Friday, September 28, 2007

MLB Playoffs Go Down to the Wire

BRONX, NY -- Okay, for those of you who have a hard time keeping up with all the teams I pull for, I'm going to make it simple for you concerning the Major League Baseball playoffs. I'm rooting for the New York Yankees... and the Colorado Rockies, if they make it.

And for all you Boston Red Sox fans, you haven't won anything yet. The 20-game winner Josh Beckett you've been boasting about all year lost to Gibbs HS (FL) phenom Boof Bonser last night, as Joe Nathan struck out Jason Varitek and Kevin Youkilis with the bases loaded in the ninth inning.

Has to be hard watching Mariano Rivera do that about a week ago, then watching Joe Nathan, Mr. Ice Water in His Veins stick it in your grill at Fenway Park? Varitek says he didn't see the scoreboard when the Yankees knocked off the Devil Rays. Unless he's blind, he did. He can use all the cliches he wants, the fact is, the Red Sox scoreboard people keep that score monitored better than the secret service watches the president.

Remember in 2005 when the Yankees won the division on the last day of the season? It can happen again, especially since the Yankees won the tie-breaker by beating the Red Sox more times this season. Since May 29th, the Yankees ar 71-38. Division or not, that's not a team I'm looking forward to playing in the playoffs.

Now onto something more exciting, like the National League...

Recently, I've been able to take in a couple Marlins-Cubs games. The Cubs brought the fans, the Marlins brought the artilery. At 7:13 p.m. on Thursday, the Marlins just swept the Cubs for the season (6-0) and extended their win streak to 10 consecutive wins over the Cubs, the longest current streak in MLB.

This put a wrench in overall happiness on the north side of Chicago, but kept the Cubs from being able to clinch the division (the NL Central has no shot at a wildcard) in Miami. They were definitely scoreboard watching because St. Louis was playing Milwaukee. Cubs fans would rather sell their first born (or name it Albert) than root for the Cardinals. However, the Brewers were closing fast and looked like they were on a roll heading into the playoffs.

I have an issue with rooting against the team behind you. If you're in first place, you control your own destiny. You shouldn't need any help. But that's Cubs fans. They're desperate.

There's something called "thinking" that more managers and teams should do, especially down the stretch of the season when chasing a pennant.

The Brewers were having their way with the Cardinals. The Cardinals didn't seem to mind at all. They had nothing left to do but go through the motions and get Albert Pujols his 100th RBI. Pujols has been playing through pain to finish the season. Whether the record was part of that or not, who knows, but the guy is a warrior and that's one of the reasons St. Louis loves this guy.

With a 2-0 lead on the series, the Brewers' Prince Fielder was hit by a Brad Thompson pitch. There are times to retalliate and there are times to play for the win. The Cardinals weren't showing any threat to the Brewers, on the scoreboard or anywhere else, but Ned Yost and the Brewers took Thompson's pitch personally. I know Brad, he's not the kind of guy who's going to try and whack Fielder in the melon for kicks on a Wednesday night.

Right about now, what's the stupidest thing the Brewers could do? Yep, that's right, go after Pujols. Scott McClung stuck one right in the middle of El Cinco's back causing McClung and Yost to get ejected and suspended. That wasn't the worst part. They woke a sleeping giant. The Cardinals haven't been that impressive down the stretch, but they really haven't been given a reason to play.

I said it before... let sleeping dogs lie. When McClung let that pitch fly they gave the Cardinals a reason to beat them. Think the Cardinals care who wins the NL Central? They're the defending World Champions. Until the Chicago Cubs and all of Wrigleyville can pull of 10 World Series rings in the last 81 years (let alone one), we'll deal with that when it comes.

St. Louis put the hammer down and smacked the Brewers bullpen around for four more runs. No more Mr. Niceguy, we're coming after you Ned! A critical loss for the Brewers who could have cut the lead to one game in the NL Central.

Last night, they lost to San Diego at home 9-5. The Padres are in a battle for the NL West crown, let alone wildcard if they lose. Milwaukee is going to have to go balls to the wall and pray for the best coming out of Cincinnati.

Speaking of the Cardinals, they dialed up a 3-0 shutout of the New York Mets, who have lost 10 of the last 14 games. Joel Piniero and Jason Isringhausen combined on the three-hitter. No one in Flushing has the foggiest of what's going on with the Mets, and to see the 74-84 Cardinals come in for a makeup game and put the screws to them must have been like a huge kick to the nuts.

Once again, Pujols came through big, as did Rick Ankiel. St. Louis is losing draft position, but gave the Mets a parting shot before heading to Pittsburgh for the three fastest games you will ever see in a series between the two teams considering they have nothing to play for. If you're a betting person, take the over in counts that don't run past 1-1.

The Mets are now tied with the Phillies who saw Kyle Kendrick get a longball from Ryan Howard and other help on their way to beating John Smoltz and the Braves. Here's the catch though:

Arizona leads the NL West by a game over the Padres, who lead the wildcard by a game over the Phillies, Mets and Rockies. Are you getting all of this? Yes, that means whoever blows the division between the Mets and Phillies will probably have no shot at the wildcard.

Now onto my reason why I'm pulling for the Rockies. The Rockies have won 11 straight and came out of nowhere to be one game out in the wildcard. I'd personally love to see them win the division, and that's not entirely out of the question, even now!

See, Colorado plays Arizona to finish the season. They sweep Arizona and the Padres lose twice, the Rockies win the NL West. Yes, it can actually happen that way!

The Padres lose twice and the Cubs drop the series to Cincinnati and there's a one game playoff at Wrigley Field between the Cubs and the Brewers. The Cubs would be flying in from Cincinnati, while the Brewers are at home and just need to take a bus south.

To be honest, I can't remember a year when this many teams were separated by a game and seven of the 16 teams in the National League were involved in the pennant race with three games to go. Seven teams, but only four make it. Not one division winner has been decided yet.

Think about it... There's not one team who doesn't use the designated hitter that has popped the cork to a bottle of champagne after 159 games.

I know the Cardinals aren't in the pennant race and will miss the playoffs a year after they gave the city of St. Louis one of the best open houses for new Busch Stadium, but this is a pretty damn good alternative.

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