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The way I look at it
right now, the Royals are probably about 2 quality
starting pitchers and a true lead-off man away from
being a contender in the AL Central. I’m only
willing to entertain the fantasy that we may even
be THAT close to contending because the Central,
itself, looks awful pathetic to this point.
Cleveland is playing well, but they’re a team that
was projected to win about 65 games this
year. It’s entirely possible that they could
fall back. Everybody outside of the Indians
and Royals range from “below .500” to “WELL-BELOW
.500.”
The following AL
offensive rankings for the Royals are staggering to
me:
Runs (the most important
category): 2nd
Batting average:
1st
OBP:
2nd
Hits:
1st
OPS:
4th
SLG:
4th
Walks:
4th
The SLG and OPS are most
affected by the fact that the Royals are only
9th in the AL in dongs—not altogether
shocking, considering the park they play in and the
way the team is built. On the other hand,
they ALMOST make up for it by the shockingly high
number of doubles they’ve been hitting. They
currently lead the AL in that category.
When Aviles and Betemit
are in the lineup together right now, the Royals
have about as effective of a 6-man offensive
combination as anyone in baseball AT THE
MOMENT. I’m not silly enough to think it
will last forever, but Aviles, Cabrera, Gordon,
Butler, Francoeur and Betemit are collectively
exceeding expectations to this point. That
includes the fact that Aviles got off to a
HORRENDOUS start. Since limping out to a line
of .107/.188/.321 by April 12, Aviles has raised it
to .250/.280/.539 in less than 3 weeks. He’s
hitting .317 over that time with a .707 SLG (4
dongs, 4 doubles).
How’s this for a
stat: Billy Butler is doing just fine.
Hitting .320/.438/.490 with three dongs. And
yet, he’s merely in 6th place on this
team for RBIs, behind each of the other 5 offensive
players who are getting it done. If Billy
Butler is your 6th-best run producer,
you’re probably getting some darn fine
offense.
The problem, of course,
is that we’re getting very little offense from the
middle infield and the catcher spot. I can
live with whatever Escobar gives us, because every
damn night, he saves at least a run with his
glove. But as Ned Yost says, it’s awfully
hard to hide three ineffective offensive players in
your lineup. I would expect the “successful
six” to come back towards average more than I
expect the “terrible trifecta” to move
upwards. So unless we can find an offensive
solution, I don’t expect us to remain a top-tier
offensive team for long.
More than anything, a
true leadoff man would be nice.
The other side of the
Royals’ coin is that, as much as the offense has
been better than expected, the starting pitching
has been right about where we thought it would
be. And that’s not good. The Royals’
pitching staff as a whole (which includes the
lights-out play from a portion of the bullpen)
currently ranks 11th in ERA,
13th in batting average allowed, and has
given up the 4th-most runs in the
league.
I don’t know how much
more the pen can do. We need starting help,
and soon.
Danny Duffy is currently
leading the Pacific Coast league with a 0.90 ERA in
4 starts. He’s struck out 24 batters, against
just 4 walks, in 20 innings pitched. Mike
Montgomery and Everett Teaford join him in the top
15 of every meaningful category in the
league.
We have help
a-waitin’. How long until we decide we’re a
player in this division, and can use a little of
that help right now?
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