Baseball Stats

If this works right, this link will take you to today’s UBL stats.

I think it works. I will be saving pages to be linked to as the season progresses.

To understand the overall totals, whatever team is first in a category, it gets 10 points, down to 1 point for last place. (We have 10 teams in the league.) If there is a tie, as there often is at the beginning of a season, then each tied team gets the average points for the range of points they fall in. i.e. if 1st and 2nd are tied, they each get 9.5 points ((10+9)/2). If three teams are tied for last place, they each get 2 points ((1+2+3)/3)

PS. In case anyone wonders, GANYF has something to do with rooting for anyone playing against the New York Yankees, though I don’t think it is said that politely. This is from a Red Sox aficionado who believes that “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.”

Problems

I seem to be having some difficulty pasting HTML tables into Word Press, so I will try something different and link to them instead, if that works.

Driving Adventures with Jack

I decided to drive on down to Dallas for the annual Fantasy Baseball Draft. The draft was on Saturday so I decided to take Friday off, leave Thursday night from work, proceed down I-25 to Raton NM, catch US 87 East, stop in Amarillo to sleep, continue on to Dallas Friday, stay with a friend Friday night, draft Saturday morning/afternoon, head back to Amarillo Saturday evening, spend the night and then head on home via Raton Sunday.

It almost worked.

Thursday, a snow storm blew through the area but it cleared up by afternoon and I figured that Raton Pass would be cleared by the time I got there. And it was. It took a while getting through the pass since I was right behind the plow that was clearing it, but I reached Raton by 9 PM. From Raton, I would catch US 87 straight through to Amarillo. Except that the nice Police Officer said that US 87 was closed and wouldn’t be cleared until mid-morning (it is very windy in that part of NM and snow drifts tend to get very deep) and there were a lot of 18-wheelers parking by the side of the road, waiting for it to open. It was not going to be a good drive in the morning.

But, I remembered from the last time I fled Texas, back in 1992, that there was a way to get to I-40 from Raton without having to backtrack all the way to Albuquerque. So I headed on down to Springer, found a gas station that was still open, checked out their map and indeed found the route that backtracked my flight when I missed the US 87 turnoff in Amarillo in ’92 and ended up on I-40 heading to Albuquerque. (I realized, as I approached the New Mexico border, that I was on the wrong track and found the back road route to Raton on the map and got off at San Jon) This time, I was going in reverse. And rather than drive all night (like I did last time) I was going to find a place to sleep before I got to Amarillo. So, after zipping through the New Mexican night, I ended up in Tucumcari and got a room at a motel on Route 66. Awakening bright and late Friday morning I got on I-40 and headed east to Amarillo (about 2 hours away) where I once again almost found the right road to Dallas. I got off on US 87 South towards Lubbock, nagged by the thought that something wasn’t right. And before going too far I realized that I needed US 287 South to get to Dallas. So, I turned around, got back to I-40 and followed the signs to US 287 South and continued on for another 6 hours to Dallas, hitting the Metroplex just at rush-hour. I was immediately reminded why I fled Texas 13 years before.

I found my friend’s place, even though he had flown off to India several hours earlier, got on line to check the baseball web-pages and got to sleep early and slept soundly. The next morning I headed over to the draft, selected my team and then went to diner with some fellow owners. (Mr. Wok’s in Plano, very tasty Chinese) After dinner, I headed back to Amarillo. Got to Amarillo about 12:30, found a comfortable motel room for the night and slept as long as I wanted. About this time, time was springing forward, but that isn’t relevant to this tale. Sunday morning, I refueled, body and car, and carefully followed the US 87 and US 287 North signs out of town and started home. The drive home was rather uneventful. Texas has this annoying habit of having divided highways with 70MPH speed limits running into little towns every 30 miles where the speed limit through town is 35 MPH. And you know that these towns probably get most of their revenue from the suckers who don’t slow down.

So I was toodling along, minding the towns when they showed up and then suddenly noticed I was in Oklahoma (the roads were better). OK was not on my itinerary. I figured I would continue on to the next town, Boise City, and find out what happened. From previous trips I had this vague idea that Boise City was in New Mexico, maybe I was just going to take the long way around. I stopped at a station in Boise City, told the clerk I had taken a wrong turn somewhere and was apparently lost. She asked where was I supposed to be? Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, or Texas? because otherwise I was stuck in OK. I told her I was heading to Colorado and she suggested I stay on US 287 to Lamar, Colorado and then head over to Pueblo and I-25, or I could take this other highway over to Clayton, NM and catch US 87 there to Raton, NM and I-25. It was about the same distance either way. (Evidently, I missed the split of US 87 and US2 287 in Dumas or Dalhart many miles down the road and kept blindly following the US 287 signs. I couldn’t believe I had completely missed New Mexicio. Do you know how big that state is?

I decided to try the Lamar way so I wouldn’t have to learn a new route sign from the one I had been following for the past 500 miles. Colorado wasn’t far beyond Boise City and I settled in for a long drive. Denver was 288 miles away, Lamar about 80. I haven’t been in that part of Colorado before, the Southeastern plains. There are actually towns below 4000 feet in that part of the state. (In Colorado, the town limit signs announce the town name and the elevation of the town, not the population as found in many other states. People in Colorado can get pretty prickly about their elevation. I live at 7200 feet, and I’m not in the mountains.)

I drove though a wind farm just south of Lamar. It was rather impressive seeing just the blades turning over the horizon of the ridge. As you proceeded, the tower and turbine slowly came into view. But, initially, just a couple of very large blades circled through the air above the ridge.

I got to Lamar and caught US 50 west to Pueblo, found NPR and listened to the Thomas Jefferson Hour to pass the time. I had thought briefly about staying on US 287 up to Limon and then catching US 24 back to the Springs, but I had been that way before and US 50 was new, so I toodled on. It was pretty anticlimatic after that. I-25 was I-25. Been there, done that. Got home about 3:30 MDT and started to catch up on all I missed while I was gone.

Next year, someone else can drive.

The Season Begins

Well, I started OK on Sunday with Randy Johnson winning.

I replaced Quiroz with Josh Bard, a back-up catcher for Cleveland, and Ken Harvey with Travis Lee, starting first baseman for Tampa Bay.

Why is a starting firstbaseman still available after the draft, you ask? Because he plays for Tampa Bay. And he was out for most of 2004 with a bad shoulder and it is always questionable whether an average player can make it back after sitting out for a season. (People always seem to make allowances for the really good players to come back after an injured season. People are still making allowances for Ken Griffey Jr, even after 4-5 years of injured seasons. Sometimes you just can’t come back from an injury without aggravating it even more. )

Baseball Draft

Well, The Unnamed Baseball League is underway again, for its 16th season.

Unveiling the 2005 Rocky Coloradans:

C1 Javy Lopez Bal
C2 #Guillermo Quiroz Tor
1B Tino Martinez NYY
3B Joe Crede CWS
CI #Ken Harvey KC
2B Juan Uribe CWS
SS Derek Jeter NYY
MI Julio Lugo TB
OF1 Manny Ramirez Bos
OF2 Gary Sheffield NYY
OF3 Aaron Rowand CWS
OF4 Torii Hunter Min
OF5 Shannon Stewart Min
DH Frank Catalanotto Tor

P1 Randy Johnson NYY
P2 Bartolo Colon LAA
P3 Kevin Millwood Cle
P4 Kenny Rogers Tex
P5 Kyle Lohse Min
P6 Gil Meche Sea
P7 Justin Speier Tor
P8 Damaso Marte CWS
P9 Gustavo Chacin Tor

The # means that they are in the Minors. And I could have sworn I checked the night before to verify any recent transactions that changed a player’s status. Either the wires were slow to pick them up, or I just missed them. I will see who I get in their place later today. (Remember the background write-up I gave? we do one-day-a-week replacements, Mondays.)

I decided, this year, to pass on saves. The other owners were bidding up the closers past what I considered a god price and if I couldn’t get a good closer it was a waste of money to try for second tier. Unfortunately, the way our league works, setup pitchers aren’t worth much. They don’t get wins because they come into the game after the starter has established the lead, and the credit. They don’t get saves because the closer comes in for the last inning to preserve the win for the starter. They don’t get a lot of strikeouts because they don’t pitch a lot of innings and, truth be told, they aren’t the best control artists in town. (otherwise they would be starting) They may get a good ERA or Ratio (watch out for that control) but that’s about it. There is a stat that we could use for set-up pitchers, the HOLD.

The Hold is determined like a Save. A pitcher that comes in, in relief, with a lead and leaves with a lead (without closing the game) gets credit for a Hold. There may be two or three pitchers per game that get credit for a Hold. I think this stat gives value to the middle relief pitchers, especially if we replace Strikeouts with it. That would leave the pitcher categories as Wins, Saves ,Holds (all specialty pitching jobs) and ERA and Ratio. And ERA and Ratio are prorated on innings pitched so the relievers and the starters are normalized