Jump to content

Schedule before the Showdown


Uli2001

Recommended Posts

Orioles have

Angels (A)
Boston (A)
St Louis (H)

Tampa Bay has

Boston (H)
Seattle (H, 4-game series)
Minnesota (A)

They both get Boston, but Tampa Bay has a much harder schedule overall (on paper). They might have trouble playing .500 against this schedule.

The Orioles have to take care of business here. Thus is a great opportunity to create some serious daylight at the top of the division before the TB series.

 

 

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The focus being on the Tampa series for many but personally I think the division is going to come down to how the O’s play the Sawx these next seven games with them.

Boston has the third toughest schedule of remaining game (.555), Tampa has the 4th toughest (.544) and the O’s have the 13th toughest (.509). The three of these teams are all playing each other at least one more series but only the O’s are done with the Jays while Tampa has them for 6 more games and Boston has the Jays for 3 more. 
 

Games left against the East:

 

Boston:

O’s - 7

Rays - 5

Jays - 3

 

Tampa:

Jays - 6

Saux - 5

O’s - 4

 

O’s:

Saux - 7

Rays - 4

 

The Jays have the 20th toughest scheduled remaining (.489) but play the Rays for 6, the Jays for 5 and the Janks for 6.

 

Each of the other ALE teams have at least 15 more games against the division. The schedule makers didn’t do the O’s any favors with these two west coast trips but the O’s are really fortunate to get the Angels when they’re as bad as they are right now. Leaving Anaheim to stop in Boston for three games should tell us a lot about how the last three weeks may go for both the Sawx and the O’s. This is again where I think the schedule makers did not do the O’s any favors. The O’s opened and will close the season with a series against the Saux. Boston being squarely in the playoff mix will factor into the O’s holding off Tampa (and even the Jays given their schedule).

I would feel confident going into that last series if the O’s could have already locked up the Division, which means that they probably need to take at least 6 of these next 9 games against the Angels, Saux and Cards before the four game set with Tampa. Picking up another game on the Rays before playing that series is almost required to avoid losing the division lead should the most catastrophic outcome occur with those four games. Tampa getting Boston then four against Seattle then three at Minnesota really helps the O’s chances of picking up at least one game. Of course the O’s have to take care of business.

These next 26 games are going to be wild. 

 

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

    • I'm looking at the Rays record over the past decade and I'm a bit confused over your definition of "have not won much". However, my argument is simple - teams that don't invest in payroll don't win championships in baseball. Over the past 21 years (I was going to do 20, but added the extra to include Florida's win in 2003), the average payroll position relative to the league of the eventual WS champ was 9th (see below) Year WS Champ OD Payroll rank 2003 FLA 25 2004 BOS 2 2005 CWS 13 2006 STL 11 2007 BOS 2 2008 PHI 12 2009 NYY 1 2010 SF 10 2011 STL 11 2012 SF 8 2013 BOS 4 2014 SF 7 2015 KC 16 2016 CHC 14 2017 HOU 18 2018 BOS 1 2019 WAS 7 2020 LAD 2 2021 ATL 13 2022 HOU 11 2023 TEX 9   Only three of these teams had payrolls in the bottom half of league: Florida in 2003 had by far the lowest payroll, at 25th. Their payroll climbed to as high as 18th over the next couple of years, but they couldn't maintain their success and haven't made the playoffs since, outside of the COVID season. KC in 2015 had the 16th lowest payroll, barely below the median payroll for the year. They haven't been back to the playoffs since. Houston in 2017 had the 18th lowest payroll. This was their big breakthrough year after their tanking/rebuild, and they haven't been lower than 11th since, and as high as 4th.   The trend is obvious. After the Marlins' miracle run in 2003, no team has won the WS with a payroll lower than 18th, and that team (Houston) is an obvious outlier as they were in the basically the same spot as the O's now (on the upswing from a full tear-down). While KC and Florida both had years where everything came together perfectly, they were unable to sustain their momentum. The O's were 23rd in payroll on Opening Day, and the current roster is good enough to win a championship, but history suggests they'll go the way of Florida and Kansas City if Rubenstein isn't willing to invest in the payroll. Consistently letting the talent drain out of your organization because you aren't willing to pay them won't lead to multiple championships and it won't keep fans engaged.
    • Correlation vs. Causation: The study states that there is a correlation between 1RM (one-rep max) squat and performance metrics like the 10-yard split and 40-yard dash times. However, correlation does not imply causation. Just because these variables are correlated does not mean that one causes the other.   
    • I think he's claimed and right away.
    • His Dad is a big boy and obvious lifter.  Some guys are naturally good squatters.  That’s an impressive number for Holliday, but who knows exactly how legit the actual squat is.  You can find high school kids at nearly every high school about his size with similar squat numbers.  Granted, they will be some of the strongest pound for pound kids, but it’s not a crazy number. 
    • Fair point, but these outliers are squatting like 40% more than Holliday is.  There are likely plenty of guys in the NCAA that can hit Holliday's numbers, and are in his age range.   There were like 50+ guys at this year's combine with a 10 yard split of 1.5 or better or 40 times of 4.5 or better, and 1rm squat correlates with both 10 yard split and 40 time, such that if you hit those numbers in 10 or 40, then your mean 1rm squat would be predicted to be about 2.5x body weight, which would be right around 500 lbs for a 200 lb guy.  If you want to call NFL caliber college guys outliers, I guess?  But Holliday is an MLB caliber guy, so he still fits.   Elite athletes just aren't normal, man.
    • The fact that they put this on the 1991 Donruss, perhaps the ultimate peak of the junk wax era, makes this even funnier to me.  If toilet paper ever shot up in price I wouldn't care because I've got heaps of '91 Donruss floating around. This is very true, which makes me thinks he'll get claimed somewhere else.
    • It's like the ghost of Chris Davis found him and has taken over his body.   I know bat speed isn't everything, but with the bat speed info that dropped, I took a look.  His average is 70.9 which isn't terribly slow, it's actually pretty average.   For whatever reason, he just can't square anything up.  I hope he fixes it but it's really tough to watch right now.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...