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  • Sizing Up The Competition: Kansas City Royals


    Nick Nelson

    I watched it all unfold, but I still have a hard time comprehending it. It feels weird -- almost oxymoronic -- to utter the phrase "American League Champion Kansas City Royals." This is a franchise that had been mired in a losing culture for nearly my entire life. Throughout most of the 2014 season, the Royals were very ordinary, lacking star power.

    Yet, there they were in October, rattling off victories and completing a pair of impressive sweeps on their way to the World Series. Now, the Royals enter the 2015 campaign as reigning league champs, seeking to prove that last year's success was no fluke. Can they do it?

    Image courtesy of Denny Medley, USA TODAY Sports

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    2014 Record: 89-73

    Runs Scored/Allowed: 651 / 624

    Key Additions: Edinson Volquez (SP), Kris Medlen (SP), Alex Rios (OF), Kendrys Morales (DH)

    Key Departures: James Shields (SP), Nori Aoki (OF), Billy Butler (DH)

    Why They'll Be Better

    The Royals have a fairly young roster, with a number of players still potentially on the rise. While it's hard to view any of their offseason personnel swaps as major talent upgrades, they have plenty of returning pieces that could take significant steps forward. Specifically, I'm thinking of Salvador Perez (24), who has the ability to be one of the top catchers in the game, and 23-year-old fireballer Yordano Ventura, who might be the de facto No. 1 with Shields gone.

    The Royals have also kept their tremendous bullpen mostly intact, and if that group can pick up where it left off, they'll help the club win a lot of games. Last year Kansas City went 65-4 when leading after six innings.

    Why They'll Be Worse

    Frankly, there are a lot of reasons to believe the Royals are headed for a drop-off, and perhaps a substantial one.

    The biggest thing is that they played way over their heads in 2014. Based on runs scored and allowed, they profiled more like a .500 team (their Pythagerean W/L record was 84-78). Their offense had no real firepower; only two regulars (Alex Gordon and Lorenzo Cain) finished with an OPS+ above 100, and the team ranked last in the majors in home runs.

    It's hard to imagine the Royals repeating -- much less building upon -- their success without becoming more of a run-scoring threat. Their offseason moves, which included replacing Billy Butler and Nori Aoki with Kendrys Morales and Alex Rios, were more lateral than forward. If someone like Eric Hosmer or Mike Moustakas finally had a breakout year, that could be a game-changer, but how long have we been waiting for that to happen?

    Removing Shields from the front of the rotation severely downgrades that unit, and the starters that GM Dayton Moore added in the departed ace's stead -- Volquez and Medlen -- are question marks at best. This looks to me like a fairly average starting corps that will struggle to consistently hand leads over to that powerful bullpen, especially if the lineup can't increase its output.

    What To Expect

    The Royals are perhaps the biggest regression candidate among all MLB clubs. That's not meant to take anything away from their charmed run last autumn -- it was nothing short of magical -- but those types of streaks are hard to repeat and I just don't see the infrastructure in place to sustain as a contender. Honestly, it wouldn't surprise me a bit to see Kansas City drop back to fourth or fifth place this year.

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    With their World Series run, the Royals should be sitting on a ton of money.  With Shields' market shrinking, is their a possibility that the Royals sign him for a one-year deal?

    That'd make them instant favorites in the Central by a pretty healthy margin, IMO.

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    Lifelong Twins fan, but now a Royals season ticket holder, here.  Just cannot underestimate the importance of defense and relief pitching, especially for the Royals.  Don't see any regression there.  Royals get Hochaver back in the pen and didn't lose anyone.  If Holland stumbles at closer, Davis is a very suitable replacement.  Will still have Dyson as late inning defensive outfield replacement and pinch runner.  Oh yea, don't forget their team speed and stolen base capabilities.  They may not hit a ton of homers, but they certainly will hit more than last year (I expect Moose and Hosmer and Rios and Salvy will all help there).  In short, offensively they will be better, defensively they will be the same, pen will be the same (maybe even better), team speed still outstanding.  Only question mark is starting pitching but the pen allows the starters to not have to be fantastic, only good.  And they will be good.  Ace Ventura, Danny Duffy (another year removed from TJ and a high-velocity lefty), Vargas, Guthrie, and now Volquez is a rotation I would match up against most other teams in the league (with a few exceptions - Indians, White Sox).  The Royals may not win the division but they should be in the 85-92 win range.  I'll take another shot at the wild card.  It was a wild, fun ride in 2014!

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    The Royals scored 27 more runs than they gave up last year.   If Volquez puts up his career average of a 4.44 ERA instead of the 3.21 Shields had last year his 227 IP....that +27 run differential goes to -4.

     

    And that is penciling in repeats for Holland 1.44, Herrera 1.41, and Davis 1.00.

    Edited by tobi0040
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