Joe looks into his crystal ball to see what 2006 holds for each division in baseball. Today he starts off with the AL East.
A lot happened in the last two days, including some minor trades and some head-scratching demotions.
Steven ponders the notion of baseball as entertainment as he wonders about the predicaments of the Marlins and Royals.
Christina has some thoughts on managers in general, and how five new managers may impact their club’s chances in 2006.
Jim has a series of creative propositions for you concerning the 2006 season.
Johnny Damon and Bronson Arroyo both react to Arroyo’s trade, Jeff Bagwell’s shoulder is in the news again, and the Nationals may have a left fielder.
Less than a week to go, and Christina’s got a rundown of all the latest roster action.
Figuring out the story of Carlos Pena, former phenom, plus a quick review of Joe’s Tout Wars results
Each year, Will renews his passion for the game, staying open to learning brand new things he never knew before. This year is no different.
Keith revisits relief pitcher stat categories armed with some new information from our play-by-play database.
Jim takes a look at year-to-year fluctuations in W-L records.
Joe catches up with the Alfonso Soriano situation, and notes that the Cincinnati-Boston trade might be the start of similar exchanges.
With Tim Wakefield’s personal catcher Doug Mirabelli traded to San Diego, Keith wonders how successful the personal catcher strategy really is.
Clay has discovered a problem in the way we compute a great deal of advanced metrics, including EqA and RC/27.
The A’s demonstrate that you must have insurance policies if you plan to contend. In their rotation, they even have insurance policies on their insurance policies.
Jim Baker is unable to predict the future. He can, however, predict what won’t happen.