BSB MLB Awards: Rookie of the Year

BSB thinks Heyward was snubbed.

This season, we’re going to announce our MLB Awards (roughly) when the actual awards are announced.  The real awards are voted on by the so-called “experts” of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America but, fear not, because BSB is here to set the record straight.  Like the actual writers that vote on these awards, we made our packs back in early October, before the postseason.

We start with our Rookie of the Year picks.  The “actual” award winners were Giants’ catcher Buster Posey and Rangers’ closer Neftali Feliz.

NL Rookie of the Year:

BRY:

  1. Jason Heyward-RF (ATL)
  2. Buster Posey-C (SF)
  3. Jaime Garcia-SP (STL)
  4. Mike Stanton-RF (FLA)
  5. Steven Strasburg-SP (WAS)

DOOGAN:

  1. Jason Heyward-RF (ATL)
  2. Buster Posey-C (SF)
  3. Jaime Garcia-SP (STL)
  4. Starlin Castro-SS (CHC)
  5. Mike Stanton-RF (FLA)

So, the unanimous BSB NL Rookie of the Year is Heyward, NOT the actual winner, in what Bry called “the best ROY race I can remember.”  Again, we made these picks well before the NLCS, so it’s not bitterness that made us go against Posey.  In fact, if we were being unbiased at all, we had more reason to go against the young star of our division rival. 

Both of us gave Heyward the edge because he was in the Braves’ starting line-up on Opening Day, while Posey didn’t come to the majors until almost two months into the season.  It was a close call.  Both guys played key roles for playoff teams, but Heyward did it for a whole season.  We agree on Garcia as the best rookie pitcher in the NL this year.  Bry stuck Strasburg on his ballot on the strength of just 12 starts, while Doogan opts for Castro, who hit .300 for the Cubs.

AL Rookie of the Year:

BRY:

  1. Neftali Feliz-RP (TEX)
  2. Austin Jackson-CF (DET)
  3. Wade Davis-SP (TB)
  4. John Jaso-C (TB)
  5. Danny Valencia-3B (MIN)

DOOGAN:

  1. Neftali Feliz-RP (TEX)
  2. Austin Jackson-CF (DET)
  3. Wade Davis-SP (TB)
  4. Brian Matusz-SP (BAL)
  5. Alexi Ogando-RP (TEX)

BSB is in agreement with the actual voters on Feliz as AL ROY.  The crop of AL rookies was nowhere near the talent and depth of the NL.  Jackson hit .297 with 27 steals, while Davis won 12 games for the NL East champs.

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Contreras and Sandberg Coming Back

The first real news of the Phillie offseason came this morning with the reports that the Phils are “close” to a deal with Jose Contreras.  Right now the reports are saying 2 years/$5 million for the soon-to-be 39-year-old right-hander.

This looks like a nice signing.  Yes, he’s old and 2010 was his first full season as a reliever, but he did a great job.  With the injuries and inconsistencies that Lidge and Madson faced early in the season, there were long stretches where Contreras was the most dependable member of the Phillie pen.  He’s also a proven postseason performer.  He pitched four scoreless innings in the playoffs this year, allowing just one base-runner.  Back in the 2005 postseason, he was 3-1 as a starter while helping the White Sox to a World Series title.

Ruben Amaro has a lot of bullpen spots to fill this offseason, so it’s nice to act quickly on a proven commodity.  Obviously, keeping the contract to just two years for a guy as old as Contreras is crucial.  Amaro will have to hand out a multi-million dollar deal to at least one other reliever, because this team is currently in desperate need of a proven left-hander.

Sandberg Returns

The Phillies announced today that Ryne Sandberg has been hired as the new manager at Triple-A Lehigh Valley.  The irony of Sandberg’s return won’t be lost on any long-time Phillie fans.  He was drafted by the Phillies out of high school in 1978 but traded to the Cubs before the ’82 season in exchange for Ivan DeJesus.

The rumor has always been that the Phillies thought he was too big to play second base.  Well, all he did was win 9 Gold Gloves at second for the Cubs, and make 10 All-Star appearances in a Hall of Fame career.  As a young fan of really bad Phillie teams in the late-80’s and early-90’s, the trades of Sandberg and Julio Franco were described to me in tones that were probably similar to stories of the Great Depression a half-century earlier.

Sandberg badly wanted the Cubs manager job this year, but this time it was the Cubs who deemed him not good enough, and it’s the Phillie organization who have welcomed him with open arms.  It still seems unlikely that he’ll be the manager of the big league club in Philly, though.  Charlie Manuel doesn’t sound like a man who’s ready to leave any time soon, and Sandberg hasn’t sounded like a man who’s willing to wait his turn in the minor leagues for too many years.  But who knows, maybe in a year or two Sandberg will take the job as Charlie’s bench coach and really be groomed as the successor.

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Defining Success

Can Vick live up to the raised expectations?

Like a lot of NFL teams, the Eagles hit the midway point of their season with a huge range of possibilities for where their season will end.  At 5-3, they’d currently be in a 3-way tie for the 6th, and final, NFC playoff spot.  But they’re also just a game behind the 6-2 teams that have the best record in the conference.

It was hard to know what to make of this team coming into the season, and the unexpected back-and-forth between Vick and Kolb at quarterback, along with a litany of injuries at other positions, have only clouded the situation.  So, what does this team need to accomplish for the season to be considered a “success?”  And, in the bigger picture, how do we fans define success for our teams?

For fans of some teams (mainly the Yankees), anything less than a championship is a failure.  Every year.  For most fans though, they have to find their own measure for each team, each season.

For example, in my mind, the 2009 Phillies undoubtedly had a successful season.  Considering how many teams win a title and then disappear from sight for ten years, the fact that they came back the next year and won the pennant, with a mediocre pitching staff, was really a great accomplishment.  Yes, they were manhandled by the Yankees in the World Series, but that couldn’t take away from everything else they did, and the entertainment they provided us fans.  That 2009 season also served to keep the ‘ball rolling,’ in a sense, and helped them sellout every home game in 2010, and may have been a contributing factor in their willingness to take on a contract like Roy Oswalt’s at the trade deadline.

The 2010 Phillie season, on the other hand, will go down as a failure.  But wait, I hear someone saying, they had the best record in baseball for the first time in their 130 year history.  And they won a playoff series!  Doesn’t matter.  Expectations for this team were, justifiably, sky high, and a loss in the NLCS put a big asterisk next to everything else the team accomplished.

So, that brings us back to the Eagles.  Coming into the season, I thought a playoff appearance would make it a success.  They were handing the reins over to a 1st-year quarterback, had a questionable offensive line, and were starting two rookies on a defense that was underwhelming a year ago.

Two factors have definitely changed that measure of success in this first half of the season.  One, Michael Vick has taken the QB job and has been one of the best players in the league, when healthy.  Two, the NFC may be as bad as its ever been, which is saying something when you think about how long the NFC has been the inferior conference.

I don’t expect the Eagles to win the NFC, but I do think they have a decent shot at it.  And so, at the midway point of the season, anything less than a trip to the Super Bowl in Dallas would be a failure.  I don’t deny that just making the NFC Championship Game would be an impressive feat for this team, but Eagles fans have just seen too many losses in that game for it to ever really feel like success.

How would you define success for this Eagle squad: a playoff appearance, a loss in the NFC Championship, a loss in the Super Bowl, or nothing less than a title?

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College Hoops Looking Like a Two-Horse Race

As Bry noted below, the end of the baseball season means more time to focus on the NFL.  But it also means there’s a new sport coming back for our viewing pleasure: college basketball.  The season gets underway tonight, and the first game is actually a pretty good one, as 4th-ranked Pitt takes on a Rhode Island team that is looking to get over the hump and into the tournament after a couple straight near-misses.

Great coaches, great teams, bad news for everybody else

Back in April, following Duke’s national title win, I ranked the Top 20 teams for the 2010-11 season.  On that list, I had Michigan State at #1 and Duke at 2.  On further reflection, I have to agree with just about everyone else and say that Duke belongs at #1, with the Spartans right behind them.  The loss of Jon Scheyer shouldn’t be underestimated, but with plenty of experience returning, a handful of impact newcomers, and Coach K pulling the strings,  the Blue Devils are a legit #1 team.  Tom Izzo’s team is in a similar position, with tons of experience returning from a team that has been to back-to-back Final Fours.

The question coming into this new season is what teams, if any, can challenge the supremacy of Duke and Michigan St.?  The three teams that I had lined up behind them in April have all lost their best player since I made the list.  Gordon Heyward and Greg Monroe left Butler and Georgetown, respectively, for the NBA, and Purdue lost Robbie Hummel for the year when he re-tore his ACL a couple weeks ago.  A few other teams that I had highly-ranked also lost key players that I thought might be back (West Virginia’s Devin Ebanks, Xavier’s Jordan Crawford, and Baylor’s Ekpe Udoh).

So, who is the third-best team in the country?  I was certainly surprised when the rankings were released and Kansas State was 3rd.  I admit that I probably had them too low in my April rankings (14th), but K-State’s weakness last year was their scoring ability, and they’ve lost Denis Clemente, who averaged 17 points and led the team in assists.  Jacob Pullen, Clint Kelly, and Jamar Samuels is a nice trio, but that roster just doesn’t looke like a Top 5 team to me.

The above-mentioned Pitt Panthers are ranked 4th, but they also have an underwhelming team.  Jamie Dixon is a great coach that always has his team over-achieving, but this team would get run off the floor by the Pitt teams of a couple years ago that featured Sam Young and DeJuan Blair, and I don’t remember those teams making any Final Four trips.  The headliners for this Pitt team: Ashton Gibbs and Brad Wanamaker.  Nice college players, to be sure, but that doesn’t sound like a title-contending team.

For me, a more impressive returning group than K-State’s or Pitt’s can be found on the Main Line.  Nova’s potential starting five of Corey Fisher, Corey Stokes, Maalik Wayns, Antonio Pena, and Dominic Cheek could definitely be Final Four-caliber by March if Wayns and Cheek continue to build on their solid freshman seasons.  The unexpected loss of Taylor King hurts them, but you know Jay Wright will have some talent to choose from on his bench, as well.

The other team that I would put in my potential Final Four as the season gets underway is Ohio State.  William Buford, David Lighty, and Jon Diebler is an under-rated trio, and they’re joined by arguably the top recruiting class in the nation.  There seems to be little doubt that PF Jared Sullinger is ready to be a star right away.  The one big question for the Buckeyes is who will handle the point guard duties that were mostly handled by Evan Turner last year.

The script for this season has Duke and Michigan State squaring off for the title at the Final Four in Houston.  During the non-conference slate, I’ll be looking to see which teams have the goods to force a re-write in March.

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Eagles, Etc: Week Nine

It’s time to transition from playoff baseball to midseason football.  Not that we haven’t been paying attention to the NFL, as it is after all, the most popular sport in the country, but just that with postseason baseball being played in Philadelphia, the football season doesn’t take center-stage around here until November.  So, let’s take a look around the league in Week Nine, starting with the Birds.

Something’s Gotta Give
The Eagles, under Reid, have never beaten the Indianapolis Colts.  In fact, Peyton Manning has absolutely carved up the Eagles defense all three times he has faced them in his career.  The Colts have won all three of those meetings, with Manning completing just under 70% of his passes, with 7 TDs and only 1 INT.  His career passer rating against the Eagles is a staggering 132.2, his best against any one opponent.  And, keep in mind that the last two times he has played the Eagles (2006 and 2002), the Birds were 10-6 and 12-4, respectively.  Add to the mix here that the last time we saw this Eagles defense, they were getting torched in the fourth quarter by a Kerry Collins – Kenny Britt combination.  The pass defense has been really suspect this year and now face their most difficult test this Sunday.

Maybe it's his ability to audible away from the blitzing Eagles, but Manning has better numbers against Philly than any other opponent

So, this one’s easy, right?  Not so fast.  This is the 12th season of the Andy Reid regime.  Coach Reid’s teams are 11-0 (straight-up AND against the spread) coming off of a bye week.  So, Reid does something right in that bye week, so expect the Birds to be ready this Sunday.  Secondly, they get Michael Vick back at quarterback and, presumably, DeSean Jackson back at WR.  Plus, the week off gave banged-up players like LeSean McCoy and Jason Peters a chance to rest.  There was no such rest for the weary on the other side of the ball, as the Colts are going on a short week, coming off a physical (albeit, relatively comfortable) win against their division rivals, the Houston Texans.  And, the injuries are quickly mounting in Indy.  Key offensive and defensive players, Dallas Clark and Melvin Bullitt, are on IR and out for the year.  Their best defensive player, Bob Sanders, and a key linebacker, Clint Session, are likely going to join Clark and Bullitt on IR.  Both Pro Bowl defensive ends, Dwight Freeney and Robert Mathis have missed practice time this week, though Freeney did return to practice on Thursday.  Their number one running back, Joseph Addai, hasn’t played or practiced in several weeks and is almost assuredly out for Sunday’s game.  Number two running back, Mike Hart, has not practiced all week with an ankle injury.  If Hart can’t go, then second-year back out of UConn, Donald Brown (who has been disappoiningtly ineffective and is banged up himself) will be the only running back with any proven NFL experience.  And, the wide receivers aren’t much better.  Austin Collie has missed a lot of time this year with a broken hand and he has missed practice this week.  Anthony Gonzalez, who has only played in two games all year, hasn’t practiced all week and is likely out.  And, Pierre Garcon, while finally healthy, has ben relatively ineffective in the four weeks he has played since returning from injury.  So, this team is on the road on a short week and is very banged up.

Maybe that is why Vegas has the Birds as a three-point favorite in this game.  Either way, it is a very big game for the rest of the season because it’s looking more and more like the NFC East is a two-team race with Philly and the Giants.  The Cowboys are all but dead, and the Redskins has serious problems and a vicious second-half schedule.  If the Birds can pull this one out on Sunday, they could set themselves up for yet another NFC East title.

The Biggest Game of the Week?

These guys finally have an actual football game to care about

If you had looked at the schedule at the beginning of the season, you may have salivated over the two prime time games this week.  You know that NBC and ESPN were rather excited to have these matchups.  Well, things don’t always work out how you expect them to.  NBC’s Packers-Cowboys game is, well, not very good, nor is ESPN’s Steelers-Bengals tilt.  And, with all due respect to the games in my childhood hometown (Eagles-Colts) and my adulthood home town (Ravens-Dolphins), those two games, while good, are not the marquee matchup of the week.  The big game is, to the surprise of probably everyone is in Oakland, where the red-hot Raiders host the first-place Chiefs.  It’s a rekindling of one of the oldest, fiercest, and best rivalries in the game that has not been fierce or good recently.  It’s the first time these two teams will play each as the 1-2 teams in the division this decade, and while the Super Bowl champ may not be participating in this game, the future is pretty bright for both of these teams, and one will get a nice leg up after Sunday.

The Dark Horse
The Raiders and Chiefs, huh?  Well, there is one team that I am now rooting for to reassert themselves out west – The San Diego…Super-Chargers!  Yes, the Chargers stink and, yes, I did mean what I wrote in the previous paragraph, but, are we ready to bury the Chargers?  Phillip Rivers has been the best player in the league this year (if the Chargers were even 5-3 instead of 3-5, he’d be the clear favorite for MVP at the midpoint in the season), and he’s been doing it without any healthy wideouts.  That is why I decided to throw $20 on the Chargers to win the Super Bowl at 30-1 odds.  Will it happen?  Probably not.  Do I think it’s a much better than a 30-1 shot?  Absolutely!  And, I get to root for the Super-Chargers…

The Best of the NFC?  Really?
Because the NFC is so bad and everyone just have to name a favorite in early November, a lot of people are talking Super Bowl for the New York Football Giants.  Now, I have never claimed to be

Honestly, name one thing that he's actually accomplished in his NFL career

objective on the G-Men, so I’m not going to comment, but I am going to say, “let’s slow down a bit first.”  Must I bring up exactly what the Giants have done thus far?  An ugly win over the worst team in football (Carolina).  Then, two losses by a combined 43 points to Indy and Tennessee, followed by an ugly win over the Bears, a nice win over the Texans, and two more ugly wins over bad teams, the Lions and Cowboys.  Yes, you can only play who is on your schedule, but let’s hold off on making Giants 2010 NFC Championship t-shirts just yet.  This week, they have a long road trip to a tough place to play (Seattle), so we can have this conversation on Monday with a little more information.

The Measuring-Stick Games of the Week
This week has a decent number of teams on the bye, and it’s not loaded with great matchups, but there are some interesting games to watch and see whether some of these teams actually are good or not.  Here is what I’ll be watching for on Sunday:

  • Can the Bills actually win a game?  Looking at Buffalo’s schedule, there are not many wins to be found after this week, so this might be their best shot.  They “host” the Bears in a game that they would certainly be at least a pick ’em if it were actually a home game, but it’s being played in Toronto.  Funny how they might get their only win of the season in Canadia.
  • The Jets at Detroit.  The Jets looked bad on offense last week against Green Bay.  The Lions have looked pretty good on offense all year, though their porous defense has not helped win any games.  The Jets should win this game, but will they be up for a road game against a bad NFC team that can beat you if you don’t bring your best stuff?
  • Last-ditch efforts.  Do the Vikings have one last stand?  They better at home against Arizona.  Are the Cowboys really dead?  I think so, but they can show something against Green Bay on Sunday night.  Do the Bengals have any pride left?  We’ll see on Monday night against the Steelers.  And, can the Chargers and/or Texans right their ships?  One of them will go a long way to doing it Sunday, as they play each other in Houston.
  • Finally, what is up in the NFC South?  A lot of questions will be answered on Sunday as the Falcons host Tampa Bay.  The Bucs have been the biggest surprise of the season, but they haven’t done it with much style (despite their D-end, Stylz G. White’s emergence as a big-time NFL player).  The Falcons might just be that “team to beat” in a weak NFC, but they have to prove it at home against a division rival they should beat.
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2010 MLB Season Preview: BSB-Style

Well, the Final Four is coming, signifying the end of the college hoops season, but have no fear, as in this never-ending sports season, the Major League Baseball season is primed and ready to go.  I’m guessing you’re not tuning into BSB for a regular, boring “preview,” so as we like to do, let’s make a game out of it.  For our season previews, we like to see if we can best each other by trying to predict which teams will improve and which will get worse.  Bry has actually narrowly won both MLB previews, so Doogan will try and get on the board this year.  With no further ado, since Bry picked first last year, Doogan will get first crack this year…

UPDATE (as of July 31st):  As usual, we are running an in-season update for the BSB MLB Preview.  Doogan is trying to break Bry’s two-year run on the MLB side of the previews, so we will see how he’s doing.

FINAL RECAP:  LET’S TALLY THE SCORES.  FINAL TALLIES ARE THE SECOND UPDATE IN ITALICS UNDER EACH PICK.

1. DOOGAN – Los Angeles Angels – UNDER 97 wins:  Hard to believe, but I’m kicking things off by betting against Mike Scioscia and this franchise.  With John Lackey, Vladimir Guerrero, and Chone Figgins gone, they’ve lost a ton of talent, and I don’t think Hideki Matsui and Joel Pineiro can make up for it.  Plus, some of their offensive stars from last year (Kendry Morales, Erick Aybar, Maicer Izturis) are still not proven for the long haul, and the division will be tougher than it’s been in a while.  97 is a big number, and they won’t hit it.

PACE: 81.  Well, Doogan nails his first pick with the Angels, as they are 53-53 right now.  It doesn’t look like they are even heading for the playoffs.  Pretty hard to believe, but it’s true

FINAL:  80.  POINT DOOGAN, 1-0
Injuries hit the Halos, but it is a bit surprising just how far they have fallen.  After about a decade of domination by this club, has there been a changing of the guard out west?  Either way, this was an easy point at #1 for Doogan.

2. BRY – Los Angeles Dodgers – UNDER 95 wins:  Doogan, I think your Angels pick might just be a sign that this year is going to be the toughest one yet.  For my first pick, I’ll go with the other team from the City of Angels.  They didn’t do anything this offseason (funny how a divorce can affect a baseball team–and by “funny,” I mean “pathetic”), and I think they’ll probably miss Randy Wolf and Orlando Hudson more than they think they will.

PACE: 84.  Bry goes against the City of Angels as well and this pick also looks pretty solid.  The Dodgers are only slightly over .500, which means they have to really pick it up between now and the end of the season.  They were active at the trading deadline, but they have a lot of games to make up.  This pick isn’t quite as solid as Doogan’s #1, but we’ll still give it solidly to Bry

FINAL:  80.  POINT BRY, 1-1
The Dodgers stuggle all year amidst divorce distractions, as Joe Torre goes out with a losing record.  This team has too much talent not to compete in this division, but we will see.  Bry gets an easy point to tie it up.

3. BRY – Baltimore Orioles – OVER 64 wins:  Now don’t think that the Baltimore water has gotten to me while living here.  I do NOT think this team can compete in the AL East this year or for the foreseeable future, but I do think that 98 losses is a boatload of losses, and I think this team at least believes that it is going in the right direction.  A full season from Wieters should help.  Plus, they added a veteran pitcher in Kevin Millwood to go along with a couple talented, young arms.  I don’t think they’ll even win 75, but I definitely think they’ll hit 65.

PACE: 50.  Wow!  It looks like Bry is going to get slaughtered on his #3 overall pick.  The O’s are not even on pace to win FIFTY games!  They look to be a gigantic longshot to even reach 60, let alone 65.  Bry is kicking himself with this pick.

FINAL:  66.  POINT BRY, 2-1
The biggest benefactor of the Buck Showalter hire was Bry, who somehow salvaged what looked to be a long-lost #3 overall pick.  Did you know that if the season was split into two seasons, the Orioles would have won the AL East’s second half?

4. DOOGAN – New York Mets – OVER 70 wins:  No, the New York water has not gotten to me, and I also don’t think the Mets will compete in their division, but when you consider the ridiculous amount of injuries they had last year, and they still have Johan Santana, Frankie Rodriguez, and David Wright.  Presumably, Carlos Beltran and Jose Reyes will play a lot more, and Jason Bay has joined the line-up.  They should be able to win 80 (but let’s hope not!).

PACE: 83.  Doogan continues his red-hot start to this year’s MLB Preview, as he looks to nail another one.  The Mets should soar right past the 70 mark that Doogan needs.

FINAL:  79.  POINT DOOGAN, 2-2
Doogan hits this pick easily.  The Mets were bad, but not nearly as bad as they were in 2009.  That being said, the arrow is not exactly pointing up for this unstoried franchise.

5. BRY – Washington Nationals – OVER 59 wins:  I like the Mets pick, Doogan, in that I think you’ll probably be right about it, but I couldn’t pull the trigger on it.  For #5, I’m going to make a third straight pick of OVER on a team that we don’t think will compete.  I don’t think this team is good.  I don’t think they’re close to being good.  But, I’m willing to bet that every team in the majors will win at least 60, so I’ll take OVER 59 for even the worst team in the bigs.  Plus, I really can’t wait for the Strausburg Era.

PACE: 72.  Bry is back on track as this looks like another solid point.  Of the first five, this is probably the most up for grabs, but it still looks good for Bry’s OVER pick.  The Nats, thanks to their strong start, are on pace for an easy cover for BRY, plus they didn’t move Adam Dunn at the deadline (though, they did move closer Matt Capps).  But, they haven’t been playing all that well lately.  We’ll see what the final 60 games have in store for these guys.  For now, we still have this solidly in Bry’s column, though, since he has about 13 games to spare on this pace.

FINAL:  69.  POINT BRY, 3-2
The BSB predictors are now 5-for-5, as Bry hits his 3rd pick.  The Nats are improving and may not be as far from contention as people may believe.  Then again, they have absolutely no pitching, which is kind of important.

6. DOOGAN – Arizona Diamondbacks – OVER 70 wins:  You’ve definitely taken two of my picks already with the Dodgers and Nats.  I’ll go with the D-Backs here, who are a tough to team to figure out, but they do seem like a team that should get at least into the high-70’s in W’s.  Brandon Webb missed all of last season, and though he’ll start the year on the DL, it certainly looks like they’ll get a lot more from him this year.  Dan Haren is a stud, and the young players that we’ve been hearing about for years (Stephen Drew, Chris Young) could be ready to be solid players to complement the emerging star, Justin Upton.

PACE: 59.  Doogan’s perfect run looks like it will end here at #6, as the D-Backs are nowhere near the pace of 71 wins that Doogan needs.  This has been an incredibly disappointing season in the desert–again.  Anyone remember that they were the youngest team in the league in 2007 and made the NLCS?  Wha– happened?

FINAL:  65.  POINT BRY, 4-2
Doogan makes the first misstep here, as the D-Backs were even worse than they were in 2009.  How frustrating must it be to be a D-Backs fan right now?  They looked to maybe be starting a run of great success and now they are just really, really bad.

7. BRY – Tampa Bay Rays – OVER 84 wins:  I like the D’Backs pick.  I’ll take the Rays here.  They still have all the important pieces from the AL Pennant winning team two years ago, and they were hurt with a bunch of injuries last year also.  Plus, Ben Zobrist has become a very good player and you have to think that David Price will soon be ready to reach his enormous potential.  They also have a couple other young players still to come up through the system.  The only thing that gives me pause is that if they are even close to out of contention by the trade deadline, they will probably look to move Crawford and/or Pena.  But, I’m guessing that they will either (a) be in the race or (b) be able to win 85 games regardless of their deadline decisions.

PACE: 101.  Great pick for Bry at #7.  The Rays are on a blistering pace and should cruise right past the total Bry needs of 85.  This one should be clinched by the end of August.

FINAL:  96.  POINT BRY, 5-2
Bry hits his 4th in a row to start this preview, as the Rays bounce back from a step back in 2009.  Though people may look at this season as a little disappointing because of the playoff loss to Texas and then the bolting of the high-profile free agents, but let’s not quite think that this team is going to just go away.

8. DOOGAN – Toronto Blue Jays – UNDER 75 wins:  Rumor has it they had a really good pitcher that isn’t on their team anymore.  Can’t quite remember his name but, either way, that figures to put a dent in their win total.  Also, you can’t expect Adam Lind and Aaron Hill to match their big offensive numbers of last year, and the pitching staff is really just no-names at this point, even if a few of them are still just too young to have made a name for themselves.

PACE: 84.  Our first team whose pace is within 10 games of its number is this one, the Toronto Blue Jays.  Doogan needs them with no more than 74 wins, which doesn’t look good right now.  We’re going to give the point to Bry, but we’re not going to make it solid because this team is showing signs of the wheels possibly falling off.  Plus, they still have a ton of games against the Yankees, Red Sox, and Rays.

FINAL:  85.  POINT BRY, 6-2
Back-to-back misses for Doogan, as the surprising Jays surprised Doogan the most.  Is it fool’s gold so that they think they are going in the right direction with some career years or are they really building something North of the Border?  It’s hard to tell, but an 85-win season in the AL East probably can’t be a bad thing.

9. BRY – Chicago White Sox – OVER 79 wins:  Well, Doogan, since you took my next pick, I guess I’ll resort to the team I always seem to overrate in March.  But, I’ll never learn.  Humor me, here.  They have Jake Peavy.  They have Jose Cruz, Jr.  They already had a good amount of talent.  They play in a division without a dominant team.  They have a GM who is willing to spit in the face of “development” to win games now.  They have a fiery coach who might be on his last life.  All this is forcing me to go with the White Sox YET AGAIN.  Ugh…

PACE: 91.  For a while, it looked like this was a terrible pick.  Now, it actually looks like a great pick.  The ChiSox are in first place in the AL Central and on pace for more than 90 wins.  Though it’s hard to put that much confidence into a team that wasn’t very good for the first month of the season, this one has to go solidly to Bry because they’ve been the best team in baseball for the last month and are on pace to clear their number by a good 12 games.

FINAL:  88.  POINT BRY, 7-2
Bry continues to light it up, extending a pretty nice lead here.  I don’t think people realize just how good the White Sox have been in the Ozzie Era.  Ho-hum, another near-90 win season that will go completely under the radar.  This currently the most underrated franchise in the sport.

10.  DOOGAN – Cleveland Indians – OVER 65 wins:  OK, I’ll stay with an over in the AL Central because, as you point out, it’s not a great division.  They had Cliff Lee and Victor Martinez for most of the season and still could only muster the 65 wins, but I think a new manager is a good thing, and they should get bounce back years from Grady Sizemore and Jhonny Peralta.  Shin-Soo Choo is also a nice hitter, and Travis Hafner at least has the potential to be good again.  The pitching staff could be a mess, but 65 is a low number, so I’ll take it.

PACE: 67.  Okay, so this is our first one that is really too close to call, at this point.  The Indians are on pace for exactly 66.9 wins.  Doogan needs 66 to get this point.  We’re going to give it to him, very tenatively because they are on pace to surpass it, but this one could really go either way.  It looks like Doogan is going to really need it, as he probably won’t have scored at this point since pick #4.

FINAL:  69.  POINT DOOGAN, 3-7
Doogan stops a 5-point streak for Bry by narrowly hitting this Indians pick.  How quickly has this franchise fallen completely off the map?  They blew a potential pennant-clinching lead in Game 5 of the ALCS and then lost games 6 & 7 and really haven’t been good at all since.  What happened to all this young talent?  And the strangest example is Grady Sizemore.  If this were 5 years ago, I would have said, “well, I guess Sizemore was a juicer who stopped,” but he kind of came along after testing…kind of.  Wait, did he?  Hmmm…

11. BRY – Chicago Cubs – OVER 83 wins:  You have to think this team underachieved last year, right?  And, though they lost Harden, they also lost Milton Bradley, which is probably a wash.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a huge fan of the additions of Marlon Byrd, Xavier Nady, or Carlos Silva, but this team should have enough returning talent to win 85-90 games.

PACE: 72.  It is really absurd how far the Cubbies have fallen in such a short period of time.  They have way too much talent (and way too large of a payroll) to be this bad.  But, they are.  They are on pace for a mere 72 wins, which is not even close to the mark that Bry needs for this point.  Give this one to Doogan, easily.

FINAL:  75.  POINT DOOGAN, 4-7
After hitting his first 5, Bry misses on his Cubs pick here.  There is too much talent for this team to be 12 games under .500.  I guess it’s no accident when a team goes 102 years without a World Series, huh?

12. DOOGAN – San Diego Padres – UNDER 75 wins:  This team stinks and, honestly, I’m not sure how they even won 75 games last year.  They got 13 starts from Jake Peavy, which they won’t get this year, and Adrian Gonzalez keeps attracting all the trade rumors.  They look more like a 65-win team.

PACE: 95.  You see, the thing about making these predictions this way, is that it totally invites us to say things like “this team stinks.”  Bry has looked ridiculous, in retrospect, by saying it on numerous occasions (including about the 2009 N.Y. Jets), and now Doogan looks a bit ridiculous.  Though, I have to say, I was mighty angry that Doogan jumped on San Diego before I could have because I thought this was a steal at #12–as you can tell by the write-up at #13.  But, either way, the Padres are, right now, the best team in the National League and are going to blow away the 75 win total.  Give this point to Bry without breaking a sweat.

FINAL:  90.  POINT BRY, 8-4
As bad as Doogan missed this pick, I actually would have taken the exact same thing.  90 wins for the Padres is probably THE MOST surprising result of 2010 for me.  I still don’t understand how they did it.  But…I’ll still take the point.

13. BRY – Cincinnati Reds – OVER 78 wins:  Damn, you, Doogan.  I almost changed my Cubs pick quickly to the Padres.  I agree with you on that one.  Okay, well, this is more of a “everybody loves them” kind of pick.  I don’t necessarily love them as a sleeper, but 79 wins is not ridiculous.  Plus, pitching wins, and there is a chance that this is one of the best staffs in the National League.

PACE: 89.  The Reds pitching has been very good, and they might be on their way to the playoffs for the first time this century.  Bry should get this point with ease.

FINAL:  91.  POINT BRY, 9-4
A pretty easy point for Bry here at #13, as the Reds did finally put it all together and make a run to the playoffs – albeit a short-lived playoff run that probably would have been completely forgotten in history if they had actually gotten a hit in their first game.

14. DOOGAN – Minnesota Twins – UNDER 87 wins:  First I go against the Angels, now I’m going against the Twins.  This is probably not that smart.  But I have two reasons for this pick.  One, Joe Nathan is a stud and they’ll be without him all season.  Two, they’re moving into a new stadium and the Metrodome offered the best home-field advantage in the sport because of the noise and the weird bounces, etc.  Also, the starting pitching is mediocre at best.  Mark them down for 83 wins.

PACE: 90.  A tough call for Doogan and this one might come back to haunt him.  But, this one is far from over, as the Twins still have some work to do to get to the 87 wins that they would need to cost Doogan this point.  They are on pace to do it, but with Morneau hurt, you never know.  We will give this point to Bry, but only tenatively.

FINAL:  94.  POINT BRY, 10-4
Another point for Bry, as he opens up a pretty substantial 6-point lead here.  This Twins team just keeps getting it done.  94 wins all with missing Justin Morneau for most of the second half?  This Ron Gardenhire can flat-out coach, huh?

15. BRY – Seattle Mariners – OVER 85 wins:  Okay, we’re just talking about the difference between 2009 and 2010, right?  Well, the Mariners added one of the best starting pitchers in the league (Cliff Lee) and one of the best leadoff hitters (Chone Figgins).  So, they have to be better, right?  I’m surprised it took this long for one of us to take them because of all the hype, but I guess that shows how we can both probably see them not being all that better.  Either way, I’m taking the bait here and going with the Mariners.

PACE: 60.  And, this will probably take the cake as the single worst pick of this whole competition.  The Mariners are on pace for a mere 60 wins.  Bry had them winning at least 86.  Great pick…

FINAL:  61.  POINT DOOGAN, 5-10
At least Bry can take solace in the fact that he has a 5-point lead through 15 picks because this pick was absolutely, utterly dreadful.  In maybe the single worst pick in the history of the BSB previews, Bry was only off by TWENTY-FIVE GAMES here.  This bad pick aside, just how terrible were the Mariners?  They made one of the two or three best pitching acquisitions of the offseason (Cliff Lee) and one of the two or three best (or, at least, highest priced) position player acquisitions (Chone Figgins).  Plus, their promising young pitcher finally puts it together and has a Cy Young season.  All this adds up to…101 losses?!?!?!?  Unreal.

16. DOOGAN – New York Yankees – UNDER 103 wins:  We might be a little skeptical of the Mariners hype, but apparently we’re not that skeptical about the Yanks, if we let this 103 number sit out there until the second-half of the draft.  I like the pick-ups of Curtis Granderson and Javy Vazquez, but they lost Damon and Matsui, who both had great seasons.  They’ll also be hard-pressed to get as much production from the aging Jeter and Posada, they were pretty lucky with injuries last year (though A-Rod did miss the first month), and they still don’t have a 5th starter.  I could easily see them coming back to a mid- to high-90’s win total.

PACE: 104.  Wow, this one is going to be very, VERY close.  The Yanks are currently on pace for 104 wins.  Doogan needs them with no more than 102 to get this point.  Although we are going to give Bry the point here at the midseason review, I think Doogan has the better side on this one.  This pace is blistering, the Yanks actually look a little old, and the last month might be meaningless as far as a playoff berth, though it’s hard to say whether or not they will go hard for the division.  Plus, with Phil Hughes on a innings watch, Andy Pettitte on an age watch, and Javier Vazquez and A.J. Burnett putting Yankees fans on suicide watch, this team might fall short of the number.  But, for now, it’s Bry’s point to lose.

FINAL:  95.  POINT DOOGAN, 6-10
Doogan has a nice comeback to take a much-needed point here.  The Yanks fell off a little bit in the second half en route to a “disappointing” 95-win season (only in the Bronx).

17. BRY – Milwaukee Brewers – OVER 80 wins:  This might be a bit of a hedge on my bets here, as I already have the OVERs on the Reds and Cubs, but there have to be wins somewhere in this division, and I don’t think it’s a huge stretch to think that the Brew Crew will be .500 or better.  They have one of the better 3-4 combos in the bigs with Braun and Fielder, and though their pitching is still holding them back from serious contention, they did add Randy Wolf to an already serviceable rotation that features Conestoga product Dave Bush.

PACE: 74.  It’s pretty a rather disappointing season for Milwaukee so far, and there aren’t really any signs of turning it around.  Bry is most likely going to lose this pick.  We’re not quite ready to put it in the lock category for Doogan, but it’s getting awfully close.

FINAL:  77.  POINT DOOGAN, 7-10
Doogan is putting a little run together here, as Bry just misses on the Brewers pick.  This is another team that just isn’t built very well.  They have a bunch of great pieces, but you have to think about team construction, not just throwing out the best talent you can find.

18. DOOGAN – Texas Rangers – UNDER 87 wins:  First off, this just has the feel of one of those teams that takes a big step forward one season and then gets a reality check with the pressure on the next season.  They lost Kevin Millwood and Marlon Byrd, which might not sound like much but both of those guys had very solid seasons.  Vladdy Guerrero and Rich Harden should a help a bit if they can stay healthy (big if), and they can expect a lot more from Josh Hamilton, but my gut definitely says under here.

PACE: 95.  If all of these paces hold up, this will be the fifth straight pick which we have gotten wrong.  This stuff is hard, folks.  And, this one is going to be tough to get back for Doogan, as the Rangers are flying high right now.  The only hope Doogan has here is that the Rangers should have the division locked up halfway through September, so they won’t have much to play for.  Still, he needs them with no more than 86.  Not likely, especially with Cliff Lee now on the roster.  We’ll give this one solidly to Bry.

FINAL:  90.  POINT BRY, 11-7
Doogan’s 3-point streak is over with a missed pick of the AL Champs.  They nearly came back to earth with a injured Hamilton for the last month, but held on to win 90 games and the AL West.  It’s about time the people in Arlington realized that pitching is actually a part of this game we call baseball.

19. BRY – Philadelphia Phillies – OVER 93 wins:  I know 93 is a big number, but we’re trying to predict a change from last year here, right?  Well, the Phils return last year’s team with two notable exceptions.  One, they traded one-half of a season of Cliff Lee for one full season of the one of the three best pitchers on the planet.  They also traded strikeout machine (albeit phenomenal defensive thirdbaseman) Pedro Feliz for the quintessential #2 hitter.  Plus, from all the spring training reports, Cole Hamels looks better.  But, most importantly, this team won 93 games and the NL pennant last year with a bullpen in total shambles.  Now, I’m not going to sit here and tell you that Danny Baez and Jose Contreras are the answers, but I also think that it’s hard to think that the ‘pen could be any worse than it was a year ago.  Give me the Phils to maybe hit the 100-win mark this year.

PACE: 87.  Make it six in a row that look to be wrong, but it’s hard to find a lot of fault in Bry’s pick here, as the Phils are on a pace that could bring them close to the mark, despite being absolutely ravaged by injuries.  They have some ground to make up on that number, but let’s not rule them out, considering they added one of the two best pitchers on the market at the deadline and they are slowly starting to get guys back from injury.  We’ll give this point to Doogan, but it’s far from solid.

FINAL:  97.  POINT BRY, 12-7
Bry’s faith in the Fightins is rewarded, as the Phils – for the first time in their 120+ year history – finish with the best record in all of baseball.  For the record, I now have first-hand information:  that Halladay guy that everyone has been talking about…he’s pretty good.

20. DOOGAN – Houston Astros – UNDER 74 wins:  A bet here against our old friend Ed Wade, and our old friends Brett Myers, Pedro Feliz, Michael Bourn, and Geoff Geary.  I’m sure Astros fans are excited for next season’s big offseason pick-up of Jamie Moyer.  They’ve lost Miguel Tejada, and Myers could definitely be a help in the rotation, but all in all they should be a 70-win team.

PACE: 69.  Excellent call by Doogan.  He called them for 70 wins and they’re on pace for 69.  They are starting to play a little better, so this is far from in the bag, but for now, it’s looking good and we’ll give this point to Doogan, as he draws closer with 12 picks remaining.

FINAL:  76.  POINT BRY, 13-7
Imagine if the Astros ever actually showed up in April and May?  They might win 120.  Another second-half explosion for a team that traded away two franchise icons (Berkman and Oswalt) put them over the mark and cost Doogan another point that looked pretty solid for most of the year.  How about our old friend, Brett Myers, and the season he put together down there?

21. BRY – Florida Marlins – UNDER 87 wins:  This is probably dumb because they always do better than they did before.  Also, they are loaded with young talent that is only going to get better.  But, isn’t 88 wins a lot of wins?  And, it’s hard to believe that the other four teams in the division aren’t also going to be better, so where are all these wins going to come from?  You have to like their pitching, and Hanley Ramirez might be the best player in baseball, but I just have a feeling that this team might come back towards .500, if not below this year.  Give me 80-83 for a Marlins win projection.

PACE: 82.  Bry was right on with this pick.  He called for 80-83 wins for the Fish this year, and they are on pace for a cool 82.  This pick is looking good, but probably not ready to be a lock for Bry, as the Marlins still have the talent and don’t have the pick up the pace that much to reach 87 and steal the point for Doogan.

FINAL:  80.  POINT BRY, 14-7
Bry is inching closer to a third straight MLB preview title with another correct pick here at #21.  His magic number is down to 2.  The Marlins are a little different than the team we all remember, as they are still bringing up young talent, but instead of adding old vets to the mix and going for broke in one year, they are actually using some money to – I know it sound crazy – sign some of their best players to long-term deal.  Gasp!  Though this is straying from a formula that got them 2 titles, it is pretty scary if you are a fan of an NL East team outside of the Sunshine State.

22. DOOGAN – St. Louis Cardinals – OVER 91 wins:  Four pretty good reasons to like the Cards:  Albert Pujols, Chris Carpenter, Adam Wainwright, and Tony La Russa.  I don’t think they’re as deep (or as good) as the Phils, but in a weaker division, I wouldn’t be surprised to see them end up with the NL’s best record.  Re-signing Matt Holliday certainly didn’t hurt.

PACE: 90.  Along with the Indians and Yankees, the last two months of the Cardinals season could decide the 2010 MLB Preview champion here on BSB.  The Cards are currently on pace to fall just short of the number Doogan needs to get this important point.  But, this is really too close to call.  Bry will get a very tenative point here.

FINAL:  86.  POINT BRY, 15-7
Bry clinches at least a tie, as Doogan misses on a Cardinals team that really has no excuse for missing the playoffs.  With two of the game’s best pitchers and the best player in the history of the game, they should win 90 games in their sleep.

23. BRY – Atlanta Braves – OVER 86 wins:  This is about the time in each of these where it starts to get really tough, but I’m still relatively okay with this pick.  I think the Braves are poised maybe not to challenge the Phils in the East, but to definitely make a run at the wild card in Bobby Cox’s farewell tour.  They won 86 games last year (and that included 6 straight losses to end the season), and they should get more out of Chipper.  If this guy Jason Heyward is even half as good as people say he is, there offense should be improved.  And, let us never, ever forget what wins in major league baseball–pitching.  Barring injury, the Braves should be able to throw out a solid starter 162 times this year with Tommy Hanson, Jair Jurrgens, Tim Hudson, Derrek Lowe, and Kenshin Kawakami.  In my opinion, the Braves should be the third-best team in the National League and, if things go right, they might even be better than St. Louis.  PS…I’m not happy about anything I wrote in this entire paragraph with the exception of the Braves not challenging the Phils in the East.

PACE: 93.  Unfortunately, Bry looks to be right on with this pick.  The Bravos are rolling and on pace to blow past the 87 number that Bry needs for this big point late in the competition.  (I really wish I was wrong here.)  There is still some room for them to fall off the table, so we’re not going to make it a complete lock for Bry, but it’s getting ever closer.

FINAL:  91.  POINT BRY, 16-7
Bry clinches the 2010 MLB Preview here in a bitter-sweet way, as it’s from the Braves winning 90 games.  This team is young and very, very good.  As good as the Phils are and will continue to be, this Bravos team is set up to be real scary for a while.

24. DOOGAN – Kansas City Royals – OVER 65 wins:  These guys won 75 two years ago with a lot of the same players, only a bunch of those guys are even closer to their primes now.  They obviously can’t expect anything more than they got from Zack Greinke, and Joakim Soria has quietly established himself as one of the best closers around.  Gil Meche, Brian Bannister, and Kyle Davies have the potential to be a serviceable unit behind Greinke and they signed Jason Kendall and Scott Podsednik so, um, no that means nothing.  They can hit 68 wins though!

PACE: 68.  “They can hit 68 wins,” says Doogan in closing of his paragraph on picking the Royals.  Well, this one is shaping up to be pretty impressive for Doogan, as KC is on pace for exactly 68 wins.  Unfortunately for Doogan, he did not predict more of a cushion for the number he needed, but hey, what else can you ask for from a selection in the mid-20’s?  We’ll give a much-needed point to Doogan, tenatively.

FINAL:  67.  POINT DOOGAN, 8-16
Doogan barely hits this pick here, as the Royals win an astonishing 67 games.  Is this team ever going to be good?  Honestly?

25. BRY – Pittsburgh Pirates – OVER 62 wins:  Well, it’s obviously getting tough here, but 63 wins is not a lot.  The Pirates are young and are actually moving in the right direction…sort of.  I like the fact that they’re focusing on player development.  Plus, the Big League club won’t be contending for any division titles, but they do have a semi-decent nucleus of talent (or at least guys we used to think were talented) like Bobby Crosby, Delwyn Young, and Lastings Milledge.  Andrew McCutcheon is about to be a star, and Ryan Doumit is the best catcher no one’s ever heard of.  And, they do have a rotation of four #4’s (Maholm, Duke, Ohlendorf, and Morton), so I guess that’s okay, and a bullpen of some big names (Donnelly, Dotel, Hanrahan).  So, 63 wins?  Hell, I’ll say they blow it away and get 65 or 66.

PACE: 57.  Bry, with a chance to clinch at least a tie for the midseason update, falls dreadfully short.  The Pirates are gawd-awful once again.  It’s really getting ridiculous in Pittsburgh.  The good news for Bry here is that it’s hard to keep up a pace this bad all year.  The bad news is that it’s really not that hard for the Pirates to do it.  Doogan will get the point, but not quite a lock.

FINAL:  57.  POINT DOOGAN, 9-16
This team has been unbelievably bad.  How can they stay so bad when they pick in the top 3 EVERY YEAR?  They have great fans, a great ballpark, and a great baseball history.  It’s sad to see where they are as a franchise here in 2010.  Doogan gets another point, as he is now just looking for respectability.

26. DOOGAN – San Francisco Giants – UNDER 88 wins:  I was going Pirates next.  The Giants were disappointing this off-season because they have so many of the pieces to contend and you would think they’re the type of franchise that would take advantage of that, but they really didn’t upgrade the offense in a signifcant way.  You obviously have to love Lincecum, Cain, and Sandoval, but it’s really tough to keep winning if you’re not scoring runs.

PACE: 92.  Doogan’s logic was sound with this pick because the Giants are having trouble scoring runs, but their pitching staff has been even better than anticipated.  Jonathan Sanchez has joined Lincecum and Cain as a consistently special starter, and Brian Wilson continues to shine at the end of the ‘pen.  However, 92 wins is a lot, even though they’re on pace for it.  The point will go to Bry, but it’s going to be close.  With this point, Bry clinches at least a tie in the midseason update (which means absolutely nothing).

FINAL:  92.  POINT BRY, 17-9
The Giants did hit just enough giving Bry the point here, as Doogan went under.  It’s still hard to believe that the Giants are the World Champs with guys like Pat Burrell, Cody Ross, and Aubrey Huff in the middle of their order, but they are.  As always, this game is won with pitching.  Period.

27. BRY – Colorado Rockies – UNDER 92 wins:  Let’s stay out West where, according to us, no one is going to win any games.  But, I’m going to take another West team to go UNDER.  It’s amazing how long I took to take this team because, well, I have absolutely NO IDEA how they’re any good.  But, because I don’t understand how they’re any good, and they keep winning, I guess I might be wrong.  I don’t care, I’m taking them anyway.  Troy Tulowitski is a nice player, but as a #3 guy?  I like Jimenez, but as an ace?  And, who else do they have?  Aaron Cook?  The always-injured Jeff Francis?  And, Huston Street is on the DL for at least a month.  On paper to my untrained eye, this isn’t even a .500 team.  But, I’m always so wrong about them, so they’ll probably win 105.

PACE: 84.  So, if everyone continues on the pace they are on as of August 1st, Bry will clinch the 2010 MLB Preview on pick #27.  The Rockies have been somewhat disappointing, considering they won 92 games last year and the Amazing Ubaldo wasn’t quite amazing yet.  It’s  been their defense that has let them down–and seemingly delivered this point to Bry.  This is so close to solid, but the memories of 2007 are still fresh in everyone’s mind, so we’ll leave this is very, very close to a lock.

FINAL:  83.  POINT BRY, 18-9
For the record books here, as Bry gets his 18th point.  I still don’t understand why this team is considered “good,” though I’m starting to believe a little more because Cargo and Ubaldo are studs.  It should be real interesting to see where this team goes from here.

28. DOOGAN – Detroit Tigers – UNDER 86 wins:  Not much reasoning here.  They lost Polanco, Granderson and Edwin Jackson, they added Damon and Max Scherzer.  So, um, that’s three established players gone and two arrived.  That math equals one less win.  Right?

PACE: 82.  Doogan’s reasoning was spot-on, seemingly, as the Tigers are not on pace to hit their number.  However, they are not entirely out of the race or hitting the OVER, so this point will remain tenative for Doogan.

FINAL:  81.  POINT DOOGAN, 10-18
A pretty nice pick here for Doogan at #28, as the Tigers were darkhorses to possibly win the AL Central.  Doogan, however, correctly saw them as pretenders, despite a monster year from Cabrera.

29. BRY – Oakland A’s – UNDER 75 wins:  I’ll leave you to decide where to go with the BoSox.  I just don’t think the A’s are all that talented.  It’s hard to say that they won’t win 75 games, but I kind of still like the AL West.  The Angels are always good and there are reasons to think that the Mariners and Rangers could be improved.  Despite some decent, young pitching, I still think the A’s are still the worst team in that division, and last place teams usually don’t reach 75 wins (even though they finished last in ’09 with 75 wins).  I guess that’s why this pick wasn’t taken until #29.

PACE: 82.  I wonder how many baseball fans would be as surprised as I was to discover that the A’s are actually above .500.  Yes, I follow baseball pretty closely and had absolutely no idea that the A’s–here on August 1st–have won more games than they’ve lost.  They have the same record as the Detroit Tigers.  That’s surprising to me.  Either way, they are on a decent pace to blow Bry’s UNDER pick away and give Doogan another point.  It’s not quite a lock, but it’s close.

FINAL:  81.  POINT DOOGAN, 11-18
Bry misses another, as Doogan continues to make it more respectable here.  While it is hard for me to see how the A’s are a .500 team, it all comes back to what I’ve been preaching this whole time – pitching, pitching, pitching.

30. DOOGAN – Boston Red Sox – UNDER 95 wins:  Well, here’s a stat for you.  Oakland’s win total the last three seasons: 76, 75, 75.  Boston’s win total the last three: 96, 95, 95.  So yeah, that would explain why these are the last two to go.  I think I like John Lackey a lot more than most people, so I love their starting pitching.  What can I say really, they’re a really good team, but it doesn’t take too many things to go wrong to fall under 95 wins.

PACE: 92.  And, to top it off, Doogan makes it very close (which is important considering just how many points are out there that could really go either way).  As impressive as it is that the Phillies are on pace for 87 with all their injuries, it’s even more impressive that the BoSox are on pace for 92 with some devastating injuries of their own.  That Terry Francona can flat-out manage.  But, injuries or no injuries, it looks like the Sox will be out of the playoffs and Doogan will be one point richer.  It’s not a lock, but it’s looking good for Doogan to finish the picks with a point.

FINAL:  89.  POINT DOOGAN, 12-18
Another nice late pick here for Doogan at #30, as the Sox failed to win 90 games, which means non-contention in the brutal AL East.  However, if you consider the incredible rash of injuries to this team, it’s absolutely amazing that they got to 89 in this division.  Francona is amazing.  Doogan, with 3 straight to end the preview gets a little more respectability.  Bry wins the 2010 BSB MLB Preview by the score of 18-12.  That is 3 in a row for Bry in MLB.

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Phillies Post-Mortem

Well, we just got to watch the Giants celebrate their first World Series title in 56 years.  The City by the Bay gets its first ever baseball championship.  Yes, the San Francisco Giants are the 2010 World Series champions.

Once upon a time, Bry idolized Will Clark to the point of insanity

I like the Giants.  In fact, when I was 9 years old, my most valued item was a 6-hour VHS tape, FULL with nothing but Will Clark at-bats.  In 1989, with the Phillies mired in a run of last-place seasons, I almost felt like it was my team that got swept by the Oakland A’s in the World Series.  Hey, at the beginning of the playoffs, I even put $10 on the Giants at 11:1 to win it all, so I had a financial interest in watching this team win.  [Yes, it was kind of an “emotional hedge” knowing that they would probably face the Phils in the NLCS.  But, value is value, no matter what color you wear.]

And, yes, the Phillies have given us meaningful baseball into late October for three straight years and have given me the greatest sporting moment of my life just two years ago.  But, still, somehow, it hurts.  I literally think about that Ryan Howard called third-strike constantly.  I can’t get it out of my mind.  I can’t shake the feeling of emptiness, regret, and loss.  One championship is great (and, trust me, I’m not complaining), but the White Sox and Marlins both have championships in the past decade.  Multiple championships by the same group of players puts you in the history books as more than an anecdote.  And, what hurts the most is that it is almost inarguable that the Phillies–OUR TEAM–had the best team in baseball.  And, we had to watch a World Series played by two other teams.  Yes, this one hurts.  I’ve finally managed to pull it together and write a “post-mortem” on the Phillies season.  I don’t know where this is going to take me because feelings are unpredictable, but either way, it’ll be raw emotion and gut reactions.

What Happened?
First of all, I don’t know.  I really don’t know how this Giants team could have won that series.  But, then again, the Texas Rangers are saying the same thing today.  Hell, even the Padres are probably

These guys just weren't themselves this October

saying “if we had just won TWO of those ten straight that we lost in mid-September…”  Yes, it defies logic that the Giants are the World Series champions, but I will not take anything away from them.  They played fantastically.  I have said time and time again, on this website and off, that:  free throws win basketball games, third-down conversions with football games, and TWO-OUT RUNS win baseball games.  The Giants were phenomenal at not only getting two-out runs, but at stranding opposing runners on base.  That is a recipe for victory in the postseason, and the Giants did just that all October.  But, more specifically to the Phillies, (as Doogan pointed out in his most recent post). the team just didn’t hit.  Plain and simple.  Utley was bad (or hurt).  Rollins was hurt (or bad).  Ibanez was bad and hurt.  Victorino was undisciplined; Werth was underwhelming.  The big guy, contrary to everything you’ll hear or read, was actually swinging the bat pretty well.  But, the fact is that he didn’t drive in a single run (which I think is more of an indictment of the top of the lineup than his postseason).  They did not hit.

Uncle Charlie
Uncle Charlie was absolutely not outmanaged, by any means, by Bruce Bochy.  Charlie Manuel may have made a couple questionable moves, but he is not the reason the Phillies lost the NLCS.  And, trust me, I’m not quick to defend postseason managerial moves because I am getting grey hairs watching some of these decisions.  Bruce Bochy managed scared and reactionary, particularly in Game Six.  He took his starter out after only 6 outs, counted on a journeyman left-hander, Jeremy Affeldt to get the next six outs, the first three, in trouble, against the heart of the Phillies order.  He then went to a 21-year old starter on two days’ rest for 6 more outs.  And, finally, the one that really gets me:  he goes to Tim Lincecum in the eighth on one day’s rest with a whole fleet of reliable right-handed relievers in the ‘pen.  The media has praised this move as a gutsy, win-at-all-costs kind of gamble.  You know what it really was?  Stupid.  And, you can say “hey, it worked,” except for the fact that it didn’t work.  Lincecum gave up two hard-hit line drive singles before Bochy had to go to Brian Wilson to get out of a jam with a line-drive double-play.  Bochy nearly cost his team the most important game of the year.  But, for whatever reason, the baseball gods picked the Giants this year.

The Most Memorable Moment of the 2010 Postseason
The Giants won the World Series for the first time in San Francisco.  The Rangers won their first ever home playoff game, their first ever playoff series, and their first ever American League pennant.  But, unless you live in or around Arlington, TX, or San Francisco, CA, the moment that will be remembered from the 2010 postseason was given to us by a Phillie.  No matter how it ended, we will always have the “remember exactly where you were when…” moment with Halladay’s no-hitter.  And, it couldn’t have happened to a better guy…

No matter how it ended, no one can ever take this away from us

Thank you, Roy
I have written a couple pieces entitled “Thank You, ____,” in which I try to appreciate and bring to light the “good guys” of sports (I even wrote one about the quarterback of the loathesome Dallas Cowboys a couple years ago).  Too much of our sports fandom revolves around final scores and division standings.  And, when we do acknowledge that these are just human beings out there, it is usually to point out their failings (i.e. gun possession, drug abuse, domestic violence) or personality traits we don’t like (i.e. arrogance, selfishness).  I like to try and take the “they are just human beings playing a game” stance to describe the good in people.  Roy Halladay threw a no-hitter in his very first playoff performance and what did he do?  He thanked his catcher; he praised his teammates; he gave the credit for the historic performance to the fans.  Not one “my stuff was just on tonight” or “I really had to dig deep.”  And, any of those comments would have been justified.  He DID throw a no-hitter.  Baseball is a series of individual contests disguised as a team game.  Roy Halladay got 27 Reds out without allowing a single base hit.

The Season, as a Whole
On the whole, the Phillies had a fantastic season.  It’s hard to quibble with a team that won 97 games, had the best record in all of baseball (for the first time in their 127-year history), swept the Reds in the Division Series, and then lost a tough 6-game NLCS to the eventual World Series champs in which the Phils outscored the Giants overall.  Throw in the ridiculous number of injuries sustained throughout the course of the season, and you have to say that this team accomplished a lot this year.  It wasn’t what we all wanted or expected when the postseason began, but let’s not let three one-run losses cloud how great this team was.

Now, What?
And, finally, as the pain of the playoff losses subside and the weather starts to chill, we, like all baseball fans across the country,  must turn to the business of the MLB offseason.  Despite falling short and growing old, the Phillies are actually in a pretty good position going forward.  The backbone of this team (and most championship teams) is the starting pitching, and that will return in tact for another go at it in 2011.  The reason Oswalt was better than Cliff Lee is because he is not a free agent and will be back for at least the 2011 season and probably the 2012 season as well.  Roy Halladay is still in his prime and is locked up.  Cole Hamels is just entering his prime and will also be around for at least a couple years to come.  Brad Lidge and Ryan Madson were lights-out for most of the year in the back of the bullpen, and they are both back.  Ryan Howard and Chase Utley form one of the best 3-4 combinations in baseball and they are locked up for a long time.  So, all of the main pieces are in place for another run.  There is no doubt that the Phillies are the favorites to win a 5th consecutive NL East and possibly a 3rd pennant in 4 years next year.  Even without knowing anything about the hot stove activity, it would not be crazy to consider this team one of the handful of favorites to win it all next year.  So, that is the good.

With these three in the rotation, the Phils should be dominant again in 2011

Here is the bad:  Jayson Werth is all but gone (which is certainly not a good thing, but not necessarily devastating if you are like me and believe strongly in Dominic Brown).  Jimmy Rollins, Placido Polanco, and Raul Ibanez are all showing signs of beginning to lose the inevitable battle with Father Time.  And, a bit of a nit-pick here, but the middle of the bullpen could use some serious upgrading, particularly the left-handed specialist that used to be named J.C. Romero.

So, what do we do?  First of all, you don’t listen to the “paid-by-the-overreaction” type analysts who say that Phillies cannot possibly compete with all of those left-handed hitters.  That is lunacy because Utley is better against LHs, Howard is much improved, and, less we forget, most pitchers in the league are right-handed.  However, you do need to cost-effectively address the issue that Werth was more valuable to the Phillies than his sheer numbers might indicate because of the fact that he crushes left-handed pitching, and he hits everyone well enough to warrant a spot right in the middle of that lineup.  Furthermore, replacing him with Dom Brown just adds another left-handed bat.  So, what do you do?  You go sign a guy like Marcus Thames, Austin Kearns, or Bill Hall to platoon with Brown, while letting Francisco platoon with Ibanez.  It is not particularly hard to find a corner-outfielder who only needs to come in and hit left-handers.  Then, you go out and sign a reliable left-handed specialist (or LOOGY, as they’re called in elitist sabermetic circles), like a Ron Mahay, Joe Beimel, or Will Ohman (all of whom are free agents and can’t possibly be looking for mega-millions).  If you have to, inquire about the asking price of a Javier Lopez or a Sean Marshall.

There is one other concern that might not be talked about much around the country, but anyone in Philadelphia knows might be a serious issue.  Davey Lopes has announced that he will not be back as the firstbase coach next year, citing contract issues as the reason.  The Phillies have decided that it isn’t worth shelling out an extra $50,000 – $100,000 for the best base coach in baseball?!?  Maybe there’s another side to the story, but if it’s an issue over his contract, I think Ruben might be making a mistake here.  Yes, firstbase coaches are not very high on the coaching totem pole, but Davey is different and should be compensated.  He is basically a “baserunning coach,” and he’s the best in the business.  I think that, of all the offseason moves that are bound to come for this team, this one might have the most greatest negative impact.  I hope Ruben comes to and realizes that Davey is too valuable to let walk for a couple thousand bucks.

But, other than that?  Roll out the balls and play the games.  This team is loaded and the window is still open.  I’ll go to war with this roster right now.

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The Phils Fall Short

Considering the Phillies’ season ended in the NLCS on Saturday night, I can’t make the claim that they were the best team in baseball this season, but I will always believe that they were, and I suspect there are plenty of experts out there that agree with me.  That’s what makes it such a disappointing defeat.  Even with so much of the current roster under contract for next year, and poised to make another run at a title, there are only so many times that you can say, “We have the best team, and we should win it all this year.”  If the Yankees go out and sign Cliff Lee and Jayson Werth this offseason, I’m not sure we can make that claim at any point next season.

But even if the Yankees do load up on high-priced reinforcements, the Phils will absolutely be a contender once again.  And even if the Yankees do hold the title of “Best Team,” that doesn’t mean they’ll win it all.  Phillies fan know that all too well right now.

As long as the Phillies have Halladay, Hamels, and Oswalt at the top of their rotation, still in or near their primes, they will be contenders.  Those guys came through and did exactly what was expected of them this postseason.  The bullpen did even more than was expected, and Lidge and Madson will be back in their same roles next year, as well.

The reason the Phillies failed, of course, was that they simply could not hit.  They could not push runners across home plate enough.  Sometimes complicated games have simple solutions.  You can’t win if you don’t score runs.  Phillie fans found themselves saying that like a mantra this October.  You can’t win if you don’t score runs.  And, in the end, they couldn’t do it.

What’s the solution?  Most fans might not want to hear this right now, but the best solution is really to stay the course.  Baseball is an odd sport.  Players go through lengthy slumps and even entire seasons where they don’t hit at the level they’re capable of.  Not only does this Phillie offense have a track record of success, but they’re also all under contract for next year (excluding Werth).  The offense will look very similar next year, and that’s not a bad thing.

We’ll all wait and see what happens with Werth.  After that performance by the Phillie offense this postseason, it’s tough to think that the guy who was arguably the most productive hitter on the team this season will be leaving.  Werth and Ruben Amaro both say there’s a chance he will be re-signed.  It seems unlikely, but who knows?  Nobody knows where the Phillie organization is willing to go with its payroll.

No matter what happens, the Phillies will open the 2011 season as the favorites to win a fifth consecutive division title, and they’ll be looking to advance to the NLCS for the fourth straight year, and to win a third pennant in four seasons.  It’s an amazing time to be a Phillie fan, even if it doesn’t feel like it this week.

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Live Blog: NLCS Game 4, Phillies at Giants

9:53 AM:  The Phils are now 3-0 this postseason when we do a live blog and 1-2 when we don’t, so you know what that means.  You can’t say we didn’t do our part.  And we’re starting over 10 hours before game time, so that can only help, right?  I’ll have my lucky shirt on, too.  I’m still debating whether to go with the mask on or off on my Chooch bobble-head, but I’m leaning towards off.

11:03: Extra-base hits have been really hard to come by, but Howard and Werth start off the 8th with back-to-back doubles to tie it!  Really impressive to do that off those good relievers.  Now we need to get Werth over and get him in.  But Rollins pops it up.  All these years later, and he still does that WAY too often.

Let’s get the Blanton talk out of the way right now.  As everyone knows, if the Phils had gone with Halladay on short rest tonight, they would’ve had to also throw Oswalt and Hamels on short rest.  The bottom line is, Hamels on short rest is not something they’re willing to consider, so throwing Halladay today makes no sense.  Why won’t they throw Hamels on short rest?  I’m not sure.  Dubee’s reasoning was, “He’s never done it before”, which is not really a valid reason at this point.  We’ve been hearing that since the ’08 playoffs.  I understand the logic in not wanting him to make his first ever short-rest start in the playoffs, but why not have him throw on short-rest once or twice during the regular season to see how he handles it?  Either the Phils’ brass really doesn’t think he can handle it, or he’s told them he doesn’t think he can (wouldn’t put it past him, unfortunately).

Anyway, all that is a moot point for this postseason.  Again, if they’re not willing to throw Hamels on short rest, Blanton is the right pick for Game 4.

10:06 AM:  Everyone agrees that the term “must-win” is over-used in sports, then they go ahead and use it anyway.  This is not a must-win.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s hugely critical, but do you really think the Phillies can’t possibly win three straight games with the pitchers they have coming?  If Halladay could manage a win tomorrow (obviously not far-fetched), then they’d be coming home, with momentum, needing to win just two in a row behind Oswalt and Hamels.  Anyone who thinks that’s an impossible scenario is crazy.  Is it likely that they’d win those three in a row?  Nope.  That’s why tonight is so important.

11:21 AM:  [Bry, jumping in]  You’re right, Doogan, in that the term “must-win is wholly over-used.  The only must-wins are elimination games.  That being said, being down 2-1 is no fun for the fans.

A lot of thoughts at the start of the series have changed and many have not.  At the beginning, it was hard for some people to imagine the Giants winning this series at all.  That thought is clearly out the window now because they are very much in the series and, though I haven’t checked with Vegas, I would probably handicap this series right now as a pick ’em.  So, it’s very much up in the air.

I, however (and maybe because of my fatalistic Philadelphianism), gave the Giants a puncher’s chance, at the very least.  But, when this series started, I honestly couldn’t imagine a scenario where the Giants would win this series without winning Game Four.  That belief has not really changed that much now.  If the Phils can win tonight (against a rookie pitcher), they are down to a best-of-three series, with homefield advantage, with all three of the big guys due to pitch, on full rest.  So, even with two frustrating losses in this series, the Phils are one win away from regaining the status of “prevailing favorite” again.  So, all is not lost.  Keep the faith.

1:47 PM:  Maybe the key to turning around this series is Chase Utley.  What a rough postseason he’s had, getting it started with two throwing errors in Game 1 of the LDS.  He has just one single in this series, and he cost the Phils a run last night in what should’ve been ruled an error but was called a single.  He also couldn’t come up with a ball to his left that was a legitimate single, but was a ball that Utley often comes up with, and he might’ve been able to get Huff at 1st to save another run.  Knowing how intense he is, and how much this all means to him, I wouldn’t be surprised to see him get things going tonight, with the bat and the glove.  Chase Utley is not the type of guy that buckles in the face of adversity.  The Phils need him to spark the offense.

3:20 PM:  [Bry again]  Another key, I think, is the bottom of the order.  That is where, it seemed, that the Phils had the greatest advantage.  The depth of the lineup was so much stronger for the Phils than the Giants.  But, so far, the bottom of the Giants order has highly outperformed their Philly counterparts.  A lot of this falls on Raul Ibanez, who, when he is on, has to be one of the best #7 hitters in the game, but right now, he looks lost.  With a still shaky J-Roll at #6 and Ibanez at #7, the Phils order, all of a sudden, looks more shallow than the puddle of a lineup that the Giants throw out there every night.

5:21: Well, just found out that Ben Francisco is in the lineup for Ibanez, so I guess it’s up to Francisco and company to come through at the bottom of the order.  Oh, and for the record (and for reasons I don’t have time to elaborate on), the more I think about it, the more I agree with the Blanton decision tonight.

5:45: Yeah Bry, it looks like Charlie shares your concerns about the bottom of the order.  I think putting Francisco in is a pretty good decision.  He hit lefties really well this year (even though he’s barely played over the last couple months) and he gives some added range in the big AT&T Park outfield and some added speed on the base paths.

7:06:  Less than an hour now until the first pitch.  The first inning could be crucial.  In the top half, the Phils have a chance to put an early run or two on the board, which would immediately relax them and help put the abysmal offensive performance of Game 3 behind them.  The bottom half is key because Blanton has really struggled in the first inning this year, and considering he hasn’t pitched in 3 weeks, that is even more of a concern than usual. Continue reading

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Live Blog: NLCS Game Two

7:43:  Okay, here we are for Game Two, in very unfamiliar territory.  This is the eigth Phillies playoff series in the in the past three years, and this is the first time the Phils have found themselves in an 0-1 hole.  So, it should be really interesting to see how this team, which is so resilient, responds to a deficit.  Let’s not call this a “must-win” because with the pitching staff that the Phils possess, they can certainly come back from 0-2, but I’d rather not have to find out.

7:46:  Tonight’s pitching matchup:  Roy Oswalt versus Jonathan Sanchez.  At first, it seems like a big advantage for the Phils, but it’s not.  Sanchez has been murder against the Phils in his career, and he’s throwing as well as he ever has.  But, still, if I had to pick, I would definitely take “Little Roy” tonight.  He need a big game from the little guy.

7:50:  Lineups have been announced, and there is an interesting change to the Giants lineup, as Uribe has been replaced at shortstop by one of the two way overpriced veterans sitting on the Giants bench, Edgar Renteria.  Renteria, who has a lot of postseason experience, including the game-winning hit in Game 7 of the 1997 World Series, will hit 8th.  Last night’s hero, Cody Ross, has been upgraded to #6.  But, the Giants change is not quite as big news as the Phillies change.  The Phils are going with the same 8 guys, but Charlie has made the interesting move of flip-flopping Utley and Polanco in the order tonight against the lefty.  Utley will hit 2 and Polanco will hit 3.  A very interesting move, especially since, as Doogan has explained in a couple posts, Polanco’s power has almost completely disappeared since the All-Star Break.  Interesting, and I actually like it because I think people are sometimes too concerned by “traditional” lineups.  I don’t think there’s anything wrong with a contact-spray hitter hitting 3rd if he gets on base for the big boppers, Howard and Werth.

7:55:  If you’re nervous, like me, and looking for something to get your mind off of the game–we’re still 20 minutes away…ugh–I just put up a quick post on today’s Eagles game.  Spoiler alert:  they looked really good.

8:14:  I know everyone is in love with Jonathan Sanchez and his “stuff,” but I’d like to see him get through a game in The Bank before we exalt him as an elite left-handed pitcher.  I actually expect him to get rattled tonight and struggle.  I also expect Lil’ Roy to come through big.  Oh, in case you were wondering, I’m a very unbiased observer of this game.  But, honestly, the big thing tonight, for the Phils, is putting Sanchez out when he’s on the ropes.  We can’t let him off the hook if he’s on the ropes because I think he really might implode.  Plus, he can get pretty wild, so with this patient team, we could take advantage.

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