Thursday, September 8, 2011

So Your Team's Not Going to the Playoffs

Milwaukee Brewers' Nyjer Morgan reacts after hitting a single during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011, in Milwaukee.

It's down to the home stretch of the season, and it's pretty clear at this point who's going on to the postseason, and who isn't. Odds are good that your team didn't make the cut. Perhaps you have no idea with whom to cast your rooting lot, and why. We here at Baseball Feelings are pleased to present you with a rooting guide for the postseason that goes beyond the standard "Just root against the Yankees and Phillies." (But not too far beyond that.)

If your eliminated team plays in the NL West: Root for the Brewers. The Brewers have a fun, old-school team of unapologetic mashers, and they've never won a World Series. Ever. They've only been to one, in fact. The year that they won the AMERICAN LEAGUE pennant. The Brewers have the best uniform in baseball, even if it's just their Friday home alternate throwback jersey. They have a bunch of guys that are totally worth rooting for (Prince Fielder, Ryan Braun, Casey McGehee, Corey Hart, John Axford), and probably the most polarizing dude in MLB, Nyjer "Tony Plush" Morgan. I love the guy, but I love most people in sports who are open, unapologetic pricks. Dude's hilarious. Seeing him freak out like in the above picture when he hits a seeing-eye single is a true joy. This is the Brewers best shot at grabbing a championship for the foreseeable future, and it's always fun to see a storied franchise win it all for the first time ever. If you need a further reason to root for them, there's this: when they went to Houston to play the Astros recently, the whole team dressed up like cowboys just to be dicks.

If your eliminated team plays in the NL East or NL Central: Root for the Diamondbacks. They're an exciting, fun young team that broke out at least a year ahead of schedule and is woefully unappreciated by a tepid fanbase that would rather boo Prince Fielder and kick all of the brown people out of their state than show up and root for their team. This is a team worth rooting for, but they're in the thick of a playoff-berth-clinching run of playing insanely good baseball, and they're playing it in front of half-empty crowds. Justin Upton is one of those rare dudes who keeps coming up in key situations, and you just KNOW he's launching a moonshot, or smashing a double off the wall to clear the bases. Paul Goldschmidt just showed up out of nowhere, fully formed as a dude who hits no-stride taters with terrifying frequency. It's really amazing what Kirk Gibson has been able to do with this team this year. Oh yeah, Kirk Gibson is the manager of the Diamondbacks. It's worth watching their games for no other reason than to see him hobble out to the mound on his peg legs for every pitching change.

If you can't get enough of the status quo: Root for the Phillies or the Braves. There's technically nothing wrong with either team, and they both have one or two players you can get behind (Roy Halladay and Freddie Freeman, for example). But there's nothing really exciting or inspiring about either team.

Dan Uggla hit like a maniac for thirty games and almost made people forget that he's not really a consistent hitter, is a nightmare at second base, and is definitely the type of dude who kisses his own biceps while flexing at the mirror nightly. The most exciting players on the Braves are their bullpen guys. They for some unknown reason stuck with Freeman all year while mishandling Jason Heyward worse than anyone not named "Brandon Belt." They've been in the playoffs every year you've been alive. Oh yeah, and their big rally starter is everyone in the stadium being as racist as they can in unison.

Over on the Phillies side, they're a Philadelphia team, with all that entails. They have a ridiculously good, highly-hyped pitching staff. They have Raul Ibanez and Shane Victorino, two of the most thoroughly unlikeable baseball players of our generation. And they've got Hunter Pence, the creepiest creep that ever crabwalked onto a baseball diamond.

If your eliminated team plays in the AL East: Root for the Texas Rangers. They made it to their first World Series last year, and have a stronger team this season that could take them all the way. Their single biggest weakness is their manager, Ron Washington, who seems to believe that shooting oneself in one's foot is a surefire way to keep the opposing team offguard. (It rarely works.)

If your eliminated team plays in the AL West: Root for the Detroit Tigers, if for no other reason than to show support for our own beloved Neil. They've got Justin Verlander, and he's the most exciting pitcher in the American League. Their best hitter likes to get loaded and make friends with cops. What's not to like?

If you have no particular rooting interest: Root for the Red Sox. They're a really fun team that just goes out and scores run after run after run until the other team is in tears. They've got three legitimate MVP candidates in their starting lineup every day. They signed a guy to a contract for a hundred years and a million billion dollars so they could bat him seventh in the lineup. That's some depth, bro. It's always fun to see the Red Sox win a World Series. Well, for now. Maybe if they win one or two more it will start getting old. But it's still fun for now!

If you're a Yankees fan: Root for the Yankees. That's the only reason to.

7 comments:

  1. A timely and most welcome post, Bill.

    I am solidly pro-Tigers (and pro-Neil) in the AL, however, failing a Detroit pennant I could totally handle a Rangers repeat. While I would not necessarily welcome a Red Sox win, I would certainly prefer that to the Yankees in the world series, so yeah. Also, there are a ton of Red Sox fan (of the completely legit variety) in my part of the world so I guess that would be nice for them, so fine.

    In the NL, I continue to reject the Arizona Diamondbacks as newfangled nonsense in a city that doesn't give a shit about baseball anyway despite a fluke championship team in like their fifth year of existence or whatever so who cares (although I have no problem with recent ex-Jays Aaron Hill and/or John McDonald, and would be pleased to see them do well). The Braves, I have no problem with nor or I am particularly excited by them. The Phillies are so, so very awesome, and I want Roy Halladay to do well there but not so well that he doesn't go into the HOF as a Blue Jay, so let's get him the one ring and then the Phillies can get old and start sucking immediately thereafter, maybe. I think the team I will really be pulling for in the NL will be Milwaukee if for no other reason (seriously: there is no other reason) than to listen to Bob Uecker lose his mind in three rounds of postseason baseball. He is the greatest and I love him.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Guess what? I am rooting for the Tigers.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I also have a soft spot for the Diamondbacks because their manager is Kirk Gibson aka my favorite baseball player OF ALL TIME. But, there is something odious about the Diamondbacks and their fans and, honestly, fuck Arizona, that wretched soulless state of the damned.

    So . . . I guess I'm rooting for the Brewers in the NL if only because if they reach the World Series, I can conceivably catch the ferry that operates only, like, 20 minutes north of where I live that goes directly across Lake Michigan to Milwaukee and then a couple of hours later I could be experiencing the joys of real live World Series baseball.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I mean, other than in Detroit. What I'm saying is that if the Brewers and Tigers met in the World Series it is not inconceivable that I could logistically make every game from my home base.

    ReplyDelete
  5. neil that would cost you thousands of dollars

    although i guess you ARE the armchairlb mogul

    ReplyDelete
  6. Bill, I said it was conceivable not practical.

    ReplyDelete