20 posts tagged “boston red sox”
I keep reading and hearing about it.
- Because of the obnoxious arrogance displayed by both their longtime fans and their legions of bandwagon boobs and douchebags who feel that they are absolutely entitled to always win.
- Because of the sheer absurdity of "26 rings!!! 26 rings!!!" When the reality is, they have 7 rings since 1962, the first year of the Mets' existence. 7 is still a lot more than 2, but it's not 26. The last thing we need is "27 rings!!! 27 rings!!!" or... 8 since 1962.
- Because they are a team whose latest dynasty (1996, 1998-2000) was built upon performance enhancing-drugs, and the Mets LOST to that roided-up team in the 2000 World Series.
- Because Alex Rodriguez is another steroid-using lying cheating prick who is in love with both Kate Hudson and Derek Jeter's ass.
- Because of the lunacy of the "aura and mystique" horseshit.
- Because of the fucking Steinbrenners.
- Because in New York City, the media will always treat the Yankees as numero uno because they've been around since 1903, and as a result, have a longer history. Why should any Met fan be happy about that?
- Because while I don't believe that the Yankees "buy championships" as no team can do so, they definitely do attempt to buy postseason berths. What makes that unfortunate is that many Met fans believe their team has to follow suit and continually lead the NL in highest payroll, instead of constructing the best team period.
- Because Roger Clemens intentionally beaned Mike Piazza, and later threw a bat at him, you fucking forgetful fruits!
- Because the Yankees and their fans represent all that is wrong with baseball, and they are known as the "Evil Empire" for many reasons, some of which I've already mentioned.
A whole lotta talk about the weather in the Bronx, but so far, the sheets of rain have not fallen from the skies. The tarp is not on the field, and while it's still just as cold as it was 24 hours prior during Game 1, it looks like the game will get started on time. Whether it finishes today, is another story entirely because the rain is expected to get heavier into the night.
- Chone Figgins desperately needs to snap out of his 0-for-16 postseason slump, only getting on base once when Jonathan Papelbon walked him on a 3-2 count in Game 3 of the ALDS. If the old cliche for the New York Mets is, "As Jose Reyes goes, so do the Mets," then the same (mostly) holds true for Figgins and the Angels. They beat Boston in spite of his inability to get on base, but that likely won't be enough to beat the Yankees
- The weather conditions tonight are generally the same as they were last night. Whatever blame the Angels may have been able to put on "not used to the cold and rain" can't happen again. You only get the one mulligan in situations like these.
- The Angels' normally stellar defense must return in this must-win game for the Halos. They cannot afford to leave New York without a split of the first two games. The Yankees won Game 1 of the 2002 ALDS and 2005 ALDS against the Angels. Both series were won by the Angels. But they also had to win Game 2 of those 5-gamers.
- Joe Saunders hasn't pitched a real game in 2 weeks. He also gives up a lot of homers. Pitching Saunders instead of Kazmir in Yankee Stadium when Kazmir's history against the Bronx Bombers strongly favor him over Saunders, could prove to be a mistake. But Saunders isn't chopped liver. He posted a 16-7 record with a 4.60 ERA this season, with a very strong 2nd half going 7-2.
Round 1 of the 2009 MLB Playoffs has completed, and I did not do very well in my predictions, which you can point and laugh at here.
Of course, predictions are just that. Results you expect to occur, hopefully with some rhyme and reason to back it all up. Whether they actually become reality or not, is a whole nother story.
So first, a little wrap-up of the ALDS and NLDS before moving onto the ALCS and NLDS.
Reality: Yankees in 3 games
The only prediction that I got right, and I suspect that a lot of people got right too. The Twins weren't good enough to compete with the Bombers, and even during the games that they might have actually taken from the Yanks, they couldn't win. Game 2 was the ultimate in that case, with the Phil Cuzzi blown call in leftfield taking center stage, but the Twins had numerous opportunities to score in that game and never did.
Closer Joe Nathan continued his terrible postseason by giving up a game-tying HR in the bottom of the 9th of Game 2 to A-Rod, and also gave up 2 hits to the Yankees in the 9th inning of Game 3. Those hits led to 2 Yankee runs which were charged to other Twins relievers, but Nathan couldn't stop the Yankees from scoring. As great as Joe Nathan is during the regular season, he's been quite awful in the postseason, posting a 7.88 ERA.
Never so happy to be so wrong on both counts.
The Angels were supposed to be shut down by Jon Lester and Josh Beckett. Instead, it was the pitching of the Angels in the first two games that shut down the Red Sox. Lackey in Game 1, Weaver in Game 2. The Angels' gave up 1 run to Boston in the first two games.
Game 3 was probably the best game of the entire Division Series, because of the unlikeliest of unlikely comebacks against Boston's closer Jonathan Papelbon leading the Angels to a 3-game sweep over their nemesis. I could write more about it here, but my liveblog of the game says it all.
Reality: Philadelphia in 4 games.
Right number of games, wrong team.
The bottom line in this series was Cliff Lee, the Phillies bullpen not blowing things, especially Brad Lidge notching 2 saves in the series. That, plus the Phillies' offense out-hitting and out-running the Rockies, and the inability of Rockies closer Huston Street to stave off the Phillies' comeback in Game 4.
I definitely figured this series was going to be a lot more competitive than it turned out. Although I was correct in that the Dodgers needed to survive by hitting off of St. Louis' shaky bullpen. I didn't however, expect Matt Holliday to drop the ball in Game 2, and then Cardinals closer Ryan Franklin to be unable to get any of the additional batters out despite having 2 outs. That game was a heartbreaker if you're a St. Louis fan, or a Dodgers despiser like me.
Thanks MLB, for scheduling this 3rd game between the Angels and Red Sox at 9 in the fucking morning on a friggin Sunday.
Watching the Angels on TV dominate the Boston Red Sox by a final score of 5-0 was something to behold. John Lackey pitching 7.1 IP of shutout ball against the potent Red Sox offense. Torii Hunter was the hero of the game with a 3-run BOMB off of Jon Lester into the centerfield rockpile which would end up being all the offense the Angels needed to win the game, though they managed to tack on another 2 runs off reliever Takashi Saito in the bottom of the 7th. Darren Oliver pitched the final 1.2 IP to loooock it up for the Halos.
But watching Game 2 at Angel Stadium, with 40,000+ fans, with not nearly as many Boston fans as you'd think (maybe because they were a lot quieter?) was an awesome experience.
- We had a fantastic pitcher's duel between one of the best postseason pitchers of the decade in Josh Beckett, and Jered Weaver, a solid #2-#3 pitcher in the Angels rotation who managed to keep Boston at bay the entire game.
- Boston struck first in the 4th inning when Jacoby Ellsbury led off the inning with a triple to deep centerfield, one of the few balls that Torii Hunter could not track down. 2 batters later, Victor Martinez singled him home. That was all the runs the Red Sox would muster.
- The Angels struck back in the bottom of the 4th when Bobby Abreu got to 1st with a leadoff single. Torii Hunter then hit a bullet towards the left side but it was caught by a diving Mike Lowell, making a fantastic play.
- The next batter, Vladimir Guerrero singled to rightfield while Abreu took off for 2nd, allowing the Angels to do what they do best. Run from first to third. Angels slugger Kendry Morales was next at the plate, hitting a line shot to J.D. Drew in rightfield, far enough for Bobby Abreu to tag up from 3rd and tie the game at 1.
- Weaver and Beckett continued to duel, with Beckett's pitch count more efficient, but Weaver was matching him on overall results. Weaver only gave up 2 hits in the entire game, both in the 4th inning. The only other baserunners allowed by Weaver were 2 scattered inconsequential walks to J.D. Drew and Jason Bay.
- The Angels finally chipped away at Josh Beckett in the bottom of the 7th when Vladimir Guerrero took, of all things, a leadoff walk on 5 pitches to start the inning. In a key managerial decision, Angels skip Mike Scioscia chose to pinch-run for his cleanup-hitting DH with Howie Kendrick, as the Angels had yet to run the bases on Jason Varitek as had been rumored to occur any time he was catching. It's a decision that paid off in spades. Kendrick successfully stole 2nd base after the first out had been made by Kendry Morales flying out to centerfield
- Juan Rivera couldn't get Kendrick home though, as he then grounded out to 3B Mike Lowell. Next batter Maicer Izturis, a .370 career BA against Josh Beckett, and a .327 hitter with runners in scoring position, got the job done. Mighty Maicer hit a shot up the middle into shallow centerfield that scored Howie Kendrick to give the Angels the 2-1 lead.
- But the Angels weren't done. Izturis then stole 2nd base, easily beating the throw from Varitek. Mike Napoli would get hit in the shoulder by a Josh Beckett pitch and took 1st base. Beckett thought Napoli didn't make an effort to get out of the way, but home plate CB Bucknor felt otherwise.
- By the way, as horrible as his Boston-screwing calls were at first base in Game 1, CB Bucknor didn't have any major problems behind the plate, giving all pitchers a consistent and somewhat liberal strike zone.
- With Izturis on 2nd, and Napoli on 1st, and still 2 out, Erick Aybar came to the plate. This would've probably been the time for Boston manager Terry Francona to go to the bullpen, but he stuck with Josh Beckett one batter too many. Erick Aybar launched a shot into deep centerfield for a triple, scoring Izturis and Napoli and giving the Angels the 4-1 lead.
- At this point in the game, Terry Francona had seen enough from Josh Beckett and brought in ex-Met closer Billy Wagner to stop the Angels' rally. He did so, getting Chone Figgins turned around to bat righty, striking him out.
- Despite a pitch count over 100, Jered Weaver came out for the 8th inning, promptly striking out J.D. Drew before it was time for his standing ovation from the Angels fans. Mike Scioscia went to the bullpen, bringing in lefty Darren Oliver for his 2nd straight game. Oliver struck out pinch-hitter Jed Lowrie but gave up a single to Jacoby Ellsbury.
- Scioscia went to the pen again, this time to righty Kevin Jepsen to face Dustin Pedroia. Jepsen induced a weak chopper short of the mound on the third base side. Jepsen made a nice fielding play and threw out Pedroia to end the 8th inning.
- Billy Wagner began the 8th inning for Boston by giving up a leadoff single to Bobby Abreu, and Tito had to keep the Angels from getting going again. So he brought in closer Jonathan Papelbon to stop things. Torii Hunter flied out to Ellsbury in CF. The Sox then pitched out first pitch to Howie Kendrick, throwing out Bobby Abreu trying to take 2nd base. Kendrick then struck out and we moved to the bottom of the 9th.
- Jepsen remained in the game to start the bottom of the 9th with the Angels' 3-run lead intact. Victor Martinez led off by flying out to Torii Hunter in centerfield for the first out. Kevin Youkilis hit a double into the left-centerfield gap, and then it was time for Angels' manager Mike Scioscia to bring in closer Brian Fuentes to face lefty David Ortiz.
- Though Fuentes has been very shaky this season despite a MLB-leading 48 saves, he's at his best when facing lefty hitters. Ortiz lined out to LF Juan Rivera for the 2nd out. Fuentes got ahead of Jason Bay on a 1-2 count before losing him to a walk With runners on 1st and 2nd, the tying run came up to the plate in the form of Mike Lowell.
- With fans of both teams on edge, Mike Lowell hit a flyball to deep centerfield, but not deep enough. Torii Hunter caught it with ease and the Angels won Game 2 of the ALDS by a final score of 4-1. Just another Halo victory!
Interesting stats about the Angels and the Red Sox:
So now the series shifts to Boston on Sunday morning at 9am Pacific / 12pm Eastern in one of those "WHO THE FUCK SCHEDULED THIS GAME TO BE SO EARLY?" questions that only MLB could make happen. The Angels will be in a position to sweep the Sox in Fenway, and each game is an absolute must-win elimination game for Boston.This was Josh Beckett's first postseason loss since Game 3 of the 2003 World Series against the New York Yankees.
Through the first two games, the Angels' starters have given up a total of 1 earned run on 6 hits with a 0.61 ERA. The scary Angels bullpen? A 0.00 ERA.
If there's any team capable of coming back in the postseason, it's Boston. They were on the winning side of the 2004 ALCS against the New York Yankees (aka: the biggest collapse in baseball history) when they came back from a 3-0 deficit to win 4 straight games and win the ALCS before sweeping the Cardinals in the 2004 World Series. The Red Sox were also down 3 games to 1 against the Cleveland Indians in the 2007 ALCS before taking the next 3 of that series and then sweeping the Colorado Rockies in the 2007 World Series.
Boston has also been down 2-0 in the ALDS 4 times before. And twice, they came back to win 3-2. They did so against the Cleveland Indians in 1999, and the Oakland A's in 2003. The other two times? They were swept in 3 games by the Chicago White Sox in 2005, and the Cleveland Indians in 1995.
The odds still do heavily favor the Angels at this point though. Since the current playoff format was implemented in 1995, teams going up 2-0 in the Division Series have won it 31 of 35 times.
These were the first two consecutive postseason wins for the Halos since Games 2 and 3 of the 2005 ALDS against the Yankees.
Considering the Angels already faced the best starters on Boston's staff in the first two games, the advantage should shift even moreso to the Angels with Scott Kazmir starting against Clay Buchholz.
Buchholz has looked stellar for Boston during the regular season except for the last two starts of the season in which he got destroyed by both Toronto and Cleveland. Buchholz has never pitched in the postseason.
Since coming to the Angels just prior to the August 31 trade deadline, Scott Kazmir has posted a 1.73 ERA in 6 starts for the Angels, going 2-2 with the club. He went 10-9 on the year with a 4.89 ERA, although he was pitching injured for much of 2009 and spent some time on the DL as well.
More importantly, Kazmir has been very successful throughout his career pitching against Boston. During the regular season, he has an 8-7 record with a 3.59 ERA over 130.1 IP in 23 starts. His career record at Fenway Park is equally impressive, going 6-4 with a 3.05 ERA over 73.2 IP in 13 starts.
In the 2008 ALCS against Boston while pitching with Tampa, Kazmir made 2 starts against the Red Sox. The first in Game 2 at Tropicana Field did not go so well, as he gave up 5 earned runs in 4.1IP, 2 of them solo homers by Dustin Pedroia, and another solo blast by Kevin Youkilis. However, opponent Josh Beckett also lasted just 4.1 IP, and he gave up 8 earned runs in that game. Neither Beckett nor Kazmir were involved in the decision in that game which was won by Tampa in 11 innings by a final score of 9-8.
Kazmir's 2nd start in the 2008 ALCS went a lot better as he pitched Game 5 in Fenway Park. Kazmir pitched 6 innings of shutout ball on 2 hits, 3 walks and 7 strikeouts. Tampa's bullpen blew that game and the Rays lost by a final of 8-7. Kazmir did not get the decision but was in line for the win until he left the game.
If the first two games of this 2009 ALDS favored Boston because of the starting pitching which didn't pan out, then Game 3 of the series certainly favors the Angels if Kazmir can outduel Buchholz and whoever else Francona throws out there, as all hands will be on deck for the Boston pitching staff for the remainder of this series.
Here's hoping that Kazmir does so, sweeps the Red Sox, and the Angels move onto the ALCS to likely face the New York Yankees.
It's the most...wonderful tiiiiime of the year!!!!
Every year, MLB begins their All-Star game balloting near the end of April, which is far too early. I advocate for voting only after June 1, as you simply cannot elect players to the All-Star game based on less than one month of baseball.
| 1st Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Mark Teixeira | Yankees | 1,561,292 |
| 2. | Kevin Youkilis | Red Sox | 1,525,660 |
| 3. | Justin Morneau | Twins | 1,275,694 |
| 4. | Miguel Cabrera | Tigers | 944,855 |
| 5. | Chris Davis | Rangers | 632,895 |
| 2nd Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Ian Kinsler | Rangers | 1,791,177 |
| 2. | Dustin Pedroia | Red Sox | 1,732,787 |
| 3. | Robinson Cano | Yankees | 1,062,863 |
| 4. | Aaron Hill | Blue Jays | 775,200 |
| 5. | Placido Polanco | Tigers | 660,693 |
| 3rd Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Evan Longoria | Rays | 2,488,076 |
| 2. | Alex Rodriguez | Yankees | 1,165,243 |
| 3. | Michael Young | Rangers | 933,630 |
| 4. | Mike Lowell | Red Sox | 890,138 |
| 5. | Brandon Inge | Tigers | 535,226 |
So back to reality... A-Rod isn't hitting at a level worthy of election and he missed 6 weeks of the season. For him to be #2 on this list is a complete joke.
| Shortstop | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Derek Jeter | Yankees | 2,563,093 |
| 2. | Jason Bartlett | Rays | 1,148,988 |
| 3. | Elvis Andrus | Rangers | 844,349 |
| 4. | Marco Scutaro | Blue Jays | 684,883 |
| 5. | Jed Lowrie | Red Sox | 459,732 |
| Catcher | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Joe Mauer | Twins | 2,298,544 |
| 2. | Jason Varitek | Red Sox | 1,108,054 |
| 3. | Jorge Posada | Yankees | 947,887 |
| 4. | Jarrod Saltalamacchia | Rangers | 827,063 |
| 5. | Victor Martinez | Indians | 754,571 |
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | AL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Jason Bay | Red Sox | 2,077,504 |
| 2. | Ichiro Suzuki | Mariners | 1,455,266 |
| 3. | Josh Hamilton | Rangers | 1,385,212 |
| 4. | Torii Hunter | Angels | 1,186,097 |
| 5. | Carl Crawford | Rays | 1,172,241 |
| 6. | Jacoby Ellsbury | Red Sox | 1,051,270 |
| 7. | Johnny Damon | Yankees | 1,021,394 |
| 8. | Ken Griffey Jr. | Mariners | 1,009,584 |
| 9. | Nelson Cruz | Rangers | 956,294 |
| 10. | Adam Jones | Orioles | 894,664 |
| 11. | J.D. Drew | Red Sox | 818,459 |
| 12. | Nick Markakis | Orioles | 756,316 |
| 13. | Curtis Granderson | Tigers | 641,102 |
| 14. | Grady Sizemore | Indians | 626,014 |
| 15. | Bobby Abreu | Angels | 614,244 |
Starting Pitchers:
Jered Weaver (Los Angeles)
Brian Fuentes (Los Angeles)
| 1st Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Albert Pujols | Cardinals | 2,934,794 |
| 2. | Ryan Howard | Phillies | 1,393,546 |
| 3. | Prince Fielder | Brewers | 1,155,529 |
| 4. | Adrian Gonzalez | Padres | 894,600 |
| 5. | Lance Berkman | Astros | 512,879 |
| 2nd Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Chase Utley | Phillies | 2,922,796 |
| 2. | Orlando Hudson | Dodgers | 1,082,248 |
| 3. | Rickie Weeks | Brewers | 832,870 |
| 4. | Skip Schumaker | Cardinals | 729,722 |
| 5. | Dan Uggla | Marlins | 475,372 |
| 3rd Base | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | David Wright | Mets | 1,698,366 |
| 2. | Ryan Zimmerman | Nationals | 1,148,054 |
| 3. | Chipper Jones | Braves | 1,104,485 |
| 4. | Pedro Feliz | Phillies | 954,945 |
| 5. | Bill Hall | Brewers | 842,295 |
| Shortstop | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Hanley Ramirez | Marlins | 1,648,482 |
| 2. | Jimmy Rollins | Phillies | 1,494,466 |
| 3. | J.J. Hardy | Brewers | 1,051,309 |
| 4. | Miguel Tejada | Astros | 834,754 |
| 5. | Jose Reyes | Mets | 754,579 |
| Catcher | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Yadier Molina | Cardinals | 1,496,285 |
| 2. | Brian McCann | Braves | 1,180,312 |
| 3. | Ivan Rodriguez | Astros | 1,002,882 |
| 4. | Jason Kendall | Brewers | 995,633 |
| 5. | Carlos Ruiz | Phillies | 980,164 |
| Outfield | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| RANK | PLAYER NAME | NL TEAM | TOTAL VOTES |
| 1. | Raul Ibanez | Phillies | 2,465,539 |
| 2. | Ryan Braun | Brewers | 2,178,144 |
| 3. | Carlos Beltran | Mets | 1,779,344 |
| 4. | Alfonso Soriano | Cubs | 1,639,664 |
| 5. | Shane Victorino | Phillies | 1,371,362 |
| 6. | Manny Ramirez | Dodgers | 1,162,507 |
| 7. | Mike Cameron | Brewers | 1,140,167 |
| 8. | Rick Ankiel | Cardinals | 1,011,527 |
| 9. | Jayson Werth | Phillies | 1,008,256 |
| 10. | Corey Hart | Brewers | 959,614 |
| 11. | Ryan Ludwick | Cardinals | 950,662 |
| 12. | Adam Dunn | Nationals | 742,515 |
| 13. | Matt Kemp | Dodgers | 673,979 |
| 14. | Andre Ethier | Dodgers | 642,983 |
| 15. | Justin Upton | D-backs | 594,185 |
Jonathan Broxton (Los Angeles)
The New York Mets are not off to a good start.
None of the starting pitchers except for Johan Santana are pitching with any semblance of consistency.
With the exception of a winning start over San Diego on April 15, Oliver Perez has been absolutely terrible.
The jury is still out on Mike Pelfrey and John Maine, and Livan Hernandez has so far only been able to pitch well against the Marlins and no one else. As it is, the expectations for Livan Hernandez are quite low.
While Frankie Rodriguez has not blown any saves yet, and he will, JJ Putz and Sean Green have not held leads during the last two games of the series against the Florida Marlins at CitiField. While these things are bound to happen, you don't want to see them happen two games in a row.
David Wright is off to a very bad start, and he's whiffing at a record pace for him. Slow starts are one thing, but striking out like you're Ryan Howard is another. On the other hand, you can see that his numbers for the month of April 2009 are still better than his start to April 2007, with only the strikeouts being the major increase.
April 2005: 17 strikeouts in 76 ABs, 23 games, .303 / .418 / .539
April 2006: 13 strikeouts in 89 ABs, 24 games. .303 / .377 / .584
April 2007: 23 strikeouts in 90 ABs. 24 games. .244 / .370 / .311
April 2008: 16 strikeouts in 96 ABs. 26 games. .281 / .417 / .531 (one game on March 31, 2008 also included)
April 2009: 27 strikeouts in 82 ABs. 21 games. .280 / .372 / .390
The highest amount of strikeouts David Wright has ever had in a single month was May 2006, when he struck out 29 times, but in 27 games and 110 ABs. He still remained far more productive during that period though, hitting .336 / .408 / .500.
However, slow starts do not rule out a team's ability to get to the posteason come October.
Here are the 21-game records of the World Series teams (both winner and loser) dating back to 2000. I use 21 as the benchmark since that's how many games the Mets have played in the 2009 season as of April 30.
(Teams with below .500 records after 21 games are bolded and italicized.)
2000: New York Yankees (14-7) and New York Mets (14-7)
2001: Arizona Diamondbacks (11-10) and New York Yankees (11-10)
2002: Anaheim Angels (7-14) and San Francisco Giants (13-8)
2003: Florida Marlins (10-11) and New York Yankees (18-3)
2004: Boston Red Sox (15-6) and St. Louis Cardinals (10-11)
2005: Chicago White Sox (16-5) and Houston Astros (8-13)
2006: St. Louis Cardinals (14-7) and Detroit Tigers (13-8)
2007: Boston Red Sox (14-7) and Colorado Rockies (8-13)
2008: Philadelphia Phillies (11-10) and Tampa Bay Rays (10-11)
The 2009 Mets are 9-12 after 21 games.
Is it better to have a strong start than not? Absolutely.
Can teams come back from slow April starts to win the World Series or make the postseason? Absolutely, although you might have to settle for the Wild Card (2002 Angels, 2003 Florida, 2005 Houston, 2007 Colorado,)
It's also important to remember that you can have the best regular season record over the course of a season, and not even make the World Series. Just ask Lou Piniella and his 2001 Seattle Mariners with their 116-46 record. They lost the ALCS to the Yankees in just 5 games. Or last year's Los Angeles Angels that ran away with the AL West crown and an MLB season-best record of 100-62, only to lose to Boston in the ALDS (again... grrrr!) in 4 games.
Can a strong April be absolutely worthless when it comes to the end result in September? Look no further than the 2008 Arizona Diamondbacks, who were 15-6 after their first 21 games, only to end up in 2nd place in the NL West when the season ended. Conversely, the Los Angeles Dodgers started 2008 9-12, and ended up winning the NL West division. The Oakland A's were 12-9 after their first 21 in 2008, and finished the season well below .500 at 75-86.
There's no shortage of examples on both sides of the coin. So when people panic about their team in April if they're not off to a 20+ win month, it's generally unwarranted. Of course, if you're a Washington Nationals fan, you can safely throw in the towel.
The Mets do have cause for concern, and they're going to need to kick things into high gear over the month of May if they want to compete for the NL East crown or the NL Wild Card. With 16 of 29 games against NL East teams in May, the Mets are going to need to win as many of those games as possible to get back into this race.
What a sports-intensive weekend. Unlike a lot of American men, I don't spend my Sundays worshipping the TV when it's time for the NFL season. I prefer college football, but even then, I can only watch so many college football games on a Saturday before my brain fries.
But April is a great month for sports, which would be a lot better if the NBA wasn't part of it. Basketball is truly the most...boring...sport....ever. Yes, I'd rather watch toddler bowling.
However, we got baseball, and we got hockey playoffs galore. And then there's always a plethora of MMA to be found.
I won't get into too much detail about all of the games, considering a lot of it is old news at the point I'm writing this, so a brief summary should suffice.
So, this weekend began on:
Friday, April 24:
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Seattle Mariners at Angel Stadium
Shane Loux took the mound for the pitching-decimated Angels against Mariners ace Erik Bedard.
Loux pitched pretty well for 4 innings, only getting stung by a Russell Branyan solo blast in the 2nd inning.
Then
the 5th inning came, and Loux just died. Ichiro led off with a single.
Endy Chavez, single. Griffey, single. Beltre just missed a grand slam
with a double off the left-centerfield wall, scoring Ichiro and Chavez.
Russell Branyan then walked to load the bases. Jose Lopez hit a chopper
towards 3rd for a single, scoring another run.
By this point, it was 5-0, there were no outs, and Loux had come apart. Manager Mike Scioscia went to the bullpen, but another 2 runs scored before the Angels could get out of the inning.
Erik Bedard pitched fantastic for Seattle, only giving up 1 hit in the first 4 innings, a double to Erick Aybar which was also the Angels' sole baserunner. He gave up a dinger to Mike Napoli in the 5th, and the Angels scored twice more in the frame to bring the score to 7-3, but Bedard still had a healthy lead and pitched into the 7th inning before Shawn Kelley finished out the game for the Mariners.
So the Angels lost by a score of 8-3, and here are some photos from my less-than-good seats in the rightfield loge.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox
What was supposed to be a pitchers duel was anything but. But what a wild exciting game. The Yankees sent AJ Burnett to face Boston's Josh Beckett, and this was one of those games you figured would be a low-scoring affair. If only.
The Yankees went up 6-0 on Boston by the time the 4th inning was over, and there was no reason to think that the fairly solid AJ Burnett would surrender this lead. Then Boston began their comeback, scoring 5 runs in the bottom 4, with 4 of those runs coming off a Jason Varitek GRAND SALAMI.
But this game was only getting started. In the 6th, Boston scored 3 runs going up 8-6 on the Skanks.
Then in the next inning, Johnny Damon hit a 2-run homer to tie the game at 8.
Boston then goes ahead 9-8 in the bottom of the 6th.
And then the lead switched AGAIN in the top of the 7th when the Yankees went up 10-9.
With all the back and forth in this ballgame, it was just super fun to watch. Mind you, I love a pitcher's duel more than anything. The best games are the 0-0 games that go into extra innings, but when both teams score a bunch of runs back and forth in every inning, that's pretty damn exciting as well.
When it was all said and done with, Boston outslugged the Yankees by a final of 16-11. There were 28 hits in the game, 6 of them home runs (3 for each team).
NHL Playoffs:
Game 5: Anaheim Ducks vs. San Jose Sharks
With the Ducks already possessing a 3-1 lead in this best of 7 series, every game was now a "must-win" for the Sharks, and with their backs to the wall at home in the HP Pavilion (aka: Shark Tank), the Sharks put up the early 1-0 goal at 7:25 in the 1st from Co-Captain Joe Thornton. The Sharks went up 2-0 in the 2nd.
But hold on, the Ducks came back with 2 of their own in the 3rd period thanks to Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry, and the game went into OT.
The Sharks stayed alive in the series when Co-Captain Patrick Marleau jabbed in a goal past Anaheim goaltender phenom Jonas Hiller at 6:02 of the first OT period to win the game 3-2. Even still, the winning goal was ultimately pushed past the goal line by the leg/skate of Hiller. Unfortunate, but so it goes.
This was another great game in what has been a thrilling series, thanks to the unlikely 8th seed Ducks taking it to the team that had the best record in the NHL regular season.
Sunday, April 26th, 2009
NHL Playoffs:
Game 6: New York Rangers vs. Washington Capitals
With the Rangers up 3-1 in this series, they didn't have Coach John Tortorella on the bench because he was serving a one-game suspension for losing his mind and throwing water at Capitals fans behind the Rangers bench.
What followed from Rangers' GM Glen Sather was one of the most laughable reactions in the history of the sport. Sather complained that Washington Capitals security should be disciplined. Why? Because Washington Capitals fans were verbally harassing/abusing the Rangers bench from their seats, and CHILDREN were able to hear this.
Apparently Sather has never been to one of his own team's games, or at least never sitting in the MSG seats, where this kind of behavior, and FAR worse, occurs every single game. The Rangers proved themselves to be a classless organization from top to bottom. A coach who benches Sean Avery (the scummiest player in all the league) because he wanted to set an example about keeping your emotions in check during the game, loses his cool because of the verbal taunts from Capitals fans. Sean Avery may be a giant piece of shit, but he can be pretty effective when he's able to taunt and agitate the opposition into taking stupid penalties, so as long as Avery doesn't take them himself. In Game 4, he did. But for Tortorella to go after Caps fans, who never threw any objects at the Rangers bench or did anything PHYSICAL to provoke Torts, proves he's as big of a dick as Avery. And then Sather's letter, hoo hee! Whattalaff!!!!
I hope the Capital fans rip the Rangers bench (verbally, of course) even moreso during Game 7 so they can make Tortorella's head literally explode.
The Rangers got destroyed on MSG ice this game by a final of 5-3, and while the final score sounds close, it's misleading. The Capitals made Ranger goalie Henrik Lundqvist look very very mortal, going up 3-1 in the first. 5-1 in the 2nd, and held on to a 5-2 lead until a 3rd Rangers goal scored with 6 seconds remaining in the game.
I can't wait until Game 7, even if I won't be able to actually watch it. The Capitals will have home ice, and they're not losing to this joke of a Rangers team, who should never have won 3 games in this series to begin with.
New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox
This ESPN Night game was actually the pitcher's duel that we were supposed to get on Saturday between Beckett and Burnett. This time it was Andy Pettite against Justin Masterson. Masterson, normally a reliever for the Red Sox, pitched a second start for Boston in place of Daisuke Matsuzaka. And he pitched brilliantly.
Masterson scattered 6 hits over 5.1 IP, walking 1, striking out 4, and giving up 1 earned run off a Hideki Matsui sac fly.
Boston's bullpen of Hunter Jones, Michael Bowden and Takashi Saito (pitching in place of closer Jonathan Papelbon, who needed some rest) stymied the Yankees for the rest of the game.
But the real story of this game?
Jacoby Ellsbury STOLE HOME! I would put the video up here but MLB will just yank it off YouTube, so... you should be able to find it quite easily in other places. :-)
In any case, with a 2-1 score in the bottom of the 5th, Andy Pettite pitching to J.D. Drew with a 1-0 count and bases loaded, Ellsbury stole home in what has to be one of the craziest plays in this early season. But Ellsbury is so fast, Pettite is a lefty pitching from the stretch, third-baseman Angel Berroa wasn't holding Ellsbury on, and the Yankees were caught completely off-guard. Posada made the tag on Ellsbury just after he had touched the plate, and the Red Sox went up 3-1.
J.D. Drew then doubled to rightfield, scoring David Ortiz, and that was all the offense the Sox needed to SAHHHHWEEEP the New York Yankees in 3 games.
With the Rangers and Yankees losing, Sunday was a very very very good day.
And finally, to top it off:
Monday, April 27, 2009
NHL Playoffs:
Game 6: Anaheim Ducks vs. San Jose Sharks
Hiller if ya hear me!! The Ducks won by a final score of 4-1, taking the series from the NHL-best San Jose Sharks in 6 games, and most importantly, doing it on home ice in front of a rabid crowd at the Honda Center (aka: The Pond).
You knew this was going to be a helluva physical game when 2 seconds into the game, immediately after the puck was dropped, centers Ryan Getzlaf and Joe Thornton went at each other in a fight. Thornton may have won that fight, but he did not win the war.
The Sharks took the 1-0 lead in the middle of the 1st period, making one wonder if Hiller was going to be ok this game. Luckily, that was the only goal that Jonas Hiller let in. Hiller outclassed San Jose goalie Evgeni Nabokov during the entire series. In this game, he stopped 36 of 37 shots. While Hiller has emerged as the top goalie on the Ducks team, with J.S. Giguere now serving as his backup, Nabokov still had far superior statistics with the Sharks during the regular season.
But finally with this 1st round series of the postseason, Jonas Hiller proved that a hot goaltender with a defense that has never looked better (Pronger, Niedermayer, Whitney, Beauchemin, Wisniewski), is going to be able to stop a high-powered offense that outshot Anaheim the entire series by a ridiculous amount.
Despite all that, Jonas Hiller posted two shutouts during the 6 game series.
A fantastic series, a huge upset, and perhaps a sign of things to come. Still, the Ducks have a tough road ahead of them as they'll face the Detroit Red Wings in the Western Conference semis. The Red Wings are well-rested, having easily swept the Columbus Blue Jackets in 4 straight games. But the Ducks could just be the Cinderella team once again.
First, a quick recap of the ALCS and NLCS predictions I made...
http://letsgomets.vox.com/library/post/mlb-2nd-round-playoffs-nlcs-and-alcs-predictions.html
ALCS:
Boston Red Sox vs. Tampa Bay Rays
My prediction: Rays in 7 games
Reality: Rays in 7 games
This didn't necessarily become the home-field advantage series I thought it would, meaning that Tampa would win their 4 at home, Red Sox would win their 3 at Fenway. Boston won Game 1, Tampa won the next 3 games (1 in Tampa, 2 in Boston), Boston won the next two (home and away), and Tampa won the all-important (and thrilling) Game 7.
NLCS:
Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Philadelphia Phillies
My prediction: Dodgers in 6 games
Reality: Phillies in 5 games
I pretty much went over this series in this post: http://letsgomets.vox.com/library/post/never-so-happy-to-be-wrong.html
and there's not much more to be said about it.
So now, we have the World Series matchup which may not be watched by too many people, but it should make for an intriguing matchup either way.
World Series:
Tampa Bay Rays vs. Philadelphia Phillies
In analyzing this matchup, there are a number of factors to take into consideration.
Home-field advantage: Tampa has it, in part due to Scott Kazmir's performance at the All-Star game back in July at Yankee Stadium. Playing at Tropicana Field didn't mean as much in the ALCS as it did in the ALDS, but I still feel that knowing how to play balls off that turf has a big impact. That's not to say the turf will make an iota of difference when guys like Ryan Howard are hitting 400-foot shots over the fences, but the Rays have their own sluggers.
Offense: People keep thinking that Philadelphia has the advantage here with guys like Utley, Howard and Burrell. Meanwhile, Evan Longoria and BJ Upton were pounding the tar off the baseball. Longoria have hit 6 HRs in this year's postseason so far, with BJ Upton hitting 7 bombs in the same timeframe. The rest of the team is hitting too, posting a team SLG of .508 during the ALDS and ALCS. Philadelphia has a team SLG of .431 during their NLDS and NLCS.
So here as well, the advantage goes to Tampa.
Defense: This is tricky. The Tampa Bay defense has been less than stellar during the playoffs, especially during the ALCS, but very good during the regular season. The Phillies have been excellent throughout, so the advantage goes to Philadelphia here.
Starting Pitching: Cole Hamels and then.... Yeah, that's kinda the problem for the Phillies. Brett Myers is hit and miss, and Jamie Moyer has not had a good postseason at all. The Rays have the studs of Matt Garza (ALCS MVP), James Shields, Scott Kazmir and Andy Sonnanstine.
Bullpen: The Phillies have had the best bullpen in the postseason, and the effectiveness of Brad Lidge all season has been the key reason to their success. But Tampa's bullpen has also been very good all season, although very shaky in some of the games against Boston. Still, David Price may prove to be the X factor as the Rays' de facto closer who pitched under unbelievable pressure in Game 7 of the ALCS and prevented Bostom from scoring. Besides, I have to believe that Brad Lidge blows a save at SOME point 2008. Wouldn't the World Series be the best time?
Overall: Tampa just has too much going for them right now. It's not that Philadelphia isn't a good team, but I believe that they are overmatched by the Tampa ballclub. I see the Phillies taking a game in this series, likely one pitched by Cole Hamels, but I think Tampa is going to take this series fairly quickly.
My prediction: Tampa Bay Rays in 5 games.