The Kansas City Royals' 2026 season reached a new low this week as the team was swept by the Chicago White Sox. This pushed the Royals six games under .500 and again brings to the surface questions about what direction Kansas City is heading. The franchise now sits in the basement of the American League Central, 4.5 games behind the division-leading Cleveland Guardians. This is far from insurmountable, but it feels like an impossible hill to climb for a team that lacks energy.
One obvious outlier is infielder Bobby Witt Jr., who did everything within his power to avoid the sweep. Witt hit a pair of home runs, walked three times, collected four hits, and stole a base over the three-game slide. Still, it wasn't enough, and the Royals are left questioning what direction this season might be heading as we sit in the middle of May.
Kansas City's problems were on full display in the series loss, with a lack of offensive cohesion and zero pitching depth both being exposed. Witt's heroics are rarely going to be enough when the majority of your lineup is hovering around the 'Mendoza line', leaving fans wondering if it is time to address these problems or punt on the 2026 season.
Royals' lack of depth exposed in ugly series sweep vs. Chicago White Sox
The Royals sit 18th in the league when it comes to team payroll, with $184.7 million spent on the current roster, according to Spotrac. What Kansas City needs to decide very quickly is whether they are willing to surpass $200 million and answer the obvious weaknesses that this series helped expose.
It isn't too late to save the season thanks to a division that has remained wide open since Opening Day. Even as the Royals currently sit in the basement, they are one hot week away from being right back in the conversation.
Kansas City needs to decide if they are willing to go out and add a middle-of-the-lineup presence and a top-end starter that are clearly needed. Witt needs more help at the top of the lineup, and the Royals need another starter they can rely on every fifth day to give the pitching rotation a chance.
With this in mind, the clear disaster of this series should serve as a wake-up call for the KC front office to pick a direction. It is either desperation time to attempt to salvage the season, or time to let go of the rope and realize that selling pieces off and entering a reset could be in the team's best interest. Regardless of what the team chooses, the series was a clear message that things must change in one way or another.
