The Kansas City Royals are on a roll. After an 8-14 start, they have won nine of their last 11 games and are now 17-16. The offense remains a bit of an issue for this club, but they are pitching quite well.
BALTIMORE — The Kansas City Royals came into Camden Yards on Friday night on a hot streak, winning nine of their last 10 games. However, Baltimore’s Dean Kremer grounded Kansas City’s high-flying offense quickly, setting the tone for what would be a dominating performance.
Ryan O’Hearn and Emmanuel Rivera granted the Orioles the win. Deep sigh. Of course, a reeling team whose pitching in particular has struggled comes in to the series against the Royals starting a guy with an ERA above 7.00.
With April in the rearview mirror, the Major League Baseball season is no longer in warm-up mode. It's now a sprint to the All-Star break. The Royals had an up-and-down April, but it could have been a lot more down if the starting pitching hadn't stepped up.
Thanks to left hip soreness, catcher/designated hitter Salvador Perez wasn't in the Kansas City Royals lineup on Friday night as a three-game series began against the Baltimore Orioles at Camden Yards.
The only two things rarer in modern-day baseball than the four-homer game is the Triple Crown and the unassisted triple play. The former is, of course, done over an entire season, while there's a large level of lucky in the unassisted triple play.
Now that the calendar has turned to May, it will amaze us all how quickly July and the Major League Baseball All-Star Game roll around. Last year, the Kansas City Royals were one of the most impressive teams of the first half, and they sent an unexpected four participants to the All-Star Game.
April sure was a confusing month to be a Kansas City Royals fan. It was a month that saw the Royals hit like a bottom-five team in the sport, and included a six-game losing streak.
The Kansas City Royals are on a hot streak, having won nine of their last 10 games following a dreadful 8-14 start to the 2025 season. They are looking to follow up their surprise American League Wild Card berth with another playoff run this year.
It’s refreshing to see a Royals hitter show such good strike zone judgment The Kansas City Royals offense came alive in their 8-2 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Thursday; they scored their magic number of runs two times in one game!
The Kansas City Royals are on a roll after starting the year 8-14. Since that start, they have won nine of their last 10 ballgames and are now two games above the .500 mark at 17-15.
What a pair of starts. While the Royals offense has been slow to start this year, the pitching has been phenomenal. Kansas City has won 9 of its last 10 games, and has done so on the back of top-to-bottom excellent pitching performances.
Move on over, Chandler Simpson, there's a new Minor League Baseball baserunning king in town. Asbel Gonzalez is the No. 23 prospect in the Kansas City Royals organization, and he stole a whopping 30 bases prior to the month of May for the Single-A Columbia Fireflies.
The Kansas City Royals are on a hot streak after a dreadful start to the 2025 season. The team was 8-14 in April, but has kicked things into gear as of late, winning nine of their last 10 games and improving to 17-15.
The Kansas City Royals beat the Tampa Bay Rays 8-2 on Thursday afternoon at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa. With the win, the Royals have now won nine of ten games to run their record to 17-15.
The Kansas City Royals completed their series sweep of the Tampa Bay Rays on Thursday. Bobby Witt led the way, hitting a two-run home run off of Shane Baz in the fifth inning.
Bobby Witt Jr. slugged a two-run homer, extending his career-best hitting streak to 22 games, and had three RBIs as the Kansas City Royals completed a three-game road sweep with an 8-2 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Thursday afternoon.
Coming off their first postseason appearance in nine years, the Kansas City Royals have struggled to show that their offense is worthy of a repeat. The hole that sparks questions for this avenging team is the outfield.
Noah Cameron wasn't the only Kansas City Royals prospect that was generating attention on Wednesday night. While Cameron was firing 6.1 scoreless innings for the big-league club, once again, Jac Caglianone was turning heads with a big performance for Double-A Northwest Arkansas.
Following a flawless MLB debut on Wednesday that saw Kansas City Royals pitcher Noah Cameron take a no-hit bid into the seventh inning of a 3-0 win over the Tampa Bay Rays, it was a much different story for the 25-year-old on Thursday.
The Royals have selected the contract of righty Taylor Clarke from Triple-A Omaha and optioned lefty Noah Cameron back to Triple-A after yesterday’s MLB debut, per a team announcement.
The Kansas City Royals shut out the Tampa Bay Rays 3-0 on Wednesday night at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa. With the win, Kansas City is finally over .500, and they end April at 16-15 and in third place in the American League Central.