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Thursday, February 19, 2015

MBL POWER RANKINGS - 2/19/2015


Each team has played at least 30 games for the year, so we're at about the 20% mark on the season.  Time for another look at the Power Rankings.  A lot of movement in this edition.  Some teams are trending upward, while others have slumped badly.  And a surprise change at the top as the Beaneaters are knocked off their perch atop the standings for the first time this season.  Here are how the teams graded out this time around:

RNK +/- TEAM BAT PIT FLD PCT rDiff PYTH xW xL LUCK
1 1
New York Rippers
9 2 2
0.727
55
0.690 23 10 1
2 (1)
Boston Beaneaters
2 1 16
0.758
85
0.738 24 9 1
3 7
Washington Tribe
4 6 17
0.733
62
0.688 21 9 1
4 5
Colorado Briar Jumpers
12 3 10
0.633
46
0.660 20 10 (1)
5 6
Baltimore Stouts
1 10 21
0.667
51
0.622 22 14 2
6 (3)
Detroit Buckeyes
3 16 3
0.556
31
0.575 21 15 (1)
7 5
Oakland Osprey
6 8 19
0.556
37
0.601 22 14 (2)
8 10
San Francisco Quakers
18 7 9
0.556
10
0.530 19 17 1
9 10
Miami Panthers
11 9 19
0.485
1
0.503 17 16 (1)
10 (6)
Houston Buffaloes
8 14 14
0.533
8
0.526 16 14 0
11 (4)
Minnesota Millers
24 3 5
0.485
8
0.529 17 16 (1)
12 (6)
Arizona Apaches
14 13 4
0.515
(12)
0.465 15 18 2
13 7
Washington Senators
10 12 18
0.467
(2)
0.494 15 15 (1)
14 0
Seattle Lightning
22 5 13
0.533
10
0.538 16 14 (0)
15 2
Milwaukee Phantoms
13 23 1
0.424
(29)
0.422 14 19 0
16 (3)
Atlanta Stonecutters
15 19 8
0.455
(21)
0.438 14 19 1
17 (2)
San Diego Vipers
21 10 7
0.455
(22)
0.433 14 19 1
18 (2)
St. Louis Sliders
7 18 23
0.424
(32)
0.417 14 19 0
19 4
Brooklyn BA Bums
17 17 12
0.394
(23)
0.434 14 19 (1)
20 (15)
Pittsburgh Crawfords
5 21 24
0.389
(32)
0.426 15 21 (1)
21 3
New York Bombers
20 15 15
0.361
(33)
0.405 15 21 (2)
22 (1)
Los Angeles Diablos
19 22 11
0.303
(42)
0.380 13 20 (3)
23 (15)
Cincinnati Red Stockings
16 20 21
0.367
(36)
0.393 12 18 (1)
24 (2)
Cleveland Rock 'N Rollers
23 24 5
0.242
(120)
0.237 8 25 0

GLOSSARY
RNK - Overall Power Ranking
+/- - Difference between this ranking and the team's last ranking
BAT - Batting Rank
PIT - Pitching Rank
FLD - Fielding Rank
PCT - Actual Win Percentage
rDIFF - Run Differential
PYTH - Expected Win Percentage
xW - Expected Wins
xL - Expected Losses
LUCK - Difference between actual wins and expected wins

Observations:
  • Obviously a change at the top as the New York Rippers supplant division rival Boston Beaneaters for the #1 spot.  While Boston has done nothing to really lose their grip on the top spot, grading out as the top pitching team and second best hitting team, the Rippers are more well rounded.  New York is the only team to crack the top-10 in all three categories.   They lead the league in stolen bases by a wide margin, and are also adept at gunning down opposing runners, butting down eight of 20 would-be thieves.
  • Another thing that instantly jumps out to me is the decline of both the Pittsburgh Crawfords and Cincinnati Red Stockings, both teams dropping a whopping 15 spots in the rankings.  Pittsburgh has went 2-13 since the last rankings, while Cincinnati has failed to win a game, dropping nine straight.  The Crawfords still grade out as the 5th best offensive squad, but they rank dead last in team fielding and 21st in pitching.  The Red Stocking rank in the bottom 10 in all three categories.
  • On the flip side, both the San Francisco Quakers and the Miami Panthers have improved 10 spots in the rankings.  San Fran is beginning to play some good ball, going 10-5 since the last rankings.  Miami is an odd case though.  They actually have a losing record since the last rankings, going only 5-7.  But they grade out in the top-11 in both the hitting and pitching categories.
  • The Minnesota Millers are arguably the league's most disappointing team to date.  They sat atop the league in the preseason rankings.  But the team has not found it's hitting stroke, ranking dead last in hitting, averaging only 4.3 runs per game.  That number is sure to improve.  When it does, the Millers will be a tough team to play as they currently grade out as the 3rd best pitching team and the 5th best fielding squad.
  • The league's unluckiest team to date is the Los Angelas Diablos.  They come in at 22nd in the rankings, but their Pythagorean Win/Loss % says they should have won three more games than they have to date.  Not that the change would put them in the playoff hunt, but still.
  • Conversely, the Baltimore Stouts and Arizona Apaches are the luckiest teams so far, both winning two more games than they "should" have.
  • Speaking of Baltimore, they jumped six spots in the standing behind their #1 ranking offensively.  The Stouts lead the league in runs per game (6.4), home runs (67), batting average (.295), on-base percentage (.372), slugging percentage (.518) and OPS (.890).  They also grade out 4th on the basebaths, swiping 21 bags while only being caught four times.
  • The highest rated team from the Expansion League is the MBL defending champion, the Colorado Briar Jumpers.  They've went 8-4 since the last edition of the rankings and currently sit atop the Western Division by three games.  The team grades out well in all categories, ranking in the top-12 in all three.  Their pitching been their brightest spot, ranking 3rd overall, 2nd in WHIP and 3rd in team ERA.
  • The Cleveland Rock 'N Rollers come in at the bottom of the rankings.  The team grades out as the 23rd ranked offense and worst overall in pitching.  Their team ERA of 7.70 is two full runs worse than their next closest competitor, and four-and-a-half runs worse than league leading New York.
  • The Expansion's Pacific Division still has all four teams ranked in the top-10 in pitching (SEA 5, SF 7, OAK 8, SD 10).

Thursday, February 5, 2015

MBL POWER RANKING - 2/5/2015


Now that each team has completed their first divisional round of play, it's time for another edition of the Power Rankings.  This is still a fairly small sample size to work with as most teams have completed just 18 games.  No change at the top of the rankings as the Boston Beaneaters still occupy the top spot, followed again by their division rival, the New York Rippers.  But besides those two, there was a lot of movement going on since the last edition.  So let's take a look at how the team's graded out this time around.













RNK +/- TEAM BAT PIT FLD PCT rDiff PYTH xW xL LUCK
1 0
Boston Beaneaters
5 1 13
0.722
41
0.724 13 5 (0)
2 0
New York Rippers
14 5 4
0.667
18
0.604 13 8 1
3 4
Detroit Buckeyes
1 16 7
0.571
29
0.613 13 8 (1)
4 13
Houston Buffaloes
8 10 5
0.524
8
0.538 11 10 (0)
5 (1)
Arizona Apaches
6 12 8
0.476
9
0.540 11 10 (1)
6 5
Pittsburgh Crawfords
2 13 22
0.571
7
0.527 11 10 1
7 1
Minnesota Millers
19 6 12
0.556
17
0.602 11 7 (1)
8 1
Colorado Briar Jumpers
15 7 16
0.611
24
0.634 11 7 (0)
9 6
Cincinnati Red Stockings
7 11 20
0.524
9
0.540 11 10 (0)
10 9
Atlanta Stonecutters
9 14 6
0.444
(4)
0.479 9 9 (1)
11 (8)
Baltimore Stouts
3 17 19
0.722
13
0.561 10 8 3
12 (6)
Seattle Lightning
21 2 11
0.667
17
0.602 11 7 1
13 (8)
Washington Tribe
13 8 21
0.619
13
0.561 12 9 1
14 (4)
Oakland Osprey
20 3 18
0.389
(12)
0.424 8 10 (1)
15 5
San Diego Vipers
24 9 2
0.429
(18)
0.399 8 13 1
16 0
Milwaukee Phantoms
11 23 1
0.389
(21)
0.405 7 11 (0)
17 (5)
San Francisco Quakers
23 4 15
0.476
(9)
0.449 9 12 1
18 3
St. Louis Sliders
4 18 23
0.476
(7)
0.474 10 11 0
19 (1)
Miami Panthers
10 15 24
0.524
4
0.517 11 10 0
20 3
Washington Senators
12 19 14
0.429
0
0.500 11 11 (2)
21 (8)
Los Angeles Diablos
17 20 9
0.333
(21)
0.406 9 12 (2)
22 (8)
Cleveland Rock 'N Rollers
18 24 3
0.286
(57)
0.299 6 15 (0)
23 (1)
Brooklyn Ba Bums
16 22 10
0.381
(21)
0.411 9 12 (1)
24 0
New York Bombers
22 21 17
0.286
(39)
0.320 7 14 (1)

GLOSSARY
RNK - Overall Power Ranking
+/- - Difference between this ranking and the team's last ranking
BAT - Batting Rank
PIT - Pitching Rank
FLD - Fielding Rank
PCT - Actual Win Percentage
rDIFF - Run Differential
PYTH - Expected Win Percentage
xW - Expected Wins
xL - Expected Losses
LUCK - Difference between actual wins and expected wins

Here are some things I take away as I look at these numbers:
  • The Boston Beaneaters continues to pace the field with their combination of solid hitting and exceptional pitching.  Boston starters sport a combined 3.16 ERA.  By comparison, Cleveland starters have been rocked to the tune of a 8.03 ERA.  Ouch!  The Beaners also have the greatest run differential in the league by far, outscoring their opponents by 41 runs through only 18 games.
  • On their heals is division rival, the New York Rippers.  New York is second in the league in team ERA.  They also are scorching on the basepaths, stealing 35 bases through their first 21 games, nearly doubling the total of the second best team in the category (HOU-18).
  • The Classic League's Metro Division has the #1 and #2 ranked teams so far in Boston and NYR.  But they also have the two bottom ranked teams as well in #23 Brooklyn Broken Arrow Bums and #24 New York Bombers.  Both of these teams had to be looking forward to getting out of Metro Division play.  In their first series outside of the division, Brooklyn took one of three against a tough Detroit squad, while the Bombers won two of three against Cincinnati.  
  • The Milwaukee Phantoms come in at #16 overall, but they are tops in the fielding category.  The Phantoms as a whole have committed only seven errors in 679 total chances through their first 18 games.  By comparison, the league's worst fielding team, the St. Louis Sliders, have committed 30 errors.
  • Another team struggling defensively is the Pittsburgh Crawfords.  The team currently is next to last in the league in fielding percentage.  Despite their defensive woes, the Crawfords moved up five spots in the rankings into the #6 position overall.
  • Their Rust Belt Division rival, the Detroit Buckeyes, come in at #3 in the current rankings, up four spots from last time.  Both of these teams can attribute their move in the rankings to their outstanding offenses.  The two teams rank 1-2 in the league in runs per game, batting average, on-base percentage and OPS.  No wonder Cleveland's team ERA is through the roof.
  • The biggest mover from last time is the Houston Buffaloes, who improved a whopping 13 spots into the #4 position overall.  The team is currently 1.5 games behind division leader Colorado in the Expansion's Western Division.  They are only one game over .500, with just a +8 run differential.  But as a team, they are very consistent across the board.  The Buffaloes are the only team in the entire league to be ranked in the top-10 in all three categories.  As a matter of fact, the lowest they are ranked in any single sub-category is 14th in runs per game and 14th in WHIP.  Crazy.
  • The Baltimore Stouts grade out as the luckiest team in the league thus far, winning three more games than their run differential says they should.  They are also the team that dropped the most in the standings, falling eight spots down to #11 overall.
  • The Pacific Division of the Expansion League is an interesting case.  All four teams rank in the top-9 in overall pitching (SEA 2, OAK 3, SF 4, SD 9).  They also rank as four of the bottom five teams in batting (OAK 20, SEA 21, SF 23, SD 24).  It will be quite interesting to see what happens once these teams get out of divisional play to see if their pitching is just that good, or if their hitting is just that bad.
  • Sticking in the Pacific, the San Francisco Quakers hold the dubious distinction of being the only team in the entire league who haven't thrown out a baserunner attempting to steal against them.  Opposing runners are a perfect 14-0 against the Quakers backstops.  St. Louis catchers have given up a league leading 23 stolen bases.
  • If the San Diego Vipers can find their bats outside of their division, they should continue to move up in the standings.  As is, they shot up five spots to #15 overall.  But they are ranked dead last in the league in hitting, scoring only 3.76 runs per game.  But they are also the only team in the league, along with the NY Rippers, to rank in the top-9 in both the pitching and defense categories.
  • We've already touched on it before, but the Cleveland Rock 'N Rollers are really struggling on the hill in the early going.  Their team ERA of 7.50 ranks them dead last in the category, almost a full run-and-a-half worse than their next closest competitor.  It's also over four full runs worse than league leading Boston.  Cleveland is also worst in the league with a 1.95 WHIP.  They are the only team in the league to allow over 100 walks so far.  The team has also given up 28 homers, which is third worst.
I'm looking forward to how the next couple weeks shake out as teams begin play outside of their own divisions.  Will the pitching strong Pacific Division find their bats?  Will the big bats in the Rust Belt come back down to earth?  Can Boston keep their hold on the #1 overall ranking?  We'll find out next time!

Monday, February 2, 2015

2001 MLB SEASON IN REVIEW

Here we are in a wonderful league using the player cards from the 2001 season.  I came across a outstanding article written by Ian Browne for MLB.com that recaps our current season pretty well.  Kinda cool to reminisce about a season that was completed almost 15 years ago.  Some of the memories come back like they took place almost yesterday.  The great World Series, Barry Bonds and his year for the ages, the Seattle Mariners incredible regular season run and playoff demise.  Ichiro's arrival (as well as Pujols).  Cal Ripken, Tony Gwynn and Mark McGwire all calling it quits.  Roger Clemens started the year 20-1!  So many great storylines from the season we are playing right now.  

Sad thing that I keep in mind today as I look back at all of these great accomplishments, great seasons and records that were being broken is we now know the effect that steroids had on the era.  Bonds of course, and McGwire and Clemens.  But also guys like Bret Boone and Luis Gonzalez who had career years.  The All-Star teams were littered with names like Giambi, ARod, IRod, Sosa, Piazza, Pettitte, Manny Ramirez, Juan Gonzalez, Brian Giles, Troy Glaus to name a few, all linked to performance enhancers.  It was the heart of the steroid era, and in some ways it diminishes the accomplishments of everyone who played during that time, rightfully so or not.

Anyhow, enough of the gloomy talk.  I thought I would share this story here for everyone's enjoyment.  And here is a link to the baseball reference page for the 2001 season as well:  http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/MLB/2001.shtml  Enjoy!

What A Year!
Major League Baseball had a season for the ages

By Ian Browne
MLB.com
We all have hopes and dreams for 2002. But when it comes to those who are passionate about Major League Baseball, what you wish for can be pretty simple. Just hope that the coming season ends up being half as riveting, historical, poignant, exhilarating, unpredictable and special as 2001.

Before we get into full anticipation mode for the odyssey that will be the 2002 baseball season, we'd be remiss not to absorb, appreciate and relive the unbelievable 2001.  The season that seemingly didn't want to end finally culminated with an unforgettable comeback in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7 of the World Series with a team in its fourth year of existence dethroning arguably the most storied franchise in professional sports.  What all of us who consider ourselves baseball aficionados experienced in 2001 was quite simply, a season (and postseason) for the ages.

Without further ado, allow us to go around the diamond and venture into the gaps to highlight the subplots that made 2001 an epic for America's National Pastime.

A Classic Fall Classic: Sometimes it's best to start at the end. And there was no better way for a season to conclude than a seven-game World Series. Especially when it comes with all the unfathomable twists and turns put forth by the Arizona Diamondbacks and the New York Yankees.  Ultimately, the Diamondbacks were the champions. Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling put on a power pitching clinic with throwback work on short rest. Fittingly, they were co-MVPs of a Series that was won with Johnson coming out of the bullpen in Game 7 on zero days of rest.

For all the mastery put forth by Schilling and Johnson in the finale, and the entire Series, let's not forget that the Diamondbacks went into the bottom of the ninth on the short end of a 2-1 score. Not only that, but the best and most clutch short reliever in recent memory was on the mound for the Yankees in Mariano Rivera. Well, as one of the most famous Yankees once said, "It ain't over until it's over."

Thanks in large part to a Rivera throwing gaffe on a bunt, it was over soon thereafter in a way Yogi Berra and the Yankees never could have imagined. Tony Womack stroked a double into the right-field corner to tie it, and with the bases loaded and one out, Luis Gonzalez ended the most fantastic season of his life with a bloop single into the shallowest of center field.

The official record will say that the Diamondbacks won this series and the Yankees lost it. But it's hard to view anyone as a loser in this Series. The only reason it went seven is because the Yankees hit two of the most dramatic home runs in World Series history in Games 4 and 5. One out away from falling behind in the series 3-1, soon-to-be free agent Tino Martinez gave the Yanks a going away present, smashing a two-run homer off of Byung-Hyun Kim to send it into extra innings. By the time the game ended, it was after midnight, which meant it was the first World Series game ever played in November. Who else but Derek Jeter to be Mr. November? The Yankees' star poked a walkoff homer off the beleaguered Kim in the bottom of the 10th. Just like that, the Series was tied and the stage was set for an encore.

But you had to see this encore to believe it. Bottom of the ninth again. Yanks down two runs again. Kim on the mound again. This time the batter was Scott Brosius -- also soon to be departed Yankee. This time the ball was skied to left field. Again, it landed over the wall. Again, Yankee Stadium was roaring. Again, it would end with a Yankees' victory in extra innings. This time it was rookie Alfonso Soriano providing the capper with an RBI single in the bottom of the 12th.

What will be remembered most from this World Series are the moments.

Pleading (for) the Fifth: Nobody can argue that the best-of-five Division Series has been an unquestioned smash since first going into effect in October, 1995. The point was hammered home harder than ever before in these playoffs, when three of the four Division Series went down to a Game 5 finale.

First, came the Cardinals and the Diamondbacks on a Sunday night in Phoenix. In the bottom of the ninth, the scored tied at one, Womack was given the squeeze sign. He missed. But redemption came later in the at-bat as Womack delivered a series-ending RBI single which wound up being his second biggest hit of the 2001 postseason.

While the Diamondbacks spent Monday gearing up for an NLCS matchup with the Braves, the upstart Indians were in Seattle trying to knock off the 116-win Mariners in Game 5. Thanks to the incomparable slop of Jamie Moyer, that proved not to be possible. The Mariners rode Moyer to a 3-1 victory to survive their first-round scare.

That same day, the A's were in the Bronx trying to take Game 5 from the mystique-laden Yankees. What were the A's doing back in New York? Hadn't they all but buried the champs by taking Games 1 and 2 at Yankee Stadium? Well, the Yankees have a way of finding a way.  Essentially, the Yankees won this series in Game 3. That was when Mike Mussina pitched a masterpiece, something the Yankees needed on a day A's starter Barry Zito surrendered two hits. That was when shortstop Derek Jeter made a remarkable behind the back flip from the first-base side of home plate to nail Jeremy Giambi at the plate. The Yankees pretty much cruised from there, knocking around overwhelmed Cory Lidle in Game 4 and riding the crowd and more spectacular defense from Jeter in a 5-3 conquest in Game 5.

Barry's Bash Into History: OK, so this chase didn't catch on with the fervor of the Mark McGwire-Sammy Sosa show of 1998. But that doesn't make it any less meaningful. Step back and applaud Barry Bonds for one of the best individual seasons in history. And his record setting 73 home runs represented just a portion of his greatness.

How about his slugging percentage of .883? It's a number so ridiculous it doesn't even sound real. Not surprisingly, it is an all-time record, breaking Babe Rush's mark of .847 in 1920. Of the slugging record, Bonds said, "That's the one I don't think is going to be broken."  He also walked 177 times, another all-time record. And he hit .328, scored 129 runs, drove in 137 runs, stole 13 bases and had an on-base-percentage of .515. There would have to be a great injustice for Bonds not to win an unprecedented fourth MVP (He won it).

The only thing missing for Bonds was a chance to extend his season into the playoffs. Despite all his heroics, the Giants fell just short in the NL West. It would be one thing to accomplish a season like this in the prime years. But Bonds did it at age 37 to cart home an unprecedented fourth MVP.  With a chance to become a free agent, Bonds instead chose to accept the Giants' offer for arbitration. Whether the sides settle before arbitration or not, Bonds will get a mammoth pay day.

Gwynn-Ripken Retirement Tour: It's hard to think of two players who so aptly represented everything that is right about being a baseball player. For the last two decades, Cal Ripken and Tony Gwynn -- playing on different coasts and in different leagues -- were nothing but classy competitors. So it was only fitting that they retired together and will go into the Hall of Fame together in 2007.

Playing an entire career for one team is becoming a lost art, but lifetime Oriole Ripken and Padres lifer Gwynn always made it seem like it shouldn't be any other way. How many other players have had an impact so great that Major League Baseball stopped the All-Star Game in progress to give these two greats a going-away ceremony?

By announcing their retirements in the first half of the season, eight-time batting champion Gwynn and all-time Iron Man Ripken both got the proper sendoffs from ballparks across the country. They will both be missed but not forgotten.

Big Mac Calls It a Career: Unlike Gwynn and Ripken, there wasn't time for McGwire to smell the roses. Instead, he hastily announced he was retiring a week after the World Series ended. So for McGwire, 2001 won't merely be remembered as the year his single-season home run record of 70 was shattered by Bonds.  It will also go down as his final season. Although it was one he'd love to forget -- .189 batting average -- his career is one all baseball fans will remember. Gwynn and Ripken will have to make room on that 2007 Hall of Fame train for McGwire, who swatted 583 homers in a career spent with the Oakland Athletics and St. Louis Cardinals.

Rickey Runs (then slides) Into History: Rickey Henderson might have lost a little skill and speed over the course of his seemingly endless career. But in breaking Ty Cobb's all-time record for runs scored on Oct. 4, the Padres' Henderson proved that he still has all the flair he ever did.
Henderson has always been able to squeeze the maximum amount of drama out of the big events in his career. So naturally, he didn't score run No. 2,246 on an infield chopper. Instead, Henderson struck a home run. You thought he was just going to do the obligatory trot and then tip-toe across home plate? Henderson captured the moment by sliding across the plate, an image that will live with Rickey watchers forever.  Henderson added another milestone to his future Hall of Fame belt in the Padres' season finale, when he smacked hit No. 3,000

Mighty Mariners: When superstar shortstop Alex Rodriguez bolted to Texas for the most lucrative contract in the history of professional sports, the perception was that the Mariners would still be a competitive team. What with a manager like Lou Piniella, all that pitching, and a team tailored to their beautiful ballpark, it wasn't as if the Mariners needed sympathy cards after going to the ALCS in 2000.
But nobody could have predicted they would tie the 1906 Cubs with the most wins in a season. That's exactly what happened, though, as Lou's crew went an uncanny 116-46 to surpass the 114-48 Yankees of 1998. OK, so it didn't do them any good in the ALCS, when they were knocked out by the Yankees in five games. But it was still a season they should be celebrated and applauded for.
What was most refreshing about this Mariners' team was not how much they won, but the way they won. It was almost as if it was a textbook example of winning baseball. Pitching, defense, timely hitting and attention to detail and fundamentals. That's how you draw it up.  It seemed like the Mariners had the AL West clinched around Memorial Day. Yet they never got complacent. They just ran into a proven championship team in the Yankees.

Ichiro's Impact: It's hard to think about the 2001 Mariners without thinking about Ichiro's rousing arrival. Yes, the eight-time Japanese batting champion does have a last name. It's Suzuki. But he only wishes to be referred to by his first name, and after the season he's had, we can grant him that simple request.
There was great curiosity about what Ichiro would do considering there was no precedent for a Japanese everyday player in the Major Leagues. All he did was hit .350 -- good for his first Major League batting title -- with 126 runs, 241 hits, 33 doubles, eight triples and 55 stolen bases to become the first player in a quarter century to be Rookie of the Year and MVP. Any more questions?  Oh, did we mention he has a cannon arm from right field. Ichiro's flair and prowess in almost every facet of the game was one of the primary reasons A-Rod's loss didn't come back to haunt the Mariners.

From Outta Nowhere, Straight A's: Back in the days of Spring Training, when A's hype was at its highest point since the peak of the Bash Brothers days of Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire, it wouldn't have been outlandish to say this up and coming team would finish with the second best record in the game at 102-60. But who would have dared make such a projection when they were 35-40 and looking much like an over-hyped bunch on June 26.  However, a scintillating 67-20 from June 27 on made the 102-60 record a reality. Only the Mariners -- who beat the A's out by 14 games in their own division -- had a better record.

Though GM Billy Beane set the stage for a big part of the revival by acquiring Jermaine Dye in July, the real story was the A's stellar starting pitching.  Tim Hudson, Barry Zito, Mark Mulder and Cory Lidle all pitched like aces down the stretch. For the season, their combined record was 69-30. Unfortunately, their season ended with a sour taste when they blew a 2-0 lead to the Yankees in the Division Series and lost the series in five games to the Bombers for the second year in a row.

Roaring Rocket: Leave it to Roger Clemens to become the first pitcher in history to start a season 20-1. Clemens has the rare ability to set standards. He carted home his unprecedented sixth Cy Young award in November. In fact, no other pitcher has won more than four.  At age 39, he continues to be a freak of nature. In Clemens' first two seasons with the Yankees, he sort of blended in on a well-rounded staff. This season, he grabbed the ace mantle he has held for much of his legendary career.

Clemens finished at 20-3 with a 3.53 ERA and racked up 213 strikeouts.  He also did a lot of climbing on the all-time strikeout list. He started the season in eighth place, and finished it third, trailing only Nolan Ryan and Steve Carlton.

Though the Yankees lost the World Series in seven games, it was no fault of the Rocket, who pitched brilliantly in his two starts. You'd think there'd be some dropoff in Clemens by now. But he still throws in the mid-90s and his splitter is nastier than ever.

Young Guns: A recent expression in baseball the last few years was "It's so hard to find good young pitchers." That theory didn't hold up too well this year, as several young guns arrived in a big way.
Marlins' right-hander A.J. Burnett, 24, and Cardinals' rookie southpaw Bud Smith, 21, fired no-hitters. In Chicago, 22-year-old Mark Buehrle (16-8, 3.29) came out of nowhere for the White Sox. Ditto in Houston, where 24-year-old Roy Oswalt (14-3, 2.73) became an anchor.  C.C. Sabathia was billed as the phenom in Cleveland. At age 21, the 6-foot-8 rookie showed it was more than just hype, going 17-5 to help the Indians win their sixth AL Central title in the last seven years.  Then there are the A's, who must think young gems grow on pitching trees. Mark Mulder (24) and Barry Zito (23) both pitched like accomplished veterans. And don't forget about Joe Mays, a 25-year-old righty who helped the Twins stay in the pennant race with 17 victories.  Sure it's harder to develop pitching in this age of offense. But this year's young crop proved that the best young arms can still neutralize even the most potent bats.

Everybody Loves An Underdog: The best success stories are the ones you never expect. The final standings show that the Twins (85-77) and Phillies (86-76) both finished in second place, and fell short in their pursuit of a postseason berth. But this can't do much to diminish the accomplishments of two teams who stayed in the race for the majority of the season -- in the Phillies' case, down to the final weekend. It's hard to find any "experts" who expected either team to be a factor after their cellar-dwelling status of 2000.

In Philadelphia, Manager Larry Bowa's fire sparked the Phillies to their best season since the 1993 pennant. Bowa wound up winning the NL's Manager of the Year award. The Phillies made a dramatic 31-win jump from last year's dismal season under Terry Francona.  The arrival of rookie shortstop Jimmy Rollins, along with the development of the young starting pitchers, created a sense of anticipation for next season. Now the Phils just have to get their fans to get caught up in the excitement. Attendance was perhaps the only disappointing aspect of their season.

And what about the Twins? Not since Kirby Puckett's prime had they been a factor. So it was only fitting that in the summer that Puckett was inducted into the Hall of Fame, the Twins became a story again. Early in the season, they weren't just a story, but arguably the story. It was a story the Indians were growing tired of.
On July 12, the Twins were in first place and a whopping 24 games over. 500 at 56-32. But they were a different team from that point on, going 29-45 the rest of the way. A July 31 trade deadline swap (Matt Lawton to the Mets for Rick Reed) flopped and the veteran Indians simply had too many weapons for the Twins to overcome.

Taking It To the Next Level: How fast can a good player become a great one? Just ask Luis Gonzalez and Bret Boone.  The D-Backs' Gonzalez became a high-caliber run producer in 1999 and 2000. This season, he became a monster. The sweet-swinging left fielder -- on the strength of a mammoth first half -- bumped his home run total from 31 last year to 56 this season. He also scored 127 runs, pounded out 197 hits, smacked seven triples and drove in 140 runs. And he capped it all with the game-winning hit in Game 7 of the World Series.

Meanwhile, Boone transformed his image as a player. For years, he was known for his terrific glove at second base. But in his third season with the Mariners (he was with the club in 1992 and '93), Boone had a season former Seattle stars like Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez would be proud of.  How do you define "career year"? How about when you establish personal bests in runs (118), hits (206), homers (37), RBIs (141) and slugging (.582). The most amazing part about it is that Boone never even approached a season like this before. The Mariners' historical season certainly wouldn't have been possible without this 32-year-old turning in the season of his life.