Congratulations to the San Francisco Giants, who are World Champions for the first time since moving to the west coast more than 50 years ago. Their last title in New York came in 1954, when Willie Mays made “the catch” that will be played on highlight reels forever. The Giants came unbelievably close to not even making the playoffs this year, but the fans who claimed that watching their team was “torture” are now the happiest fans in baseball.
Atlanta Braves
5 November 2010
8 October 2010
While the fans in Cincinnati, Atlanta, and St. Petersburg may not have appreciated it, nearly every game played so far this postseason has featured a dominant pitching performance. Roy Halladay no-hit the Reds, Tim Lincecum shut out the Braves on just two hits while striking out 14, and C.J. Wilson and Cliff Lee combined to hold the Rays to one run in 13.1 innings. Lee displayed his talents during last year’s World Series, earning both of the Phillies’ wins over the Yankees, but Halladay, Lincecum and Wilson were all making their postseason debuts, and not one of them showed any sign of butterflies.
Posted by David | No comments yet
10 September 2010
Albert Pujols and Joey Votto have been battling each other all year, but Carlos Gonzalez has leap-frogged the front-runners in the Triple Crown race. Gonzalez leads the National League in hitting (.337), is tied with Votto for the league lead with 100 Runs Batted In, and with 32 home runs is just five back of Pujols, two behind Adam Dunn, and tied with Votto and Mark Reynolds. While he may have the best shot at the Triple Crown, I suspect Gonzalez’s home-road splits (.387/.435/.783 at Coors Field, .288/.310/.450 on the road) will keep the voters from naming him the NL MVP.
Continue reading "Another Triple Crown candidate storms to the top"
Posted by David | No comments yet
27 August 2010
Albert Pujols and Joey Votto are having monster seasons. Not only are the sluggers leading their teams in the playoff hunt – the Cardinals are 1.5 games back in the Wild Card race while the Reds lead the NL Central – but Pujols (.321, 34 HR, 93 RBI) and Votto (.326, 31 HR, 90 RBI) are the top two National Leaguers in each of the Triple Crown categories. Both have strong cases for the MVP award, but if either one wins the first Triple Crown since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967, it would be awfully hard for the voters not to choose him as the league’s Most Valuable Player.
Continue reading "Pair of Triple Crown candidates duel it out"
Posted by David | No comments yet
18 June 2010
The hype over Washington Nationals’ phenom Stephen Strasburg has been followed by terrific pitching from the young right-hander, but the Nats’ front office also deserves a lot of credit. In his first three starts, Strasburg has faced the Pirates, the Indians, and the White Sox, all of whom rank near the bottom offensively. While I think Strasburg has a tremendous amount of talent and is going to be a great pitcher for quite some time, I’d like to see how he fares against the heavy-hitting lineups of the Yankees, Reds, and Red Sox.
Continue reading "Nationals handle Strasburg’s schedule ..."
Posted by David | No comments yet
21 May 2010
Julio Franco may be the oldest player in Major League history to hit a home run (he also holds a number of other oldest player records), but Jamie Moyer has established himself as the game’s new Ageless Wonder. In throwing a two-hitter against the Braves on May 7th, the 47-year-old became the oldest player to throw a complete game shutout.
Continue reading "Jamie Moyer: baseball's new Ageless Wonder"
Posted by David | No comments yet
9 April 2010
When the Atlanta Braves announced during the last week of spring training that Jason Heyward had made the big league roster, it made headlines in part because both Stephen Strasburg and Aroldis Chapman were being assigned to the minors. However, after winning the starting right fielder’s job in Atlanta, the 20-year-old phenom wasted no time before impressing the baseball world by launching a three-run home run in his very first major league at-bat. Batting seventh in the lineup behind Chipper Jones, Brian McCann, and others has limited the pressure on the 14th overall pick in the 2007 draft, but before long, you can expect to see Heyward taking his hacks in the cleanup spot.
Posted by David | No comments yet
26 March 2010
Today’s post is brought to you from Toledo, Ohio. With Spring Training wrapping up in just over a week, every team has reason to be hopeful that this will be their year. Though it is widely accepted that exhibition games are meaningless, the Giants should feel good about their 18-7 record this spring, and the Indians are certainly pleased that they have won 13 of their first 19 games. The reigning World Series champion Yankees, meanwhile, can shake off their 9-12 record as rustiness. It may not have the excitement of October, but April is when everyone’s glass is half full; no one has ground to make up or nagging injuries to play through. Every team has a share of first place, and that’s what makes it the most promising time of the year.
Posted by David | No comments yet
15 January 2010
Big news from the Big Unit: 46-year-old Randy Johnson announced his retirement, concluding his career with a record of 303-166, a 3.29 ERA and a 1.17 WHIP. His five Cy Young Awards – one with the Mariners and four in a row with the Diamondbacks – rank him behind only Roger Clemens, and his 4,875 career strikeouts are second only to Nolan Ryan. He was a 10-time All-Star, starting the Midsummer Classic four times – twice for each league. Johnson made history in 2004 when he became the oldest player – at 40 – to throw a perfect game.
Posted by David | No comments yet
4 December 2009
Mark Lemke played second base for the Atlanta Braves in the late eighties and better part of the nineties. He did not hit for
Posted by David | No comments yet
9 October 2009
The 12-inning thriller that was the last regular season game ever played at the Metrodome was exactly what I wanted to see. When the Twins and Tigers played a four-game series in Detroit last week, I found myself rooting for the Twins to close the gap in order to create an exciting finish to the regular season – ideally a one-game playoff. When that happened, I decided it would be great for the city of Detroit to send their team to the playoffs, but what I wanted most was to see a great game. My wish came true when the two teams played a nail-biter that could have gone either way, but eventually sent Minnesota to the postseason. Props to both teams for giving the fans what they deserved.
Continue reading "Twins-Tigers game was exactly what I wanted"
Posted by David | No comments yet
25 September 2009
How ‘bout that?
How about Adam Laroche? Since being traded back to the Braves mid-season, Laroche has slugged .622 to go with his .355 batting average and .426 on-base percentage. In 126 fewer at-bats, Laroche has hit twice as many home runs (12) as did his predecessor, Casey Kotchman. To top it off, Laroche has made just one error in 47 games with Atlanta and boasts a .998 fielding percentage.
Posted by David | No comments yet
14 August 2009
In the last week, baseball fans have been exposed to a number of unfortunate incidents that involved big-name, All-Star players. My thoughts on each of them follow.
Kevin Youkilis charging the mound: Youk let his emotions get the best of him on Tuesday night after getting plunked in the back for the second consecutive night. The Red Sox need Youk’s bat in the lineup and his glove in the field. Now they have neither for five games.
Continue reading "Poor behavior on and off the field is Bad for Ball"
Posted by David | No comments yet
5 June 2009
Posted by David | No comments yet
16 January 2009
A sad day for loyal Braves fans
The longest-tenured member (by far) of the Atlanta Braves has left for greener pastures. Smoltz finishes his Braves career with 210 wins, 154 saves, 53 complete games, 16 shutouts, 3011 strikeouts and a 3.26 E.R.A. in 708 games. He made eight All-Star teams and came in the top 10 in Cy Young voting five times, winning the award in 1996 – the year he won 24 games and, incidentally, the only time he reached 20 victories.
Posted by David | No comments yet
30 September 2008
With the MLB playoffs set to begin, there is a subtle difference in the air compared to start of any other postseason. In the NHL, fans can potentially look forward to a great Canadians/Bruins series that is not only exciting, but has a historical kick to it. Likewise basketball fans always have the chance to see if the Suns can finally get past the Spurs and football fans love seeing the rivalry of the Eagles Vs the City of Philadelphia when the Eagles so much as get tackled for a loss.
Posted by Karol Kudyba | No comments yet
29 July 2008
According to several blogs, including Baseball Digest Daily, Mark Teixeira is headed to the Angels, in exchange for middling 1B Casey Kotchman and minor-league pitcher Stephen Marek, with perhaps others thrown into the mix.
Posted by Street Reporter | 2 comments
So many bloggers and fans out there want the Orioles to make a play for Atlanta first baseman Mark Teixeira, who becomes a free agent at the end of this season. As the Major League trade deadline looms (THIS thursday!), O's fans are surely thinking about this Severna Park native who, in a 102-game total for the Braves this season, has been .283 with 20 home runs, 78 RBI's and an OPS of .902. We could use a little of that, I'd say.
Continue reading "teixeira trade talk (say that three times fast)"
Posted by jess blumberg | No comments yet
26 July 2008
As reported in the stalwart Sports Xchange, the Braves are making moves to their roster that may suggest a possible trade is imminent. First baseman Mark Teixeira is the big name that's been bandied about in baseball, and (except for Brian Fuentes and Matt Holliday, who will either go close to the deadline or not at all) is the Last Man Standing as far as frontline trade candidates go.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
15 July 2008
Posted by Michael Castillo | No comments yet
One of the All-Star Break traditions: Reassessing our predictions from the first half of the season. Some of mine have changed, some have stayed the same—and some were just damn wrong. Living in the West, I will take the contrarian position and roll from west to east in my choices.
Posted by Street Reporter | 3 comments
6 July 2008
Chipper Jones 3B – Atlanta Braves
The now ageless Chipper Jones is trying to accomplish something that is more elusive than Big Brown’s Triple Crown, or Alex Rodriguez’s World Series ring. He is trying to become the first player since Ted Williams in 1941, to hit .400. Many have tried, but all have failed in the 67 years since the milestone was last reached. As of July 5th, the severely slumping Chipper Jones’ batting average was at a futile .385, and as of now, he must hit roughly .418 the rest of the year to qualify for feat, seemingly impossible. But for this 36 year old, it is one challenge that he has never endured, and one that could fully cement himself in Cooperstown, should he conquer the mystique of the .406 batting average that has been frozen in time for 67 years.
Posted by Michael Castillo | No comments yet
25 June 2008
And probably not your own Braves, either. I watched them boot the ball around last night with a long-time Braves fan; three first-inning errors led to three runs, and they never recovered, losing 4-3, in a game without Chipper and a host of others.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
6 June 2008
Someday we will certainly look back on the last few years as some of the best years in baseball, as far as watching some significant milestones being broken. In between Bonds' maligned chase of Aaron and Randy's recent conquering of Clemens' K record, we've seen Frank Thomas, Jim Thome, and ARod all reach the 500-HR plateau, and Sosa reach 600, with Griffey knocking on the same door. Maddux recently won his 350th game, and Glavine won his 300th, and Smoltz recorded his 3000th strikeout just before he went down to a season- (and possibly career-) ending injury, and not long after Pedro reached that same level.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
3 June 2008
I should preface this by saying I'm not a Braves fan and never have been. This is due to many factors, including my dislike of many things Southern (I say this having spent almost 10 years living in Alabama, and several more visiting my parents there), the annoying and insulting idiocy of the Tomahawk Chop and its associated "war cry," the stupid antics of rednecks like John Rocker (and the fans' tolerance of his ignorant ways), as well as their hegemony of the airwaves. Because they were always on TBS, it was hard to avoid the Braves, and in the days before my DirecTV Extra Innings package (AKA "Baseball Heroin") I'd watch the Braves games just to root against them.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
27 March 2008
Atlanta Braves
How much do Tom Glavine and John Smoltz have left?
The Braves figure to be loaded on offense and their pitching could potentially be pretty strong depending on how this pair of 40 year-olds fair this season. Smoltz, who will turn 41 this season, is the safer bet as he has pitched over 200 innings in each season since returning to the starting rotation in 2005, each time with a sub 3.50 ERA. At his age though, a pitcher can rapidly begin to decline and he has experienced some shoulder problems already this spring. Nonetheless, I would expect him to put up another solid year.
Continue reading "MLB 2008 Season Preview: National League East"
Posted by Joe Sauer | No comments yet