KANSAS CITY, Missouri (AP) – The jersey that Eric Hosmer wore in the decisive game of the World Series is headed to the Baseball Hall of Fame. So is the glove Salvador Perez used, the spikes Lorenzo Cain laced up and the bat that third baseman Mike Moustakas took to the plate.
Maybe they ought to ask for the goal posts from the University of Kansas football field.
Those were torn down in the wee hours Monday morning, shortly after the Royals beat the New York Mets to win their first World Series championship in three decades. Thousands of fans shot off fireworks, stormed sporting goods to buy the latest apparel, and spent the night partying as if it was New Year’s Eve.
“Our fan base and our team share a real special bond,’’ Hosmer said. “That’s grown throughout the whole entire world, I think, as the fans have watched us compete throughout this postseason.’’
Indeed, the Royals made plenty of new fans with their scrappy, fight-to-the-last-out style.
U.S. President Barack Obama called manager Ned Yost on Monday and said the team was fun to watch and made Royals fans proud, according to White House spokesman Josh Earnest, a Kansas City native.
The team won 95 games during the regular season and earned home-field advantage throughout the Major League Baseball playoffs. But they never seemed to be the favorites – not against the plucky Houston Astros, the powerful Toronto Blue Jays or against the hard-throwing New York Mets’ starting rotation.
“I think the resiliency of this team and the way we can come back and the way we just count ourselves in every single game, I think it makes for a fun team to watch,’’ Hosmer explained. “It’s definitely a fun team to play for.’’
That resiliency was evident throughout their October postseason ride.
In the American League Division Series, they trailed the Astros by four runs in a game that could have ended their season, then rallied to win the series. They kept fighting back when the Blue Jays kept pounding home runs, eventually winning their second straight AL championship.
It was in the World Series that they really shined, though.
The Royals trailed in all five games against the Mets, winning three times when they were down in the eighth inning or later – something no team had ever accomplished. In the decider, the Royals became the first team since the 1939 Yankees to trail by two runs in the ninth inning or later of a potential clinching game and somehow rally to victory.
All told, Kansas City trailed by at least two runs in seven of its 11 playoff wins.
The victory parade is Tuesday in downtown Kansas City, a route that will take the team about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) to historic Union Station.