- Posts: 1737
- Joined: Wed Dec 21, 2016 10:44 pm
First of all - it can't be said enough - thank you JuicedJC for another fantastic job as commissioner.
Second, here's my Playoffs preview:
One playoff series features the team with the best record, davehaller’s Westworld Jam, against the Wild Card - sphilipp’s Get Your Wings. It figures to be high scoring since Wings finished 1st in runs scored and 6th in pitching while Westworld finished 3rd in hitting and 8th in pitching. Although Nilsson is out with injuries for the first 3 games, I see Wings as the slight favorite here. After Game 42, the Clinton Colts cut Juan Gonzalez despite a tellingly high number of hbp, jaywalker considered adding him, but no one actually picked him up til sphilipp got him for Game 76 and he ended up hitting 99 RBI in little more than half a season. The Wings also have Kevin Mitchell, Ray Langford, Mo Vaughn and last year’s post-season MVP Rob Deer. The Wings pitching is more than formidable with 3 starters ranked in the top 13 pitchers led by Pedro and Denny Martinez with WHIPs of 1.09 and 1.19, respectively. The relief core is also solid with Jeff Shaw and Rob Nen. It’s the kind of team that I look at and wonder how so many top players can fit under the cap. Westworld Jam can keep pace with hitting led by Piazza (1.076 OPS) and Thome and about 90 RBI each from Burnitz, Carl Everett, and (surprisingly) Geronimo Berroa. Another top hitter is the (at least temporarily-healthy) Harold Baines. Where Westworld falls short is pitching and outfield defense. After ace Mike Mussina, there doesn’t appear to be much quality starting pitching, Schilling looks to be on a bad year (5.07 ERA, 1.42 WHIP) and the rest is non-descript at best. The relief staff looks better with Lee Smith and the Gloved One, Mike Jackson, having very solid years. Having Piazza behind the plate doesn’t look to be a problem since the Wings hardly steal (tip of the cap to jaywalker’s experimental roster of all essentially “D”-rated runners who picked up an astonishing 1 steal for the entire season). Hallerose didn’t make this year’s finals but davehaller picked up the mantle of making-the-playoffs-with-a-bad-fielding-outfield as their outfield made a cumulative 95 outs in 155 x-chances.
The other playoff series is between 2016 Tournament Champ Lee300 and the Final’s runner-up of the previous two years Gritch. Lee’s Hammers feature outstanding starting pitching – Maddux, Rijo and Viola, and even 4th starter Pete Harnisch put up decent numbers. Fielding is solid all the way through. Hitting could be the issue for the Hammers. The top RBI guys (98 each) are Matt Williams and Eric Karros. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Eric Karros used on a Strat team. Also, Matt Williams had an early-season injury reveal for a so-so season - I would have cut Williams but Lee’s patience was rewarded with productive hitting to go along with a gold-glove at 3rd. The Hammer’s best hitter is the healthy (but oft-injured) Tim Salmon (.956 OPS). This series is likely to see a lot of steals since neither team has a particularly good catcher. The Hammer’s have four players with double digit steals including speedster Lance Johnson (50 steals in 67 attempts). Gritch has 5 players with double-digit steals. Gritch led the league in steals, which is especially interesting because Gritch is a statistically-sophisticated manager who made the playoffs in the Finals with a 60s team that had the league’s fewest steals. So, I’d be interested to hear what changed his mind about stealing. Gritch’s primary catcher is Greg Zaun who has a +1 arm and a T13 rating – even so, he had only 6 throwing errors for the season – which is proof that T-rating is not very important in selecting a catcher. Nomo is a +4 on holding runners so watch out when Nomo is starting. Other than McGwire (69 hr), the hitting is so-so. The fielding is also good but not great. The pitching is what makes Gritch a special team. Starter Frank Castillo (who?) has a 3.24 ERA, 1.11 WHIP. Stieb, Nomo, and Mark Davis are also probably on excellent years and Sid Fernandez doesn’t have a bad year. The relief staff is stellar. Closer Trevor Hoffman and an injury reveal for a year that is an out on every roll, yet, he has an ERA of 5.42 and WHIP 1.52. For Hoffman the regular season has been an all-time epic underperformance of his card. I’m guessing the post-season will right the ship and Gritch will prevail in a wildly fun series.
Other Comments
I won’t be posting a full league analysis this year because my team started out so poorly. If my team is doing well in the finals, I’ll be analyzing the other teams to see who I might face in the playoffs. But this year, at the halfway point I was 35-46 and 60-76 after 136 games. So, I never thought I had a chance and didn’t look at teams outside my division. My team got lucky at the end winning the last 10 series, going 21-5 to finish the season a respectable 3 games behind the first place Gritch in the Central. I’ll be doing an autopsy on my team and my draft once the players’ years are shown.
Finally, I can’t make a long post without a trade rant, so here goes: djkalle had the smartest first five picks in the draft: Griffey, Alomar, Jeter, Brett Butler, and Gwynn. Roberto Alomar turned out to be on his worst year and was cut – didn’t work out but still a solid pick. Jeter was a steal in the middle of Round 3. The Butler pick was a surprise because he already had Griffey and they both can only play CF. But it made sense because (1) Griffey has one bad year where he needs to be cut and (2) you can trade Butler if you keep Griffey. Butler is an excellent fielder and all five hitting years are basically the same – excellent obp and no power. Gwynn in Round 5 is insane. What was I thinking taking Steve Howe in Round 4 and Wade Boggs early in Round 5 while Gwynn was still on the board? Turns out Gwynn was on a great year, probably not his .394 year but ‘97 when he hit only .372. By the way, Gwynn’s ’97 card is one of the best in the set and can easily carry a team to the Championship. Anyway, Griffey on a great year in CF and ’97 Gwynn in RF – choke on that MFs. Strangely, with those top 5 draft picks djkalle selects Fenway? He’s not even a Sox fan. Ok, back to the trade thing, not surprisingly, several teams could use a great CF, djkalle’s Moondogs happened to have 2 of them, so a trade makes sense – right?? Apparently not because the Moondogs play all season with Butler at DH. Really? Yeah, he’s ideal batting in front of Gwynn, but that’s 5.92 mil for a high obp great runner with no power in Fenway. Butler finished with very Butler-like obp of .412, slg% of .383, and OPS of .795. Albert Belle was available as a free agent. He wasn’t injured and was cut after just 12 games – definitely worth a try in Fenway. And the Moondogs could have gotten something good in return for Butler – maybe some badly needed pitching help. But nooooo, hang onto Butler til the bitter end. People tend to overvalue players on their own team. This year, after stupidly cutting Lenny Webster, I pick up Jim Leyritz and in 20 games he bats .220 with zero homers and zero doubles and one triple (which doesn’t exist on his card) but I’m reluctant to cut Leyritz because I think he could be useful – but I do cut him figuring I could pick him up later. But after he wasn’t on my team anymore I realized there was no way he was worth his salary.