Monthly Archives: August 2012

A’s are ‘brooming’ marvelous

I’m a happy, broom-waving Oakland A’s fan this evening.

Our 12-7 victory over Cleveland in a day-game on Thursday wasn’t the sharpest game of baseball you’ll ever see in MLB – six walks dished out by Indians pitchers, seven by the A’s – but wins count the same in the standings regardless of how you put them on the board.

The win completed a four-game sweep over the Indians and kept the A’s tied with the Baltimore Orioles for one of the two American League Wild Card spots.

The old adage for success in MLB is to play .500 against the best teams and to beat up on the rest.  The A’s have undoubtedly taken that advice on board.

They swept a three-game series at home against the Indians over the 17-19 August weekend and then followed that with two wins from three against the Minnesota Twins.  An impressive 2-1 series win on the road against the Tampa Bay Rays set up this latest series in Cleveland and before the opener on Monday it had taken on a real sense of importance.

This was the sort of series that could define a season. Drop some games and you could be looking back at the season on 4 October and kick yourself for not beating a clearly beatable team.  Take advantage of a side down on their luck and you give yourself a bit of breathing space that might just turn out to be the deciding factor on the final day of the regular season.

By taking four wins from four – making it six on the spin and 12 W’s from the past 14 available – the A’s can go into a six-game home stand against the Boston Red Sox and Los Angeles Angels with the confidence that only winning baseball can bring.

Whenever I start to think about the A’s playoff chances I always stop myself from getting carried away as there is still plenty of baseball left to be played and I don’t want to feel too disappointed if we ultimately miss out as it will have been an incredible season regardless of how it ends.

But the fact that I can worry about a potential playoff disappointment is an unexpectedly wonderful position to be in as we head into September.

BGB Fantasy League 2012 Week Twenty

Three teams have secured their places in the BaseballGB fantasy league championship playoffs. Which managers were celebrating this week?
R
HR
RBI
SB
AVG
OPS
W
SV
K
HLD
ERA
WHIP
Score
The Wright Stuff 33 8 25 5 0.29 0.85 6 2 54 4 2.7 1.05 11
Weston-Super-Sox 26 5 29 2 0.24 0.72 3 0 24 1 6 1.7 1
The Stuff fell one category shy of a clean sweep against the Sox but still confirmed their playoff place. Dunn, Bruce and the Ramirez boys (Aramis and Alxei) carried the load offensively while Wainwright and Scherzer combined for four wins and 31 strikeouts. Holliday and Prado helped the Sox salvage RBIs, and there is hope for the rotation now Brandon McCarthy is back from injury. Despite the defeat, the Sox have also booked their championship playoff place.
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RBI
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HLD
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WHIP
Score
Beck ‘Nams (GB) 30 7 29 6 0.31 0.88 3 6 39 1 3.3 1.12 11
Chatham Anglers 23 5 22 2 0.25 0.73 1 1 38 9 5.4 1.36 1
Beck ‘Nams also won big this wek, defeating the Anglers 11-1. Pagan, Lucroy and Ike Davis sparked an offensive sweep, while Halladay won twice and the closer trio of Putz, Papelbon and Axford each had apair of saves. Ethier and Ruggiano had multi-homer weeks for the Anglers, who racked up an incredible nine holds thanks to Gregerson, Casilla, Benoit and Storen.
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Iron Men 20 4 22 2 0.23 0.62 4 1 37 0 5.3 1.42 1
NE Riverkings 24 7 31 2 0.28 0.79 2 3 37 2 3 1.31 9
The Riverkings defeated Iron Men 9-1, booking their championship playoff place in the process. Heyward hit four homers and swiped a couple of bases, while Grienke helped take care of ERA and WHIP. Gallardo and Lincecum each picked up wins for Iron Men, as did Frieri and Mike Adams.
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HR
RBI
SB
AVG
OPS
W
SV
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HLD
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WHIP
Score
Bonestalkers 17 2 16 5 0.28 0.65 0 0 16 0 4.5 1.86 3
YD33’s 27 7 25 4 0.27 0.78 0 2 23 0 6.1 1.35 7
Six different YD33s batters homered in the 7-3 win against Bonestalkers, with Headley the only player to go deep more than once. Wilhelmsen had a couple of saves and Hochevar racked up double-digit strikeouts. Maybin and Ianetta helped Bonestalkers take steals and average.
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SWAT* 23 6 24 8 0.25 0.72 3 5 49 1 1.7 0.92 7
daebhid2 34 6 36 4 0.3 0.84 2 0 24 0 1.8 1.2 4
A pitching sweep saw SWAT defeat daebhid2. Kershaw was the start starter with a win and 18 strikeouts while Reed and Jim Johnson each had two saves. Bourn and Pedroia combined for seven steals. Justin Upton, Gordon and Craig had big weeks with the bat for daebhid2 while Dempster won twice.
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RBI
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AVG
OPS
W
SV
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HLD
ERA
WHIP
Score
stevenston angels 27 4 28 6 0.27 0.69 1 1 35 4 4.4 1.58 7
Richie’s RBI’s 25 4 20 5 0.24 0.66 3 3 26 0 3.2 1.19 4
The Angels slugged their way to a 7-4 win against the RBIs with Rollins and Span the pick of the hitters. Cliff Lee gave the Angels the edge in strikeouts while Thornton had three holds. Weaver and Milone each picked up a win and helped take ERA and WHIP while Soriano and Rodney took care of saves and Aaron Hill had a three-homer week.
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Boyd’s Base On Balls 18 5 20 3 0.26 0.83 3 1 42 2 2.6 1.01 7
Pontypridd Pirates 19 3 19 6 0.25 0.68 4 5 35 1 2.2 1.06 5
The Base On Balls just got the better of the Pirates in a tight matchup. Desmond and Kinsler each ahd multi-homer weeks, while Bumgarner and Verlander combined for 27 strikeouts and a low WHIP. Hamilton was the pick of the Pirate batters, while Buerhle, Hudson and Sale all pitched well and Balfour and Cishek took care of saves.
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HR
RBI
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AVG
OPS
W
SV
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HLD
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Score
Orpington Isotopes 21 2 20 2 0.24 0.63 0 2 39 0 3.7 1.15 3
Ridge Bolts 26 11 29 2 0.32 0.99 0 2 25 5 4 1.59 6
The Bolts dealt my Isotopes a 6-3 loss by taking five offensive categories. Freese, Reyes, Swisher and Ross all had good weeks, but Stanton’s five-homer binge made him the top batter. Price helped my team salvage wins, ERA and WHIP in an otherwise forgettable week.
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HR
RBI
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AVG
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HLD
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The Cheddar Chasers 31 11 34 3 0.32 0.95 2 4 23 1 3.5 1.24 5
Pretzel Vendors 19 2 19 6 0.29 0.7 3 5 28 1 2.4 0.89 6
It was a matchup of two halves as the Vendors squeezed past the Chasers 6-5. The Vendors dominated the pitching categories, with the San Diego duo of Volquez and Richard combining for three wins and 21 strikeouts, while Lopez and Holland took care of saves. Rios had three steals. Offensively, the Chasers took five categories, with Moreland (10 RBIs) and Beltre (five homers) deserving special mentions.
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HR
RBI
SB
AVG
OPS
W
SV
K
HLD
ERA
WHIP
Score
BD Yankees 17 5 20 1 0.22 0.68 2 3 20 1 3.8 1.25 6
tavira expats 29 5 18 5 0.28 0.75 1 0 24 0 5.8 1.28 5
Finally, another tight matchup saw the Yankees narrowly defeat the Expats 6-5. Strasburg, Valverde and K-Rod helped the Yankees take all but one of the pitching categories, while Mauer and Montero made the difference in RBIs. Jeter had a three-homer week for the Expats, while Jay, David Murphy and Maicer Izturis helped take average.

So while the top three in the standings are sure of being in the playoffs, the remaining five championship playoff places are still up for grabs with just two weeks of the regular fantasy season left.

The week 21 matchups are as follows:

Riverkings (1st) v Base On Balls (9th)
Stuff (2nd) v daebhid2 (20th)
Sox (3rd) v Iron Men (8th)
Isotopes (4th) v Chasers (7th)
SWAT (5th) YD33s (15th)
RBIs (6th) v Beck ‘Nams (10th)
Vendors (11th) v Angels (16th)
Anglers (12th) v Yankees (17th)
Bolts (13th) v Pirates (14th)
Bonestalkers (18th) v Expats (19th)

Big games for the Buccos

The time is now for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Think back one month and all the doubters, which amounted to most of us, were beginning to come around to the idea that the Pirates' decent start to the season might amount to something more. Pittsburgh had teased us last year only to fall apart and rack up yet another losing season, so few could be criticised for wanting the Pirates to prove they could last a season before believing in them.

But as time moved on, and games were ticked off, the anticipated collapse started to seem less likely. As with the Baltimore Orioles in the American League, there was only so long you could knock them and ignore the fact that they were continuning to play well.

Just as belief started to build, the Buccos hit a rough patch of form. They went into a crucial series against the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday having lost 12 of their previous 17 games. Despite taking a 2-0 lead, Pittsburgh were defeated 4-3 and dropped to three games behind the Cardinals in the standings.

Two further defeats over the rest of the series and they will be in a hole that, without much in the way of impact players to carry the team for a few days at a time, may be too deep to climb out of.

Two wins and they would have won a big series against a Wild Card rival, reduced their deficit in the standings to just one game and got their form going back in the right direction.

If the Pirates are a genuine playoff contender, now is the time for them to prove it.

Early MLB games on 4 days out of 5

There are MLB games starting before midnight U.K. time on four of the five days this working week.

The early games begin with Daisuke Matsuzaka making his return from injury for the Boston Red Sox against the Kansas City Royals on Monday.

After a lull on Tuesday, we have four early games on Wednesday that all include at least one playoff contender, before five games on Thursday and then a Friday day-game from Wrigley Field between the Chicago Cubs and San Francisco Giants.

ESPN America reverts back to its normal position of showing plenty of live MLB games following the conclusion of the Little League World Series this past weekend. There is no mid-week MLB game on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra this week.

All times are in BST.

Monday 27 August

18.35. Kansas City at Boston (Hochevar – Matsuzaka) *ESPN America

Tuesday 28 August

No early games

Wednesday 29 August

18.05. Toronto at NY Yankees (Villanueva – Sabathia) *ESPN America
20.10. LA Dodgers at Colorado (Capuano – Pomeranz) *MLB.com Free Game of the Day
20.40. Cincinnati at Arizona (Latos – Corbin)
23.35. Atlanta at San Diego (Hanson – Stults)

Thursday 30 August

17.05. Oakland at Cleveland (Parker – Masterson)
17.35. Chicago White Sox at Baltimore (Quintana – Britton)
18.05. NY Mets at Philadelphia (Niese – Kendrick) *ESPN America
18.10. Seattle at Minnesota (Beavan – Duensing)
19.20. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs (Marcum – Raley)

Friday 31 August

19.20. San Francisco at Chicago Cubs (Bumgarner – Volstad) *ESPN America

All of these games are available to watch live via the MLB.TV subscription at MLB.com.  The early games being shown on ESPN America are highlighted above, while the full ESPN/ESPN America schedule can be found on their website.  BBC 5 Live Sports Extra can be found on digital radio, digital TV and on the BBC.co.uk website (coverage on the website is only available to UK residents). The complete schedule for this week’s MLB games can be found on MLB.com.

All eyes and ears on the Dodgers

The Sunday evening MLB game on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra focuses on the Los Angeles Dodgers, which is only fitting as they are the centre of attention right now.

Their rumoured blockbuster trade with the Boston Red Sox was completed on Saturday and new recruit Adrian Gonzalez made an instant impact by launching a three-run homer in his first Dodger at-bat later in the day.

The Dodgers went on to win their game against the Miami Marlins 8-2 and they will go for the three-game series sweep today. The BBC’s coverage begins at 21.00 and Nat Coombs and Josh Chetwynd will have plenty to discuss on top of the in-game action.

Los Angeles currently trail the San Francisco Giants by two games in the NL West and if the Dodgers can get the brooms out then that gap will close to 1.5 games before the Giants face the Atlanta Braves in the ESPN Sunday Night Baseball game. The Giants won the first two games of the four-game series before Jason Heyward’s three-run shot off Madison Bumgarner helped the Braves claw back one game yesterday.

Two Tims – Hudson and Lincecum – will take to the mound in the series finale.

All times are in BST.

18.05. NY Yankees at Cleveland (Garcia – Jimenez)
18.05. LA Angels at Detroit (Santana – Scherzer)
18.10. St. Louis at Cincinnati (Wainwright – Bailey)
18.10. Houston at NY Mets (Harrell – Hefner)
18.35. Toronto at Baltimore (Alvarez – Tillman)
18.35. Kansas City at Boston (Smith – Doubront)
18.35. Washington at Philadelphia (Zimmermann – Lee)
18.35. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (Rogers – Bedard)
19.10. Seattle at Chicago White Sox (Millwood – Floyd)
19.20. Colorado at Chicago Cubs (Chacin – Volstad)
20.05. Minnesota at Texas (De Vries – Feldman)
21.10. Miami at LA Dodgers (Buehrle – Harang) *BBC 5 Live Sports Extra
21.10. San Diego at Arizona (Volquez – Saunders)

01.00. Atlanta at San Francisco (Hudson – Lincecum) *ESPN America

Elsewhere, the Detroit Tigers rallied from a 3-0 deficit to even up their series with the Los Angeles Angels yesterday. The much-improved Ervin Santana will look to continue his recent upturn in form against Max Scherzer and the Tigers today. Detroit need a win to remain close to the Chicago White Sox – who have won five in a row – in the AL Central and both the Tigers and Angels will want to tale advantage of fellow Wild Card hunters the Oakland A’s and Tampa Bay Rays having a very rare Sunday off.

There’s also an excellent game in prospect at the Great American Ballpark. The St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds have shared the first two games of their series and the finale should be well worth watching with Adam Wainwright being in scintillating form for the Cards.

All of these games are available to watch live via the MLB.TV subscription at MLB.com. BBC 5 Live Sports Extra can be found on digital radio, digital TV and on the BBC.co.uk website (coverage on the website is only available to UK residents).

Six early games on Saturday

We’ve got six games starting before midnight U.K. time today, scheduled as two sets of three games.

ESPN America is concentrating on the Little League World Series this evening, before showing the Mariners-White Sox game from midnight.

All times are in BST.

18.05. Colorado at Chicago Cubs (White – Raley)
18.10. Houston at NY Mets (Abad – Dickey)
18.10. Oakland at Tampa Bay (McCarthy – Hellickson)
21.05. Minnesota at Texas (Duensing – Dempster)
21.05. St. Louis at Cincinnati (Garcia – Leake)
21.05. Atlanta at San Francisco (Minor vs Bumgarner)

The Giants have won their past five games to take a three-game lead over the Dodgers in the NL West. Madison Bumgarner returns to the mound today against the Braves after coming out on top in an excellent pitching duel with Clayton Kershaw on Monday.

The Cardinals have won four straight including the opening game of this big series with the Reds, meanwhile the Mets have lost six in a row and will be hoping they can provide R.A. Dickey with some run support against the Astros.

The A’s and Rays are in the unusual position of playing a series finale on a Saturday, as the three-game series was scheduled from Thursday to Saturday with Tropicana Field hosting a Republican National Convention tomorrow. The series is tied 1-1 after the A’s 5-4 victory on Friday night. Brandon McCarthy will be trying to rebound from a poor 3.1 inning display against the Twins on Monday.

All of these games are available to watch live via the MLB.TV subscription at MLB.com. The full schedule for today’s games can be found on MLB.com.

Dodgers rolling the dice

Could the Boston Red Sox and Los Angeles Dodgers really be close to a deal that would see Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett and Carl Crawford heading to the NL West?

The idea would be laughed off as a crazy piece of internet speculation concocted by someone with too much time on their hands were it not being reported by so many well-informed news sources, not least MLB.com.

This blockbuster deal really could be close to happening.

It would come as welcome relief in Boston.  A poisonous atmosphere has developed around the team over the past 12 months and only drastic changes – clear statements of intent to make a break from the recent past – will allow them to regroup.

It didn’t appear likely that any team would take on Beckett – pitching poorly, a terrible clubhouse reputation (deserved or not) and owed more than $31m over the next two seasons – or Carl Crawford – just undergone Tommy John surgery and still with five years left on his major mistake of a seven-year contract – let alone both of them.

Luckily for the Red Sox, the new ownership group behind the Dodgers has cash to burn and a fierce desire to make an immediate impact on a fanbase left chastened by the risible actions of the previous owner Frank McCourt.

L.A. are happy to add Gonzalez, a major upgrade on current first baseman James Loney (who was going to be jettisoned at the end of the season), to the team even if that means taking flyers on Crawford providing some useful contributions once he returns from surgery – which I think he will do, even if they won’t be worth the money he’ll be paid – and Beckett potentially finding some good form from somewhere.

How John Henry must wish his other major sports team, Liverpool FC, could find a similar willing deal partner for Andy Carroll. The pony-tailed lump will be as useful as a chocolate teapot in Brendan Rogers’ style of play but even the more-money-than-sense QPR don’t appear to be ready to offer Liverpool a deal that would see them taking too big a hit on their insane £35m outlay.

This isn’t quite a madder-than-QPR deal by the Dodgers. They are still in contention for a playoff place this season, despite being swept by the Giants this week, and the significant revenue streams coming into the organization mean they will be able to absorb the cost of the deal even if it doesn’t turn out particularly well.

Clearly there is a chance that this won’t work out well as Beckett has looked lost for a while now and Crawford won’t provide any immediate dividends, so even if Gonzalez once again excels for an NL West team playing in a pitcher-friendly park, as he did in San Diego, those contributions might not be enough to make for a decent return on the investment.

Beckett and Gonzalez also have been two of the most prominent names involved in the clubhouse problems at Fenway, as reported by the Boston press, at least. The Dodgers were willing to take on malcontent Hanley Ramirez earlier this season and potentially they may be creating a west coast version of the Bronx Zoo, with drama and controversy becoming part of a daily Dodgers soap opera.

This is one potential trade that fully merits the term ‘blockbuster’ and it will be fascinating to see how it turns out for the Dodgers if it is completed over the weekend.

Baseball finals offer ideal chance for late-season photography

The British Baseball Photography Competition (BBPC; run in conjunction with Project COBB Photography) is accepting entries till the end of September, but with photographic opportunities now running out, it’s an excellent time to be capitalising on the last remaining events in the calendar and also to go back through the albums you have from earlier in the season.

So choose your best 24 shots and submit them, via the specially built online entry form, to be in with a chance to scoop the £100 of photographic vouchers on offer as the first prize. The online entry form can be accessed by clicking HERE.

Once we get to October, a shortlist will be drawn up and published for a public vote, and the winner — who will receive £100 in photo vouchers — will be announced in November. For handy hints on how to please the judges, check out this article. Full competition rules can be found by clicking here.

One from the Past: Gaps

This year’s National Baseball Championship will represent the 100th anniversary of, well, nothing. Starting in 1912, British baseball experienced a 22-year period without an official national final. The title deciders that bookended this lapse were both spectacular, at least judging by their 1-run winning margins, but, regardless of that, even the most meagre of British baseball appetite would have been left far from the point of satiation during this period of the game’s history.

Anniversaries are historically easy ways of generating promotional copy for almost anything, but this hiatus does not provide much of a fulcrum with which to lever publicity. If you push down on one end of plank of wood that is lying on the ground, the other end’s coordinates are not going to be overly troubled.

Still, we should at least be reminded to not take what we do have for granted, when the British baseball community gathers in Hertfordshire this bank holiday weekend.

The only event that historians are aware of from the barren field of 1912-1933 that comes close to being considered as a national final is a game that took place in 1926 at Stamford Bridge between Chipping Norton and an all-star team from London. A Daily Mail scribe who reported on the contest branded it the “British baseball championship”, and that is certainly how you’ll find the game, which Chipping Norton won, being remembered if you ever visit Chippy’s local history museum to take in its wonderful baseball exhibition. However, without any evidence of a qualifying structure underpinning the clash it is difficult to see how it can be considered anything more than a novelty. Moreover, the Daily Mail article must be taken with a hypertension-inducing quantity of salt. It adds a fascinating prequel to the Abner Doubleday farce by stating that he “was born at Wootton, near Chipping Norton, and took the game to the United States.” This Doubleday myth was debunked in the American press much more swiftly than the more famous one was.

Finally, if we set our backward-gazing power not to 100 years but rather a solitary season, there is more scope for reflection, as Michael Jones found out in his latest post on the UK American Sports Fans website.

One from the Present: Championships

This article is all about the historical context of the upcoming National Baseball Championships, specifically with regard to the top-tier level that is the National Baseball League. We now know which four teams will contest the finals, and their rosters are being frantically finalized behind the scenes as I write, but what is at stake from a historical angle?

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