Monday, March 5, 2007

NL East Capsule: A Preview...

Philadelphia Phillies (92-70): Until last month, I was going with the Mets to win the National League East, but their lack of moves, especially on the pitching front, has moved Philadelphia to the top of the division. This offseason, the Phillies made moves to ensure they do not regress.

The Phillies offense is as good as any in baseball, and with Ryan Howard who hit 58 and Chase Utley who busted out in a big way will lead the starting lineup everyday. Add Jimmy Rollins, Pat Burrell, Wes Helms to the fold, the Phillies have a solid lineup from top to bottom and more importantly, firepower and protection for Howard and Utley.

With Ryan’s big bat, he changes the course of a game with his amazing power and ability to hit to all field; therefore, in turn will cause the other players in the lineup to help out the big man. There will time where he or Utley might have to carry the team, but you’ve got two legends possibly in the making.

The starting pitching has been improved with addition of Freddy Garcia who was solid with the White Sox along with Adam Eaton, and he joins an already solid rotation with Brett Myers, Jamie Moyer, and young ace possibly in the making, Cole Hamels.

The bullpen may not be as strong as the starting corps, but they are decent.

In the end, the lack of additions by the Mets serves as the Phillies’ gain.

New York Mets (89-73): Like I mentioned, the Mets perhaps may cost themselves the division by not making the necessary pitching movies to get ahead. Right now, the Mets have two forty-somethings, Orlando Hernandez and Tom Glavine and while they may solid starters, well they are in middle age; therefore, it may be short-sighted to depend on guys such as Glavine and Hernandez to man the pitching rotation.

In addition, ace Pedro Martinez was injured during the season in 2006 and will be out at least until the mid-point of 2007; thus, a big loss for the Mets.

Much of the Mets rotation will depend on young John Maine, who’s a capable starter, but still a little rough and Oliver Perez who is trying to bounce back. The Mets also have starters in Triple-A who can possibly fill the void, but right now, the starting rotation is shaky.

Everything must go right with the rotation in order to compete.

The bullpen should be solid with Billy Wagner and others such Duaner Sanchez along with Aaron Heilman.

The batting order is simply scary with uber stars such as David Wright and Jose Reyes who both had breakout seasons and became stars in the baseball stratosphere along with big veteran bats Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado and new addition, Moises Alou.

Much like the Yankees and Red Sox, the Mets powerful lineup will pound on mediocre pitching and should produce a ton of runs which in turn will offset bad outings.

In the end though, I see the Mets in second place and possibly getting in via the wild card, but they will have tough competition, especially from the Padres and Dodgers.

Atlanta Braves (83-79):
Well, the Braves will be much better than last year, but they won’t win the National League East. Simply put, the Braves bats may not be able to compete with the Phillies or Braves. Longtime incumbents Chipper and Andruw Jones returns, and Andruw may have a big year due to his contract ending, but that won’t be enough.

Jeff Franceour is a good player with solid numbers, but his plate discipline does not leave much to be desired, and it hurts the team at times. In addition, the team traded Adam LaRoche in the offseason for wonder-kid Mike Gonzalez.

The pitching rotation should be solid with long time pitcher John Smoltz, and the team will depend on Tim Hudson to bounce back, Mike Hampton to come back from injury and see if their young starters can make an impact. Overall, the Braves still have too many questions with their pitching rotation to make a dent in the standingd.

The bullpen is strong with new addition Rafael Soriano, Mike Gonzalez and Bob Wickman, but that will not be enough to help the Braves.


Florida Marlins (80-82): Well, the Florida Marlins did something that I thought I’d never expect – win and contend. Under the tutelage of Joe Girardi, young kids and minor leaguers made an impact and surprised the heck out everyone with only a $15 million dollar payroll.

As much as I’d expect the Marlins to finish over .500 and contend, this may not be the year. The players will be a year older, and “D-Train” Dontrelle Wilis and Miguel Cabrerd return, but it won’t be enough.

Willis will lead the pitching corps, and Cabrera will do another bang up job with the bat.

The team has oodles of talent and superstar potential with Hanley Ramirez, Dan Uggla, and Josh Willingham, they may still be too raw to go to toe with the Braves, Mets and Phillies. I’d give this young team another year of seasoning, and then they’ll break out.

The starting pitching is strong and primed for the future with young guns such as Scott Olsen, but Anibal Sanchez and Josh Johnson are hurting and that may throw a wrench into their plans of the Marlins. If Johnson and Sanchez can be healthy, then the Marlins can move up.

The bullpen is an unknown, but the Marlins will be exciting to watch. They’ll be over over .500 in 2008.

Washington Nationals (75-87): I do not see the Washington Nationals battling for the New York Mets for the worst record of all time.

However, the team is in shambles and look like they are starting from scratch; therefore, 2007 may be a season to pave the way for the future and to put the wheels in motion to move into their new ballpark.

In light of it all, the future looks bright for the team under the watch of Stan Kasten who built the Atlanta Braves into a powerhouse in the National League. The Nationals may be bad, but it may not be for long as they are trying to rebuild a moribund farm system & hopefully foster talent.

The starting rotation is basically an open rotation for guys who are hungry and looking to reclaim their career. Such names as Tim Redding, Jerome Williams and others look to earn jobs and make an impact for a team along with a fresh start.

As of now, the only guy with a starting pitching job is John Patterson.

The bullpen is in much better shape with the return of Luis Ayala and Chad Cordero (who might be traded if the price is right), and should remain fairly solid and big a source of help to the starting rotation.

The offense does not have much pop and is hindered somewhat by the injury of Nick Johnson, but they have a young core with star-in-the-making Ryan Zimmerman, Austin Kearns, Felipe Lopez in the fold, so all is not lost in 2007. The loss of Alfonso Soriano will hurt the Nationals this season; however, not trading him at the trade deadline hurt the team in the short run.

Fans are resigned that the Nationals will probably wind up in last place in the National League East; however, no one expected the Marlins to be great in 2006 either.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Way to not include Brian McCann while talking about offenses. By the way the Braves had arguably the best offense in the league last year, top three in virtually every category, and beating the Mets AND Phillies in most categories. That offense only lost Giles, who was a disappointment last year, and LaRoche, who was good but it's not like the Braves don't have a decent replacement. All that combined with a much better bullpen proves that this is a very biased review. I applaud your effort but do a little more research next time when talking about offenses.

Unknown said...

Anon - thanks for the oversight. I put the wrong version up of the review on site (I should never do work after 11pm).

I'll put up the revision, which did include McCann.

The Braves last year did have a good offense; however, I think with a few of their young additions, they may not have an offense comparable to the Mets or Phillies.

However, I did also say Andruw should have a big 2007, as it is his 'walk' year, and expect Chipper to bounce back.

Take solace, in the past, the pundit, experts and myself have been wrong about the Braves and they have surprised everyone time and time again.

Do I think they are better than 78 wins, yes -- however, I see them only having an outside chance of winning the NL East, in my opinion...

Anonymous said...

I think you are forgetting that the Braves were 2nd in the league in hitting, behind only the Phillies. Losing Giles isn't that big of a deal since he did not have a good season last year, and has in fact had down seasons the last 3 years. The Braves may miss LaRoche's pop, but the Jones boys, McCann and Francouer are all good for 20 plus HR each, Kelly Johnson, Scott Thorman, and Craig Wilson have great potential to have alot of pop as well.

Now onto the pitching...The Braves bullpen blew 29 saves for them last season. Had they won those games they would have won the division. This year no way that happens... The Phillies have questionable pitching, Myers is great...but I'm not sold on anyone else (Cole Hammels has good potential)...Lastly, the Mets have NO pitching whatsover and have aging players. Now, I think that this will be an exciting race, but to count out the Braves is just plain stupid and shows you know very little about the NL East, seeing you are more of a fan of the AL...Braves in my opinion have better pitching than Phillies and the Mets...but I think the Phillies and Braves might be neck and neck...

Please do more research on these teams before you denounce the Braves anything.

Unknown said...

Anon - whoa, whoa. I'm just giving my opinion, much you are with yours. I am not denouncing the Braves -- just calm down.

Ok, I perhaps may be wrong, but I still think the Braves have a lot of youth which ultimately brings question marks.

The Braves need Hudson pitch like he did with the A's, & Hampton to come back - no question.

Those factors played a big role in my rationale.

Anonymous said...

Oh okay the Braves are the only ones with question marks...not the Mets with their pitching staff or the Phillies with theirs...

That youth you're talking about put up phenominal numbers for the Braves last year..so no worries there. Also, Hampton and Hudson are better than Glavine, El Douke, Maine, Perez ect. The Braves pitching staff is better IMO than both the Phils and the Mets. Now, I think this will be a 3 way race..so I'm not saying I have an opinion on anything special, just that the Braves will not finish in 3rd place-and Yes, I think they can win the division with what they have right now...doesn't mean they will...

But Bravos are not the only team with a shot at being a contender with question marks...and I just don't think you are giving them their due. They only won 14 straight titles after all, and Bobby Cox is the Fifth winningest manager in baseball history.

Unknown said...

Anon - Thanks for the input. Well, I'll say your posts have got me rethinking my stance a little. I'll probably be doing a few revisions before April.

The youth of the Braves lineup will be strong core, but things could always be shaky -- however, your point of the youngsters being strong overall is a point well taken.

I like the bullpen, the starting corps is a little questionable.

I'll probably have a final revision of the divisions before Opening Day in baseball.

The Braves were my longtime fav NL team before the Nats, as I used always catch them on TBS and at the old stadium when my sister was in school at UGA (Univ. of Ga).

I appreciate the spirited debate. You've left some thoughts in mind, so it was not in vain.

Will Schaffer said...

Kelly Johnson is capable of .280+ average with a .365+ OBP and double digit homers and SBs, Renteria is a great number two hitter, the Jones boys speak for themselves, McCann is an offensive force, Francouer hit 30 bombs and drove in 100, Thorman will hit .275+ with 20 HRs, Left field has good options, there is no real weak point and The rotation has Smoltz (cy young caliber), Hudson (Come on, one bad year in his entire career), James (a great young pitcher in the mold of Glavine with more Ks), Davies (another promising youngster who is healthy) and then Cormier, Harrison, Villareal, Lerew all competing for the fifth spot and then hampton returns. The pen is the best in the NL, without a doubt. Two lefties that hold lefthanded hitters to under .180 BA is incredible. I think you severly underestimate the Braves and overestimate what a bad pen like the Phils can do to a team (as a braves fan, I can attest to that)

Unknown said...

Will & Anon, I am going to reconsider my assessment of the Braves.

I have gotten a lot of mail about the Braves, and I'll redo the capsules before the season begins.

... and I thought the Mets fans would be bad.

Too bad about Mike Hampton...

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