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Kevin Agee's avatar

I believe the Royals inadvertently set this losing spiral in motion on the final day of the 2017 season.

I can’t find the quote, but I remember Dayton saying something about how they’d never again do a Senior Day style sendoff for players like they did for the core four. It sent a clear message: The fun is over, and we aren’t going to be good for a very long time. The players took that to heart, and that played a big role in the 100-loss seasons in 2018 and 2019.

Look, talent matters more than anything. The Royals know that. But setting that expectation … that you’re going to win … has to come first. This is about culture and a slow build toward a sustained winner. The front office believes you do that by putting the best team on the field that you possibly can every single day.

I feel frustrated about how this year’s gone, but it isn’t NEARLY as bad as 18 and 19. This group is clearly much better, record be damned. They’ve clearly overhauled the approach toward development.

Something I’ve always thought: Dayton and his team made a ton of mistakes from 2006-2012, and they STILL won two pennants and a World Series, not to mention two guys breaking the team home record, and developing Gold Glovers and All Stars everywhere.

Imagine the amazing things that could happen in the second act, after they’ve learned from their mistakes. I can’t wait.

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LetsgobigMoe's avatar

Squint really hard, seems like that may apply to most mid to bottom feeders. :-)

Rivera has earned being in the conversation as making them earn positions could be perhaps the biggest cultural shift they need (accountability).

SP seems like a very long way off vs the top shelf teams.

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