Saturday, December 30, 2006



Year-By-Year Royals Team Payroll


 

Year-By-Year Royals Team Payroll
Year Payroll MLB Rank Highest Paid Player

1988 $11,558,873 13th/26 George Brett $2,305,000
1989 $15,427,162 9th/26 Willie Wilson $2,112,205
1990 $23,873,745 1st/26 George Brett $2,255,000
1991 $28,722,662 7th/26 Mark Davis $3,625,000
1992 $33,643,834 8th/26 Wally Joyner $4,200,000
1993 $40,102,666 4th/28 David Cone $5,000,000
1994 $40,481,334 4th/28 David Cone $5,000,000
1995 $27,608,834 21st/28 Wally Joyner $4,800,000
1996 $18,480,750 27th/28 Kevin Appier $5,051,250
1997 $31,225,000 21st/28 Jay Bell $5,000,000
1998 $32,912,500 21st/30 Dean Palmer $5,825,000
1999 $16,527,000 27th/30 Kevin Appier $4,800,000
2000 $23,132,500 28th/30 Johnny Damon $4,000,000
2001 $35,422,000 27th/30 Roberto Hernandez $6,000,000
2002 $47,257,000 22nd/30 Mike Sweeney $8,000,000
2003 $40,518,000 29th/30 Mike Sweeney $11,000,000
2004 $47,609,000 22nd/30 Mike Sweeney $11,000,000
2005 $36,881,000 29th/30 Mike Sweeney $11,000,000
2006 $47,294,000 26th/30 Mike Sweeney $11,000,000
2007 $67,116,500 22nd/30 Mike Sweeney $11,000,000
2008 $58,245,500 25th/30 Jose Guillen $12,000,000



Monday, December 18, 2006

A Look Back at 1994

To kick off this series, we'll take a look back at a pivotal year for the franchise - 1994. In many ways, the Royals franchise history has two distinctive eras - "pre-1994" and "post-1994." "Pre-1994", the team was one of the most successful franchises in baseball, certainly one of the most, if not the most successful expansion franchise ever. They had stable ownership, attendance near the top of the league, a sure-fire Hall of Famer in George Brett and season after season of winning baseball.

That all changed in 1994, the first full season following the tragic death of owner Ewing Kauffman. It was also the first season without Hall of Famer George Brett. It also was the first major labor stoppage since 1981, and it would foreshadow cloudy times for the Royals.


1994 in a Box:

Record: 64-51 (3rd place, 4 GB)
Runs Scored: 574 (9th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 532 (3rd in AL)
Park Factor: Batting - 104/Pitching - 104 (over 100 favors batters)

General Manager: Herk Robinson
Manager: Hal McRae

Attendance: 1,400,494 (10th in the AL) - 23,737 per game
Stadium: Royals Stadium
1994 Uniforms

Longest Winning Streak: 14 (July 23 – August 5)
Longest Losing Streak: 3 (six times)
How they started: Lost four of their first five, but then won five in a row. Finished April 9-11.
Best month: July. They went 18-10 and began a fourteen game winning streak.
Worst month: April. Their only losing month with a 9-11 record.
Best game: August 5 - Kansas City 8 Seattle 0. Tom Gordon allowed just three hits over eight innings as the Royals won their fourteenth in a row in front of 25,663 walk up fans in a game that was moved to Kansas City at the last minute because of damage at the Kingdome.
Worst game: April 12 - Boston 22 Kansas City 11. Kevin Appier gave up six in the first, but it was an eight run sixth inning that made this a real laugher as Stan Belinda absolutely imploded. Infielder David Howard had to pitch the last two innings, yielding just one run.
Loved to face: Oakland. The A’s were in transition, and the Royals went 7-3 against their former rivals.
Hated to face: Baltimore. The Royals dropped four out of five to the O’s.

Say Hello To: Vince Coleman, Dave Henderson, Bob Milacki, Tom Goodwin, David Glass
Say Goodbye To: George Brett, Kevin McReynolds, Mark Gardner, Chris Gwynn, Keith Miller (released in May), Hubie Brooks (released in July)

What Went Right: The four man rotation of David Cone, Kevin Appier, Tom Gordon and Mark Gubicza threw 612 innings with a 3.85 ERA, 26% better than the league average ERA of 5.23. The infield of Gary Gaetti, Greg Gagne, Jose Lind and Wally Joyner was perhaps the best defensive infield in baseball with the quartet committing just twenty-nine errors combined.

What Went Wrong: Outside of Bob Hamelin, the offense was still pathetic. Felix Jose had a surprisingly decent year, and Wally Joyner, Mike MacFarlane and Gary Gaetti held their own, but the rest of the lineup was pretty awful. The team didn’t draw walks, didn’t slug, didn’t hit home runs, but they did make lots of contact and steal lots of bases. They were playing a 1985 offense in the dawn of the offensive explosion.

Youngsters (25 or under)— one (24 year old Hipolito Pichardo)
Prime (26-29)—11 semi-regulars
Past-Prime (30-33)—8 semi-regulars
Old Timers (34+)— 2 (Gary Gaetti and Dave Henderson)
Rookies: Bob Hamelin
Top Prospect— Michael Tucker and Joe Vitiello. As a 23 year old, Tucker hit .276/.366/.468 with 21 homers in Omaha. Vitiello hit .344/.436/.526 in Omaha as a 24 year old.
1994 Draft: Matt Smith (16th overall), Jed Hansen, Jaime Bluma, Matt Treanor, Tim Byrdak, Jose Rosado, Lance Carter, Jose Santiago

Best OPS+: Bob Hamelin 146
Most Runs Created: Bob Hamelin, 73
Highest Batting Average: Wally Joyner .311
Lowest Batting Average: Vince Coleman .240
Most Home Runs: Bob Hamelin, 24 (9th in the AL)
Most RBI: Bob Hamelin, 65
Most Stolen Bases: Vince Coleman, 50 (2nd in AL)
Moneyball Award: Bob Hamelin, with 56 walks in 374 plate appearances
Angel Berroa Award: Chico Lind drew just 16 walks in 315 plate appearances
Best Position Player: Bob Hamelin
Worst Position Player: Chico Lind

Most Wins: David Cone, 16
Most Losses: Mark Gubicza, 9
Most Saves: Jeff Montgomery, 27
Best ERA: David Cone 2.94
Worst ERA: Mark Gubicza 4.50 (Bob Milacki had a 6.17 ERA in 55 2/3 innings)
Most Innings: David Cone 171 2/3
Best Pitcher: David Cone (Cy Young Award Winner)
Worst Pitcher: Stan Belinda

All-Stars: David Cone
Team Payroll: $40,481,334 (4th out of 28 teams)
Highest Paid Player: David Cone - $5,000,000
Career Best Seasons: Bob Hamelin, David Cone, Billy Brewer
Career Worst Seasons: Dave Henderson, Stan Belinda
Nicknames: Bob "The Hammer" Hamelin, Jose "Chico" Lind, Tom "Flash" Gordon

Better at sports than politics? - Current White House Press Secretary Tony Snow, then a columnist for the Detroit News, picked the Cincinnati Reds to beat the Royals in the World Series. The Reds won the NL Central while the Royals finished four games back in the AL Central.

Blasts from the past: The Royals signed P Charlie Leibrandt and 1B Steve Balboni, both regulars on the 1985 World Championship team, to minor league contracts. Neither made the club.

Season Summary
1994 was a transitional year in many ways for the Royals. It was the end of an era in two respects – longtime owner and founder of the Royals, Ewing Kauffman, passed away on August 1, 1993; and future Hall of Famer and franchise player George Brett retired at the end of the 1993 season. The team off the field would be left in the hands of the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation while five limited partners, including Wal-Mart CEO David Glass, ran the ballclub. The Kauffman Foundation would cover annual losses, estimated at $14 million for 1994, but the club would have to trim the $40 million payroll and raise $50 million in charitable donations to make the franchise attractive to a local buyer.

Glass, named Royals CEO, departed from the vanilla marketing themes the team had under Kauffman and implemented more ballpark entertainment. The team promoted "family fun" with parking-lot barbecues, picnic areas, roving bands, and fireworks after homers. The club also began wearing dark blue tops on Sunday home games. These moves were made to stem the decline in attendance. The Royals in 1992 and 1993 drew under two million fans for the first time in a decade.

Meanwhile, the team on the field would be left with deep pitching, but a lineup short on offense. Even with Brett, the Royals in 1993 finished dead last in the league in scoring, with just 675 runs scored. They were able to attain an 84-78 record anyway by finishing third in the league in pitching, although for the year they were outscored. They had a definite ace in Kevin Appier who had a career year in 1993 winning 18 games and the ERA title, and a solid number two in David Cone, who had a 3.33 ERA in what was considered a "disappointing" season for the free agent. Tom Gordon, Hipolito Pichardo and Chris Haney all made decent rotation candidates, and the club decided to re-sign free agent Mark Gubicza, their last link to the 1985 World Champions, to compete for a staff role.

Winter Rumors
Jeff Montgomery was coming off his finest season as a Royal, tying for the league lead in saves. But with the acquisition of setup man Stan Belinda the previous summer Stan Belinda, rumors that winter speculated that Monty might be moved to bring in an impact bat. The most persistent rumors involved the Atlanta Braves, who employed former Royals GM John Schuerholz. Kansas City was rumored to be interested in either Ron Gant or David Justice. However, manager Hal McRae put an end to speculation, when he proclaimed:

"''If we trade Monty for a power hitter, we just move our problem around. 'We'd lose games late instead of early.''

There were also whispers of the Dodgers trying a salary dump with Darryl Strawberry headed to Kansas City, but Royals officials quickly put the clamp on that rumor. There was even a rumor of Yankee outfielder and former Royal Danny Tartabull returning to the club in a trade, but his expensive contract made that deal unlikely. A more reasonable trade rumor had Stan Belinda headed to Philadelphia for first baseman Ricky Jordan.

Moneyball
What hovered over all of the trade rumors was the uncertainty of the Royals financial future. Salaries in the game were escalating and with Ewing Kauffman’s death, the Royals went into belt-tightening mode. To compound this problem, the Royals had ten players eligible for arbitration in the winter of 1993 including stars like Kevin Appier and Brian McRae, as well as regulars Tom Gordon, Mike MacFarlane and Stan Belinda. There were rumors of the team trading Appier to relieve themselves of his $3.8 million salary, but ultimately the Royals hung on to him. They did receive some cash in a swap of disappointing $3 million outfielders when they swapped Kevin McReynolds to the Mets for Vince Coleman in what was their only significant off-season move.

The only other addition the team made in the off-season was the signing of free agent outfielder Dave Henderson, a part of the feared Oakland lineup from the late 80s. However, Henderson was now 35, had gimpy knees, and was coming off a season in which he hit just .220. He was brought in as a fourth outfielder, to platoon with Hamelin, and to light a fire under the tail of consistent underachiever Felix Jose. The club also non-tendered Hubie Brooks, Keith Miller, Chris Gwynn and Mark Gubicza, but aside from Gwynn, would bring all of them back at reduced salaries. Brooks and Miller would be released mid-season, but Gubicza would prove to be a steal of a deal, pitching very adequately.

The Hammer
Even though the club failed to make a move for an impact bat in the off-season, the offense did improve considerably, scoring a half run per game more than in 1993, and finishing eighth in the league in runs scored. This came despite significant drop-offs in performance from regulars Mike MacFarlane, Wally Joyner, Greg Gagne, and Brian McRae. What made up for these drop-offs? Two words – THE HAMMER. Bob Hamelin burst onto the scene as a 26 year old rookie in 1994 and made a huge impact, both at the plate and at the post-game buffet. He finished ninth in the league in home runs with 24, was fifth in slugging at .599 and was fifth in OPS at .987.

Bob Hamelin was a portly, bespectacled left handed slugger who appeared to belong more at a beer league softball game than at Royals Stadium. Hamelin had been a highly rated prospect immediately after becoming the second round pick by the Royals in 1988, and put up two great minor league seasons to begin his career. His future was bright and he was in AAA by the age of 22. However injuries would nag him for the next three seasons, delaying his MLB debut. In 1993 he put together a solid season at Omaha hitting .259/.371/.493 with 29 home runs, but only got a cup of coffee. He looked ready to take over as the regular designated hitter in 1994, but nearly jeopardized that by tearing a muscle in an arm-wrestling tournament in January. He recovered and responded with a fantastic April, hitting .361/.432/.721 with six home runs. The season culminated in Rookie of the Year honors, the first Royal to receive the award since Lou Pinella won in the inaugural season of the franchise.

Still, after Hamelin, the team had little in the way of offensive production. Even with his performance, they were still ninth in on-base percentage, eleventh in slugging, twelfth in walks and thirteenth in home runs. The one area in which the team excelled was stealing bases, and boy could they run! They stole one hundred forty bases – Cleveland was the only other AL club to steal at least one hundred. Newly acquired Vince Coleman finished second in the league with fifty swipes, with Brian McRae stealing twenty-eight and reserve Terry Shumpert swiping eighteen. The club also picked up a speedy outfielder off waivers named Tom Goodwin, but he only appeared in two games in 1994.

Wally Joyner, Mike MacFarlane and Greg Gagne all had years consistent with their career performance. Gary Gaetti, who the club had picked up the previous summer off waivers from the Angels, continued to play adequately with a bit of pop, while the Royals paid him the league minimum. Felix Jose had his only good season with the Royals, although he would never fulfill the potential he always enticed clubs with. Chico Lind continued a steady decline in what little offensive performance he had. Between Gaetti, Gagne, Joyner and second baseman Chico Lind, the Royals had perhaps the best defensive infield in all of baseball.

The Arms
Pitching was what kept the Royals in contention. Their 4.23 team ERA was second in the league, and a full run lower than the league average of 5.23 in the dawn of the age of the offensive explosion the game was about to experience. David Cone bounced back from a disappointing reunion with the club in 1993 to win sixteen games, finish third in ERA, and win his only Cy Young Award. Appier’s performance slipped a bit, but was still solid. However, he suffered from poor run support and poor bullpen relief, finishing with just seven wins. He made nine quality starts that year that resulted in no-decisions, including a 1-0 loss to Pat Hentgen and the Blue Jays in which Appier gave up three hits, walked one, and struck out ten in a losing cause.

Jeff Montgomery had a down year from his 1993 performance, although if you take out his three worst games, his ERA drops from 4.03 to 2.16. Tom Gordon returned to the rotation after a foray in relieving in 1993, and performed adequately. Mark Gubicza also performed adequately for his new, much cheaper contract. LOOGY Billy Brewer and eccentric long reliever Rusty Meachem performed very well in the bullpen while setup man Stan Belinda and Hipolito Pichardo struggled. Chris Haney never pitched well enough to claim the fifth starting spot in the rotation, so non-roster invitee Bob Milacki ended up making ten starts with disastrous results.

Tensions in the Clubhouse
As usual, the Royals got off to a bad start, dropping five of their first six games, including a 22-11 drubbing against Boston. They followed that up with a five game winning streak, then pretty much stayed around .500 until late July, never winning or losing more than three games in a row. However, speculation hovered around the job status of manager Hal McRae all season with the memory of his outrageous tirade in 1993 fresh in the minds of fans. McRae was also accused of playing favorites and not handling the rookies very well. After a game in July in which he was booed by fans for lifting reliever Rusty Meachem in favor of lefty Billy Brewer, McRae lashed out at fans.

"It's ridiculous....If they are booing the strategy, they are the dumbest fans in the world....It's wrong for me to say, and it ain't going to help me, but I'm going to say it anyway. They can ride me out of this town and I'll go out smiling."
On July 23, the Royals sat 50-47, in third place, 8 ½ games back of Chicago. At that point the team was feeling very restless and there was a lot of speculation that manager Hal McRae would soon be fired. The clubhouse attitude was summed up by normally reserved Tom Gordon who finally exploded:

"What's it going to take for us to get going? Everyone wants to look for reasons we lose, look for excuses, look around for a leader. Why can't we just take it upon ourselves to do our job? I hear other teams talk about what it's like to play on a contender. Well, I don't know what it's like. I've been here six years and we haven't been close."

The Streak
On July 23rd, the Royals would win in Detroit 4-1 as David Cone picked up his fourteenth victory. The next day they beat the Tigers again to split their six game road trip. On the 25th they hosted the White Sox and blew a 3-2 lead in the 8th. The White Sox then took a 4-3 lead in the twelfth. Up stepped The Hammer in the bottom of the twelfth with two on one out against White Sox closer Roberto Hernandez. "We were fighting so hard to win that game. We wanted it," said veteran Mark Gubicza. The Hammer delivered with a three run home run to give the Royals a 6-4 victory. "You could have toe-tagged us if we lose that game," manager Hal McRae said. "We would have been 9 1/2 games out with no realistic chance of catching the White Sox."

The Royals went on to complete a four game sweep of the White Sox, knocking them out of first place, and pulling the Royals to within 5 1/2 games of Cleveland. The next victim was the last place Twins. The streak looked like it might end on July 30 with the Twins up 4-2 in the bottom of the ninth and The Hammer popping out for the first out. But a Kent Hrbek error prolonged the inning allowing for RBI singles by Gary Gaetti and Jose Lind to tie the game at 4-4. The Royals would win it in the eleventh on an RBI single by Brent Mayne on a rally The Hammer triggered with a leadoff single.

The Royals continued to cruise, sweeping Oakland in a four game sweep extending the streak to thirteen. Manager Hal McRae explained the recent hot streak:

"It's believing. When we get behind now, we talk about getting baserunners, not base hits. The chant in the dugout is, 'We need baserunners.' We're pumped up. We're executing. We're pitching. We're getting the clutch hits. The guys believe in executing and playing winning baseball."

The Royals would not lose again until August 6 when they finally fell to the Mariners on a nationally televised game that drew nearly 26,000 walk up fans when the game was moved to Kansas City due to falling roof tiles at the Kingdome in Seattle. The Royals fourteen game winning streak would be the second longest in franchise history and it would draw them within one game of first place.

Bob Hamelin helped carry the team during the streak, hitting .354 with six home runs and thirteen RBI, but it was truly a team effort with Chico Lind, Gary Gaetti and Brian McRae all hitting over .340 over the course of the streak. Twelve of the fourteen wins came at home. David Cone picked up three wins and Jose DeJesus won his only three games all year during the streak. Jeff Montgomery picked up six saves over that time. The Royals outscored opponents 79-40 and the team ERA was 2.47.

Less than a week later, the MLBPA followed through on their approved strike date and playing ceased. On September 14, Acting Comissioner Bud Selig would cancel the season, including the World Series.

The next day, the Royals fired manager Hal McRae and declared they would begin a youth movement in 1995. That youth movement would last for over a decade.




1994 Starting Lineup AVG OBA SLG HR BI OPS+ RC
C Mike MacFarlane .255 .359 .462 14 47 107 48
Comment: Led league with 18 Hit By Pitch
1B Wally Joyner .311 .386 .449 8 57 112 64
Comment: Only Royal with more walks than strikeouts
2B Jose Lind .269 .306 .348 1 31 66 31
Comment: Just five errors
3B Gary Gaetti .287 .328 .462 12 57 98 49
Comment: Still being paid $3 million by the Angels
SS Greg Gagne .259 .314 .392 7 51 79 45
Comment: Caught stealing 17 times in 27 attempts
LF Vince Coleman .240 .285 .340 2 33 59 43
Comment: 2nd in AL in steals with 50
CF Brian McRae .273 .359 .378 4 40 88 58
Comment: 2nd in AL in games played with 114
RF Felix Jose .303 .362 .475 11 55 111 63
Comment: Best season as a Royal
DH Bob Hamelin .282 .388 .599 24 65 146 73
Comment: 1994 Rookie of the Year

Bench AVG OBA SLG HR BI OPS+ RC
C Brent Mayne .257 .323 .347 2 20 71 16
Comment: Grand slam May 5 vs. Toronto
IF David Howard .229 .309 .313 1 13 59 8
Comment: Only HR bounced off Devon White's leg
IF Terry Shumpert .240 .289 .426 8 24 79 23
Comment: Career high 18 steals
OF Dave Henderson .247 .304 .404 5 31 78 24
Comment: Last season of his career
DH Hubie Brooks .230 .239 .311 1 14 39 5
Comment: Released on July 14



1994 Pitching Staff W-L ERA G GS IP SO ERA+
SP David Cone 16-5 2.94 23 23 171.2 132 170
Comment: 1994 Cy Young Award Winner
SP Kevin Appier 7-6 3.83 23 23 155 145 130
Comment: 5th in AL in strikeouts
SP Tom Gordon 11-7 4.35 24 24 155.1 126 115
Comment: 10th in AL in wins
SP Mark Gubicza 7-9 4.50 22 22 130 59 111
Comment: Led league in fewest walks/inning
SP Bob Milacki 0-5 6.14 10 10 55.2 17 81
Comment: Made three quality starts
Bullpen W-L ERA G GS IP SO ERA+
RP Jeff Montgomery 2-3 4.03 42 0 44.2 50 124
Comment: 2nd in AL with 27 saves
RP Billy Brewer 4-1 2.56 50 0 38.2 25 195
Comment: Much better against righties than lefties
RP Hipolito Pichardo 5-3 4.92 45 0 67.2 36 102
Comment: 3.23 road ERA, 6.32 home ERA
RP Stan Belinda 2-2 5.14 37 0 49 37 97
Comment: 3.47 home ERA, 6.66 road ERA
RP Rusty Meachem 3-3 3.73 36 0 50.2 36 134
Comment: 22.2 scoreless inning streak
RP Mike Magnante 2-3 4.60 36 1 47 21 109
Comment: 2.86 ERA as a reliever

Sunday, December 17, 2006


Kansas City Royals
All-Time Trades

The following is a list of every trade involving at least one major league player conducted by the Kansas City Royals according to www.baseballreference.com. Players dealt for cash only are not included. Cash exchanged as part of a deal is not included.

The Cedric Tallis Era
DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
12/12/1968California AngelsC Ed Kirkpatrick and C Dennis PaepkeP Hoyt Wilhelm
12/16/1968Houston AstrosC Buck Martinez, IF Mickey Sinnerud, C Tommie SmithC John Jones
04/01/1969Seattle PilotsOF Lou PinellaOF Steve Whitaker and P John Gelnar
10/21/1969Atlanta BravesP Ron TompkinsP Dave Wickersham
12/03/1969New York MetsOF Amos Otis and P Bob Johnson3B Joe Foy
05/28/1970Boston Red SoxIF Tom Matchick1B Mike Fiore
06/13/1970St. Louis Cardinals2B Cookie RojasOF Fred Rico
06/15/1970Baltimore OriolesIF Bobby FloydP Moe Drabowsky
07/01/1970St. Louis CardinalsP Ted AbernathyP Chris Zachary
10/13/1970Chicago White Sox1B Gail Hopkins and OF John MatiasOF Pat Kelly and P Don O'Riley
10/19/1970San Francisco GiantsP Bob GaribaldiC Fran Healy
12/02/1970St. Louis CardinalsP Tom HilgendorfP Ike Brookens
12/02/1970Pittsburgh Pirates2B Freddie Patek, C Jerry May and P Bruce del CantonSS Jackie Hernandez and P Bob Johnson
02/02/1971Milwaukee BrewersC/OF Carl TaylorC Ellie Rodriguez
03/24/1971Chicago White Sox2B Bobby KnoopIF Luis Alcaraz
05/11/1971Milwaukee BrewersOF Ted SavageIF Tom Matchick
12/02/1971Houston Astros1B John Mayberry and 3B Dave GrangaardP Jim York and P Lance Clemons
05/05/1972California AngelesP Tom Murphy1B Bob Oliver
07/10/1972Cleveland IndiansOF Jim ClarkP Tom Hilgendorf
10/25/1972Pittsburgh PiratesP Gene GarberP Jim Rooker
11/02/1972Cleveland IndiansIF Kurt BevacquaP Mike Hedlund
11/30/1972Cincinnati RedsOF Hal McRae and P Wayne SimpsonOF Richie Scheinblum and P Roger Nelson
02/01/1973Chicago White SoxOF Jim LyttleOF Joe Keough
02/01/1973New York MetsP Barry RazianoP Jerry Cram
04/02/1973San Francisco GiantsC Fran HealyP Greg Minton
05/08/1973St. Louis CardinalsP Al SantoriniP Tom Murphy
06/08/1973Cleveland IndiansP Steve MingoriP Mike Jackson
10/24/1973Minnesota TwinsKen GillP Tom Burgmeier
10/24/1973Boston Red SoxP Marty PattinP Dick Drago
12/04/1973Pittsburgh PiratesP Nelson Briles and 3B Fernando GonzalezC Ed Kirkpatrick, IF Kurt Bevacqua and 1B Winston Cole
12/07/1973New York YankeesP Lindy McDanielOF Lou Pinella and P Ken Wright
02/03/1974California AngelsOF Vada PinsonP Barry Raziano
03/28/1974Pittsburgh PiratesP Jim FoorP Wayne Simpson
05/30/1974California AngelsOF Richie Scheinblum3B Paul Schaal

The Joe Burke Era
DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
07/08/1974Pittsburgh PiratesIF Kurt BevacquaIF Cal Meier
03/31/1975Montreal ExposC Bob StinsonPTBNL (IF Rodney Scott)
06/30/1975Atlanta BravesPTBNL (P Ray Sadecki)P Bruce Dal Canton, PTBNL (P Norm Angelini) and PTBNL (P Al Autry)
09/15/1975Oakland AthleticsOF Rick IngallsOF Mark Williams
11/12/1975Texas Rangers2B Dave NelsonP Nelson Briles
12/22/1975Milwaukee BrewersP Pat OsbournOF Kenzie Davis
01/09/1976New York MetsP Jerry CramP Randy Hammon
05/07/1976Minnesota TwinsP Tom HallIF Bryan Jones
05/16/1976New York YankeesP Larry GuraC Fran Healy
11/02/1976Los Angeles DodgersC Steve PatchinOF Ron Washington
12/06/1976Milwaukee BrewersP Jim Colborn and C Darrell PorterOF Jim Wolhford, C Jaime Quirk and a PTBNL (P Bob McClure)
12/07/1976Montreal ExposIF Rudy Kinard1B Frank Otenzio
12/08/1976New York Mets and Chicago Cubs1B Pete LaCockOF Sheldon Mallory
12/08/1977St. Louis CardinalsP Al HraboskyP Mark Littell and C Buck Martinez
02/22/1978Milwaukee BrewersC Art KusnyerP Lynn McKinney
04/05/1978Chicago White SoxOF Mike Ondina2B Joe Gates
06/01/1978Seattle MarinersOF Steve BraunP Jim Colborn
06/05/1978San Diego PadresP Steve HamrickP Gary Lance
08/03/1978Milwaukee BrewersC Jaime QuirkP Gerald Ako
04/03/1979Philadelphia PhilliesSS Todd CruzP Doug Bird
04/27/1979Houston AstrosPTBNL (2B Keith Drumright)P George Throop
06/13/1979Boston Red Sox1B George ScottOF Tom Poquette
10/24/1979Milwaukee BrewersP Lance RautzhanOF Kevin Gillen
12/06/1979California Angels1B Willie Aikens and 3B Rance MulliniksOF Al Cowens, SS Todd Cruz and a PTBNL (P Craig Eaton)
01/15/1980Chicago White SoxP Eddie BaneOF Joe Zdeb
06/17/1980New York MetsP Kevin KobelPTBNL (P Randy McGilberry
01/21/1981Cincinnati RedsOF Cesar Geronimo2B German Barranca
02/16/1981Chicago CubsC Greg KeatleyOF Dennis Webb
03/31/1981New York MetsP Juan BerenguerOF Marvell Wynne and PTBNL (P John Skinner)
09/23/1981Seattle MarinersPTBNL (P Bud Black)3B Manny Castillo

The John Schuerholz Era
DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
12/11/1981San Francisco GiantsOF Jerry MartinP Rich Gale and P Bill Laskey
12/11/1981Cincinnati RedsP Scott BrownOF Clint Hurdle
01/14/1982Montreal ExposP Grant Jackson1B Ken Phelps
02/18/1982San Francisco GiantsC Dennis LittlejohnP Jeff Cornell
03/24/1982Chicago White SoxIF Greg PryorP Jeff Schattinger
03/24/1982New York Yankees1B Dennis WerthScot Behan
03/25/1982Toronto Blue JaysP Phil Huffman3B Rance Mulliniks
03/30/1982San Francisco GiantsP Vida Blue and P Bob TuftsP Atlee Hammaker, P Renie Martin, P Craig Chamberlain and IF Brad Wellman
11/03/1982Chicago CubsMike KingP Jim Wright
02/05/1983Toronto Blue JaysOF Leon Roberts1B Cecil Fielder
06/07/1983Cincinnati RedsP Charlie LeibrandtP Bob Tufts
12/08/1983Los Angeles DodgersP Joe BeckwithC Joe Szekeley, P John Serritella, P Jose Torres
12/08/1983New York Yankees1B Steve Balboni and P Roger EricksonP Mike Armstrong and C-1B Duane Dewey
12/15/1983Montreal ExposP Tom Dixon1B Ron Johnson
12/20/1983Toronto Blue JaysIF Jorge Orta1B Willie Aikens
03/31/1984Chicago CubsP Alan HargesheimerC Don Werner and P Derek Botelho
04/01/1984New York Mets3B Tucker AshfordP Tom Edens
09/01/1984Houston AstrosC Luis PujolsJames Miner
01/07/1985Montreal ExposP Mike Kinnunen and OF Kenny BakerSS U.L. Washington
01/18/1985Texas Rangers, New York Mets and Milwaukee BrewersC Jim SundburgC Don Slaught and P Frank Willis
03/19/1985Cleveland IndiansPTBNL (OF Dwight Taylor)P Keith Creel
05/17/1985St. Louis CardinalsOF Lonnie SmithOF John Morris
04/01/1986New York MetsSS Angel SalazarP Tony Ferreira
05/21/1986Toronto Blue JaysC Terry BellP Mark Huismann
09/23/1986Atlanta BravesP Steve ShieldsOF Daryl Motley
12/20/1986Seattle MarinersOF Danny Tartabull and P Rick LuekenOF Mike Kingery, P Scott Bankhead, and P Steve Shields
12/17/1986Baltimore OriolesOF Juan BeniquezIF Joe Jarrell and P Jim Daniels
03/20/1987Cincinnati RedsP Derek BotelhoSS Eddie Tanner and OF Pete Carey
03/27/1987New York MetsP Mauro Gozzo, P Rick Anderson and C Ed HearnP David Cone and OF Chris Jelic
03/30/1987Chicago CubsOF Thad Bosley and P Dave GumpertC Jim Sundburg
06/04/1987Seattle MarinersSS Ross JonesPTBNL (P Ricky Rojas)
06/14/1987Toronto Blue JaysP Luis AquinoOF Juan Beniquez
07/30/1987Houston AstrosP Mel Stottlemyre Jr.SS Buddy Biancalana
07/31/1987Texas RangersIF Dave OwenP Rufus Ellis
08/31/1987Atlanta BravesP Gene GarberC Terry Bell
11/06/1987Cincinnati RedsSS Kurt Stilwell and P Ted PowerSS Angel Salazar and P Danny Jackson
12/10/1987Chicago White SoxOF Dave Cochrane and P Floyd BannisterP Greg Hibbard, P Melido Perez, P John Davis and P Charles Mount
02/03/1988Seattle MarinersP Ken SpratkeOF Dave Cochrane
02/15/1988Cincinnati RedsP Jeff MontgomeryOF Van Snider
06/03/1988Cleveland Indians1B Pat TablerP Buddy Black
08/31/1988Detroit TigersC Rey Palacios and P Mark LeeP Ted Power
06/09/1989New York MetsP Terry LeachP Aquedo Vasquez
09/02/1989Philadelphia PhilliesP Larry McWilliamsOF Jeff Hulse
12/15/1989Atlanta Braves1B Gerald Perry and P Jim LemastersP Charlie Leibrandt and P Rick Luecken
03/31/1990Philadelphia PhilliesSS Steve JeltzP Jose DeJesus
04/02/1990Detroit TigersP Greg EversonP Jerry Don Gleaton
09/30/1990New York MetsP Archie Corbin1B Pat Tabler

The Herk Robinson Era

DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
03/30/1991Detroit TigersOF Jim BaxterC Andy Allanson
05/03/1991Pittsburgh Pirates1B Carmelo MartinezP Victor Cole
07/11/1991Cincinnati Reds1B Todd Benzinger1B Carmelo Martinez
12/10/1991Atlanta BravesIF Rico RossyOF Bobby Moore
12/11/1991Baltimore OriolesC Bob MelvinP Storm Davis
12/11/1991Los Angeles DodgersOF Chris Gwynn and OF Domingo Mota1B Todd Benzinger
12/11/1991New York MetsIF Gregg Jeffries, IF Keith Miller and OF Kevin McReynoldsIF Bill Pecota and P Bret Saberhagen
03/10/1992Pittsburgh PiratesP Neal HeatonOF Kirk Gibson
07/09/1992Chicago White SoxP Jose VenturaC Erik Pappas
07/21/1992Atlanta BravesP Juan BerenguerP Mark Davis
09/29/1992Montreal ExposP Bill Sampen and P Chris Haney3B Sean Berry and P Archie Corbin
11/19/1992Pittsburgh Pirates2B Jose LindP Dennis Moeller and P Joel Johnston
12/09/1992Montreal ExposP Mark Gardner and P Mark PiattP Jeff Shaw and C Tim Spehr
12/10/1992Milwaukee BrewersOF Mike GuerreroP Carlos Maldonaldo
02/22/1993St. Louis CardinalsOF Felix Jose and IF Craig WilsonIF Gregg Jeffries and OF Ed Gerald
07/30/1993Chicago Cubs and New York YankeesP John HabyanOF Karl Rhodes
07/31/1993Pittsburgh PiratesP Stan BelindaP Jon Lieber and P Dan Miceli
01/05/1994New York MetsOF Vince ColemanOF Kevin McReynolds
04/05/1995Chicago CubsP Derek Wallace and P Geno MoronesOF Brian McRae
04/06/1995Toronto Blue JaysIF Chris Stynes, IF Tony Medrano and P David SinnesP David Cone
04/23/1995San Francisco GiantsPTBNL (OF Brent Cookson)P Enrique Burgos
07/07/1995Seattle MarinersP Dave FlemingP Bob Milacki
07/21/1995New York MetsP Allen McDill and P Jason JacomeP Derek Wallace, P Geno Morones and a PTBNL (P John Carter)
08/11/1995Houston AstrosPTBNL (P Rick Huisman)C Pat Borders
08/14/1995Boston Red SoxOF Wes ChamberlainOF Chris James
08/15/1995Seattle MarinersPTBNL (P Jim Converse)OF Vince Coleman
08/08/1995Detroit TigersIF Juan SamuelPTBNL (IF Phil Hiatt)
12/04/1995St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati RedsP Mike RemlingerOF Miguel Mejia
12/17/1995Los Angeles DodgersSS Jose OffermanP Billy Brewer
12/19/1995New York MetsOF Al ShirleyC Brent Mayne
12/21/1995San Diego Padres2B Bip Roberts and P Bryan Wolff1B Wally Joyner and P Aaron Dorlaraque
06/21/1996Seattle Mariners3B Jose AmadoP Rusty Meachem
07/24/1996Milwaukee BrewersP Mark KieferP Chris Eddy
10/28/1996Anaheim AngelsDH Chili DavisP Mark Gubicza and P Mike Bovee
11/26/1996San Francisco GiantsP Jamie BrewingtonPTBNL (IF Ramon Martinez)
12/13/1996Pittsburgh Pirates1B Jeff King and SS Jay Bell3B Joe Randa, P Jeff Granger, P Jeff Martin, and P Jeff Wallace
01/28/1997Montreal ExposOF Yamil BenitezP Melvin Bunch
03/27/1997Atlanta BravesOF Jermaine Dye and P Jaime WalkerIF Keith Lockhart and OF Michael Tucker
07/15/1997Cincinnati RedsP Hector Carrasco and P Scott ServiceOF Jon Nunnally and IF Chris Stynes
07/25/1997Texas Rangers3B Dean PalmerOF Tom Goodwin
07/29/1997Milwaukee BrewersP Jason GrimsleyP Jaime Brewington
07/29/1997Florida MarlinsP Matt WhisenantC Matt Treanor
08/30/1997Cleveland IndiansP Roland de la MazaOF Bip Roberts
11/20/1997Florida MarlinsOF Jeff ConineP Blaine Mull
04/08/1998Oakland AthleticsOF Shane Mack and PTBNL (P Greg Hansell)C Mike MacFarlane
06/27/1998Pittsburgh PiratesOF Jermaine AllensworthP Manuel Bernal
12/10/1998New York Mets3B Joe RandaOF Juan LeBron
05/23/1999New York MetsOF Jonathan GuzmanIF Shane Halter
03/30/1999Oakland AthleticsP Jay WitasickPTBNL (P Scott Chiasson)
04/02/1999Baltimore OriolesP Chris FussellOF Jeff Conine
06/18/1999Chicago CubsP Marc PisciottaIF Jose Cepada
07/31/1999Oakland AthleticsP Jeff D'Amico, P Blake Stein, and P Brad RigbyP Kevin Appier
08/13/1999New York MetsP Derek WallaceOF Jeremy Jackson
09/14/1999New York MetsP Dan MurrayP Glendon Rusch
12/13/1999San Francisco GiantsP Jerry SpradlinPTBNL (P Ken Ray)
12/15/1999Florida MarlinsOF Todd DunwoodyIF Sean McNally
02/18/2000Oakland AthleticsP Brett LaxtonOF Jeremy Giambi
04/25/2000Montreal ExposP Miguel BatistaP Brad Rigby

The Allard Baird Era

DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
07/31/2000San Diego PadresP Brian MeadowsP Jay Witasick
08/11/2000New York YankeesIF Wilson DelgadoIF Nick Oritz
01/08/2001Tampa Bay Devil Rays and Oakland AthleticsC A.J. Hinch, SS Angel Berroa and P Roberto HernandezIF Mark Ellis and OF Johnny Damon
03/30/2001New York MetsOF Endy ChavezOF Michael Curry
06/05/2001Philadelphia PhilliesP Paul ByrdP Jose Santiago
06/24/2001Colorado RockiesC Brent MayneC Sal Fasano and P Mac Suzuki
07/25/2001Colorado Rockies and Oakland AthleticsSS Neifi PerezOF Jermaine Dye
07/31/2001Atlanta BravesIF Alejandro Machado and P Brad VoylesIF Rey Sanchez
12/19/2001Chicago CubsOF Michael TuckerPTBNL (P Shawn Sonnier)
05/17/2002Colorado RockiesP Eduardo VillacisP Bryan Rekar
05/06/2003Cincinnati RedsIF Damaso Espino and OF Alan MoyeP Jeff Austin and P Brian Shackelford
03/27/2003Texas RangersC Fernando LunarP Odannis Ayala
07/06/2003Los Angeles DodgersIF Travis DawkinsSS Victor Rodriguez and P Scott Mullen
07/10/2003Milwaukee BrewersP Curtis LeskanicIF Alejandro Machado and P Wes Obermuller
07/28/2003New York MetsP Graeme LloydP Jeremy Hill
08/08/2003Arizona DiamondbacksP Paul AbbottP Aric LeClair
08/25/2003Cleveland IndiansP Brian Anderson and a PTBNL (P Chris White)OF Trey Dyson and P Kieran Mattison
08/26/2003San Diego PadresOF Rondell WhiteP Brian Sanches and P Chris Tierney
12/15/2003San Diego PadresOF Rich ThompsonP Jason Szuminski
01/26/2004New York MetsP Jaime CerdaP Shawn Sedlacek
04/08/2004Colorado RockiesP Justin Huisman1B Chris Fallon and P Zach McClellan
05/31/2004Chicago CubsIF Damian JacksonIF Travis Dawkins
06/21/2004Baltimore OriolesP Denny BautistaP Jason Grimsley
06/24/2004Oakland Athletics and Houston AstrosC John Buck, 3B Mark Teahen and P Mike WoodOF Carlos Beltran
07/30/2004New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates1B Justin HuberIF Jose Bautista
07/31/2004Florida MarlinsOF Abraham NunezP Rudy Seanez
08/10/2004Los Angeles DodgersP Elvis NinaP Mike Venafro
11/08/2004San Diego PadresOF Terrence Long and P Dennis TankersleyP Darrell May and P Ryan Bukvich
12/16/2004Pittsburgh PiratesP Leo NunezC Benito Santiago
12/16/2004Atlanta BravesOF Eli MarreroP Jorge Vasquez
06/08/2005Baltimore OriolesIF Pete MaestralesOF Eli Marrero
07/19/2005Boston Red SoxOF Chip Ambres and P Juan CedenoIF Tony Graffanino
12/07/2005Pittsburgh PiratesP Mark RedmanP Jonah Bayliss and PTBNL (P Chad Blackwell)
12/08/2005Texas RangersIF Esteban GermanP Fabio Castro
12/20/2005Atlanta BravesP Ricardo RodriguezOF Matt Diaz
12/21/2005Milwaukee BrewersP Justin BarnesP Chris DeMarea
03/31/2006Los Angeles DodgersP Jarrod PlummerIF Wilson Valdez


The Dayton Moore Era












DateTrading PartnerRoyals ReceivedRoyals Sent
06/20/2006Tampa Bay Devil RaysOF Joey GathrightP J.P. Howell
07/19/2006New York MetsIF Jeff Keppinger2B Ruben Gotay
07/24/2006Chicago White SoxP Tyler Lumsden and P Daniel CortesP Mike MacDougal
07/25/2006Los Angeles DodgersP Odalis Perez, P Blake Johnson, and P Julio PimentelP Elmer Dessens
07/25/2006Milwaukee BrewersP Jorge de la RosaIF Tony Graffanino
07/31/2006Texas RangersP Joselo Diaz1B/OF Matt Stairs
07/31/2006Colorado Rockies1B Ryan Shealy and P Scott DohmannP Jeremy Affeldt and P Denny Bautista
11/20/2006Cincinnati RedsC Jason LaRuePTBNL
12/06/2006New York MetsP Brian BannisterP Ambriorix Burgos
12/16/2006Chicago White Sox1B/OF Ross GloadP Andrew Sisco
01/10/2007Cincinnati RedsP Russell Haltiwanger2B Jeff Keppinger
03/23/2007Atlanta BravesSS Tony Pena Jr.P Erik Cordier
03/27/2007Milwaukee BrewersP Ben HendricksonC Maxim St. Pierre
07/31/2007Atlanta BravesP Kyle DaviesP Octavio Dotel
12/14/2007Arizona DiamondbacksIF Alberto CallaspoP Billy Buckner
03/26/2008Colorado RockiesP Ramon RamirezPTBNL
04/30/2008Colorado RockiesPTBNLP Jorge de la Rosa
06/06/2008Los Angeles DodgersIF Juan RiveraSS Angel Berroa
10/30/2008Florida Marlins1B Mike JacobsP Leo Nunez
11/19/2008Boston Red SoxOF Coco CrispP Ramon Ramirez