The All-Star Game Counts, But Do We Act Like It? Posted by Nate Kreichman (07/03/2012 @ 3:56 pm) It’s the tenth anniversary of the travesty that was the 2002 MLB All-Star Game. You know, the one that ended in a 7-7 tie and led to the decision that from then on, the winning side in the game would receive home-field advantage in the World Series. Prior to 2003, the year the rule was implemented, home-field advantage alternated between the AL and NL from year to year. It’s one of three separate but inarguably connected rule-based controversies that dog the “Midsummer Classic” year in and year out. The second being that popular fan vote decides the starting hitters for each side. The third is that all 30 teams must have at least one representative in the game. The rules are linked because what was formerly an exhibition game meant to showcase baseball’s best and brightest (in other words, a money-making scheme) now has actual value. As such, many take issue with the game’s starters being decided based on fans clicking mouses and sticking mini pencils through holes. Equally many argue that requiring a player from each team often leaves superior players off the rosters, which detracts from the notion that the contest spotlights the game’s best. It’s impossible to gauge the impact of playing the first and last two games of the World Series at home. In the nine years the rule has been in effect, the American League has won the All-Star Game seven times. The AL won the game every year from 2003-2009, but its representatives were only champions in four of those seven years. The rule’s effects were minimal, if it had any, as the World Series never saw a seventh game. But in the past two years, the National League has had home-field. In 2010, the San Francisco Giants quickly won their first two home games, and had the Rangers playing scared en route to a 4-1 series victory. Last year was the first time the Series went seven, and the St. Louis Cardinals won the game, and the series, at home. Even if it is impossible to truly gauge the effects, if you’re a fan of a contending AL team, does it sit right with you that Billy Butler might be in a position to decide if your team gets home-field advantage with two outs and the bases loaded in the ninth? Or if your team’s in the NL, that Huston Street (who has only pitched 21 innings this season) might have to get that final out? Those are just some examples of the possibilities of the “one from each team” rule. Let’s take a look at who the fans chose, and decide whether they deserve to be starting, or in some cases, even playing. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: MLB Tags: A.J. Pierzynski, Aaron Hill, Adam Jones, Adrian Beltre, All-Star Game, Asdrubal Cabrera, Billy Butler, Bryce Harper, Buster Posey, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Ruiz, Chipper Jones, Curtis Granderson, Dan Uggla, David Ortiz, David Wright, Derek Jeter, Edwin Encarnacion, Fan Vote, home field advantage, Huston Street, Joe Mauer, Joey Votto, Jose Altuve, Jose Bautista, Josh Hamilton, Matt Kemp, Melky Cabrera, Miguel Cabrera, Mike Napoli, mike trout, Pablo Sandoval, Prince Fielder, Rafael Furcal, Robinson Cano, Starlin Castro, Tie, World Series, Yadier Molina
Mikey’s MLB power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (07/17/2010 @ 6:10 am)
The all-star game is behind us now, which means pennant races are about to heat up for real. And there are so many teams in contention this season, it really promises to be a wild rest of the summer. Here is a look at our post-all-star-game power rankings….. 1. New York Yankees (57-32)—Playing with heavy hearts this week after the passing of George Steinbrenner, but nothing else has changed. They just keep winning, and for the Yankees, that’s just what they do. 2. Tampa Bay Rays (54-35)—David Price is the real deal, and one of many reasons this young Rays team is battling the Yankees for AL East supremacy. They’re one of a handful of teams that can compete with the boys from Gotham, but they’d better not get swept this weekend. 3. Atlanta Braves (53-37)—They suddenly have a 5-game lead over the slumping Mets (and 5.5 over the Phils), and have the look of a team that wants to send Bobby Cox out on top. 4. Texas Rangers (52-38)—Cliff Lee and that lineup? The Rangers can start printing playoff tickets now. 5. San Diego Padres (52-37)—At this point, you can’t call it smoke and mirrors. Just like the Rays, this young team plays hard, manufactures runs and keeps games close with solid pitching. 6. Boston Red Sox (51-39)—Someone has awoken the beast that is David Ortiz. Home run derby was just a tease of what’s to come at Fenway this summer. 7. Chicago White Sox (50-39)—A 9-game winning streak was snapped yesterday, but the south side of Chicago is beaming. Too bad Jake Peavy is out for the year, but that doesn’t seem to matter much right now. 8. Cincinnati Reds (50-41)—See Padres, San Diego. Dusty Baker is one heck of a manager, and that is showing again now. Of course, when you have Joey Votto, Brandon Phillips and Scott Rolen in the middle of your lineup, all is right with the world. 9. Colorado Rockies (49-40)—This year, the Rockies won’t wait to make their move until September. They have already started making it, and the Padres had better watch their collective back 10. Detroit Tigers (48-39)—They have quietly kept right up with the White Sox, just one game back and now 2.5 ahead of the Twins. And Jim Leyland is still one of the best managers in the game. Posted in: MLB Tags: AL East, All-Star break, All-Star Game, Atlanta Braves, Baseball Power Rankings, Bobby Cox, Boston Red Sox, Brandon Phillips, Chicago White Sox, Cincinnati Reds, Cliff Lee, Colorado Rockies, David Price, Detroit Tigers, Dusty Baker, Fenway Park, George Steinbrenner, Gotham, home run derby, Jake Peavy, Jim Leyland, Joey Votto, Major League Baseball, Minnesota Twins, MLB, New York Mets, New York Yankees, pennant races, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Padres, Scott Rolen, Tampa Bay Rays, Texas Rangers
Mikey’s MLB power rankings Posted by Mike Farley (07/10/2010 @ 6:44 am)
Not much has changed at the top of this list, but the Rangers are making a statement. Meanwhile, the Mets, Cardinals and Twins have been playing such mediocre baseball that a few upstarts have knocked them off this list. Here are the pre-All Star game power rankings: 1. New York Yankees (55-31)—It’s on. The Rangers out-bid the Yanks for Cliff Lee, but lookie here—the Bombers have won 7 in a row. They don’t need no stinkin’ Cliff Lee. 2. Texas Rangers (50-36)—Yesterday, Nolan Ryan and company vaulted their team from playoff contender to World Series contender by obtaining Mr. Lee. The middle of their lineup with Vlad, Hamilton and Nelson Cruz just might be the most potent heart of the order in baseball. 3. Tampa Bay Rays (52-34)—Sorry, Boston. Sorry, New York. These pesky Rays are not going away. 4. Atlanta Braves (51-35)—This pains me as a Mets fan, but the Braves made a series-opening statement last night at Citi Field. They are for real and they are trying to pull away from the Mets and Phils. 5. San Diego Padres (50-36)—You think the Mets wish they still had Heath Bell? 6. Boston Red Sox (50-36)—They aren’t giving in either. The next two and a half months are going to be very exciting in the AL East. 7. Cincinnati Reds (45-35)—That team dressed in red leading the NL Central is not the Cardinals. By the way, if Joey Votto didn’t win that online voting, it would have been one of the worst all-star snubs in baseball history. 8. Detroit Tigers (47-37)—Don’t look now, the Tigers have won four in a row and the White Sox six in a row, and they are 1-2 in the AL Central while the Twins are suddenly floundering. 9. Los Angeles Dodgers (48-38)—Will the NL West be like a stock market correction and have the Dodgers and Rockies take over the Padres’ lofty spot? The Dodgers are winning again and making their move. 10. Colorado Rockies (48-38)—Always a late bloomer, the Rockies are also making a move, and their stud ace Ubaldo Jimenez is a positively sick 15-1 at the all-star break. Posted in: MLB Tags: AL Central, AL East, All-Star break, All-Star Game, Atlanta Braves, Baseball Power Rankings, Boston Red Sox, Chicago White Sox, Cincinnati Reds, Citi Field, Cliff Lee, Colorado Rockies, Detroit Tigers, Joey Votto, Josh Hamilton, Los Angeles Dodgers, Major League Baseball, Minnesota Twins, MLB, Nelson Cruz, New York Mets, New York Yankees, NL Central, NL East, NL West, Nolan Ryan, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Padres, St. Louis Cardinals, Texas Rangers, Ubaldo Jiminez, Vlad Guerrero, World Series
The AL’s secret to dominance over the NL in the ASG? Ichiro’s profanity-laced pregame speeches. Posted by Anthony Stalter (07/15/2009 @ 1:45 pm)
With their 4-3 win over the National League in Tuesday night’s All-Star Game, the American League has now beaten their counterpart 13-straight times in the Midsummer Classic. While some are quick to suggest that the AL might have more overall talent than the NL and that’s why it has had so much success in the ASG over the years, apparently the real reason for the AL’s dominance can be linked to the Mariners’ Ichiro Suzuki and his profanity-laced pregame speeches. The tradition began in 2001, Ichiro’s first All-Star appearance, and the AL hasn’t lost a game since. Coincidence? Um. No. “I know how important it is to the game,” Ichiro said. “I’m more concentrated at that moment than I am in the game.” A wide grin spread across his face. Ichiro’s secret had been exposed, so, hey, why not have fun with it? The exact words are not available. Players are too busy laughing to remember them. Ichiro wouldn’t dare repeat them in public. So here’s the best facsimile possible. “Bleep … bleep bleep bleep … National League … bleep … bleep … bleeeeeeeeep … National – bleep bleep bleepbleepbleep!” “If you’ve never seen it, it’s definitely something pretty funny,” Morneau said. “It’s hard to explain, the effect it has on everyone. It’s such a tense environment. Everyone’s a little nervous for the game, and then he comes out. He doesn’t say a whole lot the whole time he’s in there, and all of a sudden, the manager gets done with his speech, and he pops off.” And onto the field they go, enemies during the regular season, friends because together they just saw a 5-foot-9, 160-pound man from Japan, a national icon who surely could win office there, create beef where there wasn’t any.
I’ve obviously never seen Ichiro’s pregame speech, but if it’s anything like Isuro “Kamikaze” Tanka’s inspirational pregame speech to the Tribe in “Major League II,” I can see why the AL has dominated the NL for over a decade.
World Baseball Classic needs format changes to become a global event Posted by Thomas Conroy (03/23/2009 @ 9:06 pm) Entrepreneurs have said that timing is a key ingredient for making a good idea into a successful business venture. Major League Baseball has failed to read its own marketplace in regards to the World Baseball Classic. It is just bad timing to play this tournament at the beginning of spring training.
Commissioner Bud Selig has said that March is the only realistic time of the year to play the WBC. I disagree with him. This tournament needs to be moved to the middle of the summer if the WBC is going to become baseball’s premier global event. If not, then do not expect crisp, memorable games from athletes not yet in game shape. The United States’ three-run come-from-behind victory over Puerto Rico last Tuesday night should have been the top story the next morning. Instead, the outcome was scrolled underneath a highlight package of a NIT opening round game or copy filler in your local newspaper. Why? Well, sport fans are not watching or paying attention to the WBC. No, they’re preoccupied with the NCAA tournament that has firmly established itself as a the major sporting event for this time of the year. Fans cannot get excited about the WBC if the best players in baseball are not playing in the event. And the ones that are playing, many of them are not ready to compete at a world-class level. Where’s Tim Lincecum or Roy Halladay? They should be anchoring the United States pitching staff in this competition. Team USA should not be relying on the arms of Jeremy Guthrie or Ted Lilly in an elimination game. Do you think the Netherlands would have defeated the Dominican Republic twice in a competition if they were playing at mid-season? And wouldn’t it be great to see Johan Santana of Venezuela trading strikes with Japan’s Dice-K for all the world to watch. This could happen if the WBC is played every two years in place of the All-Star Game in July. How about a single elimination format, with the finals to be played on Sunday evening in front of a prime time audience? No other sporting event would be competing with baseball for the almighty TV ratings. Baseball owners might not have any interest in giving up a week’s worth of revenue during the high point of their year, and the idea of scrapping the All-Star game every two years might be enough to give the baseball purist a heart attack, but some playoff contenders might welcome a week off to catch their breath for the second half of the baseball season. Changes need to take place to make the WBC a world event. Right now, this tournament is nothing more than glorified spring training contest. Posted in: March Madness, MLB, Television Tags: All-Star Game, Commissioner Bud Selig, Dice-K, Dominican Republic, Japan, Jeremy Guthrie, Johan Santana, Major League Baseball, MLB, NCAA tournament, Netherlands, NIT, Puerto Rico, Roy Halladay, Team USA, Ted Lilly, Tim Lincecum, United States, Venezuela, wbc, World Baseball Classic
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