Thursday, March 30, 2006

MLB Preview, part 2

All right, so team-by-team capsules clearly aren't my strength. Sorry about that. Though I stand by my insinuation that the AL is dumb.

Let's try something else. First of all, I'll admit that I'm not great at stats, predictions, and things of that ilk. The Diary has always been intended to be more from an Irrational Fan perspective, not a Baseball Expert perspective (though I could hold my own in many baseball discussions, I'd like to believe).

Having said that, I will just say I have no idea what to make of the NL West and Central. The West appears to be a collection of lame teams trying to out-mediocre each other. (San Diego in the playoffs last year instead of the Phils... what a freaking travesty. And I'm not biased.) The Central will probably be the same as always: St. Louis and Houston battling for the lead, with some random team lagging close behind for most of the season to make it interesting (the trendy pick this year is the Brew). Whatever. See, the problem, like I said, is that I'm not a Baseball Expert, not in the traditional (or useful) sense: I'm a Phillies fan first, a baseball fan second. (Though I do enjoy the playoffs and World Series, even when the Phils aren't in them. I just accept them for what they are: meaningless, non-Phillies exhibition games played for the amusement of people in New York and Boston.) The way I see it, the league is basically the Phillies and 29 obstacles. Either they get the hell out of our way, or they don't. Usually, they don't.

Which brings us to the only division that matters, the axis around which the sports world spins: the NL East, featuring the Phillies and the four most infuriating and evil obstacles. I shall rank them below, and please note that this season I will be using their new code names, which I have helpfully placed in parenthesis.

Marlins (Actually, I haven't come up with their code name yet; I'm thinking something like "Losers" or "Vegas Marlins" or "Firesale-Having Bunch of Cheap, Horrible-Fan-Having Teal-Wearing Bastards"): This is the one year where I think we can safely not worry about these guys. Their Spring Training camp must have been a ghost town: they have exactly two good players, Dontrelle and Cabrera, and they spent most of the month out at the WBC. They're like a AA team. I love it. (Knowing them, I predict they will win the World Series in 2009.)

Nationals (Expos In Disguise, or EIDs): The Soriano thing was probably overblown, but I have to admit it was fascinating - it raises all sorts of questions about the nature of player vs. team management (i.e., how much say does a player have in how or where he plays? Should he do what's good for the team no matter what, or try to protect and further his own career, even if it's bad for the team?) . Also, there's the promising sign that their front office is a bunch of idiots who make trades without doing adequate research (good for the Phillies to know for future reference, though to their credit, they did palm Endy Chavez off on us). Still, none of this is as interesting as watching this franchise morph gradually from "Lovable Canadian Team With Cool Logo That You Can't Bring Yourself To Dislike" to "Yet Another Faceless NL Team I Hate".

Braves (Pure Evil): What will Pure Evil pull out of its bag of demonic tricks this year? Maybe they'll field an entire squad of 16 year olds, and win 115 games. Maybe Bobby Cox will use his untouchable genius to cure all the world's diseases. Maybe Francouer goes down and gets replaced by another, better rookie out of literally nowhere. One thing's for sure: a Phillie will hit a home run off Smoltz, and he'll have a hissy fit like a little girl.

The pundits and experts seem frightened of the idea of picking against Pure Evil, they having won the last 55 straight division titles. And you know what, I'm scared of them too, knowing as I do that they're Pure Evil, and probably listening to everything I'm saying right now, and will arrange for a SEPTA bus to hit me tomorrow. So, I give up. Pure Evil will win the division, like they always do, and always will, for the rest of eternity. They will go 152-10, Chipper Jones will win the Triple Crown, Bobby Cox's ass will be red and raw from all the kissing, and they will find time to cause a rockslide in South America, killing thousands. After that, they will lose in the first round to St. Louis.

Mets (Scumbags): The more I think about the Scumbags, the less impressed I am. Their lineup is basically Delgado, Floyd, Beltran, that dude David Wright, and then a bunch of other dudes. That's it? That's what you're throwing at us? That's what has all the experts falling over themselves, awarding you 105 wins and your first title since you snorted your way to the last one? Oh, it's pretty good, I'll give you that, but is it better than Howard, Utley, Burrell, and Abreu? Guess what? It isn't. Or at any rate, let's call the lineups a push.

The Scumbags' rotation features Pedro and Glavine. They're like 80! And then what, Zambrano? Trachsel? Some kid with no major league experience? If this spring has taught me anything, it's that the Phils' rotation is going to be better than people think. Maybe even better than Pedro, Glavine, and a cast of thousands.

I think there's some psychological phenomenon at work here: basically, there's a perception that the Scumbags stole Wagner from the Phils, therefore the Scumbags are better. And yes, Wagner's an awesome pitcher, I will not claim otherwise. But seriously, are the Phils so horribly worse without him, as everyone seems to believe? The closer position is overrated. Wagner can talk about the Phils' apparent lack of a "commitment to winning" all he wants, but think about it: Ed Wade put together a team in front of Wagner that was good enough to get him nice save-worthy leads two or three times a week. Consequently, Wagner is now a millionaire. The Sox won the WS last year with some random kid closing. Granted, he threw 98 mph, but he wasn't some overhyped, overpaid closer that the Sox had to break the bank to get. The Phils were probably a little silly to turn around and overpay Tom Gordon in response, but as long as he's solid, he'll be fine. Remember, this team had Jose Mesa closing in 2003, and still won 86 games. That should really call into question everything we believe about the importance of closers, if not the very nature of reality and logic.

But there's one crucial reason not to hand the Scumbags the division title just yet:

They have Endy Chavez.

At the risk of absurd exaggeration, Endy Chavez is the worst baseball player who ever lived.

He'll rob the Scumbags of four or five wins, easy.

Okay. So that's the 29 obstacles covered. Tune into tomorrow, and we'll discuss the our Fightins. After that, it's time to play some freakin' ball, man.

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Wednesday, March 29, 2006

MLB Preview, part 1

All right, tell you what I'm going to do. I don't have a lot of time and I haven't prepared anything, but I'm going to suddenly make up my baseball preview as I go along. Sounds like fun, huh? I'll start with the AL today because I want to get it over with - I mean, who cares about the AL?

EAST
Not content with being merely irritating, the Red Sox went out and got Josh Beckett - two things I despise have joined forces! Oh goody! Why don't they just wear swastika armbands? Meanwhile, I've planned a road trip up to Toronto in July to see the Phils play the Blue Jays. The Jays should actually be good this year, which should make for a good series, distracting me from the slow realization that I'm sitting in the building where The Worst Thing That Ever Happened happened. I'm not worried about the Yankees. Randy Johnson is what, 87 years old? It's over, Yanks fans. Let it go. The Devil Rays are interesting and young and have free parking, that's pretty cool. The Orioles feature Miguel "Literally The Biggest, Dumbest Crybaby I've Ever Seen" Tejeda, so I gotta root against those losers.

CENTRAL
Gentleman Jim now plays for the fun and cool White Sox. I love the South Side, man. Go Thome! The Tigers have improved. The Royals, not so much. The Indians might just be something special. You can tell I've got little to say about the AL Central, can't you? Who else is in that division? Oh yeah, the Twins. Yeah, they're a baseball team, all right.

WEST
I hate the Rangers. I don't know why. They just rub me the wrong way. I like the Angels though. That's a cool team. A's, yeah, they're good. Mariners, I don't know. This baseball preview was a terrible idea.

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Saturday, March 25, 2006

Call off the search. Put away those flashlights. Re-leash those police dogs. Your fears are unwarranted. I have returned. My break was long and fruitful – I spent it playing with my aforementioned new computer and heavily editing my quite brilliant book, which is taking a rather comely shape.

And it’s not like I’ve missed much. Things have happened, but nothing worth getting too worked up over…

That baseball tournament happened, but I found it difficult to get excited. I’m as patriotic as the next chap, but how can I root for the US team when Chipper Jones is on it? That’s insane. Chipper Jones is the anti-Christ. I hope he goes 0 for 10,000 this season.

The semi-big news is a report from the soccer world that MLS is working with Rowan University to put a team (ostensibly the Philadelphia team, one assumes) in Glassboro, New Jersey in 2009. Now, I’ve championed the expansion of MLS to Philly (aka “Kringlesbane”) in this space before, but I find myself oddly cold to this development, for three reasons: (a) 2009 is like a million years away (b) they’ll probably be given some deranged, Euro-ripoff name like “South Jersey FC” that you can’t possibly get excited about and (c) Glassboro ain’t Philly. It ain’t even Camden. Try harder, MLS. You have three years to WOW me.

The Sixers are the suckiest bunch of sucks who ever sucked. I mean, they just plain suck. I’m actively rooting for them to miss the playoffs. What good is a playoff spot? We need the lottery pick more than we need to get crushed to paste in four games by the Pistons. We’re just not good; the playoffs would only make it worse. It pains me to admit it but I think it’s Mo Cheeks. I mean, they can’t defend, they can’t rebound, and they look visibly demoralized. I have no idea how to save them. There were even rumors they were going to trade AI to the Nuggets for some random idiot. That would be horrendous. AI is a Sixer forever. At this point our choices are to lose with AI, or lose even worse without him. I choose the little guy.

Flyers are fine, I’m not worried about them.

The Phils have had a nice spring. They’re winning games, Ryan Howard is awesome, the pitching is a nice surprise (Gavin Floyd seems to have woken up from whatever Temple of Doom-esque waking nightmare he’s been sleepwalking through, and even non-thrilling free agent signee Ryan Franklin looks relatively solid). Can they beat the Mets? I have no idea. Are they finally ready to end Atlanta’s jackbooted, Fascist regime? I don’t know that either. But we’ll explore these questions and more in my impending BASEBALL ’06 PREVIEW! Coming next week.

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Thursday, March 02, 2006

R.I.P. My Laptop, 2001-2006
On February 18, my foot got caught in my laptop's power cord, and I pulled it off the coffee table. It landed directly on the protruding wireless card, driving said card directly up into the casing, where it completely destroyed the parts that keep the laptop from being a non-functioning, ominously rattling heap of worthless plastic. The laptop's sudden death has shocked me to the core of my being, and I will be eternally thankful for its tireless work in the fields of writing, emailing, Interneting, pinball-playing, and the like.

Because this seemed like as good an excuse to upgrade as any other, I now own a really sweet new laptop which is much faster and better, and has a DVD-R. So, it's an ill wind, eh?

Anyway, screw baseball. THIS is the greatest sport ever invented. My new goal in life is to see a match in person. I'm in love, love I tell you!

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