Tag: 2011 MLB Playoffs

MLB Playoffs: St. Louis Cardinals, 1 Ace Tops 4 Aces

In poker, four aces is a winning hand. In baseball, the Philadelphia Phillies thought so, too. But this year it turned out than one ace tops four aces.

A Year of Baseball Drama

This has certainly been a year of drama for Major League Baseball.

  • The two wild card teams were not decided until that very intense last night of the season.

 

  • Three of the four first-round playoffs went to the fifth game

 

  • All four of the final games were decided by one run

 

The Best of the Best

But the best of these dramas so far was saved for the fifth game between the Phillies and the Cardinals. By that time, eight of the top nine payroll teams were gone from sight, with only the Phillies $173 million payroll left standing. Roy Halladay, one of the Phillies’ four aces, and arguably the best pitcher in the game, was up against his friend Chris Carpenter. Halladay went 19-6 in the regular season, had 220 strike outs and a WHIP just over one. Carpenter finished the regular season at a modest 11-9, and had been knocked out of an earlier game in the series after just three ineffective innings.

 

But this night, it was a classical pitchers’ duel: ace against ace, with the Cardinals’ one run looming larger as the game progressed. 

  • Would Carpenter be able to protect the one-run lead?

 

  • Would the Cardinals have to use their spotty bullpen that had troubled them all year long, and almost cost them their shot at the playoffs by giving up six runs in the ninth inning in the brutal loss to the Mets on September 22?

 

  • Would either team be able to scratch out another run?

 

  • Would Carpenter run out of gas, since he had gone at least seven innings in each of his last five starts in the regular season?

And then it came down to the ninth inning, with the meat of the Phillies lineup due up, the same part of the lineup that had scored three runs in the first inning against Carpenter earlier in the series.  With Utley, Pence, Howard, Victorino and Ibanez, there were four out of five left-hand hitters.

  • Utley had the Philly crowd screaming with the long fly ball to deep center,

 

  • Pence grounded out to third,

 

  • and, Howard couldn’t even make it to first base

 

So there you had it: one ace beat the four aces. 

All of the top nine payroll teams are gone. All of the East and West Coast big-city teams are gone. So middle America gets a chance to fight it out for the World Series crown, in a season to remember.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Philadelphia Phillies: 6 Bold Predictions for the Phils’ 2011 Postseason

With less than a month to go, the Philadelphia Phillies are in cruise control.  There is no way they miss the playoffs at this point, so let us look forward and concentrate on what should be a very exciting playoff picture.

I present to you my “Six Bold Predictions for the Philadelphia Phillies’ 2011 Postseason.”

I am smart enough to realize that a “bold prediction” today does not necessarily equate to an absolute truth.  Anything is possible though.

Begin Slideshow


Texas Rangers: After C.J. Wilson, Who Should Make Postseason Starting Rotation?

Should the Texas Rangers hold off the Los Angeles Angels in the heated AL West race, they will secure back-to-back postseason berths for only the second time in franchise history. The other time that happened was in the 1998 and 1999 seasons, in which they were swept by the New York Yankees both times.

A possible postseason berth should be credited in large part to the job the starting rotation has done this entire year.

The combination of C.J. Wilson, Derek Holland, Matt Harrison, Colby Lewis and Alexi Ogando have helped compile the most shutouts in franchise history with 18. They also all have at least 11 wins and are all over 150 innings pitched for the year.

In a year when the bullpen has been up and down, the starting rotation has been the most consistent part of the Rangers ball club. When was the last time you heard that?

However, heading into possible postseason play, the Rangers are faced with the tough decision of whom to start in a potential five-game series.

Go ahead and pencil in C.J. Wilson for the Game 1 start, as he has been the unquestioned ace on this ball club. After earning his first career shutout, Wilson has now become the first Rangers left-handed pitcher to post back-to-back 15 win seasons. He leads the team in ERA, wins and strikeouts and should a Game 5 arise, Wilson would be your guy.

After that, it gets interesting.

Derek Holland and Matt Harrison are doing the most to make sure they are penciled in as the No. 2 and 3 starters.

Holland has dominating stuff, but has struggled with consistency throughout his career. Holland has turned in a few gems that would make you think he is the real deal, but would follow those up with some horrendous outings.

Lucky for the Rangers, Holland is pitching as good as he has all year.

Before the All-Star break, Holland had two complete-game shutouts but still had an ERA of 4.68 and a WHIP of 1.46. Since the break, Holland has two more complete-game shutouts, but his ERA is down to a very good 3.25.

And while his complete game gems were against the Oakland A’s and Seattle Mariners, he has stepped up against some of the best teams in the American League. In that stretch, he has blanked the Boston Red Sox, given up one run over eight innings to the Los Angeles Angels and arguably out-pitched David Price in a game earlier this week.

With Harrison, you get the Rangers most consistent pitcher not named C.J. Over the course of the season, Harrison has compiled 14 quality starts while inducing the most double plays in the majors. Harrison also has only given up 12 home runs all season, which bodes well for him against the AL East sluggers.

In a series against Boston, the Rangers top three starters will be Wilson, Holland and Harrison, in that order, due to the matchup problems they create. The Red Sox lineup is very left-handed heavy and the trio of southpaws the Rangers possess have already proven the ability to shut them down.

Now here is where the battle gets a little more complicated.

On the one hand, you have Colby Lewis, who was probably the best pitcher for the Rangers last postseason. The problem is Lewis has been, for the lack of a better word, inconsistent. He has pitched five games in which he did not allow a run but has also given up at least five runs in a game nine times.

In Lewis, you have the experience factor, but you also have probably the worst-performing Rangers starter over the course of the year. One stat that figures to work against him is that he has given up the most home runs in the entire American League with 33.

With the Rangers facing one of the top two home run-hitting teams in the majors, Lewis must have a drastic change in performance to instill confidence in him in a postseason matchup.

Then you have Alexi Ogando, the converted reliever turned All-Star starter. Ogando was arguably the Rangers best pitcher in the first half, going 9-3 while posting an ERA of 2.92, but things have since gone downhill. Ogando is just 3-4 since the break with an ERA of 5.19 and a WHIP nearing 1.50.

Ogando has some of the most electric stuff of any pitcher on the staff and can be dominating at times, but the fatigue he appears to be suffering from could keep him out of the starting rotation all together.

Where Ogando has the advantage over Lewis, besides overall better stuff, is he has given up half the amount of home runs that Lewis has allowed.

So who should be in the starting rotation?

If I were making out the rotation, it would look something like this:

Home field advantage against Yankees:

Wilson, Harrison, Holland and Lewis.

On the road against Yankees:

Wilson, Holland, Harrison and Lewis.

Home field advantage against Red Sox:

Wilson, Harrison, Holland and Lewis.

On the road against Red Sox:

Wilson, Holland, Harrison and Lewis.

This all came down to whether Ogando can hold up in the postseason with the amount of stress his arm has been put under this season. He has pitched three times more innings this year than any other time in his career. Unless he can show some signs of the pitcher from the first half, I’ll take the experience of Lewis and have Ogando come out of the bullpen once again in October.

As far as flipping Harrison and Holland depending on home-field or not, I would rather have Harrison pitching at home because of his ability to keep the ball in the park at the launching pad that is Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. Holland has given up 18 home runs as opposed to Harrison’s 12.

That’s my playoff rotation. What’s yours?

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB Playoffs: Will the Boston Red Sox Use Tim Wakefield If He Gets 200th Win?

Tim Wakefield is the current fifth starter for the Boston Red Sox and would not be a starter if the MLB Playoffs started today. Wakefield is going for his 200th win yet again tonight, but getting this win does not mean he will gain a spot on the 2011 MLB Playoffs roster—or does it?

There are only 25 players on the active roster at a time until September when there are 40 allowed on a roster. In the MLB Playoffs, there are 25 players only per round and if someone gets hurt, then you can replace them with a player that was called up on or before August 31. This means you can replace a starter or bullpen relievers for each round if someone is pitching and/or batting terribly. Therefore, if the Boston Red Sox need a long reliever, then Tim Wakefield is their guy in the 2011 MLB Playoffs

Tim Wakefield can also be a great middle reliever and late-inning guy, but since he is a starter and a veteran I believe he should not have to earn a spot on the Playoff roster. He is one of those pitchers who can help a club whether going a third of an inning or going a complete game. The Boston Red Sox really need to believe the 45-year-old will help them win in the postseason.

Wakefield goes for win number 200 again Saturday night against the Kansas City Royals. He has tried four times for this milestone, is 0-2 in those starts and is left with the lead in a couple of them, but the bullpen has let the lead slip away.

The Boston Red Sox rely on Tim Wakefield a lot and his 200th win would mean the world to them as much as it does to him. He has played with the Sox since 1995 and has done everything for them and even had 15 saves in 1999.

According to mlb.com, he has 185 wins with the Red Sox and is seven wins away from Cy Young and Roger Clemens, who both have 192 wins, for the most in team history. He will most likely retire once he ties or passes them. His record for the 2011 season is 6-5.

Do you think Wake should pitch in the 2011 Boston Red Sox playoff run?

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Seattle Mariners: Your Bonafied Postgame Traffic-Planning Commission at Work!

At a Seattle Mariners professional baseball game last night, we were parked in the garage between the football and baseball stadiums in Seattle.  This was a perk for the front-row tickets given my wife by supervisors for all her good work of the past few months.  No nose-bleeders for this group on this warm late-spring night! 

And no hiking tens of miles to the car following the game.  This time we would be the snooty royalty that annoys the masses of peons, and like snooty royalty, we would be parking across the street from the baseball stadium free of charge with the BMWs, Mercedes and exotic sports cars of the world.

Walking only a few yards to the car was really cool. 

But after the game, not getting out of the same parking garage for over an hour, gridlocked in non-moving vehicles just outside the stadium, sort of ruined the thrill of parking in the garage where they charge mere mortals up to $50.  

More disturbing, it became apparent that the traffic planners in our city were either crazy, or deliberately making traffic as bad as they could following typical sporting events.  It was almost as if they were making traffic worse—far worse than had there been no helpful, friendly Seattle police officers supervising traffic flow after games.

How do I know this? 

Because after waiting an hour in toxic fumes that could melt steel, I finally managed to escape the confines of the concrete garage, but was immediately ushered to the east side of Safeco Field where all vehicles did not move.  Nor could they move, because helpful, friendly Seattle police traffic officers were routing all 45,000 vehicles into the same one-lane alley south of the stadium. 

Ironic, because I sort of wanted to go north, and catch the freeway on-ramp that would take me north, that I could see…ever so close.

But the friendly, helpful police traffic officers were having none of that!  Nope, they insisted all traffic go south, right into a big gridlocked mess where nobody could move out of because other helpful police traffic officers were routing everyone where they should not be.   

So there we sat.  For a very long time.  Nobody moving and everybody getting extremely agitated.

Finally, the two-hour mark after the game hit, and like magic all the police officers hopped on their little parked motorcycles and sped away into the night, suddenly leaving all the gridlocked intersections unregulated. 

And once they did, within five minutes the traffic had completely cleared out. 

No more helpful traffic cops equaled no more gridlock.  Who would have thought?

At that point many of us, as we drove home, asked the important and profound question most citizens in Washington State have asked after sporting events: 

“Hey, if traffic is better without the friendly, helpful police regulation following games, perhaps the city is wasting its money by having each and every intersection littered with these fine, uniformed folks?”

Maybe a prudent plan would be to not spend the money for all these lovely traffic heroes, and instead let things be like they are during the rest of the week? 

Why not let traffic do what traffic does, without the “help”?

Once, several years ago, following another game in which this exact same thing happened, I emailed the beloved traffic commission chairperson and suggested this wonderful and intellectual idea. 

And just like the friendly, helpful police traffic officers at every corner last night, he eventually emailed me back with suggestions of various physical activities that I could do to myself. 

He also mentioned that people as stupid as me don’t realize that this was actually a huge traffic improvement.  “You idiot!”

See this is because the Seattle Police Department, in co-operation with the City of Seattle and various inept mayors, has carefully crafted a set of hiring guidelines for every single traffic planner.  Here’s how it goes:

 

Clause No. 1

If the applicant shows college education or traffic planning experience, that person will immediately be disqualified for employment consideration by the PGSTPC (Postgame Seattle Traffic Planning Commission).

 

Clause No. 2

If said applicant shows any natural talent for common-sense thinking, that person too, will immediately be disqualified for employment consideration by the PGSTPC.

 

Clause No. 3

Preferred applicants will normally be found in chimpanzee cages at the Woodland Park Zoo, or found sleeping under bridges in frigid temperatures.

 

Clause No. 4

Habitual inebriation for each traffic planner is a plus.  In fact, if said applicant arrives at job interview immediately after consuming a fifth of Jack Daniels straight up, that applicant will vault to the top of the stack and may be immediately hired and assigned to supervise all traffic planning for the day, before sobering up.

 

Contrary to what you might think, the goal of the PGSTPC is not to clear traffic out.  Nope.  The goal is to keep traffic confined in unmoving gridlock for as long as possible. 

Speculation persists that the local business community is behind this reasoning, insisting that the longer you stay in their neighborhood, the more crap you may buy.  Oh sure, most of those businesses are closed by the time the Mariners games are over, but…well, please see Clauses No. 1 through No. 4 if you are confused about this policy.

Also, within the traffic code is the north/south directional concept.  If said vehicle prefers to travel north (because your house is north of the stadium), each and every regulated traffic corridor will insist you go south.  For many miles too.  Conversely, if your house is situated to the south, then the very same traffic corridors will route you north in the opposite direction you wish to go, usually into gridlock and parked contraptions that cannot move.

Years and millions of dollars were spent on little, unknown GPS chips that police officers read from your vehicle as you approach, like they do for the toll bridges.  Particular effort is put into stringent requirements insisting the direction of your vehicle goes in the opposite direction that it should.   

Why? 

Because it’s fun for intoxicated traffic planners to see all the cars not moving for hours after a sporting event.

And don’t bother screaming at localized traffic cops on corners about all of this, because that will merely make them cranky.  They didn’t do the traffic plan, they merely enforce it.  In fact, when frustrated motorists yell at cops, frustrated motorists may soon find themselves charged with heinous crimes and strip-searched in public. 

What frustrated motorists can do, however, is write sarcastic articles like this one when they get home several weeks later, and then send them to every public official they can find. 

That’ll teach those jerks.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Texas Rangers: Endy Chavez and the Red Hot Texas Offense

The Texas Rangers have outscored their opponents 57-23 in the past eight days, and Endy Chavez has been the unsung hero of this recent hot streak. While players like Josh Hamilton and Nelson Cruz have been hitting balls out of the park, Chavez has been hitting .435 in 13 games while crossing the plate 11 times.

The emergence of this new hitting machine has surprised many in the Rangers fan base. Chavez began the year in AAA Round Rock hitting .305 in 30 games. He recently made his first major league appearance since 2009 where his season ended with a torn ACL. He was called up after Julio Borbon was placed on the disabled list but has remained on the roster despite Borbon being activated.

Chavez is putting up career high numbers in a lot of offensive categories and in many cases is outpacing the player he was sent to temporarily replace. Here’s a look at some figures comparing this year’s stats with his previous career-high stats.

  AVG OBP SLG WAR Cutters Seen Fastballs Seen Strike Contact Ball Contact
Career High .306 (2006) .348 (2006) .464 (2002) 1.1 (2008) 4.2% (2009) 70.4% (2002) 93.1 (2008) 78.5% (2008)
2011 Season .435 .469 .696 1.1 13% 58.2% 95% 87.5%

It’s very telling that he’s seeing fewer fastballs and more secondary pitches yet his average is up over .100 on his career high. Even dropping pitches outside of the strike zone isn’t enough to keep him off the bases.

If Borbon wants to come back to the majors, he’s going to have to improve his plate discipline. He’s certainly more of an elite defender in the outfield than Chavez but the Rangers can’t afford to keep Endy’s hot bat on the bench. Don’t be surprised to see a trade involve David Murphy because the Rangers don’t really have a need for two outfielders to warm up the dugout during games, especially if the Rangers really want Borbon to come back.

Can he keep this hot streak alive through the rest of the season? Only time will tell.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB: Colorado Rockies Blast New York Mets in NYC: 5 Keys to the Rockies Sweep

View From the Rockpile: Musings From a Mile High Along the Journey to Rocktober

 

There’s no bigger stage for a middle-market club than the sparkling new sandlot just a skip, hop and a seven-train jump from Broadway.  Do it here, and media, critics and fans will take notice. 

 

America, meet the 2011 Colorado Rockies.

 

The Rockies entered this season demanding better from themselves away from the friendly confines of Coors Field.  Road warriors, they need not be; but 31-50 on the road (as they were in 2010), they cannot be, not if they aim to make their NL West championship dreams come true.

 

After taking three of four from the Pirates in PNC Park, the Rockies looked to continue to exorcise their road demons at Citi Field against a struggling New York Mets squad. 

 

Yet, having lost eight straight series in the Big Apple and 22 out of their last 27 in old New York, New York, the Rockies still had their work cut out for them.

 

Consider those dragons tamed, at least for the moment.  With the Herculean efforts of team leader Troy Tulowitzki, the Rockies fought their way through wind, rain, daily deficits and a doubleheader to an amazin’ four-game series sweep against the Mets.

 

Just how did the Rockies manage to turn the Mets into the Mess?  Take a look inside to find out…

Begin Slideshow


Colorado Rockies: After One Week in 2011, Five Reasons They’ll Make the Playoffs

There were a few concerns for the Colorado Rockies, the team that many experts picked as the favorite to unseat the defending world champion and division rival San Francisco Giants.

One week into the 2011 season, those expectations don’t seem too out of reach. 

With all the positives that this season could potentially bring, there are, of course, some things the team still needs to work on.

The Rockies have one of the league’s best records in 4-1 and that is a good representative of how they’ve performed this past week. Rockies fans were quick to find the panic button after Ubaldo Jimenez’s less-than-stellar outing on Opening Day against the Arizona Diamondbacks. He suffered through six hard innings, giving up six runs on seven hits while striking out one and walking one.

Rocktober dreams seemed to dim before they even started. 

The Rotation is Successful All the Way Through

Coming into the season, the pitching rotation was one of the major concerns the national media and Rockies fans had. One cycle through the rotation, those worries have turned into high expectations. 

Jorge De La Rosa had a brilliant outing and looks to continue the dominance he had last season, Jhoulys Chacin could be as good as Jimenez, Jason Hammel looks to continue the success he found in 2010, and Esmil Rogers surprised many with his gem Thursday in Pittsburgh.

Pitching has never been a strong point for Colorado since their inception in 1993. If Jimenez can return to form after his stint on the disabled list, this rotation has the chance to be the best the Rockies have ever seen, bar none. 

The Bottom Third of the Lineup is Producing

Another concern that Rockies brass had was how well players like Chris Iannetta, Ian Stewart and Seth Smith could hit. All three had a disappointing year at the plate last season and many say that the success of the Rockies’ offense hinges on the success of these three at the plate.

Stewart is still looking for his first hit of the year, and while he hasn’t been benched, he has seen decreased time at the plate while the Rockies have opted to go with infielder Ty Wigginton, especially against left-handed pitchers.

Smith is currently hitting .412, as of Friday before the Rockies’ matchup with the Pirates. He has responded well to increased pressure to perform offensively. He hit left-handers well in spring training, which was something the Rockies’ coaches wanted him to improve upon. 

Iannetta is the biggest success story coming out of spring training. He is currently hitting .313 with one home run and two RBIs so far in 2011. He has embraced the catcher’s role, instead of babysitting it for someone else like last season. Chris Iannetta, if he keeps hitting like he’s proven he can, could be the key to the bottom third of the Rockies’ lineup. 

Tulowitzki is Off to a Good Start

The odds-on favorite for the National League MVP has never gotten off to a hot start in April. This April, Rockies fans thought that wouldn’t change. His 0-for-10 stretch to start off the season was not a good sign for the team, but he broke out against the Dodgers last week. Since April 5th, Tulowitzki is hitting .500 with three home runs, six RBIs, and one double. 

Since the two-game sweep of the Dodgers, Tulowitzki has been on fire. The question is whether or not he can keep up the offensive production. He can’t keep up the .500 pace he’s on now–no one is asking that of him. But for this to be considered a successful April, Tulowitzki will need to hit at least .270 before May rolls around.

All Signs Point to a Healthy Todd Helton

Mr. Rockie has been up and down the past two years. In 2009, he had a very successful year, hitting .325 with 15 home runs and 86 RBIs, finishing 13th in the NL MVP race. In 2010, however, he hit a paltry .256 with eight home runs and 37 batted in. 

This offseason, he noted that a combination of healthier eating and P90X have made his ailing back feel young again. Thus far in 2011, it seems to have paid off. Through five games, Helton is hitting .294 with one home run and four RBIs. He’ll be spelled at first base by both Ty Wigginton and Jason Giambi, but if he can keep up the pace like he did in 2009, a successful year for Helton might be the key to another postseason berth.

Can the Team Stay Healthy?

The Rockies’ biggest problem the past few years has been avoiding the injury bug. Entering his sixth year in the bigs, Troy Tulowitzki has only played in 150 games twice. Todd Helton needs to regain his 2009 form, instead of what he looked like last year.

The pitching rotation, once Jimenez returns, needs to stay healthy and dominant. A strong bullpen can help alleviate some of the pressure on the rotation, but there needs to be a fine line between the two, instead of overusing one or the other. 

Barring any major injuries and a complete shutdown by the pitching staff, Colorado looks to be the team to beat in the NL West. Once they hit the playoffs, everyone knows that they’re capable of anything. If these five things ring true, Rocktober 2011 is all but in the bag. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Cincinnati Reds Are Poised for a World Series Run

Continuing my springtime tradition, I will give my thoughts on the upcoming season for the Cincinnati Reds. Again, like last year, I am a little late getting started. The Reds have jumped out to a 4-0 start as I write this.

In Reds history this has been done four times and each time the Redlegs have made it to the World Series.  That’s a pretty amazing statistic.

The Reds were virtually ignored by the national media in the off-season. Part of it is they are a small market team and the other part is due to the fact that they pretty much kept their team in tact for this coming season. No major free agent signings and no trades.

How far the Reds go this season depends on how quickly their young talent develops. There are already signs of improvement as Drew Stubbs (22 homers, .255 avg. in 2010), enters his second full season as a starter. Fellow outfielder Jay Bruce (25 homers, .285 avg. in 2010) is on the threshold of stardom too.

The Reds have the reigning National League Most Valuable Player in Joey Votto (37 homers, .324 average in 2010). The question for Votto is, can he have an even better year than what he had 2010?

The Reds are solid at every position. Gold Glovers Scott Rolen at third base and Brandon Phillips at second base are joined by slick fielding Paul Janish at shortstop. The catching duo of veteran Ramon Hernandez and up-and-comer Ryan Hanigan were not only the second best offensively in the league, but also one of the best at throwing out potential base stealers.

Aside from Stubbs, Bruce, Janish and Hanigan, young guns on the pitching staff are going to be tough on National League hitters. Twenty-three-year-old Mike Leake, a right hander drafted out of Arizona State, has never pitched in a minor league game. He was almost certain to go to the minors this season but early injury setbacks to right handed pitchers Homer Bailey and Johnny Cueto haveleft him in Cincinnati. Lefty Travis Wood, 24, could well be the next Cliff Lee the way he has thrown since the end of last season and to start this season.

Everyone knows about Bronson Arroyo (17 game winner in 2010) and Edison Volquez (coming off Tommy John surgery).

Arolis Chapman, a 23-year-old left-handed Cuban defector, turned the baseball world on its side with his blazing fastball last year. One pitch in San Diego reached 105 miles per hour last year. He joins a bullpen that is solid with Francisco Cordero (40 saves in 2010) and Nick Masset (3.40 era in 2010).

Expect Bailey and Cueto to return shortly and make things hard for manager Dusty Baker to pick his top five starting pitchers. 

With all of this said, the strength of the Cincinnati squad is depth. General Manager Walt Jocketty has ’em lined up three and four deep in the minor leagues waiting to get their crack at the big league club.

An example is at catcher. Hernandez and Hanigan are followed by minor leaguers Yasmani Grandal and Devin Mesoraco. Mesoraco had one of the best spring trainings of any Reds player. You can also add Corky Miller, a seasoned veteran, playing in Louisville to the mix.

It’s like that at nearly every position for the Redlegs.

In the not so distant past, the Reds were lucky to go one deep at most positions. Thus the difference this year.

So much this season will depend on the grand motivator—manager Dusty Baker. In the early going Baker has played his bench players to “get them involved” in the quick start.

It’s really hard to imagine any team seriously challenging this team in the National League Central division. My prediction is the team will make it back to the playoffs, but are they good enough to get past Philadelphia and San Franscico?

Look for the Reds in the World Series.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


2011 MLB Playoff Predictions: The 8 Teams Destined for October

Ahh, the sweet smell of April.

The only time of year where Indians and Mariners fans have the same amount of hope as Yankees and Phillies fans. That is because April is a time for a fresh start and a new beginning. One hundred and two years without a World Championship for the Cubs and 18 straight losing seasons for the Pirates mean nothing right now, because every team has a chance.

But right now, only one series through the season, I am predicting the 8 teams that I believe are postseason bound.

Some are obvious and some will surprise a lot of people. 

Begin Slideshow


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress