Ease up there, Hemingway, we’re talking about pitchers, and whether we’re missing a few from the last couple of decades.
Picking up an argument from last week, the reason to favor one over the other when talking about the NL’s great pair of young backstops.
Too much mileage suggests that the Cubs really should have kept their Pie and ate it, too.
Among three outfielders and a former outfielder all off to good starts, which are worth keeping, and which are good “sell high” candidates?
The glory of the Dodgers in the ’60s, followed by an inglorious Padres period and putting the Angels on the map.
Bass-ackwardness in pinstripes, Phillies penmanship, and multiple reasons to mention Rob Deer.
Expectations entering the season were high in Seattle, but with the worst record in baseball, Felix and Company have yet to make a move for the AL West crown.
Another outfielder lands hard, the Reds lose a gamer, and one of the Pirates’ few highlights goes dark.
The Dodgers and Angels aren’t in a bad place despite their getting nicked up, while the Mets change faces without substantively changing their fortunes.
We often hear about how offenses fail when they leave too many men on base. But is this really failure?
The shape of the blistering-hot performance of the Dodgers shortstop.
A reunion in Shea with passive vs. aggressive overtones in the dugout, Gabbard’s revenge, and Justin Upton’s early fielding follies.