Maury looks at the attendance data for both the Orioles and Nationals to see if there was anything to Peter Angelos’ fears.
Playoff-hopeful teams get injured players back, while others may lose a few.
Dr. Jazayerli dissects the early makings of the game’s best team–your 2006 Detroit Tigers.
Two aging sluggers make an impact in the Bay Area.
Jim uses a Bobby Abreu walk to jumpstart a look at how teams do when they draw more than their share of free passes.
The Transaction Analysis you have been waiting for. Saunders. Izturis. Guzman. Cormier. Hernandez. Reyes. The names are all here, and only Christina can sort out the right from wrong, and the stupid from the just obtuse.
Dan continues his series analyzing baserunner advancement by taking park factors under consideration.
While trade-deadline acquisitions of big-name players make for big headlines, Nate wonders if those trades actually helped their teams the most this year.
Derek tackles a Sheets-Harang duel, and one pitcher gets the better of it in the return of Prospectus Game of the Week.
Will beats the heat and humidity in Chicago with some injury updates on Jason Varitek, Scott Kazmir, Mark Mulder, Octavio Dotel, and others.
Jeff Cirillo’s comments about the baseballs used at Coors Field were right on the money.
One of 2006’s best stories feels pain in his elbow and misses his next start.
Medich and Rogers. Eck and Montefusco. Fidrych and Zachry. Which duo takes the title? Which rookies didn’t ruin their futures? Jim’s got the answers, and they aren’t pretty.
The more things change, the more they stay the same on Ye Olde Hit List, as Jay follows the streaking Tigers and sorts out the contender from pretender.
Clay takes a closer look at Chase Utley’s odds of reaching or breaking DiMaggio’s hitting streak.