The Royals aren’t making a coaching shakeup, even with the season going sideways.
That was the message from general manager J.J. Picollo on Tuesday, just before Kansas City opened its series against the Tampa Bay Rays at Kauffman Stadium. Picollo said the club plans to keep its current staff in place for now, while leaving room to evaluate everything again once the season ends.
“These are the same guys we’ve worked with for really four seasons now,” Picollo said. “We’ve been through the highs and the lows, and they’ve been challenged before.”
That vote of confidence comes at a rough moment. Kansas City entered Tuesday at 35-50 and sitting last in the AL Central, a far cry from the expectations that followed last season’s playoff berth and back-to-back winning years.
The Royals were supposed to be in the mix for the division and pushing toward the top tier of the league. Instead, they spent April digging out of a hole, losing 19 of their first 31 games while injuries piled up.
The pitching staff took hits early. Closer Carlos Estévez was first slowed by a left-foot contusion, then later dealt with a setback tied to a right rotator-cuff strain. The injury list also includes second baseman Jonathan India, who had left-shoulder surgery, starting pitcher Cole Ragans with a left-elbow impingement and first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino with a right-hamate fracture.
“You know, we’re faced with a challenge that’s greater than any other point right now,” Picollo said. “Because in ‘23 the expectations weren’t as high. The expectations were there this year, so it’s more challenging.
“But I know what this group is about. I know how they work.
They’re very curious and they want answers. They want to try to find solutions to the questions we had, and that’s what they work (on).
“So I know they are prepared every day, and that’s all we can ask. At the end of the year, you take a look and say, ‘Is this moving in the right direction we wanted to go?’”
The Royals did make some staff changes over the offseason. They brought in two new assistant hitting coaches, Marcus Thames and Connor Dawson, both of whom have worked with hitting coach Alec Zumwalt this season. They also added assistant pitching coach Mike McFerran, who joined Brian Sweeney and the pitching staff after Zach Bove left for the Chicago White Sox.
Picollo said the communication between the front office and manager Matt Quatraro’s staff remains ongoing.
“Right now, it’s just keep having conversations with them, share things we are seeing as a front office and let them share concerns they have with us,” Picollo said. “So together, we can be part of the answers together.”
Kansas City still believes there’s time to salvage the season, and the staff will be part of that push. Quatraro, who signed a three-year extension this offseason, has overseen steady growth from young players such as Jac Caglianone and Carter Jensen, along with All-Star seasons from Bobby Witt Jr., Seth Lugo, Maikel Garcia and Estévez.
Even with the record where it is, Picollo made it clear the standard hasn’t changed.
“We expect to win more games,” he said. This town and this city expect to win more games.
There’s a responsibility that we feel that we need to produce. We need to answer those expectations and figure out how we can get better.”
In Other News...
Royals Just Became The Butt Of Another Brutal National Joke
The Royals have spent much of the season trying to climb out of a rough spot while still holding postseason hopes, but their latest wave of attention came from an especially unflattering place. A satirical Babylon Bee piece took aim at Kansas City with a joke built around the idea that the club managed to lose on a day it did not even play, a punchline aimed at a team already carrying the worst record in the American League.
The sting of it is made sharper by what happened last week, when Kansas City was outscored 35-3 over a two-game stretch, the kind of skid that invites ridicule from outside observers and weary reactions from fans. Royals supporters did exactly that on social media, weighing in on the joke in real time as the club once again found itself as the punchline in a national conversation it would rather avoid. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Downtown Stadium Push Just Took A Major Step Forward
A downtown ballpark move for the Royals is no longer just talk, as the club has filed a permit for the project and taken another tangible step toward reshaping where the franchise plays its home games. The plan calls for a major district built around the stadium site, with Populous lined up as the design lead and architect, giving the effort a more concrete structure as it moves from vision to paperwork.
The scope is sprawling, covering roughly 91 acres and split into 10 planned areas, with the timeline stretched well beyond the first shovels in the ground. Construction could begin this year and run through 2031, while the broader district is expected to keep unfolding all the way to 2040, depending on market demand and how quickly each phase can advance. [Read more 🡒]
