The Fourth of July generally is regarded in baseball circles as the midseason evaluation point.
For the Kansas City Royals, who are just a handful of games shy of the halfway point of the season, it’s one that started with so much promise but has regressed into another summer of futility.
The Royals energized their fans early on, blazing to an 18-11 record and showing a penchant for winning close games.
It was at that point that supernova closer Joakim Soria went down with an injury and it all began to unravel.
The Royals’ pitching -- namely Zack Greinke -- and timely hitting carried them during the early surge. But when Soria went down, the Royals’ pitching pattern changed. The relievers were the first to blow, then the starting rotation crumbled. Greinke has won only two games since his hot start, while Kyle Davies, the No. 3 starter when the year opened, is toiling in Omaha.
But the Royals’ pitching woes don’t even begin to compare to the total offensive ineptitude the team has suffered from.
First, we have to qualify that injuries have been instrumental, but that’s something all teams can claim. But Alex Gordon, expected to provide 20 to 25 homers, went down after just seven games. Expected tablesetter Coco Crisp is gone for the year, his season over after 49 games. He gave KC excellent defense and a stolen-base threat. Last year’s outstanding rookie, Mike Aviles, was hurt from the beginning, though he kept quiet, before shutting it down for good after 36 games. And John Buck, who splits time at catcher, has played only 28 games because of a bad back.
That means nearly half the lineup is gone and their replacements haven’t come through.
The Royals basically give away two at-bats every time through the lineup. Shortstops Tony Pena Jr. and Luis Hernandez are offensive embarrassments and Mitch Maier, who has taken Crisp’s place, struggles mightily to get the ball out of the infield. There may be pitchers on the Royals who can hit better than those guys.
The expected cannons on the team also have misfired. Newcomer Mike Jacobs, expected to provide 25 to 30 homers, had a whopping two RBI in June. Two. And he hits anywhere from fourth to sixth in the order. He’s a butcher in the field, as he’s exclusively a DH now.
Jose Guillen, who is costing the Royals $12 million a year, is mailing it in. He looks to be going through the motions, basically stealing his paycheck. Hopefully some contender will take him off the Royals’ hands come the final month when teams make a pennant push.