On Sunday afternoon, the Kansas City Royals fell once again to the Texas Rangers, losing by a score of 6-3. The loss marked the team’s sixth consecutive defeat and the second straight series they have been swept.
The inevitability of losing has only gotten more familiar game after game. Now sitting 15 games under .500 and in losing 16 of their last 19 games, questions regarding the future of the Royals echoes even louder.
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The Royals made the postseason for the first time in nine years in 2024. With the uprising of shortstop Bobby Wiit Jr., who continues to cement his stardom year after year, the future at hand seemed promising — but for now, all has spiraled for the Royals in 2026.
Considering the consistency the team is playing at, signs may be pointing for Kansas City to sell at this season’s trade deadline. There isn’t much time for the Royals to make a turnaround until that midpoint part of the season, as this past week marked one of their worst stretches of baseball in a long time.
At the beginning of the week, the Royals were swept at home by the New York Yankees, who did so soundly — outscoring Kansas City 26-4 in those three games. Not much changed when they traveled to Texas, where the Rangers defeated them comfortably twice and came back from a three-run deficit in a gutting loss for the Royals on Saturday.
Collectively, things have unraveled quickly. Maikel Garcia left Saturday’s game with a hamstring strain. Power bats Vinnie Pasquantino and Salvador Perez have each struggled tremendously, while also continuously batting in the heart of the Royals’ order.
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Kansas City has sat towards the bottom of the ranks offensively. They have scored the least amount of runs in the league, while having little to no success batting with runners in scoring position.
Their rotation, which has unarguably been their strong suit over the past couple of seasons, has not replicated that same success and have run thin. Cole Ragans has been experiencing setbacks as he looks to come back from elbow soreness, which sidelined him after a poor start to the year. The team also recently placed Kris Bubic, a productive piece of the rotation, on the injured list with elbow issues as well.
Michael Wacha and Seth Lugo have been producing as the team’s frontline starters, but not at the same elite rate that they had in the past. With minimal offense, an injury-riddled rotation and a bullpen that has proven it cannot be relied on, the recipe for the Royals had not worked out for manager Matt Quatraro.
The room for margin is thin for Kansas City. A new month dawns on Monday, one that can very well determine the landscape of where this team is headed in 2026, with the trade deadline looming in early August.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source sports.yahoo.com ’














