MLB Preview 2009

April 5, 2009 Posted by Robert

Opening Day is here!

Predicted Standings for 2009

First number in parentheses is predicted # of wins, following number is differential from 2008.

AL East

New York (98, + 8 )

Tampa Bay (Wild Card) (94, – 3)

Boston (90, – 5)

Toronto (84, – 2)

Baltimore (67, – 1)

AL Central

Chicago (91, + 2)

Minnesota (89, + 1)

Kansas City (80, + 5)

Cleveland (77, – 4)

Detroit (76, + 2)

AL West

Los Angeles of Anaheim (91, – 9)

Texas (83, + 4)

Oakland (79, + 4)

Seattle (66, + 5)

 

NL East

New York (94, + 5)

Philadelphia (Wild Card) (92, +/- 0)

Florida (81, – 3)

Atlanta (75, + 3)

Washington (58, – 1)

NL Central

Chicago (95, – 2)

Cincinnati (88, + 14)

St. Louis (84, – 2)

Milwaukee (80, – 10)

Houston (73, – 13)

Pittsburgh (66, – 1)

NL West

Los Angeles (95, + 11)

Arizona (86, + 4)

San Francisco (78, + 6)

Colorado (62, – 12)

San Diego (60, – 3)

 

Preseason Power Rankings

  1. Tampa Bay Rays
  2. Boston Red Sox
  3. Chicago Cubs
  4. New York Yankees
  5. New York Mets
  6. Philadelphia Phillies
  7. Los Angeles Dodgers
  8. Chicago White Sox
  9. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
  10. Minnesota Twins
  11. St. Louis Cardinals
  12. Toronto Blue Jays
  13. Cincinnati Reds
  14. Arizona Diamondbacks
  15. Texas Rangers
  16. Oakland Athletics
  17. Florida Marlins
  18. Milwaukee Brewers
  19. Cleveland Indians
  20. San Francisco Giants
  21. Atlanta Braves
  22. Kansas City Royals
  23. Detroit Tigers
  24. Colorado Rockies
  25. Houston Astros
  26. Baltimore Orioles
  27. Seattle Mariners
  28. Pittsburgh Pirates
  29. San Diego Padres
  30. Washington Nationals

Individual Awards – American League

The top vote-getters are listed in order for voting awards, and in statistical order for other awards.

MVP: Mark Teixeira, Grady Sizemore, Josh Hamilton

Cy Young: Roy Halladay, Jon Lester, Joe Nathan

Rookie of the Year: Matt LaPorta, Matt Wieters, David Price

Comeback Player of the Year: Francisco Liriano, David Ortiz, Andruw Jones

Batting Champ: Ian Kinsler, Nick Markakis, Dustin Pedroia

Home Run Champ: Grady Sizemore, Evan Longoria, Jermaine Dye

RBI Champ: Josh Hamilton, Mark Teixeira, Kevin Youkilis

ERA Champ: Roy Halladay, Jon Lester, CC Sabathia

Wins Champ: Roy Halladay, Daisuke Matsuzaka, Andy Sonnanstine

Strikeout Champ: CC Sabathia, Roy Halladay, Zack Greinke

Saves Champ: Joe Nathan, Jonathan Papelbon, David Price

Individual Awards – National League

The top vote-getters are listed in order for voting awards, and in statistical order for other awards.

MVP: Albert Pujols, David Wright, Aramis Ramirez

Cy Young: Tim Lincecum, Cole Hamels, Brandon Webb

Rookie of the Year: Cameron Maybin, Andrew McCutchen, Jason Motte

Comeback Player of the Year: Aaron Harang, Troy Tulowitzki, Chris Carpenter

Batting Champ: Albert Pujols, Lance Berkman, Ryan Theriot

Home Run Champ: Ryan Braun, Albert Pujols, David Wright

RBI Champ: David Wright, Aramis Ramirez, Albert Pujols

ERA Champ: Tim Lincecum, Rich Harden, Johan Santana

Wins Champ: Brandon Webb, Cole Hamels, Chad Billingsley

Strikeout Champ: Tim Lincecum, Cole Hamels, Dan Haren

Saves Champ: Brad Lidge, Francisco Rodriguez, Jonathan Broxton

Three Reasons the Arizona Cardinals Will Win Super Bowl XLIII

February 1, 2009 Posted by Robert

Let’s start this off with an aside: If today weren’t Super Sunday, you’d see a post here about how the Stars are back in playoff contention.  That’s probably really good for the Stars, because nobody cares right now, so they can continue to fly under the radar.  Anyway, it is Super Sunday, and after two long weeks of pondering, I have decided that the Cardinals will win the Super Bowl.  Here’s why:

1. Arizona’s offense is elite, and Pittsburgh’s defense is overrated.

Yes, I am well aware of the fact that by almost any statistical measure, the Steelers had the number one defense in the NFL this year.  But look at the schedule:  The 6 intradivision matchups certainly helped pad the stats.  I don’t think anybody is going to mistake Cincinnati, Cleveland, or Baltimore for a good (or even decent) offensive team.  They also played Houston and Jacksonville.  Same drill.  Borderline offensive teams they played include San Diego, Washington, Dallas, and Philadelphia (they lost that game).  That leaves the New York Giants, New England, Indianapolis and Tennessee.  Indianapolis shouldn’t even count, because they had absolutely no running game this year, but Pittsburgh lost anyway.  The Giants and the Titans both exposed the Steel Curtain.  The only exception is New England, and you have to bow down to that defensive performance, but 1 great game is worthy of all the praise they’re getting in the media?

On the other side, the Arizona offense has come alive.  The fact that they have found their running game and will be able to balance their playcalling is going to cause some problems.  The common denominator among all the teams that beat Pittsburgh this year is that they all have a solid passing game.  If Arizona can establish the run and Troy Polamalu starts sneaking up into the box, Kurt Warner will be able to carve up the secondary.

2. Ben Roethlisberger is a liability, and Ken Whisenhunt is his old Offensive Coordinator.  

I don’t think enough has been made of this.  In Super Bowl XL, Roethlisberger was terrible.  The winning touchdown pass was thrown by the wide receiver.  A lot has been made of Big Ben’s "legacy" because he did win that Super Bowl, but he’s been nothing but a game manager since he arrived.  This year, he hasn’t even done a great job of that, throwing barely more touchdowns than interceptions.  Of the 16 starting quarterbacks in the AFC, Ben finished 12th in quarterback rating, just ahead of JaMarcus Russell and behind such phenoms as Joe Flacco and Trent Edwards.  (By the way, just to bolster my "Pitt’s defense stats are juiced because of their division" argument, Ryan Fitzpatrick and Derek Anderson were 15 and 16.)  If you don’t think Ken Whisenhunt knows how to get to Ben Roethlisberger, think again.  While we’re on the subject, the offensive line of the Steelers allowed the second-most sacks this year.  If the Cardinals turn this game into a shootout, their underrated front seven will pin their ears back and get to Ben.

3. The Cardinals are hungrier than the Steelers.

There’s no way that anybody could possibly know this, but look at the situation: A young, up-and-coming team coached by the guy who got passed over for the Pittsburgh and led by a quarterback whose last taste of the Super Bowl was very bitter (and whose Hall of Fame status is almost assured with a win) is pitted as an underdog against an established team that played a fairly easy schedule this time around and acts like they’re going to win handily.  In every interview I’ve seen or heard with a Pittsburgh player who played for them 3 years ago, they talk about how satisfying it was to win.  Teams that win the Super Bowl aren’t focused on how satisfying it will be to hold up the trophy; they focus on the work it will take to get there.  I’ve heard nothing but that from Cardinals players.

I know this is an intangible category, but the intangibles always come into play in the Super Bowl.  The game is so big that they have to.  Ultimately, I believe this game comes down to the will of the two teams, and from what I’ve seen, the Cardinals want and need it more.  Arizona 29, Pittsburgh 23.