The
Royals 25th anniversary logo at Kauffman Stadium in 1993. In 19 of
those 25 years, the Royals roster included a McRae. (G21D Photo)
Part 1: Call Up | Part 2: Added Pressure |
Part 3: Great Feeling
Brian McRae got the call in Huntsville. He just couldn't call anyone else.
McRae had to get to Kansas City. The 22-year-old son of Royals great Hal McRae was going to make his debut in the majors.
"I
didn't know what to think," Brian McRae told The Greatest 21 Days in 2012, "everything was happening so fast. These were the days before
cell phones. I didn't have a chance to call anybody."
"It was probably five to six hours before I was able to get a hold of anybody and let them know that I got called up."
Getting
the call that morning, McRae made it to Kansas City that evening,
getting into the lineup and getting a triple in his first big league at
bat.
McRae spoke with The Greatest 21 Days recently by
phone from his Kansas City-area home. McRae ended up playing a decade in
the majors, amassing more than 1,300 big league hits.
He
is now the general manager of the Kansas City Sluggers, a non-profit
traveling youth baseball program. McRae was also readying to head up the
Morehead City Marlins in summer 2012 in the collegiate Coastal Plain League
in North Carolina.
In the telephone interview, McRae
told of growing up in major league clubhouses, doing just about any job
given to him and taking advice from his father's teammates.
He
also told of the of the difficulties of having a father in the major
leagues, the nights where he'd be in bed when his father got home from
games, or the road trips when wouldn't be home.
Brian McRae teammate Greg Gagne batting at Kauffman Stadium July 6, 1993. McRae went 1 for 4 in the game. (G21D Photo)
But
McRae also told of the making the majors and, the next year, the family
ending up all in the same place again, and on the same schedule. It was
before McRae's second season in the majors that his father was named
Royals manager.
McRae has always been around the game
in some capacity, he recalled. McRae was born in August 1967, the year
before his father made the majors with the Reds and three years before
his father became a regular.
McRae recalled many of his
early baseball lessons came from those Reds teams. Those lessons
continued after his father was traded to the Royals in 1973, as the
Royals were about to go on their run.
"All those were
big influences because I was around winning ball clubs, a lot of great
players," McRae said. "I learned my work ethic and habits of how to go
about being a big league player from some of those good teams."
He
also worked. McRae recalled doing a little bit of everything when he
was around those teams. He was the ball boy. He was the bat boy. He
worked in the clubhouse, helping shine shoes and do laundry.
The fountains at Kauffman Stadium in 1993. (G21D Photo)
McRae
grew up Bradenton, Florida, but graduated from Blue Springs High School
in Missouri. The Florida roots made springs that much better, he
recalled, with the family together. It also helped is first year in the
minors, in the Gulf Coast League, as McRae was only a short drive from
home.
Growing up, though, his father spent much of the summer on the road playing and away from home.
"It
wasn't your normal household," McRae recalled, "because my dad worked
odd hours, playing all night games. During school we didn't to too many
games."
"It wasn't the ideal setup, but that's all we knew because that's what the job demanded and that's what my father did."
Despite
the background in baseball, McRae recalled that growing up, he was
actually better at football, as a defensive back and receiver.
Coming
out of high school, he had multiple scholarship offers to play
football, he recalled. He even signed to attend the University of Kansas
on scholarship.
But he was also good at baseball, good enough to be selected by the Royals 17th overall in the 1985 draft, as a 17-year-old.
The decision to choose baseball, though, was an easy one for McRae.
"I
thought that baseball was the one where I had more longevity and a
chance," McRae recalled. "I didn't think I was going to be an NFL
football player, but I had a chance to play longer in baseball."
McRae did play longer in baseball. Fifteen years.
Go to Part 2: Brian McRae, Added Pressure
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