Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the
No. 1 Northeast Huskies (115-47) had home-field advantage versus the
No. 4 Goldenrod Gators (94-68).
Game One
Huskies 7, Gators 4
In a good matchup it was the Northeast Huskies 7, the Goldenrod Gators 4 at Huskie Park.
Northeast tallied 3 runs in the 4th inning when they came up with 3 base hits. It was enough scoring to earn the victory. Northeast banged out 9 hits on the night.
The win went to Adam Wainwright (2-0) who allowed 4 runs in 6 2/3 innings. Wilton Lopez earned the save, his 1st. Jeff Samardzija (1-1) ended up with the loss. He pitched 7 2/3 innings giving up 9 hits and 4 walks.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Round Two: Northwest 4, Mohawk Valley 3
Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the
No. 3 Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions (98-64) had home-field advantage versus the No. 7 Northwest Stars (90-72).
Game One
Stars 3, Lions 1
Doug Fister (2-1) and David Price (1-2) treated the Mohawk Valley fans to a fine pitching duel at Van Slyke Field. The Northwest Stars eventually emerged as victors over the Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions by the score of 3 to 1.
Fister looked very much in control throughout the night. He allowed only 4 hits and 3 walks in 7 2/3 innings seeing his ERA drop from 4.70 to 3.52 for the playoffs. Craig Kimbrel earned the save with a perfect ninth, his 4th save.
Game One
Stars 3, Lions 1
Doug Fister (2-1) and David Price (1-2) treated the Mohawk Valley fans to a fine pitching duel at Van Slyke Field. The Northwest Stars eventually emerged as victors over the Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions by the score of 3 to 1.
Fister looked very much in control throughout the night. He allowed only 4 hits and 3 walks in 7 2/3 innings seeing his ERA drop from 4.70 to 3.52 for the playoffs. Craig Kimbrel earned the save with a perfect ninth, his 4th save.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Round One: Goldenrod 4, St. Louis 2
Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the
No. 4 Goldenrod Gators (94-68) had home-field advantage versus the
No. 5 St. Louis Maulers (92-70).
Game One
Maulers 3, Gators 2
Zack Greinke racked up an impressive total of 12 strikeouts as the St. Louis Maulers topped the Goldenrod Gators by a score of 3 to 2 at Gator Grounds.
Greinke (1-0) pitched a solid game. He surrendered only 6 hits and no walks in 8 innings. Goldenrod made it exciting in the 9th, but they were unable to push the needed runs across.
Matt Thornton earned his 1st save. David Phelps (0-1) was the losing pitcher. He pitched 5 innings and surrendered 5 hits and no walks.
'I had my good stuff tonight.' Greinke said. 'As the game went along I started to get the feeling that I was going to strike out a bunch of hitters.'
Game One
Maulers 3, Gators 2
Zack Greinke racked up an impressive total of 12 strikeouts as the St. Louis Maulers topped the Goldenrod Gators by a score of 3 to 2 at Gator Grounds.
Greinke (1-0) pitched a solid game. He surrendered only 6 hits and no walks in 8 innings. Goldenrod made it exciting in the 9th, but they were unable to push the needed runs across.
Matt Thornton earned his 1st save. David Phelps (0-1) was the losing pitcher. He pitched 5 innings and surrendered 5 hits and no walks.
'I had my good stuff tonight.' Greinke said. 'As the game went along I started to get the feeling that I was going to strike out a bunch of hitters.'
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Roune One: Northeast 4, West Side 1
Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the
No. 1 Northeast Huskies (115-47) had home-field advantage versus the
No. 8 West Side Bluejays (87-75).
Game One
Huskies 6, Bluejays 4
Salvador Perez hit one over the fence and had 3 RBI as the Northeast Huskies outscored the West Side Bluejays 6 to 4.
In the bottom of the 6th inning Northeast scored 5 runs when they came up with 5 base hits. The crucial at-bat was provided by Perez who made the home-town crowd a happy bunch when he doubled scoring two baserunners. Casey Janssen relieved and was untouched by West Side as he recorded the save, his 1st.
Adam Wainwright (1-0) got the win allowing 4 runs in 7 innings. Chris Sale (0-1) was charged with the loss. Northeast scored big getting 6 runs off him in 5 2/3 innings.
Game One
Huskies 6, Bluejays 4
Salvador Perez hit one over the fence and had 3 RBI as the Northeast Huskies outscored the West Side Bluejays 6 to 4.
In the bottom of the 6th inning Northeast scored 5 runs when they came up with 5 base hits. The crucial at-bat was provided by Perez who made the home-town crowd a happy bunch when he doubled scoring two baserunners. Casey Janssen relieved and was untouched by West Side as he recorded the save, his 1st.
Adam Wainwright (1-0) got the win allowing 4 runs in 7 innings. Chris Sale (0-1) was charged with the loss. Northeast scored big getting 6 runs off him in 5 2/3 innings.
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Draft Order For 2014
With the close of the market on Oct. 7, the order of the top 3 picks in our draft next February have been determined. Here's how things came out:
DOW (Manatees, 57-105) - 14936.24
NASDAQ (Roadrunners, 59-103) - 3770.38
S&P 500 (Dutchmen, 60-102) - 1676.12
Per the constitution, we use the last decimal place, putting the teams in order from highest to lowest. So ...
Congratulations to the Roadrunners, who are now on the clock. The rest of the order follows.
DOW (Manatees, 57-105) - 14936.24
NASDAQ (Roadrunners, 59-103) - 3770.38
S&P 500 (Dutchmen, 60-102) - 1676.12
Per the constitution, we use the last decimal place, putting the teams in order from highest to lowest. So ...
Congratulations to the Roadrunners, who are now on the clock. The rest of the order follows.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Round One: Mohawk Valley 4, Spokane 2
Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the
No. 3 Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions (98-64) had home-field advantage versus the
No. 6 Spokane Hooded Crows (90-72).
Game One
Crows 6, Lions 1
The Spokane Hooded Crows put 4 runs on the scoreboard in the 6th inning and easily topped the Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions; the final score was 6 to 1.
Clayton Kershaw (1-0) earned his pay with a solid performance for Spokane. He allowed 10 hits and no walks in 8 innings. Spokane totaled 8 hits on the night.
David Price (0-1) was the losing pitcher. Despite taking the loss, he whiffed 9 batters in 6 innings.
Game One
Crows 6, Lions 1
The Spokane Hooded Crows put 4 runs on the scoreboard in the 6th inning and easily topped the Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions; the final score was 6 to 1.
Clayton Kershaw (1-0) earned his pay with a solid performance for Spokane. He allowed 10 hits and no walks in 8 innings. Spokane totaled 8 hits on the night.
David Price (0-1) was the losing pitcher. Despite taking the loss, he whiffed 9 batters in 6 innings.
Round One: Northwest 4, Wilmington 3
Game recaps from the Strat-generated box scores. In this series, the No. 2 Wilmington Razorbacks (112-50) had home-field advantage versus the No. 7 Northwest Stars (90-72).
Game One
Stars 4, Razorbacks 2
Right fielder Jason Heyward had 2 base hits and 2 RBI at The Razordome as the Northwest Stars beat the Wilmington Razorbacks 4 to 2.
Northwest took the lead for good in the top of the 5th inning plating an isolated run using 2 hits. Northwest and Wilmington each finished the night with 9 hits.
Doug Fister (1-0) allowed 2 runs in 7 1/3 innings, and picked up the victory. Craig Kimbrel was credited with his 1st save. The losing pitcher was Felix Hernandez (0-1).
Game One
Stars 4, Razorbacks 2
Right fielder Jason Heyward had 2 base hits and 2 RBI at The Razordome as the Northwest Stars beat the Wilmington Razorbacks 4 to 2.
Northwest took the lead for good in the top of the 5th inning plating an isolated run using 2 hits. Northwest and Wilmington each finished the night with 9 hits.
Doug Fister (1-0) allowed 2 runs in 7 1/3 innings, and picked up the victory. Craig Kimbrel was credited with his 1st save. The losing pitcher was Felix Hernandez (0-1).
Sunday, October 6, 2013
MMDA Awards Voting For 2013
Here are the MMDA award winners as selected by the Strat-O-Matic game engine.
Ryan Braun led the MMDA with 47 homers, 140 RBIs and 198 hits, but those screwy voters elected for Andrew McCutchen and Robinson Cano, a pair of up-the-middle players.
R.A. Dickey led the MMDA with 21 wins and 264 innings, ranking second to only Clayton Kershaw with 238 strikeouts.
MVP | ||||||||||||||
Player | Team | AB | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | AVG | BB | SO | SB | CS | OBP | SLG | OPS |
McCutchen | Lions | 645 | 13 | 6 | 45 | 118 | .296 | 63 | 146 | 13 | 1 | .366 | .544 | .910 |
Cano | Huskies | 611 | 53 | 4 | 26 | 105 | .296 | 53 | 100 | 1 | 0 | .353 | .524 | .877 |
Braun | Gators | 648 | 37 | 1 | 47 | 140 | .306 | 55 | 148 | 26 | 6 | .365 | .583 | .949 |
Dickey | Razors | see Cy Young balloting below | ||||||||||||
Headley | Lions | 617 | 46 | 1 | 32 | 111 | .277 | 80 | 171 | 11 | 0 | .361 | .511 | .872 |
Ryan Braun led the MMDA with 47 homers, 140 RBIs and 198 hits, but those screwy voters elected for Andrew McCutchen and Robinson Cano, a pair of up-the-middle players.
CY YOUNG | |||||||||||||||
Pitchers | Team | W | L | ERA | GS | SV | IP | H | BB | SO | HR | H9 | BB9 | SO9 | HR9 |
Dickey | Razors | 21 | 6 | 3.10 | 34 | 0 | 264 | 223 | 67 | 238 | 32 | 7.6 | 2.3 | 8.1 | 1.1 |
Kershaw | Crows | 18 | 6 | 2.08 | 32 | 0 | 251 | 159 | 75 | 248 | 21 | 5.7 | 2.7 | 8.9 | 0.8 |
Rodney | Razors | 3 | 2 | 2.17 | 0 | 43 | 66 | 38 | 9 | 65 | 10 | 5.2 | 1.2 | 8.8 | 1.4 |
Shields | Huskies | 18 | 6 | 3.69 | 33 | 0 | 227 | 222 | 56 | 230 | 36 | 8.8 | 2.2 | 9.1 | 1.4 |
Kimbrel | Stars | 4 | 5 | 0.98 | 0 | 37 | 64 | 24 | 21 | 101 | 4 | 3.4 | 3.0 | 14.2 | 0.6 |
R.A. Dickey led the MMDA with 21 wins and 264 innings, ranking second to only Clayton Kershaw with 238 strikeouts.
Crows, Huskies & Lions Etch Names In MMDA Recordbook
The MMDA recordbook runs back through 2002, the so-called Internet era for our league.
With offense down across the league, no team made a run at any of the team batting records. This year's Wilmington Razorbacks led the MMDA with 928 runs scored, but they would have needed to score an additional 89 runs to crack the top 10. At their run-scoring rate, Wilmington would have required 16 more games to score those 89 runs.
A number of teams broke into the top 10 for various pitching categories, however. The staffs for Mohawk Valley, Northeast and Spokane made multiple appearances on the updated pitching leaderboards, while four other clubs made single appearances.
Of course, when compared with the current league average, none of these performances are as impressive (in context) as some of the earlier feats. Here are the teams that cracked the pitching top 10s:
Runs Allowed
4. Spokane, 586 (3.62 per game)
6. Northeast, 592 (3.65 per game)
ERA
5. Northeast, 3.28
6. Spokane, 3.35
WHIP
8. Mohawk Valley, 1.190
9. Northwest, 1.197
Strikeouts
1. Mohawk Valley, 1,462 (8.91 per nine)
4. Goldenrod, 1,358 (8.25 per nine)
7. Fighting Irish, 1,323 (8.08 per nine)
Home Runs Allowed
3. Spokane, 122 (0.74 per nine)
10. Columbus, 134 (0.83 per nine)
With offense down across the league, no team made a run at any of the team batting records. This year's Wilmington Razorbacks led the MMDA with 928 runs scored, but they would have needed to score an additional 89 runs to crack the top 10. At their run-scoring rate, Wilmington would have required 16 more games to score those 89 runs.
A number of teams broke into the top 10 for various pitching categories, however. The staffs for Mohawk Valley, Northeast and Spokane made multiple appearances on the updated pitching leaderboards, while four other clubs made single appearances.
Of course, when compared with the current league average, none of these performances are as impressive (in context) as some of the earlier feats. Here are the teams that cracked the pitching top 10s:
Runs Allowed
4. Spokane, 586 (3.62 per game)
6. Northeast, 592 (3.65 per game)
ERA
5. Northeast, 3.28
6. Spokane, 3.35
WHIP
8. Mohawk Valley, 1.190
9. Northwest, 1.197
Strikeouts
1. Mohawk Valley, 1,462 (8.91 per nine)
4. Goldenrod, 1,358 (8.25 per nine)
7. Fighting Irish, 1,323 (8.08 per nine)
Home Runs Allowed
3. Spokane, 122 (0.74 per nine)
10. Columbus, 134 (0.83 per nine)
Saturday, October 5, 2013
MMDA Power Rankings For The 2013 Season
An attempt to rank the league's best teams after six blocks and all 162 games.
Teams sorted by wins, then by run differential. Note that this is not the official tie-breaking method for playoff seeding or draft order.
Top Run-Creation Teams (R/G)
Wilmington (5.73)
Brooklyn (5.59)
Northeast (5.50)
Mohawk Valley (5.18)
Goldenrod (4.91)
Top Run-Prevention Teams (RA/G)
Spokane (3.62)
Northeast (3.65)
Mohawk Valley (3.89)
Northwest (4.00)
Rosehill (4.07)
Teams sorted by wins, then by run differential. Note that this is not the official tie-breaking method for playoff seeding or draft order.
No | Team | W | L | Division | R/G | RA/G | Diff |
1 | Northeast | 115 | 47 | Northeast | 5.50 | 3.65 | +299 |
2 | Wilmington | 112 | 50 | Atlantic | 5.73 | 4.17 | +252 |
3 | Mohawk Valley | 98 | 64 | Atlantic | 5.18 | 3.89 | +209 |
4 | Goldenrod | 94 | 68 | Central | 4.91 | 4.33 | +95 |
5 | St. Louis | 92 | 70 | Central | 4.44 | 4.24 | +33 |
6 | Northwest | 90 | 72 | Pacific | 4.75 | 4.00 | +121 |
7 | Spokane | 90 | 72 | Pacific | 4.19 | 3.62 | +93 |
8 | West Side | 87 | 75 | Northeast | 4.84 | 4.44 | +64 |
9 | Brooklyn | 85 | 77 | Atlantic | 5.59 | 4.87 | +116 |
10 | Fighting | 84 | 78 | Northeast | 4.59 | 4.66 | -11 |
11 | Rosehill | 83 | 79 | Central | 4.29 | 4.07 | +35 |
12 | Jersey | 77 | 85 | Northeast | 4.14 | 4.34 | -33 |
13 | Lake County | 73 | 89 | Central | 4.46 | 5.16 | -113 |
14 | Death Valley | 68 | 94 | Atlantic | 4.43 | 5.41 | -158 |
15 | Columbus | 67 | 95 | Pacific | 3.96 | 5.03 | -173 |
16 | Rochester | 65 | 97 | Atlantic | 4.31 | 5.33 | -165 |
17 | Cape Cod | 64 | 98 | Northeast | 4.22 | 4.85 | -102 |
18 | Elysian Fields | 60 | 102 | Central | 4.02 | 5.06 | -168 |
19 | California | 59 | 103 | Pacific | 3.83 | 4.71 | -142 |
20 | Miami | 57 | 105 | Pacific | 3.77 | 5.33 | -252 |
Top Run-Creation Teams (R/G)
Wilmington (5.73)
Brooklyn (5.59)
Northeast (5.50)
Mohawk Valley (5.18)
Goldenrod (4.91)
Top Run-Prevention Teams (RA/G)
Spokane (3.62)
Northeast (3.65)
Mohawk Valley (3.89)
Northwest (4.00)
Rosehill (4.07)
Playoff Bracket A
No. 1 Northeast (115)
No. 8 West Side (87)
No. 4 Goldenrod (94)
No. 5 St. Louis (92)
Playoff Bracket B
No. 2 Wilmington (112)
No. 7 Northwest (90)
No. 3 Mohawk Valley (98)
No. 6 Spokane (90)
Friday, October 4, 2013
Huskies dominate regular season once again, but can they get it done in October?
The Northeast Huskies have done it again. John Tresca's club led the league with 115 wins during the regular season, landing in a familiar place: atop the Northeast Division (named for its geographic location, though it could just as well be in honor of its dominant team). This marks six consecutive seasons in which the Huskies have either won the division outright or tied for first.
Since bringing up the rear with a 54-108 record in 2007, the Huskies have gone 659-313, good for a .678 winning percentage. During that span they have posted the best record in the league three times (2009, 2012, 2013). For all that dominance, however, there is one thing that has eluded them: a title. Over the past five years the Huskies have advanced to the final series only once, falling to the Bulldogs in seven games in 2009.
Can they do it this year? Their road to the World Series runs first through division rival West Side Bluejays, who are making their first-ever appearance in the MMDA postseason. Vegas likes the Huskies here. Northeast led the MMDA with a 3.28 ERA and ranked third in runs scored with 891. By contrast, the Bluejays posted a 3.97 ERA (9th) and crossed the plate 784 times (6th). But as the Huskies have learned, these games aren't played on paper.
Jim Baker's Wilmington Razorbacks finished with the second-best record in the league, at 112-50, ending a postseason drought reminiscent of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Razorbacks were led by a stout offense that gets on base and scores lots of runs. They posted a .359 on-base percentage as a team, nineteen points better than the second-best club (Huskies), and scored a league-best 928 runs. Their pitching staff logged a 3.92 ERA, eighth best in the league.
The Razors will be going up against a playoff fixture, the Northwest Stars, who secured the No. 7 seed after losing the tie-breaker with division foe Spokane. The Stars are a balanced club that finished fourth in the league in ERA (3.63) and seventh in runs scored (769).
Spokane, the sixth seed, will face the third-seeded Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions, whose potent offense ranked fourth in runs (839) and pitching staff finished third with a 3.55 ERA. The Hooded Crows are a pitching oriented club. Led by ERA champion Clayton Kershaw (2.08), they finished second in the MMDA with a 3.35 ERA. Kershaw and his fellow rotation mates will have to shine, however, because Spokane's offense ranked just 15th in runs scored, with 679, the least of any playoff qualifier.
The final matchup features divisional foes Goldenrod and St. Louis. They met in the second round of last year's playoffs, with the Gators sweeping the Maulers on the way to capturing the league championship. The Gators, who won two more games in the regular season this year to take the division title, have the edge in both ERA (3.82 to 3.91) and runs scored (796 to 720).
Best of luck to all eight clubs and congratulations on advancing this far.
Since bringing up the rear with a 54-108 record in 2007, the Huskies have gone 659-313, good for a .678 winning percentage. During that span they have posted the best record in the league three times (2009, 2012, 2013). For all that dominance, however, there is one thing that has eluded them: a title. Over the past five years the Huskies have advanced to the final series only once, falling to the Bulldogs in seven games in 2009.
Can they do it this year? Their road to the World Series runs first through division rival West Side Bluejays, who are making their first-ever appearance in the MMDA postseason. Vegas likes the Huskies here. Northeast led the MMDA with a 3.28 ERA and ranked third in runs scored with 891. By contrast, the Bluejays posted a 3.97 ERA (9th) and crossed the plate 784 times (6th). But as the Huskies have learned, these games aren't played on paper.
Jim Baker's Wilmington Razorbacks finished with the second-best record in the league, at 112-50, ending a postseason drought reminiscent of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Razorbacks were led by a stout offense that gets on base and scores lots of runs. They posted a .359 on-base percentage as a team, nineteen points better than the second-best club (Huskies), and scored a league-best 928 runs. Their pitching staff logged a 3.92 ERA, eighth best in the league.
The Razors will be going up against a playoff fixture, the Northwest Stars, who secured the No. 7 seed after losing the tie-breaker with division foe Spokane. The Stars are a balanced club that finished fourth in the league in ERA (3.63) and seventh in runs scored (769).
Spokane, the sixth seed, will face the third-seeded Mohawk Valley Crimson Lions, whose potent offense ranked fourth in runs (839) and pitching staff finished third with a 3.55 ERA. The Hooded Crows are a pitching oriented club. Led by ERA champion Clayton Kershaw (2.08), they finished second in the MMDA with a 3.35 ERA. Kershaw and his fellow rotation mates will have to shine, however, because Spokane's offense ranked just 15th in runs scored, with 679, the least of any playoff qualifier.
The final matchup features divisional foes Goldenrod and St. Louis. They met in the second round of last year's playoffs, with the Gators sweeping the Maulers on the way to capturing the league championship. The Gators, who won two more games in the regular season this year to take the division title, have the edge in both ERA (3.82 to 3.91) and runs scored (796 to 720).
Best of luck to all eight clubs and congratulations on advancing this far.
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