Just like the summer heat, Daly City baseball has only heated up as we hit the midpoint of the season. After a solid April start, the Montis have shifted into full gear with a 21-4 June record (.840). The offense has been humming along at a slightly slower pace (just 6.51 runs per game in May/June, vs. 7.18 in April), but the rotation in particular has really come into its own, and their dominance has kept the team at the top of the standings.
The standings after 81 games:
Universe League (UL) | Shinto-World League (SWL) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Galactica Division | Photomaker Division | |||||||||
Team | W | L | % | Games back | Team | W | L | % | Games back | |
Daly City Montis | 64 | 17 | .790 | - | Pentax Shake Reducers | 48 | 33 | .593 | - | |
Microsoft Longhorns | 46 | 35 | .568 | 18 | Nikon Vibration Reducers | 44 | 37 | .543 | 4 | |
Mozilla Firefoxes | 43 | 38 | .531 | 21 | Canon Image Stabilizers | 41 | 40 | .506 | 7 | |
Apple Septic Tanks | 35 | 46 | .432 | 29 | Sony Super Steadyshots | 35 | 46 | .432 | 13 | |
Terran Division | World Cities Division | |||||||||
Europe Cricketeers | 38 | 43 | .469 | - | Las Vegas Valleys | 44 | 37 | .543 | - | |
Caribbean Pirates | 35 | 46 | .432 | 3 | Tokyo Samurai | 43 | 38 | .531 | 1 | |
Asia Giants | 33 | 48 | .407 | 5 | Paris Forfeiters | 36 | 45 | .444 | 8 | |
United States Patriots | 30 | 51 | .370 | 8 | Venice Carnivale | 33 | 48 | .407 | 11 |
Team Summary
Galactica Division
Microsoft Longhorns
The deep-pocketed Longhorns (their $137.5M payroll is tops in the league) are once again in solid contention, and while they don’t have a chance of catching the dominant Montis, they have a firm hold on the wildcard slot, with the third place team, the arch-rival Apple Septic Tanks, a distant 11 games back.
The Longhorns have got the power hitting – the extraordinary Jango Fett is having an MVP-caliber season, batting .390-.464-.673, setting the table nicely for Jabba Desiljic Ture, who leads the league in homeruns and RBI with 30 and 75, respectively. While the pitching staff has been horrid, it’s anchored by Kernel Tyranus, who is once again having a solid season (10-1 so far, with a 2.47 ERA and 1.01 WHIP). What they lack in overall excellence, the Longhorns are making up with star power, and they seem poised to be a playoffs threat.
Runs scored: 440(7th)
Runs allowed: 426 (7th)
Mozilla Firefoxes
The low-budget Firefoxes are showing how to get things done, non-profit style, putting up a solid .531 record with the smallest budget ($45M) in the league. Mozilla is 3rd in the league in runs allowed, where ace Rober Krogert (3.89 ERA) and breakout star Ferdinand Castro (2.95 ERA) are keeping games to a low-scoring affair, but the offense is hurting. They’re sorely feeling the loss of superstar Mathew Glenn, who signed an outrageous contract (4 years, $21.7M per) to be Gates Skywalker’s replacement at Canon.
Runs scored: 425 (10th)
Runs allowed: 393 (3rd)
Apple Septic Tanks
What’s happened to Apple? A year removed from a 92-win, .568 season, production has all but dried up for the Septic Tanks, who rank dead last in the Galactica Division (although they’d remain first if they played in the lowly Terran Division). They’re neither hitting (13th in runs scored) nor pitching (13th in runs allowed), and about the only thing they’re doing is stealing bases (Ben Kenobi is third in the league with 35).
While the rotation saw the loss of dominant ace Kyle Katarn, the offense just doesn’t seem to be clicking, despite retaining the core of their 4th-ranked 2006 lineup. There’s still plenty of baseball left from July through September however, and the 3-4-5 trio of Ben Kenobi, Hans Blik, and Chewie Gonzales could very well turn the fortunes of the Septic Tanks around in the second half.
Runs scored: 425 (10th)
Runs allowed: 393 (3rd)
Terran Division
Europe Cricketeers
The Terran Division hasn’t been dominant since the inception of the league, having failed to produce a .500 club in any of the two and a half seasons thus far. This time, the 2005 Division Champion Cricketeers are back in the driver’s seat, but with an 8-game seperation from 1st to 4th, it’s still anyone’s division.
For their part, the Cricketeers have been thriving based on pitching, with a decent performance across the board. The offense has been anemic, however, without star catcher Rolland Hochstetler, who’s been out nearly two months after tearing his abdominal muscle in mid-May.
Runs scored: 371 (15th)
Runs allowed: 421 (5th)
Caribbean Pirates
Loaded with star power, many experts predicted this would be the year the Pirates broke out from the bottom of the division, but so far they haven’t lived up to the hype, with many of the franchise stars even regressing. Though they’ve put up just 407 runs (12th in baseball), the Caribbean has seen the emergence of 2006 first-round pick Clifford Alfano, who has already hit his way into the cleanup slot with a .358-.442-.584 line in just his second season. First baseman Luis Devitt and RF Simeon Sarvis have also improved, forming a fearsome trio of hitters in the 3-4-5 slots.
The rotation has been where the Pirates have disappointed – innings eater and ace Wilfredo Raposa, stolen away from the Cricketeers, hasn’t been able to find a groove in his new digs at the cavernous Hiram Bithorn stadium, where he’s allowing baseruns at a 1.52 WHIP rate. Perhaps suffering from an ego hit, former ace David Barnett hasn’t seemed to be his old self, going 6-7 with a 6.12 ERA and 1.50 WHIP, and failing to make the all-star team for the first time in his career.
Runs scored: 407 (12th)
Runs allowed: 464 (12th)
Asia Giants
The 2007 Giants once again lean heavy on offense, and unlike their 2006 run to the top of the division, the bats just aren’t enough to overcome the horrid pitching this time around. Not a single starter has an ERA lower than 5.50, and the fielding has been worse, committing 69 errors (2nd highest in baseball).
The Giants’ core of superstar hitters is keeping them in the hunt, and they are raking like perhaps no other middle of the lineup:
Benjamin Trepanier: .320-.443-.676
Alex Quiros: .304-.402-.640
Tom Clark: .277-.362-.559
The young Trepanier is quickly becoming a star – the 2006 first overall pick and rookie of the year, has kept up career highs in batting average and on-base percentage, and has developed a newfound power stroke. He ranks 3rd in slugging percentage (1st outside of Daly City), and has 25 homers – already surpassing the 18 he had all of last season!
Runs scored: 430 (9th)
Runs allowed: 524 (16th)
United States Patriots
The Patriots are dwelling in the cellar of the Terran Division, although with a -4 Pythagorean differential, their performance is right in the pack with the rest of the division. Their offense has been led by the classic American Truex-Amey duo, but their supporting cast has been absolutely dreadful – just one other member of the starting lineup is slugging over .400, and just two others have an OBP over .300, leading to just the 14th-ranked offense in the game.
Pitching has been a relatively bright spot for the Patriots, however. Though they’ve run a revolving door of starters (10 different pitchers have made starts), the group has performed surprisingly well, with three of five of the current rotation sporting ERAs below 4.
Runs scored: 378 (14th)
Runs allowed: 439 (8th)
Photomaker Division
Pentax Shake Reducers
When the Shake Reducers finished just one game back of the division champion Image Stabilizers last season, things were looking bright for the team – they had improved steadily on their 3rd-place finish in 2005, had a strong core of middle-of-the-order hitters, and one of the game’s true aces in Augusto Figeuroa. Then things began to fall apart – the best two hitters, 1B Walter Vanish and RF Simeon Sarvis, both bolted in free agency, but in turn the payroll flexibility allowed the Shake Reducers to land the biggest fish of all – the disgruntled two-time MVP and record-breaking slugger Gates Skywalker.
Skywalker has almost single-handedly willed this team to the division lead – his monstrous .347-.441-.990 line is the stuff legend is made of, and he’s fully healthy so far, having played in all 81 games and setting himself on pace for 110 homeruns and 208 RBI’s, which would absolutely shatter the all-time record (88 HR’s by Kenton McClinton in his magical 1942 season).
Runs scored: 482 (3rd)
Runs allowed: 376 (2nd)
Nikon Vibration Reducers
Two middling seasons stuck far away from the division-leading Image Stabilizers, and any decent playoff hopes, combined to scare away the league’s second-most prolific hitter, Richard Eager. From there it looked as though the team – 162-162 (.500) the past two seasons, would be dead in the water, but the Vibration Reducers have played splendid ball and find themselves in a prime position just 4 games back of the division lead, and leading the wildcard race.
The key has been solid on-base fundamentals – the team is getting on at a .353 clip, 2nd best in the game – and the signing of Microsoft shortstop Maul Foundation, who is doing his best Eager impersonation with a .374-.408-.694 line, not so far off from the .347-.433-.679 clip of the man himself.
Runs scored: 471 (4th)
Runs allowed: 425 (6th)
Canon Image Stabilizers
The Image Stabilizers made perhaps the worst front-office decision in baseball history by letting their franchise face Gates Skywalker, waltz over to a division rival, but the Stabilizers have hung in the thick of things with their signing of Mozilla hero Mathew Glenn, who is putting up a season for the ages (.385-.457-.702), and a solid but not spectacular supporting cast (Francis Cote and Francisco Amaral putting up OBP’s over .400).
The true weakness of the team lies in their pitching, where ace Justin Ramage seems far removed from his Pitcher-of-the-Year-winning glory days of 2005 (he’s got a 4.07 ERA and just 6.3 K’s per 9), and none of the other rotation members seem particularly inspiring for a postseason run or even a strong September push.
Runs scored: 492 (2nd)
Runs allowed: 487 (14th)
Sony Super Steadyshots
After looking strong in 2005 (an even .500 finish), the Super Steadyshots once again find themselves back in the cellar. While all of their division rivals picked up new MVP-caliber sluggers, the SSS stayed pat and have found themselves unable to score any runs. Despite their league-worst scoring ability, Sony has been doing fairly well for itself on the pitching front, led by free agent signing Johnny Bussell (3.38 ERA, 1.20 WHIP) and bolstered by last season’s trade acquisition Justin Pucci (4.35 ERA, 1.34 WHIP) and longtime starter Lee Cassidy (4.20 ERA, 1.23 WHIP).
Runs scored: 344 (16th)
Runs allowed: 409 (4th)
World Cities Division
Las Vegas Valleys
The Valleys reloaded big time in the offseason in their bid for a repeat division championship, sparing no expense to acquire Nikon’s superstar Richard Eager for an unheard-of $38.3M per year, 5-year contract. Eager hasn’t disappointed, and he joins the aging Las Vegas great Hector Valdivieso (.345-.427-.647) to form perhaps the most fearsome batting duo in baseball.
Runs scored: 459 (6th)
Runs allowed: 462 (11th)
Tokyo Samurai
With the key acquisition of Pentax slugger Walter Vanish, the Samurai seemed off to a hot start, compiling a hot 33-24 record (.579) by the end of May. Tokyo nosedived in June however, posting an 11-14 record (.444) on a string of bad luck, despite strong months by Ronald Peterson (.287-.386-.609) and a monstrous month by Vanish (.411-.486-.642).
The Samurai did take a huge blow, however, when centerfielder Kevin Harwell, having a breakout (.398-.479-.605) season at age 38, broke his foot in mid-June, putting him out for the entire season.
Runs scored: 464 (5th)
Runs allowed: 440 (9th)
Paris Forfeiters
It’s been a tough break for the Forfeiters, who played admirably in 2005 to finish 2 games behind Tokyo, and played to a bitter tie (losing the tiebreaker) against the Las Vegas Valleys in 2006. The Forfeiters may find themselves out of even that kind of luck in 2007, where the wheels seem to be finally falling off of OBP machine Lamont Sanchez (.245-.366-.447).
Paris paid big dollars to lure away ace Kyle Kataran to the SWL, and his mediocre performance so far (3.44 ERA, compared to 2.43 heading into the season) is what’s barely keeping the Forfeiters in contention
Runs scored: 411 (11th)
Runs allowed: 446 (10th)
Venice Carnivale
There’s been little to root for in the small baseball town of Venice, and the Carnivale have been quietly clogging along to another last-place finish. The lone bright spots are Wilbur Phillips, who has developed into a star this season (.282-.367-.601), and the ever reliable #1 starter Gerald Freeman, who is quietly putting up yet another solid season (3.88 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, 8.1 K’s per 9).
Runs scored: 433 (8th)
Runs allowed: 511 (15th)