BaseballGB Fantasy League – Week Seven

BgbFantasyHeadlineWelcome to our weekly round-up of the BaseballGB Fantasy League competition.  This is a mixed Head-2-Head league involving BGB writers and readers. 

There are fourteen teams who pair up in different combinations each week, making for seven match-ups in any given week. The teams battle over twelve statistical categories, gaining one point for each category they win.  All the points are carried over into the season league table at the end of the weekly match-ups. The top six teams with the most points at the end of the fantasy season will go on to the playoffs during the last three weeks of September. 

SWAT were the victors in the inaugural BGB Fantasy League last year.  Will they retain their title in 2010, or will a new champion emerge?

With Mark being away this week, it falls to me to lend my less-than-expert eye over the past week’s round of fantasy baseball action.  Continue reading

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: Going on a run

WhgbHlSqThe confounding nature of the MLB season has yet again been preoccupying my mind.

It’s the schedule that does it.  There’s something endlessly captivating about the way teams play virtually every day.  Previously I’ve focused on the optimistic effect that this can have: allowing teams to write off a bad loss with the knowledge that they can turn things around the following day.  However, the MLB season doesn’t only allow a team to change its fortunes on any given day.  It also allows teams to carry forward their momentum in a way that no other sport can match.

Whether that is a positive or a negative depends on which way your momentum is heading.  Continue reading

Interleague Play & The Marmite Effect: 63 Years In The Making

Interleague play once again arrived and with it the heated discussion between fans over the pros and cons of Interleague matchups.

MLB Interleague Logo

MLB Interleague Logo

While the official interleague play has had a relatively short life (starting in 1997) compared to rest of the MLB history, ever since its conception it has caused a “Marmite Effect” on fans with people either ‘loving it’ or ‘hating it’.

1930s To The 1950s

The history of Interleague play is quite interesting. As I said the current system has only being going since the 1997 season. The initial concept however dates back to August 1933 when William Veeck Sr. of the Cubs suggested the idea. He came up with the plan during the middle of a 4-year slump in attendance due to the Depression. When he died In October of that year, the plan died with him and the idea was not revisited for another 20 years until 1953.

Another Veeck instigated it, this time Bill Veeck was trying to save the St Louis Browns from closure when he suggested a 32 game schedule. This motion was doomed from the start as the rest of the American League teams wanted Veeck out.

It was then a protégé of Veeck a man called Hank Greenburg from the Indians who next raised the idea. He tried both in 1954 and 1956 but the idea was shot down by the rest of the American League and consequently was never voted on by the National League teams.

In 1959, the Interleague concept started to get some traction by getting the entire support of both leagues. Calvin Griffith wanted to move the Washington Senators to Minneapolis but this was a no starter due to political reasons. The American League proposed an alternative plan with a one-team expansion in each league. This would have seen Minneapolis added to the American League. The New York franchise would return to the National League. Then the idea would have seen interleague play between leagues, but in the National League in the end said no.

1960s To The 1970s

In 1960, the National League approved an expansion to New York and Houston for the 1962 season. The American league then proposed to move the Senators to the Minnesota, replace them with a new expansion club in Washington, and place a second expansion team in Los Angeles for the 1961 season. The Dodgers objected to the new team in Los Angeles and the American League went back to the idea of 9 teams in each league and interleague play, however the National League remained with their original idea and the Interleague plan was abounded and Dodgers backed down after a payment of $550,000 in compensation was made.

In 1962, Commissioner Ford Frick proposed an interleague schedule but the National League blocked the idea.  After that, the plans remained dormant until 1973.

In 1973 the American League adopted the designated hitter rule and at the same time approved of the idea of Interleague play but the National League once again voted no. This meant that the current commissioner at the time Bowie Kuhn (who supported the idea) refused to cast the deciding vote and instead created a committee to look into the issue.

In 1975 and 1976 the American League once again tried to get the concept off the ground but lots of questions of franchise movements  (San Francisco was being threatened with a move to Toronto) and National League refusing to add a 13th team meant that no interleague schedule could work. In the end, the American League added a franchise in Toronto and San Francisco stayed where they were.

1980s to 1990s

In 1983 there was a brief discussion between CBS and MLB over a series of Interleague games on a Thursday night but this came to no fruition.

Then we move all the way to 1993 and the teams took an informal vote with the owners approving the concept of a realigning of the divisions and having 10-20 interleague games per year.

On January 18th 1996, the owners adopted interleague play for the 1997 season. The Eastern, Central and Western Division clubs played each other with the designated hitter being used in the American League cities.

That entire concept from its initial creation to the first game of Interleague play took 63 years but interestingly the original reason behind the concept (to improve game attendance) still holds true as attendance figures increases during Interleague play.

Interleague play provides an opportunity to provide some interesting matchups for fans of the game and I always find Interleague play interesting.  What do you like about Interleague play?

Saturday’s early MLB games: Interleague play

Interleague play in MLB is not liked by all.  Traditionalists hark back to the days when the only time American and National League teams met was in the World Series.  Watching interleague games has now become a routine part of the season and the All-Star Game has been a victim of this as seeing a star batter from the AL facing an NL ace pitcher is no longer such a memorable moment.

Add in the potential disputes caused by American League pitchers getting injured while running the bases (the ‘Chien-Ming Wang’ factor) and the impact the games can have on the strength of schedules played by competing Wild Card teams and there are a lot of reasons to say that the negatives of interleague play outweigh the positives.

However, we can put those thoughts to one side right now and just get on with enjoying the games.  There are six early contests today. All times are in BST.

19.05. Florida at Chicago White Sox (Chris Volstad – Gavin Floyd)

Mark Buehrle dominated the Marlins last night, pitching eight shutout innings as the White Sox won 8-0.  Gavin Floyd has had a difficult start to the season, so the question is whether Floyd can be inspired by his teammate or if the Marlins are able to bounce back against a pitcher not quite on his game?

19.15. LA Angels at St. Louis (Scott Kazmir – Kyle Lohse)

Pitcher Brad Penny hit a grand slam yesterday as the Cardinals took the series opener 9-5.  The Angels’ Joel Pineiro struggled badly against his former team, being knocked out after three innings with nine earned runs already against his name.  Reliever Trevor Bell picked up most of the slack (3 scoreless innings pitched) and that effort could be important today as going deep into games has rarely been Scott Kazmir’s strong point.

21.05. San Francisco at Oakland (Matt Cain – Gio Gonzalez)

The A’s won the opening game of the latest Bay Bridge series, getting the better of former Oakland ace Barry Zito in a 6-1 victory.  Both Cain and Gonzalez are in good form so this should be an exciting encounter.

21.05. Baltimore at Washington (Brad Bergesen – Craig Stammen)

The Orioles-Nationals rivalry hasn’t set many pulses racing during its short history, but maybe that will change over the next few years as both teams bring through some talented young players?  A Chris Tillman-Stephen Strasburg match-up would get plenty of attention in the future; Bergesen-Stammen doesn’t have quite the same appeal.  Baltimore won yesterday’s game 5-3.

21.10. Colorado at Kansas City (Jeff Francis – Kyle Davies)

Jeff Francis didn’t get a win in his return from Tommy John surgery last Sunday, but apart from that the day couldn’t have gone much better.  He pitched seven strong innings against Washington and will look to build on that today against the Royals.  Jose Guillen went deep twice last night as the Royals won 9-2.

21.10. Milwaukee at Minnesota (Yovani Gallardo – Kevin Slowey)

The Brewers are in a mess.  A 4-3 win against the Pirates on Thursday snapped a nine-game losing streak, but they immediately turned back to their win-less ways by getting absolutely pounded by the Twins last night 15-3.  Milwaukee were undone last year by poor pitching and yesterday’s game showed things haven’t got any better.  Starter Dave Bush gave up seven runs and retired only one batter and his replacement, Jeff Suppan, gave up a further five runs in 3.2 innings.  The only starter to buck the Brew Crew calamity trend in 2009 was Yovani Gallardo so all hopes rest on him again today.

All the above games can be followed via various resources on MLB.com (Gameday, At Bat with Gameday Audio and MLB.tv). ESPN America is not broadcasting any early games, although they are showing Tigers-Dodgers live from midnight. A complete schedule of MLB games can be found on MLB.com

Web pick of the week: Baseball and Cricket

Web-PickWhile some like to set baseball and cricket against each other, many of us live by the maxim: why enjoy just one great bat-and-ball sport when you can enjoy two?

There are many links between the two sports and some of them will be uncovered in the new exhibition at the MCC Museum at Lord’s Cricket Ground. ‘Swinging Away: How Cricket and Baseball Connect’.  

Judging by the Lord’s website and a BBC Radio 4 Today Programme feature*, it looks like being a fascinating exhibition and one that all baseball fans in the UK should try and get to over the next six months or so.  We’ll be publishing some features about the exhibition in the near future.

The exhibition couldn’t have opened at a better time, coming as it does so soon after England’s glorious ICC World Twenty-20 triumph.  The short form of the game is the version most closely related to baseball and this is something picked up by Yorkshire and England great Geoffrey Boycott in a recent article for the Daily Telegraph:

“Some people still tend to take Twenty20 lightly, but in the last few weeks we have seen how skillful the game has become. It’s basically cricket’s answer to baseball. If you count up the average number of pitches thrown in a baseball match, it comes to around 100 per innings – which isn’t far short of the 120 balls we use in this format.

There are plenty of batsmen who will whack you out of the park if you bowl in the area where they like it. So a lot of thought has to go into the field placings and individual strategies for each opponent.

Just like a baseball pitcher, you are trying to stop them hit a home run, and you often need a Plan B and C as well as a Plan A”.

Meanwhile, another England great, Michael Atherton, stated in a recent column for the Times that a certain baseball book has also had an impact on the England cricket team:

“The ECB has a habit of sweeping its bad news so far under the carpet that it becomes invisible. Who remembers Peter Moores now? But Moores had a minor influence on England’s World Twenty20 victory because it was he who gave Andy Flower a copy of Michael Lewis’s seminal book, Moneyball, which has been at the heart of the England team director’s obsession with the statistical side of the game”.

These comments are a good example of how what’s often considered to be the public perception of North American sports often doesn’t reflect the reality. Most specifically, while some may try and dismiss baseball as glorified rounders and American Football as ‘a bunch of softies running around in shoulder pads’ and see them as pale imitations of cricket and rugby, the professionals actually involved in the British equivalents often have an enormous amount of respect and appreciation for the games played across the pond.  Indeed, one of England’s star players in the Twenty-20 tournament, opening batsman and wicket-keeper Craig Kieswetter, may well have drawn on his baseball experience to help his Twenty-20 batting approach. 

Let’s hope that England’s Twenty-20 tournament success and this new Lord’s exhibition help to break down barriers and make more Brits realise that you can love both cricket and baseball and that that two sports are complementary rather than opposing forces.

* (hat tip to Matthew Cranshaw for passing on the Radio 4 link)

British Baseball Beat: Pirates, Piranhas, Trojans and Tigers

bbbHlsqThere was much to look forward to heading into last Sunday’s British baseball league games. 

How would Milldenhall Bulldogs respond from their first losses of the season the previous weekend? Who would get the better of the top of the table clash in AAA-North?  Would Poole Piranhas and Richmond Dragons keep their unbeaten starts to the season going in AA-South and A-South respectively?

Those questions, and many more, were answered during the usual round of intriguing and entertaining games throughout the British Isles.  Continue reading

BaseballGB Fantasy League – Week Six

BgbFantasyHeadlineWelcome to our weekly round-up of the BaseballGB Fantasy League competition.  This is a mixed Head-2-Head league involving BGB writers and readers. 

There are fourteen teams who pair up in different combinations each week, making for seven match-ups in any given week. The teams battle over twelve statistical categories, gaining one point for each category they win.  All the points are carried over into the season league table at the end of the weekly match-ups. The top six teams with the most points at the end of the fantasy season will go on to the playoffs during the last three weeks of September. 

SWAT were the victors in the inaugural BGB Fantasy League last year.  Will they retain their title in 2010, or will a new champion emerge?

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With last week’s results leaving plenty of teams bunched together, which sides would break free of the pack and try to challenge JJ at the top?  Continue reading

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: Hillman heads to the hills

WhgbHlSqBeyond the basic nine innings of play, any baseball game carries with it many storylines.  Some are obvious to the onlooker; some only become apparent once the action has come to a halt.

As I watched Kansas City Royals closer Joakim Soria pitching in the ninth inning with a 6-4 lead against the Cleveland Indians on Thursday, there was a sense that the potential victory would be worth more to the team than just an extra ‘1’ in the win column.  A demoralising seven-game losing streak needed to be snapped and reigning Cy Young winner Zack Greinke was in line for his first win of the 2010 season at the eighth attempt.

So when Soria threw a perfect pitch on a 3-2 count to Austin Kearns, knee high on the outside corner, only for the home plate umpire to mystifyingly call it a ball, manager Trey Hillman’s show of disapproval in the dugout was entirely understandable.  The game should have been over; instead Jhonny Peralta was stepping up to the plate as the potential tying run. It’s the kind of thing you come to expect when things are going against you and things had been going against the Royals for a long time. 

Too long for Hillman.  Continue reading

The MLB Fortnight

MlbFortnightIt’s been an eventful couple of weeks in the Major Leagues. As the divisional races have begun to settle down, there’s been some truly memorable pitching achievements this past fortnight, none more so than Dallas Braden of the Oakland A’s pitching only the 19th ever perfect game last Sunday.

In the AL East, Tampa Bay now just have a single game advantage over the New York Yankees (and that might change by the end of the day). The Rays are still an MLB-best 25-11 with series victories over Kansas and Seattle last week and a sweep of the Angels this week. Tampa Bay were yet again the victims of a perfect game, this time from Dallas Braden. Readers may recall that they were also at the hands of Mark Buehrle’s perfect effort in 2009. The New York Yankees continue to be mostly dominant. Despite dropping three games at Detroit (including being shut-out twice), it was only their second series loss of the year. Meanwhile, Toronto are surging with strong performances over Texas this weekend so far, and mastery of AL Central foes last week. Boston have improved too, a four-game sweep of the Angels a highlight for them last week, and Baltimore are playing better as well, splitting a four-game series at Minnesota before taking two of three from Seattle.

The Phillies currently hold a three game lead over the Washington Nationals in the NL East. Starting pitcher Jamie Moyer claimed most of the headlines recently when he became the oldest pitcher, at 47, to throw a complete game shutout on Friday 7th May, however Brad Lidge returning to the DL won’t be pleasing news to most fans. The Nationals have stumbled against the Rockies this weekend, but consecutive series victories over their three other divisional foes (Marlins, Mets and Braves) have kept them well in touch with the lead. Florida will look to improve on their three-game winning streak today with victory over the Mets, while the Braves, despite a three-game sweep at Milwaukee this week, are still just 5.5 games out of first place, a margin which can be easily overcome this early in the season.

Is the AL Central turning into a two-horse race? Minnesota now holds just a 1.5 game lead on Detroit, who in turn are a massive seven games up over Chicago and Cleveland. The Twins have been stumbling a bit lately, managing only a split over four games with the Orioles last weekend, before succumbing yet again to the Yankees this weekend. With upcoming trips to in-form Toronto and Boston, Minnesota could face more difficulties on the road, and it might be the ideal opportunity for the Tigers to pounce. Both the White Sox and Indians continue to disappoint, and the Kansas City Royals sacked manager Trey Hillman on Thursday, quickly replacing him with Ned Yost, who formerly managed the Brewers from 2003 to 2008. The Royals have responded by showing a little more spark already, and will be going for a series victory over Chicago today.

The NL Central is certainly looking a little more interesting lately. The St. Louis Cardinals have been struggling, though their 21-16 record still sees them at the top of the division. However, for the Cards, a series loss at the Phillies and then a sweep at home by the Astros have allowed Cincinnati to close the gap significantly. The Reds themselves have been surging. They went on a five-game win streak this week, and this included Johnny Cueto dealing a one-hit gem over the Pirates on Tuesday. A victory over St. Louis today could see the Reds out front. The other four teams in the division all possess sub-500 records, however Milwaukee were cheered by Jody Gerut hitting for the cycle last Saturday, and the Cubs were encouraged by rookie Starlin Castro’s seven-RBI debut, despite his struggles in the field back at Wrigley the following days. However, both teams need to win more series if they’re truly going to contend, which will be far more valuable than good individual performances.

The Texas Rangers head the AL West now, with a two game advantage over the Oakland A’s. Texas, who’ll look to avoid a sweep at Toronto today, still managed a four-game sweep of the Royals last week, and though they dropped a series at the A’s, they quickly turned things around when Oakland visited Rangers Stadium this week. After Dallas Braden’s celebrated perfect game last Sunday, the Athletics have stumbled somewhat, losing four straight to drop their record below the .500 mark. Behind them, both the Angels and Mariners have continued to disappoint. Anaheim’s four game sweep in Boston was not pleasant viewing for Halos fans, but at least Hideki Matsui go to knock in his 1,500th league RBI at Seattle last Saturday. The Mariners themselves have gone 3-7 over their last ten, replaced their hitting coach, and allegations of Ken Griffey Jr. sleeping in the team’s dressing room during a game, since repudiated by the team, still haven’t helped Seattle’s poor start to the year.

Finally, out in the NL West, the San Diego Padres have continued to surprise everyone maintaining a 22-14 record at the top of the division, but with the Giants still a mere 1.5 games behind. The Padres swept San Francisco at AT&T Park this week which included Mat Latos taking a perfect game into the sixth on Thursday, before finally finishing up with a one-hit complete game shutout. He even knocked in the game’s only run. Despite being swept, the Giants have rebounded with two victories over the Astros, but it’s the Los Angeles Dodgers who have been the in-form team lately. LA’s win streak is at six to finally bring them over the .500 mark for the year, and it’ll be interesting to see where they go from here. Colorado remain at 18-18 and have been dealing with snow falling at Rockies Stadium in May, while the Diamondbacks have only won two of their last ten games and continue to struggle, despite their offense coming alive against the Braves yesterday afternoon.

Well, that wraps up another eventful couple of weeks in the MLB. Back in a fortnight with more news from the Majors.

Sunday’s early MLB games: Lee-Garza heads the list

While the Phillies and the Brewers fill the ESPN Sunday Night Baseball slot, which once again gives way to the NHL playoffs on ESPN America, the rest of the teams are playing during the daytime in the States.  That leaves us with an impressive selection of Sunday evening games to enjoy from the UK.

The top pitching match-up of the evening sees Cliff Lee making his fourth start for Seattle as the M’s face Matt Garza and the Rays.  Haren-Hudson is a good looking match-up between two former A’s and another ex-Oakland man Barry Zito looks to rebound from his first loss of the season in a home game against the Astros.

The Tigers are due to call up Armando Galarraga from Triple-A to make the start against John Lackey and the Red Sox.  Detroit got a twelve-inning win last night thanks to a bases loaded walk-off walk that tied the series 1-1.  Sergio Mitre will make another spot start for the Yankees, while Jeff Francis may make his long awaited return from Tommy John surgery.  He is listed as the Rockies’ probable pitcher, although that hasn’t been officially confirmed at time of writing.

Finally, spare a thought for the Orioles’ Daniel Hernandez. MLB.com notes that he has lost eleven decisions in a row.  In his attempt to break that sequence, what Hernandez needed was a rousing Baltimore win yesterday to get everyone in a positive mood.  Instead the O’s turned a 2-0 eighth inning lead into a heavy loss by conceding eight runs in the top of the ninth.  Good luck Daniel!

All times are in BST.

18.05. Boston at Detroit (John Lackey – Armando Galarraga)
18.05. Minnesota at NY Yankees (Nick Blackburn – Sergio Mitre)
18.07. Texas at Toronto (Colby Lewis – Brandon Morrow)
18.10. St. Louis at Cincinnati (Brad Penny – Bronson Arroyo)
18.10. NY Mets at Florida (Jon Niese – Ricky Nolasco)
18.35. Cleveland at Baltimore (Jake Westbrook – Daniel Hernandez)
18.35. Arizona at Atlanta (Dan Haren – Tim Hudson)
18.40. Seattle at Tampa Bay (Cliff Lee – Matt Garza)
19.10. Chicago White Sox at Kansas City (Gavin Floyd – Brian Bannister)
19.20. Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs (Ross Ohlendorf – Ted Lilly)
20.10. Washington at Colorado (Scott Olsen – Jeff Francis)
20.35. Oakland at LA Angels (Trevor Cahill – Joel Pineiro)
21.05. LA Dodgers at San Diego (Chad Billingsley – Wade LeBlanc)
21.05. Houston at San Francisco (Brett Myers – Barry Zito)

All the above games can be followed via various resources on MLB.com (Gameday, At Bat with Gameday Audio and MLB.tv).  ESPN America is focusing on the NHL playoffs. A complete schedule of MLB games can be found on MLB.com