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Blog Posts For Tag: Mlb

Hot Teams Make the Best of MLB Playoff Tickets

The baseball playoffs have begun after the Detroit Tigers self destructed and let the Minnesota Twins win the AL Central. If anything, the very fact that the Tigers bombed so badly proves that there is a reason not to discount even the seemingly most ridiculous statistic, like the magic number in this case. The development also proves something else, that any team that has managed to make it to the MLB postseason has a very real shot if winning it all.

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MLB Tickets for Second Half Surprises

Everybody knew that the intensity of the MLB after the All Star game would quickly separate the real contenders from the handful of clubs that were going to receive participation trophies at best. It was what happened that has been such a surprise to those of us who do not make a living sitting down, reading all the stats, studying every box score, and enabling a Google alert for every MLB transaction.

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MLB Hall of Fame Pitchers

After Mark Buerhle became just the 18th player to throw a perfect game I began to wonder if that feat would make him a lock for the Hall of Fame. After setting the record for consecutive outs on Tuesday at 45 I asked myself the same thing. Now I am wondering who else among his peers is going to be considered in the Hall of Fame debate.

His peers do not include guys like Randy Johnson, but pitchers around the age of 30, let’s say between the ages of 28 and 32. These guys have had enough experience to dismiss any fluke seasons and have come up in the age of the 100-pitch limit, as noted by ESPN columnist Tim Kurkjian. These are the guys that are going to be competing for votes on the same Hall of Fame ballots in a decade or so.

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MLB Players and their Quests for Conquests

The major league baseball season is a long one. At 162 games it dwarfs the NFL (16 games), NBA (82 games), and the NHL (82 games). Sure that gives fans plenty of chances to sit in the bleachers and enjoy a lazy summer afternoon with a hotdog and a few beers (and then subsequently spend the next month staying in on the weekends waiting for the ban account to heal), but the long season also makes pleasantly surprising statistics anomalies in the long run.

This means that all those players we looked upon with wonder as they approached some record and were putting together impressive seasons fall back to earth shattering our midseason expectations, which is fitting when you consider how many fans hopes for their team are painfully beaten down as well. The question, then, is will these players that follow be able to beat the odds and actually keep up with there midseason form.

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First Half All-MLB Team

Tuesday night the American League won the All Star game for the twelfth time in a row, defeating the National League 4-3. The best players from both leagues squared off in a rather short contest (2 hours and 30 minutes) instead of a marathon like last season (which went 15 innings).

Now that this annual contest is over and the American League again has home field advantage in the World Series the real season begins, with teams looking for a pennant and players looking for individual honors. There will be two MVPs, two Cy Young winners, and two Gold Glove first basemen. There will be two of everything because MLB, unlike the NFL and NBA do not announce an all MLB team.

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The Tampa Bay Rays: A Baseball Diagnosis

This team has the third best batting average in the league. This team has the second best on base percentage and slugging percentage in the league. This team has scored the most runs and has stolen the most bases in the league. This team averages more than a run more than their opponents. This team is leading the division with an absurd win-loss record, right? Wrong. This team is hovering around .500 and is in fourth place in the American League East. This is team is the Tampa Bay Rays.

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MLB Season Suprises

A third of the MLB season has passed and the early season surprises have subsided. The Toronto Blue Jays unceremoniously fell from first place in the AL East after losing nine straight in the final two weeks of May. The Pittsburgh Pirates pitching staff, other than Zack Duke, fell apart and the general manager quickly disappointed fans by trading Nate McLouth, firmly reestablishing the keen sense of doubt and depression at PNC Park. Plenty more inflated individual stats on every team deflated as the law of averages finally won again. Still, some surprises have remained, lingering, threatening to go from an early season trend to one of the dominant storylines of the year.

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New York’s Best Third Baseman – Alex Rodriguez or David Wright

A few months ago if you asked me who was the best third baseman in New York I would have to begrudgingly give A-Rod the honor. He was an offensive force that successfully made the transition from shortstop to the corner.

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MLB Baseball Curses

Monday morning Chicago sports fan went that extra mile to prove that the fair city deserved the first local ESPN page, ESPN Chicago. According to the Chicago Tribune, disturbingly motivated fans placed a severed goat head outside of Wrigley Field in what can safely be hypothesized to be an attempt to end the Curse of the Billy Goat.

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Who is the most dangerous bat in MLB?

The outrageous numbers of the steroid era are gone, though thanks to New York Yankees whipping boy Alex Rodriguez the sport continues to be tainted with PED residue, and now I have to wonder: Who is the most dangerous bat in the league?

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My MLB Certainty Theory

Baseball is a wonderful sport for a few reasons. The first is that the game is played at a leisurely pace. Many people may hate this, but how many people would like to run several miles a day in 90 degree weather that is oftentimes humid in constricting cotton uniforms with optimal body coverage. My simple sense of humanitarianism would make feel guilty while I tried to enjoy my gloriously cold beer in the bleachers while watching a man literally kill himself on the field below me. The second is that it is a game nerds and geeks love for the simple fact that it is a game where the law of averages reigns supreme. These laws lead to certain results that cannot be denied. So, the question is: what certainties do we have to look forward to this season?

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The Silliest Sport

I love sports. I check ESPN's website dozens of times a day for the latest development on the NFL front and for things as silly as the New York Yankees ERA last season. I am not so completely insulated from reality that I can not appreciate how silly the idea of professional sports can sometimes be, and sometimes I wonder which sport is the silliest.

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Manny to Dodgers: Is It March Already?

Four months ago Frank McCourt and the Los Angeles Dodgers offered Scott Boras and Manny Ramirez $45 million dollars over two years to stay in sunny L.A. Boras retorted that he would then be taking serious offers. In the coming months magical mystery teams offered more, apparently these teams were from alternate universes because no other team that I have heard of even came to the table with enough to match the offer.

Many, including me, have condemned Scott Boras and Manny Ramirez as greedy bastards, but I think the pair knew they were never going to get the four-year, $100 deal. I think that was a mystical number chosen to do one thing: make sure Manny did not have to report to spring training until March.

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The Multi-Millionaire Brat Pack

Sometimes it seems like every aspect of our culture rewards greedy brats. I think that trying to teach children to be respectful adults might actually be a detriment to their adult lives. We bail out a banking industry with billions after that cost millions their retirement portfolio. We offer reality shows to rich kids who do absolutely nothing and put them on covers of magazines. We even reward players who act ridiculously with multi-millionaire contracts.

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How Much More Will Baseball Fans Have To Suffer?

It is times like these when the average person is thrust into a life of hardship and they are wading waist deep in corruption that Americans try and return to the simple things in life. Baseball used to be one of those things, but the league is trying America’s patience.

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Bonds will be Roid-Raging When A-Fraud Puts His Record to Shame

Alex Rodriguez started as the young superstar A-Rod, signed a huge contract with the New York Yankees and became A-Fraud, and now a Sports Illustrated article has painted him as A-Roid. Suddenly the best option to return some sort of honor to the home run record is guilty of using Primobolon and testosterone. Well, I say that we still root for Choke-Rod to come through and hit the 210 home runs needed to surpass Bonds’ 762.

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Will Work For Less: The Plight of the MLB Free Agent

With just about a week until pitchers and catchers report, there is simply an incredible number of free agents still available. This is hardly a groundbreaking observation, but I find the parallels between the deep field of quality players still looking for a contract and the layman who is trying to find work after becoming yet another causality of the economy to be too great to ignore.

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Manny Ramirez: Reaching the Pinnacle of Hitting and Greed

Manny Ramirez needs a reality check. He is going to be 37 years old this next season. The economy is killing everyone, including professional sports team. He is going to be 37 years old. He is simply not going to get a four-year deal for $100 million. He is going to be 37 years old. I do not know what Scott Boras is telling him, but not even the big-spending New York Yankees are going to make that kind of an offer.

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The 10 Most Important Signings This MLB Offseason

I knew things were going to be bad. I knew the faltering economy was reverberating throughout every facet of American life, but I did not expect to see the MLB offseason to begin with such a whimper. It picked up around Christmas (more proof that having a budget around the holidays is simply futile) and now while the entire baseball world starts looking towards the World Baseball Classic (has anybody seen the roster for the Canadian team, with the utmost sincerity, wow), I am going to take time and reflect on the top ten free signings of this offseason.

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Kent’s Retirement a Fitting End to the MLB’s Power Era

When I was a kid I used to wake each morning in the summer, take out the sports section, and devour the box scores. I would read each game carefully, noting who was hot and who had gone cold. I delighted in imagining the pitching duels and cringed at the visions of a reliever coming in and getting lit up, ruining a stupendous seven-inning outing by the starter. I also noticed that certain position players did certain things. The corner infielders hit for power, the outfielders hit home runs or stole bases, the catchers struck out, and the middle infielders hit .260 with about five home runs a year. Then came Jeff Kent, and suddenly a second baseman could hit 20 home runs a year.

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The Burrell Effect, a MLB Phenomenon

How much effect could a player who hit .250, 33 homeruns, and drove in 86 RBI have on the game of baseball. These are not numbers that even make this player a top ten free agent, even keeping in mind the slim pickings this offseason. Still, Pat Burrell’s departure from Philadelphia to Tampa for $16 million over two seasons has caused a ripple effect up and down the East Coast.

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The 2009 AL East, Tickets to the Perfect Sports Storm

The sports world may be in bowl mold- the Super Bowl, the Sugar Bowl, the Rose Bowl, the Fiesta Bowl, The Orange Bowl, the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl-, but the MLB season is coming up much quicker than most fans realize. There are already grumblings of pitchers and catchers reporting for spring training. There is even a glorious global exhibition with the World Baseball Classic (WBC). Half of the top free agents are gone and teams are starting to scurry to pick up the role players that will make the difference between 80 and 90 wins with just a few more hits.

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Angels Are Suckers For Teixeira

Last season the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim were the favorite topic of just about every baseball commentator out there. They had a pitching staff that went six deep and they followed through and easily won the American League West. They then went out and flat disappointed going down in five games in the best-of-seven first round series with the Boston Red Sox.

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