Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted May 4, 2006 Posted May 4, 2006 A month into the season, it looks like we have a few candidates to give our boys from '62 a run for their money. Our contestants are:1. Kansas City (5-20, .200)The hapless Royals are still winless on the road and just placed Mike Sweeney on the DL with a bulging disk.2. Pittsburgh (8-21, .276)Pittsburgh, meet Carlos Delgado. 3. Florida (7-18, .280)It doesn't help that they have to play the super-awesome Mets 19 times.
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted May 4, 2006 Posted May 4, 2006 Oooh, very nice!I still haven't gotten over that late-season winning streak the Tigers mounted a few years ago. I thought that record was going to fall.While Kansas City looks promising, I'd prefer to see Florida or Pittsburgh break it. That way, the Mets will lose both the major league and the National League record.It seems kinda cruel to root against the Pirates like that, though. So my preference is Florida. The Marlins have won two World Championships in the last ten years. They can stand to have a colossal losing season.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted May 4, 2006 Posted May 4, 2006 "How does it go? 'I cried because I had no shoes, until I met a man with no feet. And then I met a man with no legs. And then I met a Kansas City Royals fan.' " --- Minnesota Twins blogger
Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted May 4, 2006 Author Posted May 4, 2006 Because of the rainout and the tie, the "record" has a few different facets. If we're looking at losses alone, obviously we would need 120 to tie, 121 to break.In order to "break" the record for lowest win percentage, a team would have to lose 122, assuming no ties or rainouts.But that would still mean the Mets would hold the record for fewest wins since they only won 40 that year. So, if we're looking to lose that record, we need a team to lose 123.
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted May 4, 2006 Posted May 4, 2006 Yes, I remember all those angles from the Tigers' season in, what was it? 2003?It's the most losses thing that I'm most interested in. I would have been happy if the Tigers had gone 41-121. I just looked it up: They won 5 of their last 6 and ended up 43-119.Sheesh!
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted May 5, 2006 Posted May 5, 2006 In yesterday's action: Pirates lose, Marlins and Royals win.
Elster88 Old-Timey Member Posted May 5, 2006 Posted May 5, 2006 Gary and Ronnie seemed to think that the Pirates will improve greatly as the season progresses. I think only KC has a shot at it this year.
Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Author Posted May 22, 2006 May 22, 2006Kansas City: Just when it looked like things were picking up for them, the Royals have now lost 9 in a row. 10-31 (.244). Yesterday Scott Elarton told the press that he thinks they're not very good.Florida: The Marlins have dropped 7 in a row, including getting shut out by Scott Kazmir on Sunday. They are still ahead of the pace at 11-31 (.262) but remain in striking distance.Pittsburgh: The Pirates have gone a blistering 4-6 in their last 10 raising their win percentage above .300. At 14-30, they are threatening to make this a two-horse race.
Guest sharpie Guests Posted May 22, 2006 Posted May 22, 2006 KC may just have the worst team I've seen in many years. Who's their All Star representative? Usually on terrible teams their closer gets the shot (see Denys Baez's TB slot last year) but they've just replaced their closer with Elmer Dessens f'chrissake. Mark Grudzielanek is hitting .300 but with no power. Reggie Sanders has been hurt much of the year and Mike Sweeney for virtually the whole year. Royals might just hit 120. Marlins at least have some talent which is likely to get better, they're likely to put a good streak or two together (not this coming weekend but later).
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Posted May 22, 2006 Although I'm hoping they won't get the record, KC has the best shot. In case you didn't notice yesterday's box scores, Doug Mientkiewicz is hitting third for them.'Nuff said.Later
Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Author Posted May 22, 2006 I saw we start a movement to declare Kansas City a natural rival so we can play them 6 times a year.
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Posted May 22, 2006 sharpie wrote:KC may just have the worst team I've seen in many years. Who's their All Star representative? Usually on terrible teams their closer gets the shot (see Denys Baez's TB slot last year) but they've just replaced their closer with Elmer Dessens f'chrissake. Mark Grudzielanek is hitting .300 but with no power. Reggie Sanders has been hurt much of the year and Mike Sweeney for virtually the whole year. Royals might just hit 120. Marlins at least have some talent which is likely to get better, they're likely to put a good streak or two together (not this coming weekend but later).A perfect reason to abolish the whole "every teams needs representation" from the MLB ASG
Gwreck Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Posted May 22, 2006 SteveJRogers wrote:="sharpie"]KC may just have the worst team I've seen in many years. Who's their All Star representative? Usually on terrible teams their closer gets the shot (see Denys Baez's TB slot last year) but they've just replaced their closer with Elmer Dessens f'chrissake. Mark Grudzielanek is hitting .300 but with no power. Reggie Sanders has been hurt much of the year and Mike Sweeney for virtually the whole year. Royals might just hit 120. Marlins at least have some talent which is likely to get better, they're likely to put a good streak or two together (not this coming weekend but later).A perfect reason to abolish the whole "every teams needs representation" from the MLB ASGEh, but that's one of the fun parts.Grudzielanek will be the Royals rep. AL is short on second basemen anyway -- Iguchi and Roberts, and Grudzielanek isn't that much different than Loretta or Cano.
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted May 22, 2006 Posted May 22, 2006 Gwreck wrote:="SteveJRogers"]="sharpie"]KC may just have the worst team I've seen in many years. Who's their All Star representative? Usually on terrible teams their closer gets the shot (see Denys Baez's TB slot last year) but they've just replaced their closer with Elmer Dessens f'chrissake. Mark Grudzielanek is hitting .300 but with no power. Reggie Sanders has been hurt much of the year and Mike Sweeney for virtually the whole year. Royals might just hit 120. Marlins at least have some talent which is likely to get better, they're likely to put a good streak or two together (not this coming weekend but later).A perfect reason to abolish the whole "every teams needs representation" from the MLB ASGEh, but that's one of the fun parts.Grudzielanek will be the Royals rep. AL is short on second basemen anyway -- Iguchi and Roberts, and Grudzielanek isn't that much different than Loretta or Cano.Eh, but that's one of the reasons why no one has given a damn about the AGS in several decades. Course thats also due to the fact that not only are there 30 teams now in the league, but now, unless you are one of those causal fans of just one team that can't tell Todd Helton from Todd Marinovich* with no desire to do anything except watch that team's broadcast, you have plenty of opportunites to see all the big name players in the game, something that did make the game "fun" at one point. That really was the only time you could see the other league's stars*My neighboor, a Yankee fan, complained about a Yankee-Rockie game that he didn't know any of the players on the Rockies despite the fact that Todd Helton is one of MLB's geniune stars, and Marinovich was that Raiders pot-head QB a few years back that had one of those "Tennis Parents" that wanted to make him a star QB from child birth
Guest GYC Guests Posted June 11, 2006 Posted June 11, 2006 KC improved (by their standards) to 16-44, a .267%. Florida and Pittsburgh are almost pushing .400%, so they're done.KC is on pace for a 43-119 season.
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted June 11, 2006 Posted June 11, 2006 There's reason for hope, then. A nice five-game losing streak and their pace will look much better.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted June 12, 2006 Posted June 12, 2006 I doubt it will, but here's hoping that that Kansas City's triple play helps in a small way to change directions for them.In case you missed it, it went like this, according to one of the wire services:With Aubrey Huff on third and Rocco Baldelli on first, Russell Branyan flied out to David DeJesus in shallow center. Huff came home on the play and Baldelli attempted to take second on the throw home, but was thrown out by pitcher Scott Elarton , who was backing up the throw to the plate.Angel Berroa tagged out Baldelli and then threw to Mark Teahen at third base as the Royals claimed Huff had left early. Third base umpire Bob Davidson agreed with the appeal and ruled Huff out.Now, I want to look at how jive Aubrey Huff was, for a guy getting caught with his pants down.Firstly, even though the ball has been overthrown and the catcher has presumably chased it out of the ipcture, Huff, perhaps just as an exercise, comes in spikes high.Now that may be nothing; it just looks bad, but no real deal there. But then I read his comments. Now, remember how he has screwed his team."I didn't realize that was a triple play," Huff said. "That's how unimpressive that was. It's a joke. You've got to make sure, it has to really be obvious. It cost Branyan a RBI."I mean, wow. He's the victim, not the goat here."I didn't realize that was a triple play."That suggests you don't quite have your Devil Ray head in the game."That's how unimpressive that was."The goal is to win, not to impress. As the D-Rays won 8-2; you could be a little more gracious with acknowledging your boner."It's a joke."And the punchline is... Aubrey Huff!"You've got to make sure..."No, Aubrey you've got to be sure the ball is caught before you leave the base. The umps call them as they see them."...it has to really be obvious.."What part of the rulebook is that from?"It cost Branyan a RBI."Your baserunning did, not the umpire's call. And is it really about stat-pumping?
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 Royals are currently riding a four-game winning streak, and their winning percentage is way up to .310. Not looking good, at the moment, for those of us who want to see the 1962 Mets record fall.
smg58 Old-Timey Member Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 On the other hand, the team they just swept was the Pirates...
Guest ScarletKnight41 Guests Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 Something I will be sure to mention in my upcoming Pirates KTE.
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 While you're concentrating on the Pirates and Royals, don't lose sight of the Braves. They are on a 10 game losing streak and so far in June, they are 2 - 18.Could they be the dark horse challenger to the record?Stay tuned, y'all.Later
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 That would be fabulous, but the Braves have won 30 games. They'd have to go 10-77 to tie the 1962 Mets at 40-120. (They'd need to play at a .115 winning percentage the rest of the way.)Maybe next year!
Guest sharpie Guests Posted June 23, 2006 Posted June 23, 2006 The Braves going 10-77 (and therefore 12-96) would be one of the greatest things that's ever happened.
Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted June 23, 2006 Author Posted June 23, 2006 With all ten of those wins coming against the Phillies.
Elster88 Old-Timey Member Posted June 28, 2006 Posted June 28, 2006 KC winners of 8 of 10....probably because of interleague play. Apparently this "American League" is winning some games. (25-50)Pittsburgh has lost twelve in a row to drop to 26-52.Both teams on pace to win 54.
Guest Yancy Street Gang Guests Posted July 26, 2006 Posted July 26, 2006 The record is safe this year. Every team is within at least a few games of 40 wins.
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 26, 2006 Posted July 26, 2006 Ah well...Better luck next year, probably the same suspects next year. Any Tigers in that bunch?
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