1969 Kansas City Royals season

The 1969 Kansas City Royals season was the Royals' inaugural season. The team finished fourth in the newly established American League West with a record of 69 wins, 93 losses, and 1 tie.[1]

1969 Kansas City Royals
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionWest
BallparkMunicipal Stadium
CityKansas City, Missouri
OwnersEwing Kauffman
General managersCedric Tallis
ManagersJoe Gordon
TelevisionKMBC-TV
RadioKMBZ
(Buddy Blattner, Denny Matthews)
Seasons1970 →

Offseason

A franchise is born

The club's inception is connected to the Athletics franchise. On October 18, 1967, A.L. owners at last gave Charles O. Finley permission to move the Athletics to Oakland for the 1968 season. According to some reports, Joe Cronin promised Finley that he could move the team after the 1967 season as an incentive to sign the new lease with Municipal Stadium. The move came in spite of approval by voters in Jackson County of a bond issue for a brand new baseball stadium (the eventual Kauffman Stadium) to be completed in 1973. When U.S. Senator Stuart Symington threatened to have baseball's antitrust exemption revoked, the owners responded with a hasty round of expansion. Kansas City was awarded an American League expansion team, the Royals. They were initially slated to begin play in 1971. However, Symington was not willing to have Kansas City wait three years for another team, and renewed his threat to have baseball's antitrust exemption revoked unless the teams began play in 1969. The owners complied, but it forced the Seattle Pilots to enter the league earlier than expected without a suitable stadium, leading to financial difficulty, and a rapid relocation to Milwaukee in April 1970.

The Kansas City franchise was formally awarded to Ewing Kauffman on January 11, 1968.[2] The owner selected Los Angeles Angels vice president Cedric Tallis as the Royals' first general manager, and Tallis began to assemble a front office staff.

Expansion draft

The 1968 Major League Baseball expansion draft for the Royals and the Seattle Pilots was held on October 15.

PlayerFormer TeamPick
Roger Nelson[3]Baltimore Orioles1st
Joe FoyBoston Red Sox4th
Jim RookerNew York Yankees6th
Joe KeoughOakland A's8th
Steve JonesWashington Senators10th
Jon WardenDetroit Tigers12th
Ellie RodríguezNew York Yankees13th
Dave MoreheadBoston Red Sox15th
Mike FioreBaltimore Orioles17th
Bob OliverMinnesota Twins19th
Bill ButlerDetroit Tigers22nd
Steve WhitakerNew York Yankees23rd
Wally Bunker[4]Baltimore Orioles25th
Paul Schaal[5]California Angels27th
Dan HaynesChicago White Sox29th
Dick Drago[6]Detroit Tigers31st
Pat KellyMinnesota Twins34th
Billy HarrisCleveland Indians36th
Don O'RileyOakland A's38th
Al FitzmorrisChicago White Sox40th
Moe DrabowskyBaltimore Orioles42nd
Jackie HernándezMinnesota Twins43rd
Mike HedlundCleveland Indians45th
Tom BurgmeierCalifornia Angels47th
Hoyt Wilhelm[7]Chicago White Sox49th
Jerry AdairBoston Red Sox51st
Jerry CramMinnesota Twins54th
Fran HealyCleveland Indians56th
Scott NortheyChicago White Sox58th
Ike BrookensWashington Senators60th

Other offseason transactions

1968 MLB June amateur draft and minor league affiliates

The Royals and Seattle Pilots, along with the two National League expansion teams set to debut in 1969, the Montreal Expos and San Diego Padres, were allowed to participate in the June 1968 MLB first-year player draft, although the new teams were barred from the lottery's first three rounds. Despite this impediment, the Royals drafted fifty players in the 1968 June draft, including Iorg and other future major leaguers Lance Clemons (seventh round), Monty Montgomery (ninth) and Paul Splittorff (25th).[11] Splittorff would win 166 games for the MLB Royals, including seasons of 20 (1973) and 19 (1978) victories, in a 15-year big-league career, then become a longtime analyst on the team's television crew. The Royals affiliated with three minor league clubs during 1968 to develop drafted players; the rosters were filled out by professional and amateur free agents that had been signed and players loaned from other organizations.

1968 farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AHigh Point-Thomasville Hi-TomsCarolina LeagueJack McKeon
ADubuque RoyalsMidwest LeagueMax Lanier and Paul Pettit
A-Short SeasonCorning RoyalsNew York–Penn LeagueBobo Osborne

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: High Point-Thomasville

Regular season

  • May 4, 1969: Bob Oliver became the first Royal to collect six hits in a nine-inning game.[12]

Season standings

AL West
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
Minnesota Twins9765.59957‍–‍2440‍–‍41
Oakland Athletics8874.543949‍–‍3239‍–‍42
California Angels7191.4382643‍–‍3828‍–‍53
Kansas City Royals6993.4262836‍–‍4533‍–‍48
Chicago White Sox6894.4202941‍–‍4027‍–‍54
Seattle Pilots6498.3953334‍–‍4730‍–‍51

Record vs. opponents


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
TeamBALBOSCALCWSCLEDETKCMINNYYOAKSEPWSH
Baltimore10–86–69–313–511–711–18–411–78–49–313–5
Boston8–108–45–712–610–810–27–511–74–86–66–12
California6–64–89–98–45–79–97–113–96–129–9–15–7
Chicago3–97–59–98–43–98–105–133–98–1010–84–8
Cleveland5–136–124–84–87–117–55–79–85–77–53–15
Detroit7–118–107–59–311–78–46–610–87–510–27–11
Kansas City1–112–109–910–85–74–88–105–7–18–1010–87–5
Minnesota4–85–711–713–57–56–610–810–213–512–66–6
New York7–117–119–39–38–98–107–5–12–106–67–510–8
Oakland4–88–412–610–87–55–710–85–136–613–58–4
Seattle3–96–69–9–18–105–72–108–106–125–75–137–5
Washington5–1312–67–58–415–311–75–76–68–104–85–7


Notable transactions

The first game

Starting lineup

  9Lou PiniellaCF
14Jerry Adair2B
  8Ed Kirkpatrick    LF
  1Joe Foy3B
  7Chuck Harrison1B
33Bob OliverRF
11Ellie RodríguezC
24Jackie Hernández   SS
27Wally Bunker    P

Scorecard

April 8, Municipal Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri

Team123456789101112RHE
Minnesota0100020000003121
Kansas City1000020000014140
W: Drabowsky (1–0)  L: Grzenda (0–1)  
HRs: Nettles (1)

Roster

1969 Kansas City Royals
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
CEllie Rodríguez9526763.236220
1BMike Fiore10733993.2741235
2BJerry Adair126432108.250548
3BJoe Foy145519136.2621171
SSJackie Hernández145504112.222440
LFLou Piniella135493139.2821168
CFBob Oliver118394100.2541343
RFPat Kelly112417110.264832

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Ed Kirkpatrick12031581.2571449
Chuck Harrison7521347.221318
Buck Martinez7220547.229423
Paul Schaal6120554.263113
Juan Ríos8719644.22415
Joe Keough7016631.18707
Hawk Taylor648924.270321
Jim Campanis308313.15705
Luis Alcaraz227920.25317
Scott Northey206116.26217
George Spriggs23294.13800
Dennis Paepke12273.11100
Fred Rico12266.23102
Fran Healy6104.40000
Billy Harris572.28600

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Wally Bunker35222.212113.23130
Bill Butler34193.29103.90156
Roger Nelson29193.17133.3182
Jim Rooker28158.14163.75108

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Dick Drago41200.211133.77108
Mike Hedlund34125.0363.2474
Steve Jones2044.2234.2331
Chris Zachary818.1017.856
Jerry Cram516.2013.2410

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Moe Drabowsky52119112.9476
Dave Wickersham342353.9627
Tom Burgmeier313104.1723
Dave Morehead212305.7332
Don O'Riley181116.9410
Galen Cisco151113.6318
Al Fitzmorris71124.223

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAAOmaha RoyalsAmerican AssociationJack McKeon
AAElmira PioneersEastern LeagueHarry Bright
AHigh Point-Thomasville RoyalsCarolina LeagueHarry Malmberg
AWaterloo HawksMidwest LeagueRollie Hemsley
A-Short SeasonCorning RoyalsNew York–Penn LeagueBuddy Peterson
A-Short SeasonWinnipeg GoldeyesNorthern LeagueSpider Jorgensen
RookieKingsport RoyalsAppalachian LeagueRed Norwood

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Omaha

Elmira affiliation shared with San Diego Padres

Awards and honors

1969 Major League Baseball All-Star Game

1969 AL Rookie of the Year

Notes

References