MLB Baseball: A Season in Review
Well, that's it. It's time to close the book on the 2007 MLB regular season. I guess I'll just go into my hole and wait for basketball season to start....
Wait, what? You say the Tribe made the playoffs this year? They won the central?!? You mean my sports prediction was right? Again?
Let's see how well I did at the beginning of the season...
American League East |
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Predicted Finish:
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Actual Finish:
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Predicted Performances:
Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: | Actual Performances: Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: |
What I was expecting was for the Red Sox to get off to a hot start, and then eventually choke at the end of the year and cede the division to the Yankees. I was pretty close on that. What I wasn't expecting was that the Blue Jays would be completely inept. They had almost no bearing on how the division turned out at all. All they really did was attempt to play spoiler the last few weeks of the season. To me, that's disgraceful. They had a better rotation and a better bullpen than the Yankees, and their lineup was not outclassed by the Red Sox. I blame John Gibbons, that guy is club house poison.
As for my individual accolades at the beginning of the season, I wasn't totally off there. Though Dice-K didn't end up being the baseball Jesus, he did win the Red Sox 15 games. I ask you, Red Sox fans, where would you be if you didn't have Dice-K? That's correct, twiddling your thumbs with the Blue Jays watching the Tigers play the Yankees in the ALDS.
And I was right about Delmon Young. He had 93 RBI on a team that routinely had sub-Mendoza Line hitters in the lineup. He also blew up on an ump at the end of the year. I'm calling it now, he's the next Albert Belle. Look for him to hit 50 Home Runs and run down St. Petersburg Trick-or-Treaters with his car in the next 10 years.
American League Central |
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Predicted Finish:
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Actual Finish:
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Predicted Performances:
Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: | Actual Performances: Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: |
As both the standings and my heart show, the Indians totally dominated this division in 2007. Yes, I said it would happen, but I'm a homer, I always think it's going to happen. And hey, I called the standings exactly! So, I was a little wrong in my thinking. I thought this was the best division in baseball. It didn't turn out that way.
Looking at the personal accolades, every category is dominated by a Tribesman. Joe Borowski pulled in 45 saves for what was previously the worst bullpen in baseball, Eric Wedge kept his players playing at an extremely high level all year, and if you tell me you saw Fausto Carmona winning 19 games and finishing second in ERA, you're lying.
Only Curtis Granderson keeps the Tribe from sweeping those awards. He batted .302, scored 122 runs, stole 26 bases, hit 23 homers, roped 23 triples, and had 38 doubles. That is a historic season. He joins Jimmy Rollins on the 20-20-20-20 (HRs,2Bs, 3Bs, SBs) list this season along with four others......ever. That's right, only four people in MLB history have ever done that. Props to you Curtis. It's too bad your decrepit veterans couldn't give you a full season to get the Tigers into the playoffs. Granderson also blogged for ESPN.com this year. He wasn't especially insightful, but it's nice to give back to the fans.
American League West |
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Predicted Finish:
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Actual Finish:
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Predicted Performances:
Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: | Actual Performances: Best Offseason: Best Pitcher: Best Hitter: Best Addition: Best Manager: Team to watch: Player to watch: |
Much like I said in this column, I blame ESPN for all of my bad predictions and all of my lack of information concerning this division. I'm not even sure who the best addition is, because I don't know enough about the performances of offseason aquisitions. Why is this? Because of the shameless East Coast Bias and how out of control it has gotten at ESPN this summer. If you consumed 8 hours of ESPN TV, Radio, and website everyday like I did, all you really knew was that the Yankees play in New York and A-Rod wants a new contract this year. That is absolutely unacceptable! That's why I have swore off watching ESPN all together. But that's a whole different column.
As for the Mariners, they were a huge suprise to me and just about everyone else. After reading every major sports prognosticator last spring, I drank the kool-aid and decided the Mariners would be the worst team in the league. So much for that. I'm going to blame ESPN for that one too.
The Indians were fortunate enough to split a 10 game season series with the Angels this year. In those 10 games, I discovered that Mike Scioscia is one of the most refreshing baseball minds in the game. He manufactures runs like nobody's business. He's got all kinds of speed. The Angels steal bases, routinely go from first to third, they grind out infield hits, and stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. Just excellent, agressive, fun baseball. If he didn't have a payroll north of 100 million (which should be the case, considering his talent makeup), I'd say he was manager of the year no problem.
As for Player to Watch, Escobar is deserving after his break out year, but did anyone see Ichiro in the All-Star game? Victor Martinez hit a game-saving homer, but I'd still give the MVP to Ichiro. Did anyone see his first hit? He looped a ball off the end of his bat into the opposite field just out of the reach of David Wright. It's impossible to explain what this tiny, Japanese man can do with a baseaball bat. If you haven't been watching Ichiro over the last 7 years, you've done your self a horrid injustice.
| Awards | |||
| Pre-Season Prediction: | Updated Prediction: | Who Should Win: | |
| American League MVP: | Travis Hafner, Indians | Alex Rodriguez, Yankees | Victor Martinez, Indians |
| American League Cy Young: | Roy Halladay, Blue Jays | Josh Beckett, Red Sox | C.C. Sabathia, Indians |
| American League ROY: | Daisuke Matsuzaka, Red Sox | Dustin Pedroia, Red Sox | Delmon Young, Devil Rays |
| American League Manager of the Year: | Eric Wedge, Indians | Joe Torre, Yankees | Eric Wedge, Indians |
Basically, this section is my protest against the East Coast bias. Does Alex Rodriguez have MVP numbers? Absolutely. Did he have a better season than his other two MVP wins? Unquestionably. Should he do it because he makes $30 million a year? Undoubtedly.
But, let me, for just a moment, make an argument for Victor Martinez. He led the American League Central winning Cleveland Indians in RBI, he hit .356 with runners in scoring position, and he seemed to come up big in situations for the Tribe time and time again.
AND...
He played the most difficult position in baseball and played it well. 32% of base runners were caught stealing. That's a better percentage than Ivan Rodriguez, Jason Varitek, Jorge Posada, and A.J. Pierzynski. He managed a pitching staff that produced two viable Cy Young candidates (Sabathia, Carmona) and the AL Leader in saves (Borowski). A year earlier, the bullpen got only 24 saves and had a 4.66 ERA. This year, the bullpen had 48 saves and a 3.75 ERA. With the exception of Borowski, that bullpen was exactly the same, and Borowski's ERA was 5.07.
On top of all this, the Cleveland Indians went from fourth place in the AL Central last year to being the best team in baseball this year. No player is more responsible for that than Victor Martinez. You can give the MVP to A-Rod if you want, but the Yankees won fewer games than they did in 2006, and they didn't win their division.
I'd love to write about the National League, but it seems that I just don't have that in me. Except to say this: Go Rockies!
I'll leave you with my prediction for the AL Playoffs from the beginning of the season...
American League Playoffs
Divisonal Series
Cleveland Indians over New York Yankees
Boston Red Sox over Los Angeles Angels
American League Championship Series
Boston Red Sox over Cleveland Indians
The Tribe will probably limp into the playoffs in a strong central division which will undoubtedly cannibalize itself. This would match them up against the Yankees whom they'll beat with better pitching in a short series.
The Red Sox will beat the Angels of Anaheim because the AL West representative will probably be the 6th best team in the league.
I like the Sox experience and pitching in a series against Cleveland, which will probably be happy just to be there. Plus, I expect 4 of these games to be in Fenway. Hafner will probably hit 12 doubles off the monster, but the Red Sox will win in the end. You can bet I'll be rooting otherwise.
Tschüs!