Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Underdog Dodgers Can Make the Show
In a move comparable to the junior varsity coach who cut Michael Jordan, the Yankees last off-season gave Torre an unacceptable offer and let him go.
Mariano Rivera and Jorge Posada claimed they’d leave the Yankees too if he left. They sold out and resigned. Torre on the other hand, as always, stood tall.
Now, he will be standing at the top of the dugout at Dodger Stadium managing the Los Angeles Dodgers to the World Series
Though they enter the playoffs as a long shot, the Dodgers strong rotation, solid bullpen and dred-locked left fielder will carry the Dodgers past the Chicago Cubs in the National League Division Series.
Starting pitcher Derek Lowe is 6-1 in his last 10 starts with a 1.27 earned run average and starter Chad Billingsley has 16 wins, 199 strikeouts and a team low 3.14 ERA. The addition of future hall of famer Greg Maddux gives the Dodgers rotation depth and experience.
The Dodgers bullpen has four relievers with an earned run average under four and a now-healthy closer Tasaki Saito.
Jonathan Broxton and Joe Biemel give the Dodgers the edge. This righty, lefty combo is reminiscent of the way Torre used Jeff Nelson and Mike Stanton in the Yankees World Series victories in the late 90s.
As for the Cubs, Ryan Dempster has been consistent but that has not been the case with the rest of the rotation or bullpen.
Carlos Zambrano threw a no-hitter, then didn’t make it out of the fourth inning his next two starts. Ted Lilly has given up 32 home runs this season and outside of Carlos Marmol, getting the ball to first-year closer Kerry wood has been difficult at times.
The Cubs weak and inexperienced ’pen does not have a shut-down left handed pitcher to stop Dodger sluggers Andre Ethier and James Loney from getting on base in the late innings.
As for the Cubs lineup, last year against the Arizona Diamondbacks in round one, Chicago’s heavy hitters were contained and Arizona took the best-of-five series.
Beside pitching, what tips the scale for the Dodgers is the trade-deadline acquisition of Manny Ramirez.
In 53 games with the Dodgers Ramirez hit .396 with 17 home runs and 53 runs batted in. But more importantly, Ramirez has 24 career playoff home runs, two world series championships and had a .508 on base percentage in the 2007 playoffs.
For Torre, working with the former Red Sock Ramirez must feel like Republicans getting support from former Democrat turned Independent Joe Lieberman, a little strange, but beneficial none the less.
On the other side of the bracket, the Philadelphia Phillies and Milwaukee Brewers will face off in a series likely to set NLDS records for home runs.
C.C. Sabathia has dominated since being traded to the Brewers, but struggled in his playoff past. In four playoff starts, he has a 7.17 earned run average.
The Phillies starting rotation is weaker, but lefty J.C. Romero and closer Brad Lidge have been the kind of stoppers that the Brewers lack. Romero allowed just 41 hits in 59 innings and Lidge did not blow a save in all of 2008.
Though the Phillies will likely win the division series, hitting doesn’t get you to the world series, just ask the Yankees.
The Dodgers swept the Phillies in late August by shutting down the left handed power hitters Ryan Howard and Chase Utley.
Twenty years after the Dodgers won the world series under Tommy Lasorda, Joe Torre will lead them back. All while Hank Steinbrenner sits on his pinstripe throne pouting behind his shades.
This is what baseball is about!
From Bucky Dent to well, Bucky Dent, these crucial one game/do-or-die/heart wrenching season makers can lift the team to the playoffs or well end the season one day later.
Though I always loved the feel of that crucial one game. It helps define which team is truly ready and which players can step up to the plate and make those critical plays. Alexei Ramirez showed that last night. Who knows maybe Denard Spann will be it tonight.
Say Sez: "I was the Red Sox bullpen catcher in '78. Man, they have some really good chowder in Boston."
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Baseball Regular Season Wrap up
Today marks the last day of regular season play in baseball and it’s great to reflect on how amazing of a year it has been. We’ve seen dominance from the usual suspects, careers develop and standings look like a contrast from the normal.
Yesterday we saw the dominance of Johan Santana pitching a complete game three hitter to keep the Mets in the playoff hunt. This guy went from small market to large market and did not suffer a lapse in his ability, truly showing off his stuff. Speaking of pitching in a not so talk about local in the north, Roy Halladay is going to lose the Cy Young to Cliff Lee. Halladay is working so many complete games and just shuts down every offense powerhouse, but he suffers from playing on a team that does not have it to be a playoff team in the AL East.
That brings us to Cliff Lee, who will win the Cy Young, hands down. He went from being a mediocre 3-4 starter on what should have been a pennant contender to being an ace on a collapsing AL Central team looking to stay above five hundred. Due to an intense off season work out schedule and hunting wild animals, he is in amazing shape and posting up the stats, winning 22 games.
The greatest thing about this season has got to be the teams going to the playoffs. For the first time since 1993 (well 1994 since there were no playoffs) the Yankees will not be in October. So since 2000, there will be another year with no Yankee World Series wins. It is so sweet, because its nothing against the players, it’s their fans. They have the dumbest/ignorant/self-righteous/warped fans in the world of organized sport. Boastful hockey parents and soccer moms are better informed than Yankee fans.
Pedroia being tops amongst
The Sox are back in the playoffs. Honestly this team is as good as last year, while not having Manny being Manny. These are 25 guys who are just out there to win, a great feeling for those paranoid
Paranoid, but not in a sadistic way, Cub fans won the division again. It’s nice to see Pinella doing a great job with that team, especially with all the expectations placed on Fukudome. Even with Fukudome not playing as well, everyone else has stepped up.
This year has been an amazing ride.
Sal Says: “I was the starting tailback for the 1999 San Francisco 49ers.”
A Legend in Lost (1925-2008)
Saturday was quite a day for College Football. Lots of upsets that should scramble the BCS, but the day seemed a bit out of place. The world of sports seemed less manly.
This may be a website dedicated to sports, but I think this person falls somewhere in that category. Paul Newman passing away took something away from sports or rather sporting men.
Apart from his birth in Shaker’s Heights,
When Newman retired from films he spent time racing (quite manly) and made great food products (new, modern manly), while he was married to one broad for many years. Oh did I mention he was from
In all serious, we lost someone who helped define what the twentieth century man was. Newman was cool, handsome, smart and had all around talent. He was also smart by despising the
Sal Says: “I went as Paul Newman for Halloween 1960-1974,1976-88. I went as Roger Moore in ’75.”