Fans have common ground with Kansas City

About 1,800 miles separate Oakland and Kansas City, and the cultural divide might be even wider. But baseball fans in both regions share one thing in common: They loved, and then lost, the A’s.

The A’s got their start in Philadelphia in 1901 and next season are headed to Sacramento for what is expected to be a pit stop on the road to ultimately resettling in Las Vegas. But no matter where the A’s go, the Oakland-Kansas City connection will always be unique.

Kansas City Athletics owner Charlie Finley sits astride the team's mascot, "Charlie O," for a short ride during pre-game ceremonies at the Detroit-Kansas City opening game of the American League baseball season in Kansas City's Municipal Stadium, April 12, 1965. (AP Photo/William Straeter)
Kansas City Athletics owner Charlie Finley sits astride the team’s mascot, “Charlie O,” for a short ride during pre-game ceremonies at the Detroit-Kansas City opening game of the American League baseball season in Kansas City’s Municipal Stadium, April 12, 1965. (AP Photo/William Straeter) 

The Royals, the team Kansas City got when the A’s bolted from Missouri in 1968, make their final appearance in Oakland with a three-game series that begins Tuesday night.

The A’s already made their annual visit to Kauffman Stadium, the ballpark that local officials were strong-armed into approving in the mid-1960s in a failed attempt to keep the franchise from moving to Oakland.

If any fan base understands what Oakland A’s diehards are going through, it’s in Kansas City.

“The older ones are dying off, but there are still people here that are bitter that the A’s left Kansas City and wish they were still here,” said Jeff Logan, president of the Kansas City Baseball Historical Society.

The A’s run in Kansas City was just 13 seasons – compared to 57 in Oakland – but that’s where the core of the Oakland teams that won three straight World Series titles in the 1970s got their start, including Catfish Hunter, Reggie Jackson, Rollie Fingers, Sal Bando, Joe Rudi and Campy Campaneris. Even Charlie-O the mule and Harvey The Rabbit made their major league debuts as Kansas City A’s.

Oakland, CA October 21, 1973: Oakland Athletics third baseman Sal Bando jumps onto the pile of players after the final out in game seven of the 1973 World Series at the Oakland Coliseum. (Russ Reed/Oakland Tribune)
Oakland, CA October 21, 1973: Oakland Athletics third baseman Sal Bando jumps onto the pile of players after the final out in game seven of the 1973 World Series at the Oakland Coliseum. (Russ Reed/Oakland Tribune) 

For former Kansas City A’s fans such as Logan, what’s going on in Oakland is a case of history repeating. Only the ownership group has changed.

“It’s almost identical,” Logan said. “And it’s all about greed.”

The A’s played in Kansas City from 1955 through 1967. The relationship likely would have lasted much longer if not for the arrival of a new ownership group that alienated the fan base as it brazenly looked for anywhere else to call home.

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