by Outta Leftfield » Tue Jan 03, 2006 11:42 pm
Sometimes streaks like this can be explained, at least to some degree, by the makeup of the different divisions.
For example, I had the opposite kind of team from NYC's and Penn's once--bad at both ends but strong in the middle. I had a 1-8 start, then gathered steam, eventually running off streaks of 16 and 20 wins in mid-season. By game 99 I was 67-32, on a pace to win 110 games, but the team stumbled back to mediocrity after that, going 32-31 down the stretch. We still won 99 games--my best year ever-- but it was a season of wild ups and downs.
Perhaps one reason for this pattern was the makeup of the divisions. My home division was extremely strong (three teams well over .500) and the other divisions were weaker. My bad start was partly a result of playing the good teams in my division and my hot middle was partly explained by the weaker teams I was playing in midseason. The .500 ball down the home-stretch (when Blyleven, who'd been unhittable, dropped something like 8 games in a row), was also partly explainable by a return to the tough teams in my division. It's hard to read the strength of the divisions during the first stretch of games, when you're not playing anyone else. But by season's end, it may all become clear. :D