Election Day in Baseball

November 3, 2009 by  
Filed under Fan News

According to my Arizona Diamondbacks wall calendar today is Election Day. Initially I thought they were talking about voting on the Hall of Fame candidates for 2010, but I realized that we were still a month away from that occurring.

The Cy Young, Most Valuable Player, and Rookie of the Year voting has already occurred and we will wait until after the conclusion of the World Series before the winners of those awards will be announced.

It’s not the Roberto Clemente Award or the Hank Aaron Award, both of those have likewise been voted upon and the winners announced. New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter was given the Roberto Clemente Award. He also received the Hank Aaron Award along with first baseman Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals.

So I was curious what election was attributed to this particular day. A quick perusal of the Major League Baseball web site provided me with the answer. From now until Dec. 11, MLB will allow fans to vote for the 2009 This Year in Baseball awards.

There are a series of awards being given: Hitter, Starting Pitcher, Rookie, Manager, Closer, Set-up Man, Defense, Performance, Play, Moment, Oddity, Executive, Unsung Star, and Postseason. With the exception of Postseason each of the categories are now available for voting. Each category has ten choices and you are allowed to select your choice among the nominees.

Considering the poor year the Arizona Diamondbacks had in 2009 it should come as no surprise that the team is sparsely represented among the nominees. In all categories there are only two where the Diamondbacks have an entry.

It is somewhat fitting that Arizona’s first nominee is in the oddity category. There was not a lot that went right for the team in 2009 on the field. In this case the nominee is not even a player but rather a fan at Chase Field.

During a game against the Philadelphia Phillies, a father holding a small child stood up and made a barehanded grab of a foul ball in the Diamond level of Chase Field. Both ball and baby were cradled in the father’s arms.

The second Diamondbacks entry is in the Unsung Star category. Diamondbacks third baseman Mark Reynolds goes up against Jason Bartlett (Tampa Bay), Shin-Soo Choo (Cleveland), Aaron Hill (Toronto), Adam Lind (Toronto), Jayson Werth (Philadelphia), Billy Butler (Kansas City), Nelson Cruz (Texas), Ubaldo Jimenez (Colorado), and Ben Zobrist (Tampa Bay).

Reynolds offensive numbers look very favorable to the other nominees so it will most likely end up being a popularity contest. Given the amount of coverage the Philadelphia Phillies are receiving by being in the World Series, it is my guess that Jayson Werth will be the guy to beat.

So Arizona Diamondbacks fans have their work cut out for them. In times like this I think we should invoke the time-honored tradition of Chicago politics. Vote early and vote often and don’t let being dead deter you from casting at least 10 ballots.

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National League Championship Series

October 15, 2009 by  
Filed under Fan News

Now that the first round of the Major League Baseball playoffs are behind us, I thought I’d check back in and see how well my prognostic skills were doing.  When I made my predictions for the 2009 post season I was clearly hopped up on cough syrup or some sort of delusional medication.

In the National League I completely underestimated the flow of momentum going into the NLDS series.  I mistakenly anticipated that the St. Louis Cardinals, with the two best pitchers in the National League starting the first two games and the NL MVP at first base, would dominate the struggling Los Angeles Dodgers.

Instead it was the Dodgers that took advantage of the Cardinals’ mistakes to sweep the series and move on to the NLCS.  The series really took a turn for Los Angeles in Game Two’s ninth-inning error by Matt Holliday.  I’m not proposing that single play doomed the Cardinals, but had the teams gone to St. Louis tied, one game apiece may have equalized the momentum pendulum.

In my defense, I did successfully predict the Philadelphia Phillies victory over the Colorado Rockies.  I did think it would take five games instead of four, but then again I didn’t anticipate Huston Street flopping like a fish and giving up three runs in the ninth inning of Game Four to lose it.

Tonight the National League Championship Series begins in Los Angeles.  I’m going to give myself a mulligan on the first round and pretend my predictions didn’t really happen.  Hey, it works when I selectively forget to do what my wife told me.  Ok that’s a lie.  I never get away with that, but I doubt the Dodgers will make me sleep on the couch for not believing in them.

The series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Philadelphia Phillies on paper looks like a pairing of closely matched teams.  I have a hunch though that Joe Torre’s boys will make quick work of the Phillies and earn a berth to the World Series, breaking a 21-year drought.

My reasoning is Los Angeles has a better pitching staff especially in the bullpen and in a seven game series the bullpen is exposed more than in a shorter series. I believe the relievers are going to play an important role in this series and if that happens, the Dodgers have a clear advantage.

From a starting pitching perspective the Phillies look stronger, but because Cliff Lee cannot go until Game Three, the Dodgers have the advantage.  Had the Phillies been able to sweep the Rockies and have Lee available to start Game One and potentially have him start in three games of a seven game series, it would be different. 

But that’s all moot now.

The Phillies hitters are swinging the bat much better than their Dodger counterparts, but the Los Angeles pitching staff proved in the divisional series that they are capable of shutting down their opponents’ big bats.

I’m still scratching my head trying to understand how the Dodgers won that first round, especially considering that their offense sputtered at best.  They seemed to get the timely hits.  I can’t believe that the potent Los Angeles offense will continue to struggle through two postseason series, so I am looking for James Loney, Matt Kemp, and Russell Martin to rebound from substandard performances.

On the other side, I think the Phillies will find that the Dodgers pitching staff is a bit harder to square up than the Rockies staff.  As a team the Phillies hit very well in their first series, and they will have to continue that hot streak if they hope to stay with the Dodgers.

From a pitching perspective Cole Hamels and J.A. Happ will need to pitch much better than they did against Colorado.  Not only must they keep their team in the game but they will also need to pitch deep in the game to keep the Philadelphia relievers out of the game if they hope to have any chance.

It is hard to pick against the defending World Champions but this seems to be the Dodgers’ year, and they should overcome the challenges they face and return to the fall classic for the first time in 21 years.

We’ll see if I am any better predicting this round than the last one.  Maybe I should take some cough syrup just so I have an excuse if this pick doesn’t work out for me.

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