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Oct. 4, 2004

MLB 2004 Playoff Predictions: Round One

by Isamu Bae, Page Editor
New York Yankees vs. Minnesota Twins
There is a simple difference in this series. The Yankees have no pitching. The Twins have pitching. In the end, that is going to be the difference.

The Yankees rotation is composed primarily of Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez (currently ailing with an exhausted shoulder), followed by Mike Mussina (4.59 ERA), Javier Vazquez (4.91 ERA) and Jon Lieber (4.33 ERA). That is pathetic. Kevin Brown is in their bullpen, as is former Cy Young candidate Esteban Loaiza. They'll spell the overworked trio of Pat Quatrill, Tom Gordon and Mariano Rivera.

Against the Yankees, the Twins plan to show of the nasty Johan Santana, backed by Brad Radke and Carlos Silva. Their ERAs are all better than the Yankees’s ERAs. The bullpen is no pushover either. The Twins have Juan Rincon, former top setup man J.C. Romero and Joe Nathan. They don't inspire as much fear as the Yankees top three relievers, but they get the job done.

The Twins will win this series if only because of Johan Santana. Santana has a 2.61 ERA and 265 strikeouts in 228 innings. The Yankees have not been able to solve him this season. There is no reason to believe the Yankees will discover the hidden secret to beating Santana now. That leaves the solid Brad Radke and Carlos Silva to jockey for one more win. Laugh all you want, but there is little reason to doubt the feasibility. Radke went 1-0 and a no decision against the Yankees this season. That is not good news for the Yankees in this best of five.

Boston Red Sox vs. Anaheim Angels
MVP candidates in this series include Manny Ramirez, David Ortiz, and Vladimir Guerrero. Expect a lot of long balls.

The big difference in this series will, again, be the pitching. Boston will send out Curt Schilling (21 wins), Pedro Martinez and Bronson Arroyo as its top three, while the Angels sling out Bartolo Colon, Kelvim Escobar and John Lackey. Forgive me for saying so, but I'm not convinced those three can handle the Red Sox offense.

The Angels, however, do have one of the best top three relievers in the game. Scott Shields has been solid (although he does own a 3.33 ERA), Francisco "K-Rod" Rodriguez is being hailed as the probable future closer, and Troy Percival is as dominant as ever. On the other hand, the Red Sox know their bullpen is their Nomar Garciapar- I mean Achilles Heel. Keith Foulke was traded for as the marquee closer, but he has been shaky. The rest of their bullpen has been relatively horrid. The injury to star setup man Scott Williamson will haunt them in this series.

That said, these teams pack enough firepower to win the game on offense alone. Their offenses are fairly evenly matched, so the series will be decided upon the stronger rotation vs. the stronger bullpen. The Red Sox, on the merits of having Schilling and Pedro as their top two, will come out on top of this one.

St. Louis Cardinals vs. Los Angeles Dodgers
Three weeks ago this would have been no-contest Cardinals. Now, though, a slew of problems have cropped up for the Cardinals at the most inopportune time. The test is on.

Three weeks ago, the Cardinals looked like the perfect team. An All-Star studded offensive lineup and a rotation that caused many teams to stare in envy. Their maligned bullpen was pulling through successfully and it seemed that the one negative aspect of the Cardinals – their pitching – was solid. However in the past three weeks, Chris Carpenter has gone down due to a bicep injury (he was leading the staff with a 3.46 ERA), Matt Morris began losing control, and now their staff looks like Jason Marquis, Jeff Suppan and Woody Williams. That is nothing bad – they all have ERAs ranging from 3.7 to 4.2. But in the pitching-dominated league, whether that is enough is up for grabs. They play, after all, the Dodgers, led by Odalis Perez and Kazuhisa Ishii. If it is of any consolation, however, the Cardinals bullpen has held up while the Dodgers bullpen has crumbled with the trade of Guillermo Mota and the injury to Darren Dreifort.

The Cardinals can sure punch the ball hard, though. They have five players who hit more than 20 homers this season (Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, Jim Edmonds, Reggie Sanders and Larry Walker). They have four players who hit above .300 and a whole slew of others who hit very close. If their pitching staff falters, the Cardinals offense does have the ability to pick up the slack. The Dodgers are led by Adrian Beltre and Steve Finley, but the Dodgers offense is laughable in the face of the Cardinals.

And that offense is precisely why they will advance. The Cardinals pitching staff is solid enough to hold opponents under five runs while their offense packs enough power to launch five solo shots in one game.

Atlanta Braves vs. Houston Astros
The Astros were supposed to get here. The Braves were not. Against all odds, the Braves did manage to win their 13th straight division title and the Astros, despite a horrible mid-season record, scrambled back into the playoffs.

Could it all have been for naught, though? The Braves have a good relatively healthy rotation, lead by Jaret Wright (3.28 ERA) and followed by John Thompson (day-to-day 3.72 ERA), Paul Byrd (3.94), Russ Ortiz (4.13) and Mike Hampton (4.28). Not bad for a rotation that was supposed to be only a shell of what was left behind after the departures of Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine. Their bullpen has a dominating ERA average of around 3 and their offense is clicking. The Astros, on the other hand, have a beat-up staff that has lost Andy Pettitte and Wade Miller to season-ending injuries. Their bullpen has a good setup and closer, and their offense is one of the most explosive in the game.

Roger Clemens and Roy Oswalt are the only givens on this staff which has been bouncing Tim Redding from rotation to bullpen repeatedly while using the services of random pitchers like Bradon Backe. Only three pitchers have tossed more than 100 innings for the Astros this season, and they are Rocket, Oswalt and Redding. Hardly a solid rotation. In a best of five, however, two pitchers could very well be enough. The Astros have an arguably better offense than the Braves (Who would not want Lance Berkman, Carlos Beltran, Craig Biggio, Jeff Bagwell and Jeff Kent on the same team?)

In an upset, the Astros are going to surpass the Braves in this series. Clemens and 20-game winner Oswalt will drag out three wins. How far beyond that the Astros can go is beyond anybody's guess, though.



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  • 07 on October 5, 2004
    you are fools... orioles fans like yourselves always predict the downfall of the yankees and they always win... look at the facts. the yankees won 101 games this season, even with the 18th best team era. they happened to hit the most home runs in the majors. they have found ways to get it done all season, why should that change against johan santana and his relatively uninspiring mates? also, lieber and mussina have each lower their ERAs by over a run in the past month and a half. clearly, they have been solid lately and look to be good for the playoffs. yankees in four, santana sneaks one in. guaranteed.
  • Neil Hofman on October 5, 2004
    I am absolutly disgusted with your constant Yankee bashing. How is it that almost every baseball analyst says the Yankees will win this series? You're prediction are always Yankee biased. Did you think about the fact that Mussina has been dominating this last month and lifetime against the Twins is fabulous, NO. Did you consider that El Duque is always, ALWAYS, on the mark in the postseason? A complete gamer with a 9-3 postseason record and 2.51 ERA? NO. Did you mention that Kevin Brown, regardless of how stupid he is, was able to throw 5 strong innings last week, and we all know he steps it up when he needs to? NO. I think the most important aspect of your analysis is you never mention the following names, A-rod, Sheffield, Matsui, Lofton, Williams, Posada and most importantly Jeter. Not once do you remind people that this offense has 61 come from behind wins, the most ever, 242 home runs and the ability to draw walks. I believe good pitching wins over good hitting but this is not good hitting, its amazing hitting and shutting every one of these guys down for three games is a huge task. Lastly, the yankee bullpen. You complain about how rivera and gordon are so overworked, yet one is the league leader in saves and both have era's well under 3. I have respected most of your sports writing but I cannot respect this section on the Yankees. Even if you do think the twins will win, present all the evidence and don't make it seem like the twins won 100 games this season.
  • Aaron (View Email) on October 6, 2004
    Uh...how can you talk about the Yankees doing well in the last month when two of the best pitchers in the last month were Santana (who is the best pitcher in the American League, no questions) and Brad Radke. In the 5 game series, the Yankees will have to face these two a total of 4 times. And Mussina may have lowered his ERA, but he has to face Santana both times, so you can't really say he has the advantage there. The Twins will win in 4. Isamu is right in this case.
  • sam silsbee on October 6, 2004
    looks like the yankees got spanked last night!!
  • Isamu Bae (View Email) on October 6, 2004
    Neil, I have a couple simple responses.
    1) Mussina is a great pitcher. But against Johan Santana, I am sorry, but Yankees lineup or no, I'm taking Santana.
    2) El Duque is great. I think he's their best pitcher on their staff. If he didn't have shoulder problems at the most inopportune time. As it is, he is being pushed back to a game 4 start, and even that is still questionable. That would be against Santana. Santana has absolutely dominated the Yankees this season, and I see no reason why he will fail to do so now. Even against Hernandez.
    3) Kevin Brown is being pushed in as a game 3 starter. He has nasty stuff, but frankly, "stepping it up" in terms of Kevin Brown is getting injured. But did you know that he is not as good of a post-season player as you think? However, I will give you one thing: he is at his best during the divisional championships with a 0.83 ERA. But it begins ballooning from there, culminating in a 3.61 overall postseason ERA. That's a great statistic, but his last postseason appearance was seven years ago. He obviously seems to have been struck by fatigue then. Seven years and lots of injuries later, I don't know if he has the stamina to be as dominant as the Yankees need here.
    4) Hitting is great. But here's another thing: of the four AL playoff teams, only the Twins have horrible hitting. But they get it done, that's why they won 90 games. But here's one stat I didn't want to mention: the Yankees as a team hit .268. That's good for a tie with the White Sox and the Cubs.
    5) Come-back wins means they do well against relievers. The Twins have one of the best bullpens in the league. Come-back wins will be tough to come-by here.

    There're plenty of stats that can back up and shut down both sides.

    07:
    Actually, I'm an A's fan. If there's a team I should be bitter at, it's the A's and the BoSox. But oh well.

    If there is anything that last season proved, "uninspiring teammates" can very well win games behind pitching. Perhaps it's a tormented A's mentality, but I hold to my beliefs that dominant pitching can win games. Now, granted, Radke and Silva and Lohse and Mulholland are far from dominant, but their bullpen is dominant enough that it can take over the game. Sure, Rivera is a shut-down closer and Gordon and Quatrill are some of the league's best. But they're overworked, which will have a bigger effect in the postseason than one may be inclined to believe. I'm not saying the series is going to be a walk in the park for the Twins. It'll probably be a 3-2 series that is very, very close. But I think that the Yankees rotation and long relievers are so instabile that even with their remarkable hitting, winning will be tough against the Twins.
  • Neil Hofman on October 10, 2004
    Well, well, well. One wild pitch and three comeback victories and the Yanks are moving on to face Boston. It looks like comeback victories do matter in a season. And even though the twins have santana, the yankee starting pitching was actually more solid in the series. Now they'll beat boston just like last year. Don't doubt the curse!
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