Jose Rosado arrived in the Kansas City organization as a 12th-round selection in 1994, a left-hander whose deceptive delivery and poised mound presence propelled him through the system at a breakneck pace. He debuted in 1996 and immediately looked like the specialized ace the franchise had been searching for since the departure of Kevin Appier.
Right out of the gate, when he was called up in 1996, Rosado proved he belonged in the Majors. He only made 16 starts that summer, but posted a 3.21 ERA and a 1.114 WHIP and finished fourth in the American League Rookie of the Year voting. This success served as the lead-in to 1997, where he earned his first All-Star selection and proved his durability by tossing over 200 innings and recording 12 victories.
In 1999, he reached another peak of individual recognition, earning his second All-Star nod and famously picking up the win for the American League in the Midsummer Classic. He had a personal best of 141 strikeouts, but he was unable to build on his momentum.
Shoulder injuries compounded in 2000, and he was forced to retire at 25, leaving one of the biggest “what ifs?” in organizational history. Rosado compiled 37 wins, 480 strikeouts, and two All-Star selections over his career.
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