Loftin reached on an error that brought in two more. Suddenly, it was 6–5, and their closer had to sweat with the tying run standing right there. But Scott Barlow punched out Renfroe, Dingler, and Garcia to end it. We got to the edge—just couldn't step over. ________________________________________ Final Royals 5, Rangers 6 Royals (7 H, 0 E) | Rangers (7 H, 1 E) Royals scoring punch: Witt HR; Isbel RBI double; Loftin RBI (reached on error) in the 9th surge Royals Notable: Waters ended his streak of RBI games tonight with 7. Rangers turning point: Belt 2-run HR + Barrero 2-run HR in the 5th Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Ragans, C. 3.1 0 0 0 2 4 0 63 3.44 Marsh, A. L (1-1) 3.2 4 5 5 0 1 2 52 4.98 Suarez, A. 1.0 2 1 1 0 0 0 15 1.80 Front Office Note / Takeaways We can talk about the missed chances, the double plays, the ninth-inning “almost”—but the headline is the one that hurts: Cole Ragans left with an injury, and the box note confirmed it plainly. That changes everything for the next month and how aggressively I have to work the phones. From the manager's side, I'm proud of the fight in the ninth. From the GM side, I'm not sleeping until we've got a rotation plan. Alec Marsh is the clean internal pivot—he's done starter work for us before—and Luinder Avila is sitting in Omaha, throwing well enough to earn a real conversation. We'll decide quickly, because this schedule doesn't wait for sympathy. And one more truth: in this park, one crooked inning beats nine decent ones. We lived that lesson tonight. Around the League Keeping it brief tonight—because our internal news is loud enough: first-place Texas keeps stacking wins, and we leave Game 1 knowing the standings don't care how close the ninth inning got. The only thing that travels is tomorrow's response. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 78 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#108 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 79: A Lead That Didn't Last
👑 Saturday, June 28 • Game 2 👑 The margins bite: a few stranded runners, a couple of mistakes, and Texas takes it. Kansas City Royals at Texas Rangers | Globe Life Field Weather: Clear skies, 92° | Wind: In from CF, 13 mph | Attendance: 40,013 | First pitch: 3:05 PM CT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) We made the move that's been sitting on the edge of the whiteboard since last night: Cole Ragans to the IL, and we're calling up RHP Luinder Avila to fill the rotation lane. This isn't sentiment—this is necessity. Avila's earned his cup of coffee with what he's done in Omaha, and if we're going to find out whether his five-pitch mix can survive at this level, there's no better teacher than major-league lineups. Control's the question, but the groundball lean and three truly premium pitches give him a real shot. We've got him lined up to start against Miami on July 2. Figure 1 — Rotation Reinforcement: Luinder Avila Called Up (Post-Ragans IL Pivot) Perspective: Profile snapshot of RHP Luinder Avila, the organization's immediate rotation patch after the Ragans injury—power groundball profile with a starter's mix and enough velocity to survive mistakes if the command holds. The scouting read is clear: work-ethic engine, multiple usable pitches, and a real MLB lane—now it's about whether he can turn that into efficient outs when the lineup turns over the third time. But today wasn't about July. Today was about stopping Texas from building another win-streak brick and playing a cleaner nine innings than we did last night. This park rewards the club that makes fewer mistakes—and we gave away one too many. Texas Rangers Series Snapshot Texas came in hot and kept rolling—this win made it six straight for them. They're playing confident baseball: take the extra base, cash the one mistake you give them, and let their arms finish the job. We had chances to punch back, but we couldn't string the right at-bats together when the game was still on a wire. Series Matchup Board — Game 2 • RHP Brady Singer vs. RHP Walker Buehler A legitimate heavyweight feel on paper, but the difference today was damage concentration. Singer gave us 6.1 innings, but two swings (Jung in the 4th, Belt in the 6th) accounted for three runs, and Texas manufactured the fourth with pressure in the 7th. Buehler gave Texas 5.1 strong, and their bullpen stacked clean outs behind him. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Rangers (Game 2) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (Traffic early, no cash): We actually opened with two hits—Vinnie singled, Waters singled, and we had a real chance to steal the inning. Then Buehler slammed the door with strikeouts. A missed opportunity that set the tone for the afternoon. 3rd (We strike first): Garcia singled, Vinnie walked, and we finally turned traffic into a run—Waters' fielder’s choice plated Garcia. It wasn't pretty, but it was a lead. 1–0 Royals. 4th (The game flips on one swing): Singer walked Brandon Belt, then Josh Jung jumped a pitch and hit a 2-run homer. Just like that, the lead was gone. 2–1 Texas. 5th (A defensive crack we didn't need): We gave them a free baserunner on an error by Witt—and while Singer cleaned the inning up, those are the little leaks that add up against a club playing this sharp. 6th (We threaten, don’t finish—then they tack on): Top half: Perez singled, Pratto doubled, and we had the tying run sitting in scoring position. We couldn't bring him home. Bottom half: Belt made us pay with a solo homer to push it to 3–1. That sequence—miss a chance, then surrender one—felt like the hinge of the day. 7th (Texas manufactures the fourth): Adolis García singled, stole second, took third on a fly, then Barrero's groundout brought him home. 4–1. That's veteran baseball: take the extra 90, cash it with an out. 8th (We claw one back): Witt tripled, and Perez singled him home—two-out feel, needed life. 4–2, and suddenly the dugout had a pulse again. 9th (No runway): We got a late single from Garcia, but he was caught stealing, and the inning died right there. Texas closed the door before we could make it uncomfortable. ________________________________________ Final Royals 2, Rangers 4 Royals (10 H, 1 E) | Rangers (9 H, 0 E) Royals' bright spots: • Maikel Garcia: 3-for-5, kept the line moving all day • Salvador Perez: 2 hits, RBI • Nick Pratto: key double in the 6th (chance we couldn’t cash) Rangers difference-makers: • Josh Jung: 2-run HR (4th) • Brandon Belt: HR + walk, scored twice Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Singer, B. L (3-4) 6.1 7 3 3 2 4 2 95 4.83 Klein, W. 1.2 2 1 1 0 2 0 27 4.50 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. This one was about conversion rate. Ten hits should buy you more than two runs. We had the 1st inning, we had the 6th inning, and we left both on the table. Texas didn’t—they turned their biggest chances into damage. 2. Singer was close, but “close” isn't the standard in first-place parks. Two homers and one manufactured run—three sequences decided the game. If we’re going to keep stacking wins in July without Ragans, we need starts that don’t hand over the crooked inning. 3. Ragans-to-IL changes the calendar pressure. Avila's call-up is the next evaluation lane, and I'm treating it like a real audition—not a stopgap. We'll protect him where we can, but we also need answers, fast. 4. The little things still matter. An error, a caught stealing, a missed RBI chance—baseball's a game of inches, and today Texas collected more of them than we did. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 79 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#109 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 80: Texas Turns It into a Track Meet
👑 Sunday, June 29 • Game 3 👑 Early homers and gap shots bury Kansas City. Kansas City Royals at Texas Rangers | Globe Life Field Weather: Cloudy, 82° | Wind: Blowing out to CF, 7 mph | Attendance: 40,061 | First pitch: 1:35 PM CT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) Michael Massey was able to go, so we put him right back in the lineup for this finale. I wanted our “normal” shape—especially with the next turn coming fast: home for Miami (3) and Cleveland (4). Get on the plane tonight with a split in Texas, not another bruise. We're at the midseason hinge, and it's the same truth serum every year: the schedule tightens, bodies start barking, and the margin for a soft inning disappears. We've held our own against quality clubs we'll see again in the second half—but the pressure is real now. Teams are waiting for us to open a passing lane. The only way through is to keep playing like we mean October. Texas Rangers Series Snapshot This park has rewarded Texas all weekend—one mistake becomes two runs, and the crowd gets just loud enough to make every at-bat feel urgent. Coming in, we knew the Rangers were a first-place outfit playing with confidence and finishing innings. Today was about turning the tables early, not letting them start stacking crooked numbers again. Series Matchup Board — Game 3 • RHP Spencer Turnbull vs. RHP Logan Gilbert This one went the wrong direction immediately. Gilbert gave Texas the backbone start (6.0 IP, 3 ER, 8 K), while Turnbull never got to breathe after the first inning damage started and the second inning punch landed. Turnbull's line tells the story: 4.0 IP, 8 H, 7 R (6 ER), 2 BB, 5 K, 3 HR—and when a starter is wearing three homers by the 5th, the dugout knows it’s going to be a long afternoon. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Rangers (Game 3) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (Down early, again): Turnbull actually struck out Taveras to start the day… then Nathaniel Lowe hit a solo homer. One swing, one run, and we were behind before we'd even tested Gilbert. 1–0 Texas. 2nd (The first crooked inning): Jung singled, and Adolis García launched a 2-run homer to make it 3–0. That's the exact pattern Texas has lived on—traffic, then one loud swing. 3rd (The gap opens): Texas kept chaining line drives: Lowe reached, Langford doubled, then Evan Carter doubled in two. In a blink, it was 5–0, and you could feel our bench shifting from “win the series” to “stop the bleeding.” 4th–5th (More damage, no response): Langford doubled again in the 4th and scored—6–0. Then in the 5th, Corey Seager hit a solo homer to make it 7–0. We went to Paulino after Turnbull's night ended, but the game was already leaning hard. 6th (The knockout): The inning that erased any “maybe” left. Taveras and Lowe walked, and Evan Carter hit a 3-run homer off Paulino. 10–0. That was the moment the game stopped being competitive and became pure damage control. 7th (A pulse at last): We finally fought back with our brand: Waters infield single, stole second, Pratto doubled him home, Loftin singled, Renfroe sac fly, then Garcia doubled to score Loftin (and we got aggressive at the plate again—runner safe, no throw). Three runs, but too late. 10–3. 8th (One more chance dies at the plate): Perez doubled, Pratto singled—but we got cut down trying to score on the outfield throw. A small snapshot of the day: we finally got traffic, and Texas still found a way to win the moment. 9th (Quiet finish): No late miracle. We walked off knowing the margin was never ours. ________________________________________ Final Royals 3, Rangers 10 Royals (9 H, 1 E) | Rangers (11 H, 0 E) Rangers headline: Evan Carter — HR + 2B, 5 RBI Royals late push: 3-run 7th inning (Pratto RBI double, Renfroe sac fly, Garcia RBI double) Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Turnbull, S. L (8-5) 4.0 8 7 6 2 5 3 88 4.02 Paulino, A. 2.1 2 3 3 2 4 1 52 4.33 Zerpa, A. 2.2 1 0 0 0 3 0 28 3.47 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. We lost the series in the “crooked inning” category. Texas didn't just score—they inflicted damage. Three homers off our staff and doubles in the gaps. You can't play catch-up baseball every day in a first-place park. 2. Turnbull's line isn't just a bad start—it’s a rotation stress signal. With Ragans already off the board, we can't afford short starts that force the bullpen to carry real innings in hostile series. Zerpa cleaned up for 2.2 scoreless, but the damage was already done. 3. The 7th inning showed our identity still exists. Down ten, we still ran, took the extra base, and forced plays at the plate. That's a small thing in a big loss, but it's also the reminder: when we play with pace, we can manufacture runs—even against a good club. Around the League Below are the current Royals' player standings for AL All-Star Fan Voting (as of Sun. Jun. 29, 2025). The overall leader is Jackson Holliday (2,019,375 votes). SHORTSTOP 1. Gunnar Henderson (BAL): 1,920,995 2. Bobby Witt Jr. (KC): 1,621,882 3. Carlos Correa (MIN): 1,386,165 STARTING PITCHER 1. Tarik Skubal (DET): 1,166,996 2. Zach Eflin (KC): 1,085,132 3. Framber Valdez (HOU): 1,076,523 4. Blake Snell (BOS): 1,046,948 5. Gavin Williams (CLE): 970,950 ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 80 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#110 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June 2025 — Game 81: Eight Strong, Zero Support
👑 Monday, June 30 • Game 1 👑 Montgomery deals, but the bats go silent—Royals shut out by Miami at Kauffman. Miami Marlins at Kansas City Royals | Kaufmann Stadium Weather: Clear skies, 80° | Wind: Blowing in from LF, 11 mph | Attendance: 26,614 | First pitch: 7:10 PM CT ________________________________________ Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk) Back home after six road games to close the month. We didn't bring any wins back from Texas, but we did bring a series win out of Oakland—and at this point in the calendar, you take the split personality as a warning and a lesson. Our June road slate was a shade better than last month, but we still finished under .500 away from Kauffman, and the bullpen hasn't sniffed the top half of the league for long stretches. That's not a complaint—just a scoreboard truth. I'll generate the June Crown report for John later this week. He's going to want the dashboard view—where we've improved, where we've stalled, and where the “good on paper” decisions didn't cash in. And I'll remind him where we were at this time last year, because progress is real even when the nightly results punch you in the ribs. Miami Marlins Series Snapshot Three games at home to open a new chapter against Miami. Coming in, the Marlins were 37–40, sitting 2nd in the NL East (9 back), scoring plenty (.260 team AVG) and preventing runs even better than people give them credit for—especially out of the bullpen (top-tier relief numbers in our prep). Here are the projected pitching matchups, our pitchers listed first: LHP J. Montgomery (10-5, 4.90 ERA) vs RHP E. Perez (2-5, 4.20 ERA) RHP Z. Eflin (9-1, 1.68 ERA) vs RHP S. Alcantara (6-5, 5.36 ERA) RHP L. Avila (0-0, 0.00 ERA) vs LHP R. Weathers (5-6, 4.12 ERA) The top 5 players on their team are: 1. SP Eury Perez (Age: 22, Overall: 60, Potential: 4.0) 2. SP Sandy Alcantara (29, 60, 3.5) 3. 1B Jacob Berry (24, 55, 3.0) 4. CF Victor Mesa Jr. (23, 55, 3.0) 5. LF Javier Vaz (24, 55, 3.0) Series Matchup Board — Game 1 • LHP Jordan Montgomery vs. RHP Eury Pérez The box score reads like two different games stitched together. Montgomery gave us eight innings of “starter backbone” baseball: 8.0 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 8 K. The frustrating part? The two runs weren't loud—they were the kind of first-inning mess that comes from a couple of small cracks: a single, an RBI triple, and then a balk that scored the second run. Pérez, meanwhile, put on a clinic: 6.1 IP, 5 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 9 K—and our lineup never got him into that “traffic panic” state where an ace has to sweat. ________________________________________ Game Day Log — Royals vs. Marlins (Game 1) Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View) 1st (The inning that wrote the whole night): Miami didn't waste time. Nasim Núñez singled, and Jacob Berry roped an RBI triple to put them up 1–0. Then the part I hate as a manager—the balk. One extra run without a swing. 2–0 Marlins before our first at-bat could settle the game down. 2nd–3rd (Pérez starts stacking strikeouts): Our swings got defensive early. We put a couple of singles together in small pockets, but Pérez kept finishing counts. Dingler doubled in the 3rd—our best early punch—and we still couldn't cash it. 4th–6th (Monty holds; our bats don’t): Montgomery did his job—quiet innings, quick outs, no free passes. But the offense kept running into the same wall: empty at-bats, strikeouts in the wrong spots, and not enough pressure on the bases. Witt even tripled in the 6th, and we still came up empty. That's a gut-check inning you remember later. 7th–8th (Last windows close): We tried to spark something with small-ball looks—Loftin stole a base, Dingler walked in the 5th earlier—but Miami's relief chain was clean. They handed it from Pérez to Sánchez to Mayza without letting the game wobble. 9th (The last run and the last breath): Miami scratched an insurance run in the 9th off Jacob Lopez—two walks, then a wild pitch that scored Vaz. That made it 3–0, and it felt like the door locking. Bottom 9, we went quietly—Schneider pinch hit, but nothing lit. ________________________________________ Final Royals 0, Marlins 3 Royals (5 H, 0 E) | Marlins (4 H, 0 E) Marlins difference: Berry RBI triple + first-inning pressure Royals note: Witt triple, Dingler double—no runs Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline Pitcher Dec IP H R ER BB K HR PI ERA Montgomery, J. L (10-6) 8.0 4 2 2 0 8 0 104 4.58 Lopez, J. 1.0 0 1 1 2 0 0 22 3.19 Front Office Note / Takeaways 1. This one's on the first inning—and the lack of finish. Montgomery gave us eight innings of winning-caliber work, and we still got shut out. That's the kind of game that forces honesty in the mirror. 2. The balk run is unacceptable baseball. That's not “they earned it.” That's us handing over a run in a game that finished 3–0. You can't donate margin when you're facing a front-line arm like Pérez. 3. We're not playing enough “pressure baseball” at the plate right now. Five hits are fine if you're stacking them, taking walks, moving runners, turning singles into stress. Tonight we collected hits like souvenirs, not like ammunition. 4. Bullpen lane remains fragile. Lopez's inning didn't change the result, but the walks and wild pitch are reminders that clean ninth innings still aren’t automatic for us. That's a roster-building note, not a one-night gripe. Around the League Power Rankings snapshot: We're sitting #8 right now—still respected, but sliding enough to get my attention. Tampa Bay and Texas are up top, and Miami is climbing in the middle of the pack. Teams (Total Points, Tendency): 1) Tampa Bay Rays (120.4, o) 2) Texas Rangers (118.5, ++) 3) Atlanta Braves (114.5, +) 4) Baltimore Orioles (110.2, ++) 5) Cleveland Guardians (108.1, ++) 6) Arizona Diamondbacks (106.5, +) 7) St. Louis Cardinals (105.2, -) 8) Kansas City Royals (105.0, --) 9) Minnesota Twins (99.8, --) 10) Detroit Tigers (99.4, ++) Transaction wire: Tampa Bay acquired minor-league CF Hudson Haskin from Baltimore for a young package—one of those “not headline, but direction” deals clubs make when they like their process. Weekly awards: Colt Keith (DET) took AL Player of the Week; Rafael Devers grabbed NL honors after living on the highlight reels again. Minor Leagues KC Single A - Minor league tip of the cap: Blake Mitchell earned Carolina League Player of the Week after going full spark plug for Columbia. The 20-year-old catcher compiled a .647 average (11-for-17) with 2 home runs, 10 RBIs, and 5 runs scored. Currently, Mitchell is batting .260 with 14 home runs and 35 RBIs. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 81 (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#111 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June Crown Ledger: The Halfway Mark, Still in the Driver's Seat
👑 Tuesday, July 01 • Royal Pulse: June Report 👑 Kansas City Royals Front Office | Kauffman Stadium ________________________________________ Front Office (GM's) Desk June ended with a clean reminder that baseball doesn't care how you got here—only how you're playing right now. We played our 81st game at the end of the month (a true midpoint marker), and we walked off the field against Miami on the wrong side of a 3–0 shutout. No drama, no excuses—just the kind of quiet loss that forces an honest look in the mirror. Figure J1. Kansas City Team Dashboard — Record + Team Rankings (June-End Profile) Club dashboard consolidating June-end performance indicators: overall record (48–33), split performance (notably the home fortress vs. road strain), plus team batting and pitching/defense ranks. Included as the primary evidence panel for June's comparative analysis—offense remains top-tier, starters remain strong, defense ranks among the league’s best, and the bullpen ranking remains the clearest operational pressure point heading into July. The good news is the mirror still reflects a contender. We turn the page into July at 48–33 (.593), holding 1st place in the AL Central, with Minnesota pressing at 46–33 (1 GB). Cleveland is in range at 43–35 (3.5 GB), Detroit at 41–37 (5.5 GB)—so we're not playing with house money anymore. But we're still playing from the front, and that matters at the midpoint. June itself stabilized after the turbulence of May. We posted a winning month: 15–13 (.536). That's not fireworks, but it's a corrective step from May's 13–15 (.464) while confirming April's 20–5 (.800) wasn't a mirage. If April was the sprint and May was the stumble, June was the breath—steady enough to keep the division lead, honest enough to show what must be fixed. Midpoint reality check (what changed from earlier months) 1) The offense stayed productive—but the profile shifted from “league-best” to “top-tier.” We're still 1st in the AL in runs (413) and tied for 1st in hits (733), with 2nd in AVG (.263) and 3rd in OPS (.767). Compared to April's scorching pace, we've cooled from “unfair” to “reliably dangerous.” The big change is how we're doing it: we're not living off walks (BB rank: 11th), and we're still not a homer-dependent club (HR rank: 10th). This lineup is built to grind, not gamble. 2) The rotation remains our spine—still elite-tier. After leading the AL in starters' ERA earlier, we're now 2nd in the AL (3.66). That's still frontline performance over half a season. Our best nights are still “starter sets the tone, defense converts, offense pressures.” 3) The bullpen problem didn't go away—it got louder. May warned us. June confirmed it. Bullpen ERA: 5.60 (15th in the AL). That's the reason too many close games still feel like coin flips, and it's the reason our one-run record sits at 10–10. We've proven we can get to the late innings in position—now we have to finish. 4) Defense is not just good—it’s carrying competitive value. We're 1st in the AL in Defensive Efficiency (.717) and 2nd in Zone Rating (+12.1). That's a true separator as we cross into the second half. It also reinforces the roster identity: we're not a strikeout-heavy staff (team K rank: 15th), so our gloves have to be sharp—and they are. Record shape (how the 48–33 is built) • Home: 30–10 (.750) — Kauffman has been our fortress. • Road: 18–23 (.439) — this is the line we can’t ignore anymore. If we want October comfort, we need June’s steadiness to travel. • Extra innings: 3–1 — we’ve handled chaos reasonably well. • One-run games: 10–10 — pure “middle of the pack,” and that points right back to late innings execution. • Last 10: 4–6 — the month ended with some drag. Not a collapse, but enough to sharpen urgency. Figure J2. MLB Expanded Standings — July 1, 2025 (Midseason Context + Quality Markers) Expanded standings view at the midpoint checkpoint showing Kansas City still 1st in the AL Central at 48–33 (.593) with Minnesota 1 GB. The split columns (home/away, one-run, extra innings, last-10, run differential) provide the “how” behind the record—useful for explaining June's stabilization (15–13) while highlighting the continuing road drag and late-inning volatility. Team performance indicators (June-end rankings) Offense (AL ranks) • AVG .263 (2nd) | OBP .327 (4th) | SLG .440 (3rd) | OPS .767 (3rd) • wOBA .328 (3rd) | Team WAR 12.8 (3rd) • Runs 413 (1st) | Hits 733 (t-1st) | XBH 283 (2nd) • HR 92 (10th) | BB 238 (11th) | SB 72 (3rd) • Base Running: -2.0 (9th) — improved from May's uglier shape, but still value leaking. Pitching & Defense (AL ranks) • Team ERA 4.29 (7th) | Starters’ ERA 3.66 (2nd) | Bullpen ERA 5.60 (15th) • Runs allowed 348 (6th) | Hits allowed 630 (3rd) | Opp AVG .235 (3rd) • HR allowed 96 (t-8th) | BB allowed 255 (8th) | Strikeouts 652 (15th) • Defensive Efficiency .717 (1st) | Zone Rating +12.1 (2nd) Front office interpretation: At the midpoint, our identity is clear: pressure offense + elite defense + strong starters. That's a real contender profile. The obstacle is also clear: late-inning run prevention. We can keep white-knuckling it, or we can address it before the deadline turns into a scramble. July decision runway (draft + deadline) June also shifts our calendar priorities. The draft and the July 31 trade deadline are no longer theoretical—they're operational. • Draft/rookie pipeline: We need clean space in Rookie ball and a real plan for promotions where it's earned. The worst outcome is having young talent stagnate because we didn't prepare roster lanes. • Deadline posture: right now, we're not selling. We're also not obligated to buy recklessly. The correct posture is: contender with a defined need—late-inning stability, and (if we're honest) a road-game plan that travels. ________________________________________ July Snapshot July is a stress month: repeat opponents, travel, and series that can swing perception fast. Figure J3. July Schedule Grid — Upcoming Series & Travel Load (Post-June Planning View) Calendar snapshot used for the “Next Month” section: July opens with MIA and an immediate CLE set, followed by a measuring-stick series vs TB, then a road swing through COL/STL/BOS before closing with CWS and AZ. Included to frame workload management at the midpoint—protect starter routines, avoid bullpen overuse on the road, and treat divisional games as double-value. Schedule flow (high level) • July 1–2: vs MIA • July 3–6: vs CLE • July 8–10: vs TB • July 11–First Year Player Draft • July 11–13: @ COL • July 15–16: @ STL • July 18–20: @ BOS • July 22: AL vs NL showcase date • July 25–27: vs CWS • July 28–30: vs AZ What it means: • Cleveland at home is immediate division leverage. You don't have to sweep; you do have to avoid giving them oxygen. • Tampa is a measuring-stick series—top-of-the-league quality that punishes bullpen softness. • The road swing (@COL, @STL, @BOS) is exactly where our 18–23 road record gets tested. If we want the second half to feel stable, we need to play clean baseball away from Kauffman. July objectives (FO + staff) 1. Win the home series you're supposed to win. Keep Kauffman as a bank. 2. Reduce late-inning volatility. Fewer free passes, fewer middle-middle misses, cleaner leverage roles. 3. Road competence. Not dominance—professional wins and avoiding spirals. 4. Protect starter workload and rhythm. No July heroics that become August injuries. ________________________________________ Manager's Desk At the midpoint, the league knows our book. That's not a complaint—that's a compliment you earn. Opponents are mixing earlier, attacking our chase windows, and trying to turn our pressure offense into empty contact. We responded better in June than we did in May, and that's the key: we didn't flinch. But from the dugout, the theme is simple: we're playing too many games that feel like they need to be perfect. When the bullpen struggles, the lineup presses and the defense tightens—not because we're weak, but because everyone knows one inning can erase seven good ones. So my focus is “clean baseball that travels”: • smarter baserunning decisions (we're still negative overall), • better early-count execution to avoid late-game overuse, • and clearer bullpen lanes so guys aren't pitching with uncertainty. If we keep putting ourselves on the right side of the sixth inning, we'll keep winning. If we keep letting the seventh and eighth become a haunted house, we'll keep inviting trouble. ________________________________________ Around the League • Tampa Bay continues to set the AL pace at 51–28, and they're the kind of club that tests depth, not just stars. • The AL Central remains a real race. Minnesota is right on our heels, Cleveland is lurking, and the standings say it plainly: the second half will reward steadiness, not headlines. • In the NL, clubs like St. Louis are playing with strong run differential authority, and the West remains volatile—good teams in clusters, meaning wild-card math will stay tight. Figure J4. MLB Regular Season Standings — July 1, 2025 (Division Race Snapshot) Traditional standings view confirming Kansas City’s division lead entering July, with the Central tightening behind us. Included to anchor the June recap's headline: we reached the midpoint in first place, but the margin is now small enough that a single cold week can reshape the race. Why it matters to us: the league-wide environment suggests this isn't a season where you can coast into October. The margin will be earned. Banking wins early was valuable—now converting opportunities late is mandatory. ________________________________________ 👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑 Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 – June Recap (OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log) |
|
|
|
|
|
#112 |
|
Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 290
|
⚾ June Crown Ledger Addendum
👑 Tuesday, July 01 • Royals on the League Boards 👑 Kansas City Royals Front Office | Kauffman Stadium ________________________________________ Front Office (GM's) Desk — Why This Addendum Matters June was a stabilizing month in the standings (15–13) and a clarifying month in the evaluation room. At the midpoint, the separation between “good team” and “built to hold first place” often shows up in one place: league-wide visibility. Not team ranks—names on the boards. This addendum is the proof that even while our club carried a few stress points (late innings and road consistency), we still have Royals on panels that reflect: 1. Core talent translating against the full league, not just the AL Central. 2. Repeatable edges (speed pressure, extra-base impact, top-of-rotation dominance). 3. Areas we can't ignore—because the same boards that celebrate our strengths will expose what opponents will attack. In short, June didn't just keep us in first. It kept our best tools in the national spotlight. That matters going into July and the deadline runway. ________________________________________ League Leaderboard Highlights — Royals Players Who Made Lists Figure J-A1. MLB Batting Leaders (Royals Mentions) Royals appearances on league offensive boards: Witt Jr. (22 SB), Pasquantino (24 doubles), and Waters (6 triples) reinforce Kansas City’s midpoint identity—speed pressure plus extra-base impact without homer dependence. Offense: Speed & Impact in the Same Frame Bobby Witt Jr. (KC) — Stolen Bases Leaderboard Witt appears 3rd in MLB with 22 stolen bases. This is not cosmetic speed. It's an inning-shaping weapon—he forces faster deliveries, he changes pitch selection, and he creates scoring position without needing a hit. At the midpoint, that kind of pressure is currency. Front office takeaway: Bobby's value isn't just “steals.” It's leverage. We should keep optimizing green-light decisions around game state so his pressure doesn't get diluted by team baserunning leakage elsewhere. ________________________________________ Vinnie Pasquantino (KC) — Doubles Leaderboard Pasquantino shows up on the doubles panel with 24 doubles (top-five list). That's high-grade contact sustainability. Doubles are the kind of damage that survives good pitching, cold nights, and big ballparks—especially important as we head into a schedule with road tests and elite opponents. Front office takeaway: Vinnie is functioning as a stabilizer bat. When the league adjusts, and homers become harder to find, doubles keep an offense from going quiet. ________________________________________ Drew Waters (KC) — Triples Leaderboard Waters appears on the triples list with 6 triples, placing him in the top group shown. That reflects athletic pressure: turns in the gaps, aggressive reads, and the ability to convert contact into instant scoring position. Front office takeaway: Waters adds value that doesn't show up in home run totals—he creates chaos in the outfield and adds “one swing away” scoring without needing a second hit. ________________________________________ Pitching: We Still Have an Ace on Page One Zack Eflin (KC) — The “Frontline Starter” Cluster (Multiple Boards) Eflin continues to live on the pitching boards across categories that matter most to winning at the midpoint: • ERA: 1.68 (league leader) • Pitcher WAR: 3.5 (league leader) • WHIP: 0.82 (league leader) • Complete Games: 2 (tied among league leaders shown) • Shutouts: 2 (tied among league leaders shown) • ERA+: 273 (league leader) • RA9-WAR: 5.6 (league leader) • Quality Starts: 15 (league leader) • Wins: listed on the wins panel (appearing in the league group, with Montgomery/Flaherty at 10) Figure J-A2. MLB Pitching Leaders (Royals Mentions) Eflin remains the premier league-board presence for Kansas City, appearing across multiple dominance categories including ERA (1.68), WHIP (0.82), Pitcher WAR (3.5), QS (15), ERA+ (273), RA9-WAR (5.6), plus complete games/shutouts. This is the cleanest “ace behavior” profile in baseball at the snapshot point: elite run prevention, elite workload, elite efficiency. And it’s the kind of value that keeps a club in first even when the bullpen is a nightly tightrope. Front office takeaway: Eflin is carrying an outsized share of our stability. Protecting his rhythm and avoiding bullpen issues that force extended usage are second-half priorities. ________________________________________ Defense: No Royals on the Top-Line Fielding Panels The fielding leaders screenshot does not show a Royals name in the categories displayed (fielding %, total chances, errors, assists, putouts, innings played, range, framing runs, etc.). That's not a negative statement about our defense—our team defense metrics remain elite—but it does mean our defensive advantage is collective rather than tied to a single “league panel” headline. Front office takeaway: our defense remains a system strength (positioning, conversion, reliability). The lack of a board appearance here is informational, not alarming. ________________________________________ Streak Board Watch — Royals Showing Active Momentum The current streak board snapshot is less about runs scored and more about “who is consistently impacting the game state.” We've still got Royals names in streak categories that speak to repeatability. Figure J-A3. MLB Streak Leaders (Royals Mentions) Streak boards show continued Kansas City consistency at the midpoint: Eflin (10-game quality start streak; 23 scoreless innings), Witt Jr. (29-game on-base streak), and Waters/Pasquantino maintaining scoring streak presence—supporting June’s theme of stabilization despite late-inning stress. Scoring Streak / Pressure Presence Quality Start Streak Zack Eflin (KC) — Quality Start Streak: 10 Eflin appears 2nd on the quality start streak list with 10. That's a major stabilizer. It means the floor on his starts is high and predictable—critical when the bullpen remains the most volatile segment of the staff. Front office takeaway: when your ace is stacking QS streaks, you can plan series outcomes. The offense knows the game will be in range. The bullpen can be scheduled rather than improvised. ________________________________________ Scoreless Innings Streak Zack Eflin (KC) — Scoreless Innings: 23 Eflin is again the headliner on the scoreless innings board at 23. That's a dominance streak with two practical benefits: 1. it reduces bullpen exposure, 2. it prevents “chasing” games where the offense has to press early. Front office takeaway: this is not just performance—it's workload management value baked into results. ________________________________________ Scoring Streak Drew Waters (KC) — Scoring streak: 10 Waters appears on the scoring streak panel at 10, again emphasizing that he's contributing consistently on-base/advancement/run creation rather than living on sporadic power. Vinnie Pasquantino (KC) — Scoring streak: 9 Pasquantino appears with a 9-scoring streak. When your doubles leader is also scoring consistently, it suggests the lineup's connective tissue remains intact even as the league adjusts. Front office takeaway: these streaks reinforce that our offense still generates regular traffic and conversion opportunities—our bigger challenge remains closing games cleanly, not creating offense. ________________________________________ On-Base Streak Bobby Witt Jr. (KC) — On-base streak: 29 Witt appears on the on-base streak list with 29. That's a key midpoint indicator: even when the month is uneven, your best player is consistently giving you chances to win. Front office takeaway: Bobby is staying in the fight nightly. Keeping him healthy and protected in the lineup structure is a second-half priority. ________________________________________ Manager's Desk — How We Protect These Edges in June June ended with a shutout loss, which is a blunt reminder: good clubs don't live on vibes. They live on repeatable decisions. 1) Don't let the speed game get sloppy Bobby's on the steals board and the on-base board. That's the engine room. We keep him aggressive, but we tighten the situational rules around everybody else. No unnecessary outs that bleed innings—especially against playoff-caliber clubs. 2) Keep Vinnie in “gap-first” mode A doubles leader is a stabilizer. I don't want him hunting three-run homers with two outs and nobody on. I want him chaining quality contact so the lineup stays relentless. June's stability came from not going silent for long stretches. 3) Manage Eflin like a franchise asset When a guy is leading half the pitching panels, the temptation is to ride him like a rental. We're not doing that. We're managing for October viability. Let the plan be the plan—especially in weeks where the bullpen has been overtaxed. 4) Waters' streaks signal value—keep him active When Waters is scoring consistently and showing up in triples, he's doing the small things right: first step, reads, turns, and pressure. Keep him moving, keep him confident, and keep him from getting passive. ________________________________________ Front Office Notes — Action Items • Bullpen remains the obvious deadline target. This addendum doesn't need to restate the bullpen issue; it needs to underline it. Our ace is covering cracks. That's not a long-term plan. • Baserunning policy refinement. Bobby's speed is elite; the team's baserunning value is still negative overall. We need precision, so our biggest advantage isn't offset by avoidable outs. • Continue leveraging athletic pressure. Waters + Witt give us a speed-and-gap profile that travels. That's worth protecting as we hit a July road-heavy stretch. • Monitor fatigue. The midpoint is where soft tissue shows up. Keep proactive rest aligned with our July travel blocks. ________________________________________ 👑 Crown Check Addendum Summary (June) 👑 At the midpoint, the Royals still have true league-board talent carrying our identity: Witt's speed and on-base consistency, Vinnie's doubles-driven damage, Waters' athletic pressure, and—most importantly—Eflin anchoring the staff across nearly every frontline pitching category. The second-half path is clear: protect these edges, tighten the baserunning decision layer around them, and reinforce the late innings so our best nights stop needing to be perfect. |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
|
|