Showing posts with label All MLB Team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All MLB Team. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Milwaukee Brewers Top 10 Moments

Baseball returns to Milwaukee (1970): Baseball came to Milwaukee in 1953 when the Braves moved from Boston. The team only stayed a dozen years before moving to Atlanta. Milwaukee baseball fans had to wait five years before the Brewers moved in from Seattle to replace Hank Aaron, Eddie Mathews, and Warren Spahn. In less than a decade, the Brewers were a powerhouse.

Hank Aaron’s final home run (July 20, 1976): Hank Aaron hit his 755th and final home run off California’s Dick Drago. Little did anyone know that Aaron’s final big fly would occur in July for the Brewers. He retired baseball’s all time home run leader. The Brewers won 6-2.

The Yount Game (October 3, 1982): Milwaukee and Baltimore entered the final game of the 1982 season tied for first. Each needed a win to clinch the AL East. In a match up of Hall of Fame big game pitchers, Don Sutton beat Jim Palmer 10-2 behind Robin Yount’s two homers. For the game, Yount went 3 for 4 with 4 runs scored and 2 RBI solidifying his MVP credentials. Yount would win a second MVP in 1989.

Cooper’s single sends Brewers to the World Series (October 10, 1982 Game 5 ALCS): The Brewers fell behind Gene Mauch’s Angels 2 games to none in the 1982 ALCS. They rallied to win Game 3 behind Don Sutton and clubbed California in Game 4. In Game 5, they trailed 3-2 in the seventh when Cecil Cooper singled in two for the lead. Milwaukee held on for the win and their first pennant. Without Rollie Fingers, they lost an exciting World Series in seven games to St Louis.

Juan Nieves No-Hitter (April 15, 1987): Juan Nieves no-hit the Baltimore Orioles early in the 1987 season. He was aided by a great play in centerfield by Robin Yount. Nieves pitched three seasons in the majors finishing with a 32-25 record.

13-0 (April 20, 1987): Juan Nieves’ no-hitter was part of a 13-0 start for Milwaukee. They swept the AL Champion Red Sox at home, swept the Rangers and Orioles on the road, Texas at home, and then won the first game at Comiskey Park. The White Sox broke the streak with a 7-1 win on the 21st. Milwaukee finished with 91 wins and a third place finish.

Paul Molitor’s 39-game hitting streak (1987): Paul Molitor hit .353 in 1987. That season, he embarked on a remarkable 39 game hitting streak. It was the longest streak since Pete Rose’s 44 gamer in 1978. Only six players have had longer streaks.

Robin Yount gets his 3000th hit (September 9, 1992): On September 9, 1992, Robin Yount singled off Cleveland’s Jose Mesa for his 3000th hit. Interestingly, hit 1000th and 2000th hit also came off Cleveland. George Brett joined Yount in the 3000 hit club a couple weeks later. Cleveland won the game 5-4.

Brewers move to NL (1998): As part of Bud Selig’s reorganization and MLB’s expansion, Milwaukee moved to the National League. They lost their first game to Atlanta 2-1. In their inaugural NL campaign, Milwaukee finished 74-88.

Brewers make the postseason ending 26 year drought (2008): An exciting Brewer team made the postseason for the first time since 1982. The team’s late season acquisition of C.C. Sabathia and his clutch pitching down the stretch assured the team’s success. Unfortunately, C.C. burnt out by the end and Milwaukee lost the LDS to Philadelphia. However, it provided a core group of young players playoff experience.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Top 10 Arizona Diamondbacks Moments

Diamondbacks: 3 Giants: 2 (April 5, 1998): The Diamondbacks lost the first five games in the team’s history. On April 5, 1998, they finally broke through with a win against the Giants. Andy Benes pitched 7 strong innings for the win. Arizona finished their inaugural season 65-97.

Diamondbacks clinch NL West (September 24, 1999): In an amazing turnaround, the Diamondbacks won 100 games in 1999. On September 24, they clinched the division title with an 11-3 victory over San Francisco. Arizona made the playoffs in just their second season in existence making them the fastest expansion team to go to the postseason.
Randy Johnson k’s 20 (May 8, 2001): Randy Johnson dominated the Reds. The lefty struck out 20 equaling the mark held by Roger Clemens and Kerry Wood. Unfortunately, his team could not win in regulation. The Diamondbacks won in 11.

Tony Womack’s NLDS walk-off single (October 14, 2001): Curt Schilling pitched a complete game as the Diamondbacks defeated the Cardinals in five games. Tony Womack’s 9th inning single scored Danny Bautista to clinch the series.

Diamondbacks win the pennant (October 21, 2001): Randy Johnson led the Diamondbacks to their first pennant beating the Braves 3-2. Byung-Hyun Kim finished up for the save.

The Gonzalez single (November 4, 2001): In the conclusion to an exciting World Series, Luis Gonzalez capped off a 9th inning rally with a single to win the title. The Yankees took a 2-1 lead into the ninth after an Alfonso Soriano home run off Curt Schilling. Randy Johnson finished the 9th and earned his third victory.

Curt Schilling throws 1-hitter (April 7, 2002): Curt Schilling allowed a second inning single to Raul Casanova and that was it. He shut out the Milwaukee Brewers 2-0 and struck out 17 batters. Three different Brewers scored a hat trick. Not a single batter reached second base.

Randy Johnson perfect game (May 18, 2004): Randy Johnson is the oldest man to throw a perfect game. At 40 years 7 months old, Johnson handcuffed the Atlanta Braves striking out 13.

Brandon Webb 42 scoreless IP (August 17, 2007): Brandon Webb shutout the Atlanta Braves to extend his scoreless streak to 42. The major league record is 59 innings held by Orel Hershiser. It was the twelfth longest streak in history. His three straight shutouts was the longest streak since 1998. The scoreless streak ended in the first inning of his next start against Milwaukee.

Doug Davis returns from cancer (May 23, 2008): Pitcher Doug Davis returned from thyroid cancer to beat the Atlanta Braves 11-1. The Dbacks made it easy on Davis with 5 first inning runs. Davis went 7 innings allowing 5 hits and a single run for the win.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

2010 All Major League Baseball Team

1b- Miguel Cabrera- Detroit


2b- Robinson Cano- Yankees

SS- Troy Tulowitzki- Colorado

3b- Adrian Beltre- Boston

OF- Ichiro- Seattle

OF- Carlos Gonzalez- Colorado

OF- Josh Hamilton- Texas

C- Joe Mauer- Minnesota

DH- Vladimir Guerrero- Texas

Utility- Omar Infante- Braves

RHP- Roy Halladay- Philadelphia

LHP- C.C. Sabathia- Yankees

REL- Joaquin Benoit- Tampa Bay

Closer- Brian Wilson- Giants

MVP: Joey Votto, Josh Hamilton
Cy Young: CC Sabathia, Roy Halladay
Rookie of the Year: Buster Posey, Austin Jackson
Manager of the Year: Bud Black, Ron Washington

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

All Time MLB Team

Here is my all-time Baseball Team.

1b- Lou Gehrig - Yankees

2b- Rogers Hornsby - Cardinals

3b- Mike Schmidt - Phillies

SS- Honus Wagner - Pirates

C- Johnny Bench - Reds

RF- Babe Ruth - Yankees

LF- Ted Williams- Red Sox

CF- Ty Cobb- Tigers

DH- Paul Molitor - Brewers

Bench:

C: Yogi Berra - Yankees

OF- Rickey Henderson - A’s

OF- Willie Mays- Giants

OF- Mickey Mantle- Yankees

SS/1b- Ernie Banks - Cubs

2b- Joe Morgan- Reds

3b- George Brett - Royals

IF/OF- Pete Rose- Reds

Pitching:

RHP- Walter Johnson - Senators

LHP- Lefty Grove - A’s

RHP- Greg Maddox - Braves

LHP- Sandy Koufax - Dodgers

RHP- Bob Feller - Indians

REL- Rollie Fingers - A’s

REL- Mariano Rivera - Yankees

REL- Goose Gossage - Yankees

REL- Dennis Eckersley - A’s

REL- Bruce Sutter - Cardinals

REL- Hoyt Wilhelm - Giants

P- Randy Johnson - Diamondbacks

P- Tom Seaver - Mets

Monday, October 5, 2009

2009 All MLB Team

C- Joe Mauer- Twins

1b- Albert Pujols- Cardinals

2b- Aaron Hill - Blue Jays

3b- Evan Longoria-Rays

SS- Hanley Ramirez- Marlins

DH- Jason Kubel- Twins

OF- Ichiro- Mariners

OF- Ryan Braun- Brewers

OF- Matt Holliday- A’s/Cardinals

UT- Ben Zobrist- Rays

UT- Juan Pierre- Dodgers

RHP- Zach Greinke-Royals

LHP-C.C. Sabathia- Yankees

RP- Jeremy Affeldt- Giants

Closer- Mariano Rivera- Yankees

Friday, August 21, 2009

MLB All 1970s Team

C-Johnny Bench- Reds
1b- Tony Perez- Reds
2b- Joe Morgan- Reds
3b- Pete Rose- Reds
SS- Dave Concepcion- Reds
OF- Reggie Jackson- A’s/Yankees
OF- Willie Stargell- Pirates
OF- Fred Lynn- Red Sox
DH- Don Baylor- Orioles/Angels
RHP- Tom Seaver- Mets
LHP- Steve Carlton- Phillies
SP- Nolan Ryan- Angels
SP- Jim Palmer- Orioles
SP- Catfish Hunter- A’s
RP- Rollie Fingers- A’s

Friday, July 10, 2009

All Century Team

19th Century that is...

C: Buck Ewing- Giants
1b: Cap Anson- Cubs
2b: Bid McPhee- Reds
3b: Lave Cross- Phillies
SS: George Davis- Giants

OF: Sam Thompson- Phillies
OF: Ed Delahanty- Phillies
OF: Willie Keeler- Orioles
UT: Dan Brouthers- Wolverines
SP: Cy Young- Spiders

P: John Clarkson- Beaneaters
P: Pud Gavin- Bisons
P: Tim Keefe- Metropolitans
P: Old Hoss RadBourn- Grays

Sunday, October 5, 2008

2008 All MLB Team

1b- Albert Pujols- Cardinals
2b- Dustin Pedroia- Red Sox
3b- Chipper Jones- Braves
SS- Hanley Ramirez- Marlins
OF- Carlos Quentin- White Sox
OF- Ryan Ludwig- Cardinals
OF- Manny Ramirez- Red Sox/Dodgers
DH- Aubrey Huff- O's
C- Joe Mauer- Twins
UT: Reed Johnson- Cubs
RHP- Roy Halladay- Blue Jays
LHP- Cliff Lee- Indians
REL- Carlos Marmol- Cubs
Stopper- Francisco Rodriguez- Angels

2007 All MLB Team

1b- Prince Fielder- MIL: Fielder the Younger is a force at the plate that is reminiscent of his father. This season, he became the youngest player to ever hit 50 homers in a season. He also drove in 119 runs. Not bad for a kid that I remember from a bad McDonald's ad in the early 90s.

2b- Placido Polanco- DET: Polanco hit .341 and committed 0 errors on the season. His record for consecutive errorless games will go into next season.

3b- Alex Rodriguez- NYY: Do I really need to explain?

SS- Jimmy Rollins- PHL: It is hard to pick a Phillies offensive player because their ballpark is a complete joke, but Rollins is getting serious consideration for MVP. This season, he became the 4th player in history with 20 doubles, 20 triples, 20 homers, and 20 steals.

OF- Matt Holliday- COL: The probably NL MVP. This was a career year for Holliday. He lead the league in hitting and RBI and oh yeah, helped lead Colorado to the playoffs for the first time in 12 years by tripling off Hall of Famer Trevor Hoffman and then scoring the Wild Card winning run.

OF- Magglio Ordonez- DET: The Tigers' first batting champ since 1961. Maggs was also 2nd in the league in RBI and hit over .400 with RISP. If A-Rod had not put together such a ridiculous season, Maggs would be MVP.

OF- Curtis Granderson- DET: The third player to join the 20-20-20-20 club and the first in 50 years. Granderson sparked Detroit's offense and played gold glove caliber defense in the field. He also hit .302.

C- Jorge Posada- NYY: MLB has a catching shortage. There aren't many great catchers anymore. Posada is one of the old guard and put up some gaudy offensive numbers. He hit a career high .338 with his usual 20 homers and 90 RBI.

DH- David Ortiz- BOS: When he's done, Ortiz may hold all the power records for the DH position. Big Papi defines clutch and was just heating up as the Sox sail into the October storms. Ortiz suffered a bit from an off year by Manny Ramirez, but still proved to be the AL's premier Designated Hitter.

Bench- Marlon Anderson- NYM: 95 at-bats and 27 RBI.

RHP- Jake Peavy- SD: Although Peavy did not get it done against Colorado, he was still MLB's top right handed hurler for the 2007 season. He led the majors in strikeouts (240) and ERA (2.54) and the NL in wins (19).

LHP- C.C. Sabathia- CLE: The AL CY Young Co-Favorite. C.C. had a monster year.Sabathia went deep into games, beat the AL's best (Verlander and Santana) time and time again, gave up fewer hits than IP, struck out 209 batters, and went 19-7.

Setup- Rafael Betancourt- CLE: The most annoying player in MLB. He's slooooow. During one game against Detroit, the umps penalized him because he took too long. He is this generation's human rain delay, but also a major reason Cleveland made the playoffs. Put Betancourt in Detroit, and the Tigers are still playing this season.

REL- Jonathan Papelbon-BOS: He's just unhittable. Papelbon pitched less this season and as a result, he is still effective. He saved 37 games in 40 chances, whiffed 84 batters in 58 1/3 innings, and gave up just 30 hits. His WHIP was 0.77.

Honorary Member: Craig Biggio: HOU: Craig Biggio was a Hall of Famer without the 3000 hits. He played the game the way it was supposed to be played. Biggio always hustled, came up with the big play when needed, was always dirty, and had the world's messiest batting helmet. Pro-Sports needs more Craig Biggios.