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Old 06-25-2026, 12:02 PM   #201
Biggp07
Major Leagues
 
Join Date: Sep 2024
Posts: 384
⚾ October 2025 — Game 159: Washington Buries the Margin

👑 Thursday, October 02 • Game 3👑

The Royals leave Washington with a 13–4 loss, and their Wild Card margin is stripped nearly bare.

Kansas City Royals at Washington Nationals | Nationals Park
Weather: Cloudy, 64 degrees | Wind: In from center at 8 mph | Attendance: 13,170 | First pitch: 1:05 PM ET
________________________________________

Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)

Last night's loss did not move us behind the Wild Card line, but it pushed us close enough to feel the edge under our feet.

Four games remained. Our magic number sat at three. We held roughly a one-game advantage over the clubs behind us, which meant there was still a path into October—perhaps not with the fanfare that accompanied most of the season, but at least as recognition of how far this club had climbed from the year before. The problem was that backing into a berth no longer felt like enough. If we were going to arrive in the postseason with any real confidence, these final four games needed to become a winning wave rather than another September-style stumble.

Bobby Witt Jr.' s-controlled return offered one clear reason for optimism. His first plate appearance back produced a home run, which said everything about the player and almost nothing about the condition of his groin. He remains the franchise star, the central piece of the next decade, and the player carrying the weight of a $245 million commitment. If that contract does not eventually include one or two World Series championships, then baseball will have played a cruel trick on all of us.

That long-term responsibility still governs today's plan. Bobby would not be asked to carry nine innings simply because the standings were tight. He remained available for selective work, a late plate appearance, and a few innings in the field when the risk could be controlled.

Alec Marsh had been one option for the start, but I chose Hunter Brown instead. Brown deserved a 16th start and one more sizable major-league sample before we make offseason decisions. He has shown enough stuff to belong in a respectable rotation, but his place in ours is not guaranteed. This afternoon offered another opportunity to strengthen the argument.

The organizational work continued despite the Wild Card stress. Jason McLeod's China assignment produced a new international-complex arm in Zhi-fu Ming, a 6-foot-3 left-hander with an imposing frame, solid stamina, and a four-pitch mix built around a slider, changeup, splitter, and cutter. The slider projects as his best offering, but below-average overall stuff means his control will have to develop if he is going to move beyond a likely bullpen path. For the front office, Ming is a long-range development bet—an intimidating frame and enough pitch variety to justify patience, provided his control improves. One secondary offering separates itself as a true out pitch.

Figure 1. Zhi-fu Ming International Complex Profile — Projectable Left-Hander with a Bullpen Path

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Perspective: Zhi-fu Ming's scouting profile introduces a 16-year-old left-hander from Hangzhou, China, assigned to the KC International Complex, but the present scouting view remains cautious: low certainty, modest stuff, developing control, and a future role that currently leans toward the bullpen rather than the rotation.

The coaching search has also moved from review to action. Chris Rayborn has already replaced Pimental as the ACL pitching coach. The next phase involves DSL Fortuna, where the hitting coach position needs a new voice, and pitching coach J. Veras may be promoted into the High-A opening. Those decisions belong to the coming offseason, but the calls and offers have already started.

That is the strange balance of this job in the final week. The manager is still trying to save one more game. The general manager is already trying to save next year.

Washington Nationals Series Snapshot

We entered the finale with the series tied one game apiece. Tuesday's opener had been the clean version: Spencer Turnbull worked six strong innings, Christian Arroyo hit two home runs, and a nine-run sixth turned the game into a 10–1 rout. Wednesday returned us to the harder September pattern. Brady Singer allowed three runs in the fourth, Cristopher Sánchez controlled the lineup, and Bobby's ninth-inning homer could not prevent a 5–3 loss.

Washington entered this final game at 62–96, but its record no longer mattered. The Nationals had already demonstrated that their young lineup could punish mistakes. CJ Abrams, Luis García Jr., James Wood, Brady House, Dylan Crews, and Jhostynxon García gave them enough athleticism and power to turn one loose inning into several.

The projected series board originally had Hunter Brown facing Cristopher Sánchez and Brady Singer opposite MacKenzie Gore. The order shifted, placing Brown against Gore in the finale.

On paper, this remained a game we needed to win. Washington's staff ranked near the bottom of the league, and Gore entered with a 5.18 ERA. But paper does not measure urgency, command, or what happens when a bullpen inherits a game already beginning to tilt.
________________________________________


Series Matchup Board — Game 3

• RHP Hunter Brown vs. LHP MacKenzie Gore


Brown's final start of the regular season did not strengthen the rotation case. He lasted three innings, allowing five hits, five earned runs, four walks, and striking out five on 70 pitches. The stuff still produced swings and misses—he struck out the side around Abrams' double in the first—but the command disappeared under pressure.

Washington scored four in the second on four hits and added another in the third after Brown walked three consecutive hitters. His game score was 28, the loss dropped him to 5–9, and his ERA climbed to 5.23.

Gore's line was unusual but effective enough. We collected eight hits and scored four runs in 5.2 innings, including home runs from Salvador Perez and Mark Payton, but Gore struck out eleven and did not issue a walk. Tyler Viza inherited two runners in the sixth, stranded both, and allowed only one hit over the final 3.1 innings to earn his first save.

Game Day Log — Royals vs. Nationals (Game 3)

Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View)


1st Inning
Mark Payton doubled with one out and moved to third on Michael Massey’s groundout. Salvy lifted a fly ball to center, but not deep enough to bring the run home. Another runner reached third and stayed there.
Brown opened with a mixed signal. Abrams doubled immediately, but Brown struck out Yohandy Morales, Luis García, and James Wood in succession. The breaking ball had finished, the fastball had life, and for one inning, the start looked ready to settle.

2nd Inning
Christian Arroyo led off with a single. Mann struck out, but Maikel Garcia doubled into the gap and Arroyo scored from first. Kyle Isbel followed with another double, scoring Garcia. Two runs, three hits, and an early 2–0 lead. Gore then threw a wild pitch that moved Isbel to third, but Lane Thomas struck out to leave him there.

Washington erased the advantage immediately. Brady House walked. Daylen Lile struck out, but Dylan Crews singled. Jhostynxon García followed with another hard single, scoring House. Silas Ardoin singled home Crews, and after Abrams grounded out, Morales lined a two-run single to left. Four runs crossed. Four hits landed. Brown escaped when Luis García flew out, but Washington had flipped the game to 4–2 before the lead had time to settle.

3rd Inning
Payton and Massey struck out, but Salvy turned on a Gore pitch and drove a solo home run 377 feet to left. His 21st homer cut the deficit to 4–3.
Brown struck out Wood to begin the bottom half, then lost the zone completely. House walked. Lile walked. Crews walked. The bases were loaded without a ball put in play. Jhostynxon García lifted a sacrifice fly to right, scoring House. Ardoin grounded out, but Washington had extended the lead to 5–3 without recording a hit in the inning. That was the end of Brown’s day.

4th Inning
We went quietly against Gore, with Mann striking out before Garcia and Isbel grounded out.

Anderson Paulino entered for Washington’s half, hoping to stabilize the game. Instead, the inning became the afternoon’s breaking point. Abrams doubled. Morales popped out, but Luis García reached on an infield single. James Wood then battled through a long plate appearance and drove a three-run homer to left. Brady House followed with a solo homer of his own.

Four runs on four hits. Two home runs. Paulino recorded only one out. Ryan Walker entered, walked Lile, then retired Crews and struck out Jhostynxon García. But the damage had pushed Washington ahead 9–3.

5th Inning
Payton gave the dugout one more brief spark, driving a 402-foot solo home run to right-center. It was his 19th of the season and made the score 9–4.

Walker could not keep it there. Ardoin walked and Abrams reached on an infield single. Morales popped out, but Luis García doubled both runners home. Washington led 11–4. James McArthur entered and retired Wood and House, but the game had already moved beyond a normal comeback lane.

6th Inning
Arroyo singled and stole second. Mann followed with another single, putting runners at the corners with one out. Garcia struck out, and Washington went to Tyler Viza. Isbel flew out. Two runners stranded. No counterpunch.

McArthur then gave up a single to Lile. Crews flew out, but Jhostynxon García hit a two-run homer to right. Ardoin singled before Abrams grounded into a double play. Nationals led 13–4.

Six innings had produced the full summary: whenever we put runners aboard, the inning stopped. Whenever Washington did, the scoreboard moved.

7th Inning
Viza retired Schneider, Thomas, and Payton in order.
McArthur walked Morales and allowed a single to Wood. Fernando Cruz entered with two aboard, got House to force the runner at second, and struck out Lile. Washington did not score, the first quiet inning from its offense since the first.

8th Inning
Massey walked, but Perez flew out, Arroyo struck out, and Mann struck out. The offense had gone completely still. Bobby entered at shortstop in the bottom half.
Cruz walked Crews, then struck out Jhostynxon García as Salvy threw Crews out trying to steal. Ardoin grounded out.

It was a clean defensive inning for Bobby and the final controlled exposure we wanted from him. By then, the score had removed any temptation to push further.

9th Inning
Bobby led off and grounded out to first. Isbel struck out. Schneider singled to center and tried to stretch it into a double. James Wood threw him out at second.

It was a fitting final play: one more attempt to manufacture something, one more unnecessary out on the bases, and one more game ending with the plan outrunning the execution.

________________________________________

Final

Royals 4, Nationals 13

Royals (9 H, 0 E) | Nationals (15 H, 0 E)

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Player of the Game: Jhostynxon García

Notable Royals: Payton went 2-for-4 with a double and his 19th home run. Salvy hit his 21st homer. Arroyo collected two hits and stole his third base, while Garcia and Isbel supplied the second-inning RBI doubles.

Notable Nationals: Washington's offense produced 15 hits and eight walks. Jhostynxon García drove in four with a single, sacrifice fly, and two-run homer. Wood hit a three-run shot, House followed with a solo homer, Luis García drove in two, and Morales added two more.

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The Nationals scored in five consecutive innings from the second through the sixth.

Winning Pitcher: MacKenzie Gore, 9–15
Losing Pitcher: Hunter Brown, 5–9
Save: Tyler Viza, 1


Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline
Pitcher             Dec           IP    H    R   ER   BB    K   HR    PI    ERA
H. Brown          L (5-9)        3.0    5    5    5    4    5    0    70   5.23
A. Paulino                       0.1    4    4    4    0    0    2    17   4.58
R. Walker                        1.0    2    2    2    2    1    0    34   3.04
J. McArthur                      2.0    4    2    2    1    1    1    41   3.38
F. Cruz                          1.2    0    0    0    1    2    0    20   5.27
________________________________________

Front Office Note / Takeaways

Today felt like the whole season compressed into one afternoon. We scored first, created early momentum, then surrendered it immediately. The offense produced enough moments to keep hope alive, but the pitching staff never gave those moments room to matter. Our Wild Card margin may no longer survive another day like this. The magic number was three entering the afternoon, but the loss leaves us dependent on results elsewhere and removes another game from the calendar.

• Brown's final audition created more questions than answers. Five strikeouts in three innings showed the raw stuff. Four walks, five runs, and 70 pitches showed why his rotation place remains uncertain. He may still belong in the depth plan, but he did not finish the season by locking down a guaranteed spot.

• The second inning changed the tone. Garcia and Isbel gave us a 2–0 lead. Brown then allowed four runs before returning the lineup to the field. In a must-have road game, the shutdown inning never arrived.

• The walks were as damaging as the hits. Brown walked the bases loaded in the third. Walker and McArthur added more free traffic later. Washington finished with eight walks, and a struggling club was given too many chances to hit with runners already aboard.

• Paulino's outing was a setback. Four hits, four earned runs, and two home runs while recording only one out. His September work had earned a longer look, but this appearance showed how fragile a bullpen evaluation can become against major-league power.

• The bullpen never stabilized the game until it was over. Walker allowed two runs, McArthur surrendered two more and a homer, and only Cruz delivered scoreless work. The staff gave up eight runs after Brown departed.

• Payton continued to finish strongly. A double and his 19th homer gave him six total bases. He has provided more consistent late-season production than many players who entered the year with firmer roster standing.

• Salvy reached 21 home runs. The third-inning shot briefly pulled us within one. Like too many of the club's recent homers, it came with the bases empty and could not change the larger game.

• Arroyo's late-season case remains intact. Two more hits and a stolen base. The development report and the game results continue to point in the same direction: he deserves a serious role in the 2026 infield discussion.

• The baserunning file added another mistake. Schneider was thrown out trying to stretch a ninth-inning single in a nine-run game. The result was already decided, but the habit remains part of the evaluation.


Around the League

San Diego secured a Wild Card berth at 85–73. The Padres missed their goal of winning the National League West, but Jackson Merrill made the club's mindset clear: once the division path closed, the entire focus shifted toward claiming a postseason place. They will now pursue the first World Series championship in franchise history.

Discipline followed the Angels' confrontation with the White Sox. Zach Neto and James Kaprielian each received five-game suspensions for their roles in the fight. Neto is batting .279 with 25 home runs, 91 RBIs, and 108 runs, while Kaprielian has worked 89.1 innings with a 5.04 ERA.

Detroit's Jackson Jobe delivered the kind of October-preparation performance contenders need, shutting out Tampa Bay on three hits in a 7–0 win. He walked nobody and struck out nine, improving to 8–11 with 177 strikeouts across 184 innings.

That result sharpened the contrast around us. Detroit is receiving dominant starts as it prepares for October. We just allowed thirteen runs to a 63-win Washington club while trying to hold onto the final edge of its season.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 159

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(OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log)
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Old 06-25-2026, 01:05 PM   #202
Biggp07
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⚾ October 2025 — Game 160: Mann’s Early Thunder Holds Through Atlanta

👑 Friday, October 03 • Game 1👑

Kansas City survives Atlanta's power push for a critical win.

Kansas City Royals at Atlanta Braves | Truist Park
Weather: Cloudy, 72 degrees | Wind: Right to left at 9 mph | Attendance: 40,780 | First pitch: 7:20 PM ET
________________________________________

Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)

We arrived in Atlanta after failing to take the Washington series, and there was no point dressing up what that meant.

The 13–4 loss in the finale looked like the season catching fire again. We had spent most of the year searching for consistency and found it across much of the organization—in the rotation for long stretches, in the defense, in the player-development work, and in a lineup that showed more depth than expected. The bullpen remained the exception.

That matters because relief pitching is not a side department. It is the hinge between a quality start and a win, between a comeback and a finished game, between a strong regular season and a short October. When a resilient club cannot trust the bridge from the starter to the final out, it operates with only part of its strength available. That weakness had surfaced too many times, and there were not many new buttons left to push.

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What I should have been doing was arranging the rotation and lineup for a Wild Card series. Instead, the berth remained as uncertain as next month's weather. Baltimore was moving in the right direction, while we had begun another slide, and only one game separated us. At that moment, the odds felt as though they favored the club playing better baseball, not necessarily the club that had occupied the position longer.

Bobby Witt Jr. remained out of the starting lineup as a precaution. He had already proved his bat was ready enough to help, homering in his first plate appearance after returning, but the groin and the franchise's long-term health still came before one desperate lineup card. Atlanta had already secured its postseason place, and I wanted to see how aggressively they intended to play this final series before exposing Bobby to a full night. Our middle-infield alignment of Maikel Garcia and Michael Massey had been steady, with Davis Schneider handling third. That allowed Bobby to remain the foundation we could add to when needed, rather than a piece we had to force into every inning.

Luinder Avila received his 16th start. Hunter Brown had received the same opportunity one night earlier and left us with more questions than answers. Avila's season had been steadier. I hoped this final start would reinforce what the larger sample had already suggested: he belongs in the 2026 rotation discussion.

Atlanta Braves Series Snapshot

We began the final three-game series of the regular season at Truist Park, a 41,149-seat stadium that slightly favors hitters. Atlanta entered at 90–69, leading the National League East with a .566 winning percentage. The Braves had scored 832 runs, third in the National League, while their .261 team average also ranked third. Their lineup was built to punish mistakes and apply pressure from the first inning through the ninth.

The pitching profile offered more opportunity. Atlanta had allowed 775 runs, ranking tenth in the league. Its starters carried a 4.50 ERA, sixth in the NL, while the bullpen's 4.92 ERA ranked 13th.

The projected series board originally read:

RHP Alec Marsh vs. RHP Spencer Schwellenbach
LHP Jordan Montgomery vs. RHP Reynaldo López
RHP Spencer Turnbull vs. RHP AJ Smith-Shawver

The rotation plan changed, placing Avila into the opener. Atlanta's personnel board still contained some of the game's most dangerous names: Ronald Acuña Jr., Michael Harris II, Spencer Strider, Sean Murphy, and Max Fried. Matt Olson and Rafael Devers made the lineup even deeper than the top-five list suggested. Atlanta had already clinched and could afford to begin arranging its October staff. We could not afford anything except a win.
________________________________________

Series Matchup Board — Game 1

• RHP Luinder Avila vs. RHP Spencer Schwellenbach


Schwellenbach lasted only one inning and ten pitches before leaving injured. That forced Atlanta into an immediate bullpen game, beginning with Bryan Hoeing in the second. Kansas City attacked before the Braves could establish their bridge.

Avila worked five innings, allowing three hits, two earned runs, two walks, and striking out seven on 80 pitches. The two hits that hurt were solo home runs from Acuña and Olson, but Avila prevented Atlanta from clustering traffic around them. He left with a 5–2 lead, earned Player of the Game honors, and improved to 6–8 with a 3.86 ERA.

The middle-relief test nearly turned the game. Noah Cameron allowed consecutive solo homers to Michael Harris II and Olson in the sixth while recording only one out. Will Klein then entered and supplied the first stable bridge, retiring all five hitters he faced. Jacob Lopez handled the eighth, and John Schreiber closed the ninth for his third save.

The bullpen bent, but for once, it did not break.


Game Day Log — Royals vs. Braves (Game 1)

Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View)


1st Inning
Schwellenbach worked a clean opening inning, retiring Garcia and Massey before striking out Austin Meadows. He then left the game with an injury, forcing Atlanta to begin piecing together eight more innings from the bullpen.
Avila's first inning required more work. Jarred Kelenic walked, and Michael Harris II singled with two outs. Avila responded by striking out Rafael Devers and Acuña before getting Olson to pop out. Two stranded, no damage. That escape gave us room to strike first.

2nd Inning
Bryan Hoeing replaced Schwellenbach. Salvy grounded out, but Payton walked, and Arroyo singled. Schneider followed with a hard ground-ball single that scored Payton and moved Arroyo to third. Devin Mann then stepped in and turned the entire inning. He drove a three-run homer 349 feet to left, his third of the season, pushing the Royals ahead 4–0. Atlanta went to Tanner Banks, who struck out Isbel and Garcia, but the early damage was complete.
Avila gave us the shutdown inning we have so often asked for. He struck out Murphy, worked around a walk to Yunior Severino, and struck out Luis Vázquez to preserve the four-run lead.

3rd Inning
Massey opened the inning by driving a solo homer 388 feet to right. His 34th of the year made it 5–0. Payton later singled, but Arroyo struck out to end the inning.
Atlanta answered through its best player. Avila retired Kelenic and Devers, but Acuña drove a 424-foot solo homer to center. Harris grounded out, and the lead remained 5–1.

4th Inning
Schneider walked against Banks, but Atlanta brought in Mark Leiter Jr., who struck out Mann and Isbel before Garcia popped out.
Olson opened the bottom half with a 420-foot solo homer. Avila did not let it grow. He struck out Murphy and Severino before getting Orlando Arcia on a grounder. Royals led 5–2.

5th Inning
Leiter retired Massey, Meadows, and Perez in order.
Avila responded with his cleanest inning, retiring Vázquez, striking out Kelenic, and getting Devers to fly out. His final inning reinforced the broader takeaway: even against an elite lineup, he could distinguish a mistake from a rally. He left after five with a three-run lead.

6th Inning
Kansas City went quietly against Leiter and Colin Poche.
Noah Cameron replaced Avila and struck out Acuña to open the bottom half. Then Atlanta's power arrived in consecutive swings. Harris homered to left, and Olson followed with his second home run of the game. A 5–2 lead had become 5–4.
Will Klein entered with the inning beginning to tilt. He struck out Murphy and Severino, both looking, and stopped the rally exactly where it stood. That was the game's first major bullpen checkpoint, and Klein passed it.

7th Inning
Poche retired Mann, Isbel, and Garcia. The offense had gone quiet since Massey's third-inning homer.
Klein returned and gave us a clean seventh. He retired Arcia, pinch-hitter Michael Conforto, and Kelenic on three ground balls. Five hitters faced, five outs recorded, and Atlanta's momentum stalled.

8th Inning
Massey singled sharply to begin the inning, and Meadows worked a walk. Atlanta went to Joe Jiménez.
Salvy lined a single to left, scoring Massey and giving us a needed insurance run. Meadows advanced to second, but Payton flew out, Arroyo struck out, and Schneider struck out. We had added one, but left two more aboard. Royals led 6–4.
Jacob Lopez took the eighth and immediately faced the dangerous core. He struck out Devers, walked Acuña, and then Salvy allowed a passed ball that moved the runner to second. Harris grounded out, moving Acuña to third. Lopez then struck out Olson.

That was another leverage inning we had failed to finish too many times during September. Tonight, the left-hander completed it.

9th Inning
Jiménez struck out Mann and pinch-hitter Drew Waters before Garcia lined out. No additional cushion.
John Schreiber entered with the two-run lead. Murphy singled sharply to right, bringing the tying run to the plate. Schreiber struck out Severino. Jonathan Aranda then pinch-hit for Arcia and grounded into a 6-4-3 double play.

Ballgame.

________________________________________

Final

Royals 6, Braves 4

Royals (7 H, 0 E) | Braves (6 H, 0 E)

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Player of the Game: Luinder Avila

Notable Royals: Mann's three-run homer supplied the largest swing of the night. Massey went 2-for-4 with his 34th home run and two runs scored. Schneider drove in the first run, while Salvy added the eighth-inning insurance single.

Notable Braves: Atlanta scored all four runs on solo homers. Acuña hit his 56th, Harris his 34th, and Olson hit his 48th and 49th. The Braves produced six hits and left four aboard.

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Kansas City struck out 12 times but limited itself to four runners left on base and converted its early traffic into the decisive four-run second.

Winning Pitcher: Luinder Avila, 6–8
Losing Pitcher: Bryan Hoeing, 8–10
Save: John Schreiber, 3
Hold: Noah Cameron, 1; Will Klein, 1; Jacob Lopez, 2


Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline
Pitcher             Dec          IP    H    R   ER   BB    K   HR    PI    ERA
L. Avila          W (6-8)       5.0    3    2    2    2    7    2    80   3.86
N. Cameron        H (1)         0.1    2    2    2    0    1    2    10   4.15
W. Klein          H (1)         1.2    0    0    0    0    2    0    30   3.65
J. Lopez          H (2)         1.0    0    0    0    1    2    0    21   2.60
J. Schreiber      SV (3)        1.0    1    0    0    0    1    0     8   2.93
________________________________________

Front Office Note / Takeaways

This was the kind of win we expected more often. Early offense, a competitive start, a bullpen that recovered after a bad inning, an insurance run, and a clean finish. Nothing complicated—just nine innings in which each part of the roster carried its share.

So, our Wild Card fight remains alive. Baltimore's momentum is still real, and one game may separate us. Tonight, did not secure anything, but it prevented the Washington series from becoming the season's final collapse. Bobby received a recovery day, the infield played cleanly without him, and the club won. That allows us to keep balancing the immediate chase against the need to protect the franchise player.

• Mann delivered the swing his roster case needed. The three-run homer turned an early opportunity into a 4–0 lead. His season numbers remain modest, but this was a high-value hit in the most important series of the year.

• Massey reached 34 home runs. His third-inning blast restored the four-run margin after Atlanta's pitching change and continued a breakout power season that now stands among the central stories of the 2025 offense.

• Avila finished his rotation audition with substance. Five innings, seven strikeouts, and two runs against Atlanta's postseason lineup. His mistakes left the park, but he did not compound them with walks or extended rallies.

• Cameron's sixth nearly reopened the bullpen wound. Two consecutive home runs cut the lead to one. Against the backdrop of the Washington collapse, the inning carried the feel of another game beginning to slip.

• Klein supplied the bridge we desperately needed. Five batters retired, two strikeouts, and no baserunners over 1.2 innings. His recent development report was discouraging, but this performance was a reminder that the arm can still solve major-league hitters when the command holds.

• Lopez handled the leverage core. Devers, Acuña, Harris, and Olson represented the most difficult section of Atlanta's order. Lopez allowed a walk but struck out Devers and Olson to preserve the two-run lead.

• Schreiber closed without drama after the leadoff single. A strikeout and double play ended the night. For a bullpen that has carried most of the season's criticism, this was a complete late-inning finish.


Around the League

Atlanta reliever Will Smith confirmed that his season is over after suffering a torn rotator cuff on September 30. The 36-year-old made 49 appearances this year, recording one save with a 4–0 record and a 4.50 ERA across 72 innings.

His absence removes a veteran option from Atlanta's postseason bullpen, although the Braves' deeper concern tonight may be Schwellenbach, who left after only one inning and ten pitches. With October already secured, Atlanta now has another starter-health question to resolve before setting its playoff rotation.

Kansas City does not yet have the luxury of arranging a postseason staff. But after tonight, we still have a reason to keep trying.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 160

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Old 06-25-2026, 02:30 PM   #203
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⚾ October 2025 — Game 161: Dingler's Blast Pushes the Crown Across the Line

👑 Saturday, October 04 • Game 2👑

Kansas City over the Wild Card threshold with tonight's victory.

Kansas City Royals at Atlanta Braves | Truist Park
Weather: Cloudy, 70 degrees | Wind: Out to left at 8 mph | Attendance: 40,922 | First pitch: 7:20 PM ET
________________________________________

Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)

We reached the morning with two games remaining and the entire season reduced to one clean objective:

Win tonight, and we move across the threshold. We were playing for the season.

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The Wild Card race had narrowed until Baltimore, and we were effectively tied to the same magic number. One more victory would secure our place in October and allow the regular-season finale to become preparation rather than desperation. Atlanta had clinched the National League East weeks ago and already owned its postseason bye, but there was no expectation that the Braves would step aside. Their lineup remained dangerous, their park remained full, and their club had its own reasons to stay sharp.

Friday's win had been satisfying because it contained several elements we had been missing. Luinder Avila held Atlanta to two runs over five innings, Devin Mann and Michael Massey supplied early power, and the back end of the bullpen protected a narrow lead. Yet the sixth inning still showed the recurring danger. Noah Cameron faced three batters, surrendered two home runs in ten pitches, and turned a comfortable game into another late-inning test. Will Klein, Jacob Lopez, and John Schreiber closed that leak before the whole dam gave way. Their work kept us alive long enough to arrive tonight with control of our own path.

Bobby Witt Jr. returned to the starting lineup as the designated hitter. His controlled appearances in Washington had gone well, and the extra recovery day on Friday gave us enough confidence to increase the workload without asking him to defend for nine innings. Bobby would hit second, protected by Michael Massey behind him, while Maikel Garcia continued at shortstop. This was the balance we had been working toward: use the franchise player where his bat could change the game, but avoid turning a groin recovery into a reckless all-or-nothing gamble.

There was also another organizational decision made under major-league pressure. Simon Ferrer accepted our offer to become a pitching coach at DSL Fortuna.

Figure 1. Simon Ferrer Pitching Coach Profile — Elite Teaching Hire for the International Pipeline

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Perspective: Simon Ferrer's staff profile shows why the organization targeted him to lead pitching development at DSL Fortuna.

The 45-year-old brings excellent developmental ability, an outstanding influence on mechanics, good work with aging players (although not needed at this level, he's in our system and may become valuable in future years), and a legendary reputation for pitching instruction—an especially valuable combination for young arms arriving from the international complex. He adds another development-focused coach to the international program and continues the coaching turnover identified during the midseason review. His broader defensive and hitting instruction is limited, but that is not the assignment. For the front office, Ferrer is a specialized development hire intended to improve pitch quality, mechanics, and long-term progression at the system's lowest level. Chris Rayborn is in place at the ACL level; Ferrer now joins the pipeline in the Dominican complex. The organization continues building even while the major-league club stands one win from October.

Atlanta Braves Series Snapshot

We entered Game 2 having taken the opener 6–4. The first game followed the shape we had wanted all season: four runs in the second, another in the third, a competitive five-inning start, and enough bullpen recovery to withstand Atlanta's middle-order power. The victory improved us to 84–76 and left the Wild Card berth within one win.

Atlanta remained a difficult opponent even after securing its division. The Braves had entered the series with 90 wins, one of the National League's strongest offenses, and a lineup featuring Michael Harris II, Ronald Acuña Jr., Matt Olson, Sean Murphy, Rafael Devers, and Ozzie Albies.

Their pitching staff presented more opportunities than the lineup. The rotation had been solid rather than dominant, while the bullpen carried one of the weaker ERAs among postseason clubs. Spencer Schwellenbach's injury after only one inning on Friday added another question to Atlanta's October preparation.

The original series board had Jordan Montgomery facing Reynaldo López in Game 2. That matchup held. For us, Montgomery was the right pitcher for the assignment: a veteran left-hander, a full-season rotation anchor, and the arm most capable of giving us length in a game the bullpen could not be allowed to decide too early.
________________________________________

Series Matchup Board — Game 2

• LHP Jordan Montgomery vs. RHP Reynaldo López


Montgomery gave us 7.1 innings, allowing nine hits but only two earned runs. He issued no walks, struck out four, and threw 97 pitches. Rafael Devers' fourth-inning home run was Atlanta's only scoring swing through seven innings.

The line was not built on overwhelming stuff. It was built on sequencing, ground balls, and refusing to let Atlanta stack its hits. Montgomery repeatedly separated traffic from damage, and the defense helped him with two double plays and two outfield assists at home plate. The win moved him to 16–8 and lowered his ERA to 3.91.

López kept the game close through four innings, allowing Austin Meadows' solo homer as the only early run. The fifth changed his night. He walked Dillon Dingler and Garcia, then allowed consecutive run-scoring hits to Bobby, Massey, and Payton. His final line was 4.2 innings, five hits, five earned runs, three walks, and five strikeouts. Bryan Hoeing inherited the inning, then allowed Dingler's three-run homer in the sixth.

Game Day Log — Royals vs. Braves (Game 2)

Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View)


1st Inning
Garcia opened with a double to center, and Bobby was hit by a pitch. We had two aboard before Atlanta recorded an out. Massey grounded into a double play, moving Garcia to third, and Payton struck out. A promising inning ended without a run.

Montgomery immediately found traffic of his own. Harris and Acuña singled around an Albies double-play ball, but Olson grounded out to third. Both teams produced early baserunners. Neither scored.

2nd Inning
Austin Meadows changed the scoreboard with one swing, driving López’s first pitch 400 feet to right for his third home run. Schneider struck out, Isbel flew out, and Mann lined out, but the Royals had the first run.

Atlanta answered with three singles. Devers and Arcia reached before Kelenic singled to left. Devers tried to score, and Payton threw him out at the plate. Montgomery struck out Luis Vázquez to strand two more. The first of Payton’s two outfield assists preserved the 1–0 lead.

3rd Inning
Dingler and Garcia made two quick outs before Bobby drew a walk. Massey lined out to center.

Harris singled in the bottom half and moved to second on Albies’ sacrifice bunt. Montgomery retired Acuña and Olson on fly balls. Another runner reached scoring position. Another zero stayed on the board.

4th Inning
Kansas City went in order.

Atlanta finally broke through when Devers drove a solo home run 387 feet to right-center. Montgomery retired the next two hitters, but the game was tied 1–1. The night had settled into the kind of one-run contest that has tested us all year.

5th Inning
Dingler worked a two-out walk, and Garcia followed with another. Bobby then singled through the left side, scoring Dingler and restoring the lead. Massey followed with a double, bringing home Garcia and Bobby. Payton doubled to right, scoring Massey. Four runs crossed with two outs. Atlanta replaced López with Hoeing, who balked Payton to third before striking out Meadows. We led 5–1.

Montgomery answered with a clean shutdown inning, retiring Vázquez, Harris, and Albies on three ground balls. That response may have been as important as the rally itself. After scoring four, we gave Atlanta no immediate opening to answer.

6th Inning
Schneider doubled sharply to begin the inning. Atlanta intentionally walked Isbel, choosing to face Mann. Mann flew out, bringing Dingler to the plate. Dingler worked the count, fouled off two pitches, and then drove a three-run homer 408 feet to right-center. His eighth homer of the season turned a four-run lead into seven. The swing gave us an 8–1 advantage and changed the atmosphere from tense to expectant.

Montgomery retired Acuña and struck out Olson before Murphy doubled. Devers struck out to strand him. Six innings remained complete, and the Wild Card door had opened wide enough to see through.

7th Inning
We went down quietly against Hoeing.

Montgomery retired Arcia, struck out Kelenic, and got Vázquez to fly out. Seven innings, one run. The veteran had given us precisely the start the situation demanded.

8th Inning
Atlanta’s bullpen issued another walk to Isbel, but we did not add on.

Montgomery returned with a seven-run lead and allowed a leadoff double to Harris. Albies moved him to third with a fly ball, and I went to Huascar Brazoban. Acuña grounded home Harris. Olson doubled, and Murphy followed with an RBI single. Meadows’ throwing error allowed Olson to score and Murphy to advance. The lead had been reduced to 8–3. Devers singled, and once again Atlanta tested Payton’s arm. Murphy tried to score from third, and Payton threw him out at the plate. Two outfield assists in one night. Two Atlanta runners erased at home. The inning still cost us two runs, but Payton’s throw stopped it from becoming another late collapse.

9th Inning
Bobby and Massey walked with one out, but Payton grounded out and Meadows struck out. We left two aboard and carried the five-run margin into the bottom half.

Schreiber replaced Brazoban. Arcia walked, but Kelenic grounded into a 5-4-3 double play. Jonathan Aranda doubled with two outs, giving Atlanta one final baserunner. Harris flew out to right. Ballgame. Royals 8, Braves 3.

The Wild Card threshold was crossed. October baseball was ours.


________________________________________

Final

Royals 8, Braves 3

Royals (7 H, 1 E) | Braves (13 H, 3 E)

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Player of the Game: Dillon Dingler

Notable Royals: Dingler finished 1-for-3 with a walk, two runs scored, and three RBIs. His sixth-inning homer provided the decisive separation and earned him Player of the Game honors. Bobby went 1-for-2 with two walks, a hit-by-pitch, two runs scored, and the go-ahead RBI. Massey drove in two with his fifth-inning double. Meadows homered, and Payton added an RBI double while throwing out two runners at the plate.

Notable Braves: Atlanta collected 13 hits but scored only three runs. Devers homered and finished with three hits, Harris added three hits, and Murphy had two.

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Our defense and Montgomery's sequencing kept the total from becoming larger.

Winning Pitcher: Jordan Montgomery, 16–8
Losing Pitcher: Reynaldo López, 11–12


Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline
Pitcher             Dec           IP    H    R   ER   BB    K   HR    PI    ERA
J. Montgomery     W (16-8)       7.1    9    2    2    0    4    1    97   3.91
H. Brazoban                      0.2    3    1    1    0    0    0    10   6.20
J. Schreiber                     1.0    1    0    0    1    0    0    17   2.76
________________________________________

Front Office Note / Takeaways

We are going to October!

A season that seemed ready to collapse several times finally crossed the line. We did not back down tonight. We beat a 90-win division champion on its home field and secured the berth with our own win. The offense scored eight runs on seven hits. Seven walks, one hit-by-pitch, and timely extra-base hits made the difference. We did not need a constant stream of baserunners; we needed to cash in the ones we created.

The preparation has changed. Tomorrow is no longer about survival. It is about setting the rotation, protecting the bullpen, managing Bobby's workload, and deciding which version of this roster gives us the best shot at the Wild Card round.

• Montgomery delivered the veteran start. He allowed nine hits but issued no walks and carried the game into the eighth. Sixteen wins and a 3.91 ERA give him one of the strongest rotation cases entering the postseason.

• Bobby's controlled return continues to work. He reached four times, drove in the go-ahead run, and scored twice while serving as the designated hitter. The bat is helping without forcing unnecessary defensive exposure.

• The fifth inning showed two-out execution. Dingler and Garcia walked, then Bobby, Massey, and Payton delivered three consecutive run-scoring hits. That was playoff-caliber situational hitting.

• Payton changed the game on both sides. His RBI double added to the fifth-inning rally, but the two outfield assists may have been more valuable. Devers and Murphy were both thrown out at home.

• The eighth inning still requires review. Montgomery returned with a large lead, Brazoban allowed three hits, and Meadows' throwing error helped Atlanta score twice. The bullpen bridge cannot rely on a five-run cushion in a Wild Card game.

• Schreiber closed the right way. A leadoff walk created a small opening, but the double play removed it. He has now finished several of the season's most important late games with growing confidence.

We spent most of September trying not to lose October. Tonight, we earned it.


Around the League

Minnesota was officially eliminated from postseason contention. Closer Jhoan Duran offered a blunt assessment—“It sucks”—as the Twins missed October for the first time since 2021. The franchise has reached the playoffs six times in the past ten seasons, but its last World Series championship was in 1991.

Within our farm system, Columbia manager Willie Concepcion earned Carolina League Manager of the Year honors after guiding the Fireflies to a 77–55 record and first place in the South standings. His direct, no-nonsense approach drew attention from the day he arrived, but it also produced wins and a championship-caliber season. Concepcion dismissed the praise in his usual style: it was not molecular physics, just baseball.

Tonight, the major-league club proved the same point.

Get the runners home. Keep theirs from scoring. Record 27 outs.

Then start preparing for October.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 161

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Old 06-25-2026, 03:56 PM   #204
Biggp07
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⚾ October 2025 — Game 162: October Secured, the Finale Burns Away

👑 Sunday, October 05 • Game 3👑

The Royals close 2025 with a 12–5 loss before turning toward Cleveland.

Kansas City Royals at Atlanta Braves | Truist Park
Weather: Partly Cloudy, 73 degrees | Wind: In from left at 9 mph | Attendance: 38,353 | First pitch: 3:20 PM ET
________________________________________

Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)

Last night's victory completed the first job.

We had crossed the Wild Card threshold, secured a postseason berth, and taken the pressure of mathematical survival out of the regular-season finale. After the long September fall, that mattered. We had bent far enough to make October feel unlikely, then won the two games in Atlanta that finally pushed us across the line.

The remaining teams around the American League would settle the final seeding. Boston and Baltimore were still tied in the race behind us, and their results would determine the last Wild Card participant. We could only control one more game—our 162nd—and use it as both a chance to finish the Atlanta series cleanly and a final evaluation before setting the postseason roster.

This series had given us a legitimate test of our mettle. Atlanta had already secured the National League East and a first-round bye, but the Braves did not treat us like a club receiving a ceremonial passage into October. They played their regulars, attacked our pitching, and forced us to earn both wins.

Winning the finale would complete the sweep and send us into the Wild Card round on a three-game wave. Losing would not remove the berth, but it would leave one final warning about how quickly poor pitching can bury even a productive offense.

Bobby Witt Jr. returned to shortstop after working as the designated hitter Saturday. His controlled return had gone well, and giving him another defensive game offered a final check before postseason preparation. Austin Meadows remained in right, while Salvy caught, and Spencer Turnbull received the final start.

Turnbull's appearance carried two meanings. As the manager, I wanted innings and a clean exit before handing the bullpen its final regular-season assignment. As the general manager, I needed one more data point for an extension conversation and the postseason rotation.

Off the field, the lower-level coaching plan continued taking shape. James Smith accepted the offer to become hitting coach at DSL Fortuna, joining new pitching coach Simon Ferrer. That completes the new staff structure in Santo Domingo and gives both coaches the off-season to build relationships with the young players arriving from the international complex.

Figure 1. James Smith DSL Fortuna Hitting Coach Profile — Development-First Hire for Young Bats

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Perspective: James Smith's staff profile shows why the organization selected him to complete the new coaching structure at DSL Fortuna.

The 54-year-old brings excellent player-development ability, a strong influence on mechanics, and an outstanding teaching grade in hitting—exactly the foundation needed for teenagers beginning their professional careers outside the international complex. His broader defensive, baserunning, and pitching instruction is limited, but the assignment is intentionally specialized. For the front office, Smith's hiring pairs a dedicated offensive-development voice with Simon Ferrer's pitching expertise, giving the Fortuna roster a more complete teaching environment as the Royals enter the 2025–26 offseason.

Two hitting-coach decisions remain elsewhere in the system. Ari Adut has earned consideration for an extension after two strong seasons at Columbia A, while Andy LaRoche's future at Northwest Arkansas AA appears less secure. I considered promoting Adut into a major-league base-coaching role because our baserunning was one of the season's clearest weaknesses, but the current coaches remain under contract for another year. That decision can wait. I'll have to improve the post-season base-running the hard way, patience. October cannot be a time for trying out new roles. Base-running will have to improve through playoff pressure now.

Atlanta Braves Series Snapshot

We entered the finale having already won the series. Friday's opener belonged to Luinder Avila, Devin Mann, Michael Massey, and a bullpen that recovered after Noah Cameron's back-to-back home runs. Saturday belonged to Jordan Montgomery and Dillon Dingler, whose three-run homer created the separation in the 8–3 Wild Card-clinching victory.

Atlanta remained dangerous despite losing the first two games. The Braves carried a 90-win roster featuring Ronald Acuña Jr., Michael Harris II, Matt Olson, Rafael Devers, Sean Murphy, and Jarred Kelenic. Their offense had already shown its power against our bullpen, and with the October playoffs approaching, they had no reason to soften their approach.

The series board placed Spencer Turnbull against AJ Smith-Shawver in the finale.
________________________________________


Series Matchup Board — Game 3

• RHP Spencer Turnbull vs. RHP AJ Smith-Shawver


Turnbull recorded only two outs. He allowed five hits, six earned runs, one walk, and three home runs on 20 pitches. Acuña hit a two-run homer, Murphy followed with another two-run shot, and Orlando Arcia added the third two-run homer later in the inning. The loss moved Turnbull to 15–10 and raised his ERA to 4.36. His full-season contribution remains valuable, but this was the exact type of inning that complicates both an extension discussion and any argument for a postseason start.

Smith-Shawver allowed Meadows' three-run homer in the first but settled afterward. He worked 3.1 innings, allowing two hits and three runs before leaving injured. Trevor Richards followed with 2.2 perfect innings and five strikeouts, shutting down any immediate Kansas City comeback.

Game Day Log — Royals vs. Braves (Game 3)

Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View)


1st Inning
Massey walked with one out, and Bobby followed with a sharp single. Meadows then jumped on Smith-Shawver's pitch and drove a three-run homer 376 feet to left.

Three batters had put us ahead 3–0 before Atlanta's lineup came to the plate. It looked like the continuation of the previous two nights: early pressure, clustered offense, and another chance to control the game. Turnbull never found the shutdown inning.

Nacho Alvarez Jr. walked. Devers flew out, but Acuña hit a two-run homer. Harris grounded out, giving Turnbull two outs with the lead still intact. Then Olson singled. Murphy hit another two-run homer. Kelenic singled, and Arcia followed with a third two-run shot.

Six runs. Five hits. Three home runs.

Cameron entered and retired Luis Vázquez, but the game had flipped from 3–0 Royals to 6–3 Braves before the first inning ended.

2nd Inning
We went in order against Smith-Shawver.

Cameron answered with a clean frame, striking out Alvarez and retiring Devers and Acuña. The bleeding stopped immediately, but the offense needed to overcome a three-run deficit.

3rd Inning
Massey, Bobby, and Meadows were retired in order.

Cameron hit Harris to begin the bottom half. Olson singled, moving Harris to third, and Murphy brought him home with a sacrifice fly. Cameron retired Kelenic and Arcia, but Atlanta had extended the lead to 7–3.

4th Inning
Salvy flew out before Smith-Shawver left with an injury. Trevor Richards entered and struck out Payton and Arroyo.

Bernardino replaced Cameron and gave us the clean inning we needed, retiring Vázquez, Alvarez, and Devers.

5th Inning
Richards retired Mann, Isbel, and Garcia in order. We had not recorded a hit since Meadows' first-inning homer.

Acuña singled in Atlanta's half, but Bernardino retired Harris, Olson, and Murphy. The deficit remained four.

6th Inning
Richards struck out Massey and Meadows around Bobby's fly ball. His relief appearance had completely shut down the middle of the lineup.

Kelenic singled against Bernardino and stole second after Huascar Brazoban entered. Brazoban retired Arcia and Vázquez, but Alvarez doubled Kelenic home with two outs. Atlanta led 8–3.

7th Inning
Salvy singled to begin the inning, but Arroyo grounded into a double play after Payton struck out.

Brazoban struck out Acuña, then Harris doubled, and Olson hit a two-run homer. Murphy flew out, but Kelenic walked, and Arcia singled. Fernando Cruz entered with two runners aboard. He walked Vázquez, loading the bases, and Alvarez followed with a two-run single. Cruz finally retired Devers, but Atlanta had scored four in the inning. The lead had grown to 12–3.

8th Inning
We mounted our best opportunity since the first. Mann walked, Isbel singled, and Garcia singled to load the bases with nobody out. Atlanta brought in Colin Poche. Massey grounded into a force play at home. Bobby flew out. Meadows grounded out. Bases loaded, nobody out, no runs.

It was an inning that belonged in the season-long file: traffic created, pressure established, opportunity lost.

Cruz then retired Acuña, Harris, and Olson in order.

9th Inning
We made one final push. Payton singled with one out, and Arroyo followed with another. Mann singled to load the bases, and Atlanta went to A.J. Minter. Isbel singled home Payton. Garcia walked, forcing Arroyo home. The score moved to 12–5, and the bases remained loaded. Massey flew out. Bobby flew out. Three runners remained aboard as the regular season ended.

No comeback, but not a quiet exit either.


________________________________________

Final

Royals 5, Braves 12

Royals (9 H, 0 E) | Braves (13 H, 0 E)

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Player of the Game: Matt Olson

Notable Royals: Meadows drove in three with his fourth home run. Isbel finished 2-for-4 and supplied the ninth-inning RBI single. Garcia added the final RBI with a bases-loaded walk, while Bobby, Salvy, Payton, Arroyo, and Mann each collected a hit.

Notable Braves: Atlanta hit four home runs. Acuña, Murphy, and Arcia each went deep in the six-run first, while Olson hit his 50th homer in the seventh. Olson finished 3-for-5 with two runs and two RBIs. Alvarez drove in three, Murphy drove in three, and Arcia and Acuña each added two.

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Kansas City left seven runners aboard and stranded the bases loaded in both the eighth and ninth innings.

Winning Pitcher: Trevor Richards, 4–2
Losing Pitcher: Spencer Turnbull, 15–10


Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline
Pitcher             Dec           IP    H    R   ER   BB    K   HR    PI    ERA
S. Turnbull       L (15-10)      0.2    5    6    6    1    0    3    20   4.36
N. Cameron                       2.1    1    1    1    0    2    0    43   4.12
B. Bernardino                    2.0    2    1    1    0    0    0    28   3.92
H. Brazoban                      1.2    4    4    4    1    1    1    36   6.80
F. Cruz                          1.1    1    0    0    1    1    0    27   4.80
________________________________________

Front Office Note / Takeaways

This Atlanta series still counts as a successful final test. We won two of three against a 91-win division champion and clinched October on their field. The finale exposed weaknesses, but it did not erase the work from the first two games. The postseason berth was already secure. That changes the emotional weight of the loss, but not the evaluation. We finished the regular season at 85–77 and now move into a Wild Card series against Cleveland. We went 3–10 against the Guardians during the regular season. The next two days must be used to build a rotation, bullpen sequence, and lineup specifically for an opponent that repeatedly controlled us. From this point forward, there are no development innings, sample-building starts, or long-view explanations. Every decision must serve the next game.

• Meadows supplied the ideal opening swing. His three-run homer gave us immediate control. The offense did what it needed before Turnbull took the mound.

• Turnbull's final start was a severe setback. Six earned runs and three home runs before recording the third out. His season still includes 15 wins and valuable rotation flexibility, but this outing weakens his case for a playoff start.

• Cameron stabilized the first inning but allowed another run in the third. His postseason role remains difficult to define after an inconsistent finish that included both useful length and damaging home runs.

• Bernardino gave us two steady innings. One run was charged after Brazoban inherited Kelenic, but Bernardino stopped Atlanta's early surge and covered the necessary length.

• Brazoban's postseason case remains fragile. Four hits, four earned runs, one walk, and Olson's homer. He has not provided enough late-season reliability to receive an automatic October role.

• Cruz prevented further damage after inheriting traffic, then finished with a clean eighth. Two inherited runners scored on Alvarez's single, but Cruz also gave us 1.1 innings without an earned run charged to his line.

• The bases-loaded failures were the offensive story after the first. We loaded them with nobody out in the eighth and scored none. We loaded them again in the ninth, scored two, and left three aboard.

• Bobby completed another full game at shortstop. He went 1-for-5 and handled the defensive workload without a reported setback. That is more important than the box-score line entering the Wild Card round.

The regular season is complete. We reached October.

Now we have to prove we belong in it.



Around the League

Boston claimed the final American League Wild Card position after finishing tied with Baltimore. The Red Sox gained the advantage through their 2–1 series win over Tampa Bay, while Baltimore dropped two of three to Minnesota and saw its season end outside the playoff field.

Houston reliever Franny Cobos will miss the remainder of the season with a torn flexor tendon in his elbow. He finished with a 5.94 ERA over 16.2 innings.

Nick Castellanos hit for the cycle as the Dodgers defeated Colorado 7–5. He doubled in the second, singled in the fourth, homered in the sixth, and completed the cycle with a ninth-inning triple.

Within the Royals system, Columbia reliever Brandan Bidois won the Carolina League Outstanding Pitcher Award unanimously. Bidois made 14 relief appearances, earned three saves, struck out 81 over 68.2 innings, and finished 5–0 with a 1.31 ERA. Fellow Fireflies pitcher Josh Hansell placed third in the voting.

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Player - Team - First Place - Total Points

Brandan Bidois - Columbia Fireflies - 12 - 84
Fran Oschell - Fredericksburg Nationals - 0 - 44
Josh Hansell - Columbia Fireflies - 0 - 28
Raimy Rodriguez - Fayetteville Woodpeckers - 0 - 21
Pablo Aldonis - Fredericksburg Nationals - 0 - 10
Michael Caldon - Augusta GreenJackets - 0 - 7
Reggie Crawford - Myrtle Beach Pelicans - 0 - 5
Santiago Peraza - Lynchburg Hillcats - 0 - 5

The farm system closes 2025 with individual awards and new coaches in place. The major-league club closes it with a postseason ticket.

The next entry begins in Cleveland.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 - Game 162

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Old 06-28-2026, 09:48 AM   #205
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⚾ September/October Crown Ledger: The Long Way In, October Still Ours

👑 Monday, October 06 • Royal Pulse: Final Regular Season Report 👑

Kansas City Royals Front Office | Kauffman Stadium
________________________________________

Front Office (GM's) Desk

There are easier ways to reach October. We did not take one of them. That's why today feels a little surreal. When I wrote the August recap, I had already begun allowing part of my attention to drift toward the offseason.

At the end of August, we were 73–58, one game out of first and sitting atop the Wild Card chase. Thirty-one games later, we finished four games out of the division and entered the tournament as the second Wild Card. Cleveland finished 88–74, Detroit 89–73, and Minnesota 82–80. We had surrendered first place, the remaining schedule leaned heavily toward the road, and six games against Cleveland stood between us and any realistic attempt to regain the division. I remember looking at that September calendar and wondering whether we would hold together long enough to claim even a Wild Card berth. Yet here we are. The regular season is complete, and the Kansas City Royals are going to the postseason.

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September–October Review — The Cost of the Finish

The final calendar segment produced:

September: 10–16 (.385)

October: 2–3 (.400)

Combined closing stretch: 12–19

That stretch changed the ending. The most notable change was not merely the loss of winning percentage. It was the erosion of control.

We opened April at 20–5, built enough early margin to withstand an uneven summer, then spent September watching nearly every weakness we had identified since May become magnified under pennant-race pressure. The bullpen remained unstable. The offense became less efficient. Our defensive edge softened. The road schedule wore us down. Cleveland and Detroit took advantage. On September 1, we could still take the division by winning the head-to-head matchups. By October 6, Detroit owned the Central, Cleveland held the first Wild Card, and our October path ran directly through Progressive Field.

The month was not one long collapse. There were brief recoveries, individual wins that felt like turning points, and a two-game response in Atlanta after beginning October with two losses in Washington. But every recovery was followed by another leak. The final 5–12 loss in Atlanta left the closing ledger at 2–3 and confirmed what the standings had already decided: no division crown, no bye, no comfortable entry. Yet the club did not disappear.
________________________________________

Regular-Season Closeout — The Final Ledger

Kansas City's final record:

• Overall: 85–77 (.525)
• AL Central: 3rd place, 4 GB
• Wild Card: 2nd position
• Pythagorean record: 86–76
• Home: 49–32 (.605)
• Road: 36–45 (.444)
• Extra innings: 6–6
• One-run games: 20–22
• Against left-handed starters: 17–12
• Against right-handed starters: 68–65
• Final 10 games: 3–7

Our Pythagorean record came within one game of our actual result, suggesting the final record was a fair representation of the club's overall run production and prevention. We were neither a hidden juggernaut nor an undeserving playoff entrant. We were an 85-win club with real strengths, persistent weaknesses, and little separation from the teams around us.

At the same time, a 20–22 one-run record and an even 6–6 extra-inning mark reinforce the point we have repeated since early summer: too many late games remained unresolved because we lacked consistent leverage relief. The home-road split was also never fully corrected. Kauffman remained our dependable base at 17 games over .500, while the road record finished 9 games under .500. That matters immediately because the Wild Card round sends us into Cleveland rather than bringing the series home.

Figure SO1. MLB Expanded Standings and Wild Card — Final Regular-Season Position

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Perspective: Combined standings view showing Kansas City's 85–77 finish, third-place position in the AL Central, and second Wild Card berth. The expanded columns add context through the club's +50 run differential, near-matching 86–76 Pythagorean record, and one-game edge over the final chasing group.

Wild Card Standing — The Berth We Earned

The American League postseason field finished as follows:

• Tampa Bay: 96–66
• Detroit: 89–73
• Cleveland: 88–74
• Kansas City: 85–77
• Boston: 84–78
• Texas: 84–78

The standings say 85 wins. The shape of the season says considerably more. Boston, Baltimore, and Texas all finished one game behind us at 84–78. One game. That is the final margin separating our postseason berth from an October spent cleaning out lockers.

Every win banked in April mattered. Every extra-inning escape mattered. Every one-run game we protected mattered. Every reserve player who stepped into an injury-created opening mattered. Even during the September slide, the club found just enough wins to remain above the chasing group. That does not excuse the finish. It explains the value of the complete season.

We did not back into October because the standard was low. We reached October by surviving the hardest portion of our schedule, holding the second American League Wild Card position, and earning a postseason berth against a divisional opponent that has been in our way all season.

Figure SO2. MLB Regular-Season Standings and Subleague Alignment

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Perspective: Final league alignment confirming Detroit as AL Central champion, Cleveland as the first Wild Card, and Kansas City as the second Wild Card. The subleague comparison places the Royals fourth among American League postseason qualifiers.

From the GM side, the full-season record validates the roster's overall competitiveness. After 162 games, survival is not the same thing as failure. From the manager's side, the closing pace is a warning. We arrive at the Wild Card Series wounded, inconsistent, and fully aware of what can go wrong—but still alive. We enter October on a 3–7 run, and postseason baseball does not allow time to rediscover rhythm slowly.

The regular season was the qualification round. Now that the standings are cleared, the series begins at 0–0, and Cleveland has to beat us again when the games carry an entirely different weight. That is the distinction I am carrying into the room.
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Comparative Team Stats Analysis 2025

Figure SO3. Team Stats Dashboard — Complete 2025 Ledger

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2025 Offense

The offense finished among the better contact clubs in the American League, but it no longer carried the league-leading profile it displayed in April and July.

Final batting and baserunning profile

• Batting average: .257 — 3rd in AL
• On-base percentage: .319 — 6th
• Slugging percentage: .431 — 4th
• OPS: .750 — 6th
• Batting WAR: 18.2 — 6th
• wOBA: .320 — 5th
• Runs scored: 788 — 5th
• Hits: 1,436 — 3rd
• Extra-base hits: 552 — tied for 3rd
• Home runs: 187 — 10th
• Walks: 448 — 14th
• Strikeouts: 1,340 — 6th
• Stolen bases: 138 — 4th
• Baserunning: -8.3 — 15th

August-to-final movement

At the end of August, the club was hitting .261 with a .760 OPS. We finished at .257 and .750. Hits slipped from second to third in the league, while home-run rank fell from eighth to tenth.

The decline was not catastrophic, but it was broad enough to matter. Average, on-base percentage, slugging, OPS, and wOBA all softened. The offense remained capable of generating volume, but it became less efficient at converting that volume into sustained scoring.

The largest concern is not the home-run rank. This roster was never designed to wait for three-run homers. The most troubling combination is:

14th in walks

15th in baserunning

only 6th in on-base percentage

That means we too often require hits to create rallies, only to give some of that value back once runners reach base. The final -8.3 baserunning mark is nearly twice as costly as the -4.1 posted at the end of August. In a Wild Card series where one run may decide the season, those lost bases become magnified.

Front office interpretation

The lineup remains playable in October because of contact and extra-base ability travel. We finished third in both hits and extra-base hits, and fourth in slugging. But we cannot afford to engage in empty aggression against Cleveland. Their pitching will gladly allow us to expand the zone, make first-pitch outs, and run into unnecessary outs on the bases.

The offensive postseason plan has to be narrower:

• force Cleveland to finish plate appearances.
• accept walks rather than trying to manufacture offense on every pitch.
• avoid low percentage extra-base attempts.
• cash runners at third with less than two outs.
• make their bullpen record more than three outs whenever possible.

The offense does not need to rediscover April. It needs to win two games.
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2025 Pitching & Defense

The pitching profile finished in the same general shape we saw throughout the summer: credible starters, a vulnerable bullpen, modest strikeout volume, and a defense that remained useful but declined from its early-season standard.

Final pitching and defensive profile

• Team ERA: 4.37 — 8th in AL
• Starters' ERA: 3.97 — 3rd
• Bullpen ERA: 5.11 — 15th
• Runs allowed: 738 — 6th
• Pitching WAR: 21.2 — 4th
• Hits allowed: 1,316 — 2nd
• Opponents' average: .241 — 4th
• BABIP: .288 — 4th
• Home runs allowed: 186 — tied for 4th
• Walks allowed: 518 — 8th
• Strikeouts: 1,384 — 11th
• Defensive Efficiency: .699 — 4th
• Zone Rating: +7.7 — 5th

August-to-final movement

At the end of August:

• Team ERA: 4.32
• Starters' ERA: 3.87
• Bullpen ERA: 5.22
• Defensive Efficiency: .707
• Zone Rating: +12.2

At the finish:

• Team ERA: 4.37
• Starters' ERA: 3.97
• Bullpen ERA: 5.11
• Defensive Efficiency: .699
• Zone Rating: +7.7

The bullpen ERA technically improved by 11 points, but the remaining 15th-place finish in the American League tells the fuller story. The unit did not transform; it merely ended slightly less damaged.

The rotation stayed the best portion of the staff. A third-place starters' ERA and fourth-place pitching WAR give us a legitimate postseason entry point. We can win a short series if our starters control the first six innings.

The defense, however, lost some of its earlier-season margin. Defensive Efficiency fell below .700, and Zone Rating dropped from +12.2 to +7.7. The club remained above average, but by September, it was no longer converting contact with the same authority that had carried the staff in April, May, and June.

Front office interpretation

Our run-prevention formula is unchanged:

starter length + controlled contact + clean defense + carefully rationed bullpen exposure.

The dangerous part is that October compresses every relief decision. There is no “save tomorrow's arm” logic if tomorrow does not exist. But that does not mean blindly using the best reliever for three consecutive days. It means planning leverage before the game and being ready to alter the plan before an inning becomes a bonfire.

Cleveland knows the bullpen is our vulnerable point. They will work counts, take borderline pitches, and attempt to force the game into our middle relief as early as possible. Our starters, therefore, have two jobs: prevent runs and prevent unnecessary bullpen innings.
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Pennant Chase Review — How the Central Was Lost

Detroit won the AL Central at 89–73. Cleveland followed at 88–74, and Kansas City finished at 85–77.

The expanded standings give context beyond the four-game final margin:

• Kansas City's run differential remained +50
• Detroit finished at +54
• Cleveland finished at -11
• Kansas City's Pythagorean record was 86–76
• Cleveland's was 80–82

That comparison is difficult to ignore. Cleveland outperformed its expected record by eight wins, while Kansas City finished approximately in line with expectations. In aggregate, our performance may have been stronger than the four-game standings gap implies.

But the standings are not awarded on expected record.

Cleveland won the games it needed, especially against us. The head-to-head matrix shows Kansas City finished only 3–10 against the Guardians. Cleveland's ten victories over us account for nearly the entire difference between winning the division and entering as a lower Wild Card. That is not background information heading into the series. That is the central challenge.

We are not facing an unfamiliar opponent. We are facing a club that repeatedly found our weak points and converted them.
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Team vs. Team — What the Matchup Ledger Reveals

The season matrix tells a more complete story about the Royals than the final record alone.

Figure SO4. MLB Team-vs.-Team Standings — Opponent Performance Audit

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Perspective: Head-to-head matrix highlighting the season's decisive matchups. Kansas City finished 3–10 against Cleveland and 4–9 against Detroit, while stronger results against Minnesota, Tampa Bay, Toronto, Baltimore, Houston, and Oakland helped preserve the Wild Card berth.

Productive matchups

Kansas City recorded strong win totals against several opponents:

• 9 wins over the White Sox
• 9 wins over Minnesota
• 6 wins over Tampa Bay
• 6 wins over Toronto
• 5 wins over Baltimore
• 5 wins over Houston
• 5 wins over Oakland

The 9–4 record against Minnesota helped keep the Twins behind us and became one of the reasons we retained a postseason position. Sweeping or dominating weaker opponents was not always consistent, but we banked enough wins against portions of the league to build the 85-win floor.

The most intriguing result is 6–0 against Tampa Bay. The Rays are the American League's top seed at 96–66, yet Kansas City handled the regular-season matchup. Should we advance, Tampa waits in the Division Series. That record gives us confidence—but no entitlement. A five-game postseason series is not a continuation of six regular-season games.

Damaging matchups

The ledger also exposes where the season went sideways:

• 3–10 against Cleveland
• 4–9 against Detroit
• 0–6 against Texas
• 0–3 against Philadelphia
• 0–3 against Pittsburgh
• 0–3 against San Francisco

Kansas City's combined performance against Cleveland and Detroit was 7–19. That is the division story in one line. We beat Minnesota, but the two clubs above us consistently beat us.

The September sweep by Philadelphia also fits the matrix: Kansas City finished winless in three meetings, and that late home series accelerated the loss of divisional control. Similar clean losses against Pittsburgh and San Francisco reinforced the broader problem—too many series ended without salvaging a game.

Manager's conclusion

The Cleveland series cannot be managed as though the first 13 meetings do not matter. Their tendencies against us are now evident:

• they know how to reach our middle relief.
• they have handled our aggressive offensive stretches.
• they won the late innings.
• and they enter believing the matchup belongs to them.

Our job is not to deny that history. Our job is to change the first inning of the next chapter.
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Manager's Desk

There is a temptation after a finish like this to drag the full season into the Wild Card clubhouse.

I will not allow it.

The players know we went 10–16 in September. They know we finished 3–7. They know Cleveland beat us repeatedly. They do not need another lecture about the standings. What they need is a clear plan and the confidence that the next game is still theirs to take.

The postseason message is narrower than any regular-season speech:

Win today's strike zone. Win today's first six innings. Hand the next pitcher a clean inning. Take the extra base only when it belongs to us.

We spent six months learning what this roster can and cannot do. Now we stop asking it to be something else. We are not going to become the league's most patient offense in two days. We are not going to turn the bullpen into the best unit in baseball by changing the title above each reliever's name. We can, however, play a cleaner version of ourselves:

• starters attacking.
• defense ready on the first pitch.
• hitters using the middle of the field.
• runners respecting game state.
• and relievers entering before the inning has already tilted.

The season has narrowed from 162 games to two wins. That is not pressure to fear. That is clarity.
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Front Office Note / Takeaways

• The regular season met and exceeded the original "play close to .500" ownership benchmark, finishing eight games above .500 and securing a postseason berth.

• April's extraordinary start provided the cushion that ultimately separated Kansas City from three 84-win challengers.

The club's core identity remained intact: good contact production, extra-base volume, strong starting pitching, and above-average defense.

• The bullpen never developed into a dependable full-season strength and remains the primary October risk.

• The divisional record against Cleveland and Detroit prevented a Central title.

• The road record now becomes immediately relevant because the entire Wild Card Series will be played in Cleveland.

• The Wild Card berth should be recognized as real organizational progress, but the regular-season finish cannot be treated as the endpoint.

• Postseason success requires simplification, not reinvention.
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Around the League

Tampa Bay completed the American League's strongest regular season at 96–66, while Detroit claimed the Central at 89–73. Cleveland's 88 wins secured home-field advantage in our Wild Card matchup. Boston, Baltimore, and Texas all finished at 84–78, one game behind us in the Wild Card race.

In the National League, St. Louis posted the best record in baseball at 100–62, followed by Arizona at 94–68 and Atlanta at 91–71. San Diego, San Francisco, and Cincinnati fill out the Wild Card side of the bracket.

The postseason tree gives Kansas City a difficult but defined path: Cleveland first, Tampa next. There is no reason to look further than that. October punishes clubs that start planning for rounds they have not earned.

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👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Regular Season 2025 – Sep/Oct Final Season Recap
(OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log)
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Old 06-28-2026, 06:33 PM   #206
Biggp07
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⚾ September/October Crown Ledger Addendum⚾ September/October Crown Ledger Addendum

👑 Monday, October 06 • Royals on the League Boards 👑

Kansas City Royals Front Office | Kauffman Stadium
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Front Office (GM's) Desk — Why This Addendum Matters

The final standings tell us where the club finished. These leaderboards help explain who carried enough individual value to get us there.

Kansas City did not close the regular season playing its best baseball. September produced our lowest monthly winning percentage; injuries thinned both the lineup and the pitching staff; and several team rankings slipped from the elite territory they occupied during April and early summer. Even so, a meaningful group of Royals remained visible among the league leaders when the final regular-season numbers were locked. That distinction matters.

A player appearing on one final leaderboard can reflect a specialized skill. A player appearing across several lists usually indicates a more complete and sustainable contribution. In our case, the boards confirm three primary themes:

• Vinnie Pasquantino and Salvador Perez remained dependable sources of situational offense.

• Kyle Isbel supplied legitimate run-saving value in the outfield.

• Zack Eflin and Jordan Montgomery provided top-of-the-rotation performance even while the staff around them became less stable.

The streak boards add another layer. They show which players were able to sustain production over meaningful stretches, including several names beyond the obvious core. Those streaks did not prevent the late-season slide, but they helped keep the club from falling completely out of the postseason picture. There is also an important difference between the two sets of screens.

The American League boards measure our players against their direct league peers and postseason competitors. The combined boards raise the standard by including the National League. A player who survives both cuts is demonstrating performance that belongs among the best in all of baseball.
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American League Leaderboards

League Leaderboard Highlights — Royals Hitters Who Made the AL Lists

Vinnie Pasquantino — American League Doubles Leader

Vinnie finished first in the American League with 49 doubles.

That is the most prominent offensive placement by a Royal on the final AL batting board. It also fits the shape of our offense better than nearly any other statistic could. Kansas City was built to create traffic through contact, use the gaps, and pressure defenders rather than depend entirely upon home runs.

Vinnie's 49 doubles represent more than a personal counting-stat achievement. They served as a central source of lineup acceleration. A single puts pressure on a defense; a double changes the inning. It scores runners from first, creates immediate sacrifice-fly opportunities, and gives the middle of the order a chance to produce without requiring several consecutive hits. His final placement confirms that his gap power was not simply good within our lineup—it was the best in the American League.

Front-office interpretation: Pasquantino remains one of the club's most dependable run-production building blocks. His combination of contact and extra-base authority fits both Kauffman Stadium and postseason baseball, where moving a runner ninety additional feet can decide a game.
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Bobby Witt Jr. — Third in AL Triples

Despite the late-season injury interruption, Bobby remained tied near the top of the American League triples board with eight triples, placing third on the displayed list.

That placement is a reminder of the dimension his speed gives the lineup. A triple is not simply a ball driven into the gap. It requires impact contact, immediate acceleration, aggressive reads, and the ability to force an outfield defense into a hurried relay.

Bobby's appearance here is especially notable because he lost time late. He accumulated enough value before the injury to remain among the league leaders even after his season was interrupted.

Manager's note: Bobby does not need to steal a base to change an inning. His ability to turn a routine double into three bases alters defensive positioning before the pitch is even thrown.
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Maikel Garcia — Fourth in AL Triples and Fifth in Stolen Bases

Garcia appears on two final American League batting boards:

• Fourth in triples — seven

• Fifth in stolen bases — 29


That two-category appearance captures his best offensive value: speed applied through multiple channels. He was not simply accumulating steals after reaching first base. He also used his legs to stretch extra-base hits and take advantage of outfield positioning.

The final 29 stolen bases placed Garcia fifth in the league and gave Kansas City a second significant speed threat alongside Witt. That mattered for a team that finished fourth in the AL in total stolen bases, even though the club's overall baserunning value finished last.

That contrast deserves attention. Garcia's speed was an asset. The team's collective decision-making with that speed was not always an asset.

Front-office interpretation: Garcia should remain aggressive, but his reads and game-state decisions must stay selective. The goal is not fewer attempts for the sake of caution. It is a higher percentage of attempts that materially improve the inning.
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Salvador Perez — American League Sacrifice-Fly Leader

Salvador Perez finished first in the American League with 10 sacrifice flies.

This is not one of baseball's glamorous leaderboards, but it is one of the most directly useful for a club that played 42 one-run games. A sacrifice fly reflects an ability to understand the situation, control the strike zone sufficiently to find a pitch to lift, and convert a runner at third into a run without requiring a base hit.

For a lineup that ranked only 14th in walks and sometimes struggled to extend rallies late, Salvy's ability to finish an opportunity remained important. He was still asked to drive the baseball, but the leaderboard confirms that he also accepted the less dramatic run when the game demanded it.

Manager's note: October does not care whether the run arrives on a home run or a fly ball to medium-depth right field. Salvy continued to cash in on the opportunity.

Figure SO-A1. American League Batting Leaders — Final Royals Offensive Placements

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Perspective; Final AL batting board highlighting Kansas City’s category leaders and top-five finishers. Vinnie Pasquantino led the league with 49 doubles, Salvador Perez led with 10 sacrifice flies, Bobby Witt Jr. and Maikel Garcia placed among the triples leaders, and Garcia finished fifth with 29 stolen bases.
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American League Fielding Leaders — Run Prevention Beyond the Box Score

Kyle Isbel — Perfect Fielding Percentage and Second in Zone Rating

Kyle Isbel appears on two American League defensive lists:

• Tied for first in fielding percentage — 1.000

• Second in Zone Rating — +14.6


The pairing is more meaningful than either category alone.

A perfect fielding percentage tells us that Isbel avoided the visible mistake. The +14.6 Zone Rating indicates he also reached baseballs that an average defender would not. One measures reliability; the other measures range and impact.

Kansas City's defense slipped from its early-season peak, but Isbel remained one of the players preserving the club's run-prevention floor. His routes, first step, and ability to close space helped compensate for a pitching staff that did not generate elite strikeout totals.

Front-office interpretation: Isbel's offensive line may not always command attention, but his glove materially changes the staff's results. That is roster value we cannot evaluate solely through batting production.
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Vinnie Pasquantino — Third in American League Double Plays

Pasquantino tied for third on the displayed AL double-play board with 103 double plays.

First-base double plays are partly opportunity-driven, but the total still reflects availability, positioning, reliable hands, and the ability to complete throws under pressure. Vinnie's placement supports the broader picture of a player whose value was not limited to his doubles at the plate. He was present, dependable, and involved in converting a high number of infield opportunities.

Manager's note: The first baseman often receives credit for the final out of a play created elsewhere, but poor footwork can still lose it. Vinnie completed those plays consistently.
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American League Pitching Leaders — Rotation Value at the Top

Zack Eflin — A Multi-Category Ace Profile

Even with his season ending early because of injury, Eflin remained on a wide range of American League pitching lists:

• 3rd in ERA — 3.24
• 2nd in strikeout-to-walk ratio — 4.9
• 1st in BB/9 — 1.8
• 1st in WHIP — 1.04
• 3rd in ERA+ — 140
• 3rd in RA9-WAR — 5.7
• 3rd-lowest BABIP — .266
• 4th in opponents' average — .222
• 4th in winning percentage — .650
• 2nd in quality starts — 21
• Tied for 2nd in shutouts — one

That is not a one-category season. It is a complete starting-pitching profile.

Eflin prevented runs, limited traffic, avoided walks, suppressed opponents' batting average, and consistently worked deep enough to qualify for quality starts. His control was especially valuable because it kept innings from expanding through free passes.

The breadth of the leaderboard footprint confirms what the monthly reports had been telling us since spring: Eflin was not merely our best pitcher. He performed like one of the best starters in the American League.

His absence at the end of the season also helps explain why the staff became more difficult to stabilize. Losing an arm like Eflin does not create one hole. It changes the length of the rotation, increases bullpen exposure, and forces every other starter one position higher in the hierarchy.

Front-office interpretation: Eflin's season should be evaluated as ace-level production interrupted by injury, not diminished by it. His health is now one of the organization's most important variables in the offseason and postseason.
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Jordan Montgomery — Durability, Volume, and Traditional Starter Value

Montgomery's final American League placements include:

• 4th in wins — 15
• 4th in pitcher WAR — 5.0
• 2nd in complete games — four
• 4th in BB/9 — 2.0
• 3rd in WHIP — 1.09
• 5th in FIP — 3.54
• 5th in RA9-WAR — 4.7
• 3rd in winning percentage — .667
• 3rd in quality starts — 20

Where Eflin's board is built around elite command and rate statistics, Montgomery's board highlights volume and durability. Four complete games in the modern environment are significant. They reflect not only performance but also the ability to maintain effectiveness through a lineup multiple times.

His 20 quality starts and 15 wins placed him among the league's most reliable rotation arms. Just as importantly for this club, his complete games represented nights when the bullpen could remain seated.

Manager's note: Every complete game had value beyond the final score. It protected the relief corps for the next two or three nights.
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Eflin and Montgomery — The Rotation Pairing That Carried the Staff

Taken together, the two pitchers account for an unusually broad set of league placements:

• elite WHIP;
• elite walk suppression;
• high-quality start totals;
• strong WAR and RA9-WAR;
• complete games and a shutout;
• and top-five winning percentages.

That pairing is the primary reason the Royals finished third in the AL in starters' ERA despite ending the year eighth in overall ERA and last in bullpen ERA. The rotation was not a supporting feature of the 2025 club. It was the structure holding the pitching staff together.

Figure SO-A2. American League Pitching Leaders — Eflin and Montgomery Across the Board

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Perspective: American League pitching summary documenting Zack Eflin’s elite command and prevention profile alongside Jordan Montgomery’s durability and workload value. Eflin led the displayed AL lists in BB/9 and WHIP, while both starters placed in quality starts, winning percentage, WAR-based categories, and multiple run-prevention measures.
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Combined Major League Leaderboards

Combined Batting Leaders — The Standard Narrows

When the leaderboard expands from the American League to all of Major League Baseball, Kansas City's representation becomes more limited.

Vinnie Pasquantino — Third in MLB Doubles

Pasquantino remained on the combined batting board, finishing third in Major League Baseball with 49 doubles.

His move from first in the American League to third overall does not reduce the achievement. It places his season in its proper national context. Only two players across both leagues recorded more doubles.

He is the lone Royal on the displayed combined batting leaders screen, which tells us two things:

1. Vinnie's doubles production was genuinely elite across baseball.

2. Kansas City's offensive strength was more collective than superstar-driven.

The Royals finished among the American League leaders in batting average, hits, and extra-base hits, but much of that output was distributed across the lineup. Pasquantino's doubles total was the offensive category that broke through at the full-MLB level.
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Combined Pitching Leaders — Eflin and Montgomery Hold Their Ground

The combined pitching boards are more selective, but both starters remain visible.

Zack Eflin — Combined MLB Placements

Eflin appears among all MLB pitchers in the following categories:

• 4th in BB/9 — 1.8
• 2nd in WHIP — 1.04
• 5th in ERA+ — 140
• 5th in RA9-WAR — 5.7
• 3rd in quality starts — 21


His WHIP ranking actually remains near the very top when both leagues are combined. That reinforces the central feature of his season: Eflin controlled traffic better than nearly every starter in baseball.

The combined quality-start placement also demonstrates that his performance was not built from a small number of spectacular outings. He repeatedly provided six or more competitive innings.
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Jordan Montgomery — Combined MLB Placements

Montgomery appears on the combined boards in:

• 5th in wins — 16
• 2nd in complete games — four

The combined display credits Montgomery with 16 victories, one more than the American League-only screen shown in the accompanying set. Regardless of the screen timing or filter difference, the larger point remains unchanged: he finished among the major-league leaders in wins and complete games.

His complete-game total is especially notable because it survived the comparison with the combined total. Only one pitcher on the displayed board finished with more.

Front-office interpretation: Montgomery's national leaderboard value was based on workload and game completion. Eflin's was based on command and prevention. Together, they supplied complementary forms of frontline value.

Figure SO-C1. Combined MLB Pitching Leaders — National Rotation Recognition

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Perspective: Combined pitching board showing Zack Eflin among MLB leaders in WHIP, BB/9, ERA+, RA9-WAR, and quality starts, while Jordan Montgomery ranks among the leaders in wins and complete games. The placements validate Kansas City’s rotation as the strongest component of its 2025 pitching staff.

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Streak Board Royals — September/October End-of-Season Review

The streak boards provide a different kind of information from full-season totals. They identify sustained periods in which a player repeatedly produces the same favorable outcome. Those stretches mattered during a season when the team's overall momentum was inconsistent.
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American League Streak Leaders

Austin Meadows — Fourth-Longest Hitting Streak

Meadows appears fourth on the AL hitting-streak board with a 16-game streak.

That run represented one of the steadier stretches by a Kansas City hitter. A long hitting streak does not necessarily mean every at-bat was dominant, but it shows that Meadows found repeated ways to produce playable contact and avoid prolonged empty nights. During a late season marked by lineup disruption, a 16-game hitting streak provided valuable continuity.
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Drew Waters — Third-Longest Scoring Streak

Waters placed third on the AL scoring-streak board with 10 consecutive games scoring a run.

This is an important distinction from a hitting streak. To score in ten consecutive games, Waters had to reach base, advance, and receive enough support from the hitters behind him. It reflects both his individual pressure and his connection to the broader lineup.

Manager's note: A scoring streak measures whether the player is helping complete the inning, not merely start it.
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Hunter Brown — Nine-Game Losing Streak

Brown appears on the AL losing streak board with a nine-game streak, tied among the longest displayed. This is the one Royals placement that carries a negative signal. It should not be interpreted as nine uniformly poor starts—pitcher wins, and losses remain dependent upon run support and bullpen outcomes—but a streak of that length still warrants review.

For the front office, it creates several questions:

• Was his performance meaningfully worse during the streak?
• Did the bullpen surrender inherited or late leads?
• Was run support unusually low?
• Did fatigue or matchup quality affect the results?
• Does his role need adjustment before the next roster cycle?

The leaderboard identifies the symptom. The internal review must identify the cause.
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Zack Eflin — Fifth-Longest Winning Streak

Eflin appears fifth on the AL winning-streak board with seven consecutive winning decisions.

That streak complements his full-season rate statistics. It shows that his command and run prevention translated into actual team wins over a sustained period.
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Zack Eflin — Longest AL Quality-Start Streak

Eflin ranks first with 12 consecutive quality starts.

This may be the most valuable streak placement by any Kansas City player. Twelve straight quality starts represent nearly two full months of dependable rotation work. During that period, the manager could plan bullpen availability with unusual confidence.

This streak also explains why his injury created such a disruptive downstream effect. Replacing an ordinary rotation turn is difficult. Replacing twelve consecutive quality starts is nearly impossible.
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Zack Eflin — Longest AL Scoreless-Innings Streak

Eflin also ranks first with 23 consecutive scoreless innings.

The quality-start streak shows reliability. The scoreless-inning streak shows dominance. Together, they make the clearest possible case that Eflin's best stretch belonged among the most effective pitching runs in the league.
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Bobby Witt Jr. — Consecutive Hits and On-Base Presence

Bobby appears on two AL streak lists:

• Tied for second with eight consecutive at-bats producing hits

• Tied for the top group with nine consecutive plate appearances reaching base


These are compact streaks rather than long game-based runs, but they illustrate how quickly Bobby can take over a sequence of plate appearances. Eight consecutive hits and nine consecutive times reaching base create immediate lineup momentum.

His late-season injury prevented him from adding to the season totals, yet the streak boards still capture the ceiling he showed when healthy.
________________________________________

Maikel Garcia — Fifth in Consecutive Stolen Bases

Garcia appears fifth on the AL consecutive-stolen-base board with 29.

The category underscores his efficiency during the successful portion of his running attempts. It also gives context to the club's overall baserunning problems: Garcia was capable of generating substantial positive pressure even while Kansas City's collective baserunning value declined.
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Mike Payton — Consecutive On-Base Streak

Payton appears among the AL leaders with nine consecutive plate appearances reaching base.

This was quiet but useful lineup work. Payton was not asked to carry the offense, but a reserve or supporting player who strings together nine successful plate appearances provides exactly the kind of depth value that helped the club withstand late-season injuries.
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Combined MLB Streak Leaders

When both leagues are included, four Royals remain on the displayed streak boards.

Hunter Brown — Tied for Third in Losing Streak

Brown's nine-game losing streak remains among the longest across Major League Baseball. The persistence of the placement at the combined level makes it a legitimate offseason review point.
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Zack Eflin — Second in MLB Quality-Start Streak

Eflin's 12 consecutive quality starts rank second across both leagues.

Only one pitcher on the combined board produced a longer run. This confirms the streak as a major-league-level achievement rather than simply an AL placement.
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Zack Eflin — First in MLB Scoreless Innings

Eflin's 23-inning scoreless streak remains first on the combined board.

That is the strongest universal leaderboard result by a Royals pitcher in this addendum. No pitcher in either league matched the displayed streak.
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Bobby Witt Jr. — Tied Among MLB Consecutive-Hit Leaders

Bobby's run of eight consecutive hits remains tied among the combined leaders.

The streak reinforces the game-changing offensive gear he can reach. When locked in, Bobby does not simply produce once per game; he can control an entire series of at-bats.
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Mike Payton — Tied Among MLB Consecutive On-Base Leaders

Payton's nine consecutive on-base plate appearances also hold up in the combined comparison.

For a supporting player to remain on an all-MLB streak board is meaningful. It validates the organizational depth theme noted in the final recap: the bench provided real value during the injury-heavy close.

Figure SO-C2. Combined MLB Streak Leaders — Eflin's Major-League Best Run

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Perspective: Combined streak board confirming Zack Eflin’s 23 scoreless innings as the longest displayed streak in MLB and his 12-game quality-start streak as second. Bobby Witt Jr., Mike Payton, and Hunter Brown also remain among the combined leaders in their respective categories.
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Manager's Desk — What the Final Boards Say About This Club

The leaderboards do not erase the 10–16 September or the 3–7 finish. They do explain why the season did not completely come apart.

We had players producing elite value in specific lanes:

• Vinnie was the AL's doubles leader.

• Salvy led the league in sacrifice flies.

• Isbel supplied top-tier defensive range.

• Eflin dominated the traffic-control and quality-start categories.

• Montgomery provided innings, complete games, and wins.

• Bobby and Garcia kept speed present in the lineup.

• Meadows, Waters, and Payton supplied stretches of useful consistency.

The boards also reveal the roster's imbalance.

Our strongest individual placements came from starting pitchers, gap hitters, situational run producers, and defenders. There is no Royals reliever on the saves, holds, or shutdown leaderboards. That absence aligns with the team's 15th-place bullpen ERA and the repeated late-inning instability documented throughout the monthly reports.

From the manager's side, that creates a simple postseason reality: our established strengths have to do more work before the game reaches its weakest phase.

The starters must cover innings. The defense must convert contact. Vinnie and Salvy must cash in opportunities. Bobby and Garcia must apply pressure without donating outs. The supporting hitters must extend innings whenever Cleveland gives them an opening.

We do not need every player to become a league leader in October. We need the players who made these lists to continue doing the things that placed them there.
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Front Office Notes / Takeaways

• The final lists confirm that the roster contains enough high-end individual strengths to compete in October, provided those strengths control the game before its vulnerable innings.

• The absence of Royals relievers from the final leaderboards reflects the club's unresolved bullpen weakness.

Austin Meadows, Drew Waters, and Mike Payton provided meaningful contributions as role players, reinforcing the importance of bench and secondary-lineup depth.

Hunter Brown's losing streak requires deeper evaluation, separating pitcher performance from run support, bullpen impact, and role fit.

________________________________________

👑 Crown Check Addendum Summary — September/October End of Season 👑

The final leaderboards do not describe a club carried by one superstar. They describe a roster with several distinct sources of value: gap power, speed, situational hitting, elite outfield defense, and two high-end starting pitchers. That balance helped Kansas City survive a difficult September and hold its Wild Card position by one game.

Vinnie's doubles, Salvy's situational execution, Bobby's impact speed, Isbel's defense, Montgomery's length, and whatever version of Eflin's stability the staff can reproduce must now be sustained and carried into next season, regardless of this October outcome.

The regular-season lists are complete. October will decide which names remain standing.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — OCTOBER EDITION 👑
Kansas City Royals | September/October 2025 Crown Check Addendum
(OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log)
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Old 06-29-2026, 06:11 PM   #207
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⚾ October 2025 — Wildcard Series Game 1: Four Runs Forward, Three Runs Back

👑 Wednesday, October 08 • Game 1👑

Kansas City's final push stops 90 feet short in an 8–7 Wild Card Game 1 loss.

Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Guardians | Progressive Field
Weather: Partly Cloudy, 48 degrees | Wind: Out to left at 11 mph | Attendance: 36,510 | First pitch: 8:05 PM ET
________________________________________

Pregame Memo (Manager's Desk)

From Monday morning through the opening of the clubhouse today, every discussion came back to one purpose: to construct the roster and game plan capable of winning the first game in Cleveland.

This was not a series where we could ease into October. All three games would be played at Progressive Field, and Cleveland had already controlled us across the regular season. One loss would place us on the elimination line. One win would reverse the pressure and give Jordan Montgomery the ball with a chance to close the series.

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The playoff roster required several calculated risks.

Mason Thompson was added to the bullpen, while Huascar Brazoban was removed after an unstable finish to the regular season. Sam Haggerty remained ready on the secondary roster after being designated. Devin Mann also moved to the secondary group so Vinnie Pasquantino could return to first base. Vinnie's day-to-day injury designation was scheduled to expire tomorrow, but waiting one more night would have meant opening the series without one of our most important left-handed bats. The risk felt justified. Mann remained available as an injury replacement if Vinnie could not finish the series.Christian Arroyo earned a postseason spot after his September surge. He would begin on the bench, available as a pinch hitter or late-game infield option. He had played his way into this roster rather than receiving a courtesy invitation.

The largest decision involved the rotation.

Brady Singer was rested and available, but I did not believe his recent form made him the best choice for Game 1. Luinder Avila had been more dependable down the stretch and had just given us five competitive innings in Atlanta. I gave him the ball, with Montgomery ready for Game 2 and Spencer Turnbull held behind him if the series required a third game. Our priorities were straightforward. The starter needed to provide the actual length, not the theoretical length. We could not allow Cleveland to dictate the game through its bullpen ladder. Our baserunning had to become precise immediately. We needed to accept the free base rather than give one away. Most of all, the 3–10 season record against the Guardians had to remain outside the dugout once the first pitch was thrown.

We would play to the strengths that carried us through 162 games. Then we would learn whether those strengths could survive October.

Cleveland Guardians Wildcard Series Snapshot

Cleveland entered the postseason after winning the American League Central and controlling the season series against us, 10 games to three. The Guardians did not overpower us with one repeated formula. They beat us through pitching depth, contact, pressure on the bases, and an ability to keep innings moving after we believed we were one out from escaping.

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Their lineup was built around Steven Kwan's table-setting, José Ramírez's switch-hitting impact, Andrés Giménez's all-around pressure, Bo Naylor's left-handed power, and Angel Martínez's ability to move throughout the order. Cleveland also carried a deep bullpen capable of shortening a game once it reached the seventh.

That made the middle innings critical. We could not afford to trail and allow the Guardians to hand a clean lead to Tim Herrin and Cade Smith. At the same time, an early advantage would mean little unless our own bullpen supplied the shutdown innings that had escaped us too often during September.

The series format offered no travel day and no return to Kauffman:

Game 1: October 8 at Cleveland
Game 2: October 9 at Cleveland

Game 3, if necessary: October 10 at Cleveland

There was no room to bank tomorrow's opportunity. The objective was to take tonight.

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Front office matchup priorities

1. Starter length must be real, not theoretical.
A five-inning start exposes the weakest portion of our roster. Six or seven competitive innings change the entire series.

2. We cannot allow Cleveland to dictate the bullpen ladder.
The leverage plan must account for lineup pockets rather than traditional inning labels. The most dangerous Cleveland hitters may appear in the seventh, not the ninth.

3. The baserunning has to become neutral immediately.
A full-season -8.3 cannot follow us into a three-game series. No speculative third outs. No forcing the extra base without a clean read.

4. Take the free base.
Fourteenth in walks is a regular-season concern. In October, it becomes a choice. Cleveland will try to get us to chase. We have to make them come into the zone.

5. Forget the season series once the lesson is taken.
The 3–10 record provides the scouting report, not the outcome. It tells us where the game has broken before. It does not tell us where Game 1 has to end.
________________________________________

Series Matchup Board — Game 1

• RHP Luinder Avila vs. RHP Gavin Williams


Avila's night was equal parts swing-and-miss ability and mounting pressure. He struck out nine over 4.2 innings, but Cleveland collected five hits, drew three walks, and scored five earned runs. He threw 98 pitches to 22 hitters and recorded only one ground-ball out.

The opening run came after a Kwan double and a Ramírez single. Avila then settled long enough for us to take the lead, but Cleveland scored twice in the fourth and twice more in the fifth. His wild pitch moved two runners into scoring position immediately before I went to McArthur.

Williams did not control the game either. He allowed six hits, six earned runs, and two walks over 5.1 innings. Kansas City reached him for two in the third and then opened the sixth with four consecutive singles. Cleveland's starter left with the bases loaded and his club trailing.


Game Day Log — Royals vs. Guardians (Game 1)

Both starters provided an opportunity. Cleveland's relief response was simply better than ours.

Inning-by-Inning Beats (Dugout View)

1st Inning
Williams retired Garcia, Pasquantino, and Massey in order, striking out the first two.

Cleveland attacked immediately. Kwan doubled at 110 mph to begin the bottom half. Avila struck out Naylor and Martínez, giving himself a chance to strand the runner, but Ramírez singled Kwan home and advanced to second on the throw. Avila struck out Giménez to finish the inning, but Cleveland had the first run. Guardians led 1–0.

2nd Inning
Bobby grounded out, Salvy flew to left, and Payton struck out. Six Royals had come to the plate without a baserunner.

Avila walked Brayan Rocchio with one out but struck out Chase DeLauter and José Siri. His fifth strikeout through two innings kept the deficit at one.

3rd Inning
Davis Schneider opened Kansas City's first real attack with a single to center. Austin Meadows followed with a triple into the gap, scoring Schneider. Kyle Isbel then lifted a sacrifice fly to center, bringing Meadows home and giving us the lead. Garcia attempted to bunt his way aboard but grounded out, and Pasquantino flew out. Still, the bottom of the order had turned the game. Royals led 2–1.

Avila answered with the shutdown inning we needed. Kwan lined out before Naylor and Martínez struck out. Seven strikeouts through three innings, and the lead remained intact.

4th Inning
Massey, Bobby, and Salvy went in order. The offense could not add to the one-run margin.

Ramírez walked to start Cleveland's half, and Giménez doubled him to third. Avila struck out Thomas Saggese, but Rocchio lifted a sacrifice fly that tied the game. DeLauter then singled Giménez home. Siri grounded into a force play, but Cleveland had scored twice and reclaimed the lead. Guardians led 3–2.

5th Inning
Williams retired Payton, Schneider, and Meadows, ending the inning with Meadows caught looking after a long battle.

Avila retired Kwan and struck out Naylor, reaching nine strikeouts. Martínez then doubled, and Ramírez walked. A wild pitch moved both runners into scoring position. With Avila at 98 pitches and Giménez at the plate, I went to McArthur.

Giménez beat out an infield single, scoring Martínez. Saggese followed with a line-drive RBI single that brought home Ramírez. McArthur retired Rocchio, but both inherited runners had scored. Cleveland led 5–2.

The decision to choose Avila had produced strikeouts, but not the length we needed. The bullpen was now carrying the game from the fifth inning forward.

6th Inning
The offense answered with its strongest inning of the night.

Isbel singled. Garcia followed with another hit. Pasquantino lined a 111.3 mph single to right, scoring Isbel. Massey then singled home Garcia. Four consecutive hits had cut the deficit to one and loaded the bases with nobody out. Bobby walked, forcing Cleveland's defense to hold every base and bringing the potential tying run closer. Salvy flew out without advancing anyone, but Payton worked a bases-loaded walk that scored Pasquantino and tied the game.

Cleveland went to Herrin.

Schneider grounded into a force at home, but Meadows drew another bases-loaded walk, scoring Bobby and giving us the lead. Isbel struck out to end the inning with three runners stranded. Four runs had crossed. Royals led 6–5.

That should have been the game's turning point. Instead, the shutdown inning never arrived.

McArthur walked DeLauter to open the bottom half. Kevin Kiermaier failed to move him with a bunt, but Kwan singled. Naylor followed with a double that scored DeLauter and placed Kwan at third. Martínez then singled through the middle. Kwan scored, Naylor scored, and Martínez advanced on the throw. Three runs. The lead had lasted only four batters. McArthur retired Ramírez and Giménez, but Cleveland had answered our four-run rally with three of its own. Guardians led 8–6.

7th Inning
Garcia walked against Herrin and stole second with one out. Pasquantino flew out, and Massey struck out, leaving Bobby as the final chance to extend the inning. Bobby delivered a single through the middle, scoring Garcia and cutting the deficit to one. He then stole second, putting the tying run in scoring position. Salvy worked the count full but struck out. Royals trailed 8–7.

Jacob Lopez replaced McArthur and gave us a clean seventh, retiring Saggese, Rocchio, and DeLauter. For the first time since the third inning, Cleveland went down without creating pressure.

8th Inning
Cade Smith entered for Cleveland. Payton struck out, but Schneider walked, and Meadows singled sharply to right, sending Schneider to third. The tying run stood 90 feet away with one out. Isbel popped up. Garcia followed with another shallow pop. Two runners were stranded, and the Guardians escaped the inning without allowing the ball to leave the infield after Meadows' single.

Lopez retired Kiermaier and Kwan in the bottom half. Garcia then dropped a foul ball off Naylor's bat, extending the plate appearance, but Lopez worked through it after Naylor singled. Martínez grounded into a force to end the inning. Cleveland remained one run ahead.

9th Inning
Pasquantino led off against Smith and drove a double to right. The tying run was immediately in scoring position. Arroyo pinch-hit for Massey and grounded to second, moving Vinnie to third. One out. Tying run 90 feet away. Bobby popped out to short.

Salvy came to the plate with the game resting on one at-bat. He fell behind, fought off a pitch, and then struck out swinging. Vinnie remained at third. The final out settled into Naylor's glove, and Cleveland took Game 1. Guardians 8, Royals 7.

________________________________________

Final

Royals 7, Guardians 8

Royals (9 H, 1 E) | Braves (11 H, 0 E)

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Player of the Game: José Ramírez

Notable Royals: Pasquantino returned to the lineup and went 2-for-5 with a double, a run, and an RBI. Meadows finished 2-for-3 with a triple, two walks, and two RBIs. Bobby singled, walked, stole a base, scored once, and drove in one. Garcia reached twice, stole a base, and scored twice. Salvy finished 0-for-5 and left five runners aboard. Kansas City stranded seven overall, including three in the sixth, two in the eighth, and the tying run at third in the ninth.

Notable Guardians: Cleveland received two hits and two RBIs from Martínez, two hits and an RBI from Naylor, two hits from Kwan, and two walks plus an RBI single from Ramírez. The Guardians also went 6-for-12 with runners in scoring position.

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Winning Pitcher: Tim Herrin, 1–0
Losing Pitcher: James McArthur, 0–1
Save: Cade Smith, 1


Code:
Kansas City Pitching Scoreline
Pitcher             Dec           IP    H    R   ER   BB    K   HR    PI    ERA
L. Avila                         4.2    5    5    5    3    9    0    98   9.64
J. McArthur       L (0-1)        1.1    5    3    3    1    0    0    35  20.25
J. Lopez                         2.0    1    0    0    0    0    0    23   0.00
________________________________________

Front Office Note / Takeaways

Cleveland's season-long advantage reappeared in the leverage moments. We built the larger rally. They supplied the immediate answer. We placed the tying run at third twice. They recorded the final out both times. The fifth-innings hook came after the leverage had already formed. Martínez's double, Ramírez's walk, and the wild pitch put two runners in scoring position. McArthur allowed both to score, leaving Avila's final line worse and Cleveland in control. The series is not over, but the margin is gone. Cleveland now leads 1–0 and needs one more win. Every pitching and lineup choice tomorrow will be made under elimination pressure.

• Avila's selection produced only part of the desired result. Nine strikeouts showed why he received the start. Five runs, three walks, and 98 pitches before completing five innings showed why postseason length must be measured in outs rather than stuff.

• Vinnie justified the roster risk. Two hits, a double, and the ninth-inning opportunity. His condition will need to be checked carefully, but the bat belonged in the lineup.

• Salvy's 0-for-5 line sits in the center of the loss. He had multiple chances with runners aboard, including the bases loaded in the sixth and Vinnie at third in the ninth. We will need his bat tomorrow.

• The baserunning was aggressive but controlled. Garcia and Bobby each stole a base, and neither attempt cost us an out. That was the cleaner pressure we asked for when entering the series.

• Montgomery now carries the season. Game 2 is no longer about positioning. It is about survival. Win, and Turnbull gets the ball in a deciding Game 3. Lose, and the 2025 journey ends in Cleveland.
We proved we could score against them. Tomorrow, we have to prove we can finish.


Around the League

Two Northwest Arkansas Naturals officially announced their retirement ahead of the Wild Card opener. Shortstop J.T. Arruda and first baseman T.T. Bowens will step away from professional baseball, closing their time in the Royals organization.

Their decisions arrived quietly while the major-league club opened its postseason, but they belong to the same organizational cycle. Players enter, develop, fight for another assignment, and eventually reach the point where the game sends them in another direction.

For Kansas City, that point has not arrived yet. There is still another game tomorrow. There has to be.

________________________________________
👑 FOR THE CROWN — ALWAYS 👑
Kansas City Royals | Wildcard Series 2025 - Game 1

(OOTP25 Royals Journey — GM/Manager's Dual Log)
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