Tuesday, March 27, 2012

2012 World Series Predictions, from FOX Sports

30: Astros. I’m not sure they could beat the Kentucky men’s basketball team — in baseball. On the bright side, the ‘Stros’ season will qualify as a success if they trade left-hander Wandy Rodriguez and first baseman Carlos Lee. Next year, American League.
29. Athletics. Built to succeed — by 2016. The rotation is inexperienced, center fielder Yoenis Cespedes is a gamble, and first baseman Brandon Allen and third baseman Josh Donaldson will not be confused with Prince Fielder and Miguel Cabrera. There also is this: One of the Obama girls might become president before the A’s move to San Jose.
28: Twins. Nice that catcher Joe Mauer and first baseman Justin Morneau are back, but right-hander Jason Marquis was the only addition to the third-worst rotation in AL — and the Twins compounded their run prevention-problems by signing Jamey Carroll, 38, to play short and sticking Josh Willingham, 33, in left field.
27. Orioles. The decision on center fielder Adam Jones will be the latest test of this sorry franchise, which is headed for its 15th straight losing season. Jones is eligible for free agency after the 2013 season. The Orioles need either to sign him long-term or trade him. If history is any indicator, they will do nothing.
26. Cubs. Fair to ask how long the honeymoon will last for Theo Epstein; the Cubs won’t improve quickly. Then again, Epstein and GM Jed Hoyer might receive keys to the city if they trade left fielder Alfonso Soriano and closer Carlos Marmol. Right-hander Matt Garza, who could be the best pitcher available this summer, would bring a more meaningful return.
25. Pirates. Erik Bedard, Opening Day starter? Neil Walker, cleanup man? I don’t mean to disrespect either player, but both are seriously miscast. I’ll just say this — all those great Pirates prospects had better accomplish more than third baseman Pedro Alvarez, the second pick of the 2008 draft.
24. Padres. Not yet, but soon. The Padres boast the third-best farm system in the majors, according to Baseball America. Develop the kids, find a new owner, put the new TV money to good use — and a return to contention actually might not be that far off.
23. Mariners. Felix Hernandez is my choice for AL Cy Young and Jesus Montero my pick for Rookie of the Year. Still, I’m not sure the Mariners will improve much on their average of 98 losses the past two seasons. Promising young pitchers are nice, but mix in a few hits.
22. Mets. This high? My generosity knows no bounds. A rotation headed by Johan Santana, R.A. Dickey and Jonathan Niese should keep the Mets competitive, but every other part of the team is suspect. By June, if not before, Citi Field could be a ghost town.

 

21. White Sox. It’s not a good sign when your scenario for success is, “If Adam Dunn, Alex Rios and Jake Peavy have bounce-back seasons . . .” One or two of those players actually might revive, and the White Sox are talented enough in other spots to surprise. Then again, I frequently dream of dunking a basketball. Doesn’t mean it will ever happen.
20. Indians. Will be OK, but probably nothing more. A big spring from center fielder Grady Sizemore might have changed the team’s entire outlook, but Sizemore underwent back surgery and likely will be out until July. Shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera looks heavy this spring. Right-hander Ubaldo Jimenez is a question, not an answer — and ditto for righty Derek Lowe.
19. Rockies. Call it age-ism, but I’m not about to anoint a team that has a starting pitcher — left-hander Jamie Moyer, 49 — who is as old as me. The Rockies fooled me into picking them last season, but I’m not senile enough yet to make the same mistake again. Their rotation is largely inexperienced, and I’m not sure their high-character newcomers — right fielder Michael Cuddyer, second baseman Marco Scutaro, right-hander Jeremy Guthrie — will make a significant impact.
18. Royals. At least they’ll host the All-Star Game. Otherwise, the Royals are not all that different from the Rockies; their rotation isn’t good enough to support the rest of the club. The losses of catcher Salvador Perez for three months and closer Joakim Soria for the season only add to the Royals’ challenge. The team needs its young starting pitchers to catch up to its young position players — and soon.
 
17. Braves. I know this ranking seems harsh, but what have the Braves done lately to inspire anyone’s confidence? Their rotation is full of health questions — right-hander Tim Hudson is unlikely to return from back surgery before May 1, and third baseman Chipper Jones underwent his sixth knee surgery Monday. The Braves need right fielder Jason Heyward to regain his rookie form, or their offense again figures to be about as exciting as an infomercial.
16. Dodgers. My sleeper, and not simply because the sale of the club will energize the franchise and presumably give the front office greater financial muscle at the trade deadline. Left-hander Clayton Kershaw and center fielder Matt Kemp are among the game’s elite, and right fielder Andre Ethier and first baseman James Loney should be motivated entering their free-agent years. Shortstop Dee Gordon, the game’s next great base stealer, will electrify L.A.
15. Nationals. Manager Davey Johnson already has said the Nats can fire him if they don’t reach the postseason, which means that GM Mike Rizzo should get his list of possible replacements ready. The Nats are dealing with a number of injuries. Scouts question whether second baseman Danny Espinosa and shortstop Ian Desmond are a championship double-play combination. Center field will remain an open question until Bryce Harper arrives, and perhaps even after that. Lots of potential; just not sure all of the pieces fit.

 

14. Blue Jays. The Sisyphus of baseball, rolling a boulder up a hill, then watching it roll back down. Some club officials privately believe the team is a No. 3 starter from becoming a contender, but good luck finding that No. 3 starter. The Jays are an athletic, exuberant bunch, their revamped bullpen could be quite good, and young pitchers such as right-hander Drew Hutchison are close to contributing. But keep watching out for that boulder.
13. Brewers. It’s not just that first baseman Prince Fielder is gone. Third baseman Aramis Ramirez was an enigma with the Cubs. First baseman Mat Gamel is talented, but unproven. And left fielder Ryan Braun, even though he avoided suspension for his alleged use of performance-enhancing drugs, faces pressure unlike any he experienced before. The Brewers’ pitching staff, seventh in the NL in ERA last season, might not be good enough to compensate for all of those issues.
12. Cardinals. Winning the World Series has its downside — namely, what happens the year after. Right-hander Chris Carpenter was the Cardinals’ first pitching casualty and might not be the last. Right-hander Adam Wainwright is back, but outfielder Carlos Beltran and shortstop Rafael Furcal are injury risks. The big losses — first baseman Albert Pujols, manager Tony La Russa, pitching coach Dave Duncan — might be too much for the Cardinals to overcome.
11. Marlins. I actually don’t think manager Ozzie Guillen or any of the players will lose their minds; it’s their bodies that concern me (well, not Ozzie’s). All teams need their best players to stay healthy, but the Fish’s lack of depth is alarming. Imagine what happens if the team loses right-hander Josh Johnson, shortstop Jose Reyes — any of its major parts, really. The Marlins’ talent is real, but only if it stays on the field.

 

10. Reds. They bullied me into this, forcing me into the middle of the clubhouse and surrounding me with their many pitchers who are at least a foot taller than me. Actually, the Reds should be quite good as well as giant, even after the loss of closer Ryan Madson to Tommy John surgery. Right-hander Mat Latos will help the rotation, lefty Sean Marshall the bullpen. The Reds need center fielder Drew Stubbs to fulfill his potential and right fielder Jay Bruce to become a star.
9. Red Sox. Too many pitching questions, from the fourth and fifth starters to a bullpen that likely will be without its two best parts from 2011 — closer Jonathan Papelbon, who signed with Philadelphia as a free agent, and setup man Daniel Bard, who is likely to join the rotation. The Sox will need their top three starters — lefty Jon Lester and righties Josh Beckett and Clay Buchholz — to be not just good, but near-great. The new culture under Bobby Valentine will mean nothing if the pitching is sub-par.
8. Phillies. They’re going to do this on muscle memory, once first baseman Ryan Howard and second baseman Chase Utley are healthy enough to use their muscles again. The start of the season will be a struggle without those two offensive pillars, but manager Charlie Manuel will patch together first. Utley’s replacement, Freddy Galvis, looks like a better player than even the Phillies thought. I’m not ready to pick against Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels just yet.
7. Giants. It’s a little ambitious ranking them this high, but I’m banking on the strength of the Giants’ pitching and return of catcher Buster Posey to restore the team’s 2010 vibe. Disturbing up-the-middle questions, though: Second baseman Freddy Sanchez frequently gets hurt, shortstop Brandon Crawford needs to prove he can hit, and center fielder Angel Pagan has not had a good spring.

 

6. Rays. They’ve added first baseman Carlos Pena, designated hitter Luke Scott and infielder Jeff Keppinger. They’re a good bet to obtain catching help before July 31. And I’m still not sure it will be enough to make the Rays’ offense a sufficient complement to their fabulous rotation. All the Rays need is for the offense to be league-average; it was a tick below last season.
5. Diamondbacks. The deepest team in the NL, and that’s why I’m picking them to go to the World Series. The D-backs can withstand the absence of shortstop Stephen Drew, who is still recovering from a broken right ankle. The addition of Jason Kubel gives them four legitimate outfielders, and three youngsters — righty Trevor Bauer and lefties Tyler Skaggs and Patrick Corbin — are candidates to join a rotation that already includes lefty Joe Saunders as the fifth starter. Lots of options, lots to like.
4. Angels. I wrote a column earlier this spring expressing confidence in closer Jordan Walden, but the bullpen is undeniably the Angels’ biggest question. Will it even matter? The Angels’ offense and rotation are so good, the addition of one quality reliever at the deadline just might catapult the team into the World Series. Good luck to Vernon Wells holding off Mike Trout.

3. Yankees. Age is their biggest negative, but the offensive talent is still amazing and the rotation suddenly a major strength. GM Brian Cashman didn’t just add righties Hiroki Kuroda and Michael Pineda, he’s also getting back the old Phil Hughes and maybe the old Andy Pettitte. The bullpen, too, is full of options — if Mariano Rivera, 42, ever starts to show his age, the Yankees still would have Rafael Soriano and David Robertson, plus a choice of their top prospects, plus maybe David Aardsma, who underwent Tommy John surgery last July. Not the same as Rivera, of course. But not too shabby.

 

2. Rangers. I’m so tempted to pick the two-time defending AL champions; their pitching depth is even more staggering than that of the Yankees. It actually might take the Rangers a while to figure out just what they have, but by October they should be a force — provided their offense remains intact. Outfielders Josh Hamilton and Nelson Cruz both struggle to stay healthy, and it will be interesting to see how Hamilton handles his free-agent year.

1. Tigers. They can’t say they weren’t warned. But when I told right-hander Justin Verlander that I was preparing to curse his club, he dismissed me by saying, “You’re not the only one picking us.” The Tigers aren’t perfect — Austin Jackson isn’t a true leadoff man, and the team’s lack of speed, defensive prowess and a proven fifth starter are concerns. But Prince Fielder, Miguel Cabrera and Co. will mash, Verlander heads a formidable front four and the bullpen should be even better with the addition of righty Octavio Dotel. The Tigers last season extended the Rangers to six games in the ALCS in an all-but-crippled state. This year, they will complete the job — and restore my credibility, once and for all.


AL East

Yankees
Rays
Red Sox
Blue Jays
Orioles

AL Central

Tigers
Royals
Indians
White Sox
Twins

AL West

Rangers
Angels
Mariners
Athletics

NL East

Phillies
Marlins
Nationals
Braves
Mets

NL Central

Reds
Cardinals
Brewers
Pirates
Cubs
Astros

NL West

Diamondbacks
Giants
Dodgers
Rockies
Padres

AL wild-card game

Angels over Rays

AL Division Series

Rangers over Yankees
Tigers over Angels

ALCS

Tigers over Rangers

NL wild-card game

Giants over Marlins

NL Division Series

Diamondbacks over Reds
Giants over Phillies

NLCS

Diamondbacks over Giants

World Series

Tigers over Diamondbacks

Monday, March 5, 2012

Three of the best baseball teams ever, in my opinion, as far as lineup strength is concerned

1. 1998 Yankees-114 wins

-The only team in recent memory that had it all perfect. Unlike the colossal hitting power that typically defined the late-1990s Yankee dynasty, the 1998 squad was balanced, with colossal power (Brosius, Martinez and O'Neill) superior pitching (Wells, Cone, Hernandez) and a stellar bullpen (Stanton, Rivera.) Not a weakness on the team.

-2011 Phillies-102 wins

-Had this team not finished 7th in offense and hit like the Phillies in 2010, where they were #1 in runs scored, the Philadelphia Phillies would have come within 30 games of a perfect season, according to Baseball America. Yes, you read that correctly. 132-30 was indeed a possibility. Headlined by the "Best Rotation Ever," the four pitchers, Cliff Lee, Roy Halliday, Cole Hamels and Roy Oswalt, the team was THAT good. Philadelphia fans were rightfully disappointed. Still, the Phillies posted the lowest ERA in the majors in 2011, and will likely do so again in 2012; Philadelphia has emerged from relative obscurity to becoming one of the dominant franchises in baseball, along with the Yankees, Red Sox, Rangers, Angels and Tigers, and the ongoing Phillies dynasty, where Philadelphia will seek to win their sixth straight division title, continues to add to their payroll.

1988 Mets-100 wins

-As with the Phillies in 2011, the '88 Mets were hampered by their offense, and when you consider that the Mets had the lowest ERA in the majors that year, you can guess that, once again, the Mets would have had more wins than the '98 Yankees.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

New Yankees "Core Four?"

Austin Romine-Catcher

Manny Banuelos-LHP

Gary Sanchez-(Catcher/DH)

Dante Bischette Jr. (SS)

These four players in the Yankees farm system could be the heirs to the legendary "Core Four" of Pettite, Rivera, Jeter and Posada, though David Robertson will probably be the closer once Mo retires. The four players mentioned here are the best group of four players since the 1996 World Series, and Yankees fans everywhere know which four players I'm talking about. Romine has the potential to be one of the best backstops in a generation, and Banuelos is being called the "Cliff Lee back-up plan," as he's a potential superstar in the Bronx. Gary Sanchez is a ridiculously powerful hitter, as is Dante Bischette Jr; with the capability for the latter player to take over Jeter's position once the Hall of Fame-bound shortstop retires. Dante is also the same type of hitter that Jeter was in 1999...and he hasn't even hit the major leagues yet. Combine these four players, with David Robertson filling out the bullpen as the closer, as well as another star prospect, Dellin Betances, as a reliever on the same caliber as Mike Stanton was in the 90's, and you have the potential foundation for a dynastic team not seen in the Bronx since the 2001 World Series. Domination begins in 2014, I can feel it. Not only does King Felix Hernandez become a free agent, but Justin Verlander as well, in that year. The Yankees are lowering their payroll; Hal Steinbrienner is a much more frugal businessman than his father was, and only needs enough money to "win ball games." And that is all that matters. After all, the 1998 season was won on a lower payroll than some other teams. If the Yankees can sign Verlander, Felix or even Cole Hamels or Matt Cain in 2013 or 2014, the Yankees will have a team for the ages. Be patient, as the best is yet to come.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Angels vs. Rangers: The new rivalry

Let's face it, the Boston/N.Y. rivalry just isn't as entertaining as it used to be. It will always be there, but now, two new super-teams have emerged and are doing the same things as Boston and New York were doing 10 years ago. These teams are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on the best talent in the majors. They have incredible lineups, one team has the most seasoned lineup since the Atlanta Braves in 1997-1998, and one has the biggest bats in all of baseball, the team average was .289 in 2011. The rivalry that everyone will be talking about in 2012 is between the Los Angeles Angels and Texas Rangers, two new powerhouses that have become the center of the baseball world. In the December meetings, the Angels signed Albert Pujols and Texas Rangers ace C.J. Wilson, in response, Texas signed Yu Darvish, possibly one of the best Japanese pitchers of all time, posting a 1.79 ERA over 5 years in Japan; coming close to Mariano Rivera's numbers; the Yankees closer even admits that Darvish has "real potential." In this regard, the AL West is where the real rivalry is going to be. The Angels now have a lineup capable of winning 110+ games, but then, so do the Rangers, possibly even rivalling the 1998 Yankees for the title of the most regular season wins. Also, driving this rivalry is Albert Pujols, who, in Game 3 of the 2011 World Series, possibly the most incredible Series in several generations, hit three home runs in one game off of a Texas Rangers pitcher; Pujols not only tied this record, but set a World Series record for the most runs driven in and the most hits in one World Series game, and that the Angels will be ecstatic if Pujols hits .320 with a .631 slugging percentage in 2012, for that's what Mike Napoli did for the Rangers in 2011, and he was traded to the Blue Jays, who then flipped him to Texas...by the Angels. Yu Darvish, the new Rangers ace, drew more crowds to his early bullpen sessions than some of the Rangers' playoff games last fall. The Rangers still have the hitting power colossus they did last year, Josh Hamilton hit a home run out of Fenway Park last summer...3 times. Even Miguel Cabrera, the Tigers' slugger, now accompanied by Prince Fielder, was astonished at the Rangers' hitting power, they were hitting home runs off Justin Verlander as if it was nothing. However, the best baseball stories are causes, where the whole team is focused on one goal, as well as the loyal fanbase. With the epic collapse of the Texas Rangers' pitching in the 2011 World Series, and the epic battle in Game 6 between the St. Louis Cardinals and Texas Rangers that put the Rangers just one strike away from a championship twice, the Rangers have become a cause. David Freese's walk-off home run off of the Texas closer in the 11th inning of Game 6 will continue to haunt the Rangers until the team has a World Series ring. The 2012 season is going to be a clash of the two titans, the Los Angeles Angels and Texas Rangers. Boston and New York need to sit down and hang on. 110+ wins for both Texas and Los Angeles? Possible, even likely. With the securing of Derek Holland for another 5 years, the Rangers have locked down their core players and secured a dynasty, and the Angels could potentially do the same, if they can work their bullpen weaknesses out. Baseball dynasties are incredibly difficult to build, however, but the other team that's likely to return to champion form in the West is the San Francisco Giants. After a World Series championship in 2010, 2011 was an awful year for the Giants, but now they are back in championship form. Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum could combine for a whopping 40 wins at least, and with the new star hitters, Angel Pagan and Melky Cabrera, with returning hitters like Buster Posey the 2012 Giants look like the 2009 Yankees, with the hitting power and pitching power to prove it. That team won 103 games and the World Series that year. Between the Giants, Rangers, Angels, Yankees, Tigers, Red Sox, Phillies and Rays, there are 8 teams that have the potential to reach the World Series. Who makes it will be revealed in time.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

NL East the most competitive division?

According to Charlie Manuel of the Philadelphia Phillies, the NL East might be the most competitive division in baseball this year, which would be a major shift from the norm. Philadelphia is armed with Johnathan Papelbon and has most of its 2011 lineup back in the fold, minus Roy Oswalt, who wasn't a big part of the 2011 team because of his injury, but the rest of the NL East, namely the Braves, Nationals and Marlins are also major contenders. The Miami Marlins signed Jose Reyes, Heath Bell, Carlos Zambrano, Josh Johnson and Mark Buhlere, giving the Marlins one of the most lethal rotation in baseball for 2012, plus a very good closer. However, the Nationals have an even more impressive lineup, with Stephen Stratsburg, Gio Gonzales, and Edwin Jackson, along with hitter Ryan Zimmerman, outfielder Jayson Werth, and many other elite players. Last year, the Nationals finished with 80 wins, just a game under .500, and that was without Gonzales or Edwin Jackson. The Nationals are in contention with the Phillies for the title this year, and are just a few good players away, say, another two ace pitchers to complement the three ace pitchers they already have, and another power hitter, from being a once in a generation lienup, the kind of lineup that wins multiple championships and posts 100+ wins. With closer Storen on board, the Nats are in contention to win it all this year...but if they sign free-agent pitchers Cole Hamels and Matt Cain following the 2012 season, plus Mike Napoli from Texas if they let him go, the Nationals could become a colossal force on the field...how does a decade-long dynasty sound? The Nationals could pull it off. In the words of Charlie Manuel: "Yankees fans and Boston fans might argue it, but every team in the NL East is capable of beating them."

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Baseball Armageddon: 2012 season predicted to be one of the best ever

7 teams with 100+ wins

-Rays

-Phillies

-Yankees

Detroit Tigers

Los Angeles

Texas

Boston


Most Likely AL champion contenders


Texas Rangers (3rd time in a row!)

Los Angeles Angels (Best pitching rotation in more than 30 years, each pitcher has pitched more than 230 innings per season, plus they have Albert Pujols.)

New York Yankees (What else is new?)

Detroit Tigers (Verlander, Fielder and Cabrera. Need I say more?)

Thursday, February 23, 2012

World Series Fantasy Scenario #2

1998 Yankees vs. 1988 Mets, (assuming that  injuries never held the Mets offense back)

Yankees Record: 114-48,

Mets Record: 126-36

Yankees: Starting rotation performed spectacularly all year, with David Wells throwing a perfect game and every pitcher racking up double-digit wins. Hitting power was colossal, with players like Paul O'Neil, Tino Martinez, Bernie Williams and Scott Brosius batting over .300, and Martinez hitting 28 home runs.

Mets: Best pitching staff in Mets history, only the 1968 Mets team struck more batters out in baseball history. More than 950 runs were scored in the 162-game season, with such a deep bench that even if a player was injured, another one would quickly take his place. Going into this fantasy series, the Mets have the most regular season wins of all time.

Synopsis-Unless some future matchup rises to this caliber, this series would likely have been the most colossal of all time. We'd be looking at a 7-game series for sure, with some of the most fearsome pitching duels, slugging wars and baserunning ever seen. This one would likely come down to the wire, to the very last pitch. Both closers, Mariano Rivera (NYY) and Randy Myers (NYM) were some of the best of all time. However, since these teams were a decade apart, they could never have played a World Series...but who knows? Two other, future teams could potentially rise to these sky-high levels, and when they do, you know I'll be watching.

World Series we Wish Happened.

1998 Yankees vs. 1998 Braves

Yankees Record: 114-48

Braves Record:106-56

7-game series (probably)

Starting pitchers for Yankees- David Cone, David Wells, Andy Pettite, Orlando Hernandez, Hideki Irabu

Starting pitchers for Braves- John Smoltz, Tom Glavine, Greg Maddux, Dennis Martinez, Kerry Ligtenburg


Synopsis-This matchup, had it occurred, would likely have been the biggest matchup of all time. One of the best NL teams in history by win percentage pitted against the best AL team in history by win percentage. The San Diego victory over the Braves should be the subject of a 48 Hours Mystery episode. No one, not even the Yankees, expected that they would be playing against San Diego and not Atlanta. One thing's for sure, the Yankees wouldn't have swept the 1998 Series against the murderous trio of John Smoltz, Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux, combined with the ace pitchers Dennis Martinez, still the only Latin-born player to toss a perfect game, and Kerry Lightenburg, the 1998 Atlanta Braves were still the only team to ever include 5 aces in a 5-man rotation. Combined with the hitting power of Chipper Jones, Mark DeRosa and various other hitters, they would have given the Yanks everything they had.

That's not to say that the Yankees had nothing to counter the Braves with, however. Their best hitters, Scott Brosius at third and Tino Martinez at first, as well as Jorge Posada, Andy Pettite, Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter as their "Core Four," not to mention their fantastic starting rotation; David Wells pitched a perfect game that year and every pitcher posted double-digit wins, led by David Cone's 20. There wasn't a weakness on the Yankees team that year at all.

Alas, this "Baseball Armageddon" never happened, and the Yankees won their 24th championship that year. Oh, what a Series that would have been.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Top 10 Mets teams of all time

Throughout the next few weeks, I will be doing some fun “look back’s” at various points of New York history. One of the first things I wanted to do is rank the best Mets teams of all time. I threw out where they finished, but rather the strength of the squad using both statistical, as well as some intangible factors.

1. 1988 - Cream of the crop in Mets history. Best pitching staff in team history as only the 1968 team gave up less runs in a 162 games season, and that was the year of the pitcher. David Cone won 20 games, Ron Darling had his best season, and how many teams could say Sid Fernandez was their fifth starter? Doc Gooden was beginning to decline, but still won 18 games. Unlike the ’86 title team they had a dominant closer as Randy Myers had 26 saves and a 1.72 ERA. Offensively they had two MVP candidates (Strawberry/McReynolds), and their bench was so deep that injuries to Keith Hernandez, and the steep decline by Gary Carter was offset by Dave Magadan, and the occasional Mackey Sasser start. Gregg Jefferies infused some life into the offense late that year (.321, 6, 17 in 118 PA). If this team performed offensively as they did in ’87 it would be the ’88 Mets, not ’98 Yankees, that won the most games in baseball history. They still won 100 games despite going 44-39 throughout the summer. How they lost to the Dodgers should be part of an A&E mystery series.

2. 1986- Do I need to wax poetic about this team? 108 wins, four starters with 15+ victories, and a lineup that scored over 700 runs for the first time in team history. This was Lenny Dykstra‘s best “non steroid” season (.822 OPS, more walks than strikeouts), Ray Knight had a bounce back year, and there was the ultimate super sub, Kevin Mitchell, off the bench. The 1989 National League MVP couldn’t crack this starting lineup. It wasn’t the best of seasons for Darryl Strawberry, but it didn’t matter. The reason why I put this team a notch below ’88 is because their overall staff wasn’t as strong. The difference between the ’88 team, and the next best, was a wide margin. Houston was the equal of the ’86 Mets, and the NLCS proved as much. If the ’88 team won a championship, especially over Oakland, this wouldn’t even be a debate.

3. 1987- If the pitching staff stayed healthy this might have been the best Mets team of all time. 823 runs scored was a team record held until 1999. Strawberry and Howard Johnson were 30/30 members, while Kevin McReynolds (29 homers, 95 RBI) wasn’t’ too shabby on both sides of the ball. This was the year of the juiced ball (precursor of the steroid era), as they hit 192 homers. Tim Teufel was an underrated member of this squad posting a .944 OPS with 14 homers and 61 RBI in just 350 plate appearances. The downfall was that every starting pitcher was injured at some point. Both Roger McDowell and Jesse Orosco struggled out of the bullpen as well. If not for journeyman Terry Leach winning 7 games in the rotation they may not have sniffed a pennant race with the Cardinals. Still, this is a very strong edition in team history. In my opinion, a baseball version of a Greek Tragedy.

4. 1969- I was tempted to drop this team down behind the ’99 club (a personal favorite), but the pitching is too good. Hall of Fame ace in Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman‘s career year (17-9, 2.28), and a bullpen that included Ron Taylor, Tug McGraw, and Nolan Ryan. The issue is the offense, which averaged less than four runs a game. Cleon Jones was the only player to have a standout season, although midseason acquisition Donn Clendenon certainly did his part (11 homers, 37 RBI). This team won on its pitching staff, and the managing of Gil Hodges, who used the platoon masterfully.

5. 1999- One of my favorite all time teams. I will never forget what a fun summer it was as they went on a 55-27 run from June 4th to September 4th. Sure, the late September losing streak was painful, but it made that last weekend against the Pirates, and the one game playoff with Cincinnati, a worthwhile experience. Everyone remembers “the best infield ever,” but offensively this team was loaded with players that got on base. John Olerud and Rickey Henderson both had OBP over 42%, Mike Piazza hit 40 homers, Robin Ventura had a MVP season (32 homers, 117 RBI), and Edgardo Alfonzo hit 27 homers with 108 RBI. The key was the supporting cast as Roger Cedeno hit .313 with 66 stolen bases, Darryl Hamilton hit .339 after a July 31st trade from Colorado, Benny Agbayani had an .888 OPS, and Rey Ordonez drove in 60 runs from the eight hole. The pitching was spotty, but Al Leiter and Rick Reed were big game pitchers, and Kenny Rogers won five big games down the stretch. It was the work of the bullpen, anchored by Armando Benitez, who had arguably his best season in New York (14.8 strikeouts per nine innings) with 22 saves after John Franco went down with an injury. They were a hair away from forcing Game 7 against Atlanta, and would have had a better shot of beating the Yankees than the 2000 edition.

6. 2006- This team holds a special place in the hearts of Mets fans as I have never seen a fan/team love affair like 2006. Offensively right there with the ’99 team as David Wright/Jose Reyes had their coming out party, while Carlos Delgado and Carlos Beltran produced at a high level. Even complementary players like Paul Lo Duca, Jose Valentin, and Endy Chavez had incredible offensive seasons. The real key was solid up the middle defense, and a bullpen that was “lights out” from the sixth inning on. How else could you explain winning 97 games, and coming one win away from the World Series, with a rotation headed by two 40 year olds in El Duque and Tom Glavine? The real MVP’s of this team were Wagner, Heilman, Feliciano, Bradford, Sanchez, and yes, Guillermo Mota. That is, until the NLCS against St. Louis.

7. 2000: Amazing how the last pennant winning Mets team is towards the bottom of this list. This team was just a year removed from the offensive minded ’99 team, but this group was more centered on pitching. The starting rotation had two aces (Hampton/Leiter), and solid seasons from Rick Reed, Bobby Jones, and surprise fifth starter Glendon Rusch. Losing John Olerud hurt, but Piazza and Alfonzo led the team offensively, and they got just enough from the rest of the supporting cast. Like the ’06 team the bullpen featured four top notch relievers in Wendell, Cook, Franco, and Benitez. This is the prototypical team where the sum is greater than its parts. Most everyone agrees this was one of the grittiest teams in Mets history. Put this team’s grit with the ’06 versions talent and you have a World Champion.

8. 1990- A forgotten team because it came at the tail end of the eighties run. It featured two Cy Young Award winners (Gooden Viola), David Cone as a three starter, and so much starting pitching that neither Bob Ojeda or Ron Darling, big parts of other teams rotations in the coming years, couldn’t get consistent starts. The offense was good, but inconsistent, as Strawberry turned a difficult start into a solid campaign (37 homers, 108 RBI). A key was when Bud Harrelson inserted Dave Magadan into the lineup that June. He started hitting, and never stopped, nearly winning the NL batting title. I also think Davey Johnson got a raw deal as he was fired 42 games into the season. The team would go on a huge winning streak that June, something that I believe was inevitable due to their talent. Their Pythagorean Record was 98-64, which would have given them the NL East title. Could make a point they are better than the 2000 team, but had to knock them down because they underachieved.

9. 1985: I believe this team was the Mets version of the eighties Chicago Bulls before Pippen and Grant came into their own. Doc Gooden played Jordan (24-4, 1.52), while Keith Hernandez, Darryl Strawberry, and Gary Carter provided enough offense to win 98 games. Offensively there were holes at second, short, third, and when Strawberry was injured, the outfield. Davey Johnson started to incorporate the young pitchers like Aguilera and Fernandez into the rotation, and Ron Darling had a decent year. The bullpen was a disaster as Jesse Orosco and Doug Sisk had lousy seasons, although Roger McDowell picked up the slack when he was called up from Tidewater. Good team, but their offense is one of the weakest of the group.

10. 2008: How many teams get elite offensive seasons from four of their starting eight? This team did as Reyes, Wright, Beltran, and Delgado keyed an offense that scored more runs than the ’86 championship team. The starting rotation was decent, with Johan Santana playing a modern day ‘85 Gooden in the second half. Its Achilles heel was the bullpen, as well as managers (Randolph/Manuel) that didn’t understand the importance of lefty/righty matchups, or bullpen roles. Once Billy Wagner was lost in August the 2008 season went down in flames. Give me almost any other bullpen in team history, and this group probably wins 95 games and makes the playoffs.