Baseball

Royals’ Season Spirals Amid Management Criticism and Offensive Collapse

A look at the Kansas City team's historic slump, from bullpen woes to front‑office scrutiny

The Kansas City Royals have entered a stretch that few teams in baseball have ever endured, posting the fewest wins in the sport and enduring multiple six‑game losing streaks that have left fans searching for answers.

The Bullpen's Breaking Point

Reliever Lucas Erceg has become a symbol of the trouble, posting the worst ninth‑inning ERA in the majors and surrendering the decisive run in a recent loss that underscored the team's inability to close games.

Compounding the problem, the Royals' offense has been unable to generate consistent scoring, averaging fewer runs per game than any other club and managing to string together three or more runs in an inning only 74 times all season.

Management and Coaching Under Fire

Manager Matt Quatraro's tactical choices have drawn increasing criticism, as the organization's front office faces questions about its failure to address glaring gaps in both player development and acquisition strategy.

Even the starting rotation has struggled, posting an ERA that falls short of the league median, while the bullpen sits second‑worst in baseball, creating a cascade of pressure on every inning. Key contributors such as Bobby Witt Jr., Maikel Garcia, Vinnie Pasquantino and Salvador Perez have seen their OPS dip below league averages, with Pasquantino and Perez ranking among the least productive hitters in the American League when runners are in scoring position.

The confluence of poor performance, questionable decisions and a lack of decisive moves in the trade market paints a picture of a franchise at a crossroads, where systemic issues threaten to linger long after the current losing streak ends.

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