League Updates Uncategorized

Means tested

I’ll be honest:  on a day when John Means came as close as you possibly can to a perfect game, and when we celebrate Willie Mays’ 90th birthday, the headlines from the EFL are not going to measure up in drama or meaning.  We didn’t even have anyone retire yesterday.  

That’s not how Barry Hubbell taught me to write a lede. I’m not supposed to undermine the significance of the story.   But who reads these intros, anyway?

EFL Standings for 2021
EFL
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB RS RA
Old Detroit Wolverines 22 9 .726 181.9 111.8
Flint Hill Tornadoes 22 9 .694 1 133.8 85.0
Haviland Dragons 22 10 .683 1.1 139.5 96.1
D.C. Balk 21 10 .681 1.4 172.1 120.0
Peshastin Pears 21 10 .662 2 136.7 97.2
Kaline Drive 19 13 .590 4.1 142.7 120.4
Portland Rosebuds 17 14 .536 5.9 162.8 150.7
Canberra Kangaroos 15 16 .483 7.5 170.3 175.8
Bellingham Cascades 14 15 .467 8 117.1 136.6
Cottage Cheese 14 17 .465 8.1 179.8 196.2
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 12 17 .414 9.5 125.2 152.0
 
Old Detroit: “L”, 6 – 1.  (49 PA, .255, .265, .340;  16 ip, 5 er, 2.81 ERA)  Oh the travails of the Wolverines!  They:
    * outscore their opponents handily;
    * improve upon a .723 winning percentage (I originally wrote “sinning percentage” which I think would mean they’d cut their sinning rate somewhat from 72.3% — hopeful news!)
    * used their 10th pitcher of the month…
… and still the evil cybermind running our league saddled the (newly?) innocent Oldies with a loss.  No respect for Walker Buehlers’ sharp 6 ip, 2 er, nor Marcus Stroman’s lucky 5 ip, 2 er (2 more runs were unearned), nor the shutdown bullpen’s combined 5 innings, 1 er, spread over 5 pitchers.
 
Oh, and the W’s JP Crawford made the last out of John Means’ almost-perfecto, going 0 for 3, obviously.
 
 
Flint Hill:  “W”, 1 – 3.  (46 PA, .233, .283, .302; 5.7 ip 2 er, 3.16 ERA).  See the injustice?  The Tornados got outscored but they got a “win” and their winning percentage went up! How is that possible?  (psst! ron! Yu Darvish, as the 9th Dragon hurler of the month, erased some penalty innings.) (Psst yourself! don’t interrupt.) Perhaps the Flinty sinning percentage also went up, when it bribed the cybermind.  What good is a corruptible cybermind? We meat people are plenty good at corruption.   We can all admire Paul Goldschmidt’s team-leading 3 for 7 on the day, with a homer. We don’t need the database gussying that up inexplicable wins. Although, in fairness, I will note the Tornados lost 0.1 games in the pennant race. 
 
 
Haviland:  W 2, L (-1); 13 – 5.  (48 PA, .368, .468, .579 — Happy Edgar Martinez Day! ; 2.7 ip, 0 er , 0.00 ERA) Ramon Laureano led a powerful Dragon lineup, going 3 for 4 with a homer and a double.  Two relievers brought the Dragon May pitching corps up to 9, and didn’t allow any earned runs, to boot. Thus the Dragons surged two places and 0.6 games in the standings, and improved their winning percentage by 0.022 points.  So already we have the answer to the question Jamie posed yesterday: what’s going to happen to the rest of us now that the Dragonmaster has retired from his day job?  It is not a pretty picture to any of us non-reptiles. 
 
 
DC: W, 3 – 0. (32 PA, .167, .375, .292; 8.4 ip, 2 er, 2.14 ERA). The Balk cleverly spread those 8.4 innings across four pitchers, blowing past the 10 pitcher mark and securing a win.  There were no hitting stars — despite my respect for walks, I can’t bring myself to bestow stardom on Pete Alonso for working 2 of the team’s 7 game-saving walks — but Martin Perez pitched well (5.7 ip, 2 er) and three relievers pitched even better. Thus the Dissies nudged up their winning percentage by 0.001, and kept pace with the W’s in the race. 
 
 
Peshastin: L, 0 – 5. (36 IP, .139, .139, .194;  6 ip, 5 er, 7.50 ERA)  The Pears have had their 10 pitchers, their 10th apparently coming yesterday, which allowed them to survive Freddy Peralta’s 4 ip, 5 er performance without further damage to their standings. The offense was hampered by their star, Mitch Haniger, being a victim of John Means’ no-hitter, and the refusal of any Pear to deign to take a walk or get hit by a pitch. 
 
 
Kaline:  W 2, L (-1); (-1) – (-6).  (56 PA, .120, .124,  .214;  25 (!) ip, 6 earned runs, 2.16 ERA)   I think there might have been other no-hitters in the EFL before, but I am sure there’s never been one like John Means.  I was pre-occupied by not EFL matters yesterday, last evening, and this morning — no, it’s the truth, it is possible — so I didn’t know about Means’ performance until I checked the Mariners’ box score after the game was over.  The headline said it was a no-hitter, the box score showed no hits, with everyone going a simple 0 for 3 (including Kaline’s Kyle Lewis) … but also no walks. No hbp. No errors. Only 27 men reached base.  Haggerty got caught stealing, but how did he get to first?  Was he born on first and thought he’d hit a single? (Reference to Texas Governor Anne Richards’ famous line about George Bush Sr: “He was born on third base and thought he’d hit a triple.”)  It turns out the only thing separating Means from perfection was a third strike that bounced away from the catcher… a wild pitch.  
 
Congratulations, O Wizard, for Means’ brilliant no-no! Oh, and also for getting your 10th pitcher (and even your 11th).   
 
Oh, and don’t think I didn’t notice your attempt to sneak across the moat protecting us in the top tier from you troublemakers in the, umm, more grounded tier.  You are still closer to 7th place (1.6 games) than 5th place (2.1 games)
 
Had I looked at Kaline’s batting line, I might have thought their lineup was heavy with Mariners.  But not a single Mariner appeared for the Drive yesterday.  Jesse Winker continued his stealth journey toward major hitting star by doubling and singling for 1/3 of the 14-man lineup’s hits, and half their extra bases.  None of the other Drive pitchers were in Means’ class yesterday, but they were still effective as a group, going 16 innings with only 6 earned runs.  Newly-acquired deb Garrett Whitlock was the only one who pitched poorly: 2 er in 1 ip for a modest chulk. 
 
 
Portland: W, 5 – 3. (47 PA, .205 .340, .308;  17.7 ip,  8 er, 4.07 ERA) A motley crew of five pitchers pitched decently, and more to the point, obliterated the 10 pitcher minimum requirement. Of the 12 hitters the Rosebuds sent to the plate, none were Mariners and Andrew Benintendi did the best: a double and a homer in 4 trips to the plate. Tyrone Taylors homer supplied 75% of the team’s extra bases, so getting 5 runs was pretty fortunate with this hitting. 
 
 
Canberra: W, 7 – (-1). (26 PA, .250, .423, .500;  8.7 ip, 1 er, 1.03 ip)  Casey Mize doesn’t deserve to be a footnote on the league’s news, not with 6 ip and 1 er, but he just happened to pitch the same day as John Means. The offense did its part with 5 hits, 5 walks, 1 hit by pitch, two doubles and a Mitch Garver homer  — and carefully avoiding sending anyone to face Means.  Thus the Kangaroos leapt over the Cascades (again), improved their winning percentage by 0.020 points, and gained 0.3 games on the leaders.  Canberra still needs one more pitcher to take the mound. 
 

Bellingham: “W”, 5 – 7. (35 PA, .233, .343, .333;  1.7 ip, 0 er, 0.00 ERA).  No Mariners (dis)graced the Cascades’ lineup, so they were able to salvage a workable bottom line.  But they didn’t get enough for a win, especially considering the Cascades still are one pitcher short of 10 for the month.  Marcel Ozuna’s 2 for 4 with a homer  was the lone offensive highlight.

 
Cottage: W 1, L 1; 7 -5. (37 PA, .125, .243, .219;  7.7 ip, 1 er, 1,17 ERA).  Trea Turner homered, but no one else did much, especially not considering they were trying to cover two games.  Shohei Ohtani pitched 5 shutout innings, but apparently didn’t bat.  Thus the Cheese worked to stay out of the cellar.  But actually they didn’t need to worry because…
 
 
Pittsburgh: L, 4 – 16. (41 PA, .237, .293, .368;  15.3 ip, 18 er, 10.59 ERA) … the Allegheny had a disastrous day.  The hitting was unimpressive, even without any Means-tested Mariners.  5 pitchers pitched.  Sonny Gray started off with 7 shutout innings, but every subsequent pitcher stank.  Luke Weaver did the best: 4 ip, 6 er.  Then comes Logan Webb: 3.7 ip, 6 er.  Then Brian Garcia triple chulked (0.3 ip, 1 er).  And to top it off, the delightfully named Lou Trivino royally chulked: 0.3 ip, 5 earned runs. The Alleghenys sank like a giant pile of rocks:   0.031 in winning percentage, and 1.3 games further out of first place… and 10th place. 
 
Somehow it seems like retirement isn’t treating our two retirees equally. So far. 
 
 
 
Combined MLB + EFL Standings for 2021
AL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Old Detroit Wolverines 22 9 .726
Flint Hill Tornadoes 22 9 .694 1
Boston Red Sox 18 13 .581 4.5
New York Yankees 16 14 .533 6
Tampa Bay Rays 17 15 .531 6
Toronto Blue Jays 15 14 .517 6.5
Baltimore Orioles 15 16 .484 7.5
NL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
D.C. Balk 21 10 .681
Philadelphia Phillies 16 15 .516 5.1
Canberra Kangaroos 15 16 .483 6.1
New York Mets 12 13 .480 6.1
Atlanta Braves 14 16 .467 6.6
Washington Nationals 12 14 .462 6.6
Miami Marlins 13 16 .448 7.1
 
AL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Chicago White Sox 16 13 .552
Cleveland Indians 16 13 .552
Kansas City Royals 16 13 .552
Bellingham Cascades 14 15 .467 2.5
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 12 17 .414 4
Minnesota Twins 11 18 .379 5
Detroit Tigers 9 22 .290 8
NL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
St. Louis Cardinals 18 13 .581
Milwaukee Brewers 17 14 .548 1
Chicago Cubs 15 16 .484 3
Cincinnati Reds 14 15 .483 3
Cottage Cheese 14 17 .465 3.6
Pittsburgh Pirates 13 17 .433 4.5
 
AL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Haviland Dragons 22 10 .683
Oakland A’s 19 13 .594 2.9
Kaline Drive 19 13 .590 3
Seattle Mariners 17 15 .531 4.9
Houston Astros 15 15 .500 5.9
Texas Rangers 15 17 .469 6.9
Los Angeles Angels 13 16 .448 7.4
NL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Peshastin Pears 21 10 .662
San Francisco Giants 18 13 .581 2.5
San Diego Padres 18 14 .563 3
Portland Rosebuds 17 14 .536 3.9
Los Angeles Dodgers 17 15 .531 4
Arizona Diamondbacks 15 15 .500 5
Colorado Rockies 12 19