Month: March 2011

Lou’s MLB Over/Unders Part 2

5) Cincinnati Reds (Over 84.5)
What’s most striking about the Reds is the sheer depth of their team, extending to the high minors as well. Unlike teams such as the Cardinals, this depth means the floor is fairly low, so much so that I’d be somewhat shocked to see this team finish below .500. There’s not a lot of upside in terms of the key hitters so it would be just as surprising for Votto & Friends to surpass what they did last season. That said, they won 91 last season so there’s 6 games of slack here.

4) San Francisco Giants (Over 88)

A full season from Brandon Belt and Buster Posey should help this offense be the best the Giants have had since Barry Bonds retired.  There’s some risk here with the starting pitching as the Giants have little depth beyond their initial five and would be best served by limiting Madison Bumgarner’s innings as he’s probably the highest risk of the bunch.   92 wins + a championship and their total is only 88?  Not sure what I’m missing as unlike past editions, there’s no gaping hole/ overly washed up veteran anywhere in the lineup.  Maybe Miguel Tejada.

3) Arizona Diamondbacks (Over 72.5)

Arizona’s bullpen was historically bad in 2010
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In 439 innings, they allowed 307 runs to score, 280 of which were earned. That comes out to a 5.74 ERA, over a full run more than the next worst team (the Cubs, 4.72). On top of that, the Diamondbacks also allowed 78 of 189 inherited runners to score, a 41% mark which ties the Dodgers for the worst in the Majors.

Assuming the bullpen improves (and by definition it has to), the only risk for under 73 here is health.  Justin Upton, Kennedy and Hudson all need to stay on the field.  The lineup should score enough runs to keep them competitive, if not all the way back flirting with .500.

2) Boston Red Sox (Over 95)

See what Pat wrote.  A full season of Pedroia, Gonzalez and Crawford will really help the offense.  While it might not appear so at the end of the year because they play in the East, Boston may have the best pitching staff in the league this year.

1) Seattle Mariners (Over 70)

Their offense was as bad as Arizona’s bullpen last year.  While it won’t be good, it should rebound to below-average and combined with Felix + some other pitchers that will hopefully get them back into the 70s.  I don’t really want to forecast a 10-win improvement. but that’s why it’s a one point play.

Lou’s MLB Over/Unders Part 1

Before we start, I’d like to point out my perfect record in NFL picks this past season.  This doesn’t change in any way that I’m setting money on fire with these plays and I do have an actual play on the first three on this list.  Unfortunately for me, I had to make up the other seven.

10)  Philadelphia Phillies (under 97)

Thank you Ruben Amaro!  You not only splashed out on a kickass free agent but also managed to build the oldest team in the majors, ensuring any gains will likely be washed away by steady decline throughout the lineup and the loss of Jason Werth.  Dom Brown is the only projected starter under 29 and I wonder if he’ll have anyone to hang out with on the team.  He also broke his hand.  The Phillies won 97 last year with Rollins the only significant regular to underperform.  They’ve already lost arguably MLB’s Most Irreplaceable Player for half the season and some books have adjusted their lines down as low as 95.

9)  Tampa Bay Rays (Over 84.5)

Last season Tampa won 96 games.  Pena, Bartlett, Crawford, Garza and the bullpen are all gone.  In for them are Dan Johnson, Brignac, Manny/Damon/Jennings,  Hellickson and a new bullpen.  I’ll posit that Johnson can adequately replace Pena and his .196 average but close to league average play, Brignac can come close to Bartlett’s production and that Hellickson can provide 3/4 of Garza’s league average innings.  This leaves a roughly a 10 win dropoff from Crawford and the bullpen and I just can’t see it.  Both were beyond excellent in 2010, but the either the replacements and/or the returnees would have to really stink it up to drop that many games.

8) Houston Astros (Under 71.5)

This team is terrible and it won’t even be worth the effort to play their veterans over the younger players in September in hopes of eeking out a few extra meaningless wins and miracle covering the over like they’ve done the past few years.  It’s irrelevant anyway as Hunter Pence is the only solidly above average player on the team and they have approximately zero advanced prospects.  I’d also like to take the Astros for fewest wins in MLB this season if that’s available someplace.  Carlos Zambrano is a better career hitter than both of Houston’s catchers.  Interleague:  Texas (6), Boston, Toronto, Tampa (3).

7) Anaheim L.A. Angels (Under 83)

Why does Mike Scioscia hate all catchers who hit better than he did???  The Angels did nothing productive this offseason, missing out on Carl Crawford, who was born to play for this team, and Adrian Beltre who signed with Texas.  They also traded away sometimes catcher Mike Napoli for another center fielder, despite not having anyone at catcher who can actually hit.  Napoli somehow ended up in Texas as well, so the AL west will have one team with an actual functioning offense.  Despite my snarkiness, the offense is not terrible (though not helped by Kendry with an ‘S’ starting on the DL) and should the starting pitching go without too many injuries and the bullpen turn in an effective season, this over will ship.  That’s a lot to ask of a team with little pitching depth to call upon IMHO.

6) Milwaukee Brewers (Under 85.5)

For a team that’s purportedly contending, even in the NL Central, they have a long way to go.  The Brewers only won 76 games last season and while they added Zach Greinke and Shaun Marcum, both of whom are very good, they also had to take Yuniesky Betancourt to play shortstop, who is not.  Greinke is starting the season on the DL and should things not go well, Prince Fielder is a free agent to be who is not re-signing in Milwaukee and could be traded.  2b Rickie Weeks played 160 games last year in a contract season, after playing in 95, 118, 127 and 39 the last four seasons making JD Drew look durable in comparison.  I’ll take under 130 games played please.  Lastly, the interleague schedule is brutal: Twins (6) Yankees, Red Sox, Tampa (3).

Pat’s MLB Over/Unders

Let’s get into it. The contest is to pick 10 teams against the Vegas over/under totals.  The #10 is your top confidence pick, with #1 your shakiest.  Without further ado…

10)  Chicago White Sox (over 85.5)  –  This pick is more an indication of my disregard for the competition in the AL Central than with the White Sox, though they themselves certainly seem to have a good thing going this year.  Adam Dunn obviously is a big acquisition.  John Danks is their listed 3rd, but at an age where another year will only help him, he could turn into a legit #2 during the course of the season.  And that depth enables them to have Edwin Jackson towards the back end of the rotation where he probably belongs at this point until he consistently proves himself.  Similar thoughts on Mark Teahen, great extra OF, IF guy coming off the bench, or more accurately, just not starting.

9)  Boston (over 95)  –  Red Sox won 89 games last year while suffering an avalanche of injuries.  They add Adrian and Crawford, which will more than compensate for the loss of Beltre.  Patently explosive offense, and the pitching should be good-borderline-spectacular in stretches throughout the year.  This is the team the Yankees used to be when they were dominating baseball in the late 90s, early 2000s.

8)  Baltimore (over 76)  –  The O’s are a team a lot of people are hot on after years of meteoric mediocrity.  They remind me of the Cincy Reds going into last year.  Lots of subdued but persistent talk and expectations in the background.  If Adam Jones has a real break-out season, and Derek Lee and Justin Duchscherer (The Duchsch) stay healthy, they should clear this number.  Definitely helped by weaker Yanks and Rays teams.

7)  Kansas City (under 69.5)  –  I don’t love this pick, any time you are picking a professional team to win less than 70 games you are on suspect ground IMO.  But Kansas City failed to clear this number last year when they had Zack.  Instead they go into the season with #1 pitcher Jeff Francis, or as espn describes him, “a sleeper starter in AL-only (fantasy) leagues.”  Yikes.  As a side note, at this exact moment in time, espn has Melky Cabrera listed as Kansas City’s Opening Day center and right fielder, which cannot be good for business.

6)  San Diego (under 76.5)  –  Wow.  That lineup…goodness.  Their centerpiece is Ryan Ludwick.  Soon to be 33, career 104 HRs, Ryan Ludwick.  This team had the 28th rated slugging percentage in the league with Adrian Gonzalez.  Obviously not a hitter’s park, but did they play all their games there last year?

5)  NY Yankees (under 91.5)  –  Don’t like that this means I’m betting on the Yanks to essentially finish with a win total in the 80s.  Ehhhh.   But Pettite is gone, and if you don’t think that makes a difference you are nuts.  I was just about to write how the back end of their rotation is a disaster with Burnett and Garcia only to click on their depth chart to see that Burnett is the listed #2.  Burnett cannot be as bad this year as last, but that is far from a rave endorsement.  In addition, the Yankees do not have their typical 1-7 lineup of ridiculousness.  They have three hitters that scare you and a whole lot of OK after that.  And the AL East is stronger at the bottom this year.

4)  Houston (over 71.5)  –  I actually started this thinking of taking the under.  But this number is just a little too low.  Some people might say, ‘well, they sucked last year, and now they don’t have Oswalt.’  But it is the Astros horrifying offense that is the issue, not the pitching.  And this is what the argument boils down to.  No matter how disastrous (just learned how to spell that) the hitting can and will be at times for Houston this year, this rotation just isn’t the type that leads a team to 60 something wins, as a unit they are too good for that.  And it should be noted that no matter how anemic the Astros offense has been over the last few years, they never dropped below 73 wins.  Let’s go over.

3)  Arizona (under 72.5)  –  As in essentially every bet, it would be great if this number was a little different.  Aaron Heilman excluded, Joe Saunders is the wily veteran among the starting pitchers and he isn’t 30 yet, which means this group is dominated by potential.  Their numbers 1, 3, and 4 starters do not have a combined 50 decisions in the majors (49) by my count.  At 3B, Melvin Mora is 39, assuming Venezuela doesn’t have those birth certificate problems baseball seems to like, and he somehow managed to hit only 7 HRs last year playing 113 games for Colorado.  Still, as noted, they are young and potentially talented in a lot of places, would love this at 76.

2)  Cincinnati (over 84.5)  –  Last year, got lucky with these guys taking the over simply because of the enormous amount of chatter that was surrounding them.  So what the hey, let’s take them again.  And this pick is based almost entirely on the Reds offensive potential.  They have five players with easy 20+ HR pop and that is not including Scott Rolen, who hit 20 himself last year.  Their division is certainly not the strongest thing going.  The Cards number is 84.5 also, this is essentially a vote for a St Louis under.

1)  Oakland (over 83.5)  –  Where the Cincy pick comes down to offense, this comes down to the idea that, when healthy, the A’s probably have the best pitching in the AL West.  They certainly do not have the best hitting, but they did add Matsui, and I think a huge X factor this year is 3B Kevin Kouzmanoff (pretty sure it is a contract year, 29 years old).  If the Angels pitching was even fractionally better I’d have them here, but it isn’t.

MLB Over/Unders

These are the win totals according to pinnacle.  For spreads where one side is -120 or higher I will note so accordingly.  We will get into analysis, predictions, and occasional reminders of how badly I kicked Lou’s ass in this contest last year in upcoming entries.

  • Atlanta  88
  • Arizona  72.5
  • Baltimore  76
  • Boston  95  (over -128)
  • Chicago Cubs  81.5  (over -131)
  • Chicago White Sox  85.5
  • Cincinnati  84.5  (over -146)
  • Cleveland  71  (over -132)
  • Colorado  86  (over -136)
  • Detroit  83.5  (over -131)
  • Florida  82
  • Houston  71.5
  • Kansas City  69.5  (under -131)
  • LA Angels  83
  • LA Dodgers  84  (under -120)
  • Milwaukee  85.5
  • Minnesota  86  (under -129)
  • NY Mets  77.5  (under -136)
  • NY Yankees  91.5  (under -130)
  • Oakland  83.5
  • Philadelphia  97  (under -137)
  • Pittsburgh  68  (under -129)
  • San Diego  76  (under -148)
  • San Francisco  88
  • Seattle  70
  • St Louis  84.5  (under -141)
  • Tampa Bay  84.5  (under -127)
  • Texas  86.5  (over -120)
  • Toronto  76.5
  • Washington  71  (over -144)

Program vs. Year (Start of “Units tracking”)

Ohio St – much better team this year.  Kentucky – much better program historically.  Kentucky getting 6 points.  These types of games happen all the time.  The question is, does the line get skewed in these instances at all since Kentucky is such a storied program or do things pretty much hold to form.  If all the players and coaches stayed the same but the team names switched to Vanderbilt and Wash St, would the line be the same?  Going to try to track these as the months go by whenever I spot them.  My gut reaction at the moment is to really like Ohio St at -6.

10 Units – Ohio St -6