Originally posted by Awesome Sauce Malone
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White only felt more disrespected by an organization he cared about his entire life, and the Royals grew more tired of what some viewed as a sense of entitlement and paranoia unbecoming of a man of such accomplishment.
But White is complicit in getting to this point. His reputation for privately badmouthing the Royals caught up to him, as well as a feeling from some that he’s a diva who longs to be treated as George Brett’s equal without the Hall of Fame status to justify it.
The Royals have done a lot for White. They gave him a coaching job, and, when White cut an original five-year commitment in Wichita after three years, pushed him for the broadcasting job.White is the common denominator in a tension-filled relationship with the club that stretches back to his playing days — through different general managers, front office personnel, coaches, even ownership.
What I've noticed is that regular fans mostly support White but those who are a level deeper with club and other MLB contacts (the bloggers, writers, etc.) mostly take the balanced position of blaming both sides. I give more credence to the ones with more inside knowledge than the emotional response of regular fans.
I think the lesson to be learned is, don't hire the hometown heroes or legends. An eventual split is virtually unavoidable and there's a good chance it won't be amicable and will be a PR hit.
Just because it's worked out - so far - with Brett, doesn't mean it always will.
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