More than six months have passed since making my predictions
for the 2010 Major League Baseball season.
Well, so much for the Seattle Mariners winning the World
Series. The Mariners had the kind of year they would just as soon
forget. They lost 101 games finishing with the worst record in the
American League. I didn’t see the Texas Rangers coming in the AL
West.
However, I did not do so badly with the rest of the AL. I
correctly picked the Minnesota Twins to win the AL Central. Then
again it is not exactly a bold prediction as they have won the
division six out of the last nine seasons. I also correctly picked
the New York Yankees to go to the post-season. Well, if you want to
be technical about it I picked them to win the AL East rather than
the Wild Card. But the Yankees have made the post-season in fifteen
of the past sixteen seasons. Again, not exactly going out on a
limb.
I did go out on a limb for the Boston Red Sox.
Unfortunately, the Sox were impaired by a lot of broken limbs and
other body parts. Jacoby Ellsbury, Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis
spent more time in the infirmary than they did on the field this
season. The Sox did manage 89 wins with names like Ryan Kalish,
Daniel Nava, and Jed Lowrie in the lineup. Alas, the Tampa Bay Rays
were far healthier and won their second AL East crown in three
years.
But it was the National League where I excelled. I picked
the Philadelphia Phillies to win the NL East, the Atlanta Braves to
win the NL Wild Card, the Cincinnati Reds to win the NL Central and
the San Francisco Giants to win the NL West. Ladies and gentlemen,
I went 4-for-4.
Now I know what some of you will say. The Phillies had won
the NL East for three straight years. Picking the Phillies to win a
fourth straight NL East crown was no leap of faith. While the
Braves had not been in the post-season for five years, given this
was Bobby Cox’s
last shot it wasn’t a huge stretch of the imagination to pick
them. The Giants were also not an outrageous pick. They have the
pitching led by two time NL Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum. It
was simply a question of whether they would hit and once they
acquired Pat Burrell and then called up Buster Posey from the
minors they did.
Unfortunately the San Diego Padres did not hit. In fact,
the only hitting the Padres did was when their pitching hit the
wall in late August. They would embark on an untimely ten game
losing streak en route to losing 23 of their last 37 games. As for
me, I thought the Padres would improve in 2010 and picked them to
finish third in the NL West. I am sure that in spring training the
Padres would have been happy to finish in third. Instead, they go
home to a bitter winter with a second place finish after having led
the division for nearly the entire season.
But picking the Cincinnati Reds to win the NL Central in
2010? At the risk of speaking immodestly, that took chutzpah. After
all, the Reds haven’t been in the post-season since 1995 and
haven’t had a winning record since 2000.
When looking at the pre-season predictions of the baseball
writers at Sports Illustrated, they almost unanimously
picked the St. Louis Cardinals to repeat as champions of the NL
Central. And who could blame them? With a lineup led by three-time
NL MVP Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday and a starting rotation led
by Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright, how could they
lose?
Yet there was one baseball writer at Sports
Illustrated who went against the grain. Cliff Corcoran also
picked the Reds to win the NL Central. In fact, Corcoran and I were
almost in simpatico with our NL picks with the exception of the NL
West (he picked the Los Angeles Dodgers.)
I must also give
Tyler Kepner of the New York Times credit as he too
put the Reds atop the NL Central. Kepner wrote, “Joey Votto is a
star, and Jay Bruce has a chance to be a difference-maker.” Well,
the Canadian born Votto will very likely win the NL MVP. As for
Bruce, he sure
made a difference.
So why did I like the fabulous Dusty Baker’s boys? Votto?
Bruce? Was it Bronson Arroyo anchoring the starting rotation? How
about Francisco Cordero in the pen? No. It’s Orlando Cabrera. I
knew the Reds truly had a shot when they signed the Colombian-born
shortstop to a one-year contract last February. It was the moment I
saw Red.
Now Cabrera’s numbers in 2010 weren’t earth shattering. He
finished
the season with a .263 batting average with 4 homeruns and 42
RBI. He also missed
nearly 40 games this season due to a strained oblique muscle.
Despite his modest statistics and missing more than a month of
action, Cabrera has a knack for being on winning teams. After
nearly eight seasons with the Montreal Expos, Cabrera was traded to
the Red Sox during 2004 season and would earn a World Series ring.
Since then, Cabrera has made it to the post-season in five of the
past six seasons — twice with the Angels, once with the White Sox,
once with the Twins, and now with Cincinnati. If the Reds decline
to offer Cabrera a contract for 2011 someone is sure going to sign
him. With Orlando Cabrera on your team there is a good chance your
team will play baseball in October.
So what are the Reds chances this October? Sorry, I have
the Phillies winning the NLDS in four.
Doctor Right| 10.6.10 @ 8:34AM
Baseball...
......
Tom Corry| 10.6.10 @ 10:48AM
The Reds will be Philly in 4!
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 1:45PM
The Fightin's Halladay , Oswalt & Hamels should handle Cinci .
LarryK| 10.6.10 @ 9:11AM
The Cards lost the NL Central because Franklin is a lousy closer. Also, outside of Pujols and Holliday, everyday lineup not really that good. They're in the mix every yr for two reasons - Pujols and Tony LaRussa. Hope both of them can hang on in StL for another decade!
Freddy| 10.6.10 @ 9:27AM
LarryK, this past 2nd half has been downright painful to watch. I agree about Franklin. But where were the bats? Nowhere! If STL had won just a handfull of those 1 run games they lost, the picture would be very different
Waterbury| 10.6.10 @ 11:57AM
I used to be indifferent to baseball,but having been long exposed to Red Socks fans, I have a feeling like poison ivy. Any year the Sox lose is a good year!
Frank Drackman | 10.6.10 @ 12:21PM
Sparky Anderson would be turning over in his grave if he could see the way today's players "Wear" the Uniform, what with the Pajama Style Pants Legs, and Hat Bills flatter than Nebraska...
Oh for the days of 140lb shortstops like Mark Belanger who would smoke 1/2 a pack of Luckys before the 7th inning stretch, Pitchers who would nail you in the earhole with a 97mph fastball for just hitting a loud foul ball, and Pete Rose decleating Catcher Ray Fosse in AN ALLSTAR GAME!!!!!
Fosse was never the same after that...
Frank "Billy Martin Rules!" Drackman
Aaron Goldstein | 10.6.10 @ 1:14PM
Sparky Anderson might be rolling over but not in a grave. He is very much alive.
Frank Drackman | 10.6.10 @ 3:54PM
Really??? he seemed old as dirt when I saw his Reds totally emasculate the Dodgers in a July 1976 4 game series...must be the white hair...
Aaron Goldstein | 10.6.10 @ 4:55PM
Yes, it is the gray. Sparky Anderson became manager of the Cincinnati Reds in 1970 at the age of 36 and took them to a National League pennant.
PCC| 10.6.10 @ 5:44PM
Let's not extol the virtues of Mark Belanger's smoking addiction. He died of lung cancer.
Frank Drackman | 10.6.10 @ 12:33PM
Oh yeah, Braves over Yanks in 6
Maria| 10.6.10 @ 5:04PM
H 2 0 !! Phighten Phils on their way to the World Series.
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 5:24PM
Victorino scores on Sac Fly . 1-0 Phightin's , bottom of 1st .
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 5:49PM
Phighten's Halladay drives in Ruiz .In the bottom of 2nd .Phightin's 2-0 .
Volquez strugglin' ,47 pitches already .
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 6:02PM
Phightin's up 4-0 after 2 .
Rainin'
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 7:36PM
Bottom of eighth , 4-0 Phightin's . Halladay has a No Hitter goin' into ninth .
Tim*| 10.6.10 @ 7:47PM
Halladay throws a No Hitter . Phightin's Win 4-0 .