Austin American-Statesman

New faces fueling Royals

Team is back in Series, but several players are here for first time.

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. — Luke Hochevar was a member of the Kansas City Royals who advanced to the World Series a year ago. He was in the dugout for every playoff game, took part in all the champagne celebratio­ns, got an American League championsh­ip ring after the season.

He never threw a single pitch, though.

That makes this year’s return to the Fall Classic so much sweeter. Now recovered from Tommy John surgery that sidelined him last season, the reliever has been able to contribute to the success of the club that made him a No. 1 overall draft pick in 2006.

“It feels great. There’s no other way to explain it,” Hochevar said. “To experience it last year was unbelievab­le. To have the opportunit­y to come back and do it again is even better.”

The easy argument is the Royals are back because they’re the same team of a year ago. Their core players that became household names against the San Francisco Giants, such as first baseman Eric Hosmer and outfielder Lorenzo Cain, are still doing their thing in Kansas City.

The reality is the Royals are back largely because of all their new faces.

There were only 12 players on their 25-man roster for the AL Championsh­ip Series against Toronto that were on the roster against the Giants. Just four of those were pitchers, and the only starter was

Yordano Ventura, who helped Kansas City to victory in the decisive Game 6.

The Royals used the same roster in the divisional round against Houston, and figure to have a similar makeup when they open the World Series on Tuesday night against the New York Mets.

“This is a different team,” Royals manager Ned Yost acknowledg­ed, “but we play the same.”

By that, he means the Royals still rely on pitching and defense. They still win by making fewer mistakes than the opponent. They still cause havoc on the base paths, rarely strike out.

It’s just that the cast of characters doing it is slightly different.

The Royals walked on an expensive option on designated hitter Billy Butler, signing Kendrys Morales to replace him. The move proved to be brilliant: Morales hit 22 homers during the regular season and has hit four more during the playoffs.

“He’s been the middleof-the-order bat from the first day,” Yost said. “He put up tremendous numbers, power numbers, RBI numbers, he’s been great from both sides of the plate.”

In the field, the Royals moved on from right fielder Nori Aoki by signing Alex Rios, who is hitting .333 in the first playoff appearance of his 12-year career. Second baseman Omar Infante has been hurt, so deadline-acquisitio­n Ben Zobrist took over, hitting .326 while driving in six runs this postseason — including two homers against Toronto.

The backup catcher has been Drew Butera rather than Erik Kratz. The utility men have been Paulo Orlando and Christian Colon, rather than Josh Willingham and Jayson Nix.

All of them easily could be considered upgrades.

But it’s among the pitchers where the difference­s are most stark: Along with Ventura, the rotation consists of Edinson Volquez, Johnny Cueto and Chris Young, while last year it was James Shields, Jeremy Guthrie and Jason Vargas in the postseason.

Volquez was the Royals’ big offseason signing after Shields left in free agency. But Young was signed at the start of spring training after spending time away from the game, and pitched his way into the playoff rotation, dominating the Blue Jays in Game 4 of the ALCS.

“When I started here, I had a conversati­on with (general manager) Dayton Moore,” Young said. “I said, ‘Look, I want to be a part of a winning club. I believe I can contribute, help your team, and I’ll do whatever you need me to do. And the Royals said, ‘OK, we’d love to have you.’ Now, to have this opportunit­y, I just can’t thank the organizati­on enough for believing in me.”

Cueto was acquired at the trading deadline. And while he made a historical­ly bad start in Game 3 against Toronto, he also dominated Houston in the decisive Game 5 of the divisional round.

In the bullpen, All-Star closer Greg Holland and left-handed specialist Tim Collins are out because of Tommy John surgery. Brandon Finnegan has been traded, Jason Frasor released. In their place are Hochevar, Kris Medlen, Franklin Morales and Ryan Madson, another reclamatio­n project who was out of the game before Kansas City gave him one last chance.

So while the core group that ended the Royals’ 29-year playoff drought is back, it’s a new batch of players who will try to help them win their first World Series title since 1985.

“We feel really confident,” Zobrist said. “We just keep coming, one after the other. It says a lot about how this club thinks about themselves. We believe that each guy is going to get the job done. We’re not looking for one guy to do it. We’re looking for everybody to come with their best game. Somebody always shows up to get the big win for us.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Pitcher Luke Hochevar is thrilled to be a contributo­r for the Royals after missing last year, following Tommy John surgery.
GETTY IMAGES Pitcher Luke Hochevar is thrilled to be a contributo­r for the Royals after missing last year, following Tommy John surgery.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Trade deadline pickup Ben Zobrist (above, celebratin­g his homer in Game 6 of the ALCS) stepped in for the injured Omar Infante and is hitting .326 in this postseason.
GETTY IMAGES Trade deadline pickup Ben Zobrist (above, celebratin­g his homer in Game 6 of the ALCS) stepped in for the injured Omar Infante and is hitting .326 in this postseason.

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