Archive for September, 2016

MLB Power Rankings: Where All 30 Teams Stand with 1 Week to Go

We’ve arrived at the final week of the 2016 MLB regular season.

Baseball feels unimportant after the news early Sunday morning that Miami Marlins ace Jose Fernandez had died in a boating accident, but the pennant push continues on.

The Chicago Cubs, Washington Nationals and Los Angeles Dodgers have all clinched their respective divisions on the National League side, leaving a three-team race between the New York Mets, San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals for two wild-card spots.

On the American League side, the Texas Rangers have clinched the AL West, and the Boston Red Sox have clinched a playoff spot, while the Cleveland Indians’ magic numbers sits at one to claim the AL Central crown.

That leaves the Toronto Blue Jays, Baltimore Orioles and Detroit Tigers as the leaders in the wild-card standings, with the Seattle Mariners and Houston Astros not out of the running either.

Meanwhile, non-contenders are taking a long look at some of their young talent while trying to play the role of spoiler, and the Atlanta Braves remain one of the better stories of the second half as they continue to play well.

At any rate, there was a good deal of shuffling in this week’s rankings (like always) as we head down the homestretch.

One thing remains true: These rankings are a fluid process as teams move up or down based on where they ranked the previous weekIf a club keeps winning, it will keep climbing—it’s as simple as that.

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Top 10 Pickups for Week 26

Fantasy baseball’s finish line is well in sight.

One week remains on MLB‘s schedule. Although keep in mind that any tiebreaker game—a real possibility in both leagues’ wild-card races—classifies as a regular-season contest. As a result, any stats accrued count in fantasy leagues.

Without any long-term ramifications, managers should feel no loyalty to anyone. Don’t like a decent pitcher’s matchup? Dump him for someone scheduled to tussle against a lesser adversary. 

Unsure about someone such as Alex Bregman, who has missed a few days but isn’t ruled out for the season yet? Don’t hold out hope for two games. Go get someone who will play six or seven.

Heading into the final week, the last batch of waiver-wire recommendations will focus heavily on matchup plays. That makes pitchers a larger focus.

It’s also important for gamers to know their circumstances. Which categories still contain potential for mobility? Is there an innings limit, and if so, how many frames remain before reaching it? 

For the final time this season, here’s a look at the top adds available in over half of Yahoo Sports leagues. 

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MLB Playoff Picture 2016: Bracket, Odds, Wild-Card Standings Entering Last Week

With just over one week left in the long slog that is the MLB regular season, the playoff pictures in both leagues are becoming clearer with each passing day. Each of the six division races is all but over, but teams in both the American League and National League continue to claw at each other’s heels in their final attempts to secure wild-card spots. 

In the AL, the Boston Red Sox and Cleveland Indians have firm holds on their respective divisions, and the Texas Rangers have already clinched the AL West title. Meanwhile, the division winners are all locked in for the NL playoffs. The Washington NationalsChicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers will represent the East, Central and West, respectively, after the Dodgers clinched the NL West Sunday evening. 

Now, superstition-fueled history tells us that the San Francisco Giants should be the 2016 World Series champions. After all, they win the Fall Classic every two years, or at least they have on alternating years since 2010. If San Francisco wants a shot at keeping that trend alive, though, they’ll have to fight off the St. Louis Cardinals, who trail the Giants by just a half-game for the second wild-card spot and are 1.5 games behind the New York Mets.  

If San Francisco can snag a wild-card spot, it will enter the slugfest that will be the 2016 MLB playoffs. There will be no easy game or series for the Giants or any postseason team, and the last club standing will have had to prove it is the undisputed champion among the league’s behemoths. 

Let’s take a look at the updated playoff picture and standings.

   

American League

Perhaps the biggest surprise out of this group is the Indians, who strung together an inspired 14-game winning streak that just so happened to coincide with the Cleveland Cavaliers’ remarkable NBA championship in June. At 90-65 through Sunday’s action, the Indians have left the Detroit Tigers in the rearview mirror as they look to claim the AL Central led by studs such as All-Star Francisco Lindor and Carlos Santana

Cleveland acquired reliever Andrew Miller just before the trade deadline from the New York Yankees for a troop of prospects, and since changing teams, Miller has given up just five earned runs in 22 games. He has bolstered an already-impressive bullpen for the Indians.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox have just recently run away with the AL East. The Yankees abruptly faded from the playoff picture, while the Orioles and Blue Jays have been relegated to competing for the right to host the AL Wild Card Game. Boston, which has now won 11 straight games, has been buoyed by its trove of heavy hitters, led by the indefatigable David Ortiz (clap-clap, point to sky).

Ortiz, who plans to retire after this season, is absolutely mashing the ball in 2016, hitting .321 with 37 home runs and 124 RBI. During the All-Star break, Los Angeles Angels center fielder Mike Trout told Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal (via Joe Rodgers of Omnisport for Sporting News) he wasn’t sold that Big Papi would actually hang it up at year’s end, although due to his aching body, Ortiz maintains he will retire. 

Despite Ortiz’s monster stats, I’d be remiss not to mention Red Sox standouts Mookie Betts, Hanley Ramirez and Xander Bogaerts. And still, the list goes on, making Boston a serious threat come October in spite of its occasional shaky pitching. 

The Rangers boast an offense that is possibly more impressive than that of the Red Sox. Like Cleveland, Texas took advantage of the Yankees’ mediocrity back in July by acquiring Carlos Beltran. Beltran joined Adrian Beltre, Rougned Odor and Ian Desmond in Texas’ potent offensive attack.

Texas and Boston both boast records of 92-64 after Sunday’s games, which is tied for the best record in the American League, so let me clarify why the Rangers are still slotted as the top seed above.

Should both teams finish the season with the same record that is tops among their AL foes, the team with home-field advantage would be the squad that won the head-to-head season series. However, the Red Sox and Rangers each won three of the six meetings this season. Next, seeding is determined by which team has a greater winning percentage in games against divisional opponents. The Rangers hold a slight edge in that category and thus would be the AL’s No. 1 seed if the playoffs began today. 

Lastly, the Blue Jays and Orioles aren’t yet safe in their spots in the standings. The Tigers trail Baltimore by just 1.5 games, and the Seattle Mariners are still only 2.5 games out of the second wild-card spot. Although they currently stand to host the Wild Card Game, the Blue Jays can’t be too happy about not yet securing their place in the postseason this late in the campaign after reaching the ALCS last year.

   

National League

So, is this the year the Cubs finally exorcise their demons and win the World Series? With a startling record of 99-56 entering the season’s final stretch, the baseball community has to fear the Cubbies this postseason. It is the first time since 1935 that Chicago has posted at least 99 victories, although, as you know, the Cubs didn’t win the World Series that year. 

The club’s offense is led by young guns Anthony Rizzo and Kris Bryant, who have combined for 69 homers and 204 RBI so far in 2016. As for their pitching staff, the Cubs have relied heavily on Jon Lester, Jake Arrieta and Kyle Hendricks to win games this year, and they’ve done just that. The Cubs could meet up with the Mets in the NLDS if New York makes it past the Wild Card Game, which would provide a rematch of the 2015 NLCS

Speaking of the Mets, it is their former second baseman, Daniel Murphy, who has continued his postseason magic from a year ago all season long, but now he plays for his old division rival, the Washington Nationals.

Murphy has been more productive than the Nats ever could have hoped during an injury-plagued season for reigning NL MVP Bryce Harper. Murphy is hitting .347 with 25 long balls and 104 RBI and will need to continue to lead the Nationals as they make a push toward World Series baseball. 

Out west, a familiar cast of characters propelled the Dodgers to a fourth consecutive NL West title. Corey Seager, Adrian Gonzalez and Justin Turner have carried the bulk of the offensive burden, and the pitching staff responded well after the departure of Zack Greinke to Arizona during the offseason and even as ace Clayton Kershaw missed some time due to injury. 

As for the wild-card race, the Mets might be the most intriguing story. After a thrilling run to the World Series last year, New York fell flat against the Kansas City Royals. There were times during this season when it didn’t look like the Mets would even make it back to the playoffs, especially as injuries sidelined many of their high-powered arms.

After a 17-0 romping of the Phillies on Sunday, the Mets seem to have caught fire—or at least sparked some embers as the postseason nears. If they can keep it up, they will inspire some panic in their wild-card opponent, which figures to be either San Francisco or St. Louis.

   

World Series Odds

According to Odds Shark, the Cubs (+300; bet $100 to win $300) are the current betting favorites to win it all. These teams follow: 

Washington Nationals: +500 

San Francisco Giants: +550

Cleveland Indians: +650

Texas Rangers: +750

Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers: +1200

Toronto Blue Jays: +1400 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


B/R MLB 300: Ranking the Top 25 Shortstops of 2016

After a stop at second base, the B/R MLB 300 will now go to the left side of the infield and check in with the top shortstops in Major League Baseball.

As with first base and second base, the list ahead features the names of 25 shortstops. The scoring system for them reflects how shortstop is an extremely important defensive position with low offensive standards:

  • Hitting: 25 points
  • Power: 25 points
  • Baserunning20 points
  • Defense: 30 points

Before we move on, here’s a reminder that this year’s B/R MLB 300 is different from past versions in a key way. Rather than use the events of 2016 to project for 2017, the focus is strictly on 2016. Think of these rankings as year-end report cards.

For more on how the scoring and ranking work, read ahead.

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From a Fractured Skull to Baseball’s Best Closer: ‘It’s a Real Miracle’

Watching on television, through the eye of the center field camera, the pitch looks unhittable.

Standing at home plate, with a bat in your hands, it looks just about the same.

“A devastating pitch,” Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Evan Longoria said. “Really hard, and with tremendous sink. It looks straight until it gets to the plate, and then it goes down.”

Zach Britton throws it, game after game, pitch after pitch. Hitters pound it into the ground, or they just whiff. According to FanGraphs, their batting average against it was .154, the slugging percentage was .197, and nearly 30 percent of the time they swung, they missed, through Sept. 24.

The average velocity: 96.3 mph.

“It’s the best left-handed sinker I’ve ever seen,” said one American League scout with decades of experience watching thousands of pitches.

“He’s kind of like the modern-day Mariano Rivera,” Longoria said. “Basically just one pitch, but it’s a devastating pitch.”

The pitch—call it a turbo sinker or, in the words of Baltimore Orioles general manager Dan Duquette, “a sinker with a trap door on the way to the plate”—has helped turn Britton into baseball’s best closer.

Brandon Crow, Luke Elliott, Tommy Kimmerle and the other kids from the 2003 Canyon High freshman team watch and marvel. That’s their buddy, their onetime teammate. That’s the kid they remember from that awful day at Bouquet Canyon Park, lying on the ground, screaming in pain after he ran head-on into a light standard.

Even now, 13 years later, Crow can remember details from that day. Even now, Elliott says that day sticks in his mind more than anything else from his high school baseball career.

They remember the sound, the “thwack” as Britton collided with the standard. They remember the scene, the blood and the medics arriving to take Britton to the hospital.

They remember, and then they think of what that 15-year-old kid has become.

“It’s a real miracle, to be honest,” Crow said.

Britton is the one guy who barely remembers the details of that day in Santa Clarita, California. One minute he was chasing a fly ball, thinking he had a chance to catch it. The next thing he knew, he was in an ambulance, in pain.

Then he was in a hospital bed, with a fractured skull, a fractured right collarbone, a separated shoulder and a doctor telling his parents he had bleeding in his brain. If the swelling didn’t go away, they would need to drill a hole in his skull.

“That’s when I knew it was serious,” he said.


The freshman team at Canyon practiced at Bouquet Canyon Park, across town from the school. The varsity team got the main diamond, and the junior varsity squad had a park closer to campus.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was what they had, and they were freshmen and they weren’t going to complain. They’d grown up together, some playing in the Canyon Country Little League and others, such as Britton, playing in the nearby Hart Little League.

“I remember Zach pitching against us when we were eight or nine years old,” Crow said.

Britton was the best player on the Canyon freshman team, the Most Valuable Player when the team handed out postseason awards. But the team wasn’t winning its league, and on that late-spring day, coach Mike Newman decided to have a little fun.

Instead of a normal practice, the kids would play over-the-line, a baseball-like contest popularly played by kids on California streets. Newman divided the group into two teams, and the game began.

Britton played the outfield on days he didn’t pitch, and he was standing in the outfield that day when Crow was at the plate. Newman was pitching, and Crow swung and hit it foul down the left field line.

“Everyone else peeled off,” Crow said. “But Zach kept running. He wanted to get the ball.”

Crow and Britton‘s other Canyon teammates say that was just Zach. He went all-out after everything. He always had.

“My dad had me play Pop Warner football one year,” Britton said. “He thought maybe I’d get some of the energy out by hitting people on defense.”

The light standard was just off the main field, on a berm that several players described as looking like the center field hill at Houston‘s Minute Maid Park. And it wasn’t just any light standard. It was huge, like something you might see on the side of a freeway.

“One of those monster light standards,” Britton said.

The ball kept going, and Britton did, too.

“I was watching the ball, the pole and Zach all coming together,” Crow said.

As they reconstructed later what they had seen, some of the kids figured Britton might have lost his balance as he ran up the berm chasing the ball. They all remember hearing the sound, although some at first thought it was the ball hitting the light standard.

It wasn’t the ball.

Britton went into the standard with enough force to fracture his skull and collarbone. He’s still not sure exactly where he hit, because there’s no scar (and no memory).

He hit the post, and then he hit the ground. And then he tried to get up.

“He got up, and he went right back down,” Elliott said. “It went from ‘ooh’ to ‘oh, wow’ to ‘I hope he’s all right.'”

Some of the players went right to Britton, who was screaming and covered in blood. Any touch brought on louder screams. Other players went to an elementary school across the street in search of ice bags. The park medics came quickly, and so did Britton‘s mother, Martha.

“I remember thinking this is bad,” Elliott said.


The Britton family was well-known in the Canyon High School baseball community. Zach’s older brothers, Clay and Buck, were both starting players on the varsity team, Martha Britton was active in the booster club, and Greg Britton helped get the field ready for games.

“We knew Zach was going to be all that and more,” said Adam Schulhofer, the varsity coach. “He was the best athlete in the program.”

Schulhofer wasn’t at Bouquet Canyon Park, but when Zach was at Henry Mayo Hospital, he went to visit.

“I went and saw him, and he was flanked on both sides by his parents and brothers,” Schulhofer remembered. “It may have been a little tense at the time, but luckily it all worked out.”

It was more than just a little tense.

“It was really one of the worst days of our lives,” Greg Britton told Kevin Van Valkenburg of the Baltimore Sun for a 2011 story. “When we were in the hospital, the doctors showed us his scans, and he had a bubble on his brain about the size of a quarter. They told us: ‘If this doesn’t go down in a day or so, we’re going to have to drill through his skull to relieve the pressure. And if we do that, it may affect his motor skills.’

“At that point, you just drop to your knees and start praying.”

Zach still remembers the look on his parents’ faces as the doctor spoke. He remembers doctors testing his ability to speak and his sense of taste.

“I remember them giving me math stuff to do,” he said. “I was just like, ‘I’m not good at math, anyway.'”

He could tell his left from his right and knew he was fortunate the broken collarbone was on his right side. The collarbone remained sore for a full year, but because he threw left-handed, he was able to return to pitching later that year.

Britton returned to Canyon High before the school year ended. His arm was in a sling and his neck was in a brace, but by then, doctors were confident he had avoided any serious damage to his brain.

His teammates were thrilled to see him but couldn’t resist one question: “What were you thinking going after that ball?”

“I don’t know,” Britton told them.

He knew one thing. He was lucky it wasn’t worse.

“I got pretty fortunate,” Britton said. “It could have been something pretty serious.”


The journey from hospital room to the title of baseball’s best closer wasn’t always smooth, but the obstacles had little to do with the injuries Britton suffered that day at Bouquet Canyon Park.

He was back to playing baseball later that year after the family moved from California to Texas. He was a third-round draft pick three years later and a highly rated prospect who made the Opening Day rotation in 2011 with the Orioles.

He had already shown off the signature sinker, a pitch Britton stumbled on in 2007 in Aberdeen, Maryland, when coach Calvin Maduro was trying to teach him to throw a cutter. Instead of cutting, the ball sank.

“It was doing the opposite of what we wanted it to do,” Britton said. “He said, ‘OK, well just keep doing it.’ Over the years, I started doing a few different things, throwing it harder.”

It seems a little funny now. The closer Britton is compared to the most is Rivera, who made his career throwing basically one pitch—a cutter he said appeared when he wasn’t trying to throw one.

Like Rivera with the New York Yankees, Britton struggled to find consistency as a starter. He was sent back down to the minor leagues in July 2011, and while he spent parts of the next two seasons in the Baltimore rotation, he also found himself pitching in Double-A Bowie and Triple-A Norfolk in 2012, and at Norfolk again in 2013.

By the time the 2013 season ended, he was out of options and still without a guaranteed job. And just as spring training began, the Orioles spent $50 million on Ubaldo Jimenez, filling what had been the only open spot in the rotation.

But something else happened that winter, something that would have just as big an impact on Britton‘s career.

The Orioles hired Dave Wallace as their pitching coach and Dom Chiti as bullpen coach. Before their first spring training began, Wallace and Chiti flew to California to work with Britton and two other Orioles pitchers in person.

They had both watched Britton on video, and Chiti had seen him quite a few times in person while scouting for the Atlanta Braves. They met Britton at the baseball field at UC Irvine, and they brought along their ideas.

“It was let’s just go back to being simple again [with the delivery],” Britton said. “And they wanted me to only throw the sinker in the spring and focus on commanding it to both sides of the plate. They felt that was going to be the way to stay in the big leagues and be successful.”

It became more than that. The Orioles don’t think of Britton as a one-pitch pitcher, but since going to the bullpen, he has thrown the sinker more than 90 percent of the time.

He stayed in the big leagues. And he was so successful that he made back-to-back All-Star teams and has a chance to win the Cy Young Award.


When spring training began in 2014, the Orioles still weren’t sure what Britton would become or even what role he would fill. But Wallace and Chiti saw quickly he had picked up what they gave him.

“Zach bought it,” Chiti said. “He listened and made it his own. And halfway through spring training, it was like, ‘Here it comes!'”

Britton began the season in the bullpen, but not as the closer. The Orioles went with Tommy Hunter in the ninth inning. Britton was still thinking that if he pitched well enough, he’d get another chance at starting.

Instead, a month into the season, manager Buck Showalter made him the closer.

Showalter still wasn’t sure how it would work. Then came a sequence of games in late June.

Called on to protect a 3-1 lead at Yankee Stadium, Britton gave up a three-run, walk-off home run to Carlos Beltran. It wasn’t his first blown save, but it was the first really bad one.

They wondered how he would react. Here’s how: It was almost a month before Britton allowed another run.

When he converted his next save opportunity without trouble, Showalter turned to Wallace and said, “We may have something here.”

They had something, all right.

Britton converted 37 of 41 save opportunities that season and 36 of 40 in 2015. He still hasn’t missed one in 46 chances this year, and in 43 appearances between May 5 and Aug. 22, he didn’t allow a single earned run.

He’s almost certain to get votes for the Cy Young Award and probably for Most Valuable Player, as well. He’s unlikely to win either one, simply because many voters believe awards like that shouldn’t go to someone who appears in just 60-70 innings a season.

Showalter disagrees.

“You don’t think he’s valuable?” Showalter asked. “Try winning without him.”


There are other things Britton does that you don’t notice. Showalter talked about the work he has done on his defense, which is necessary because his sinker induces so many swinging bunts.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone improve as much defensively,” Showalter said.

Chiti talked about how much of a leader Britton has become in the bullpen.

“Zach does a lot of things to let the other guys in the bullpen know how important they are,” he said. “To me, that’s a sign of people who are better than good.”

As for Britton, he has found that the bullpen suits his personality in a way pitching out of the rotation never seemed to fit him.

The hidden truth is he always preferred hitting and that, as a kid, he was very good at it. Flint Wallace, who coached Britton at Weatherford High in Texas, said Britton was the best hitter he has ever coached.

“That’s what I wanted to do was hit,” Britton said. “I wasn’t completely sold on pitching. There’s something about being able to play every day that I really wanted to do.”

As a closer, he has found the next best thing. Unlike a starter who gets in a game once every five or six days, Britton has to be ready nearly every day.

He pitches one inning a night, but he can go all out. He’s always done that.

He did it as a kid, and he did it on that awful day at Bouquet Canyon Park. No one else was going to keep chasing a foul ball in a simple game of over-the-line.

Zach Britton did it, and years later, the other kids who were there that day say they’ll never forget it.

The memories come back, and because it all worked out, they don’t try to suppress them. They think of Britton, and then they see an Orioles game or an All-Star Game, and there he is.

“Every time I see him on TV, I think, ‘We almost killed the kid,'” Crow said. “Now look at him.”

Now look at him. He’s the best closer in baseball, with the best pitch in baseball.

It is a real miracle.

    

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


NL West Champion LA Dodgers Hope Resilience, Momentum Carry over to October

The 2016 season has not gone according to script for the Los Angeles Dodgers. On Sunday afternoon, though, all the punch-up artists in Hollywood couldn’t have written it any better.

With their magic number whittled to one, the Dodgers defeated the Colorado Rockies 4-3 in 10 innings. It was legendary broadcaster Vin Scully’s final home game, and he got to call a walk-off home run by utilityman Charlie Culberson—in extras, no less. Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register offered:

Even with the MLB mood darkened by the tragic death of Miami Marlins‘ ace Jose Fernandez, it was a special scene.

At nearly the same moment, the San Francisco Giants lost 4-3 to the San Diego Padres just down California’s I-5 freeway. Call it a double clinch.

The Dodgers have now won four straight NL West titles. During that span, they’ve never advanced past the National League Championship Series, and have been dropped twice in the division series.

Now, they’re gunning for redemption and angling to bust the franchise’s 27-years-and-counting championship drought.

There are no guarantees, not with formidable foes such as the Chicago Cubs and Washington Nationals lurking.

The Nats are cemented as LA’s first-round opponent. The good news for the Dodgers is that they’ve gone 5-1 against Washington this season, sweeping a three-game set in L.A. June 20-22 and taking two of three in the nation’s capital July 29-31.

They’ve also fared well against Nationals ace Max Scherzer. Current Dodgers hitters with a history against Scherzer own a collective .282 average, per ESPN.com.

Ace Clayton Kershaw, meanwhile, has kept Nationals bats under wraps to the tune of a .217 average and .557 OPS.

Stats and matchups aside, this Dodgers squad has weathered injuries and controversy and emerged—resilient and triumphant—on the other side.

Sure, it’s helped that the Giants have imploded. After posting the best record in the first half, San Francisco has gone 25-41 since the All-Star break.

Give Los Angeles credit, though. They’ve secured a 90-win season and another October foray. And they’re coming together at the right time, with momentum in the dugout next to the sunflower seeds.

Let’s begin with the starting rotation, which has been a veritable MASH unit for much of the season. We won’t recount every ding and disabled-list stint; the fact that Los Angeles has used 15 starting pitchers should tell you all you need to know.

The biggest ailment, obviously, was the herniated disc that cost Kershaw the entire months of July and August. For a while, it was uncertain whether Kershaw would return at all. On July 21, manager Dave Roberts suggested surgery was on the table, per ESPN.com’s Doug Padilla

Thankfully for the Chavez Ravine faithful, Kershaw never went under the knife. He returned to action Sept. 9, and has appeared to get progressively stronger. He threw seven shutout innings in his most recent start against the Rockies, scattering three hits and striking out six.

The Dodgers trailed the Giants by eight games on June 26, the date of Kershaw’s final pre-DL start. On Sunday, they moved eight games up on San Francisco.

Kershaw is joined atop the rotation by Japanese import Kenta Maeda, who has been the constant in an otherwise revolving cast of hurlers. Through 30 starts, Maeda owns a 3.20 ERA with 171 strikeouts in 169 innings.

Add trade-deadline acquisition Rich Hill—who battled frustrating blister issues early in his Dodgers’ tenure but owns a 1.53 ERA in five starts with LA—and you’ve got a formidable top three.

Offensively, Los Angeles has benefited from the rise of shortstop Corey Seager, the odds-on favorite to claim NL Rookie of the Year honors with his .313 average and 26 home runs. 

Others—including third baseman Justin Turner, first baseman Adrian Gonzalez and center fielder Joc Pederson—have helped the Dodgers score the second-most runs in the NL since the All-Star break.

But the team also wrestled with the Yasiel Puig controversy. The mercurial outfielder was beset by injuries, inconsistency and behind-the-scenes grumbling and was ultimately demoted to Triple-A in early August, prompting yours truly to wonder if he’d ever again don Dodger blue.  

Sure enough, Puig returned Sept. 2 and has been a boon, notching four home runs and 10 RBI. 

It’s been that kind of stretch run for the Dodgers, with hardships turning to blessings like sand getting polished into a pearl.

The postseason push won’t be easy. Los Angeles will face the  Nationals in the NLDS, as mentioned. 

If LA survives that test, the young, loaded Chicago Cubs will be waiting, assuming Chicago wins its series against the NL Wild Card Game winner. And let’s not forget Kershaw’s past October struggles.

We’re getting ahead of ourselves, though. For now, the Dodgers should celebrate. They are, per the team’s official Twitter feed:

I threw out a word a while back: “resilient.” Left-hander Brett Anderson invoked it recently, too.

“It’s probably the most resilient team I’ve been on,” Anderson said, per the Associated Press (h/t New York Times.). “We’re never out of it.”

It describes this Dodgers club. But it also harkens back to one of the franchise’s defining moments, in 1988, when Kirk Gibson stepped to the plate on two bad legs and launched a two-run, walkoff homer in Game 1 of the World Series.

Los Angeles beat the Oakland A’s in five games and hoisted the Commissioner’s Trophy. More than a quarter-century later, they’re hoping for a similar sparkand similar glory.

The Dodgers have already written one Hollywood ending. Now, we wait to see what the sequel has in store.

 

All statistics current as of Sunday and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Dodgers Clinch NL West: Highlights, Twitter Reaction to Celebration

The Los Angeles Dodgers are National League West champions for the fourth consecutive season.

They clinched the division crown in dramatic fashion Sunday, as second baseman Charlie Culberson hit a walk-off home run in the 10th inning to send them to a 4-3 victory over the Colorado Rockies. The Dodgers reacted to the win and the National League West crown that came with it:

It will be a moment Culberson will likely remember for the rest of his life:

The team also shared the celebratory embraces and the after-victory party:

Sunday was the final home game of the season for Los Angeles, which means it was the last time legendary broadcaster Vin Scully called a game in Dodger Stadium. Scully will retire after the year, and Ramona Shelburne of ESPN.com thought it was the perfect ending:

Boston Celtics announcer Sean Grande underscored just how long Scully had been with the Dodgers:

Jesse Spector of Sporting News reacted to the walk-off:

Helping fuel the Dodgers’ playoff berth was a solid offense that ranked sixth in the National League in total runs heading into Sunday, per ESPN.com. Justin Turner and Yasmani Grandal each have 27 home runs, and rookie shortstop Corey Seager has provided a critical boost to L.A.’s offense, slashing .310/.370/.514 with 25 home runs and 70 RBI coming into Sunday’s game. Stephanie Apstein of Sports Illustrated believes he is a “lock for the National League Rookie of the Year.”

It isn’t just the offense that has spearheaded the Dodgers this season.

The starting pitching staff features six-time All-Star and three-time National League Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw. While he did miss significant time earlier in the season with a herniated disc, he is back and healthy with sparkling numbers. The southpaw has a 1.65 ERA, 0.71 WHIP and 168 strikeouts in 142 innings. Had he not missed so much time, he could be the clear-cut National League Cy Young front-runner.

Elsewhere, Kenta Maeda and Rich Hill provide some depth to the rotation. The Dodgers acquired Hill via trade from the Oakland Athletics this year, and he has a head-turning 1.53 ERA and 0.68 WHIP in five starts for his new team. Kershaw and Hill give Los Angeles a formidable duo that will make it a difficult out in any postseason series.

The Dodgers can also shorten playoff contests with closer Kenley Jansen and a bullpen that touts the best ERA in baseball, per ESPN.com

While the focus will turn exclusively to the players in a few weeks’ time, Scully is perhaps the marquee figure associated with the organization until the end of the regular season. He announced he won’t call playoff games in his final season, per Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times, means his career will end on Oct. 2 when the Dodgers visit the San Francisco Giants.

At least he will be calling games for a postseason team after the Dodgers clinched the division crown Sunday.

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Bryce Harper Injury: Updates on Nationals Star’s Wrist and Return

Washington Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper suffered a wrist injury Sunday against the Pittsburgh Pirates. X-rays on his wrist were negative, according to Byron Kerr of MASNsports.com. 

It’s unclear when he’ll return to the field. 

Continue for updates.


Latest on Harper’s Timeline for Recovery 

Monday, Sept. 26

Nationals manager Dusty Baker said the swelling in Harper’s wrist has gone down, adding he might be able to play later this week, per Kerr.


Harper Suffers Wrist Injury During Slide

Sunday, Sept. 25

Mark Zuckerman of MASNsports.com reported Harper was holding his left wrist after sliding awkwardly into third base, and Chris Heisey replaced Harper in right field. 


Harper Continues to Battle Injuries in ’16

This is not the first health concern for Harper in 2016. He already dealt with neck stiffness earlier in the season that forced him to miss time.

Harper isn’t known for his durability and appeared in more than 139 contests in a season for the first time in his career when he played 153 last year. However, he is widely considered one of the best players in MLB and is the anchor in the middle of the Nationals lineup. Thus far, he’s hitting .244 with 24 home runs and 85 RBI in 2016.

Harper proved his overall dominance in 2015 with a National League MVP award behind video game-type numbers. The four-time All-Star and 2012 National League Rookie of the Year posted a .330 batting average, 42 home runs, 99 RBI, 38 doubles, 124 walks and a 1.109 OPS last year.

Washington is on the short list of teams with realistic World Series championship hopes this season, and Harper’s presence is a major reason why. If it plans on competing against teams such as the Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers for the NL pennant, it needs Harper back and healthy.

The Nationals will likely turn toward a combination of Clint Robinson and Heisey until their superstar returns.

Robinson is versatile enough to play either corner outfield spot and brought some power to the Washington lineup last year with 10 home runs. Heisey has hit as many as 18 home runs in a season (2011 with the Cincinnati Reds) and at least provides another potentially powerful option while Harper recovers.

However, neither is of Harper’s caliber, and Washington will be far more dangerous in the postseason push with the defending MVP healthy again.

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Jose Fernandez’s Joy, Passion Create Lasting Memories on Tragic Day

When Jose Fernandez pitched, anything was possible. He was young, vibrant, dominant and passionate.

He was a Rookie of the Year winner, surely a future Cy Young Award winner, a foundational piece of the Miami Marlins organization and a face of the game’s next generation.

That he died overnight Saturday is stunningly tragic.

That it was in a boating accident is utterly unspeakable.

Fernandez, 24, defected from Cuba to chase his baseball dream. It took him four tries. Once, he was caught and tossed into a Cuban prison, just a kid, 15, locked up with steely adults. The fourth attempt was successful but harrowing. His mother, Maritza, was knocked off the boat by a wave, and Fernandez leapt into the ocean and saved her from drowning.

This is American Dream stuff—the best of our cultural melting pot, the part where it was supposed to be smooth sailing for Fernandez from here on out.

Instead, a young life was extinguished far too soon.

And at the most exciting time of the baseball year, with just a week’s worth of drama and cheers left before the calendar turns to October and the volume cranks even higher, the games have been interrupted, and we will pause for a wrenching moment of silence.

Leaves fall, seasons change, but this brings you to your knees.

You think of Thurman Munson and Roberto Clemente and their fatal plane crashes. You’re brought back to the spring of 1993, when Cleveland Indians pitchers Tim Crews and Steve Olin were killed during spring training in a boating accident on Florida’s Little Lake Nellie.

There is no preparation for death when it forces its way into our lives as an unexpected intruder. It shows up unannounced, and we’re reminded once again that all the first-pitch ceremonies and full-count offerings and raucous tailgating can turn hollow by sunrise tomorrow. Maybe it hits us especially hard in the sports world because this is where we turn to forget, even momentarily, the latest difficulties we’re having at work or the most recent absurdity in a world that seems to go more off balance by the day.

Fernandez last pitched Tuesday. He threw a gem against the Washington Nationals, cutting down 21 consecutive hitters en route to striking out 12 and allowing only three hits in eight innings. The Marlins have been on the periphery of the National League wild-card chase all summer, and Fernandez’s dominance helped keep their faintly flickering hopes alive.

Because he was little more than two years removed from Tommy John surgery, the Marlins also continued to keep a close watch over him. He had thrown 111 taxing pitches, and the Marlins came to a compromise while debating whether that would be his final start of the season: They would give him another, but they would also give him an extra day’s rest in the process and push that start back to Monday.

Had he stayed on his regular schedule and started Sunday, he probably would have been home resting Saturday night instead of with friends on that fatal boat ride.

But that’s how fragile life is, and it is moments like this that drive that head-shaking fact home. One decision here. One decision there. And the effects on our lives ripple like waves on the ocean.

When Fernandez won the National League Rookie of the Year Award in 2013, it was announced on a Monday. One day before that, his grandmother, the woman Fernandez once called “the love of my life,” had left Cuba to join Jose and his mother in Miami. Talk about sweet, must-see TV:

Since that suitable-for-framing 2013 season, Fernandez—even with significant time off—had established himself as one of the best young pitchers to come along in years.

At 16-8 with a 2.86 ERA in 29 starts this season, Fernandez at the time of his death was ranked No. 1 among all major league pitchers with a 6.2 WAR by FanGraphs.

By striking out 589 of the 1,888 batters he faced during his career, or 31.2 percent, Fernandez became the all-time leader among starting pitchers in strikeout percentage—ahead of Hall of Famers Randy Johnson (28.6 percent) and Pedro Martinez (27.7 percent).

Fernandez had so much game ahead of him, but more than that, so much joy and so much life. There were times when he angered opponents by crossing some of baseball’s silly so-called “unwritten rules,” showing too much emotion after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves in 2013, for example.

There also were times when he even angered his own teammates with his immaturity—a subject I wrote about in December.

But like the rest of us, no matter whether we are 24 or 54, Fernandez was a work in progress. And he played with such passion and joy that you couldn’t wait to see how that work was going to turn out.

As devastated Marlins manager Don Mattingly said during a press conference Sunday:

There was just joy with him when he played…and when he pitched, and I think that’s what the guys will say, too. As mad as he would make you with some of the stuff he would do, you’d just see that little kid that you see when you watch kids play Little League or something like that. That’s the joy that Jose played with and the passion he felt about playing. That’s what I think about.

Even more than the steady diet of strikeouts, what Fernandez leaves us with are vivid memories of that joy and that passion. The Marlins canceled their game with Atlanta on Sunday as baseball hit the pause button to mourn. It will take a long time to get over this one.

But as we all move toward tomorrow, maybe stop and think about this for a bit: If we all could inject some of that joy and passion into what we do, what a fitting tribute it would be as we pay our final respects to a man who still had so much more to do.

    

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Sports World Reacts to Jose Fernandez’s Death in Boating Accident

Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez was one of three people declared dead Sunday after a boating accident. 

He was 24.

“The Miami Marlins organization is devastated by the tragic loss of Jose Fernandez,” a team statement said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with his family at this very difficult time.”

Sunday’s game at Marlins Park against the Atlanta Braves has been canceled.

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred also released a statement:

All of baseball is shocked and saddened by the sudden passing of Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez. He was one of our game’s great young stars who made a dramatic impact on and off the field since his debut in 2013. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family, the Miami Marlins organization and all of the people he touched in his life.

The Miami sports community was quick to offer condolences. According to NFL.com, the Miami Dolphins will have a moment of silence in remembrance before their game Sunday and sent out a tweet:

The Miami Heat shared a similar message:

The news also created a ripple effect across baseball, with a number of former teammates, teams and other prominent figures reacting:

Adam Peterson of Purple Row reminisced about Fernandez’s talent and infectious joy:

ESPN.com reported on Tuesday that “a bag of baseballs autographed by [Fernandez] washed ashore on Miami Beach on Monday, according to law enforcement officials.”

A Cuban defector who made multiple life-threatening attempts to leave the country to pursue his baseball dream, Fernandez saved his mother from drowning during their successful trip to the United States.

In 2014, Fernandez’s grandmother saw him pitch for the first time since he left the country. Just last year, he became a United States citizen. 

     

Follow Tyler Conway (@jtylerconway) on Twitter.

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