Obama honors Royals at White House

President Barack Obama holds up a personalized Royals jersey presented to him by team manager Ned Yost during a ceremony Thursday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
President Barack Obama holds up a personalized Royals jersey presented to him by team manager Ned Yost during a ceremony Thursday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.

WASHINGTON - The Kansas City Royals are going to have to work on their nicknames as far as President Barack Obama is concerned. Everything else was looking pretty good though as he honored the 2015 World Series champions Thursday at the White House, describing them as one of the "grittiest, most complete teams we've seen in a long time."

The Royals last visited the White House in 1985 when President Ronald Reagan saluted their "never-say-die spirit" in the Rose Garden. The 2015 team showed the same quality. Six outs away from playoff elimination, the Royals scored seven runs to defeat the Houston Astros. They went on to win that series and to beat the Toronto Blue Jays and the New York Mets. Obama noted the Royals held the record for comeback wins in the playoffs.

Obama also acknowledged it had been a long time between visits to the White House for Kansas City. "Let's face it, it's been a long road for Royals fans," Obama said. "There were some dark years, some tough decades."

But Obama said that began to change when general manager Dayton Moore was hired and the Royals started to develop talented players through their minor league system. Among them: outfielder Alex Gordon, infielders Mike Moustakas and Eric Hosmer, and catcher Salvador Perez.

Obama called each of the players by their nicknames, "Gordo," "Moose," "Hos" and "Salvy." But the president didn't seem to find those too creative.

"We're going to have to work on this," Obama said.

"When the president calls you out, you definitely got to start thinking about something," Hosmer said after the ceremony. "We've got some guys in the locker room, I'm sure they're starting to bear down on that."

However, Obama admitted to liking outfielder Jarrod Dyson's description of one of the team's top weapons: "That's what speed do."

"That's a good quote," Obama said.

Obama noted his spokesman, Josh Earnest, was a big Royals fan, and the Royals visit Thursday was right up there as far as best days ever. Manager Ned Yost, Hosmer and Perez interrupted the day's press briefing to present the Kansas City native with a team jersey, an upgraded mug and an autographed World Service baseball.