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Daly City Montis Career Leaderboard (at the end of the 2005 Season)

Team Review

Games

Rk Name G GS
1 Nathan Yan* 96 96
2 Angel Poon* 96 0
3 Josiah Leong* 95 47
4 Terrence Zhao* 87 83
5 Michelle Absalon 84 0
6 Sarah Jimenez 76 13
7 Katie Clayton 61 0
8 Willis Fong 55 55
9 Alvina Chu* 55 0
10 Erica Lum 53 39
11 Michelle Lin 52 51
12 Miguel Pardo* 50 41
13 Zubeda Khan* 42 0
14 Sean Wade* 29 29
15 Jessica Tirta 29 0
16 Samantha Chin* 26 26
17 Alfred Vong* 24 1
18 Helen Yamamoto* 19 0
19 Helen Chow 9 0
20 Aubrey Cubilo 8 8
21 Sean Mok 3 0

*Denotes active player
G: Games
GS: Games Started

A sheer sign of his workhorse nature, it shouldn’t be any surprise that Yan tops the charts in both Games Started and Games. Angel Poon, another three-year veteran, is tied for tops in games, but Josiah Leong, who looks to pitch an ungodly number of relief games in the long-relief closer role, looks to pass up everybody by the end of the season. In terms of starters, Yan and Zhao should remain at 1-2, but the season will likely see Wade, Pardo, and possibly Chin move up beyond 2003-2004 players Fong and Lin for the 3-5 spaces.

Innings

Rk Name G GS IP IP/GS IP/RA
1 Nathan Yan* 96 96 830 8.646 0.000
2 Terrence Zhao* 87 83 587 7.072 0.000
3 Willis Fong 55 55 415 1/3 7.552 0.000
4 Josiah Leong* 95 47 351 0.000 0.000
5 Michelle Lin 52 51 335 1/3 6.575 0.000
6 Miguel Pardo* 50 41 275 6.707 0.000
7 Erica Lum 53 39 258 2/3 0.000 0.000
8 Sarah Jimenez 76 13 213 0.000 3.381
9 Sean Wade* 29 29 201 6.931 0.000
10 Angel Poon* 96 0 181 0.000 1.885
11 Samantha Chin* 26 26 168 1/3 6.474 0.000
12 Michelle Absalon 84 0 120 2/3 0.000 1.437
13 Alvina Chu* 55 0 102 0.000 1.855
14 Katie Clayton 61 0 89 0.000 1.459
15 Alfred Vong* 24 1 63 2/3 0.000 2.768
16 Jessica Tirta 29 0 54 1/3 0.000 1.874
17 Zubeda Khan* 42 0 46 2/3 0.000 1.111
18 Aubrey Cubilo 8 8 44 2/3 5.583 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 19 0 26 0.000 1.368
20 Helen Chow 9 0 18 0.000 2.000
21 Sean Mok 3 0 6 2/3 0.000 2.222

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (innings are baseball’s time unit)
IP/GS: Average innings pitched per start
IP/RA: Average innings pitched per relief appearance

A much more exact statistic of work, Yan once again dominates this chart, not only in sheer innings but also in innings per start – rounded off he averages a complete game very start! It’s slightly disappointing to see Leong so low on the list, although he did spend a year in relief. Wade seems to be the fastest-rising player – after a single season he’s already 9th on the list, and looks to pass up everyone up to and maybe even including Leong after this season. Angel Poon tops the charts for a pure reliever, a statistic she’ll probably hold onto for awhile.

Wins

Rk Name GS W L Win%
1 Nathan Yan* 96 90 6 0.938
2 Terrence Zhao* 83 52 15 0.776
3 Willis Fong 55 48 3 0.941
4 Michelle Lin 51 34 3 0.919
5 Erica Lum 39 26 7 0.788
6 Sarah Jimenez 13 23 6 0.793
7 Miguel Pardo* 41 22 9 0.710
8 Josiah Leong* 47 21 17 0.553
9 Sean Wade* 29 20 8 0.714
10 Alvina Chu* 0 14 3 0.824
11 Samantha Chin* 26 13 1 0.929
12 Michelle Absalon 0 10 1 0.909
13 Angel Poon* 0 9 5 0.643
14 Alfred Vong* 1 4 2 0.667
15 Jessica Tirta 0 3 1 0.750
16 Aubrey Cubilo 8 3 1 0.750
17 Zubeda Khan* 0 2 3 0.400
18 Katie Clayton 0 0 1 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 0 0 0 0.000
20 Helen Chow 0 0 0 0.000
21 Sean Mok 0 0 0 0.000

*Denotes active player
GS: Games Started
W: Wins, counted whenever a pitcher “wins” the game
L: Losses, whenever a player “loses” the game

Yan once again tops the leaderboard, by a very far margin. After three 30-2 seasons, however, his Winning % actually hasn’t improved, so he’s in fact still behind Fong, who in 2004 put together a perfect 29-0 season Yan still holds the prime distinction of being the only player to not have recorded a single no decision, however, although Wade had only one in his rookie year. The coming year should see all starters move up, possibly past Lin’s #4 spot, but likely not beyond Fong’s 48.
K

Rk Name IP K K/9
1 Nathan Yan* 830 1279 13.87
2 Terrence Zhao* 587 508 7.79
3 Willis Fong 415 1/3 454 9.84
4 Michelle Lin 335 1/3 392 10.52
5 Josiah Leong* 351 375 9.62
6 Miguel Pardo* 275 181 5.92
7 Sean Wade* 201 163 7.30
8 Samantha Chin* 168 1/3 163 8.71
9 Sarah Jimenez 213 149 6.30
10 Angel Poon* 181 142 7.06
11 Michelle Absalon 120 2/3 138 10.29
12 Alvina Chu* 102 95 8.38
13 Erica Lum 258 2/3 73 2.54
14 Alfred Vong* 63 2/3 53 7.49
15 Katie Clayton 89 49 4.96
16 Zubeda Khan* 46 2/3 38 7.33
17 Jessica Tirta 54 1/3 31 5.13
18 Aubrey Cubilo 44 2/3 28 5.64
19 Helen Yamamoto* 26 12 4.15
20 Helen Chow 18 12 6.00
21 Sean Mok 6 2/3 0 0.00

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (Innings are baseball’s time unit)
K: Strikeout, when the batter fails to even put the ball in play
K/9: A strikeout rate, measured by strikeouts per 9 innings pitched

No surprises here: Having blown away the league for three consecutive years, it shouldn’t be any surprise that Yan dominates this chart. After three years, Zhao also finally surpasses Fong for #2 all-time, although Leong, with his far higher K/9, should have been well past both now, if he had been consistent enough to pitch the innings. Depending on his innings, Leong may yet move past Fong. An interesting thing to note is the dying breed of high K pitchers – of the five players with higher than 9 K’s per 9 innings, 3 of them are retired

Quality Starts

Rk Name GS QS CG SHO QS% CG% SHO%
1 Nathan Yan* 96 90 68 35 0.938 0.708 0.365
2 Terrence Zhao* 83 61 20 14 0.735 0.241 0.169
3 Willis Fong 55 45 20 7 0.818 0.364 0.127
4 Michelle Lin 51 34 8 3 0.667 0.157 0.059
5 Josiah Leong* 47 28 1 0 0.596 0.021 0.000
6 Erica Lum 39 24 3 0 0.615 0.077 0.000
7 Sean Wade* 29 23 3 2 0.793 0.103 0.069
8 Miguel Pardo* 41 21 4 2 0.512 0.098 0.049
9 Samantha Chin* 26 14 2 1 0.538 0.077 0.038
10 Sarah Jimenez 13 9 2 1 0.692 0.154 0.077
11 Alfred Vong* 1 1 0 0 1.000 0.000 0.000
12 Aubrey Cubilo 8 1 1 0 0.125 0.125 0.000
13 Angel Poon* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
14 Michelle Absalon 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
15 Alvina Chu* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
16 Katie Clayton 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
17 Zubeda Khan* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
18 Jessica Tirta 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
20 Helen Chow 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
21 Sean Mok 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000

*Denotes active player
GS: Games started
QS: Quality starts, where the pitcher throws at least 6 innings with fewer than 3 earned runs allowed. A mark of consistency
CG: Complete games, where the pitcher throws the entire game from beginning to end. A mark of endurance
SHO: Shutouts, a complete game where the pitcher allows no runs. A mark of dominance
QS%: Quality starts as a percentage of starts
CG%: Complete games as a percentage of starts
SO%: Shutout games as a percentage of starts

Yan dominates all three QS, CG, and SHO categories by a large margin. A more interesting note is Zhao, who has steadily bettered year after year. Despite his overall career averages not being as high as Fong, at this point he’s probably a better pitcher, and over time he should be able to increase his averages up to #2. Other notes: it’s clear to see that Leong, Chin, and Pardo rank among the most inconsistent, where as Wade has already demonstrated he can be one of the most consistent players around.

ERA

Rk Name IP ERA CERA DIPS WHIP
1 Michelle Absalon 120 2/3 0.75 0.81 1.75 0.77
2 Nathan Yan* 830 1.21 0.72 0.96 0.67
3 Alvina Chu* 102 2.03 1.89 2.94 0.97
4 Willis Fong 415 1/3 2.04 1.83 2.76 0.93
5 Jessica Tirta 54 1/3 2.65 3.02 3.57 1.21
6 Terrence Zhao* 587 2.79 2.66 3.92 1.12
7 Sean Wade* 201 3.00 2.37 3.37 1.02
8 Michelle Lin 335 1/3 3.44 2.98 3.01 1.07
9 Sarah Jimenez 213 3.46 2.98 3.90 1.26
10 Zubeda Khan* 46 2/3 3.47 3.28 3.98 1.14
11 Erica Lum 258 2/3 3.51 4.32 5.88 1.58
12 Angel Poon* 181 3.58 3.52 3.94 1.19
13 Helen Chow 18 4.00 5.12 4.73 1.56
14 Sean Mok 6 2/3 4.05 5.56 6.83 1.65
15 Josiah Leong* 351 4.05 4.04 4.57 1.44
16 Samantha Chin* 168 1/3 4.06 3.29 3.73 1.21
17 Aubrey Cubilo 44 2/3 4.23 3.32 4.88 1.21
18 Alfred Vong* 63 2/3 4.24 3.84 4.65 1.19
19 Miguel Pardo* 275 4.88 4.81 5.05 1.56
20 Katie Clayton 89 7.28 6.05 5.83 1.74
21 Helen Yamamoto* 26 9.35 12.35 8.29 2.54

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (innings are baseball’s time unit)
ERA: Earned Run Average, the average earned runs allowed by the pitcher per 9 innings
CERA: Component ERA – an overall performance metric similar to ERA. Probably the performance indicator
DIPS: Defense-Independent Pitching ERA – an overall performance metric similar to ERA, which involves only walks, strikeouts, and homeruns.
WHIP: Walks and hits per inning pitched, a rough performance metric

What’s this? A category where Yan isn’t on top? Surprisingly, Yan’s career ERA has actually been bested by Absalon, who boasts a 0.84 ERA in 2003 and 0.64 ERA in 2004. Despite this, all other indicators point to Yan being the far more dominant pitcher. Among other players, Chu is making quite a name for herself, with the third best ERA all-time, just barely edging Fong.

Saves

Rk Name S G RA GF HLD SVO BS SV%
1 Michelle Absalon 50 84 84 69 12 61 3 0.820
2 Josiah Leong* 40 95 48 46 0 43 3 0.930
3 Zubeda Khan* 29 42 42 40 0 34 5 0.853
4 Angel Poon* 7 96 96 50 19 29 5 0.241
5 Alvina Chu* 3 55 55 27 12 22 7 0.136
6 Sarah Jimenez 2 76 63 24 14 19 3 0.105
7 Katie Clayton 2 61 61 40 5 6 1 0.333
8 Jessica Tirta 2 29 29 13 3 5 2 0.400
9 Alfred Vong* 2 24 23 14 3 7 0 0.286
10 Erica Lum 2 53 14 7 0 2 0 1.000
11 Helen Yamamoto* 2 19 19 12 0 2 0 1.000
12 Helen Chow 1 9 9 3 3 4 0 0.250
13 Miguel Pardo* 1 50 9 5 1 2 0 0.500
14 Nathan Yan* 0 96 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
15 Willis Fong 0 55 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
16 Terrence Zhao* 0 87 4 0 0 0 0 0.000
17 Sean Wade* 0 29 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
18 Michelle Lin 0 52 1 1 0 0 0 0.000
19 Sean Mok 0 3 3 3 0 0 0 0.000
20 Samantha Chin* 0 26 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
21 Aubrey Cubilo 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0.000

*Denotes active player
S: Save, when a relief pitcher enters a close game and successfully maintains the lead (the primary role of a “closer”)
G: Games played
RA: Relief appearances
GF: Games finished, relief appearances in which the reliever was the last pitcher
HLD: Hold, similar to save, where a relief pitcher enters a close game and successfully maintains the lead (a reliever does not need to finish a game for a hold)
SVO: Save opportunities, the number of opportunities the pitcher has had to save the game.
BS: Blown saves, when a pitcher enters into a save situation and fails to maintain the lead
SV%: The percentage of save opportunities converted into actual saves.

After three tumultuous years and three starters, the leaderboard is still topped by none other than the inaugural closer Michelle Absalon, who picked up 46 saves in her first season, and added on another 4 the subsequent year. Last year’s closer, Zubeda Khan, managed a scant 29 saves, while year 2 closer Josiah Leong picked up 40. Leong returns as the year 4 closer, marking the first year without a new face at closer. With another year of saves under his belt, Leong should skyrocket past Absalon for first place, and until next year at least, no other candidate has presented himself/herself to climb significantly up this leaderboard.

Games

Rk Name G GS PA AB
1 Joey Wong 474 473 2160 1924
2 Derek Lew* 440 440 2079 1972
3 Sam Lau 405 403 1745 1465
4 Aubrey Cubilo 337 337 1601 1527
5 Desiree Tienturier 326 326 1521 1366
6 Norman Ho 317 317 1464 1238
7 Jonathan Chee* 317 312 1363 1149
8 Sean Mok 255 246 1171 1059
9 Cristian Ortiz* 241 233 996 898
10 Jason Liu* 218 213 951 832
11 Henry Nghe* 151 149 671 618
12 Tina Quach* 150 142 606 535
13 Joanna Maung* 145 128 557 481
14 Rudy Puzon* 139 139 640 554
15 Francis Chen* 121 116 476 414
16 Jean Paredes 113 103 449 424
17 Justin Cheuk 112 106 446 409
18 Josiah Leong* 67 67 314 265
19 Tiffany Ho* 64 60 243 233
20 Joe Jaber 53 44 205 186
21 Kelvin Huang 26 24 104 98

*Denotes active player
G: Games
GS: Games started
PA: Plate appearance, the number of times the player has shown up at the plate to bat. This indicates how many opportunities the player had.
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.

A quartet of three-year veterans headline this leaderboard, which isn’t really an indicator of anything but longevity. Wong dominates this chart, although Lew held the position for a long time before his injury-plagued 2005 season. With Lew the only player in the top 5 still active, look for him to move into the leaderboard without rival, as he becomes the only regular starter who has been with the team since 2003. Fellow three-year veterans (albeit not regular starters) Jonathan Chee and Cristian Ortiz also look to move up beyond most of the retired players on the board.

Hits

Rk Name AB H AVG
1 Joey Wong 1924 707 0.367
2 Derek Lew* 1972 590 0.299
3 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 452 0.296
4 Desiree Tienturier 1366 447 0.327
5 Norman Ho 1238 436 0.352
6 Sam Lau 1465 408 0.278
7 Sean Mok 1059 371 0.350
8 Jonathan Chee* 1149 324 0.282
9 Jason Liu* 832 259 0.311
10 Cristian Ortiz* 898 244 0.272
11 Henry Nghe* 618 223 0.361
12 Rudy Puzon* 554 167 0.301
13 Tina Quach* 535 161 0.301
14 Joanna Maung* 481 138 0.287
15 Jean Paredes 424 110 0.259
16 Josiah Leong* 265 95 0.358
17 Justin Cheuk 409 93 0.227
18 Francis Chen* 414 84 0.203
19 Tiffany Ho* 233 65 0.279
20 Joe Jaber 186 48 0.258
21 Kelvin Huang 98 34 0.347

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
AVG: Batting average, hits per at bat, or the percentage of at bats that result in hits

No surprises here – Wong tops the leaderboard by a wide margin, as he also retires as Daly City’s all time batting average leader (a feat that will be tough to match). While veteran Lew looks to pass Wong by this season, it appears a long ways off before any other player will come close to surpassing the current leader totals.

Singles

Rk Name AB H 1B 1B%
1 Joey Wong 1924 707 490 0.693
2 Derek Lew* 1972 590 309 0.524
3 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 452 308 0.681
4 Desiree Tienturier 1366 447 284 0.635
5 Sam Lau 1465 408 275 0.674
6 Sean Mok 1059 371 267 0.720
7 Jonathan Chee* 1149 324 257 0.793
8 Norman Ho 1238 436 243 0.557
9 Cristian Ortiz* 898 244 168 0.689
10 Henry Nghe* 618 223 149 0.668
11 Jason Liu* 832 259 126 0.486
12 Tina Quach* 535 161 117 0.727
13 Rudy Puzon* 554 167 114 0.683
14 Joanna Maung* 481 138 108 0.783
15 Jean Paredes 424 110 74 0.673
16 Josiah Leong* 265 95 59 0.621
17 Justin Cheuk 409 93 53 0.570
18 Tiffany Ho* 233 65 50 0.769
19 Francis Chen* 414 84 36 0.429
20 Joe Jaber 186 48 27 0.563
21 Kelvin Huang 98 34 22 0.647

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
1B: Singles, hits that result in the player reaching the first base (out of four)
1B%: The percentage of hits that are singles

The number of singles correlate fairly well with the number of hits – there is not much Huange in the leaderboard here. Wong dominates by a large amount, although Lew, due to a team third-lowest 1B%, only edges out second place by 1 single. A more interesting statistic than pure 1B totals is 1B%. As expected, the light-hitting players such as Mok, Quach, and most especially Tiffany Ho, Maung, and Chee, were singles dominant, all hitting for singles 70% of the time. In contrast, the biggest pure sluggers like Lew and Norman Ho, batted in the low .500’s for singles. The biggest anomalies, however, turn out in fellow sluggers (and RF position competitors) Jason Liu and Francis Chen, both of whom hit for singles less than half the time (in Chen’s case, a scant 42.9% of the time!)

Doubles

Rk Name AB H 2B 2B% AB/2B
1 Derek Lew* 1972 590 181 0.307 10.90
2 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 452 116 0.257 13.16
3 Joey Wong 1924 707 115 0.163 16.73
4 Norman Ho 1238 436 95 0.218 13.03
5 Desiree Tienturier 1366 447 69 0.154 19.80
6 Sean Mok 1059 371 65 0.175 16.29
7 Sam Lau 1465 408 62 0.152 23.63
8 Jason Liu* 832 259 57 0.220 14.60
9 Henry Nghe* 618 223 49 0.220 12.61
10 Jonathan Chee* 1149 324 44 0.136 26.11
11 Justin Cheuk 409 93 36 0.387 11.36
12 Cristian Ortiz* 898 244 35 0.143 25.66
13 Tina Quach* 535 161 32 0.199 16.72
14 Joanna Maung* 481 138 21 0.152 22.90
15 Josiah Leong* 265 95 18 0.189 14.72
16 Rudy Puzon* 554 167 16 0.096 34.63
17 Francis Chen* 414 84 16 0.190 25.88
18 Jean Paredes 424 110 14 0.127 30.29
19 Joe Jaber 186 48 13 0.271 14.31
20 Tiffany Ho* 233 65 12 0.185 19.42
21 Kelvin Huang 98 34 8 0.235 12.25

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
2B: Doubles, hits that result in the player reaching the second base (out of four)
2B%: The percentage of hits that are doubles
AB/2B: The frequency of hitting doubles, in at bats per double (lower is better)

As Wong dominates the hits and singles chart, Lew excels here at his specialty – the double. Now only does Lew have by far the highest 2B total, but he also dominates the 2B% and AB/2B charts as well. There doesn’t appear to be anyone who will challenge him soon, or ever, although rookie Henry Nghe showed a strong penchant for hitting doubles in his rookie season.

HR

Rk Name AB H HR HR% AB/HR
1 Joey Wong 1924 707 92 0.130 20.91
2 Derek Lew* 1972 590 87 0.147 22.67
3 Norman Ho 1238 436 87 0.200 14.23
4 Desiree Tienturier 1366 447 85 0.190 16.07
5 Sam Lau 1465 408 67 0.164 21.87
6 Jason Liu* 832 259 67 0.259 12.42
7 Cristian Ortiz* 898 244 37 0.152 24.27
8 Sean Mok 1059 371 33 0.089 32.09
9 Rudy Puzon* 554 167 32 0.192 17.31
10 Francis Chen* 414 84 28 0.333 14.79
11 Jonathan Chee* 1149 324 21 0.065 54.71
12 Jean Paredes 424 110 20 0.182 21.20
13 Josiah Leong* 265 95 16 0.168 16.56
14 Henry Nghe* 618 223 12 0.054 51.50
15 Joanna Maung* 481 138 9 0.065 53.44
16 Tina Quach* 535 161 8 0.050 66.88
17 Joe Jaber 186 48 7 0.146 26.57
18 Justin Cheuk 409 93 4 0.043 102.25
19 Kelvin Huang 98 34 3 0.088 32.67
20 Tiffany Ho* 233 65 1 0.015 233.00
21 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 452 0 0.000 0.00

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
HR: Homeruns, hits that result in the player reaching all four bases and scoring a run
HR%: The percentage of hits that are homeruns
AB/HR: The frequency of hitting doubles, in at bats per homerun (lower is better)

While it’s clear that the slugger era dominated by the likes of Norman Ho and Desiree Tienturier are long over, it’s actually the three-year veterans Wong and Lew that top the leaderboard. With Wong’s retirement, Lew seems likely to move into first place, although there’s a great potential threat from sluggers Jason Liu and Francis Chen. Although both players lag far behind, both players have insanely high HR% and AB/HR numbers that equal or even top the numbers Ho and Tienturier put up. Given enough playing time, look for both to move up the charts quickly, although it will take them awhile before really approaching the top of the board. Rudy Puzon, who had 17.31 AB/HR in his rookie season, also seems like a strong candidate to have a lengthy HR career.

Total Bases

Rk Name AB H 1B 2B 3B HR TB AVG SLG TB/H
1 Joey Wong 1924 707 490 115 10 92 1118 0.367 0.581 1.581
2 Derek Lew* 1972 590 309 181 13 87 1058 0.299 0.537 1.793
3 Norman Ho 1238 436 243 95 11 87 814 0.352 0.658 1.867
4 Desiree Tienturier 1366 447 284 69 9 85 789 0.327 0.578 1.765
5 Sam Lau 1465 408 275 62 4 67 679 0.278 0.463 1.664
6 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 452 308 116 28 0 624 0.296 0.409 1.381
7 Sean Mok 1059 371 267 65 6 33 547 0.350 0.517 1.474
8 Jason Liu* 832 259 126 57 9 67 535 0.311 0.643 2.066
9 Jonathan Chee* 1149 324 257 44 2 21 435 0.282 0.379 1.343
10 Cristian Ortiz* 898 244 168 35 4 37 398 0.272 0.443 1.631
11 Henry Nghe* 618 223 149 49 13 12 334 0.361 0.540 1.498
12 Rudy Puzon* 554 167 114 16 5 32 289 0.301 0.522 1.731
13 Tina Quach* 535 161 117 32 4 8 225 0.301 0.421 1.398
14 Francis Chen* 414 84 36 16 4 28 192 0.203 0.464 2.286
15 Jean Paredes 424 110 74 14 2 20 188 0.259 0.443 1.709
16 Joanna Maung* 481 138 108 21 0 9 186 0.287 0.387 1.348
17 Josiah Leong* 265 95 59 18 2 16 165 0.358 0.623 1.737
18 Justin Cheuk 409 93 53 36 0 4 141 0.227 0.345 1.516
19 Joe Jaber 186 48 27 13 1 7 84 0.258 0.452 1.750
20 Tiffany Ho* 233 65 50 12 2 1 84 0.279 0.361 1.292
21 Kelvin Huang 98 34 22 8 1 3 53 0.347 0.541 1.559

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
1B: Singles, hits that result in the player reaching the first base (out of four)
2B: Doubles, hits that result in the player reaching the second base (out of four)
3B: Triples, hits that result in the player reaching the third base (out of four)
HR: Homeruns, hits that result in the player reaching all four bases and scoring a run
Total Bases: The cumulative number of bases from all hits (where singles count as 1 base, doubles as 2, triples as 3, and homeruns as four)
AVG: Batting average, hits per at bat, or the percentage of at bats that result in hits. This is a rough indicator of contact ability
SLG: Slugging percentage, or total bases per at bat. This is a rough indicator of power ability, although it is partially dependent on average
TB/H: Average total bases per hit. This is a pure indicator of power ability, independent of contact ability.

As with most other categories, Wong retires at the top of this chart, with only Lew within easy reach of claiming first place anytime soon. Interestingly, TB/H yields some affirmative results for the best pure hitter in the team’s history. While Ho dominates this category for regular players, Liu and to an even greater extent Chen have hammered away in this category, and both possess numbers greatly in excess of the team’s historical leaders.

Walks

Rk Name BB PA OBP BB/PA
1 Sam Lau 236 1745 0.382 0.135
2 Joey Wong 212 2160 0.429 0.098
3 Norman Ho 199 1464 0.445 0.136
4 Jonathan Chee* 156 1363 0.391 0.114
5 Desiree Tienturier 118 1521 0.391 0.078
6 Sean Mok 93 1171 0.406 0.079
7 Jason Liu* 93 951 0.388 0.098
8 Cristian Ortiz* 79 996 0.336 0.079
9 Rudy Puzon* 76 640 0.383 0.119
10 Tina Quach* 67 606 0.381 0.111
11 Joanna Maung* 67 557 0.375 0.120
12 Derek Lew* 65 2079 0.325 0.031
13 Aubrey Cubilo 53 1601 0.324 0.033
14 Francis Chen* 52 476 0.296 0.109
15 Henry Nghe* 47 671 0.407 0.070
16 Josiah Leong* 41 314 0.443 0.131
17 Justin Cheuk 34 446 0.285 0.076
18 Jean Paredes 17 449 0.296 0.038
19 Joe Jaber 12 205 0.322 0.059
20 Tiffany Ho* 8 243 0.305 0.033
21 Kelvin Huang 4 104 0.365 0.038

*Denotes active player
PA: Plate appearance, the number of times the player has shown up at the plate to bat. This indicates how many opportunities the player had.
BB: Base on balls, or walks, where a player automatically reaches first base after a pitcher has thrown four off-target pitches
OBP: On-base percentage, or the percentage of plate appearances in which the player reaches base safely, regardless of method.
BB/PA: Walks per plate appearance, or the percentage of plate appearances that result in walks:

It’s quite interesting to dip back into the past – despite having played only two seasons, only in the last season have players Lau and Wong surpassed Ho, and not even by that much. Turning towards the rates, we find that Ho clearly dominates in the OBP and BB/PA departments. Nonetheless, all three of the top players are retired, leaving Chee as the current active leader, on pace to take the lead sometime in 2007. Noticeably absent from the top is longtime player Derek Lew, who ranks only 12 in this category, due to his longtime inability to garner any walks despite a great ability to fend off strikeouts.

RBI

Rk Name AB RBI RBI/AB
1 Joey Wong 1924 421 0.219
2 Derek Lew* 1972 396 0.201
3 Norman Ho 1238 299 0.242
4 Desiree Tienturier 1366 296 0.217
5 Sam Lau 1465 291 0.199
6 Jason Liu* 832 215 0.258
7 Aubrey Cubilo 1527 174 0.114
8 Sean Mok 1059 169 0.160
9 Jonathan Chee* 1149 158 0.138
10 Cristian Ortiz* 898 143 0.159
11 Rudy Puzon* 554 115 0.208
12 Henry Nghe* 618 101 0.163
13 Francis Chen* 414 85 0.205
14 Joanna Maung* 481 83 0.173
15 Tina Quach* 535 73 0.136
16 Jean Paredes 424 66 0.156
17 Josiah Leong* 265 52 0.196
18 Justin Cheuk 409 44 0.108
19 Joe Jaber 186 33 0.177
20 Tiffany Ho* 233 23 0.099
21 Kelvin Huang 98 21 0.214

*Denotes active player
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
RBI: Runs batted in, when a player directly drives another player (or himself, via a homerun) in for a run (runs are baseball’s point/goal unit)
RBI/AB: RBI’s per at bat

After three dominant RBI seasons, Wong, Lew, Ho, and Tienturier dominate this chart, each averaging well over 100 RBI’s per season. Except for the up-and-coming Liu, Chen, and Puzon, all four players dominate in the RBI/AB rate as well. Lew, as the team’s new #4 hitter following the departure of Wong, looks to dominate in this category after this season, without anyone else to really challenge him for years to come.

Runs

Rk Name PA R R/PA
1 Joey Wong 2160 396 0.206
2 Derek Lew* 2079 366 0.186
3 Norman Ho 1464 318 0.257
4 Desiree Tienturier 1521 304 0.223
5 Sam Lau 1745 265 0.181
6 Aubrey Cubilo 1601 264 0.173
7 Sean Mok 1171 208 0.196
8 Jonathan Chee* 1363 189 0.164
9 Jason Liu* 951 187 0.225
10 Cristian Ortiz* 996 144 0.160
11 Henry Nghe* 671 120 0.194
12 Rudy Puzon* 640 109 0.197
13 Joanna Maung* 557 87 0.181
14 Tina Quach* 606 82 0.153
15 Josiah Leong* 314 69 0.260
16 Francis Chen* 476 68 0.164
17 Jean Paredes 449 61 0.144
18 Justin Cheuk 446 55 0.134
19 Tiffany Ho* 243 34 0.146
20 Joe Jaber 205 28 0.151
21 Kelvin Huang 104 17 0.173

*Denotes active player
PA: Plate appearance, the number of times the player has shown up at the plate to bat. This indicates how many opportunities the player had.
R: Runs, the number of times the player has scored by reaching the fourth base
R/PA: Runs per plate appearance

Runs pretty much follows an order of longevity, although it is again the best sluggers who also end up with the highest run totals, much like RBIs.

Steals

Name SB CS SBA SB%
Aubrey Cubilo 170 24 194 0.876
Desiree Tienturier 92 36 128 0.719
Norman Ho 68 22 90 0.756
Cristian Ortiz* 61 8 69 0.884
Sean Mok 39 13 52 0.750
Josiah Leong* 35 4 39 0.897
Joey Wong 31 0 31 1.000
Jonathan Chee* 24 0 24 1.000
Henry Nghe* 19 9 28 0.679
Sam Lau 15 0 15 1.000
Derek Lew* 14 2 16 0.875
Jason Liu* 11 0 11 1.000
Francis Chen* 10 2 12 0.833
Tiffany Ho* 10 1 11 0.909
Jean Paredes 7 1 8 0.875
Rudy Puzon* 5 4 9 0.556
Joanna Maung* 1 0 1 1.000
Tina Quach* 1 0 1 1.000
Justin Cheuk 1 0 1 1.000
Joe Jaber 1 0 1 1.000
Kelvin Huang 0 0 0 0.000

*Denotes active player
SB: Stolen bases, or steals, when a player runs to take an extra base
CS: Caught stealing, when a player unsuccessfully attempts to steal a base
SBA: Stolen base attempts, when a player attempts to run to advance an extra base
SB%: Stolen base %, or the rate of success

Daly City’s heralded speedster Aubrey Cubilo dominates this chart, with numbers far in excess of anyone else. With the top three players all retired, and not another speedster in the group, Ortiz remains as the only true base stealer on the team, although Jonathan Chee could look to make a long career out of piggy-backing double steals.

AVG

Rk Name AVG AB H
1 Joey Wong 0.367 1924 707
2 Henry Nghe* 0.361 618 223
3 Josiah Leong* 0.358 265 95
4 Norman Ho 0.352 1238 436
5 Sean Mok 0.350 1059 371
6 Kelvin Huang 0.347 98 34
7 Desiree Tienturier 0.327 1366 447
8 Jason Liu* 0.311 832 259
9 Rudy Puzon* 0.301 554 167
10 Tina Quach* 0.301 535 161
11 Derek Lew* 0.299 1972 590
12 Aubrey Cubilo 0.296 1527 452
13 Joanna Maung* 0.287 481 138
14 Jonathan Chee* 0.282 1149 324
15 Tiffany Ho* 0.279 233 65
16 Sam Lau 0.278 1465 408
17 Cristian Ortiz* 0.272 898 244
18 Jean Paredes 0.259 424 110
19 Joe Jaber 0.258 186 48
20 Justin Cheuk 0.227 409 93
21 Francis Chen* 0.203 414 84

*Denotes active player
AVG: Batting average, hits per at bat, or the percentage of at bats that result in hits. This is a rough indicator of contact ability
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.

Joey Wong dominates here as batting champ, although surprisingly the next two spots are not other veteran hitters but one-season players Nghe and Leong, both of whom are still active. While both are talented contact hitters, it would be a surprise if either ended up playing at a consistently high level enough to surpass Wong’s .367 mark, although both players are already very close.

OBP

Rk Name OBP PA H BB HBP
1 Norman Ho 0.445 1464 436 199 16
2 Josiah Leong* 0.443 314 95 41 3
3 Joey Wong 0.429 2160 707 212 6
4 Henry Nghe* 0.407 671 223 47 3
5 Sean Mok 0.406 1171 371 93 11
6 Jonathan Chee* 0.391 1363 324 156 53
7 Desiree Tienturier 0.391 1521 447 118 28
8 Jason Liu* 0.388 951 259 93 17
9 Rudy Puzon* 0.383 640 167 76 2
10 Sam Lau 0.382 1745 408 236 23
11 Tina Quach* 0.381 606 161 67 3
12 Joanna Maung* 0.375 557 138 67 3
13 Kelvin Huang 0.365 104 34 4 0
14 Cristian Ortiz* 0.336 996 244 79 12
15 Derek Lew* 0.325 2079 590 65 20
16 Aubrey Cubilo 0.324 1601 452 53 13
17 Joe Jaber 0.322 205 48 12 6
18 Tiffany Ho* 0.305 243 65 8 1
19 Francis Chen* 0.296 476 84 52 4
20 Jean Paredes 0.296 449 110 17 6
21 Justin Cheuk 0.285 446 93 34 0

*Denotes active player
PA: Plate appearance, the number of times the player has shown up at the plate to bat. This indicates how many opportunities the player had.
H: Hits, when a player hits the ball and successfully reaches a base.
BB: Base on balls, or walks, where a player automatically reaches first base after a pitcher has thrown four off-target pitches
HBP: Hit-by-pitch, where a player automatically reaches first after he has been hit by the ball

All-world hitter Norman Ho dominates this category, where he both hit for a high batting average and garnered a large number of walks in two seasons. Not far behind is the one-season wonder Josiah Leong, followed by Joey Wong, after which there is a significant dropoff. One player who looks to improve greatly is Jonathan Chee, who after 1 ½ seasons of mediocrity finally emerged as an OBP machine in 2005. Continuing his on-base ways, he should easily be able to exceed Mok, Nghe, and possibly even break into the top 3 in several years.

SLG

Rk Name SLG AB TB 1B 2B 3B HR
1 Norman Ho 0.658 1238 814 243 95 11 87
2 Jason Liu* 0.643 832 535 126 57 9 67
3 Josiah Leong* 0.623 265 165 59 18 2 16
4 Joey Wong 0.581 1924 1118 490 115 10 92
5 Desiree Tienturier 0.578 1366 789 284 69 9 85
6 Kelvin Huang 0.541 98 53 22 8 1 3
7 Henry Nghe* 0.540 618 334 149 49 13 12
8 Derek Lew* 0.537 1972 1058 309 181 13 87
9 Rudy Puzon* 0.522 554 289 114 16 5 32
10 Sean Mok 0.517 1059 547 267 65 6 33
11 Francis Chen* 0.464 414 192 36 16 4 28
12 Sam Lau 0.463 1465 679 275 62 4 67
13 Joe Jaber 0.452 186 84 27 13 1 7
14 Jean Paredes 0.443 424 188 74 14 2 20
15 Cristian Ortiz* 0.443 898 398 168 35 4 37
16 Tina Quach* 0.421 535 225 117 32 4 8
17 Aubrey Cubilo 0.409 1527 624 308 116 28 0
18 Joanna Maung* 0.387 481 186 108 21 0 9
19 Jonathan Chee* 0.379 1149 435 257 44 2 21
20 Tiffany Ho* 0.361 233 84 50 12 2 1
21 Justin Cheuk 0.345 409 141 53 36 0 4

*Denotes active player
SLG: Slugging percentage, or total bases per at bat. This is a rough indicator of power ability, although it is partially dependent on average
AB: At bats, the number of plate appearances minus PA’s that resulted in non-batting events, such as walks and hit-by-pitches. This indicates how many opportunities the player had to bat.
Total Bases: The cumulative number of bases from all hits (where singles count as 1 base, doubles as 2, triples as 3, and homeruns as four)
1B: Singles, hits that result in the player reaching the first base (out of four)
2B: Doubles, hits that result in the player reaching the second base (out of four)
3B: Triples, hits that result in the player reaching the third base (out of four)
HR: Homeruns, hits that result in the player reaching all four bases and scoring a run

The Babe Ruth of Daly City baseball, Norman Ho remains at the top of the slugging board, although in recent years slugger Jason Liu has made a strong run, and Leong in his half-season also came close. Outside of those three, no other active player ranks even remotely close to the elite slugger range. Henry Nghe is the next best, topping out at .540
Games

Rk Name G GS
1 Nathan Yan* 96 96
2 Angel Poon* 96 0
3 Josiah Leong* 95 47
4 Terrence Zhao* 87 83
5 Michelle Absalon 84 0
6 Sarah Jimenez 76 13
7 Katie Clayton 61 0
8 Willis Fong 55 55
9 Alvina Chu* 55 0
10 Erica Lum 53 39
11 Michelle Lin 52 51
12 Miguel Pardo* 50 41
13 Zubeda Khan* 42 0
14 Sean Wade* 29 29
15 Jessica Tirta 29 0
16 Samantha Chin* 26 26
17 Alfred Vong* 24 1
18 Helen Yamamoto* 19 0
19 Helen Chow 9 0
20 Aubrey Cubilo 8 8
21 Sean Mok 3 0

*Denotes active player
G: Games
GS: Games Started

A sheer sign of his workhorse nature, it shouldn’t be any surprise that Yan tops the charts in both Games Started and Games. Angel Poon, another three-year veteran, is tied for tops in games, but Josiah Leong, who looks to pitch an ungodly number of relief games in the long-relief closer role, looks to pass up everybody by the end of the season. In terms of starters, Yan and Zhao should remain at 1-2, but the season will likely see Wade, Pardo, and possibly Chin move up beyond 2003-2004 players Fong and Lin for the 3-5 spaces.

Innings

Rk Name G GS IP IP/GS IP/RA
1 Nathan Yan* 96 96 830 8.646 0.000
2 Terrence Zhao* 87 83 587 7.072 0.000
3 Willis Fong 55 55 415 1/3 7.552 0.000
4 Josiah Leong* 95 47 351 0.000 0.000
5 Michelle Lin 52 51 335 1/3 6.575 0.000
6 Miguel Pardo* 50 41 275 6.707 0.000
7 Erica Lum 53 39 258 2/3 0.000 0.000
8 Sarah Jimenez 76 13 213 0.000 3.381
9 Sean Wade* 29 29 201 6.931 0.000
10 Angel Poon* 96 0 181 0.000 1.885
11 Samantha Chin* 26 26 168 1/3 6.474 0.000
12 Michelle Absalon 84 0 120 2/3 0.000 1.437
13 Alvina Chu* 55 0 102 0.000 1.855
14 Katie Clayton 61 0 89 0.000 1.459
15 Alfred Vong* 24 1 63 2/3 0.000 2.768
16 Jessica Tirta 29 0 54 1/3 0.000 1.874
17 Zubeda Khan* 42 0 46 2/3 0.000 1.111
18 Aubrey Cubilo 8 8 44 2/3 5.583 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 19 0 26 0.000 1.368
20 Helen Chow 9 0 18 0.000 2.000
21 Sean Mok 3 0 6 2/3 0.000 2.222

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (innings are baseball’s time unit)
IP/GS: Average innings pitched per start
IP/RA: Average innings pitched per relief appearance

A much more exact statistic of work, Yan once again dominates this chart, not only in sheer innings but also in innings per start – rounded off he averages a complete game very start! It’s slightly disappointing to see Leong so low on the list, although he did spend a year in relief. Wade seems to be the fastest-rising player – after a single season he’s already 9th on the list, and looks to pass up everyone up to and maybe even including Leong after this season. Angel Poon tops the charts for a pure reliever, a statistic she’ll probably hold onto for awhile.

Wins

Rk Name GS W L Win%
1 Nathan Yan* 96 90 6 0.938
2 Terrence Zhao* 83 52 15 0.776
3 Willis Fong 55 48 3 0.941
4 Michelle Lin 51 34 3 0.919
5 Erica Lum 39 26 7 0.788
6 Sarah Jimenez 13 23 6 0.793
7 Miguel Pardo* 41 22 9 0.710
8 Josiah Leong* 47 21 17 0.553
9 Sean Wade* 29 20 8 0.714
10 Alvina Chu* 0 14 3 0.824
11 Samantha Chin* 26 13 1 0.929
12 Michelle Absalon 0 10 1 0.909
13 Angel Poon* 0 9 5 0.643
14 Alfred Vong* 1 4 2 0.667
15 Jessica Tirta 0 3 1 0.750
16 Aubrey Cubilo 8 3 1 0.750
17 Zubeda Khan* 0 2 3 0.400
18 Katie Clayton 0 0 1 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 0 0 0 0.000
20 Helen Chow 0 0 0 0.000
21 Sean Mok 0 0 0 0.000

*Denotes active player
GS: Games Started
W: Wins, counted whenever a pitcher “wins” the game
L: Losses, whenever a player “loses” the game

Yan once again tops the leaderboard, by a very far margin. After three 30-2 seasons, however, his Winning % actually hasn’t improved, so he’s in fact still behind Fong, who in 2004 put together a perfect 29-0 season Yan still holds the prime distinction of being the only player to not have recorded a single no decision, however, although Wade had only one in his rookie year. The coming year should see all starters move up, possibly past Lin’s #4 spot, but likely not beyond Fong’s 48.
K

Rk Name IP K K/9
1 Nathan Yan* 830 1279 13.87
2 Terrence Zhao* 587 508 7.79
3 Willis Fong 415 1/3 454 9.84
4 Michelle Lin 335 1/3 392 10.52
5 Josiah Leong* 351 375 9.62
6 Miguel Pardo* 275 181 5.92
7 Sean Wade* 201 163 7.30
8 Samantha Chin* 168 1/3 163 8.71
9 Sarah Jimenez 213 149 6.30
10 Angel Poon* 181 142 7.06
11 Michelle Absalon 120 2/3 138 10.29
12 Alvina Chu* 102 95 8.38
13 Erica Lum 258 2/3 73 2.54
14 Alfred Vong* 63 2/3 53 7.49
15 Katie Clayton 89 49 4.96
16 Zubeda Khan* 46 2/3 38 7.33
17 Jessica Tirta 54 1/3 31 5.13
18 Aubrey Cubilo 44 2/3 28 5.64
19 Helen Yamamoto* 26 12 4.15
20 Helen Chow 18 12 6.00
21 Sean Mok 6 2/3 0 0.00

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (Innings are baseball’s time unit)
K: Strikeout, when the batter fails to even put the ball in play
K/9: A strikeout rate, measured by strikeouts per 9 innings pitched

No surprises here: Having blown away the league for three consecutive years, it shouldn’t be any surprise that Yan dominates this chart. After three years, Zhao also finally surpasses Fong for #2 all-time, although Leong, with his far higher K/9, should have been well past both now, if he had been consistent enough to pitch the innings. Depending on his innings, Leong may yet move past Fong. An interesting thing to note is the dying breed of high K pitchers – of the five players with higher than 9 K’s per 9 innings, 3 of them are retired

Quality Starts

Rk Name GS QS CG SHO QS% CG% SHO%
1 Nathan Yan* 96 90 68 35 0.938 0.708 0.365
2 Terrence Zhao* 83 61 20 14 0.735 0.241 0.169
3 Willis Fong 55 45 20 7 0.818 0.364 0.127
4 Michelle Lin 51 34 8 3 0.667 0.157 0.059
5 Josiah Leong* 47 28 1 0 0.596 0.021 0.000
6 Erica Lum 39 24 3 0 0.615 0.077 0.000
7 Sean Wade* 29 23 3 2 0.793 0.103 0.069
8 Miguel Pardo* 41 21 4 2 0.512 0.098 0.049
9 Samantha Chin* 26 14 2 1 0.538 0.077 0.038
10 Sarah Jimenez 13 9 2 1 0.692 0.154 0.077
11 Alfred Vong* 1 1 0 0 1.000 0.000 0.000
12 Aubrey Cubilo 8 1 1 0 0.125 0.125 0.000
13 Angel Poon* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
14 Michelle Absalon 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
15 Alvina Chu* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
16 Katie Clayton 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
17 Zubeda Khan* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
18 Jessica Tirta 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
19 Helen Yamamoto* 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
20 Helen Chow 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
21 Sean Mok 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0.000

*Denotes active player
GS: Games started
QS: Quality starts, where the pitcher throws at least 6 innings with fewer than 3 earned runs allowed. A mark of consistency
CG: Complete games, where the pitcher throws the entire game from beginning to end. A mark of endurance
SHO: Shutouts, a complete game where the pitcher allows no runs. A mark of dominance
QS%: Quality starts as a percentage of starts
CG%: Complete games as a percentage of starts
SO%: Shutout games as a percentage of starts

Yan dominates all three QS, CG, and SHO categories by a large margin. A more interesting note is Zhao, who has steadily bettered year after year. Despite his overall career averages not being as high as Fong, at this point he’s probably a better pitcher, and over time he should be able to increase his averages up to #2. Other notes: it’s clear to see that Leong, Chin, and Pardo rank among the most inconsistent, where as Wade has already demonstrated he can be one of the most consistent players around.

ERA

Rk Name IP ERA CERA DIPS WHIP
1 Michelle Absalon 120 2/3 0.75 0.81 1.75 0.77
2 Nathan Yan* 830 1.21 0.72 0.96 0.67
3 Alvina Chu* 102 2.03 1.89 2.94 0.97
4 Willis Fong 415 1/3 2.04 1.83 2.76 0.93
5 Jessica Tirta 54 1/3 2.65 3.02 3.57 1.21
6 Terrence Zhao* 587 2.79 2.66 3.92 1.12
7 Sean Wade* 201 3.00 2.37 3.37 1.02
8 Michelle Lin 335 1/3 3.44 2.98 3.01 1.07
9 Sarah Jimenez 213 3.46 2.98 3.90 1.26
10 Zubeda Khan* 46 2/3 3.47 3.28 3.98 1.14
11 Erica Lum 258 2/3 3.51 4.32 5.88 1.58
12 Angel Poon* 181 3.58 3.52 3.94 1.19
13 Helen Chow 18 4.00 5.12 4.73 1.56
14 Sean Mok 6 2/3 4.05 5.56 6.83 1.65
15 Josiah Leong* 351 4.05 4.04 4.57 1.44
16 Samantha Chin* 168 1/3 4.06 3.29 3.73 1.21
17 Aubrey Cubilo 44 2/3 4.23 3.32 4.88 1.21
18 Alfred Vong* 63 2/3 4.24 3.84 4.65 1.19
19 Miguel Pardo* 275 4.88 4.81 5.05 1.56
20 Katie Clayton 89 7.28 6.05 5.83 1.74
21 Helen Yamamoto* 26 9.35 12.35 8.29 2.54

*Denotes active player
IP: Innings pitched (innings are baseball’s time unit)
ERA: Earned Run Average, the average earned runs allowed by the pitcher per 9 innings
CERA: Component ERA – an overall performance metric similar to ERA. Probably the performance indicator
DIPS: Defense-Independent Pitching ERA – an overall performance metric similar to ERA, which involves only walks, strikeouts, and homeruns.
WHIP: Walks and hits per inning pitched, a rough performance metric

What’s this? A category where Yan isn’t on top? Surprisingly, Yan’s career ERA has actually been bested by Absalon, who boasts a 0.84 ERA in 2003 and 0.64 ERA in 2004. Despite this, all other indicators point to Yan being the far more dominant pitcher. Among other players, Chu is making quite a name for herself, with the third best ERA all-time, just barely edging Fong.

Saves

Rk Name S G RA GF HLD SVO BS SV%
1 Michelle Absalon 50 84 84 69 12 61 3 0.820
2 Josiah Leong* 40 95 48 46 0 43 3 0.930
3 Zubeda Khan* 29 42 42 40 0 34 5 0.853
4 Angel Poon* 7 96 96 50 19 29 5 0.241
5 Alvina Chu* 3 55 55 27 12 22 7 0.136
6 Sarah Jimenez 2 76 63 24 14 19 3 0.105
7 Katie Clayton 2 61 61 40 5 6 1 0.333
8 Jessica Tirta 2 29 29 13 3 5 2 0.400
9 Alfred Vong* 2 24 23 14 3 7 0 0.286
10 Erica Lum 2 53 14 7 0 2 0 1.000
11 Helen Yamamoto* 2 19 19 12 0 2 0 1.000
12 Helen Chow 1 9 9 3 3 4 0 0.250
13 Miguel Pardo* 1 50 9 5 1 2 0 0.500
14 Nathan Yan* 0 96 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
15 Willis Fong 0 55 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
16 Terrence Zhao* 0 87 4 0 0 0 0 0.000
17 Sean Wade* 0 29 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
18 Michelle Lin 0 52 1 1 0 0 0 0.000
19 Sean Mok 0 3 3 3 0 0 0 0.000
20 Samantha Chin* 0 26 0 0 0 0 0 0.000
21 Aubrey Cubilo 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0.000

*Denotes active player
S: Save, when a relief pitcher enters a close game and successfully maintains the lead (the primary role of a “closer”)
G: Games played
RA: Relief appearances
GF: Games finished, relief appearances in which the reliever was the last pitcher
HLD: Hold, similar to save, where a relief pitcher enters a close game and successfully maintains the lead (a reliever does not need to finish a game for a hold)
SVO: Save opportunities, the number of opportunities the pitcher has had to save the game.
BS: Blown saves, when a pitcher enters into a save situation and fails to maintain the lead
SV%: The percentage of save opportunities converted into actual saves.

After three tumultuous years and three starters, the leaderboard is still topped by none other than the inaugural closer Michelle Absalon, who picked up 46 saves in her first season, and added on another 4 the subsequent year. Last year’s closer, Zubeda Khan, managed a scant 29 saves, while year 2 closer Josiah Leong picked up 40. Leong returns as the year 4 closer, marking the first year without a new face at closer. With another year of saves under his belt, Leong should skyrocket past Absalon for first place, and until next year at least, no other candidate has presented himself/herself to climb significantly up this leaderboard.

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The 2005 Season Review

Team Review

2005 started off as a year of uncertainty for the Daly City Motnis. The team lost their two best hitters, Norman Ho and Desireé Tienturier, who in 2004 combined for 328 RBIs and 325 Runs, as well as starting shortstop Sean Mok. On the pitching staff, they also lost half of thei pitching staff with Willis Fong, Michelle Lin, Sarah Jimenez, and Erica Lum all retiring down into the AAA affiliate. A big chunk of the bullpen, including Tirta and Absalon, were gone too.

With all of the huge losses, the team entered into the 2005 season, a fresh start in a new league of players, with big question marks. Big hitters Derek Lew and Joey Wong remained on the team, but there hardly seemed anyone on the team, the entire league even, who could duplicate the 3-4 slot numbers of Ho and Tienturier. Daly City needed to field three new starting positions players: The starting LF position went to the feeble Jonathan Chee, who the previous yea had barely even reached 200 plate appearances and provided a weak .219-.344-.303 line. Cristian Ortiz, while a slick defender, hardly seemed a proficient hitter, putting up a .230-.296-.392 line over only 81 plate appearances in 2004. At shortstop, the rookie Henry “Mr.” Nghe, who had all of 12 plate appearances in the previous year, would be taking over the reins. Meanwhile, the pitching staff saw two fresh pitchers straight out of high school – Sean Wade and Samantha Chin, who had not even gotten the benefit of being eased in through the farm system. Josiah Leong also had to be pulled back from the bullpen to fill in a rotation spot, leaving another rookie, Zubeda Khan, in the closer role straight out of high school.

Despite all of these uncertainties, and the stigma of being the youngest, most inexperienced, and lowest-salaried team in the majors, Daly City exploded out the gate, putting up a 24-4 record in their first month (a .857 winning percentage!) and outscoring their opponents 198 to 92. By midseason almost all of the early season doubts had been erased – after a torrid first month, Jonathan Chee as the leftfielder had began picking up steam, and would end up leading the league in OBP and scoring 93 runs on only 550 plate appearances. SS Mr. Nghe was already having a fine rookie season, although he wouldn’t turn on the afterburners until the 2nd half. Cristian Ortiz, meanwhile, was proving a stellar defender as well as a high-contact hitter and a demon on the basepaths. On the pitching staff, rookie Sean Wade had turned projections of cool consistency and control into flat out domination – his ERA was in the low 2’s, and his 11 wins were 2nd on the team.

The team would end atop the leaderboard, placing a 125-37, .772 record, 29 games in 1st, while placing 1st with runs scored (1085) and 1st in team ERA (2.94 in the league). Coordinated team effort, rather than flash-bang power numbers, were the name of the game for the 2005 squad – there were no 40 HR hitters or 160 RBI/Run players to be found on this year’s squad – instead the team had 6 of its 9 starters with an OBP over .380, and four players with an OPS over .900, though none over 1.000. Despite losing lights-out players in Fong, Lin, and Jimenez on the pitching staff, the pitching staff found new life with a consistent shutdown starter in rookie Sean Wade, a 2nd breakout season for 3rd-year starter Terrence Zhao, and some first-half razzle dazzle from longtime player Miguel Pardo. Many players showed huge promise and growth, and the year 2006 looks to be an even better one for the Daly City Montis, now the reigning three-peat champions of the baseball world.

Recap of stats:
Games: How many games the player played (there are 162 games in a season)
At bats: How many times a player went up to bat – roughly a measure of how many chances a player got to hit
Hits: The total number of hits (runs are the “points” of the game, and hits generally are needed to achieve runs)
2B: A type of hit where the batter gets 2 bases instead of the usual 1.
3B: An even better type of hit where the batter gets 3 bases instead of the usual 1.
HR: The best type of hit, where the batter gets 4 bases (and thus scores 1 run).
RBI: A measure of how many runs by other player the player has driven in
Runs: A measure of how many runs the player himself has scored
K: A strikeout, where the batter fails to hit the ball at all
Walk: An alternative to a hit, where the pitcher throws badly and the batter gets to advance a base for free
Hit-by-pitch: Similar to a walk, except instead of the pitcher throwing multiple bad balls, the batter just gets hit by the ball once
Steals: When a player runs to get an extra base – this is usually an indicator of good speed
CS: Caught stealing, when a player tries to get an extra base but gets out instead
AVG: The percentage of at bats that the player gets a hit – this indicates good contact ability and is a more traditional, although outdated method of measuring a player’s value.
OBP: The percentage of times a player gets on base, or rather, not out. This is a more modern metric that is a good indicator of a player’s run-scoring ability.
SLG: The average number of bases per at bat – this is an indicator of a player’s power and ability to drive in other players’ runs.
OPS: This is a combination of OBP and SLG, yielding an overall performance metric.
RC: Runs Created, this is a cumulative statistic of how many runs (points) the player was worth – this is a standard metric for total, cumulative achievement.
RC/27: Runs Created per 27 outs, this is the cumulative achievement represented by RC divided by the number of chances, yielding a very advanced overall value metric for the batter.

Sam Lau, Catcher: The team’s longtime catcher returned to full-time duty in 2005, after a 2004 season split with then-rookie Tina Quach, and Lau came back with fury, posting career highs in almost every category – his .304-.397-.498 line completely obliterated his career averages, as Lau also put up 161 hits, 26 doubles, and 25 homeruns in 530 at bats. Lau also hit 113 RBI and scored 105 runs, one of four 100-100 players on the team, and made it to the all-star game for the first time in his career. On top of consistently hitting well, Lau also came through in the clutch when it counted – his line bumped up to a .352-.430-.582 with runners in scoring position, and an even greater .356-.456-.733 in close/late situations. Unfortunately, 2005 will go down as the final year for Sam Lau, who moves on to Daly City’s AAA affiliate, but not before posting his .278-.381-.463 line and going down in history as high OBP, power- hitting first catcher of the Daly City Montis.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 155 548 146 19 3 24 104 97 62 98 10 5 0 .266 .395 .443 .838 102.5 6.57
2004 110 387 101 17 0 18 74 63 38 63 2 5 0 .261 .374 .444 .818 67.8 6.16
2005 140 530 161 26 1 25 113 105 46 75 11 5 0 .304 .397 .498 .895 109.1 7.54

Tina “Experimental Error” Quach, Utility Catcher/Outfielder: Backup catcher Tina Quach found herself in much the same role she had last season, seeing significant playing time both at catcher and in the outfield. Quach started out the season abysmally, posting a .167-.286-.333 line in April, and following it up with a .172-.351-.207 May. She began to come to life after that, however, and exploded through June-July-August, eventually ending up with a .303-.386-.433 season in 290 plate appearances, similar to the .299-.386-.409 line she posted in 2004. With a second solid, albeit once again part time season, the Experimental Error seems to have established herself as a passable hitter – good average with a high OBP, although not quite much in the power department. Her abilities will be tested, especially on defense, when she moves in to become the team’s starting catcher in 2006.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2004 78 281 84 18 2 3 33 42 19 33 2 0 0 .299 .377 .409 .782 44.4 5.90
2005 72 254 77 14 2 5 40 40 25 34 1 1 0 .303 .386 .433 .819 45.2 6.74

Derek Lew, 1st Baseman: Expected to be a cornerstone of the young, new squad, unlike the previous two seasons Lew was anything but a measure of consistency in 2005. He started out the season with a huge April – .361-.370-.648, with 30 RBIs and 30 Runs, along with 17 doubles. At that point Lew had seemed all but set to go onto a career year. Instead, Lew plummeted, going .226-.247-.417 in May (yet somehow still driving in 16 RBI) before getting injured for 7 weeks with a fractured knee, a devastating loss that sidelined him until mid-July. Lew returned, but didn’t seem to be the same – he posted an impressive .282-.301-.615 July, but dipped down to .254-.269-.509 in August, and bottomed out at .176-.211-.308 in September. The postseason, however, seemed to hint at a resurgence for the powerhouse hitter – in 80 at bats (and 84 plate appearances), Lew went .325-.357-.637, driving in 17 RBIs and scoring 14 runs. He ended the season at .266-.285-.507, a mark which seems to indicate that his power-hitting prowess is all there, but he’s not making consistently good contact, despite posting a career-low 6 strikeouts. Overall, an extremely disappointing season for Lew, with an offseason spent hoping he can recover from his fractured knee and return to the form that helped him hit a league-leading 74 doubles and last 764 at bats in 2004.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 162 729 219 67 6 37 160 141 35 32 11 6 2 .300 .348 .561 .909 132.2 6.54
2004 162 754 241 74 1 28 133 138 24 19 7 7 0 .320 .344 .532 .876 127 6.33
2005 116 489 130 40 6 22 103 87 6 14 2 1 0 .266 .285 .507 .792 66.4 4.70

Rudy Puzon, Designated Hitter/Backup 1st Baseman: The rookie Puzon entered into the season as a player straight out of high school. Projected initially as a decent hitter with both low ceiling and high floor, Puzon shocked many when he posted a .325-.391-.588 line in his first month, while leading the team with 8 HR. Thereafter, Puzon settled into a consistent groove, and went on to post 116.8 Runs Created, 3rd on the team behind Batter of the Year Joey Wong and Rookie of the Year Henry Nghe, and hit .301-.383-.522, an extremely impressive performance that bodes well for the rookie. With Lew going down in late May, Puzon stepped up and filled in most of the games at designated hitter, and was one of the biggest additions in terms of replacing the output void left by the departures of sluggers Ho and Tienturier.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2005 139 554 167 16 5 32 115 109 94 76 2 5 4 .301 .383 .522 .904 116.8 7.65

Cristian Ortiz, 2nd Baseman: Signed on back in 2003 as a defensive wizard, Ortiz had big shoes to fill as he moved into the starting 2nd base job. No one expected him to hit for power, get on base consistently, or score runs – Ortiz’s role was purely as a defensive specialist who could hopefully pass as a decent hitter in the lineup. Ortiz started the season at the #8 slot, usually reserved for the worst hitter in the lineup. Having gone .257-.324-.421 in 2003 when he played half a season, and a .230-.296-.392 in only 25 games, the expectations weren’t very high. Ortiz, however, surprised all of his critics when he went .289-.315-.488 in his first month, a line he would more or less stick to. Throughout the rest of the season, Ortiz would draw comparisons to a “Jeter with speed”, as he hit a .284-.342-.460 line while knocking in a surprising 23 homeruns and stealing 58 bases. Like the real-life Jeter, however, Ortiz would really come to life once in the postseason, where he hit .422-.458-.688 in 64 at bats and hit 16 RBI and scored 12 runs, something which seemed to directly contradict his .173-.205-.212 line in close/late situations during the regular season. We’ll have to see next season if his newfound hitting abilities are the real deal or some one-season fluke.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 73 261 67 7 3 10 38 33 39 26 6 2 0 .257 .340 .421 .761 38.2 5.16
2004 25 74 17 0 0 4 17 6 13 7 0 1 0 .230 .313 .392 .705 8.7 3.85
2005 143 563 160 28 1 23 88 105 80 46 6 58 8 .284 .342 .460 .803 93.7 5.91

Kelvin Huang, Backup 2nd Baseman: Without a backup middle infielder for much of the first half of the season, newcomers Ortiz and Nghe manned the middle infielder positions for most all of the first half. Meanwhile, Kelvin Huang, a 60-rated second baseman and 40-rated shortstop, bashed away in the minor leagues, where he had gone 340 at bats with a .353-.437-.588 line. By July the club decided he was major-league ready, and was brought up to the bigs, where he served as a spot starter to give the starting middle infielders some much needed rest. Rather than being a simple fill-in starter, however, Chang exploded in his first two starts, going a combined 4-9 with 4 runs and 4 RBI. He went on to a .333-.359-.617 line in 60 at bats and 16 games, although he sank somewhat with a .217-.217-.261 August and saw a resurgence in limited duty with a .600-.588-.667 line in 4 September games. Overall, the rookie backup showed some strong flair, going .347-.365-.541 in 26 games, although the limited playing time and more standard scouting reports cast some doubt as to whether those numbers are truly representative of his ability. In any case, Daly City has seemed to have found a solid middle infielder from the bench, putting some confidence behind SS and 2B should Nghe or Ortiz ever go down with an injury.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
AAA 80 340 120 23 3 17 58 90 84 51   6 4 .353 .437 .588 1.025    
2005 26 98 34 8 1 3 21 17 18 4 0 0 0 .347 .365 .541 .906 19.4 7.72

Joey Wong, Third Baseman: With the big losses of Ho and Tienturier, much of the burden fell on Wong as the primary run producer, especially after Lew’s injury and subsequent troubles. Wong didn’t disappoint, and in this, his final year, finally captured the batter of the year award in which he had long been overshadowed by five tool players Ho and Tienturier. Wong finished .001 behind batting champion Nghe, and was #3 in OPS in the league, #8 overall in the entire Monti league, and finished 2nd with 148.5 runs created. The overall season was fairly on par with Wong’s career numbers he finished with a .361-.421-.567 line, and 130 RBIs and 124 Runs, to lead the team. For his career, he finished with 1924 at bats in 474 games, accumulating 707 hits, 115 doubles, 10 triples, and 92 HR, along with 421 RBI, 396 Runs, 220 K’s to 203 walks, and 31 stolen bases, for a .367-.427-.581 line, making him the team’s all-time leader in HR, RBI, Runs, Hits, and Batting Average.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 161 642 236 49 5 28 157 131 73 68 1 20 0 .368 .441 .590 1.018 161.8 10.07
2004 162 665 248 40 1 33 134 141 67 68 4 3 0 .373 .436 .585 1.016 165.5 10.13
2005 151 617 223 26 4 31 130 124 80 67 1 8 0 .361 .421 .567 .988 148.5 9.69

Joanna Maung, Backup saung-gah-basewoman: It was another year of slight improvement for the young third basewoman. Playing sparingly again (56 games, 186 AB), Maung put up some fairly good numbers – a .306-.378-.435 line, marking a good increase in her contact abilities, although this was somewhat negated by a decreased ability to garner walks – 21 in 207 plate appearances, compared to 26 in 186 the year. Nevertheless, she saw a second consecutive increase in her OPS. Whether she likes it or not, however, Maung seems set to be cast into the frying pan come next season – with the imminent departure of Joey Wong, Maung is left as the only player with significant experience fielding 3rd base, where she carries a 61-rating defense. Maung will have to demonstrate her ability to both field 3rd and improve her performance against lefties, against whom she batted .206-.325-.441 this season.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 39 135 37 9 0 0 20 25 23 20 1 0 0 .274 .373 .341 .714 18 4.66
2004 50 160 44 6 0 3 31 30 25 26 1 0 0 .275 .386 .369 .755 23 4.96
2005 56 186 57 6 0 6 32 32 26 21 1 1 0 .306 .378 .435 .813 31.9 6.48

Henry “Mr.” Nghe, Shortstop: The “rookie”, if a 28-year old can be called that, was a huge question mark entering the season. He seemed to have mediocre skills, and few believed he could jump in and begin replicating the OBP ability of the prior year’s Sean Mok to set the table. Instead, Nghe surprised many with his first .324-.389-.520 month, where he began a precipitous rise until the climactic month of August, where he posted a gaudy .414-.439-.638 line that solidified him as one of the premiere players of the game. Instead of being a bottom-of-the-order player, or even a top of the order table setter, by mid-season Nghe had found himself hitting in the #5 spot behind Joey Wong, with his league-leading .362 AVG and propensity for hitting big (49 doubles, 13 triples, and 74 extra base hits to lead the team) that would eventually lead to his winning the Rookie of the Year award. Barring a sophomore slump, Nghe looks poised to become one of the best shortstops in the league, and take on a role as one of the primary run producers of the team, especially with star 3B Joey Wong retiring.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
AAA 148 587 182 21 3 27 97 100 97 86   29 9 .310 .398 .494 .892    
2004 3 11 3 0 0 0 1 2 4 1 0 0 0 .273 .333 .273 .606 0.8 2.44
2005 148 607 220 49 13 12 100 118 89 46 3 19 9 .362 .408 .545 .953 139.3 9.13

Jonathan “The Cheet” Chee, leftfielder: After a dreadful 2004 spent in and out of a starting role, Chee returned to the Leftfield position he held in 2003, and in the two years since, has shown some dramatic development as a hitter. Chee started out slowly, with a .226-.314-.387 line, causing him to only play 8 games all of April (and allowing players like Tiffany Ho and Jason Liu a chance in the outfield). Chee bounced back in May, however, with a .324-.472-.471 line, buoyed by a monthly high 12 hit-by-pitches, despite only 88 plate appearances overall. Fully up to speed now, Chee found himself firmly in a starting role, and put up a solid and surprisingly consistent performance throughout the rest of the season, coming on fire in September when he belted out a .383-.495-.580 month, combined with a 12 hit-by-pitch surge that brought his total to a league-leading 49. For the season, Chee went .312-.436-.424, 3rd, 1st, and 8th on the team, respectively. Chee also piggy-backed a league-high 20 steals on double steals with Cubilo and Ortiz, a dramatic feat considering his 10 (out of 100) running speed and 5 stealing ability.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 144 525 146 18 2 8 68 68 112 70 4 3 0 .278 .363 .366 .729 75.3 5.23
2004 54 178 39 3 0 4 17 40 40 34 0 1 0 .219 .344 .303 .647 20.5 3.88
2005 119 446 139 23 0 9 73 93 65 52 49 20 0 .312 .436 .424 .860 92.2 7.78

Jason Liu, Leftfielder: Liu exploded onto the scene out of nowhere in 2004, getting a callup two months into the season and shocking all with a 39-39 double/HR performance in 433 AB, for a .323-.409-.702 season. Though projected in scouting reports as a raw power hitter, Liu’s overall line seemed to indicate a complete player, who had good contact and basewalking ability in addition to his propensity for extra base hits. Liu was up for a second season, and despite shocking numbers in 2004, once again started the season from the bench, with Jonathan Chee and Francis Chen seated at the corner outfield positions. With early struggles by both Chee and Chen, however, Liu came onto a starting role quickly, and mashed his way as a starter to succesively more impressive months in the first half. Liu hit some struggles in the second half, however, and with Jonathan Chee catching a groove, Liu found himself in a part time position as he continued some second-half struggles. Liu ended the season with a still impressive .298-.348-.579 line, cashing in on 28 homeruns, 3rd behind Puzon and Wong, despite having only 399 at bats.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
AAA 22 90 28 7 2 9 22 23 18 17   1 1 .311 .421 .733 1.154    
2004 118 433 140 39 4 39 126 104 109 63 14 2 0 .323 .430 .702 1.132 129.7 11.26
2005 100 399 119 18 5 28 89 83 106 30 3 9 0 .298 .348 .579 .927 79.7 7.32

Aubrey Cubilo, Centerfielder: Another of the soon-to-be-departed, Daly City’s longtime leadoff hitter would go off with a humble last season. After hitting at a torrid .319-.333-.459 pace, and stealing 26 bases in 46 games, before going down with a season-ending injury in 2003, Cubilo came back in 2004, asserting her proficiency at the leadoff position with 58 doubles and 15 triples, along with 123 runs and a team-leading 67 steals. This year, Cubilo provided more of the same, though sacrificing some power for improved on-base ability, and blazing the basepaths for a new league-record 77 steals to 9 caught stealing, for a 89.5% SB%. Aubrey retires with a .296-.322-.409 line, and 170 steals, far and away the all-time team leader.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2003 46 229 73 20 6 0 20 42 30 5 0 26 2 .319 .333 .459 .792 35.9 6.07
2004 153 698 204 58 15 0 83 123 78 23 6 67 13 .292 .323 .418 .741 98.2 5.05
2005 138 600 175 38 7 0 71 99 59 25 7 77 9 .292 .325 .378 .704 79.8 4.79

Francis Chen, Rightfielder: It was a maddening year for Francis Chen. After breaking onto the scene with a .241-.268-.537 season that showed as many gaping flaws as huge promises, Chen’s sophomore season proved to be all disappointment. Out of the gate, Chen stumbled with a .210-.333-.419 line, although his OBP and relative SLG showed some glimmer of hope if Chen could find the ability to make consistent contact. However, Chen only plunged to further depths of atrocity, going .125-.263-.250 in May and never getting better, eventually ending his season with a quite pitiful .179-.307-.417 line. While analysts and scouts everywhere knew Chen would be an inconsistent enigma, even his most pessimistic critics didn’t expect him to flame out this early. The future holds great uncertainty for the once promising Chen, although his ending line for the 2005 postseason run to the world series may yet leave a lingering bit of hope: .244-.400-.805 in 12 games, with a team-leading 7 homeruns.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
AAA 15 70 15 4 1 6 15 18 13 5   0 0 .214 .267 .557 .824    
2004 42 162 39 7 1 13 41 29 41 6 2 0 0 .241 .285 .537 .822 22.8 4.77
2005 79 252 45 9 3 15 44 39 69 46 2 10 2 .179 .307 .417 .724 36.1 4.49

Tiffany Ho, Backup SS, Outfielder: The spirited Ho, like fellow rookie Alfred Vong a fresh player out of high school (and the two youngest players on the team), turned out a decent performance in her rookie season, in which she went .279-.305-.361 with 10 steals in 64 games. Ho started off slowly, with a .243-.263-.297 April, but began to become progressively better, with strong contact numbers in the second half. She also seemed to be a much more confident player at home, where she hit .333-.365-.433. Given the ever-tumultuous outfield situation, especially with Chen’s flame-out and the retirement of Cubilo, Daly City fans chance to see a lot more of the spunky rookie outfielder in 2006.

Year Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
2004 64 233 65 12 2 1 23 34 35 8 1 10 1 .279 .305 .361 .665 25.6 3.95

The 2005 Batter Composite (sorted by Runs Created per 27 outs):

Name Games At bats Hits 2B 3B HR RBI Runs K Walks Hit-by-pitch Steals CS AVG OBP SLG OPS RC RC/27
Joey Wong 151 617 223 26 4 31 130 124 80 67 1 8 0 .361 .421 .567 .988 148.5 9.69
Henry Nghe 148 607 220 49 13 12 100 118 89 46 3 19 9 .362 .408 .545 .953 139.3 9.13
Jonathan Chee 119 446 139 23 0 9 73 93 65 52 49 20 0 .312 .436 .424 .860 92.2 7.78
Kelvin Huang 26 98 34 8 1 3 21 17 18 4 0 0 0 .347 .365 .541 .906 19.4 7.72
Rudy Puzon 139 554 167 16 5 32 115 109 94 76 2 5 4 .301 .383 .522 .904 116.8 7.65
Sam Lau 140 530 161 26 1 25 113 105 46 75 11 5 0 .304 .397 .397 .498 109.1 7.54
Jason Liu 100 399 119 18 5 28 89 83 106 30 3 9 0 .298 .348 .579 .927 79.7 7.32
Tina Quach 72 254 77 14 2 5 40 40 25 34 1 1 0 .303 .386 .433 .819 45.2 6.74
Joanna Maung 56 186 57 6 0 6 32 32 26 21 1 1 0 .306 .378 .435 .813 31.9 6.48
Cristian Ortiz 143 563 160 28 1 23 88 105 80 46 6 58 8 .284 .342 .460 .803 93.7 5.91
Aubrey Cubilo 138 600 175 38 7 0 71 99 59 25 7 77 9 .292 .325 .378 .704 79.8 4.79
Derek Lew 116 489 130 40 6 22 103 87 6 14 2 1 0 .266 .285 .507 .792 66.4 4.70
Francis Chen 79 252 45 9 3 15 44 39 69 46 2 10 2 .179 .307 .417 .724 36.1 4.49
Tiffany Ho 64 233 65 12 2 1 23 34 35 8 1 10 1 .279 .305 .361 .665 25.6 3.95

Recap of stats:
Games: The number of games a pitcher has played – although this is out of 162 games, pitchers are not expected to play all games
Starts: This is the number of times a starter has started the game. A full-time starter in a 5-man rotation can be expected to throw 32 starts. In a 6-man rotation, which the Daly City Montis use, a full-time starter can be expected to throw 27 starts.
Record: The win-loss record of the pitcher. Wins are how many times a pitcher has won a game, and a loss is the number of times the pitcher has lost, both calculated using complicated methods. These stats are largely irrelevant.
Saves: The number of times a pitcher has finished out a game and protected the team’s narrow lead. This stat is largely irrelevant.
Holds: The number of times a pitcher preserved a lead. This stat is largely irrelevant.
Blown saves: The number of times a pitcher has given up a narrow lead – low numbers are irrelevant, but high numbers indicate a bad reliever.
QS/CG/SHO: Quality Starts are how many times a starter has thrown 6 innings while giving up less than 3 runs, which is a standard of consistency. Complete games are how many times a starter has thrown the entire game, which is a standard of endurance. Shutouts are how many times a starter has thrown an entire game without giving up a run, which is a standard of dominance.
Innings: How many innings (baseball’s time unit) a player has thrown
K’s: Strikeouts (the batter fails to hit the ball at all) – strikeouts indicate a dominating pitcher
Walks: The number of times a pitcher allows a batter a free advance because the pitches are not thrown accurately – this is a rough indicator of a pitcher’s control and throwing accuracy.
HBP: Hit-batter-with-pitch, the number of times a batter has been hit with a pitch.
WP: Wild Pitch, in which the ball is thrown so far off target that not even the catcher can catch it.
RS/G: Runs Scored per Game, counting how many runs the offense scores per start by the pitcher.
AVG: The opposing batters’ AVG, indicating how often batters achieve hits
OBP: The opposing batters’ OBP, indicating how much the pitcher allows batters to reach base
SLG: The opposing batters’ SLG, indicating how much the pitcher allows batters to hit for power
K/9: The rate at which the pitcher throws strikeouts – roughly a metric of dominance
ERA: The number of runs a pitcher allowed on average – this is a measurement of the pitcher’s real performance.
CERA: A metric on the same scale as ERA, but which is an overall performance metric.
WHIP: Another overall performance metric, more crude than CERA.

Nathan Yan, #1 Starting Pitcher: The starting ace was dominant yet again this year, as Yan brought his lights-out pitching to an entirely new level. Once again finished 30-2 (he’s been 30-2 in 32 starts in all three seasons), Yan finished with an astounding 0.98 ERA and 0.48 WHIP, not to mention a godly 0.19 Component ERA. Padding his power numbers, Yan also struck out 469 batters in 276 innings this year, obliterating his previous career record of 444 K’s in 276 2/3 innings in 2003 and setting a 15.3 K’s per 9 innings mark. Yan also set career highs with 31 quality starts, 25 complete games, and 14 shutouts, and highlighted the season with astounding performances, including his 10-inning 1 hit shutout on opening day, FOUR 1-hitters and a no-hitter (1 on-base-by-ERROR short of a perfect game). Yan also pitched five consecutive shutouts in September, and currently holds a 28-game winning streak.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 32 32 30-2 0 0 0 28/21/10 276 2/3 444 18 9 13 6.3 .186 .206 .248 14.4 1.46 1.11 0.73
2004 32 32 30-2 0 0 0 31/22/11 277 1/3 366 30 10 9 7.3 .170 .201 .230 11.9 1.20 0.88 0.70
2005 32 32 30-2 0 0 0 31/25/14 276 469 20 6 3 6.9 .120 .144 .209 15.3 0.98 0.19 0.48

Josiah Leong, #2 Starting Pitcher: The ever on-the-cusp Leong threw in yet another almost there season. Making 30 starts, Leong switched back and forth between brilliance and abysmality – he made nine starts with 1 run or less, third most behind Yan and Zhao, yet ended up with the highest ERA of the five main starters and the highest WHIP of anyone on the entire team. Despite this, Leong continued to flash great potential – he struck out 227 batters, good for #12 in the league and #6 in the UL. In addition, his 11.1 K’s per 9 innings was second most in the league, only behind Yan. Leong’s Achilles Heel still seems to be his control – while his opponent’s AVG and SLG numbers seem to be a good .217 AVG and .392 SLG, his OBP was a high .324, especially considering his low initial AVG. He gave up 87 walks in only 183 2/3 innings, in addition to hitting 23 batters to lead the Universal League, although his 4.26 walks per 9 innings mark is dramatically improved from his 6.69 mark when he was a starter two years ago. With the starter’s pool getting crowded, with Zhao emerging as a dominant ace and rookies Wade and Chin proving their worth, and possibly a young Vong waiting in the wings, Leong’s hold on the #2 starter position, and even a guaranteed spot in the rotation, seems uncertain, as he’s currently the worst starter on the team.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 18 17 7-6 0 0 0 12/0/0 109 90 81 15 9 4.7 .201 .357 .388 7.4 4.21 4.41 1.45
2004 47 0 1-2 40 0 3 0/0/0 58 1/3 58 31 5 0   .189 .306 .354 8.9 3.70 3.02 1.20
2005 30 30 13-9 0 0 0 16/1/0 183 2/3 227 87 23 7 6.8 .217 .324 .392 11.1 4.07 3.84 1.27

Terrence Zhao, #3 Starting Pitcher: Zhao had a break-out year in 2004, where he was a surprise sleeper as the #3 starter, with a 2.94 ERA and 0.99 WHIP, a dramatic improvement over his 4.14 ERA and 1.37 WHIP in the inaugural 2003 seasons. With a dominating 3-hit shutout in his 1st start of the season, Zhao set the tone early, going 4-1 with a 1.64 ERA in the first month. From there, Zhao continued to dominate, and really began to shine when he hit August, where he pitched five consecutive shutouts. For the first time, Zhao also threw more K’s than innings, for a 9.3 K’s per 9 innings mark, and he asserted his dominance with a 2nd-place 27 quality starts, 2nd-place 9 shutouts, and 11th-place 11 complete games. Zhao also finished 2nd place in opponent’s AVG, OBP, and SLG. All in all, the past three seasons have seen tremendous growth for Zhao from a middling #5 starter to solid ace, and now to a lights-out legend, the undisputed second best pitcher in the league.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 28 24 14 7 0 0 14/2/1 163 120 91 5 0 7.5 .221 .324 .436 6.6 4.14 3.99 1.37
2004 28 28 15 4 p 0 20/7/4 186 2/3 143 68 5 0 6.7 .176 .257 .375 6.9 2.94 2.52 0.99
2005 31 31 23 4 0 0 27/11/9 237 1/3 245 75 4 0 6.9 .192 .258 .278 9.3 1.74 1.74 1.01

Sean Wade, #4 Starting Pitcher: One of three rookie starters on the team, Sean Wade came in projected as the #5 starter – a kid with good control and a decent floor who projected to be consistent, though not spectacular. Compared to fellow rookie Samantha Chin, Wade was to be the thunder to Chin’s lightning. Instead, Wade took off in the first half of the season, going 5-0 in five starts in the first month with a 2.04 ERA and an amazing 0.63 WHIP, bested only by Nathan Yan. Wade continued to dominate into May and June, and for a time even led the team in wins. By his fourth game, Wade would already have his first complete game shutout. He began to cool off once he hit the second half, however, with a bad 5.60 ERA July (although he still managed a decent 1.24 WHIP), and at the end of September finished the season at 20-8 in 29 starts, with a 3.00 ERA and 1.00 WHIP in 201 innings. To top it all off, Wade would go 4-0 in the postseason with a 1.72 ERA as the team’s second-best postseason starter. All in all, a huge rookie season for Wade, who also finished #2 in Rookie of the Year balloting behind teammate Henry Nghe, and a promising sign of huge things to come for the slow-throwing Wade.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2005 29 29 20-8 0 0 0 23/3/2 201 163 38 5 0 6.9 .217 .258 .345 7.3 3.00 2.33 1.00

Samantha Chin, #5 Starting Pitcher: The other half of the team’s rookie starter duo, Chin flashed on and off all season like a strobe-light – she was slammed with a horrific 7.33 ERA, 1.37 WHIP month in April, then proceeded with a promising 2.57 ERA, 1.09 May (where she went 3-1 with her only loss, a 9-inning 2-run outing). The following month would see her fall back to a more average 4.44 ERA, but the next July Chin jumped back with a 2.21 ERA and 0.90 WHIP. She would fail to keep her success going on, however, and met with a 5.76 ERA, 1.44 August, before showing her explosive side yet again with a 2.70 ERA, 0.98 WHIP September. The most amazing aspect of this is that through it all, Samantha finished with a 13-1 record, the second W-L ratio on the team, luckily aided by her league-best 7.7 run support per game. Overall, an extremely promising rookie year for Chin, who showed flashes of being one of the league’s best starters every other month. Whether she can harness that into season-long consistency remains to be seen.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2005 26 26 13-1 0 0 0 14/2/1 168 1/3 163 37 16 13 7.7 .234 .290 .402 8.7 4.06 3.23 1.11

Miguel Pardo, #6 Starting Pitcher: The old stalwart, with magic soaking his spine – no one could read Pardo’s mind in April, when he went a phenomenal 3-0 in 3 starts, throwing 25 innings with 2 complete games and 1 shutout, posting a 1.08 ERA and 0.76 WHIP. Pardo, who had been with the team as a starter since way back in the 2003 season, had always showed flashes of brilliance that were often drowned out by his other starts that were often so bad that sports writers didn’t know whether they could still call him a ‘starting pitcher’ or if the simple ‘thrower’ was a more appropriate term. Pardo’s start, however, amazed all, and many wondered if Pardo had finally gotten it all together. After all, Pardo’s 1.08 ERA was even lower than the great Nathan Yan’s! The doubts were all back with his 4.43 ERA follow up month, but a 2.93 ERA and 1.04 WHIP in June once again sparked intense interest in the #6 starter. The magic would run out eventually for Pardo, however, as he settled into his old-self numbers – a 6.38 second-half ERA. Pardo would end the year with a 9-2 record and 4.19 ERA and 1.27 WHIP, showing significant improvement over his previous two years, although his second-half numbers cast serious doubt over exactly how much Pardo developed. Like Leong, Pardo, who’s on the borderline as one of the worse pitchers on the team, faces stiff competition in the rotation, where several new pitchers have emerged to crowd the rotation

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 21 19 10-3 0 1 0 9/1/0 126 79 90 2 1 8.2 .241 .362 .395 5.6 4.79 4.52 1.61
2004 9 9 3-4 0 0 0 4/1/1 46 25 34 0 0 5.7 .302 .401 .556 4.9 6.65 7.62 1.98
2005 20 13 9-2 1 0 0 8/2/1 103 77 35 3 0 7.8 .247 .311 .399 6.7 4.19 3.57 1.27

Alfred Vong, Long Reliever: Another newcomer this year, Alfred, who projected as a starter, figured to spend most of his time in the bullpen, especially with the packed rotation. There Vong pitched as the team’s long reliever all season, accumulating 63 2/3 innings in 24 games, including 1 start late in the season. Overall, Vong’s 4.24 ERA was slightly under the league’s average, but this statistic partly masks Vong’s fine season-long performance that was peppered with huge meltdowns. Vong started out very well, maintaining a sub-3.00 ERA at the half-season point, but saw his July ERA balloon up to 8.18, and got hit hard again in September with an ERA of 21.60. Discounting the months of July and September, Vong’s ERA would be a scant 2.01. The prospects look good for the young rookie, although it may yet be a while longer until Vong finally gets a shot at a full rotation spot.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2005 24 1 4-2 2 3 0 1/0/0 63 2/3 53 15 1 1 12.4 .245 .289 .469 7.5 4.24 3.83 1.18

Angel Poon, Middle Reliever: As the team’s middle reliever, a supersized rotation meant that the bullpen saw little work this year, and having been displaced as the team’s top reliever by now-setup reliever Alvina Chu, Poon worked only 50 innings, compared to 65 the past two seasons. Poon’s ERA also saw a bump from a 2.88 ERA 2004, although this was somewhat expected given the rather high 1.14 WHIP last year. Overall, Poon was very effective during the three-month middle summer stretch from May-July, but she got slammed in the other months, resulting in a fairly average overall season.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 41 0 3-2 1 13 3 0/0/0 65 51 11 4 3   .252 .289 .388 7.1 4.15 3.42 1.14
2004 28 0 4-1 4 2 0 0/0/0 65 2/3 46 13 0 1   .249 .286 .414 6.3 2.88 3.20 1.14
2005 27 0 2-2 2 4 2 0/0/0 50 1/3 45 11 3 3   .262 .310 .449 8.0 3.75 3.96 1.19

Katie Clayton, Mopup Reliever: The often down Katie Clayton finally came around to putting up a decent season this year – after hitting the 9.00 ERA mark each of the past two seasons (on 43 and 12 innings), with WHIPs well into the 1.90’s, Clayton turned in a 4.50 ERA and 1.21 WHIP, and a 3.70 Components ERA. With the rotation getting ever more crowded, however, and showing no signs of letting up their dominant, complete-game throwing performances, Katie Clayton, the league-average bullpen pitcher, may be a part of a dying breed that won’t remain very much longer with the team.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2003 30 0 0-0 0 4 0 0/0/0 43 26 31 1 0   .316 .411 .526 5.4 9.00 7.63 1.98
2004 10 0 0-0 0 0 0 0/0/0 12 8 13 1 0   .238 .429 .405 6.0 9.00 5.95 1.92
2005 21 0 0-0 2 1 1 0/0/0 34 34 12 4 0   .240 .324 .438 4.0 4.50 3.70 1.21

Helen Yamamoto, Mopup Reliever: Taking over the title from Katie Clayton as worst pitcher ever, Yamamoto set record-worsts in pitching for the Daly City team – she packed a 9.35 ERA and 2.54 WHIP, and even worse, had a components ERA of 12.05. Despite this, she still pitched a substantial 26 innings of work, raising the team’s ERA from 2.83 to 2.94 all on her own.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s Walks HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
2005 19 0 0-0 2 0 0 0/0/0 26 12 22 0 0   .379 .475 .672 4.2 9.35 12.05 2.54

Alvina Chu, Setup Reliever: After breaking onto the scene with a stunning 2.58 ERA, 1.04 WHIP part season in 2004, Chu impressed even further in 2005, although not without controversy. Chu became the team’s primary reliever, appearing in 35 games and 63 2/3 innings with a 1.70 ERA and 0.91 WHIP. Chu, however, was not the most consistent of relievers, especially early on. While she pitched astoundingly well on her own, she made life a nightmare for many of the starters, inheriting 28 runners and allowing a team-high 11 (39.3%) to score, making her the 7th worst pitcher in the league. Chu also finished 3rd with 7 blown saves in 19 opportunities, robbing many a starter of a hard earned win while padding her league-leading 9 wins as a reliever.

Year Games Starts Record Saves Holds Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP RS/G AVG OBP SLG K/9 ERA CERA WHIP
AAA 12 0 1-1 8     0/0/0 14 11 3             7.1 1.29   1.14
2004 20 0 5-0 2 0 0 0/0/0 38 1/3 41 13 1 1   .196 .270 .283 9.6 2.58 2.10 1.04
2005 35 0 9-3 1 12 7 0/0/0 63 2/3 54 16 0 1   .191 .239 .309 7.6 1.70 1.72 0.91

Zubeda Khan: The rookie reliever came in at the beginning of the year hoping to be the team’s next new savior at the closer role, which has now seen a tumultuous 3 closers in 3 years. Would she be the one to finally establish security at the position? Khan seemed to have the right make for a closer – unlike last year’s flamethrower Josiah Leong, Khan was projected as a crafty, control-driven pitcher who’d be able to finish out games with consistency. Khan astounded in April when she jumped out to an 0.87 ERA and 0.68 WHIP in 10 1/3 innings of work, working 9 games, saving 5 games, and winning one in the process, quickly drawing comparisons to 2003’s closer Michelle Absalon (she had finished that year with an 0.83 ERA, 0.88 WHIP, and 46 saves in 64 2/3 innings). The magic wouldn’t last very long, however, as Khan got hit badly in May and June, before throwing 7 shutout innings in July and also having a good September. Overall, the rookie managed to save 29 games in 34 opportunities, marking a second straight year of decline after Josiah’s 40 edge-of-your-seat saves in 2004 and Absalon’s 46 saves in 2003. Perhaps Khan’s consistency will begin to develop later on in her career, but for now, it’s back to the drawing board to find a consistent closer for Daly City.

Year Games Starts Record Saves
Holds
Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP
RS/G
AVG OBP SLG K/9
ERA CERA WHIP
2005 42 0 2-3 29 0 5 0/0/0 46 2/3 38 11 0 1   .241 .283 .408 7.3 3.47 3.28 1.14

2005 Pitcher Composite (sorted by Components ERA)

Name Games Starts Record Saves
Holds
Bl.Sv. QS/CG/SHO Innings K’s
Walks
HBP WP
RS/G
AVG OBP SLG K/9
ERA CERA WHIP
Nathan Yan 32 32 30-2 0 0 0 31/25/14 276 469 20 6 3 6.9 .120 .144 .209 15.3 0.98 0.19 0.48
Alvina Chu 35 0 9-3 1 12 7 0/0/0 63 2/3 54 16 0 1   .191 .239 .309 7.6 1.70 1.72 0.91
Terrence Zhao 31 31 23 4 0 0 27/11/9 237 1/3 245 75 4 0 6.9 .192 .258 .278 9.3 1.74 1.74 1.01
Sean Wade 29 29 20-8 0 0 0 23/3/2 201 163 38 5 0 6.9 .217 .258 .345 7.3 3.00 2.33 1.00
Samantha Chin 26 26 13-1 0 0 0 14/2/1 168 1/3 163 37 16 13 7.7 .234 .290 .402 8.7 4.06 3.23 1.11
Zubeda Khan 42 0 2-3 29 0 5 0/0/0 46 2/3 38 11 0 1   .241 .283 .408 7.3 3.47 3.28 1.14
Miguel Pardo 20 13 9-2 1 0 0 8/2/1 103 77 35 3 0 7.8 .247 .311 .399 6.7 4.19 3.57 1.27
Katie Clayton 21 0 0-0 2 1 1 0/0/0 34 34 12 4 0   .240 .324 .438 4.0 4.50 3.70 1.21
Alfred Vong 24 1 4-2 2 3 0 1/0/0 63 2/3 53 15 1 1 12.4 .245 .289 .469 7.5 4.24 3.83 1.18
Josiah Leong 30 30 13-9 0 0 0 16/1/0 183 2/3 227 87 23 7 6.8 .217 .324 .392 11.1 4.07 3.84 1.27
Angel Poon 27 0 2-2 2 4 2 0/0/0 50 1/3 45 11 3 3   .262 .310 .449 8.0 3.75 3.96 1.19
Helen Yamamoto 19 0 0-0 2 0 0 0/0/0 26 12 22 0 0   .379 .475 .672 4.2 9.35 12.05 2.54

A look at the team awards for the 2005 season:

Team Defensive Player of the Year: Sam Lau
Despite starting only 139 games, the stout catcher actually led the league in starts, defensive innings, and total chances. Most importantly, however, Lau also led the league by a huge margin with 48.3% of would-be basestealers thrown out, which was probably the biggest factor in earning him the league’s Golden Glove award at catcher, as well as the team’s defensive player of the year.

Rookie of the Year: Henry “Mr.” Nghe
It’s rare for a player to perform so well in his first year, but the 28-year old “rookie” performed better than any rookie in recent memory since Ichiro Suzuki made his first appearance in the Major League Baseball league and won both Rookie of the Year and MVP. Nghe didn’t do quite so well, but did win the league’s Rookie of the Year award and made a strong showing in the Batter of the Year awards. The shortstop exceeded all expectations and developed into a polished, middle-of-the-lineup hitter. Nghe emerged as the best among a strong class of rookies – Rudy Puzon himself developed into another strong, middle-of-the-lineup hitter, and also led the league in homeruns. Sean Wade also developed into one of the best and most consistent pitchers in the league, and Samantha Chin showed strong promise as she put together a very decent rookie season. The younger rookies, Alfred Vong and Tiffany Ho, also performed decently in limited time, and should see even bigger roles next season.

Comeback Player of the Year: Jonathan “The Cheet” Chee
There weren’t many candidates to choose from this year – for such a young team, not many players have really had time enough to be great, fall from glory, and become great once again. While not the epitomic Comeback Kid, “The Cheet”, the RF starter way back in the 2003 season, had put up a decent .278-.363-.366 line in 525 at bats in 2003 – average in the average department, decent in the OBP department, and downright atrocious in the SLG department. With the sudden surge of RF power potential in newcomers Francis Chen and Jason Liu in the 2004 season, Chee took a backseat, playing only 54 games (178 at bats) and putting up a .219-.344-.303 line. With Norman Ho gone this year, however, Chee found a berth at LF, and after a slow start, became the starting LF and put up his best season yet – .312-.436-.424 in 446 at bats, with career highs in virtually every hitting category, including a dramatic cutting down of K’s from 112 in 525 at bats to a 65 in 446.

Breakout Player of the Year: Cristian Ortiz
Although this award could have also gone to Chee, who developed from league-average obscurity + OBP ability to become an AVG and OBP machine, Ortiz, the team’s second base defensive wizard, who had been a below-average Pokey Reese type hitter each of his past two seasons, displayed solid hitting and tremendous speed for the first time ever – Ortiz far more than doubled his numbers from his 2003 half-season, hitting 28 doubles to his previous 7, 88 to 38 RBI, 105 to 33 Runs, and most importantly 58 to only 2 steals.

Performance of the Year: 5-peat shutouts by Zhao and Yan
This year’s Performance of the Year award goes to Zhao and Yan, who in consecutive months accomplished a streak of 5 consecutive shutouts – from July 30 through August 22, Zhao made 5 complete game shutouts in 5 games, including a one-hitter in which he also struck out a career-high 17 batters. During this time, Zhao gave up 23 hits, 16 walks, and got 44 strikeouts, for a WHIP of 0.87 and an 8.8 K/9. Picking up right where Zhao left off, the following month Yan embarked on his own 5 shutout streak, although one of these games was marred by an unearned run on an error. Nonetheless, Yan threw 5 complete games without an earned run, including two 2-hitters and another near-perfect game (imperfect because of an error) and 18- and 19-K games. Overall, Yan gave up 13 hits, 2 walks, and got 81 K’s, for a WHIP of 0.33 and a 16.2 K/9.

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The 2005 Playoffs: Divisional Series Review

Game Recaps

10/10/05 – After 7 games, the divisional playoff round comes to a close, abound with some absolutely shocking results.

U.S. takes Daly City down to the wire in 3-3 showdown!
Perhaps the most heavily one-sided matchup in the playoffs, the Daly City team, bolstered by both the best offense and pitching in the league, got clobbered by the Patriots in game 1.  With ace Nathan Yan resting from pitching the last game of the regular season, #2 Josiah Leong took the mound against the Patriot’s John Coyer, a 10-14 starter with a 5.08 ERA and 1.44 WHIP over the regular season.

The results were disastrous – Leong took a heavy beating, giving up 4 runs in the 1st inning.  Meanwhile, the offense was unable to muster much of anything, going scoreless for the first 6 innings.  Leong appeared to take smooth control thereafter, but hit trouble again in the 6th inning – he gave up 2 runs of his own and 2 more on errors, allowing the U.S. an 8-0 lead. Daly City clawed its way back up to 6 runs, mostly on the strength of back-to-back homers by Joey Wong and Derek Lew, but ultimately fell short, suffering a shocking 12-6 defeat at the hands of the Patriots.

The next three games saw strong pitching performances from Terrence Zhao, Nathan Yan, and Sean Wade, who went on to lead the team to 9-3, 14-1, and 19-1 victories, putting them just a game shy of advancing to the next round.  Around this time, the offense also exploded, with huge games by Derek Lew, Rudy Puzon, Cristian Ortiz, and most surprisingly, Francis Chen.

With Josiah Leong up for another turn, the Daly City Montis suffered another lost, although this team Leong pitched a decent game, throwing 7 1/3 innings while giving up 4 runs on 5 hits and 5 walks.  However, it was the hitting that did the team in – the Patriot’s Camilo Belmonte shut out the team, allowing only 3 hits and 2 walks, and emerging with an 0-4 win.

The next game, with Terrence Zhao pitching against the lowly Craig Oberle, seemed to be a lock.  Daly City jumped out to a lead early, scoring 5 runs in the first four innings.  The U.S. answered back with 2 runs, but scored FIVE more in the 6th, where Terrence Zhao got shelled by an Andrew Amey 2-RBI double and a couple of triples.  With Daly City down 5-7, they put in 2 runs in the 8th from an Aubrey Cubilo double and Joey Wong HR to tie the game up at 7-7, and bring the game into extra innings. Samantha Chin, who had come in after Zhao’s disastrous 6th, gave up a homerun in the 10th to Juan Truex, and as all seemed lost, Kelvin Chang is replaced with Sam Lau, who successfully draws a walk to first, and gets replaced by Cristian Ortiz.  Cubilo advances him to 2nd on a single, and they both double-steal to get on 3rd and 2nd.  With the game on the line, Francis Chen of all players knocks in a sacrifice fly to bring Ortiz home, and tie the game up.  Daly City is unable to score another run, however, and in the 13th the United States scores a run off of a William Brown double, giving the United States a 9-8 win in 13 innings, and just like that, tying the series up at 3-3.  With the team’s entire playoff hopes on the line, Daly City’s Nathan Yan steps up to the mound for game 7, delivering a beautiful 1-hit, 2-walk shutout for a 3-0 win, and moving Daly City (just barely) onto the league series round.

Over in the other Universe League series, Europe delivered not only a surprising upset over the Apple Septic Tanks, but swept Apple with a 4-0 series win.  Europe delivered on the pitching, with an excellent win by #1 Wilfredo Raposa, but also two solid starts by #2 Justin Pucci, who won both of his games and pitched 15 1/3 innings, with a 2.35 ERA and 0.78 WHIP.  Closer David Avila also pitched extremely well, closing out all four games while not giving up a single run.

Things were a bit more predictable in the Shinto-World league – with an absolutely abysmal performance by Richard Eager (.105-.227-.158, 2 RBI, 1 Run), Nikon could hardly muster any offense, and the Vibration Reducers lost the seriese 1-4.  The Tokyo-Paris game, as expected, was a tight one, which drew out into a full 7 game series, which included three 1-run games and an extra inning game that was won 12-3 on 9 Tokyo runs in the 10th inning.

The next series sees a Europe vs. Daly City matchup, and Paris vs. Canon matchup as we progress to the Final Four league series round.

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