Birk's Blog
by: birk
In-Season Preseason Preview
Apr 17, 2008 | 8:50PM | report this

First, I’d like to point out Ken Pomeroy’s Bracket Breakdowns at the start of the NCAA tournament. Using his Pomeroy Ratings and log5 computations, he posted the chances of each team getting to each round. So why am I bringing this up now? If you had simply used those odds to make your picks, you would have ended up with the top score in Yahoo’s Tournament Pick’em.

Originally, I was going to say that I was going to be putting this blog on the backburner while I go through a career transition, but I’m going to try my best to keep this going. I’m not going to promise anything regularly getting posted, but we’ll see how it goes. I still have the Balancing the Market series to finish. While I plan on completing that series, it takes quite a bit of work for me to assemble the information in one place so don’t be surprised if it doesn’t get finished for a while.

For today, I just want to tie up some loose ends. A while back, I had promised that I would post my projected standings before the season. While it’s obviously not before the season anymore, I will post my picks I made in BP’s Predictatron. In making these picks, I leaned on the PECOTA projections, which you can get a fairly close look at here (although those are updated every day by taking games completed into account). In adjusting away from those projections, I used a combination of things: how I disagree with PECOTA about certain teams, expectations of teams to improve via trade, and expectations of teams to dump FA-bound players at the deadline.

AL East

1.       New York Yankees (94-68) – a lot of risk in the pitching staff, but they’ve got the arms and front office ability to get the job done

2.       Boston Red Sox (91-71) – same as above, but less likely to make a big deal at the deadline

3.       Tampa Bay Rays (84-78) – maturation at the plate and among the pitching prospects, and improved defense over last year

4.       Toronto Blue Jays (78-84) – lack big-time star to put them over the top, but they do have plenty of big-time injury risks

5.       Baltimore Orioles (67-95) – doing the right thing by getting younger and their 2008 team will get worse if Brian Roberts finally leaves town

AL Central

1.       Cleveland Indians (93-69) – I think I made a mistake here as the 2007 IP increases for C.C. Sabathia and Fausto Carmona could hurt their 2008 chances

2.       Detroit Tigers (90-72) – if C.C. and Carmona falter, the Tigers will end up on top of the division

3.       Chicago White Sox (78-84) – several players on the wrong side of 30 could offset the acquisitions of Orlando Cabrera and Nick Swisher

4.       Kansas City Royals (76-86) – the Royals are starting to turn things around, and they might get out of the basement again in 2008

5.       Minnesota Twins (71-91) – after losing Torii Hunter and Johan Santana, the Twins will be lucky to stay out of the basement, which makes the Joe Nathan extension a bit of a head-scratcher

AL West

1.       Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (86-76) – the Angels have been hit hard with injuries, but they’re lucky they don’t have much competition here

2.       Oakland Athletics (80-82) – the A’s weren’t as bad as their record in 2007, and they just might regret trading away Haren and Swisher as the season progresses

3.       Seattle Mariners (76-86) – unlike the A’s, the Mariners weren’t as good as their record in 2007; they couldn’t even outscore their opponents, and it’s not like they have youth on their side (lineup’s average age is 31)

4.       Texas Rangers (74-88) – after last year’s trades of Mark Teixeira, Eric Gagne, and Kenny Lofton, the Rangers went completely into rebuild mode, and they’ll be there for a couple more years

NL East

1.       New York Mets (91-71) – after acquiring Johan Santana, how can you not pick the Mets here?

2.       Atlanta Braves (86-76) – very good lineup and SP depth

3.       Philadelphia Phillies (84-78) – very good lineup and no pitching depth

4.       Florida Marlins (75-87) – without Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis, I guess Marlins fans will have to celebrate that they still have Hanley Ramirez

5.       Washington Nationals (74-88) – new park, but they still don’t have their farm system completely rebuilt; at least they’re getting closer

NL Central

1.       Chicago Cubs (91-71) – I’d be more confident here if they could fix their lineup (hint: OBP guys go at the top)

2.       Milwaukee Brewers (90-72) – could take the division once they figure out that Jason Kendall is no longer a starting catcher; yes, he’s done well, but he has a .375 BABIP with only a 14.6% line drive rate (expected BABIP of .266)

3.       Cincinnati Reds (82-80) – despite Corey Patterson’s hot start (5 doubles and 4 home runs), he still has the lowest OBP in the lineup and is still batting leadoff

4.       St. Louis Cardinals (77-85) – Albert Pujols and the gang won’t keep up this 111-win pace

5.       Pittsburgh Pirates (71-91) – new management was still sorting things out this offseason; if several of their players restore some of their trade value early, don’t be surprised if they end the season in different uniforms midseason

6.       Houston Astros (70-92) – if you ignore pitching staffs, the Astros might be contenders

NL West

1.       Arizona Diamondbacks (90-72) – although they were outscored last year, nearly all Diamondbacks players are on the upswing portion of their careers; they’ll outscore their opponents this year

2.       Los Angeles Dodgers (86-76) – plenty of top young talent; if they learn to bench Juan Pierre, the Dodgers have the talent to win the division

3.       Colorado Rockies (81-81) – my expectations from Ubaldo Jimenez and Franklin Morales aren’t too high, and they don’t have the depth behind them

4.       San Diego Padres (76-86) – I’m probably expecting too little from the Padres (I always do), but their outfield is a mess as they don’t really have a capable CF as Jim Edmonds doesn’t really qualify anymore

5.       San Francisco (68-94) – Q:  How long until the Bay Area writers start to wish Barry Bonds was still around? A: It won’t happen; they’re too stubborn to admit it.

For those curious, my mortal lock picks are the Red Sox and Giants. The Red Sox are possibly the best run organization in baseball, so I’m confident they can finish around 91 wins. The Giants have Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain, and nothing else, so I’m pretty confident they’ll end up around 68 wins. My only worry is that they’ll end up with a lot less.

My World Series pick is the Boston Red Sox crushing Cubs’ fans spirits.

6 Comments | Add a comment   categories: MLB, NCAA BB, Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, San Francisco Giants, Tampa Bay Rays, Toronto Blue Jays, Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Oakland Athletics, Seattle Mariners, Philadelphia Phillies, Milwaukee Brewers, St. Louis Cardinals, Arizona Diamondbacks, Los Angeles Dodgers, Colorado Rockies, San Diego Padres, New York Yankees, New York Mets
 
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total comments: 6      Page 1 of 1     
edclinch
Apr 18, 2008
6:52 PM
Good job. I hope you are partially right.

edclinch
Apr 18, 2008
6:54 PM
Like the White Sox being better...

MetsFan08
Apr 19, 2008
5:48 AM
I like the Mets Beating the Red Sox in the World Series 4-3

birk
Apr 19, 2008
8:13 AM
Just to let everyone know, I'm not sure what's going on with the left-hand side of the text. I have a Word document on my computer that I can try to copy from again, but I'm about 100 miles from my computer at the moment. I'll try to fix it Sunday night.

kyleistheman101
Apr 23, 2008
5:24 PM
I can almost garuntee you didn't watch a single Mariners game last year and have yet to do so this year. You can't honeslty think they will have a losing record, and the A's with 80 wins, please name me five guys from their team (without looking it up) I'm sure you can't. You are obviously from the east coast, because all the east coast teams have good records and none of the west coast teams do. Typical.

Last edited by kyleistheman101 on April 23rd at 5:26 PM.

birk
Apr 25, 2008
6:53 PM
Which team do you want me to name guys from? Trust me, I'm not looking these up.

Oakland: Kurt Suzuki, Daric Barton, Frank Thomas, Mark Ellis, Bobby Crosby, Eric Chavez, Jack Cust, Carlos Gonzalez, Travis Buck, Rich Harden, Joe Blanton, Huston Street, Justin Duchscherer, Dana Eveland, Greg Smith, Alan Embree, Santiago Casilla, Gio Gonzalez.

Seattle: Kenji Johjima, Jeff Clement, Jose Vidro, Richie Sexson, Jose Lopez, Yuniesky Betancourt, Adrian Beltre, Willie Bloomquist, Raul Ibanez, Ichiro Suzuki, Brad Wilkerson, Wladimir Balentien, Felix Hernandez, Erik Bedard, Miguel Batista, Jarrod Washburn, Carlos Silva, J.J. Putz, Ryan Rowland-Smith, Brandon Morrow, Mark Lowe.

I can't think of anyone else, but that's 18 A's and 21 Mariners right there.

RS and RA are a better indicator of future performance than W and L, and as I said above, the Mariners were outscored by 19 runs last year. FWIW, the updated Postseason Odds, PECOTA version (http://www.baseballprospectus.com/
statistics/ps_oddspec.php) has the Mariners at an average of 74.7 wins this season. As far as the "East Coast bias," I'm from Ohio and I only hope that I can achieve what Kevin Goldstein has mentioned (that he's received emails from fans of every team claiming that he has a bias against their team).

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birk
This is baseball. Let's have some fun. Recommended Websites: MLB Trade Rumors, Baseball Prospectus, Cot's Baseball Contracts, Fan Graphs, Football Outsiders
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