MLB: September 2011

Fuckin’ Braves.

… That’s all.

:mad:

I am ready to believe that last night was the most awesome moment in the history of MLB, at least during the regular season.

It’s especially amazing considering that all the divisional races were settled. Nevertheless, we wound up with:

FOUR teams in win or go home situations, two who were coming from behind and two who were fading

Playing four teams with nothing to lose, including two teams that could have been forgiven for laying down and resting their starters for the playoffs

And of those four games, three were excrutiatingly close, with two come from behind efforts going into extra innings and the third held up by rain forever

Leading to two games which were won by teams who were within one out of defeat

Ending in the spectacular failure of the Red Sox and success of the Rays completed in just exactly the time it took to switch from one game to the other.

Honestly, I can’t recall anytime the schedule played out like this – even in 1964 when the NL season could have ended in a 3-way tie.

MLB.com made a pretty good video of all the wildness last night. Nice for someone like me who is relegated to radio and “watching” various games using the Gameday app.

I am actually really excited for the Tigers. They blew us away in their last 2 series with us. They are just a monster team at the plate and their pitching is more than just Verlander and Valverde and those guys rock.

I would LOVE to see them roll over the Yankees.

Being a midwesterner, I would love to see a Milwaukee/Detroit World Series. Milwaukee is actually my NL Team If I Must Have One so I would definitely tune in.

I was back and forth between all the games on MLB.TV on my PS3 last night. Reading this thread and knowing I was going through all of the same emotions as the rest of you is amusing me. That has to be the most entertaining evening of baseball-watching I’ve ever had in my life.

In addition to all of the meaningful games last night that I spent most of my time watching last night, it was fun watching Matt Kemp come this close to making the 40/40 club. And a little frustrating watching the Dodgers try desperately to blow huge leads to the D-Backs on consecutive nights. I wonder how many times in MLB history there has been a team who hit grand slams in the 9th inning in consecutive games.

Anyway, even though the Dodgers’ season ended last night like 21 other teams, and even though we are still, for the moment, saddled with Frank McCourt, I am still VERY pleased with how this team played in the last two months. When we were sitting at 14 games below .500 in late July, I never imagined they’d end up with a winning record this year. As did I, since they went 8-6 in games I attended. I haven’t had one of those in a while.

As for my Indians, it was a really fun year watching them compete, as well. Detroit was just too much, but they hung in far longer than people thought they would. I got to watch them beat the Angels in person, which is like a double joy for me, and I got a ball tossed to me by an Indians’ coach. Having Thome back at the end of the year was a good time.

Only 181 days left until the first game of the 2012 regular season!

Cards fan checking in. I am…apoplectic. My traitorous brother who has become a Sox fan and forsaken his roots and his Cardinals, well, he doesn’t seem to be taking my calls today.

The Braves didn’t deserve to be in the playoffs. Last game of the season, a win or go home situation, and the stands were half empty.

Rays too. It’s sad really. I do think that next year is going to be a monster year for the Braves. They are so close to being a well rounded team, and they have a lot of talent they just need to keep it together for the whole season and hit a little more.

As for the Dodgers, I am with Asimovian. I am filled with optimism. The young guys played well enough down the stretch and Kemp only really needs one bat to compliment him (Prince Fielder? McCourt wants to spend money and bring in a big name. I don’t know that he would be my first choice but I think that’s where they are leaning) to get the offense really firing. And Kemp has said he wants to retire a Dodger, so maybe we can lock up his contract this year. Kershaw too would be smart.

Kershaw and Billingsly are a great 1-2 despite how Bills has pitched recently, Lilly is a good 4-5 and the bullpen is starting to shake out. They will need someone to fill Kuroda’s role, but there is some hope. More than I had at the end of last season that’s for sure.

Well, this sucks. I just read this about the very coach in question: “On Wednesday, bench coach Tim Tolman disclosed he has Parkinson’s disease and will not be back…”

The recriminations are in full flower. Chad Finn writes:

Yes, that would be a good start.

No disrespect to the Rays, but they didn’t have a notable September either. Boston just choked.

The Rays went 17 - 10 in September, with two 5-game winning streaks.

I get the sense Chad Finn doesn’t like John Lackey.

But what is Boston supposed to do with Lackey? Nobody would take such a bloated contract, except… hey, wait a minute…

… the Angels!

If they’ll take Vernon Wells, why not take back Lackey?

What’s with the numbers, stat geek? If you left your mother’s basement once in a while, you’d know that .629 isn’t anything special. Get those sort of numbers over a season, and you’ll only have 102 wins.

:smiley:

Braves. Hee hee! OHHHHH OH OH OHHHHHHHH, OHHHHHHHH OH OH OHHHHHHHH!
(laughs, wheezes)

Ahhh. So, let’s root for the Phils to get that rematch with the NY team-- shit, I always forget their name. Tankees? Flankees? Mets? Yeah, yeah. The Mets, right? You know, the team with that pitcher with the huge gut? :smiley: :smiley:

I don’t know how many, if any, of you all listen to the Baseball Prospectus Podcast. If you don’t you should. It’s the most interesting ongoing baseball discussion I have ever heard. It’s two guys who work for baseball prospectus (Kevin Goldstein and Jason Parks if you read BP) having a sort of free-form conversation about baseball and other stuff. It ends up being like 65% baseball 45% other stuff.

I just finished listening to their quick thrown together short episode that recaps the events of the last couple of days and thought that I would share a link here in case anyone was interested.
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=15209

The NY Daily News is reporting Francona is out. As much as I dislike the Sox, I respect him as a manager and I think he’s getting a raw deal.

The most amazing thing? All four games went my way!

  1. I despise the Yankees, and love the idea of the Rays in the playoffs.
  2. I dislike the Red Sox
  3. I despise the Braves.
  4. I love Pujols and the Cards’ pitching staff

and

  1. In general, I love the underdog.

I’m very happy with the playoff picture. Even with the Giants gone, I would be OK with the D-backs making noise.

Joe

Agreed, but whattaya gonna do? SOMEONE’S head is gonna roll for the most epic collapse in baseball history, right?

Joe

That’s not a good way to run a team, though. The Braves are evidently not going to fire Fredi Gonzalez, and I think they’d be stupid if they did. The Mets didn’t fire Willie Randolph after their 2007 debacle, although they did give him a quick hook in 2008. Francona’s had a long run in Boston and you could argue they need a change, but giving into the fanbase’s need for scapegoating just for the sake of it is a bad idea.

Fredi getting fired would make infinitely more sense than Francona being dismissed makes. His overuse of the bullpen is almost directly responsible for their loss on Wednesday. That said, yes it would be stupid. Francona being fired is MASSIVELY stupid. Hope he lands with the Cubs and that Theo goes with him and turns that club around so that Boston fans can look out at Chicago and kick themselves.

The fallout from this game has made me really dislike Boston fans.