Remembering Alex Gordon’s Career
Alex Gordon retired following the 2020 season. He spent all of his 14 MLB seasons in Kansas City with the Royals and became one of the franchise’s all-time greats.
Alex Gordon retired following the 2020 season. He spent all of his 14 MLB seasons in Kansas City with the Royals and became one of the franchise’s all-time greats.
The Kansas City Royals finished 26-34, good enough for fourth place in the American League Central. They are in the midst of a rebuild and will be returning most of their team in 2021.
Kansas City Royals outfielder Alex Gordon announced on Thursday that he’s retiring at the end of the season.
The Kansas City Royals finished the season 59-103. While they weren’t in the basement of the American League Central, they did have the fourth-worst record in the Major Leagues. This bodes well as they will have the fourth pick in the Amateur Draft come June of 2020. The Royals are going to need prospects like that to pan out if they hope to reach the pinnacle of the sport as they did just four years ago.
The weekend kicks off Friday night with a nice main slate schedule of 15 games. The pitching landscape appears to be full of great choices to pay up for so if that’s the route you take finding the right combinations of lower-priced options could be key. Let’s break it down with another trip Around the Horn
In what looks to be a rebuild, although Royals GM Dayton Moore doesn’t want to call it a rebuild, the Royals have signed a bunch of guys to one-year deals. Is it in hopes of trading them in July or can the Royals compete this year? Let’s take a closer look at the 2019 Kansas City Royals.
Alex Gordon retired following the 2020 season. He spent all of his 14 MLB seasons in Kansas City with the Royals and became one of the franchise’s all-time greats.
The Kansas City Royals finished 26-34, good enough for fourth place in the American League Central. They are in the midst of a rebuild and will be returning most of their team in 2021.
Kansas City Royals outfielder Alex Gordon announced on Thursday that he’s retiring at the end of the season.
The Kansas City Royals finished the season 59-103. While they weren’t in the basement of the American League Central, they did have the fourth-worst record in the Major Leagues. This bodes well as they will have the fourth pick in the Amateur Draft come June of 2020. The Royals are going to need prospects like that to pan out if they hope to reach the pinnacle of the sport as they did just four years ago.
The weekend kicks off Friday night with a nice main slate schedule of 15 games. The pitching landscape appears to be full of great choices to pay up for so if that’s the route you take finding the right combinations of lower-priced options could be key. Let’s break it down with another trip Around the Horn
In what looks to be a rebuild, although Royals GM Dayton Moore doesn’t want to call it a rebuild, the Royals have signed a bunch of guys to one-year deals. Is it in hopes of trading them in July or can the Royals compete this year? Let’s take a closer look at the 2019 Kansas City Royals.
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