What's causing the Royals' struggles at Kauffman?
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KANSAS CITY -- The Royals continue to search for a remedy that will help them cure their home-field blues.
A team that entered the season with a new manager, a new coaching staff and new ideas had hopes of building goodwill equity with its home fans by capitalizing on a schedule that included 13 of the first 19 games at Kauffman Stadium. But those plans haven¡¯t materialized, and Kansas City fell to 1-8 at home on Saturday after the Braves flashed their formidable offense for the second straight game and rolled to a 9-3 victory.
The Royals only have four more opportunities in April to do something with the heavy-loaded home schedule they had once looked forward to after leaving Spring Training in March.
The Royals went 3-3 during the lone road trip of the season, but the win-loss results at The K have put manager Matt Quatraro¡¯s team in a 4-11 hole heading into Sunday¡¯s series finale against the Braves.
Kansas City¡¯s 1-8 home record has come against three teams -- Minnesota, Toronto and Atlanta -- that have been playing extremely well against all opponents, not just the Royals. The combined record for the Twins, Blue Jays and Braves is 31-14.
¡°Those are good teams,¡± Quatraro said. ¡°But that being said, we have to be better. We have to compete with these teams.¡±
Coming off one of the best starts of his career at San Francisco, Royals left-hander Kris Bubic allowed 10 hits and five earned runs over five innings. A two-hour, 35-minute rain delay and cold, windy conditions were obstacles that Bubic had to deal with in addition to the potent Atlanta lineup.
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Asked if the cold conditions had an impact on his pitches, Bubic said: ¡°Maybe a little bit. To be honest, my forearm tightened up fairly early today. But we¡¯ll take a look at it tomorrow and go from there.¡±
Bubic allowed seven hits over the first three innings, and the Braves took a quick 4-1 lead after three innings. Atlanta managed to keep Kansas City at arm¡¯s length the rest of the way.
¡°I just felt like I couldn¡¯t execute pitches when I got ahead,¡± Bubic said. ¡°There was harder contact today. I didn¡¯t really have a great feel of putting guys away with any pitches, as I had in previous outings. I wanted to keep battling, keep grinding and give us a chance.¡±
Quatraro said Bubic indeed kept battling, but the Royals¡¯ offense couldn¡¯t overcome the early deficit.
¡°His stuff was a little down,¡± Quatraro said. ¡°Movement was a little down, velocity was a little down. But I thought he did a pretty good job of competing, mixing what he had.¡±
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The Royals put some pressure on Braves starter Bryce Elder at times, but couldn¡¯t come up with the big hit. Bobby Witt Jr. had his third consecutive three-hit game, but the Royals could only manage one run in each of the first, fifth and sixth innings. Kansas City finished 1-of-13 with runners in scoring position, which has been a trend for much of the season.
The Royals are off to their worst home start since 2018, but they¡¯re hopeful there will be a course correction soon.
¡°As a team, we¡¯re learning more about ourselves every day,¡± Bubic said. ¡°It¡¯s the Major Leagues. Everybody is pretty good. But if you want to be the best, you¡¯ve got to beat the best.¡±
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