The Royals have been one of the game’s most active teams this winter but don’t appear done with their offseason just yet.
It had been a 21-year drought for the Seattle Mariners before the club made the postseason in 2022 and now they are on the verge of making it for the second year in a row. Still, even teams built to content consistently will seek upgrades in the offseason.
The Royals once again enter the trade deadline as sellers, and while the roster is lacking intriguing trade chips there is an unheralded arm in the bullpen that could bring the club and helpful return.
He’s been very good! Let’s be honest: it’s easy to fly under the radar on a team like the 2023 Kansas City Royals. They are barrelling towards 100 losses, mired in an everlasting rebuild.
On Wednesday night against the Kansas City Royals, Luis Arraez will go for a fifth straight multi-hit game as the host Miami Marlins aim for their sixth consecutive win and second sweep in a row.
The Royals’ offensive explosion against the Rangers come from some unknown guys on the roster, including Tyler Tolbert Diego Hernandez got shaken after an awkward dive and missed a low-line drive.
The future looked bright for Carlos Hernández when, coming off the best of his two stints in the big leagues, he reported to the KC Royals’ spring camp last March with a rotation spot secured.
Hernández becomes the second member of the season-opening rotation to pitch his way off the active roster.
"Those things will come back and get you. Putting guys on base is going to hurt." The above quote is from Kansas City Royals manager Mike Matheny following Thursday night's 7-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox.
After taking game one of their series against the Colorado Rockies, the Kansas City Royals dropped game two in convincing fashion. The club surrendered 10 runs to Colorado in the thin air of Coors Field, and almost all of them were charged to starting pitcher Carlos Hernandez.
Through four-and-a-half innings on Monday, the Kansas City Royals were rolling en route to what could've been a 1-0 victory. Once starting pitcher Carlos Hernandez took the mound for the bottom of the fifth, though, things fell apart.
When it rains, it pours. The Royals dropped their 17th game in 26 tries on Monday afternoon, as the Orioles used a six-run fifth inning to blow by Kansas City with a 6-1 win.
Good teams find a way to win, bad ones find a way to lose. The Royals struggled to capitalize on late game blunders by Cleveland, as Kansas City dropped its second game of the season 10-7 and earned a split of the four-game series.
Welcome back to Kings of Kauffman’s KC Royals Projections series for 2022. Between now and Opening Day, our writers are analyzing how various Royals performed last season and predicting how they might fare this year.
Kansas City Royals righty Carlos Hernandez is in his second season at the MLB level. We got an abbreviated look at the youngster in 2020, but the sample size was too small to come to any real conclusions.
It was a Friday night win over the White Sox. It took two hours to get started, and it didn’t end until after 12:30 am, but the Royals beat the White Sox, 7-2, to open a three-game set.
The Kansas City Royals are once again playing like one of the best teams in baseball, and a big part of it has been the revival of the starting pitching staff.
It doesn’t matter who the opponent was today, that was a great all around win Former Royal Alec Mills, who famously said every time he pitched against the Royals he was going to give it his all to get back at them did not have it today.
Lots of velo. Lots of runs given up, too Kansas City Royals right-handed pitcher Carlos Hernandez is instantly recognizable. He’s huge, for one thing; listed at 6’4” and 250lbs, Hernandez looks like an NFL tight end on the pitchers’ mound.
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