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MLB Heavyweight Champion

If MLB champs were decided like boxing: beat the champ, and you're the champ.

The 2008 season started with the Red Sox as champs. They were beaten by the A's, who were beaten back by Boston, who were then swept by Toronto, who lost to Oakland, who lost to Cleveland, and so on, until we reached our current champion.

The Heavyweight of the Year is the team that wins the most title bouts at the end of the season.

Current Champion (as of 8/12):
Milwaukee Brewers

2008 Title Bout Records:

Mets2317
Athletics1313
Red Sox117
Cubs91
Padres86
Rockies714
Angels64
Indians611
Brewers50
Cardinals55
Reds55
Dodgers57
Marlins43
Rangers46
Blue Jays33
Nationals35
Mariners21
Yankees23
Phillies25
Tigers12
Giants03
Orioles03

2007 Heavyweight of the Year:
Seattle Mariners

2006 Heavyweight of the Year:
Oakland Athletics

2005 Heavyweight of the Year:
Oakland Athletics

more info...

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April in the Rear View Mirror
2006-04-30 21:15
by Ken Arneson

The good news is that the A's finished April just a half game out of first place in the AL West. In fact, it's more than just good news, it's miraculous news. With the exception of Nick Swisher and Eric Chavez, it has seemed like a Murphy's Law kind of month for the A's.

So far, the A's have suffered injuries to Rich Harden, Esteban Loaiza, Huston Street, Justin Duchscherer, Jay Witasick, Bobby Crosby and Milton Bradley. And beyond that, all but a handful of players have been performing below (and in many cases, far below) expectations.

If you look at the OPS numbers for both hitters and pitchers, only six players are performing better in 2006 than in 2005: Swisher, Chavez, Marco Scutaro, Joe Kennedy, Chad Gaudin, and Brad Halsey. When 21 of your 27 players see their performances decline, you're bound to be disappointed.

Here's a little April OPS chart, with hitters' OPS on the left, and pitchers' OPS allowed on the right.

Oakland Athletics OPS, April 2006

Swisher 1.142
                  Loaiza     1.097
Chavez  1.078
                  Witasick    .984
                  Street      .935
                  Gaudin      .846
                  Blanton     .835
                  Saarloos    .813
                  Haren       .781
Bradley  .779
                  Zito        .745
Kotsay   .736
Scutaro  .718
                  Duchscherer .671
Thomas   .669
                  Kennedy     .626
                  Calero      .624
Kendall  .618
Crosby   .584
                  Harden      .579
Ellis    .579
Melhuse  .579
Johnson  .559
                  Halsey      .533
Payton   .477
Perez    .188
Kielty   .000

You'll notice that there are way too many pitchers near the top, and way too many hitters near the bottom. You want the batters near the top, and the pitchers near the bottom. Here's what the same chart would look like if you used those players' OPS values from 2005:

Player OPS values, 2005

                  Gaudin     1.347
Thomas   .905
Ellis    .861
Bradley  .834
                  Halsey      .816
Johnson  .806
Crosby   .802
Chavez   .794
Swisher  .768
Perez    .758
                  Kennedy     .757
                  Witasick    .751
Payton   .749
Kotsay   .746
Kielty   .746
                  Saarloos    .736
                  Haren       .710
                  Loaiza      .707
Scutaro  .701
                  Blanton     .694
Kendall  .666
Melhuse  .666
                  Zito        .665
                  Calero      .608
                  Duchscherer .581
                  Harden      .565
                  Street      .534

That's more the kind of distribution we're hoping for. The more that list is heavy on the top-left and bottom-right, the more games you're going to win.

There have been signs in the last few days that some hitters, such as Ellis, Payton, and Johnson, have started to awaken from their profound slumbers, and that they'll start bubbling up higher on this list.

However, with Harden likely to miss all of May on the DL, and with who-knows-what being wrong with Esteban Loaiza, I'm less confident that the pitching will come around soon. The starters are not going deep into games, the bullpen is getting overworked. Things could get worse before they get better.

This is exactly what happened last year, and it worries me. In 2005, the A's slumped early, but managed to stay around .500 in April. Then Harden got hurt, and the A's went on a long losing streak in May that buried them in the standings. They managed to turn that streak around in June, but it's not something you want to keep relying on.

If the A's at least avoid any long losing streaks until Harden comes back, I will be happy. Just hang around in the race, until the pieces are in place, and things start to click. The A's don't need miracles to win the division. They just need good health, and performances that at least somewhat resemble expectations.

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