How unprecedented was
this? Two new stadiums opened, and the Mets opened the nicer one
against the Red Sox?
David
Wright says it’ll be a lot of fun for all of us. He also talked about
having it be a pitcher’s park with big gaps to suit his Mets team,
which shows that he’s already thinking about how far they’ll go. And
that’s a good thing.
Sports Illustrated says the Mets are going
to win the whole thing. But Mets manager Jerry Manuel dismisses that
notion. He knows his team has to learn to perform down the stretch, to
hit in big situations, to hit to the opposite field, to make contact
more often, and all those other things they haven’t done in the last
couple of years.
The Mets are picking up Gary Sheffield. I
understand they got him to replace Marlon Anderson as a utility guy and
pinch hitter.. Let me try to look at the bright side of this. Sheffield
can hit, some people say he’s a good team player, and in the last
couple of years, he’s been hurt more than he’s played. So I won’t have
to look at that dour countenance every day. And I don’t agree with Omar
that Sheffield has that much upside, not anymore.
What this
does is shut up all those fans who knocked Minaya for not picking up
the big bat, especially a right-handed bat. That makes me think it was
just a political move, something to ingratiate himself with the fans
and with the critics. It’s still not clear as to how this will affect
Murphy’s time, and Tatis’s time, both of whom are infinitely superior
to Sheffield in my mind.
In any event, Sheffield’s negative
affects won’t be enough to derail the Mets run to the NL East division
title. They fixed the bullpen, they have just enough starting pitching
(although we may see some really uneven performances from Perez, Maine
and even Pelfrey). The lineup is our same happy Metsies but with an
invigorated Castillo, a steady diet of Murphy and Evans and Tatis, and
enough depth to outlast any conceivable injuries.
Everybody wants predictions. It seems it’s the the thing to do. So, let
me give you my drift on the season…..
NL East – Mets,
Florida, Phillies, Atlanta, Washington
The
Phillies just can’t get it done again with that starting staff. Myers
and Hamels and pray for rain. Florida will amaze with an extra year of
maturity for all their young guys and some very decent pitching.
Besides Nolasco and Johnson, they’ve got a young’n named Chris Volstad
and there’s Anibal Sanchez too. Atlanta and Washington…ho-hum…. .
NL Central – Cubs,
Cards, Reds, Brewers, Astros, Pirates
The
Cubs are loaded for bear. Everywhere you look, there is strength. The
starters should be amazing, five good ones, Zambrano, Lilly, Dempster,
Harden and Marshall. The bullpen sports Gregg and Marmol. The lineup is
outstanding with steadiness all around. The Cards look strong too but
too many holes still. The Reds and Brewers will be competitive, the
Astros are old and sick, and then there’s the Pirates.
NL West – Arizona,
Giants, Dodgers, Rockies, Padres
I
hate to agree with my brother but he’s right. He asked, “Can you name
one Dodgers starting pitcher”? I was able to name exactly one. The
Diamondbacks look awesome in comparison. And if the Dodgers don’t win
it, why should they even take second? The Giants will surprise with
Lincecum, Zito, Cain, Randy Johnson and young Jonathan Sanchez at the
helm and enough relief in Wilson, Affeldt and company to make up for
any holes in their lineup.
NL Wildcard – The Marlins steal it from the Giants on
the last day of the season.
AL East – Red Sox,
Yankees, Rays, Jays and Orioles
The
Rays luck with their healthy starting pitching can’t be expected to
continue. The Yankees will have trouble getting the ball to Rivera with
the lead. The Red Sox just seem to have everything. The starters match
up well with anyone, including the Yankees. They have way better relief
and a lineup that doesn’t miss Manny all that much. Unless Vernon Wells
has the season of a lifetime, the Jays have no shot and then there’s
the Orioles, improved but still looking up at the rest of this tough
division.
AL Central –
Indians, Twins, White Sox, Royals, Tigers
The
toughest division to pick, any of these teams could win it but the
Indians will have the best combination of pitching and hitting. Cliff
Lee, Fausto Carmona, Carl Pavano and Westbrook upon his return provide
lots of innings and a strong relief corps featuring Kerry Wood,
Betancourt and Perez to outclass the Twins, whose starters will still
need another year of seasoning. Liriano, Slowey, Perkins and Blackburn
for the Twins…just too much youth there. This will be a real crapshoot
though and nobody’d be happier than I’d be if the Royals somehow
prevail. Good pitching…Meche, Greinke, Horacio Ramirez, Joakim Soria
and Farnsworth but a weak lineup keep them an also-ran.
AL West – Angels,
Rangers, A’s, Mariners
The
Angels lineup is really powerful with Guerrero all fixed up, fleet
Torii Hunter and Chone Figgins and seasoned veterans and hitters in
Bobby Abreu and Juan Rivera will be too much for the rest of this
division, even the Rangers, who’ll be handicapped by their uneven
pitching. The A’s too will be much improved with their acquisitions of
Holliday, Giambi and Cabrera but the talents of their unbelievably
inexperienced starters will not outweigh their lack of seasoning. Just
too much to ask. Seattle has a really nice pitching staff in Hernandez,
Bedard, Silva and Washburn but Griffey and Beltre have had their day.
It was yesterday.
AL Wildcard – Texas Rangers steal it from the
Yankees on the season’s last day.
Playoffs – NL – Mets
take it from the Cubs in seven.
Playoffs – AL – Red Sox
take it from the Rangers in six.
World Series – Mets over
Red Sox in 7 tough and memorable games. Beltran MVP.
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