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For 28 consecutive seasons, between the 1985 World Series championship and 2014, the Royals did not qualify to play in the Major League Baseball postseason, one of the longest postseason droughts during baseball's expanded wild-card era. The worst years during this era were from 2002 to 2006, when the Royals had four 100-loss seasons out of five.
Kansas City entered the 2007 season looking to rebound from four out of five seasons ending with at least 100 losses, and appeared to be opening up its wallet a bit, with a payroll exceeding $60 million for the first time (rising to 22nd-highest in the major leagues).
The Kansas City Royals dropped their third straight series and ninth straight game and are dealing with another injury to a key starter. Kansas City Royals’ losses mount in Reds finale: 9th ...
The longest losing streak by a defending World Series Champion is 11, by the 1998 Florida Marlins and the 1986 Kansas City Royals. Key. ...
Royals players and general manager J.J. Picollo shared their perspective on the season, as KC nears a franchise-worst mark for losses. What Kansas City Royals must do to avoid franchise loss ...
The Kansas City Royals are slumping at the wrong time. After taking three of four against the Cleveland Guardians last week, the Royals on Monday lost their sixth consecutive game, falling 4-2 to ...
Unlike most offseasons — including the last one, when Kansas City had just finished a 106-loss campaign that ranked among the worst in franchise history — the Royals are headed into this one with momentum for the first time in years.
The Kansas City Royals, who reached 100 losses more than two weeks ago and have been out of contention for almost the entire season, suddenly became a huge thorn in the side of the defending ...