Season of opposites in AL Central
We like to think we know something about baseball. All of us.
Those of us who cover it. Those of us who follow it. Especially those of us who actually put together baseball teams for a living. But then along comes a season like this. And along comes a division like the 2008 AL Central. And two months into a wild and crazy season, it feels as if everything we thought we knew about the AL Central has happened exactly the opposite. Heck, even the general managers who are right in the middle of this thing can't figure their own division out. "If you have an answer," Twins GM Bill Smith chuckled, "let me know." Yeah, sure. Here are the answers we thought we had a couple of months ago: The Tigers and Indians were going to stampede away with this division -- and naturally, they're a combined 16 games under .500. The Twins were going to tread water while they rebuild -- and of course, they're 1½ games out of first place. The Royals were going to be better -- and they just lost 12 games in a row. Which brings us to the White Sox. We might have figured that this team and its mega-loquacious manager would be an ongoing soap opera. But who'd have figured Ozzie Guillen would be second-guessing his GM, publicly tossing his hitting coach into the firing lines and fanning those soap-operatic flames while he was in first place? Nope. Never saw any of that coming. None of it. So now that we've watched it unfold for two months, what have we learned about the AL Central? "I'll tell you one thing we've learned," said Indians GM Mark Shapiro. "This is just one more reminder of how little we really know. But that's the beauty of our game." Ah, it's a beautiful thing, all right. So let's review baseball's most topsy-turvy division -- and see if we can sort out where it's been and where it's heading:| CHICAGO WHITE SOX |
WHAT WE EXPECTED: We figured Nick Swisher and Orlando Cabrera would add energy. We also figured Scott Linebrink and Octavio Dotel would turn out to be $30 million in ill-advised bullpen dollars. And most of us concluded this team still wouldn't have enough going for it besides starting pitching to beat out the Tigers or Indians. Oops.
WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENED: Carlos Quentin has vastly outperformed Swisher. Cabrera has moved into the master suite in Guillen's doghouse. Linebrink and Dotel have helped turn this bullpen into the best 'pen (2.80 ERA) in the league. Gavin Floyd and John Danks have answered their doubters. Jose Contreras has reincarnated himself -- again. And the White Sox have spent 45 days in first place -- more than they'd spent in the two seasons that followed the 2005 World Series parade combined.
TRIVIALITY
Before he was known for his riveting quotations, Ozzie Guillen was known for something else -- never letting the count get to ball four. Well, almost never. Guillen's 12 seasons with fewer than 30 walks (and at least 100 games played) are the third-most since 1900. But there's an active player in our midst, a well-known multiple All-Star, who has had nine seasons with under 30 walks. Can you name him? (Answer later.)
| CLEVELAND INDIANS |
WHAT WE EXPECTED: We expected this to be the deepest pitching staff in baseball. We expected this relief crew to be the best bullpen in the AL Central. We expected Travis Hafner to bounce back. And we expected a team that won 96 games last year to take that next step. Hey, it all seemed logical at the time.
WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENED: The best starting pitcher in town has been -- who else? -- Cliff Lee. C.C. Sabathia has almost as many starts in which he's given up nine runs (two) as he has wins (three). Injuries (Fausto Carmona, Jake Westbrook and Joe Borowski) have tested that pitching depth. The bullpen has the second-highest ERA (4.44) in the AL. And Hafner (hitting .217, with 2 homers) headed for the DL last week with a sore shoulder -- and a lower OPS (.677) than Marco Scutaro or Jack Hannahan.
BEST REASON TO THINK THEY'LL WIN: Even though Westbrook figures to be out indefinitely, this rotation is still as good as any in baseball. Carmona (hip) returns by the end of the month. Sabathia (2.08 ERA in his past eight starts) is himself again. And this team's sixth and seventh starters -- Aaron Laffey and Jeremy Sowers -- are better than some teams' third and fourth starters.
Blake
| DETROIT TIGERS |
WHAT WE EXPECTED: It was all so clear once upon a time. This was going to be one of the most terrifying lineups in the history of lineups. Right? Drop Miguel Cabrera into the middle of all this thunder and he might drive in 200 runs. Right? Even the modern record for runs scored in a season (1,067) was reachable. Right?
WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENED: Uhhh, wrong, wrong and wrong. No team in baseball has been shut out more times than the Tigers (nine). No team in the AL has scored two runs or fewer more times than the Tigers (23). And Cabrera, whose weight has headed upward while his OPS has headed downward (by 164 points), has been a perplexing disappointment. "It kinda looks," said one scout, "like his interest in getting in shape only lasted as long as it took to get his [new $152-million] contract signed."
BEST REASON TO THINK THEY'LL WIN: The Tigers have 103 games left, and they can't be this bad. Can they? Joel Zumaya and Fernando Rodney should be back in the bullpen shortly. Justin Verlander (a league-leading six Criminally Unsupported Starts) hasn't been as awful as his record (2-8). And we'd bet $1,000 this offense won't wind up leading the big leagues in shutouts. "I don't know anyone who didn't think they'd score a lot of runs," said one AL executive. "And I mean anyone. I was as sure as you. We recognized their other issues -- bullpen, age, depth. But their big trouble has been scoring runs. And it's hard to believe that will continue."
BEST REASON TO THINK THEY WON'T WIN: How come nobody noticed in March that these pieces didn't fit together really well? Seven of the Tigers' nine everyday players are 32 or older. And that age is really showing up on defense, in which the Tigers rank in the bottom four in the AL in fielding percentage and range factor. "I really don't see how they can recover," said an official of one team. "They have so many issues, they could lead the league in runs scored, and I'm still not sure that would make a difference."
Bonderman
| MINNESOTA TWINS |
WHAT WE EXPECTED: In a year in which they waved goodbye to Torii Hunter and Johan Santana, changed general managers and had to start Livan Hernandez on opening day, it's hard to find anybody -- from Kent Hrbek to ex-Gov. Jesse Ventura -- who thought this team would find a way to contend. But at least the Twins added a little thump in Delmon Young. Uh, didn't they?
WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENED: OK, not exactly. Young has more at-bats (223) without a home-run trot than any player in baseball. Hernandez has won more games (six) than Verlander and Bonderman combined (five). And the Twins are the only team in the entire American League that still hasn't lost more than three games in a row.
Gomez
| KANSAS CITY ROYALS |
WHAT WE EXPECTED: This was going to be the year. The year they didn't finish last. The year they took a run at .500. The year Billy Butler and Alex Gordon became certifiable offensive forces. The year Trey Hillman's managerial positivity changed the culture of a team that was sick of lugging the weight of 13 straight losing seasons. Yeah, this was going to be the year, all right.
WHAT'S ACTUALLY HAPPENED: Too bad the season didn't end around April 9. The Royals were 6-2 then. In first place. Feeling good about life. But unfortunately, they kept playing. Whereupon Butler slumped himself all the way back to Omaha, after slugging just .339. And Gordon is coming along, but they'd kind of like him to outhomer, say, Rod Barajas. And this team just lost 12 in a row -- for the fourth time in four seasons. Which is four more times than the Yankees have had a 12-game losing streak in the past 95 seasons.
Soria
Ready To Rumble
• OH SAY CAN YOU C.C.: C.C. Sabathia to the Red Sox? Our spies say the Indians have "got their soldiers out, looking at other clubs with depth and prospects," just in case they decide to put their ace on the market. And one organization they've been scouting most heavily is (yep) the Red Sox.
Sabathia
SEEING STARS
Two months ago, the Giants were viewed as having as little talent as any team in baseball. Now one scout says of them: "You could legitimately make a case for having four Giants on the All-Star team." To which we need to add: No kidding. And those four are the following:
Aaron Rowand (.328 AVG., .924 OPS, 8 HR, 36 RBIs): "A great player. He brings so much to the table. Defense. Offense. And a great energy guy." Bengie Molina (.328 AVG., .861 OPS, 6 HR, 37 RBIs): "There are very few players I'd rather have up there with the winning run on third and less than two outs than Bengie Molina." Brian Wilson (16 SAVES, 28 K, 24 IP): "He's the National League's Joe Nathan, except nobody knows it." Tim Lincecum (7-1, 2.23 ERA): "He'd be my pick to start the All-Star Game. I'd take him over [Brandon] Webb, for right now anyway. I'm really impressed by Tim Lincecum. Nobody can hit his fastball or his curve. He has an idea what he's doing. And he has real good presence."
Blanton
TRIVIA ANSWER
Pudge Rodriguez has had nine seasons of at least 100 games played but fewer than 30 walks -- one more season like that than both Garret Anderson and Mark Grudzielanek.
Utley


