But here we are. The Kansas City Royals will be playing in the 2014 World Series.
That's not a sentence I ever expected to think, type, or read. |
Of course, no story about this team would be complete without focusing on their bread and butter: the pitching. James Shields, acquired in a trade with Tampa Bay early in the 2012 offseason that I shouldn't have to remind anybody of, was their nominal and literal ace, while Jeremy Guthrie, offseason signing Jason Vargas, rookie Yordano Ventura, and reclamation project Danny Duffy kept the extremely dominant bullpen (more on them later) from getting too overworked. Even though they ranked 10th in the AL in innings pitched, they were 4th in starters' ERA, 5th in shutouts, 2nd in quality starts, and 7th in WHIP. In the playoffs, the first 4 have been good if not great, combining for a 3.17, the lowest of all AL teams this postseason. That's without a single appearance by Duffy, who enjoyed his longest, and best, season to date. There's no doubt that the Royals' starters are vital to their success. That bullpen, though...
The scariest part about this team was the idea that if they got through the 6th inning of any given contest with a lead, a victory was all but assured. That's thanks entirely to Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis, and closer Greg Holland. These relievers combined to make the 2014 Royals the first team to have 3 pitchers who all recorded an ERA under 1.50 with 60 or more innings pitched. They tied with the same Orioles they just eliminated for the most saves in the AL, with 53 saves notched. That's not insignificant: Herrera is a flamethrower who consistently crosses up the league's best hitters; Davis, a throw-in from the Shields trade, had one of the most dominant seasons for a reliever in history; and Holland continued his 9th inning prowess, extending his reputation as one of the best closers in the last 5 years. Through the ALDS/CS, these three allowed just two runs (Davis, ALDS Game 3/Holland, ALCS Game 1) while striking out 13. It's not a stretch to say that without any one of these three men, the Royals don't shut down the opposition with such ease.
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And there would be considerably less mobbing on the mound. |
Will they win the World Series against an opponent to be determined (at the time of this writing, the Cardinals lead the Giants 4-2 in Game 4 of the NLCS, but the Giants currently hold a 2-games-to-1 lead in the series)? Maybe. They'll have home field advantage, just as they did in 1985. They're currently 8-0, the first team in history to ever reel off 8 straight wins in a single postseason. Most importantly, their style of play is very reminiscent of 100-odd years of National League baseball: they get crafty on the basepaths, they employ the sacrifice bunt quite liberally (please, Ned Yost, you don't need to open an inning by giving away an out), and they rely more on defense than offense, even though they can pull several runs out of nowhere, seemingly at will. They could very easily hit the wall against San Francisco or St. Louis, and as my mother has cautioned multiple times since they were down 7-3 in the 8th inning of the Wild Card game, nobody implodes as quickly or suddenly as this team (although, having spent my entire life in the South, I'd argue that the Braves do a nice job of that as well). But until we see some signs of slowing down, there's no reason to doubt these red-hot Royals. Baseball is alive in Kansas City once again, and it's a pretty damn impressive sight.