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Old 02-06-2005, 02:24 AM   Topic Starter
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Posnanski: The Royals are going to win the division!

.... like clockwork.

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansas...s/10828010.htm

Believe my annual pitch

It's true: Royals have the arms to win the division

JOE POSNANSKI


The time has come, once again, for me to tell you why the Royals are absolutely and positively going to win the American League Central division. Faithful readers will note that I've been writing this particular column every February for seven years now, and the Royals have not actually won the American League Central division in any of those years.

So, if you want to be technical, I actually never have been right on this prediction.

But, this is the year. I know it.

Before we begin, let's take a question from a reader: “Dear loser: You're not really going to write that stupid column about the Royals winning again, are you? Come on. Tell me something: Do you really believe the Royals are going to win? Or are you trapped by a bad decision you made several years ago to pick the Royals every year, no matter how dumb it makes you look?”

Answer: Sorry, that's actually three questions.

The thing about baseball is this: You gotta hope. Sure, there are, admittedly, a few barriers this year as I pick the Royals to win: logic, for instance. The Royals are coming off a 104-loss season. That's not too good. Their big offseason signing was a guy, Jose Lima, whom they dumped last year. They seem somewhat committed to having an opening-day lineup that will include Chris Truby, Terrence Long and Abraham Nuñez. Their best, most prominent and highest-paid player, Mike Sweeney, made it clear he doesn't expect this team to compete.

Yes, this column gets harder to write every year.

But the Royals do have something this year they have not had before, something that makes them exciting, something to build some hope around, something that will make the Royals the surprise team of baseball this year.

The Royals have pitching.

OK, stop laughing. No, really, stop. Yes, I know you've heard this before. Yes, I know the names that have been mentioned in this column before — Dan Reichert, Glendon Rusch, Chris Fussell, Orber Moreno, Brian Bevil, Jim Pittsley, Chad Durbin.

Yes, I know how bad Royals pitching has been. I know that since 1998, the Royals have given up 80 more homers than any team in the American League. They have had one pitcher with 15 or more wins, no pitchers strike out 150 batters and seven different pitching coaches. Of the last seven Royals pitchers of the year, four had losing records.

This time it's different.

Why? Because I think the Royals finally have figured out something: You can't win with lousy pitching. This lesson probably took a little longer than necessary to learn, but hey, everyone go at his own pace.

In the last few years, the Royals started to scout differently. They tried to make trades for pitchers with good stuff. They changed the way they develop young pitchers.

And this time around, the Royals will bring more good young pitchers to camp — I'm talking genuinely talented pitchers — than they have in a long, long time. You start with last year's pitcher of the year, Zack Greinke (21 years old), who throws 947 different pitches, all for strikes. He is for real.

Runelvys Hernandez (26) is, by all accounts, healthy again. He was a phenomenon for the first month in 2003 before he got hurt. He can be a star. Denny Bautista (24) has dominating stuff and learns pitching from his cousin Pedro Martinez. If he figures it out, he has a chance to be the best of the three.

Jimmy Gobble (23) was the only Royals pitcher with a winning record last year, and another lefty, J.P. Howell (22), might be better than Gobble right now. I like Dennis Tankersley (25), who can be a big strikeout guy. Some like Kyle Snyder, who is still 27 and showed talent before his shoulder surgery.

And then there are so many great arms in that bullpen. Jeremy Affeldt (25) is healthy, still has the great combination of mid-90s fastball and back-breaking curve, and for the first time in his career knows his role. He's the closer.

Mike MacDougal (28) looks to have his 98-mph fastball and nasty slider back, but he isn't the hardest thrower on the team anymore since Ambriorix Burgos (20) was clocked at 102 this offseason. Andy Sisco (22) is a 6-foot-9 lefty who throws in the mid-90s; I only of know one other guy on the planet like that, and the Yankees just spent something like a billion dollars to get him. Jaime Cerda (26) was the best of the bunch last year.

And the Royals will be able to keep all those guys together for several years.

Yes, the Royals have finally figured this thing out. See, it's not about money — the Royals have spent more money the last five years than the Minnesota Twins, who have three division titles. It's not about home runs. It's not about Carlos Beltran.

No, it's about pitching. If the Royals can get starting pitching, if they can build an overpowering bullpen, they can win. They will win. They seem to understand this finally. The Royals have moved back the fences (which instantly turned Kauffman Stadium from a launching pad into the toughest home-run park in the American League). They hired pitching guru Guy Hansen. They have loaded up with power arms. The Royals have their direction now. They have their focus.

Those great arms will come around this year, and the Royals will win this thing.

You read it here first. And last. Now, if you want reality, you can go to the newsstands, to the Internet, to talk radio. It won't be hard to find people predicting Royals doom.

But who wants reality in February anyway?
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