Sunday, April 7, 2013

2013 MLB Predictions


Is there a chance the Orioles could be celebrating at the expense of the Nationals this October? A Beltway World Series is not as far fetched as it once seemed.
Tyler's Predictions

AL East
1. Toronto Blue Jays
2. Baltimore Orioles (Wild Card)
3. Tampa Bay Rays
4. Boston Red Sox
5. New York Yankees

The AL East is about to be turned upside down this season. The Yankees and Red Sox in the cellar? It could happen. Age and injuries have depleted the usual powerhouses. The Blue Jays brought in an all-star cast of pitchers and top of the lineup studs in Jose Reyes and Melky Cabrera. On paper, Toronto should be the best team in the division, but we all know that how things look on paper does not translate to on the field success. The second spot could be up for grabs between the 2012 surprise Orioles and the strong-pitching Rays. I see the Orioles returning the playoffs, assuming the starting pitching depth proves to be an asset.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

2013 AL East Predictions

American League East

Expect Jose Reyes to be scoring very often batting at the top of the revamped Blue Jays  lineup


1. Toronto Blue Jays

Key Acquisitions:
SS Jose Reyes, OF Melky Cabrera, IF Emilio Bonifacio, SP Mark Buehrle, SP Josh Johnson, SP R.A. Dickey

Key Losses:

No team will put out such a drastically different opening day lineup than the Blue Jays. The blockbuster trade with the Marlins in which they acquired Jose Reyes, Emilio Bonifacio, Mark Buehrle and Josh Johnson, as well as trading for 2012 NL Cy Young winner R.A. Dickey and signing Melky Cabrera have made the Blue Jays the trendy pick to leap the standings in the East and capture their first division title since 1993. 

Why they will win the East: The new three headed monster of Dickey, Buehrle and Johnson will form a top of the rotation that will reek of the Phillies, circa 2011. Also, Melky Cabrera's bounce back from steroid suspension and the growth of Brett Lawrie will be important for the offense. 

Why they will flop: Dickey struggles in transitioning to the American League, Mark Buehrle shows he can't get people out with an 84 MPH fastball, Melky Cabrera returns to his pre-PED days and Edwin Encarnacion proves his breakout 2012 was a statistical outlier. 

Projected Lineup:
SS Jose Reyes
LF Melky Cabrera
RF Jose Bautista
1B Edwin Encarnacion
DH Adam Lind
3B Brett Lawrie
CF Colby Rasmus
C JP Arencibia
2B Maicer Izturis/Emilio Bonifacio

Projected Rotation:
RA Dickey
Mark Buehrle
Josh Johnson
Brandon Morrow
Ricky Romero

Thursday, March 7, 2013

My Top Ten Maryland Sports Moments as an Undergrad

Maryland students rush the court after beating No. 2 Duke on February 16, 2013

With Maryland falling to North Carolina on Senior Night at Comcast, nearly every major athletic event I will attend as an undergrad at this great university is over (with the exception of maybe a lacrosse game or two). So as my career here comes to an end, I wanted to put together a list of the top ten games I attended during my four years. Without further ado, here they are starting from the bottom:


Sunday, September 9, 2012

Natty Bros NFL Pick'em: Week 1

Each week, the Natty Bros will be doing picks of all the NFL games and will publish them on the blog, with a season record to be tallied each week. Enjoy.

Cowboys vs. Giants
Matt: Giants
Tyler: Giants
Vince: Giants
(And we all started the season 0-1, as did all of the ESPN "experts")

Colts vs. Bears
Matt: Bears
Tyler: Bears
Vince: Bears

Eagles vs. Browns
Matt: Eagles
Tyler: Eagles
Vince: Eagles

Patriots vs. Titans
Matt: Patriots
Tyler: Patriots
Vince: Patriots


Saturday, August 18, 2012

I've waited 14 Years For... This?


Mark Reynolds
Did Mark Reynolds add some late-season fuel to keep the Orioles' fire burning in September?  (Photo credit: Baltimore Sun, 8/17)  



I remember 2002 very fondly. I remember watching Travis Driskill get his major league callup. I remember Tony Batista launching bombs with his quirky stance. But most of all, I remember 4-32. Mike Hargrove managing and steering a ship with no rudder. The team miraciously was 63-63 before the collapse(!). That right there should have garnered Grover some MOY votes, the team was awful. Worse, way worse, than this current team trotted out everynight by Buck Showalter.


Let's flash forward to the present. I still sense the apprehension, the genuine doubt fans have in this Orioles team. I feel it too, don't get me wrong, much has been made of lately that the Orioles run differential is a paltry negative 46, in the same company as the 52-66 Kansas City Royals and the 54-65 Philadelphia Phillies. The adjusted W/L total for the Orioles accounting for their run differential? 55-64, according to baseballreference.com's Pythagorean formula.


Unfortunately, there's no formula for analyzing the atmposphere at the ballpark. I was at the game last Tuesday when Mark Reynolds hit two home runs and the Red Sox were roughed up pretty darn good. The last time I was at a Red Sox/Orioles game at OPACY? "LET'S GO RED SOX" chants and constant screams of joy each time a BoSock reached base, recorded an out and of course, when they eventually won. This time, there was very little of that. The crowd was a decent 26k draw, but what got my attention was the overwhelmingly pro-Orioles theme that reviberated around the stadium. Fans on their feet screaming for Reynolds when he did his Sosa-esque home run jump, oohing and ahhing at Manny Machado making plays at third base that Brooksie would nod his head in approval at. I left that game with a legitimate sense that things are turning around in Baltimore. What could be a better barometer than a Red Sox game in mid August?


This all brings me back to the genesis of this piece. What proof do Orioles fans have that this run will continue into Sepetmber when it matters most? When they win it's by the narrowest of margins, 40 of their 64 wins have come by one or two runs. Yes, their bullpen has a 3.01 ERA, 3rd best in the AL. Their starters though? 9th in the AL with a 4.68 ERA. The inconsistencies of the "calvary" include the likes of Brian Matusz and Jake Arrieta - both relegated to AAA. Zach Britton has battled a shoulder injury and has been largely ineffective in his 2012 season between Norfolk and Baltimore. Chris Tillman has been the brightest spot but even he has had a few rough patches in his big league stint thus far.  The hitting is an enigma in every sense of the word. JJ Hardy has had multiple stretches of downright stink (.200 OBP in June(!!)). Mark Reynolds has been stinky all year, to be polite. Including this recent stretch of hot play his average again remains teetering just above the Mendoza line, but the problem truly lies with the 12 home runs.


So maybe there is no hope for the Birds and the last month and a half will be a screeching regression to the mean. Maybe the starting pitching will completely collapse, Jason Hammel's knee stays balky and the bullpen's run ends because of the grueling season length. 4-32 happened once, I suppose it could happen again.


Or this could happen. Hardy progresses to the mean for his average on balls hit in play. Remember what I just said about his awful stretches this season? June and July he hit .193 and .184 respectfully. His batting average on balls in play those two months? Almost identical, .208 and .207. For his career? .274. And for Reynolds, there is a proven track record with his power production. He has hit below 20 HRs once in a major league season, his rookie year when he played 111 games. There can be any number of factors as to why his season has been a disappointment, but in his career it's worth noting the month that he has hit the most home runs -- August.

Taking a step back and looking at this season is a real treat to Orioles and baseball fans alike. This is a cinderella story, not in the sense of March Madness where a team can catch fire for a few games. The Orioles have battled through peaks and valleys, injuries and ineffectiveness. No different than any other team really (well maybe different than the Astros, who really never "peaked, but I digress). The difference between this team and the previous 14 Orioles teams is hard to pinpoint. 2004 and 2005 had some talent but also some serious clubhouse issues. Maybe this team is succeeding because there are no cancers in the clubhouse as Reynolds said a few days ago. Maybe Buck really does know what he is doing, pressing the right buttons like keeping Hardy batting in the two hole despite his subpar season. Maybe Dan Duquette isn't the bumbling baffoon many made him out to be when he was hired after the Orioles were spurned by just about everyone else they reached out to.

There's no rational explanation as to why the Orioles are where they are, which is smack dab in the middle of the playoff race and in possession of a wildcard spot. With leaders on the team like Nick Markakis, Adam Jones and Matt Wieters the team has a young and hungry core. Reynolds' passionate outburst and subsequent comments about the umpiring last night in Detroit may be the best indicator any of us have as to why this team is winning. They haven't mailed it in. They never did. Somehow, when pundits across the nation predicted 58-70 wins for the Orioles, the players didn't listen. Neither did Duquette, who declared 'We are going to do whatever we can to make the playoffs' --back in June!

That's fine though by me. There doesn't have to be a statistic to back up every win. Yes it's fun to analyze and measure every tangible attribute related to the team, but at the end of the day the Orioles are winning because of the intangibles. And those can't, no matter how hard you try, be measured. Sit back, enjoy the ride, go out to the ballpark and watch the Orioles continue their run. You've waited 14 years for this.



Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The MLB Realignment Plan: Saving the Future of Baseball


Is geographical realignment in Major League Baseball's future? It would only help the game

In this post, I want to take a look at the possibility of division realignment in Major League Baseball. The MLB, similar to the NFL and unlike the NBA and NHL, is based on the traditions of the American and National Leagues, where geography is not the basis for each of the leagues. The NBA and NHL split their leagues into two "eastern" and "western" conferences, with divisions grouping the nearest geographic rivals. MLB's divisions do create geographic rivals, but most teams are not in the same division as their nearest physical rival (i.e. Mets-Yankees, Dodgers-Angels, Cubs-White Sox, Orioles-Nationals, etc.) Sure, regional rivalries against the Yankees and Red Sox exist for the Orioles, but wouldn't playing teams from Washington, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with regularity be even better? In a league that struggles to fill its stadiums to capacity (outside of the major population areas of New York, Boston, Philadelphia and occasionally a few others), nightly attendance could increase across the league if the Orioles are playing more Tuesday night games against the Nationals rather than the Oakland Athletics.

Next season, the Houston Astros will be moving to the American League West, which will cause a chain of events. Each division will now have 5 teams, and the American and National Leagues will each have 15 teams. This means that interleague play will occur every day of the season, amplifying the DH vs. no-DH rules of both leagues. My thoughts are, why stop there? Now baseball traditionalists (and trust me, I'm usually one of them) will hate the idea of scrapping the traditions of the American and National Leagues and starting from scratch, but if baseball wants to continue to draw fans to its stadiums and maintain interest throughout the season, my proposal would help accomplish that goal:


Monday, April 30, 2012

Introducing Courtney Upshaw



                First off both Tyler and Matt in their draft prediction mentioned the chance of the Ravens trading back out of the first round. That is exactly what the Ravens did with their 29th pick in this past weekend’s NFL Draft. The Ravens traded the pick to the Minnesota Vikings in return they received the 35th pick and the 98th pick. With the pick from the Ravens the Vikings selected Harrison Smith a Safety from Notre Dame.
                Watching the draft there was a sense that this was going to happen. Don’ta Hightower was taken by the Patriots at 25 a pick that all three of us here thought the Ravens wanted to make. Overall I am a fan of this as the Ravens were able to trade back 6 picks and get the guy who they most likely would have drafted at 29 anyways in Courtney Upshaw. With the other pick they received from the Vikings they took Gino Gradkowski a Center/Guard from Delaware. Gradkowski has the potential to be the Ravens Center of the future or at the very least provides some young and depth to the offensive line which is always a good thing.
Upshaw should fit right into the Ravens defense.
More following the jump.