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-   -   Royals *** Official Kansas City Royals @ Houston Astros ALDS Game 4 Thread *** (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=295263)

Dartgod 10-12-2015 07:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Archie F. Swin (Post 11794115)

I hope we get 2014 WS Game 6 Ventura and the offense as well.

ChiTown 10-12-2015 07:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dayze (Post 11794086)
is that the black guy from The Love Boat?

That would be Lynn Jones - reserve OF who played some LF for the R's before they brought in Lonnie Smith

TEX 10-12-2015 07:36 AM

I'll be at the game, so there's a good chance the Royals win. I have that effect on the Stros. LMAO

I HATE having to cheer against the Royals, b/c they have always been my 2nd favorite team and my favorite AL team. When the Stros changed leagues, I knew this situation was going to happen but both teams were bad, especially the Stros, so I figured it would be awhile. Bottom line is that time is here NOW, and you cant choose your opponent and there are no guarantees. So you must seize the moment and WIN NOW when given the chance.

So, GO STROS! Stay humble and win with class! Play with respect for last year's AL champs because the Royals deserve that. But KNOW what's at stake and WIN TODAY because you have them on the ropes. You DON'T want to have to go back to KC and possibly learn a hard lesson...

Three7s 10-12-2015 07:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TEX (Post 11794245)
I'll be at the game, so there's a good chance the Royals win. I have that effect on the Stros. LMAO

I HATE having to cheer against the Royals, b/c they have always been my 2nd favorite team and my favorite AL team. When the Stros changed leagues, I knew this situation was going to happen but both teams were bad, especially the Stros, so I figured it would be awhile. Bottom line is that time is here NOW, and you cant choose your opponent and there are no guarantees. So you must seize the moment and WIN NOW when given the chance.

So, GO STROS! Stay humble and win with class! Play with respect for last year's AL champs because the Royals deserve that. But KNOW what's at stake and WIN TODAY because you have them on the ropes. You DON'T want to have to go back to KC and possibly learn a hard lesson...

My only team will always be the Royals, but if the Royals lose, I'm going to root for the Cubs. If I have a 2nd favorite team, it's definitely them.

ChiTown 10-12-2015 08:50 AM

We had 10 base-runners yesterday and not one stolen base attempt. The most mind-numbing was Rios drawing a LEAD-OFF walk in the 7th inning and not having Dyson PR for him. When you are struggling like a bitch to score runs, you got to try and manufacture a few. Have to do a better job of that today.

KCUnited 10-12-2015 08:51 AM

Looks like I have a "3 hour conference call" at noon from the home office.

ChiTown 10-12-2015 08:52 AM

Any place to watch the game on-line today?

mr. tegu 10-12-2015 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiTown (Post 11794453)
Any place to watch the game on-line today?

strikeout.co

Also, it looks like the fox sports web site might have it if you log in with your cable provider. I know the app has it but I am not certain on the actual desktop web site. Right now I just see the Spanish broadcast on the schedule.

eDave 10-12-2015 09:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChiTown (Post 11794453)
Any place to watch the game on-line today?

http://wiz1.net/channel65

Always wiz1. You won't get any pre-game stuff. Stream goes like at game time.

ChiTown 10-12-2015 09:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 11794499)
http://wiz1.net/channel65

Always wiz1. You won't get any pre-game stuff. Stream goes like at game time.

Thanks eDave/mr. tegu

KChiefs1 10-12-2015 10:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dartgod (Post 11794197)
I hope we get 2014 WS Game 6 Ventura and the offense as well.


That would be awesome.

alnorth 10-12-2015 10:24 AM

I'm gonna miss the beginning of the game, but I'll start updating the OP probably around the 3rd inning or so.

KChiefs1 10-12-2015 10:34 AM

*** Official Kansas City Royals @ Houston Astros ALDS Game 4 Thread ***
 
http://www.theplayerstribune.com/eri...s-city-royals/

Quote:

ERIC HOSMER
FIRST BASEMAN / KANSAS CITY ROYALS
“No one believes in us.”

You hear that all the time in sports. You hear it so often that it’s almost become meaningless now. You hear an athlete say it, and you just kind of roll your eyes.

“No one believes in us.” Okay, bro, you think.

Whatever you say.

The thing about “no one believes in us,” though … is that most of the time it’s deserved.

When people don’t believe in you — as hard to accept as it may be — what it usually, finally, amounts to is this: You haven’t done something worth believing in yet.

It means that you still haven’t proven it. That you still haven’t proven you belong.

And honestly, that’s how it should be.

But what about when you have done it? What about when you’ve proven you belong — and still no one believes in you? What then?

Well, there’s a word for that. There’s a word for what that makes you, in people’s minds — when you’ve done something once, and no one believes you can do it again.

A fluke.

*

When Spring Training started this year, it was clear that “a fluke” is what the Kansas City Royals were to most people.

Maybe no one said it out loud, or said it directly … but even still. You could tell. You can always tell.

We knew where we stood.

We were the defending AL Champs. We had come within a game — and as close as you could possibly come, within that game — of winning the World Series. We were a young team, with its core returning intact.

And yet … no one was picking us to even make it back to the playoffs. Not the World Series … not the American League … not the division — the playoffs. We were predicted, by consensus, to miss the postseason entirely. We were predicted, essentially, to be a flash in the pan. A cool moment, a nice story … but a footnote. A team that people would look back on in ten years and say, Oh, hey, remember that one random Royals team? That was fun.

We were That Team — that’s what people assumed. We weren’t built to last.

And on some level … I get it. From the outside looking in, I can see how someone might come to that conclusion. At times during the regular season last year, a lot of our younger guys struggled — myself included. We had a season to be proud of, of course — we won the Wild Card, the Royals’ first playoff berth in 29 years — but it’s not as though we had set the world on fire. We won 89 games. We were solid. That’s it.

And then, in the playoffs, we found this magic. We were in the Wild Card Game, down 7-3, in the eighth inning, with Jon Lester — a legendary postseason pitcher — on the mound.

And we found … this … magic.

To this day, it’s hard for me to explain what happened that night. I’m still not sure I totally know myself. But here’s the best I can come up with: When you have your back against the wall, and are facing adversity — that’s when you find out who you really are. That’s when you really get a good look in the mirror.

And I think we looked ourselves in the mirror, as a team, and we liked what we saw. It felt like this — playing on national TV, in prime time, in a meaningful baseball game in October — was where we belonged. And we didn’t want that feeling to end.

And somehow, it didn’t. We scratched and clawed, bit by bit … and by the time that Salvador’s single dropped in, early into the next morning … we had won the game, 9-8, in a 12-inning miracle. We found a way — and I think a lot more, besides: We found our identity. Our groove. Our potential. Our selves.

And there was no turning back.

It’s no accident that, in the next two series, we started to play with a swagger. After that Wild Card Game, we felt a swagger. We felt like, in those middle innings against the A’s, we had attended our own funeral. People had already declared us dead. But we weren’t dead — we were very much alive. And we had nothing to lose.

We weren’t “hot.” We were good. We were almost great.
And we didn’t lose. Not in the Division Series. Not in the League Championship Series. For two straight playoff series, we didn’t lose once.

Remember when I said that we were an 89-win team? That we were “solid”? Yeah — we weren’t just solid anymore. During those two series, our team grew up. And we became really, legitimately good.

In the World Series, we gave it everything we had. We lost, in seven, in an instant classic. “Heartbreaking ending” — another sports cliché. But that’s how it felt. Man, we came close.

And we knew. We knew how close we had come, and how well we had matched up with a Giants team that will probably go down as a dynasty. We had gone toe to toe. We had taken the Champ’s very best shot, and endured one of the best World Series performances in history from Madison Bumgarner — and still we had nearly come out on top.

We weren’t “hot.” We were good. We were almost great.

And that’s what everyone who assumed we would take a step backward this year failed to fully understand. We didn’t just “go on a run” last year. We had been a young team, trying to figure it out. And together we did. We came of age, and into our own.

After Game 7, the whole team sat with each other in the locker room for about an hour and a half. No one even took their uniform off. Honestly, I think we were all just a little confused. It was a terrible feeling.

But looking back, now, I understand what that confusion meant.

We were confused that it was over — and that we weren’t holding a trophy.

We had expected to win it all.

*

When the season began this year, I knew we were a team that had several identities — that represented a lot of things: Comeback kids. A new generation. Playoff veterans. The defending AL Champs. But one identity stood out above the rest: No fluke.

And that, to me, is what has defined this team all season long — and has made it so special, and its objective so unique.

While every other contender right now is playing with the goal of proving that they belong this year — for us the stakes are even higher. For us, we feel like we aren’t just playing for this year … we’re playing for last year as well.

We’re playing to win the pennant. But we’re also playing to prove that last year’s pennant was real. We’re playing to prove that the “heartbreaking ending” to our season was only one of those things: That yeah, it was heartbreaking. But it wasn’t an ending at all.

It was a beginning.

They predicted that we would win 75 games this year. We won 95. And now we’re in a fight for our playoff lives.

In other words: We’re right where we want to be.

We weren’t a fluke.

We’re the Kansas City Royals.

We’re here, now. And we’re going to be sticking around for a while.

ERIC HOSMER
CONTRIBUTOR


Archie F. Swin 10-12-2015 10:34 AM

I'm more ready than that filthy beast in alnorth's avatar

Prison Bitch 10-12-2015 10:47 AM

Nobody wants to hear from you, Hosmer. Go do something and maybe we will start listening again. We are sick of your excuses


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