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Winter Comes To Baltimore As Royals Sweep The Birds in ALCS

“The only reason to play baseball is to keep winter away,” is one of my favorite sayings, exact origin unknown. On Wednesday October 15 the Orioles joined the sidelines with 27 other major league teams as the streaking Kansas City Royals swept them in four straight in the American League Championship Series. (As of this posting, the San Francisco Giants have three chances to send the St. Louis Cardinals to the sidelines in order to meet the Royals in the World Series.)

The identical 2-1 scores in the last two games at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City meant that one pitch could have turned each game around. But these games were psychologically never that close. The Orioles had a lead for only two and a half innings in the entire series. Fans felt the team was playing uphill the entire time and I sense the players were experiencing similar feelings.

The Royals’ victory was no fluke. They had been a sleeping giant in the American League with three young former number one draft picks not even in their prime years peaking at the right time: first baseman Eric Hosmer, third baseman Mike Moustakas, and left fielder Alex Gordon.

The Royals’ bullpen arms from the seventh inning on were virtually unhittable: Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis, and closer Greg Holland. Davis came from Tampa Bay in a trade along with ace starter James Shields to bring their experience and fierce competitiveness to a team needing to learn how to win.

Some observers saw in the Orioles’ loss an analogy to the 1969 World Series when after an opening victory over Tom Seaver, the Birds were beaten four in a row by the Miracle Mets. In this analysis center fielder Lorenzo Cain played the role of Tommy Agee.

Cain was deservedly voted the MVP of the ALCS for his all-around play. A one-time third baseman and Milwaukee Brewers farmhand who didn't play baseball until high school, Cain bunted on his own to sacrifice two runners into scoring position in the first inning in Game 4. Both scored on a tough error charged to Oriole catcher Caleb Joseph who couldn’t quite catch the ball thrown by first baseman Steve Pearce after Hosmer’s ground ball.

Why players rarely bunt these days is a good question to ask about today's baseball. The explanation, though, is really simple - salary arbitration awards are not bestowed on bunts and sacrifices. That’s pretty sad because well-placed bunts can win games as in Game 4 and in Game 2 when Moustakas, who had homered earlier, laid down a sacrifice to set up the winning run.

The finality of the end of a season is always stark. And a sweep is one of baseball’s more painful indignities. However, in the long view the Orioles’ season was a success. They played virtually all season without all-star catcher Matt Wieters – who had Tommy John elbow surgery. Third baseman Manny Machado, last year’s platinum glove winner as baseball’s best defender, missed the first month of the season recovering from knee surgery and then in August had surgery on his other knee.

In early September first baseman Chris Davis, who turned out to be an adequate replacement for Machado at third base, was suspended for 25 games for using the amphetamine Adderall without a prescription. That suspension will end the day after Opening Day 2015.

Despite these key losses, the Orioles ran away with the AL East flag and swept the favored Tigers three in a row in the AL Division Series (ALDS). That was an improvement over 2012, the rebirth year of Buck Showalter-Dan Duquette’s Orioles when the Yankees won a very competitive five-game ALDS over Baltimore.

In my opinion, the outlook for 2015 became brighter when just before the start of the post-season, the Orioles signed shortstop JJ Hardy to a three-year contract worth reportedly $40 million. This contract makes a lot of sense because Hardy is the quiet but effective captain of the defense, someone who makes everyone better. It also suggests that Machado, hopefully fully recovered by spring training, will remain at third for the foreseeable future. That’s fine by me.

The fate of other key Oriole free agents won’t be known for a while. Steady right fielder Nick Markakis has been an Oriole all his career and wants to return and probably will.
Left fielder/dh Nelson Cruz was the one-year steal in free agency in 2014 and he’ll want a long-term contract that the Orioles may not want to offer. Ditto for southpaw reliever Andrew Miller who bolstered the bullpen immeasurably after his arrival at the July 31 trading deadline.

We’ll see what happens. There will likely be a bevy of trades as the Hot Stove League picks up. I hope the Tampa Bay Rays, my second most favorite team, can bounce back from their sub-.500 season. The Rays’ presence is, of course, felt on the World Series-bound Royals with James Shields as the ace and Wade Davis as the almost unhittable eighth inning specialist.

When they fell out of contention in July, the Rays traded another ace pitcher David Price to the Tigers but it seems like they found an able replacement in southpaw Drew Smyly. It remains to be seen how they adjust to the departure of their youthful general manager Andrew Friedman who recently became the president of baseball operations for the Los Angeles Dodgers.

FINAL NOTE: Congrats to Jeff Banister, new manager of the Texas Rangers who overcame the threat of amputation as a teenager to become a minor league baseball player and more recently a longtime coach for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

That’s all for now. Always remember: Take it easy but take it.
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YIBF (Yours In Baseball Forever) JOURNAL, All-Star Break Edition

Major league baseball has been so unpredictable this season. I don’t know if it is parity or mediocrity or more likely both, but only 10 of 30 MLB teams can say definitively that they will not enjoy any October playoff baseball this year.

The most secure way to the playoffs is to win one of the six divisions. Thanks to a good rules change a couple of years ago, two wild-card teams will meet in one Winner Take All game to make it into the first best-of-five round against the division winner with the best record.

To cap this madcap season so far, the last game prior to the All-Star Game Break was delayed by rain in the bottom of the 5th inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. The Orioles were leading their arch-rival Yankees, 3-1, so it was an official game.

I fully expected resumption of play in the wee hours of Monday morning but the Yankees caught no such break. The game was called a few minutes after midnight and the Orioles go into the ASG break with a four game lead over Toronto and five over the Yankees.

My Birds are 10 over .500 qualifying them for contender status according to Lowenfish’s Second Law of Baseball Dynamics. But they face a tough second-half schedule beginning with three series at Oakland, Los Angeles and Seattle, three teams who have emerged in the top tier of the American League. They then play LA and Seattle at home.

“To be the best you have to beat the best,” Branch Rickey often said and so let the games begin on Friday after the needed break of a few days.

One of the charms of baseball is its visceral link of present and past. The shortened game last night brought to mind another Yankee-Oriole matchup in Baltimore on Sunday afternoon August 13, 1978.

I was spending the month on the ocean in Rhode Island but thanks to good radio reception I was able to pick up a New York broadcast of the tussle.

The Birds entered the 7th with a 3-0 lead but the Yankees rallied and took a 5-3 lead. Disconsolate, I snapped off the radio and went into the ocean to drown my sorrows in waves and foam. Imagine my surprise barely a half-hour later when I returned to my beach blanket to discover that the Orioles had won 3-0.

You see, there had been a rain delay. And the game was called while the Yankees were still batting and the Orioles were ruled winners by a 3-0 score because the 7th inning had not been complete. The old rule was reversion of score to last complete inning.

Not long after, an official change was introduced that would make games with lead shifts in uncompleted innings suspended. To be picked up at a later date.

What caused baseball to act was that manager Earl Weaver’s groundskeeper Pat Santarone had been instructed to delay putting on the tarp to allow the grounds to become unplayable. There had been an earlier rain delay in the same game.

I chuckle at how Billy Martin or Weaver - if he had been on the wrong side of the score last night – would have handled the top of the fifth inning. Winds were swirling all over Camden Yards and the grounds crew was ready to put on the tarp in any moment.

It was not yet an official game and you can bet Billy Martin or Weaver or any other old school manager would have had batters delay getting into the batters’ box. The umps would have urged them to hurry up but, “Hey, ump, I got something in my eye.
Gotta see the ball right?”

How baseball has changed! There was a quick first out made by former Oriole Brian Roberts and a circus catch by Nick Markakis made by right field on a fly ball hit by Ichiro Sizuki that must have changed directions three times.

Then unbelievably rookie Yangervis Solarte swung at the first pitch and while it went foul, he soon grounded out to Manny Machado at third to end the inning and made the game official.

Steve Pearce, one of the great perseverance stories of the season – released in April and now a regular contributor to the Orioles – walked to lead off the bottom of the fifth and then the rains came. Victory for the Birds, perhaps tainted but a win's a win.

Well, that’s all for now. Lots of baseball ahead to enjoy and agonize over.

And always remember: Take it easy but take it!
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