League Updates

“Uh, oh”

(This is Thursday morning’s update brought to you at 11:00 PM Thursday.)

I am sitting here listening to the Mariners game Thursday evening. Some replacement announcer guy is doing the play by play. It’s the top of the 7th inning, James Paxton pitching, and the announcer interrupts his comments on the AL wild card pennant race  to say “uh, oh.”

This announcer’s no Ernie Harwell.  Nor is he Jerry Coleman, who once uncorked this classic:

“Winfield goes back to the wall, he hits his head on the wall and it rolls off! It’s rolling all the way back to second base. This is a terrible thing for the Padres.”

Our announcer (whose name I still haven’t caught, other than “Gary”) is not so poetic. After his “uh oh” he pauses, leaving us to wonder what is the matter.  Dave Sims has to step in to tell us: the M’s trainer, manager, and bullpen coach have just hurried to the mound.  Paxton has something wrong with his left pectoral muscle. “This is a game-changer for the Mariners,” Sims says. “happening right before our eyes.”

The Wolverines had a series of such game changers early in the season, so we’re fully empathetic. Baseball seasons unfurl in all their glory against a backdrop of ever-present peril. A center fielder runs over your stud prospect in the second game of the season.  When the prospect finally returns a year later, he has forgotten how to hit. Your ace goes dirt-biking — or grabs his chest after throwing the 107th pitch of the game. Your closer walks three guys in the ninth, setting the table for Mike Trout.

Occasionally a team has a season where nothing seems to go wrong. The 1984 Tigers started 35-5 and sailed to a World Series title. The 2016 Cubs. The 2017 Dodgers, so far (jinx!). But this is not the normal way of things.  The 116-win 2001 Mariners didn’t make it to the World Series.  So we squirm our way through the season, dreading the moment our team’s announcer says “this is a terrible thing for the home team.”  Or maybe just  “uh, oh.”

Well, for our 2017 EFL season, right now is such a moment.

Uh, oh.

 

EFL Standings for 2017 AFTER WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
EFL
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB RS RA
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 75 36 .676 628.7 434.2
Haviland Dragons 73 40 .643 3.4 662.2 494.2
Cottage Cheese 73 40 .643 3.4 612.6 451.9
Flint Hill Tornadoes 72 42 .629 4.8 583.9 445.4
Portland Rosebuds 68 45 .602 8 651.8 519.1
Kaline Drive 65 48 .573 11.2 560.8 480.4
Peshastin Pears 62 51 .548 14.1 555.5 511.6
Old Detroit Wolverines 59 55 .513 18 553.0 527.7
Canberra Kangaroos 50 62 .451 25 516.4 574.0
D.C. Balk 43 69 .381 32.8 550.4 703.8
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(Note: stats are for Tuesday and Wednesday games.)
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Pittsburgh: W 2,, L 0; 9 – 3. (.263, .300, .474; 23.7 ip, 9 er.)  Corey Kluber’s 9 ip, 1 er anchored two solid championship-caliber days, which is bad news enough for those trying to catch the Alleghenys. But combined with stumbles by the closest pursuers, the result is a sudden doubling of the Alleghenys’ lead in the pennant race.  This is  s0 ominous — a terrible thing for the pennant race.
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Cottage: W 1, L 2; 8 – 17. (.256, .343, .451;  13.3 ip, 7 er).  Doggone it, Cheese! You move heaven and Earth to be a first place team, but you faded for the last two days.  And then tonight your man Trout undoes Nelson Cruz’s heroics with a three-run double in the top of the ninth off poor Edwin Diaz.  Argggh.
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Haviland: W 1, L 1; 1 – 8. (.178, .221, .315; 7.7 ip, 6 er). Somehow the Dragons got a win out of two days of 1 – 8 baseball. That “win” doesn’t paper over the fact that the D’s sagged markedly in the pennant race.
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Flint Hill: W 1, L 1; 8 – 13. (.191, .314, .326; 8.3 ip, 4 er). The Tornadoes only got 2 starting innings from Trevor Cahill, leaving them at the mercy of 8 replacement innings.  Todd Frazier (4 for 7 with a homer, a double, and a walk) tried to overcome the disadvantage, and succeeded in snagging one official win.
Portland: W 2, L 0; 6 – (-5). (.227, .284, .420; 26 ip, 4 er).  Outstanding pitching (especially Chris Sale’s 8 scoreless innings) led the Rosebuds to the best two-day performance in the league.  But the ‘Buds are pretty deep in the standings.  Can they run down the Alleghenys?
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Kaline: W 1, L 1; 10 – 13. (.294, .337, .412;  14.3 ip, 11 er).  The Drive bullpen features both Marc Rzepczynski and Asher Wojciechowski.   They combined for 6.7 ip, 3 er — so you can’t blame them for  Drive’s pitching woes Tuesday and Wednesday. Wouldn’t it be great if Kaline added Mike Foltynewicz to their pen?
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Peshastin: W 1, L 1; 8 – 9. (.231, .296, .477;  9 ip,  2 er). Zach Eflin pitched 7 strong innings (only 2 er) to lead the Pear pitching performance… as a member of the AAA Cashmere Cotlets.
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Old Detroit: W 2, L 0; 4 – 4.  (That rs/ra is really 4.3 – 3.6, but it’s still an awfully good outcome for such a small scoring advantage.)  (.213, .310, .344; 15.3 ip, 3 er.) One reason I’m listening to the M’s game is to hear how Tyler Skaggs does in his second game back from the DL. And I have to say this game was going wonderfully: Skaggs shut the M’s out for 6.1 innings. But the M’s tied the game in the bottom of the 8th on homers by Segura and the amazing Nelson Cruz. Even with the season unravelling, we take our consolation in small things.  Until Mike Trout comes along to spoil them…
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Canberra: W 0, L 2; 4 – 2. (.205, .271, .359; 18 ip, 3 er) The ‘Roos get robbed! Or so it appears. Their record in our standings two days ago was listed as 50 – 60, but the were really  more like 40.51 – 50.49 — 16.5 games behind the 66 — 44  Nationals. Now, after two days of crummy hitting and excellent pitching, our standings list them as 50 – 62.  But they are still 16.5 games behind the 67 – 45 Nationals.  Rounding errors can be vicious.
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DC: W 1, L 1; 9 – 13. (..370, .382, .500; 21 ip, 11 er). Great offensive numbers,  corroded a bit by a few replacement hitters. Same story for the pitchers, since only  8 of those 21 innings came from pitchers allocated to start..
Combined MLB + EFL Standings for 2017
AL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Flint Hill Tornadoes 72 42 .629
Boston Red Sox 65 49 .570 6.7
New York Yankees 60 52 .536 10.7
Old Detroit Wolverines 59 55 .513 13.1
Tampa Bay Rays 58 57 .504 14.2
Baltimore Orioles 56 58 .491 15.7
Toronto Blue Jays 53 60 .469 18.2
NL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Washington Nationals 67 45 .598
Miami Marlins 53 59 .473 14
Atlanta Braves 51 61 .455 16
Canberra Kangaroos 50 62 .451 16.5
New York Mets 50 61 .450 16.5
D.C. Balk 43 69 .381 24.3
Philadelphia Phillies 42 69 .378 24.5
AL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 75 36 .676
Cleveland Indians 60 51 .541 15
Kansas City Royals 57 56 .504 19
Minnesota Twins 56 56 .500 19.5
Detroit Tigers 52 61 .460 24
Chicago White Sox 43 68 .387 32
NL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Cottage Cheese 73 40 .643
Chicago Cubs 59 54 .522 13.6
St. Louis Cardinals 58 56 .509 15.1
Milwaukee Brewers 59 57 .509 15.1
Pittsburgh Pirates 56 58 .491 17.1
Cincinnati Reds 47 67 .412 26.1
AL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Haviland Dragons 73 40 .643
Houston Astros 71 42 .628 1.6
Kaline Drive 65 48 .573 7.9
Seattle Mariners 59 56 .513 14.6
Los Angeles Angels 57 56 .504 15.6
Texas Rangers 54 59 .478 18.6
Oakland A’s 50 64 .439 23.1
NL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Los Angeles Dodgers 80 33 .708
Portland Rosebuds 68 45 .602 11.9
Colorado Rockies 65 49 .570 15.5
Arizona Diamondbacks 64 49 .566 16
Peshastin Pears 62 51 .548 18.1
San Diego Padres 50 63 .442 30
San Francisco Giants 46 70 .397 35.5