Jump to content

Which was your favorite year (baseball-wise) of the last decade?


Frobby

Favorite year of the decade?  

81 members have voted

  1. 1. What was your favorite year (baseball-wise) of the last decade?



Recommended Posts

I figure this really comes down to 2012 vs. 2014, but I threw in poll options for 2016 and other.   Vote in the poll and give your reasons here!

2012: Our first winning season in 15 years, and almost completely unexpectedly.    The team outperformed its Pythagorean record by 11 games, going 29-9 in one-run games and 16-2 in extra innings.    The season included the Chris Davis pitching performance in the 17-inning win over the Red Sox in May, Manny Machado’s August debut and amazing display of defense on a nightly basis, the unveiling of the six statues including the great win against the Yankees on Cal’s statue night, and many other highlights.    The O’s won the wild card game and lost a tense five-game series with the Yankees.    

2014: The first division title in 17 years for the O’s.     The O’s not only won the division by 12 games, but they dominated divisional play, going going 47-29 and winning the season series against all four AL East opponents (including 13-6 against the Yankees).    Nelson Cruz led the league in homers and the O’s pitchers allowed 100 fewer runs than any other O’s team this decade.    The O’s clinched the division at OPACY and Adam Jones circled the field slapping hands with fans and giving one the pie treatment, after Nick stood on the field taking it all in and misting up.    The postseason featured a dramatic comeback against Detroit capped by Delmon’s double and an eventual sweep of the Tigers, only to be followed by the O’s being swept in the ALCS by the Royals.    The year featured our best regular season record and deepest playoff run of the decade.

So, what’s your pick, and why?    Feel free to go with another year if you can justify it.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

2012 was magic, for sure.  Haven't had that much fun in a summer for a long, long time.  Everything seemed to click.  

I had to convince myself it was actually happening and I wasn’t going to wake up from a dream.

By 2008-09, I had just come to accept that the Orioles would never have a winning season again. Nothing seemed to work and just playing.500 ball seemed like an impossible dream. 1989 and 2012 were my two favorite years to watch as a fan. I can remember parts of 1983, but it’s fuzzy. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm astonished that anyone picked anything but 2012. 

I guess you could have been too young to remember 2012, but just old enough to remember 2014. Or maybe you just started following the Orioles in 2010 or 2011 and didn't understand how crazy it was that a dead and buried team like the 1998-2011 Orioles could win 90 games and get to October with mostly a cast of unknowns and castoffs and a Hall of Fame 3B who just turned 20.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Unexpected Team is one of the very best things in sports, and 2012 has my vote, but I think 2014 is competitive.  In the summer of 2012, it was one pleasant 2-out-of-3 surprise after another.  By 2014, it was knowing we were going to win a lot of games instead of hoping, and there is some fun value to that kind of excellence.  You only get to buy the Andrew Millers off the October shelf when you aren't scrounging for a berth.

I rooted for it as it happened but in retrospect I think I rooted wrong pulling for the Royals to upset the Angels in the other ALDS that year so we could have HFA.  The Tigers series was so successful, and then suddenly after years of underdog-dom that Showalter leveraged well, earning clear favorite status was I think a little discombobulating.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

34 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

I'm astonished that anyone picked anything but 2012. 

I guess you could have been too young to remember 2012, but just old enough to remember 2014. Or maybe you just started following the Orioles in 2010 or 2011 and didn't understand how crazy it was that a dead and buried team like the 1998-2011 Orioles could win 90 games and get to October with mostly a cast of unknowns and castoffs and a Hall of Fame 3B who just turned 20.

I liked being there to win the east. And Destroy Detroit. Though love me some Joe Saunders. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2014 for me. Delmon's double was the most memorable great play of my Orioles lifetime fandom. Loved 2012, of course. Honorable mention to...2019. Yeah, I said it. First time I've seen this team with a smart, coherent, plan since Pat Gillick was GM. 

If he's good, ten years from now we'll all be saying how important the Elias hire was (which happened in 2018, but you get the point).

  • Upvote 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is all just a "feeling" about a team, but, while I loved the 2014 season, that 2012 team was so fun. 2014 just felt more like a powerhouse and I felt like we were the favorite to win every single night, but there was something about the grind of that 2012 team (and somehow only a 3 game difference between the two!).

It was scrappy, it seemed to have more personality to it. I loved that confidence I felt about the 2014 team, but 2012 just felt like the underdog, good guys breaking through. Sometimes we forget, there was air of fun around Chris Davis. I still remember "Big Game" Joe Saunders (at least that one time!), Miguel Gonzalez (out of nowhere),  Nate McLouth, Luis Ayala in those goggles when we made the playoffs... I was a lurker on this board for that season, but I had fun just watching you all talk with my binoculars on the rooftops. 

Like I said, it was all from my subjective view of things and I loved 2014, but 2012 felt like a team that wasn't supposed to be there, was there. If there was every a season to reinvigorate my love of the Orioles and remind me why I love baseball so much over the last decade, it's 2012 for me also. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • ZiPS being an inhuman thing incapable of recency bias is not much out on Holliday.    It only dings his 2025-2029 forecast WAR by about 3% today relative to what it was forecasting this spring. https://blogs.fangraphs.com/reassessing-the-future-for-this-seasons-disappointing-rookies/ Jackson Holliday’s numbers didn’t take a big hit for a few reasons. First, and most importantly, despite a really lousy debut in the majors, he played well enough in the minors — plus he’s so young and his résumé is so strong — that his small-sample struggles barely register. By reverse-o-fying Holliday’s major league woes into an untranslated minor league line and including it in his overall Triple-A production, ZiPS estimates that he would’ve had a 118 wRC+ in Triple-A this season, down from his actual mark of 142. A 20-year-old shortstop with a 118 wRC+ in Triple-A would still top everybody’s prospect list.
    • Kjerstad should also get some reps in at first so he can be an option there as well, although now is probably not the time, best for him to DH for the rest of the season. He had 8 starts at first at AAA this season and 37 starts there between AA and AAA in 2023.
    • In Grich’s case, I think his OBP skills weren’t appreciated at the time.  He was a .266 lifetime hitter in an era when that was maybe 10 points above average, but his .371 OBP was more like 45-50 points above average.  But OBP just wasn’t very valued at the time.  
    • We don’t have a current combo that is ideal. You have to go with the best possible grouping you have.
    • Yep, we're in agreement on the 70 rWAR threshold.  A championship would help Manny's cause, though I'm not sure if that's in the cards for him in the near future.  He needs a big moment on a big stage, too....as silly as that sounds, I do believe it matters in the eyes of some voters. Not to derail, but Whitaker is a guy that belongs in the HoF, too.  I'm not sure why Grich never got serious consideration.
    • I’ve always felt that 70 rWAR was the line between having to justify why someone shouldn’t be in the HOF versus justifying why they should.  In other words, if you’re over 70, there needs to be a reason for you NOT to be in.  There are 70 position players over 70 WAR, and the only ones not in are Bonds, Pujols (not yet eligible), Trout (not yet eligible), Rose, Bill Dahlen, Lou Whitaker, Raffy Palmeiro, Bobby Grich, and Carlos Beltran.  Really, only Dahlen, Whitaker and Grich have no obvious reason why they’re not in.  And I wouldn’t bet against Beltran getting in eventually.  He’s gotten  46% and 57% of the ballots his first two tries.  
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...