Kaufmann Stadium learned the perils of having fountains close to the centerfield camera on Thursday as heavy winds blew water into the lens, obscuring it and forcing the Royals.TV broadcasting crew to get creative.
The Kansas City area experienced significant wind on Tuesday as the Minnesota Twins came to town for an American League Central showdown with the Royals.
That didn’t pair well with the Kauffman Stadium Water Spectacular, the 322-foot-wide, two-tiered water features located behind the outfield wall, and at various points during the broadcast, the centerfield camera’s vision was partially or completely washed out.
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) April 2, 2026
At other times, the winds were also shaking the camera, making it tough for viewers suffering from seasickness.
What is going on in Kansas City?
Crazy wind today after they played through a hurricane yesterday pic.twitter.com/9aY1IobOsL
— SleeperMLB (@SleeperMLB) April 2, 2026
Things got so bad that the broadcasters had to acknowledge the issue and find alternative camera angles to show the gameplay clearly.
The wind in Kansas City is blowing the fountains all over the center field camera pic.twitter.com/fQTR7SNa4c
— Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia) April 2, 2026
While the centerfield camera angle is usually the main one broadcasters use for baseball games, they were forced to switch to the camera behind home plate for pitches after a while.
The Minnesota and Kansas City broadcasts have gone to the backstop camera angle for many pitches due to the CF camera being covered in fountain water.
Here’s the Twins broadcast explaining it. #MLB https://t.co/Jywrf9UNLx pic.twitter.com/t6yDH6XNwD
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) April 2, 2026
A wild situation for sure, but one that the Royals.TV broadcasting team was able to get creative with and figure out how to keep the view clear for audiences at home.