
So when he said that – dominate! – it was so out of character he might as well have been speaking Chinese. When the words come out, they are often efficient and occasionally cutting (like the time he told Billy Butler in no uncertain terms how badly another player could beat him up in a fight). Unless approached or asked a specific question, he rarely speaks. Now, most of you know this already, but it’s worth emphasizing: Gordon is as outwardly cocky as a pot of soil. Toward the end of that season – four years into a career going nowhere – Gordon promised to dominate the next year. But he felt something, even if the rest of the world couldn’t see it. 665 on-base-plus-slugging percentage before the position switch in 2010, and. The results didn’t come, at least in the beginning. He found fun again, further away from the required precision of defending a spot 90 feet or so from home plate. The request came for two primary reasons: the next star prospect was ready for the big leagues, and the Royals had no more ideas about what to do with Gordon. Three years after that first game, the Royals asked him to change positions, and not because they knew what he would become in left field. Gordon received two standing ovations before his first big league at-bat, a strikeout with the bases loaded that foreshadowed so much struggle. What’s even crazier is Brett felt honored by the comparison.


Alex gordon game 1 home run professional#
They compared him to George Brett before he ever played a professional game. Dirty blonde hair, left-handed swing, third base. – More than anyone else, Alex Gordon personified the Royals’ climb from punchline to parade. Sam McDowell: In appreciation of Alex Gordon, the 'perfect ballplayer' and a model Kansas City Royal
