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Let’s begin by addressing a huge team priority. The Royals have been playing games at Kauffman Stadium since 1973, making it the fifth-oldest stadium still in use. It’s undergone multiple refurbishments throughout the years, and is still a solid place to see games. The tailgating is great, the stadium is open and airy, and it doesn’t feel 50 years old.
That said, the Royals have been exploring potential sites for a new ballpark in both Kansas and Missouri. Part of their sales pitch to local governments and to the fans that live in the various jurisdictions has been the team’s desire to stay in Kansas City long-term, and a commitment to winning. That’s likely at least part of the reason they decided to push their chips in prior to the 2024 season.
Off the heels of a 2024 ALDS appearance with no stadium deal in place, I believe it’s likely the Royals will try to go all-in this offseason in order to show their dedication to the city and the fan base. What are the factors that will impact this over the next several months?
Payroll and Contract Decisions
Heading into the 2024 season, owner John Sherman pushed payroll to $122M, the highest in several years. In 2025, they don’t have a ton of committed money – just over $44M guaranteed to Salvador Perez, Seth Lugo, Bobby Witt.
There are three players with Player Options – the net result is there’s likely $12M more hitting the 2025 books. Chris Stratton has an option at $4.5M (his likely free agent value is 1/$4.8M). He could go either way, but I’m guessing he stays. Hunter Renfroe has an option at $7.6M (his likely free agent value is a 2/$11M deal). Because the AAV is higher on his option, he likely opts in. Michael Wacha has a $16M option (his likely free agent value is a 3/$60M deal). He likely opts out and signs a multi-year deal with someone.
Adam Frazier also has an $8.5M mutual option, but his likely market value is a 1/$1.2M deal. The Royals will decline the option.
They will have arbitration decisions on a number of players: Josh Taylor ($1.1M), Hunter Harvey ($3.9M), Brady Singer ($8.8M), Kris Bubic ($2.8M), Kyle Wright ($1.8M), John Schreiber ($2M), Carlos Hernandez ($1.2M), Kyle Isbel ($1.7M), MJ Melendez ($2.5M), Daniel Lynch ($1.1M). Of those players, just Singer and Harvey are set to make more than $3M, and both factor into their 2025 plans. Assuming they choose to tender everyone, that adds $28M onto their 2025 books.
With all of this in mind, the Royals are sitting around a $95M payroll so far, with some holes to fill. Let’s look at their offseason needs.
Offseason Needs
They have eight players hitting free agency, in Will Smith, Michael Lorenzen, Paul DeJong, Tommy Pham, Garrett Hampson, Robbie Grossman, Yuli Gurriel, and Dan Altavilla. That creates some holes on the roster, and there isn’t much high-end depth even close to ready on the farm.
Third base coverage becomes thin. Maikel Garcia is the primary fielder at the position, and he doesn’t hit much, with a .614 OPS in 2024.
The Royals finished the season with the 11th-worst bullpen ERA in baseball. They traded for Lucas Erceg and Hunter Harvey, but likely need at least one more arm capable of pitching in the late innings.
Their outfielders didn’t hit a lick in 2024, and the Royals would benefit from at least one big bat playing in the grass, and two would be better.
With Gurriel departing, the Royals will need to decide whether Salvador Perez is their everyday first baseman, or if they need him to catch alongside Freddy Fermin. They will need to acquire a decent player at either first base or catcher.
They will also need at least one starting pitcher to replace Michael Wacha’s likely departure. Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo, and Brady Singer set up the front of the rotation, and Kyle Wright probably holds down the fifth spot, but the Royals will likely want to aim for another mid-rotation starter, and possibly two to combat uncertainty and provide additional depth.
TV Deal
The Royals are yet another team impacted by the Diamond Sports Group’s bankruptcy proceedings and stated goal of only broadcasting Atlanta. Similar to the Twins, they could choose to re-up on a worse deal, or they could choose to use MLB to broadcast their games. Either option would almost certainly carry a large financial hit compared to their current TV deal, and that figures to impact their payroll goals.
How will the Royals square up the need to compete in order to secure a stadium deal with the significant loss of revenue? And will it affect their ability to sign impact players? Will they pursue the trade route to save payroll? If so, they may need to empty their farm system which is not strong to begin with.
In many ways, the 2025 Royals offseason could look a lot like the 2024 Twins — they have a couple star players, some young talent, but some real needs and no easy way to fill them unless they are either comfortable operating at a loss, or willing to push all their chips in to win now. For Twins fans, one can hope that the Royals 2025 season looks like the 2024 Twins season as well.
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- Patzky, mikelink45 and Karbo
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