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Friday, August 24, 2012

MLB in Review - Three Quarter Point - American League

Today, we pick up from yesterday's evaluation of the MLB heading into the home stretch of the season.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

A.L. East

Tampa Bay Rays (70-55, 2nd place) – This team began to find “it” last September. By and large, the staff is the same, but a year more experienced.

Simply the best managed team in Major League Baseball. Having the brightest budding star starting pitcher in David Price (7-3, 2.44 ERA, 62 K) doesn't hurt, either.

I would never count this team out...ever...and Evan Longoria (.329, 4 HR, 19 RBI) has been out of the lineup since early May (expected to return in August - hamstring). But the race in the American League East couldn't be more competitive. They simply must get more good innings from the
ir starters if they expect to catch the Yankees. Realistically, they are probably hunting for a Wild Card spot.


This team is like Rasputin…cockroaches after a nuclear attack…porcelain toilets…pick something that you just cannot destroy. This team bends but doesn’t break. They’re my favorite American League team. The poor regular season attendance is baffling to me. They are the best managed team, in my opinion. Their pitchers are the best in the league. Their position players are good, quality players.

Now, Evan Longoria (.299, 6 HR, 29 RBI, 38 GP) is back in the lineup. The Rays went from being in a good position for the Wild Card to chasing the Yankees down for the American League East division title. With the rash of injuries the Yanks have suffered (Sabathia, Nova, Rodriguez), I think the Rays chances of winning the division for the third time in the last five years are better than 50/50 right now.  


Toronto Blue Jays (56-68, 5th place) – This is my dark horse team. This team has been competitive the last two seasons. Behind the bat of Jose Bautista, the Jays should continue to put runs on the board in many games. The pitching HAS to improve, but I think that the addition of high-potential Henderson Alvarez to the starting rotation and acquiring closer Sergio Santos from the White Sox can give the Jays the extra backbone to surprise the A.L. East.

Sergio Santos (0-1, 9.00 ERA) has done nothing but Edwin Encarnacion (.279, 17 HR, 43 RBI) has helped give Joey Bats (Jose Bautista - .226, 14 HR, 37 RBI) the extra bat in the lineup to turbo charge the Blue Jays' lineup. Toronto is in fourth place, but only 3 games back of the Rays.

I cannot recall the last time a cellar dweller, at the All-Star break, was in the thick of the Wild Card race, but that is the case with the Jays. This team has lived by the home run and is going to die by it if the pitching staff, with fifth worst ERA in the majors, can't tighten up. Edwin Encarnacion (.296, 22 HR, 56 RBI) and Jose Bautista (.244, 27 HR, 64 RBI) have been the glue holding this team together. Aaron Laffy (0-1, 2.67 ERA), recently promoted to the starting rotation, should give Blue Jays Fan some cause for optimism.

My dark horse blacked out. They are not the worst cellar dweller in the majors. However, the cold, hard facts are if you cannot pitch, then you cannot win.  


New York Yankees (72-52, 1st place) – Solid at every position from top to bottom, but the pitching staff is aging and showed a number of signs of inconsistency last year. Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez cannot outrun Father Time forever, either.

Apparently the pitching staff can't but The Grandy Man can (Curtis Granderson - .261, 17 HR, 33 RBI)! The pitching has to beef up or they will not win this extremely tight, hotly contested division.

I don't think anyone is going to catch them, barring a rash of injuries. This team has been without C.C. Sabathia (9-3, 3.45 ERA, 105 Ks) and Andy Pettitte (3-3, 3.22 ERA) since late June and they appear to have improved. The Bronx Bombers have won three consecutive divisional road games and five of their last seven as of Saturday afternoon. Curtis Granderson (.245, 23 HR, 48 RBI) is making a bid for the American League home run title and Derek Jeter (.309, 7 HR, 25 RBI) appears to have drunk from the Fountain of Youth. I have them penciled in for October. My only concern is the downward strain on the bullpen that will likely be experienced due to Pettitte's prolonged absence (60 day DL - broken ankle).

Last time, I said that they would not be caught barring a rash of injuries. Alex Rodriguez (.276, 15 HR, 44 RBI) breaks his hand, C.C. Sabathia (12-3, 3.56 ERA, 140 Ks) aggravates an elbow injury, and now, Ivan Nova (11-7, 4.92 ERA, 139 Ks) has a rotator cuff problem that has made him so ineffective that he was placed on the disabled List. Voila! We have a division race, again.  


Boston Red Sox (59-66, 4th place) – I think the long term impact of last year’s September meltdown and subsequent management fallout is grossly underestimated by fans and reporters. The loss of closer Jonathan Papelbon won’t help the cause of the BoSox, either. The curse of The Bambino is back, baby!

I have expected doom for the Red Sox all season and, technically, no team in the A.L. East has a worse record, but Bobby V. - in his...unorthodox manner - has the BoSox withing striking distance.

This team just won't go away. Still, they cannot make the playoffs from fourth place. They aren't catching the Yankees this year. If they want to put themselves in the driver's seat for the Wild Card, the pitching staff has to rise to some occasion. It hasn't risen to any this year. Meanwhile, Red Sox $20 million man Carl Crawford (.255, 11 HR, 56 RBI in 2011) has yet to take a swing in 2012 due to an elbow injury and will not play until well after the All-Star break. I'm not ready to stick a fork in them yet, but....

Stick a fork in ‘em. They’re done; on the field and in the clubhouse. To their credit, they are hitting the ball well, but their pitchers have completely sold out. Add the managerial situation, and we have a modern MLB version of One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest.


Baltimore Orioles (67-57, 3rd place) – This has been the best cellar dweller in baseball for two years running. I expect a third. #BigFishInASmallPond

EHHHHHHHH! WRONG! The O's have been the most pleasant surprise of the year. Buck Showalter has been building this once proud franchise back up, brick by brick, for the past two years and the fans at Camden Yards finally have something to cheer about. Adam Jones (.315, 16 HR, 34 RBI, .602 SLG)  appears to be realizing his potential, as is Jason Hammel (6-2, 3.06 ERA, 58 K).

Baltimore is no early season flash in the pan. They will be in the discussion come September and I am just a heartbeat away from saying I expect them to return to the playoffs for the first time in 15 years.

I like everything about what manager Buck Showalter is doing. I love watching centerfielder Adam Jones (.295, 20 HR, 44 RBI) develop into a bona fine star. I don't think there could have been a better pairing of team needs and a player needing a change of scenery than the Orioles and Jason Hammel (8-4, 3.42 ERA, 97 Ks), on pace for the best year of his career.

I see two pitfalls: First, the Orioles rely too much on their bullpen to bail out inconsistent starting pitchers, which will become a problem in September. Second, they rely too much on the long ball without the strong starting pitching to back it up if they aren't flying out.

Everything about this team completely defies logic. Their hitters are mediocre, though they hit better than average for power. Their starting pitchers aren’t very good, though the bullpen has picked this team up repeatedly. Yet they are tied for the second Wild Card spot. Buck Showalter, regardless of how the Orioles’ season ends, deserves a gold medal along with American League Manager of the Year. Not silver…not bronze…not cheap tin…not even 18 carat gold…SOLID…PURE…GOLD!
   
SOLID...GOLD! 1

A.L. Central

Detroit Tigers (67-57, 2nd place) – Instead of a paragraph, how about a haiku?

They’re already good
Then they add in Prince Fielder
Central race is done!

Justin Verlander
Must be the only pitcher
Worth a good ___ damn

Hitting is awesome
"ERA" ain't "GPA"
Time to make some trades

Pitching is better
Closing in on the White Sox
Should not be this close


Cleveland Indians (54-70, 4th place) – If starting pitcher Ubalbo Jimenez can regain his form from his best days in Colorado and stop throwing at former teammates’ heads, perhaps the Indians can finish second and possibly make a run at the American League Wild Card.

They have gotten off to a good start, much like last year. I simply do not think the pitching, particularly the bullpen, is going to give The Tribe what they need to compete into the fall. Ubaldo Jimenez (5-4, 5.79 ERA) has done nothing!

Small ball works, even in the American League, and it has the Tribe in second place as we approach the All-Star break. However there is nothing small about the Indians' ERA. The starters have been mediocre, albeit underachieving, and the bullpen is just not that good. Ubaldo Jimenez (2.78 ERA, 8.9 K/9 IP in June) seems to have settled down after a rough start. His improvement has to continue. Meanwhile, shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera (.291, 11 HR, 42 RBI, turned 59 double plays) continues to to develop into the prototype at his position. 

The recurring theme I heard from the baseball analysts is that the Tribe did not have the pitching to stay in the A.L. race. They fought the good fight, but the experts were right.


Kansas City Royals (55-68, 3rd place) – Stuck in mediocre, which is an improvement over the last decade.

They can't pitch a fit, let alone a decent nine innings.

I haven't said anything of substance about this team yet and I am not going to start now. 

Much like in the movie “Mr. 3000”, a third place finish is a noteworthy achievement for this team. The Royals have not finished better than 4th place in nine years. Dare I say that if this team can get some speed and power in their lineup and some pitchers who can…pitch…they could make a playoff run in the next season or two.


Chicago White Sox (68-55, 1st place) – White Sox Fan is about to find out just how many shortcomings former manager Ozzie Guillen was able to cover up through shrewd management (and the occasional motivational F bomb).

I never doubted that the Sox had talent. I just didn't expect them to put it together like this.The big difference? Adam Dunn (.222, 17 HR, 38 RBI). He already has my vote for Comeback Player of the Year.

Ozzie WHO??? Big props to White Sox management. They are two for two in identifying standout players from their teams in the early 1990s with managerial potential. Robin Ventura is rockin' in his first year as a major league manager. The Sox are in first place in spite of a slew of free agency defections and managerial change. The White Sox are doing it with lights out starting pitching, starting with ace Jake Peavy (7-5, 2.85, 108 Ks). Adam Dunn's (.211, 25 HR, 60 RBI) awakening from a one year hibernation has given them a huge boost, too.

Robin Ventura should get some votes for Manager of the Year as well. This team has weathered its storms and is sitting pretty for a playoff spot. The White Sox’s strength has been starting pitching all year long. The Central division race is going to be very close and Gavin Floyd (9-9, 4.56 ERA) absolutely must pitch no worse than “mediocre” (which he has not done lately) if the Sox are going to stay ahead of the Tigers in this division. 
 

Minnesota Twins (51-73, 5th place) – 2011 and 2012 – twin disappointments in the Twin Cities!

I like being right, but I'd prefer to be right with something positive. I guess one out of two ain't bad. The batting is mediocre. The starting pitching is awful. The bullpen is awful. The managing is awful. Josh Willingham's (.287, 11 HR, 39 RBI, .409 OB%, with Oakland in 2011) ability to land with a team worthy of his talents is awful.

The stadium is nice.

I was about to write a backhanded, dismissive, sarcastic one-liner. But, upon closer inspection, the Twins are quietly hot. The Twins posted a winning record in the month of June including six of their last nine games. The Twins, from top to bottom, have demonstrated excellent plate discipline of late and it is beginning to pay off. 

Francisco Liriano (3-7, 5.08 ERA) has done an about-face after a disastrous start to the season. Liriano posted a 2.87 ERA in June with 31 strikeouts in 31.1 innings pitched. The pitching staff has a whole has seen a month-over-month decline in ERA after a catastrophic April. While the Twins will have to dig themselves out of a canyon sized hole to get into the Wild Card race, they have a pulse. 

Flatline….  

Get it together, Gavin! 2
A.L. West

Los Angeles Angels (65-60, 3rd place) – They face a daunting battle with the Texas Rangers. The Angels were already pretty good and gave Texas a run all the way into September. Now they get Albert Pujols and former All Star Kendrys Morales returns to the lineup after missing much of 2010 and all of 2011. If your favorite team is not in this division, be glad!

C.J. Wilson (6-4, 2.64 ERA, 64 K) , acquired from the Texas Rangers, has been all he was cracked up to be. Two hundred million dollar man Albert Pujols (.236, 8 HR, 30 RBI) had not been in April. Kendrys Morales (.289, 6 HR, 20 RBI) got off to a bit of a bumpy April, but appears to be pulling it together. The team as a whole is mirroring its big hitters, in spite of stellar pitching. In a division with the Texas

Albert Pujols (.269, 13 HR, 49 RBI, .977 OPS in June) is back, but that does not surprise me one iota. He isn't even the big story in L.A. It is 20 year old sensation center fielder Mike Trout (.344, 11 HR, 39 RBI). The Angels are doing everything right - pitching, hitting, fielding, contact, and power. The problem for the Halos is that they are in the same division with the Texas Rangers, who are doing everything even better than the Angels are. To be determined in September...possibly October.

I don’t think the Angels’ fate will be determined until the final week of the season. They are 2.5 games back of the second Wild Card spot in a very crowded and competitive field. Forget about A.L. MVP candidate Mike Trout (.345, 24 HR, 72 RBI, .410 OBP), Albert Pujols (.283, 28 HR, 86 RBI), the woefully underpaid Mark Trumbo (.285, 30 HR, 79 RBI), or the heavy artillery in the starting rotation. The Angels will either reach the post season or reach for a fifth to drown their sorrows at in October based on the performance of their bullpen. It is not pulling its weight since the All-Star break. Period.


Texas Rangers (73-51, 1st place) – Seeking a third straight American League pennant. All of their key field players are back. There were no major changes to the pitching staff, but their division just got a lot tougher (see Los Angeles). I don’t know if the pitching staff from last year can carry the Rangers past the loaded Angels.

First of all, I don't know what brain fart I was suffering from when I said, "There were no major changes to the pitching staff," Their ace, C.J. Wilson defected to division rival Los Angeles. Boy did I screw the pooch on that one!

Regardless, the two-time defending American League champions haven't missed a beat. No doubt, Josh Hamilton (.348, 21 HR, 57 RBI, .407 OB%) has given this team an unexpected jolt, even by his high standards. Japanese import Yu Darvish (7-3, 3.34 ERA, 73 K) appears to be the replacement for Wilson that the Rangers had hoped for. I don't see how this team doesn't win the A.L. West, barring injury. 

This team has so many weapons on offense that it is almost unfair. Centerfielder Josh Hamilton (.313, 27 HR, 75 RBI, 1.025 OPS) already has his name etched on the American League MVP award. This team is going to the playoffs. How far they go will depend on their very good but not elite pitching staff. The bottom of their rotation has been in the bottom of the toilet this year. While that is slightly less important in October, it is a weakness. And with the talented and surging Angels on their tails, it could factor in the difference between being a division champion or one game from elimination in a Wild Card match.

The Fat Lady is warming up in the A.L. West race. The Rangers have all but completed the first leg of their journey to a third consecutive American League championship. Josh Hamilton (.287, 34 HR, 107 RBI) has reappeared after disappearing in June and July. As long as Hamilton doesn’t attempt an encore, this is your American League frontrunner in the playoffs.


Oakland Athletics (67-57, 2nd place) – Good, not great, pitching and weak bats are not a recipe for success in Major League Baseball.

I think it is stunning that the A's are in the cellar, especially after a promising first 30 games of the season (16-14). The problem, however, is that if your pitching isn't lights out, and it isn't in Oakland, and your bats are more like rubber hoses, and they are for everyone not named Josh Reddick (.271, 14 HR, 29 RBI), you aren't going to fare well in a 162 game season, and they aren't!

I don't get this team at all. They appeared to be circling the drain in June. So what do they do? Catch FIRE! The A's have won five in a row and 16 of their last 23 games. They have played themselves right back into the Wild Card race with efficient, stingy, consistent starting pitching and a lights out, lock down bullpen. Still this team can't hit the ball off of a tee. This will be their undoing as the season wears on. 

They have not met their undoing yet and are tied for the second Wild Card spot. I believe that undoing is coming, though, because of Bartolo Colon’s (10-9, 3.43 ERA) 50 game suspension for performance enhancing drug use and the continued absence of any real threat with the stick. I don’t think the idea of bringing Manny Ramirez (.302, 14 RBI, .348 OBP in 17 games with AAA Sacramento in 2012) back is as laughable as it may have sounded when he was released.


Seattle Mariners (61-64, 4th place) – You can stick a fork in them before opening day. They can’t hit the broadside of a barn with a shotgun from 10 feet away. Why exactly is Felix Hernandez wasting his career there, still?

They are .003 winning percentage points from being in the cellar, sticking their noses out momentarily while Oakland suffers that dubious distinction. I hope they enjoy their breath of fresh air. "Small ball" doesn't work when you can't hit the small ball!

I think they should be allowed to use metal bats for the rest of the year, just to keep the games close.

I never thought these words would ever cross my lips this season, but the Mariners are back from the dead and have a pulse. Defying all sound reasoning and logic, the M’s, on the strength of Felix Hernandez (12-5, 2.54 ERA, 179 Ks), a stout pitching staff, particularly the bullpen, and a blazing red hot streak that has seen this team win 11 of its last 12 games, including nine straight, are in play for the American League Wild Card race heading into September.

The hitting still continues to be anemic, however. I think the Mariners’ run is a classic case of “too little, too late”, but the fact that I can even say that about this team at all this late in the season is remarkable. Stay tuned for a fantastic finish!

I thought PEDs were supposed to help guys tone up, not tone around! 3
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