League Updates Uncategorized

Mojo Run Amok

July slipped away while I was distracted. So I have lots of news since last Friday morning to catch up on, beginning with these standings.

EFL Standings for 2017
EFL
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB RS RA
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 69 35 .665 597.7 420.1
Cottage Cheese 68 36 .649 1.7 567.1 412.2
Flint Hill Tornadoes 67 37 .640 2.7 544.2 407.0
Haviland Dragons 67 38 .637 2.8 629.5 473.5
Portland Rosebuds 63 42 .604 6.3 616.1 488.6
Kaline Drive 61 44 .585 8.3 527.8 441.9
Peshastin Pears 58 47 .550 12 515.5 473.5
Old Detroit Wolverines 51 53 .492 18.1 495.2 493.2
Canberra Kangaroos 47 57 .457 21.7 479.2 526.1
D.C. Balk 36 68 .351 32.7 493.5 672.1
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Pittsburgh: W 3, L 1; 21 – 11.  (.280, .329, .515; 29.3 ip, 14 er). Wait a second! Corey Kluber was MY stud. I traded him to Peshastin for the Pears to use to take down the Old Guard. How did he end up pitching for the Oldest Guard of Them All starting August 1?  Yikes. The A’s, who started July in 6th place 3.7 games back, are already in first place by 1.7 games, and now they have the best pitcher in the EFL? See, Peshastin,  this is why we can’t let you have nice things.
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Cottage:  W 2, L 1; 18 – 15. (.270, .384, .437; 27.3 ip, 15 er).  The Cottage was a mess over the final July weekend. Bryce Harper cost the Cheese dearly in their pennant race, going 1 for 13 with a walk the last four days of July.  Cory Seager tried to make up for Harper’s indolence, going 8 for 12, 3 doubles, 2 homers, 2 walks.  Danny Duffy and Parker Bridwell pitched in with 14.3 ip, 2 er — but then, Alex Cobb chulked (3 ip, 8 er).  The Alleghenys are edging away, and now they have Kluber!  Come on, Cottage — be the Cheese, not the Chaos.
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Flint Hill: “W” 1, L 0; 1 – 2. (.250, .322, .431; 28.7 ip, 16 er).  Ouch.  With the Yankees back in front in the MLB’s AL East, the Tornadoes only got one game in over the weekend. Out of 160, probably 12o were wasted — but at least they weren’t exciting.  Out of 28.7 ip, probably 18 or 19 were wasted — but at least they weren’t very good (5.02 ERA). Watch out Alleghenys! The Tornados will answer your Kluber with their new Dinelson Lamet… I mean, their new  Manny Machado!
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Haviland: W 2, L 2; 11 – 16. (.188, .282, .313; 23 ip, 7 er).  How the mighty are struggling! Only two Dragons OPSed over .563 the last four days of July (Gary Sanchez .944, Steven Souza .872). And  their 109 plate appearances were at least 10 fewer than needed for four games, leaving Haviland with 11 replacement plate appearances for the month. Dragon pitchers did much better, especially Kevin Gausman’s 8.7 shutout innings, keeping the D’s in the race, but the trajectory isn’t great.  Ever since I accused Haviland way back in April of using voodoo to rise to the top in the EFL this year, some of you have probably been skeptical. But now that the Dragons are falling inexplicably, what’s your theory that explains the dramatic Haviland reversal of fortune?
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Portland: W 1 , L 2; 13  – 10. (.254, .321, .373; 25.7 ip, 6 er).  The Rosebuds outscored their foes in the last four days of July, but came out of it with only one more win.  That’s rough. But here’s consolation: Jose Pirela, hard-won over Wolverine opposition at the last draft, paid off with a fine July finale (.5 for 12 with a double and two triples for a .417, .417, .833 batting line). Will Portland make a major move between now and Sunday evening’s roster deadline to stay in the race?
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Kaline: W 3, L 1; 22 – 10. (.269, .333, .474; 40 ip, 11 er).  Leonys Martin suddenly reappeared in the majors Sunday, and smacked a no-doubter homer in his first at bat.  He also made a thrilling diving catch right in front of me (and 100 feet down).  His 1.375 OPS was good for second on the Drive over the last four days of July (Christian Vasquez led the way with a 1.500 OPS). Except for Michael Fulmer (6 ip, 6 er) Drive pitchers thrived, the rest of the squad posting a 1.32 ERA). The Drive traded away Lamet, but got James McCann and Brian Johnson — so who was buying and who was selling in that deal?  Can the Drive stun everyone and surge to the top?
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Peshastin: W 2, L 1; 14 – 17. (.233, .353,.403; 18.0 ip, 9 er). Have I been unfair to the King Pear, with all my spluttering about trading Kluber to the six-time EFL champion Alleghenys?  Kluber finished his brief Peshastin career with a mediocre 6.3 ip, 4 er outing.  “Mediocre” in result, although he struck out 12 and walked only 1. And consider this:  the Pears were just behind the Alleghenys at 49 – 32 when Kluber joined the team, 5.7 games out of first (and 10.2 games ahead of the Kangaroos, the 8th place team).
With Kluber on the team they went 11 – 12, falling to to 12 games out, a 6.3- game drop. And the team behind them — the 8th place Wolverines– are now only 6.1 games behind.
So maybe that Peerless Pear knows what he is doing.  Maybe Kluber will knock the Alleghenys for a 6.3- game loop now that the Kluber Curse has been cast upon them. May it be so… right? We are all agreed on this, aren’t we?
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Old Detroit: L, (-10) – 2. (179, .273, .308; 35.3 ip,  15  er).  After last Thursday’s game, climaxed with a sweet Steve Pearce walk off grand slam, the W’s had an amazing .900 team OPS for July. On Friday they went 1 for 34, and things never got back on track at the plate. Although Pearce won another game Sunday with an even better come-from-three-runs-behind walk off grand slam. But the damage was done, and my team  scored 10 negative runs with their offensive mistakes. After the Wolverines’ spiffy 8-game winning streak to start the month, the W’s only went 8 – 8 the rest of the way, ending up 1.1 games further out of first place than they started.
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Canberra: W 0, L 4; 17 – 30. (.250, .340, .388; 17.3 ip,  14 er)
DC:  W 0, L 4; 16 – 35. (.233, .347, .379; 15.7 ip, 15 er) . The Kangaroos and the Balk finished July in eerily close harmony. Notice the identical records.  See the batting lines in tight harmony.  See how the pitching aligns so closely. No Kangaroo pitchers chulked, but Martin Perez came close (4.3 ip, 8 er).  No Balk chulked, but Mike Clevinger came close (3.o ip, 5 er).  Recall the close ties both teams have to our nation’s capital.  Creepy, isn’t it?
Combined MLB + EFL Standings for 2017
AL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Flint Hill Tornadoes 67 37 .640
New York Yankees 57 47 .548 9.5
Boston Red Sox 58 49 .542 10
Tampa Bay Rays 54 53 .505 14
Old Detroit Wolverines 51 53 .492 15.4
Baltimore Orioles 51 54 .486 16
Toronto Blue Jays 49 57 .462 18.5
NL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Washington Nationals 63 41 .606
Miami Marlins 49 55 .471 14
New York Mets 48 55 .466 14.5
Atlanta Braves 48 56 .462 15
Canberra Kangaroos 47 57 .457 15.5
Philadelphia Phillies 39 64 .379 23.5
D.C. Balk 36 68 .351 26.5
AL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 69 35 .665
Cleveland Indians 57 47 .548 12.2
Kansas City Royals 55 49 .529 14.2
Minnesota Twins 50 53 .485 18.7
Detroit Tigers 47 57 .452 22.2
Chicago White Sox 41 62 .398 27.7
NL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Cottage Cheese 68 36 .649
Chicago Cubs 56 48 .538 11.5
Milwaukee Brewers 55 52 .514 14
St. Louis Cardinals 52 53 .495 16
Pittsburgh Pirates 51 54 .486 17
Cincinnati Reds 42 63 .400 26
AL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Houston Astros 69 36 .657
Haviland Dragons 67 38 .637 2.1
Kaline Drive 61 44 .585 7.6
Seattle Mariners 54 53 .505 16
Los Angeles Angels 51 55 .481 18.5
Texas Rangers 50 55 .476 19
Oakland A’s 47 59 .443 22.5
NL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Los Angeles Dodgers 74 31 .705
Portland Rosebuds 63 42 .604 10.6
Arizona Diamondbacks 60 45 .571 14
Colorado Rockies 60 46 .566 14.5
Peshastin Pears 58 47 .550 16.3
San Diego Padres 47 58 .448 27
San Francisco Giants 40 67 .374 35