Will has news on Jaret Wright, Kerry Wood, Frank Thomas, the Cardinals’ rotation, and–remember him?–Barry Bonds.
Our view of the season would be very different if it had played out exactly in reverse to reality. James rewinds the year, and shows us how.
Notebook takes a look at Chicago’s Big Three, Oakland’s playoff hopes, and San Francisco’s recent roster moves.
With an eye toward October or 2006, teams fill out their rosters with veteran-y goodness or young prospects. Chris breaks it all down.
Interleague play, more hype than substance, could end up having a tremendous effect on the NL wild-card race.
Jim has a look at the A’s historic turnaround, and has some props for the best outfields in the game.
In a time of crisis, baseball is always there to give us a respite.
Dayn’s trip to an NFL preseason game left him with more questions than answers about football’s popularity compared to baseball.
Jim Bowden had the audacity to call out the Nationals’ hitters on Sunday. Who put this lineup together, anyway?
August wraps up with the Yankees climbing and the Angels dropping on this week’s Hit List.
Jay invites you in for a tour of the sausage factory in which he makes the Prospectus Hit List. There’s method–actually, a bunch of them–behind the madness.
It’s over for Kerry Wood and the Cubs, but other teams are still massaging their rosters–and their sore players–for the stretch run.
Checking back in with a team covered earlier in the season proves illuminating for Jonah Keri in this week’s Game of the Week.
Steven runs down the early history of Yankee/Red Sox trading.
Got milk? Got team chemistry? Got…rally panties? If not, then check out this steroid-free edition of The Week in Quotes.
BP staffers reach into the mailbag to talk King Felix, WXRL usage, Hit List construction and more.