Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Marco's Baseball Blog-O-Roonie 2017: Spring Baseball Kisses the Boo Boo

MARCO'S BASEBALL BLOG-O-ROONIE 2017: SPRING BASEBALL KISSES THE BOO BOO

I'm in recovery from post election nausea and box fever.

My wife somehow convinced me that it was time to move my aged ass out of our two story house of the last 14 years so I wouldn't keep landing on it as I fall down stairs in my moments of dotage. She seems to be as sure footed as a mountain goat. (A cute little mountain goat of course.) But I can't seem to drink coffee and talk on the cell phone and walk down the stairs at the same time. I have no idea why.
I keep plunging to my death in more and more spectacular avalanches.

That and our house being uncomfortably in the flood plain (with Onion Creek across the street periodically looking like the Ganges in full flood) finally motivated my Viking wife to make one supreme effort to move three blocks up the hill to a new, one-story town house. Thus the boxes. We've filled up about a thousand of them and are starting to load up the Conestoga. I'm just glad she didn't insist on moving to Costa Rica to get away from Trump.

But suddenly it's time for pitchers and catchers to report to Spring Training! I'm saved! Something to occupy my mind while I try to decide if I really need to keep 6 used tuxedos. And enough books to re-start civilization if Kim Jong Un blows us up.

Instead of worrying about the Bowling Green Massacre I am so relieved that the Texas Rangers didn't sign free agent Jose Bautista. It would have been hard to root for him. Instead Jose re-signed for one year with his old team in Toronto where I can continue to despise his bat flipping hot doggery. I notice that The Mets kept Yoanis Cespedes and the Orioles kept Mark Trumbo and I am grateful for this new sense of team continuity that slightly permeates baseball culture.

Of course Edwin Encarnacion went to the Indians, making them the strongest club in the AL. (Over the Red Sox and the Blue Jays.) And the World Champs, the Chicago Adorables, have to defend their title without their center fielder and lead off hitter Dexter Fowler, who got stolen by their NL Central rivals the Cardinals in some sort of payback for the Justin Heyward take-away of last year. They also watched Aroldis Chapman recamp to the New York Yankee bullpen.

But the Dodgers, in some sort of spasm of actual front office intelligence, kept two of their strongest players in third sacker Justin Turner and closer Kenley Jansen. I can mindlessly pack up six U-Haul moving boxes while day dreaming about the Dodger's chances of repeating as NL West Primeros this season...

LA really needs to win one this year or next. They missed a great chance when they had both Kershaw and Matt Greinke pitching at a high level. They mishandled Greinke's contract negotiation and lost him and last season Kershaw's back acted up. Back trouble is a huge warning sign that a power pitcher's prime is ending.

The Dodgeheads have strong defense up the middle with Grandal catching, Corey Seager at short, Joc Peterson in center and the new addition, Logan Forsyth coming over from Tampa Bay to play second. Power at the corners with Turner and Adrian Gonzalez. Help for Kershaw with young arms Maeda and Urias and old pros Kazmir and Rich Hill to fill out the rotation. They even got a set up man for Kenley with Sergio Romo bringing his slider south from San Francisco.

Some people thought they should have upgraded all the way to Minnesota's second baseman Brian Dozier instead of settling for Forsyth. Dozier somehow hit 42 bombs while playing in that cold Yellowstone Park up in Target Field. And he's only 30. But that would have meant giving up yet another handful of prospects and that minor league depth is still remarkable in the Dodger's organization. They're bringing 65 guys to camp!

With their new found clubhouse chemistry thanks to Mr. Sunshine Dave Roberts I see the Heads maybe having... “The Year.”

LA's competition hasn't done enough. The Giants signed Mark Melancon to be closer, but one guy isn't enough to fix their horrible bullpen. It helps but not enough. They also don't have any offense...again. They keep relying on guys who keep getting hurt.

The DiamondHumps severely underachieved last year. Greinke found out the difference between pitching in a pitcher's ball park vs. that homer dome in Phoenix. (It's almost exactly 2 runs on your ERA, Matt.) The Humps will fight it out for third with...

The Colorado Rockies. They have a hellacious lineup. They got Ian Desmond from Texas to give them a scary good infield with Arenado at third, Story at short and LeMahieu at second. Ian will try to learn first base. (* ALERT: Ian Desmond just broke his hand on a Spring Training inside pitch. 8 weeks out.)

I actually resent LeMahieu for sitting out the last week of the season to protect his batting average from Danny Murphy...who was trying to help his team win by playing. Polish up that batting crown LeMahieu...set it next to a picture of Ted Williams to remind you of your lameness.)
Of course, offense is not the problem in Colorado, RockHeads...it's the pitching! Rockies apologists are claiming that they have a bunch of fresh young arms to rekindle the flickering Colorado baseball flame. Well, they better throw real hard because we know what happens to breaking ball pitchers at elevation. I still say go sinker ball if you're going to pitch in Denver.

San Diego Padres...they lost their football team in San D so now maybe the fans will get more interested in their disaster of a ball team. Won't help.

Moving West to East for a change, The NL Central has already been awarded to the Cubs, but I see possible trouble. For one thing, that starting staff had a great year last year and one of the reasons was David Ross, now retired. Ross framed pitches, especially for Lester. All the pitchers loved him. Willson Contreras can hit and has a great arm but he's not yet a good receiver. That will make a diff to those starters.

Also, the loss of Fowler leaves the Little Bearsie Wearsies with no real leadoff hitter. And who plays center now? Heyward? Syzyzur? The Cubs are short in the outfield.
They made up for the loss of Chapman by signing Wade Davis and Kojie Uehara.

The Cardinals should make up their minds about what kind of offensive team they should be. Either get some power or get some speed. They have a bunch of guys who are in-betweeners. Still, with their pitching talent they are the main threat to Chicago.

Pittsburgh insulted their great star Andrew McCutcheon all winter with trade rumors and then moved him to right. They did little or nothing to bolster their pitching staff. I've just about given up on them. Kansas City and Cleveland showed how to win with a small market team (at least for one or two seasons before you lose everybody to free agency) but the Pirates seem like perennial “Not Quites”.

Cincy Reds had the worst pitching staff imaginable last year. Truly execrable. Now they've lost their $50 million insanity-signee Homer Bailey. Small market teams can't afford to keep that kind of money on the books for non-productive players. They pay Votto a lot too, but at least he delivers. The Reds will compete for last with...

The Milwaukee Brauners. I refuse to pay attention to this team until they get rid of Kid Steroid.

In the NL East the Fabulous Floundering Metskies are ready to disappoint again thanks to a tease of a starting staff. They can either be the greatest collection of arms ever assembled or the youngest collection of burnt out arms ever assembled.

Two years ago I predicted that the Met's pitchers would take turns going down with arm trouble. Hate to say I told you so. Zach Wheeler is back after elbow surgery that took two full years to recover from. Think he's going to be lights out right away? Think again. Harvey (with that stupid Dark Knight nickname) turned into a head case and passed it off as thoracic nerve syndrome. Well okay maybe he was hurt. Maybe he's well now. But when you try to throw it through the side of the barn every pitch...things break down.

Ask Jacob DeGrom. He had the baseball world swooning at his buggy whip fast balls two years ago. At 28 he's had only 3 years in the majors before going under the knife. Likewise Matz. And Noah Syndergaard, who pitched a terrific, dominating game in a losing effort in the Wild Card game against Bumgarner and the Giants...he's nursing an elbow full of bone spurs. Just a matter of time.

Ask Ye Not for Whom the Bell Tolls, Mets fans...it tolls for your pitching staff. (Watch for this sign in the stands in New York this year: “Bring Back Bartolo!”)

The Nationals made one of the stupidest trades I've seen...3 of the top pitching prospects in baseball were in their system and they gave them all up for who?...Aroldis Chapman? Chris Sale? Andrew Miller? (They could have had any of them for those prospects.) No, for Adam Eaton of the White Sox! OVERPAID! So now they have a good leadoff hitter with no power who can play decent defense and nobody to rebuild the pitching staff. If they'd gotten a star, maybe I would have said they're going for it this year and they had to pay. But they got the wrong guy for those arms.

Still the Nats may make the Playoffs because they and the Mets inhabit a weak sister of a division with 3 rebuilding clubs...Atlanta, Florida and Philadelphia. Hard NOT to win some games when you play teams like that 19 times each during the season.

Also, the Nats have an interesting young player named Trea Turner who runs very very fast and can play center or shortstop for them. He could rev up their aging lineup. If Danny “Boy” Murphy has another spectacular year at second and Bryce Harper awakens from his 2016 snooze the Nats could do it this year.

Ooops! Slight interruption here. We just spent a week moving to the new house and I forgot that I can barely set up my own computer. Had to get the son to come up from San Antonio to plug in the right cords and the cable guy to rewire the new house (or something...I can't keep track of what these tech guys are up to.)

Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah...the American League Spring First Look...

If you noticed in the National League rundown, the primary candidates for baseball competence are exactly the same as last year: Washington and New York in the East, Chicago and St. Louis in the Central, L.A. And San Francisco in the West. It's almost a sure bet that the 5 playoff teams will come from that group.

The American League has at least a degree of doubt, mainly because the teams in the East are much closer in relative talent and the West teams are also closer, but mostly in team flaws that should keep the race close.

The Central should be a runaway however, with Cleveland asserting its new-found dominance over the fading Royals and Tigers and especially over the rebuilding Twins and White Sox.

Cleveland will be underrated this year because...well because they're Cleveland and not Boston or New York. Just remember this team came within a workout-room-rain-delay- pep-talk of knocking off the Adorables in a seven-game series with only 2/5s of a pitching staff and no Michael Brantley. Now they have Brantley back (maybe?...that shoulder injury is tricky)and have added the best clutch power bat in the game (now that Big Papi has hung it up) in Edwin Encarnacion. The starters (Carrasco and Salazar) are healed now and the bullpen (with multiple innings freak Andrew Miller)is very, very strong. Their young Prince Lindor is ready to have his third year break-out.*

*A quick aside: did you ever notice how many great players have a break-out year in their third season? I mean the real superstars: Ted Williams (.406 season in 1941), Stan Musial, Willie Mays, George Brett...all the way back to Ty Cobb. The pattern for a lot of superstars seems to be: rookie year make a big splash, retrench in the second year while the league adjusts to them, break out into major dominance in the third season. Of course sometimes the first year is only a handful of games (Willie Mays went into the army for a season)and sometimes injury postpones the break out by a year or so (Bryce Harper, Mickey Mantle).
Following this pattern, I'm predicting Lindor and Houston's shortstop Carlos Correa are ready for their first big offensive season.

The Royals and Tigres will compete for second place...sadly. These are two great teams on the skids. At least KC made it to the top...briefly. But now their two big offensive guns Lorenzo Cain and Eric Hosmer are in their walk years, as is their popular third sacker Moose Moustakis.(Watch the Yankees scoop up Hosmer and his left-handed bat...Hosmer will go up to the 40 dingers a year-range in the Stadium.) The Royals great three-headed monster in the bullpen has been decapitated with the loss of Wade Davis and Greg Holland. Their young starter Ventura was tragically killed. Swan Song for the 2015 champs...an admirable team in so many ways.

The Tigers still have a scary, veteran team on paper: Miggy Cabrera at first, Kinsler at second, Castellano at third, Iglesias at vacuum-shortstop, Upton and J.D. Martinez in the outfield, Victor Martinez at DH. The trouble is that those guys are rarely on the field at the same time because of constant, rotating injuries. Miguel Cabrera is still remarkably great, but fragile in the nether regions. Vmart is hurt all the time now. The whole team is aging and so well-paid that management has little room to augment.

And the pitching...can you believe this team could have had a rotation of Verlander, Scherzer, Porcello, Anibel Sanchez etc.? Now they have Verlander and some hopeful babies. The timing is all off, Tigers.

Maybe they can rally enough to make a bid for a wild card. I'd like to see them have one more shot at glory.

The Twins are rebuilding but somehow think that doesn't have to include pitching?? It's a shame Joe Mauer has to spend the rest of a distinguished career hitting singles for a last place club.

The White Sox have gotten a bunch of young, good prospects and are going to let them go out and play. More power to them. They at least accepted that they weren't a contender and did something about it ala the Cubs. Next they'll trade
Todd Frazier, Melky Cabrera and starter Jose Quintana (at least by July). They just dumped Brett Lawrie to clear second base for Moncada. The White Sox will probably have a juggernaut in place by 2020.

A better race should be expected in the AL West because the Rangers have slipped a little, the Astros haven't added enough and the Mariners have completely overhauled their team to try to win something before Cano and Nelson Cruz are too old. Nobody in the division has enough pitching.

The Astros are counting on Keuchel to bounce back into Cy Young form. They are also assuming that Lance McCullers, Colin McHugh and Doug Fister are legitimate rotation fillers. (?)Big question mark by that statement. They think Giles can get his head screwed on straight and become a lights-out closer. I don't know, maybe he can but he sure didn't look that good last year.

Their big additions in the off-season were Carlos Beltran and Josh Reddick. Both are low average/good power threats at this point in their careers. Beltran is exceedingly old but should be an ok DH most of the time. Reddick will strike out a lot but hit some dingers much like Colby Rasmus did for them last year. I rate these additions a C+. At least Reddick has a good arm in the outfield. I guess they're moving Springer to center?

The main thing you have to like about Houston's chances are their two superstars...Carlos Correa and Jose Altuve. Altuve especially can carry the team with his high average, high on-base and surprising power to go with stolen bases and good defense. Not to mention high level leadership and inspiration. (“If that little guy can go out and dominate, I've got to get my ass in gear!”) Just a great, great player. They need to rest him a little bit every now and then...he wore down in the stretch last year.

Correa is a talent bomb about to go off. If he gets his swing grooved you could see the second coming of young ARod...hopefully an unjuiced version. The Astros are also hopeful about Cuban import Yulieski Gurriel at third and rookie Alex Bregman at first. If those guys are as good as advertised, the 'Stros could be Da Bomb!

The fly in the Astro's ointment...besides their questionable pitching...is the Texas Rangers strange habit of beating the Holy Shit out of them in the season series.
Four years of both teams in the same League and Division: 2013 Rangers 17 wins Astros 2. 2014 Rangers 8 Astros 11. 2015 Rangers 13-6. 2016 Rangers 15-4. That's why the Rangers went to the playoffs the last two years. They dominated their chief rival.

The Rangers have spirit. They are led by a player who is finally getting the acknowledgment he deserves. I speak of Adrian Beltre. (And I still can't believe that the Red Sox let this guy walk after one season in 2010...Beltre had a season of .321/.365/.553 with 28 bombs and 49 doubles. The Sox had him and Vmart and Epstein let them go so they could play Youkilis and trade for Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford. Beltre and Martinez went on to star for Texas and Detroit respectively and Boston finished last 3 out of the next 5 years.)

Along with infield vets Beltre and Andrus the Rangers have some great young position players in right fielder Nomar Mazara and second baseman Rougned Odor. (They also have a potential star in Jurickson Profar if they can find a position for him. He may be able to hop around the field like Brock Holt of the Red Sox.)

I don't much like Shin-Soo Choo and Carlos Gomez as the other outfielders because Choo is going to get hurt anyway and Gomez is a hotdogging hothead. They got Napoli to play first and he's good in the clubhouse and a nice long ball threat when he's not whiffing helplessly on sliders in the dirt.

The big catch (bad pun alert) and an addition that could make a huge difference is catcher Jonathon Lucroy coming over from Milwaukee. Lucroy is one of the top five catchers in the game. A clutch hitter; a steady defensive force. This is a major advantage for the Strangers.

Two problems: the pitching staff and the Disabled List.

The former is highly dependent on having Cole Hamels and Yu Darvish both pitching at a high level. Darvish was babied last year coming back from elbow surgery. He has to pitch more effective innings this year. Hamels totally fell apart and looked nothing like an Ace by the end of last year. He got lit up in the Playoffs. They need him to rally because the rest of the starters are very iffy.

The bullpen is hardly overwhelming either. They have three young power arms in right-handers Jeremy Jeffress, Keona Kela and Tanner Scheppers. Only Jeffress has had a decent season before....31 for 32 saves for the Brewers a couple of years ago. All of these guys throw hard but have put up miserable results. If they get hot the Rangers could be scary.

But it's the DL that's really scary. The Rangers have had epic injury problems the last few years. Most of their pitching staff, Prince Fielder, Profar, Choo...so many really serious injuries have decimated the team...and yet they come back and win two years in a row. Even with those major losses. Fate has to let up and even out, doesn't it?

I look forward to watching both the Astros and the Rangers play...I love Altuve and Correa and I love Beltre and Odor and a lot more of the players on both teams.

I will pick the Rangers to prevail in that division because
of their record of handling the Astros head to head. Also I think the Rangers pitching is a better bet than Houston's. (Unless Houston goes out and trades for a number one type starter before July.) Should be an excellent pennant race...especially because...

Seattle just might smoke them both! I mean, come on Seattle! If not now, when? The law of averages says Seattle can't keep screwing the pooch, season after season. I mean, everybody hates Safeco Field...especially hitters...but it can't hurt that young pitching staff any to have those fences so far away. I mean, Cruz and Cano can still reach them.

The Scariners have Cano, Cruz, Kyle Seager, and top flight additions Jean Segura at short and Carlos Ruiz (to platoon with Gosewich at catcher) along with a host of other new players who haven't learned to lose up there in the Northwest. I think they could do it.

The pitching has to get a lot better. Which is why I applaud the additions of Segura to play short and team with Cano in the middle and Ruiz to be a veteran steady hand for the pitching staff. That guy was a God for the Phillies pitching staff. He's old and slow and can't hit now but so what...did you see what Ross did for the Cubbies last year? The Mariners young staff needs a great game-calling catcher to nurse them along. And he just may revitalize King Felix and get another great year or two out of him.

I'm watching the Seattle RainGods this Spring...if they show signs of life early instead of waiting til August to make a move like last year I'll notify you!

The California Angels...Oh God what a disaster! They've surrounded their four good players (Trout, Calhoun, Pujols (DH only) and Andrelton Simmons (defense mainly) with aging mediocrity and a very weak pitching staff. I think management is desperate but they have too much money on the books with people like Pujols and Josh Hamilton (still!) to make much of a difference. So they take chances on young pitchers, professional bench warmers and aging vets. Once again Angels: WELCOME TO HELL!

If the Strangles don't watch out, Trout will leave in free agency and they'll have nothing to show for his Angels career but one playoff appearance. (3 games-and-out against the Royals in 2014...Trout went 1 for 12.)

Oakland is far from competitive but they are stirring. It will probably take them another year or two to finish the rebuild.

So far we have 6 possible playoff teams in two divisions. Not bad. Now we can add 4 more from the AL East...because who knows what the frick is going to happen over there?

Everybody is in love with the Red Sox because their pitching looks so much better with Sales coming over and improvement (perceived on paper only) in the bullpen. Mookie Betts is everybody's darling. They think Jackie Bradley Junior is going to hit 26 homers every year. (He's not.) They have enough power so that they won't miss Ortiz that much. Wrong...expect a major post-Papi hangover. Not everybody can come up in the big spot and deliver. Hanley and Mookie did a little bit last year, but they had Papi to lean on and scare the pitchers into throwing fast balls to the mere mortals of the lineup.

On the other hand, there is definite reason for optimism among the Fenway Faithful. I speak of Benitendi being an instant batting champ candidate in left. Brock Holt being a band-aid for any position. Hanley coming back strong from his outfield nightmare and playing a quite decent first base. (And Hanley hitting!) Porcello proving himself. Sale coming over. Price not being hurt that bad this Spring (!) Stephen Wright maybe being well enough to pitch his knucklers again. Good depth in the rotation. (Pomeranz, Rodriguez, Kelly). Xander Bogaerts establishing himself as a star at short.

Plus there might be a delightful summer birthday present with Blake Swihart. He's still learning to catch but he's getting better. They had to bring him up too early because of injury emergencies last time. Then he got hurt in the outfield. But he's always been a great switch hitter. Those in the know say he's a can't-miss star hitter. They might let him DH and fill in at catcher once in awhile just to get his bat in the lineup. (Especially from the left side because of all the right handed hitters in the Sox lineup and the lack of Papi.)

The Sox had problems at third base last year. This Spring they'll look at Pablo Sandoval again. From all reports, he's skinny, strong and ready to go long. They can always stick Brock Holt over there 'cause he always produces. (He was their best hitter in the playoffs last year.) And on the way up, they have the top third base prospect in the game in left-handed hitting Rafael Devers, the Dominican Dandy who hits with a lot of power and can handle himself around the bag. Devers is only twenty and can probably wait a year or two but he might be better than whoever else they try.

The keys for the Sox are: Pedroia, Hanley Ramirez, Mookie Betts, Craig Kimbrel and David Price.

Petey has to be the leader he's always been to pick up the Papi-slack. Hanley has to keep hitting in the clutch (yes, to pick up even more Papi-slack), Mookie has to be able to carry the team's destiny with his incredible talent (Papi-slack squared), Kimbrel has to be lights out as the closer to let the bullpen settle into a rhythm. And David Price has to keep pitching at a high enough level to steady the rotation and let Sale and Porcello pitch without too much pressure.

I just don't see how the Sox can fail to at least win a wild card, but then, they've proved me wrong before!

Toronto was close last year and they are tired of tasting the bitter fruit of defeat in the playoffs. They lost their big stick when Encarnacion took Cleveland's money over the Canadian dollars and high taxes.

Jose Bautista made himself look ridiculous a year ago when he informed the world before his free agent walk season that he wouldn't take a home town discount to stay in Toronto (where the friendly fences helped make him a home run star) and would be expecting a 5-7 year free agent contract at $20 million plus a year thank you very much. (Even though he's already 36!) All must bow to me and my transplendant excellence. (Insert bat flip here.) Chew on this Jose...nobody wanted you for more than one year. You were lucky to re-sign with the Jays for a one year $18 mil.

Troy Tulowitzki was healthier than usual last year (131 games) but just didn't click. 24 dingers is good but .254 isn't. This guy has gotten to play in two of the best hitter's ballparks in the majors and I think this has inflated our opinion of his prowess. Good player. Not a HOF candidate.

The team leaders are Josh Donaldson at third and Russell Martin at catcher and they are both very damn good. Martin should get some credit for what the Jays young pitchers did last year. That's the big hope with this team...the pitching staff...

Aaron Sanchez won the ERA title with 3.00. Marcus Stroman had a good WAR. Marco Estrada looked good with his change-up. They got key wins at the end of the season when they brought The Ancient One, Francisco Liriano to the Great White North. So there is reason for optimism. But if they think they're getting another 20-win season from J.Happ, they've been smoking too much medical Mary Jay.

Toronto looks like a formidable threat to Boston to win the division. I think both clubs will make the playoffs.

Last year the Baltimore Orioles faced those Jays in the Wild Card Game and lit a stink bomb when manager Buck Showalter decided to keep his lights-out closer Zach Britton in the bullpen to save him for....what exactly?
The Birds bring essentially the same roster back for another try. They plan to hit a lot of homers and hope the good bullpen can hold the fort. I think they lack depth and starters.

Less predictable is what the New York Yankees will do this year. Their starters are pretty good: Tanaka, Sabathia, Severino and whoever else. The bullpen is fantastic. They got Aroldis Chapman back (and get to keep the great prospects they got when they traded him to the Cubs.) Plus they have Betances and Adam Warren to set up.

The problem is the lineup. Projected middle of the lineup hitters are Matt Holliday and Chris Carter. Carter hit 41 homers for Milwaukee but struck out 202 times. He hit .222 and had a .321 OBP. That's really, really bad. Holliday has been a worthy performer in the game but at 37 he is playing out the string. Brett Gardner and Jacoby Ellsbury show flashes but are basically middling first and second place hitters. Ellsbury especially has really disappointed since his days with the Red Sox. He doesn't hit, doesn't hit for power, and only steals 20 bases now. He hasn't topped 30 doubles since 2013. Warning to general managers: don't buy a player for 5-7 years if he's going to be over 33 or so by the end of the contract and his whole game is based on speed.

The Yankees are trying to bridge until their young players develop. Gregorius at short and Castro at second are already productive. They think lefty Greg Bird can be a good power threat at first. The most excitement is reserved for Gary Sanchez, who hit 20 bombs in his first 50 games last season. He may the next great Dominican player. Has catching skills too.

But in all sobriety, I don't think the Yankees will win the division this year. Not unless about half the roster has a career year. I just don't think they match up with Boston and Toronto yet.

Neither will the Tampa Bay Rays. And a half. Somebody should put this team out of its misery and move them to San Antonio or North Carolina or somewhere. I know I say that every year, but really, it makes me mad to watch a team scout so well and draft great pitchers and just not be able to keep anybody in free agent years. The Oaklands and Tampa Bays of the baseball world haven't been allowed to succeed because they have bad ballparks and rotten locations for their ballparks. The commissioner should step in and facilitate a positive change. Baseball has been too successful lately to be dragging around wounded-duck- franchises like this.

So my first look at the upcoming season counts 10 American League clubs that have a chance to make the playoffs. That's the kind of competition that makes the summer tick! Lots better than the National League, but the super teams even out: Chicago and Los Angeles in the National and Boston and Cleveland in the American.

Here are some top fives for your amusement:

Top five Little Miss Sunshines:

  1. Dave Roberts
4.Mike Trout
3.Adrian Beltre
2.Jose Altuve
and...

1.Mookie Betts

All time? Ernie Banks!

Top Five All Time Scary Brushback Pitchers:

5.Sal Maglie (“The Barber”)
4.Bob Gibson
3.Don Drysdale (he made Willie Mays hit the dirt virtually every time Mays came to bat against him. “If I didn't he'd absolutely kill me” was Drysdale's excuse. Willie never complained either. He knew better.)
2.Randy Johnson
and...

1.Carl Mays (Only pitcher to ever kill a man in major league baseball. (1920...Ray Chapman) Mays was demonized for years but this one event changed baseball profoundly. They outlawed Mays' favorite pitch...the spitball...and started bringing fresh white balls into the game more frequently which led to the end of the dead ball era and more hitting and homers.)

Top Five “Not Enough Mustard for that Hot Dog” Players:

    1. Carlos Gomez
4.Rougned Odor
3.Bryce Harper
2.Jose Bautista
and...

1.Jose Bautista

Top Five All time “Not Enough Mustard for that Hot Dog” Players:

5.Babe Ruth
4.Reggie Jackson
3.Ricky Henderson
2.TIE: Jeff (“Flaps Down”)Leonard and David Ortiz
and...

1.TIE: Jose Bautista and Leon “Daddy Wags” Wagner.(At least I think it was him. He played for San Francisco, St. Louis, the Cleveland Indians and the California Angels in the 60's. Hit around 30 taters a year. Big left handed hitter. When he'd get hold of one he'd hold a pose on his follow- through and shout out...”BATBOY!” Then he'd drop his bat and go into his home run trot.

UPDATES TO COME!