Buster OlneyFeb 7, 2026, 11:14 PM

CloseSenior writer ESPN Magazine/ESPN.com
Analyst/reporter ESPN television
Author of “The Last Night of the Yankee Dynasty”

Multiple Authors

Terrance Gore, a dynamic baserunner whose speed impacted postseason games for the better part of a decade, has died at age 34, the Kansas City Royals announced Saturday.

According to USA Today, Britney Gore, his wife, posted on social media that Gore died from complications after routine surgery. He leaves behind three children.

“Very sad to wake up and hear this,” said the Dodgers‘ Dave Roberts, one of many major league managers who deployed Gore as a pinch runner during his career. “He was as confident a base stealer as I’ve ever been around.”

Eric Hosmer was a teammate of Gore with the Royals.

“Absolutely brutal news,” he texted. “A great teammate.”

Gore had 85 plate appearances during his big-league career and batted .216. But in some Septembers and October, he led the majors in fear induced because of his speed. He was often added to rosters late in the regular season — first by the Royals and subsequently by the Chicago Cubs, Dodgers and New York Mets — to serve as a pinch runner, usually in the late innings of close games. He played in the big leagues in parts of eight seasons and in just 112 regular-season games and 11 more in the postseason, he stole 48 bases in 58 attempts.

Buck Showalter managed against Gore when the Baltimore Orioles faced the Royals in the playoffs and had Gore on his roster in 2022 when Gore was with the Mets.

“I called him in to talk to him about what his role would be, but he already knew,” Showalter said. “He was such a weapon. He fit in well. He didn’t take himself too seriously.”

Gore took batting practice daily and worked in the outfield before games. But Gore and his teammates knew how he would be used — if his team was down a run in the late innings, or if the score was tied, then he would be sent into the game as a pinch runner.

“If the score was tied and you got him into the game to run,” Showalter said, “it was like the game was over.”

Showalter mentioned that players such as Gore and Deion Sanders were different in their degree of speed. Some players are fast, Showalter said, but when Gore ran, it was at another gear.

“We knew we couldn’t throw him out,” he recalled. “He was a light slider, and then we would try to ride him off the base with the tag [since he sometimes popped up after reaching a base]. But if you just worked at trying to throw him out, forget it, it wasn’t going to happen.”

Terrance Gore played in 112 regular-season Major League games over eight seasons, stealing 48 bases in 58 attempts. AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson

When Roberts played with the Boston Red Sox in 2004, he famously played a similar role as Gore did during his career, notably stealing a base against Mariano Rivera and the New York Yankees in the playoffs before scoring a pivotal tying run. Roberts talked about this with Gore when the player joined the Dodgers in 2020.

“He knew exactly what I meant,” Roberts said. “He was a good teammate.”

Gore was born and raised in Georgia, and after playing for Gulf Coast State College in Panama, Florida, he was selected in the 20th round of the 2011 draft by the Royals, the 606th player picked. In the minors, Gore had a .237 batting average with a .334 on-base percentage — he hit one home run in 2,585 plate appearances. But he could run.

“His acceleration was amazing,” texted Dayton Moore, the former GM of the Royals. “He was fearless on the bases. He was in control of the matchup [on the bases] — I always worried that he’d hurt himself because he slid late and hard into bases.”

Moore recalled that Gore thought about quitting when he was playing in Single-A ball, but Mike Sweeney and Lonnie Goldberg, then with the Royals’ organization, talked him out of it.

“He wasn’t satisfied with just being known for base stealing,” Moore said. “He worked extremely hard at trying to be an everyday guy.”