Greatest baseball Team simulation Topic



1921 Pittsburgh Pirates over 1965 SF Giants
Four games to two
MVP: Earl Hamilton (2-0, 1.02 ERA, 6 K)
 
The 1921 Pirates won all three of their games at Candlestick Park and kept the big boppers in the Giants lineup under control as they win this series. The Pirates did it mostly through great starting pitching as they threw two shutouts, Wilbur Cooper beat Juan Marichal in games one and Earl Hamilton threw a gem in the clinching game six.
 
The most crucial game of the series may have been game three at Forbes field as the Pirates beat the Giants in 11 innings. Rabbit Maranville drove in the tying run with two outs in the ninth with a single and then won the game in the 11thnwith another two out hit, the game set up the series win for the Pirates even though the Giants were game and won two in a row in Pittsburgh thanks in part to a Marichal shutout in game four. Willie Mays played a great centerfield as always but only batted .286 in the series with two RBI from the three spot.

Games
Game 1  
At Candlestick Park  
21 Pirates 6
65 Giants 0
   
Game 2  
At Candlestick Park  
21 Pirates 3
65 Giants 2
   
Game 3  
At Forbes Field  
65 Giants 6
21 Pirates 7
   
Game 4  
At Forbes Field  
65 Giants 4
21 Pirates 0
   
Game 5  
At Forbes Field  
65 Giants 8
21 Pirates 5
   
Game 6  
At Candlestick Park  
21 Pirates 5
65 Giants 0

Stats

1921 Pittsburgh Pirates (90-63) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Rabbit Maranville 29 7 0 2 0.241 0  
Cotton Tierney 27 12 0 3 0.444 0  
Max Carey 26 8 0 6 0.308 1  
Carson Bigbee 26 8 0 3 0.308 1  
Possum Whitted 23 4 0 7 0.174 0  
Charlie Grimm 26 5 0 0 0.192 0  
Walter Schmidt 25 8 0 0 0.320 0  
Clyde Barnhart 25 11 1 3 0.440 0  
Dave Robertson 3 1 0 1 0.333 0  
George Cutshaw 1 1 0 0 1.000 0  
Johnny Mokan 1 1 0 0 1.000 0  
Totals 212 66 1 25 0.311 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Wilbur Cooper 17 1 1 1 13 1 0.53
Earl Hamilton 17.6 2 0 2 6 3 1.02
Chief Yellowhorse 2.3 0 0 3 2 2 11.74
Whitey Glazner 8.3 0 0 5 5 0 5.42
Jimmy Zinn 3 0 0 4 0 2 12.00
Hal Carlson 3 1 1 2 0 1 6.00
Babe Adams 4 0 0 2 3 1 4.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 55.2 4 2 19 29 10 3.10

1965 SF Giants (95-67) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jesus Alou 29 7 0 1 0.241 0  
Len Gabrielson 24 5 0 1 0.208 0  
Willie Mays 21 6 0 2 0.286 0  
Willie McCovey 25 7 1 5 0.280 0  
Jim Ray Hart 26 10 1 6 0.385 0  
Tom Haller 26 8 0 1 0.308 0  
Hal Lanier 23 6 0 1 0.261 0  
Dick Schofield 23 5 0 1 0.217 0  
Cap Peterson 4 1 0 2 0.250 0  
Jim Davenport 1 1 0 0 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 202 56 2 20 0.277 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Juan Marichel 18 1 1 5 5 1 2.50
Bob Shaw 13 0 2 7 1 1 4.85
Masanori Murakami 4 0 0 1 3 2 2.25
Ron Herbel 3.6 0 0 2 1 0 5.00
Gaylord Perry 7 0 0 3 4 0 3.86
Frank Linzy 2.3 0 0 2 0 0 7.83
Bill Henry 0 0 1 1 0 0 #DIV/0!
Jack Sanford 5 1 0 3 1 2 5.40
Bobby Bolin 2 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 54.9 2 4 24 16 6 3.93
4/21/2011 10:20 AM


1988 Boston Red Sox over 1916 Philadelphia Phillies
Four games to two
MVP: Mike Greenwell (.400, 7 RBI)
 
A good hitting series with both teams batting over .300 and the final and deciding game of the series looking more like a football score. Neither the dominant arm of Grover Alexander or Roger Clemens looked all that imposing as each ace took a loss, Although Alexander sported the better ERA. Lee Smith saved two of the Boston wins as they won both game two and game five by the slimmest of margins; game five was likely the best game of the series with Mike Boddicker and Erskine Mayer the unlikely stars.
 
The Red Sox only hit one home run in the series but had almost everyone one of their players contribute in a significant way. Four players have six RBI or more in the series with even old vet Jim Rice pitching in with a .357 clip. The Phillies had little help from their table setters at the top of the lineup, Possum Whitted and Dave Brancroft who went a combined .214 with no RBI.
 

Games
Game 1
At Baker Bowl
88 Red Sox 3
16 Phillies 7
Game 2
At Baker Bowl
88 Red Sox 8
16 Phillies 7
Game 3 
At Fenway Park
16 Phillies 7
88 Red Sox 4
Game 4
At Fenway Park
16 Phillies 2
88 Red Sox 6
Game 5
At Fenway Park
16 Phillies 1
88 Red Sox 2
Game 6
At Baker Bowl
88 Red Sox 14
16 Phillies 10

Stats

1988 Boston Red Sox (89-73) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Ellis Burks 27 7 0 1 0.259 2  
Jody Reed 27 7 0 1 0.259 0  
Wade Boggs 25 4 0 2 0.160 0  
Mike Greenwell 25 10 0 7 0.400 0  
Dwight Evans 26 10 0 6 0.385 0  
Todd Benzinger 23 9 0 6 0.391 0  
Rich Gedman 29 8 1 6 0.276 0  
Marty Barrett 24 8 0 4 0.333 0  
Jim Rice 14 5 0 3 0.357 0  
Larry Parrish 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 221 68 1 36 0.308 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Roger Clemens 17 1 1 9 14 4 4.76
Bruce Hurst 11.6 1 0 12 8 8 9.31
Bob Stanley 6.3 2 0 0 3 1 0.00
Dennis Lamp 3.3 0 0 5 2 3 13.64
Tom Bolton 1.3 0 0 0 2 1 0.00
Lee Smith 2 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Oil Can Boyd 5 0 1 4 0 3 7.20
Wes Gardner 1.3 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Mike Boddicker 5 0 0 1 1 5 1.80
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 52.8 4 2 31 32 25 5.28

1916 Philadelphia Phillies (91-62) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Possum Whitted 30 5 0 0 0.167 0  
Dave Bancroft 26 7 0 0 0.269 1  
Gavvy Cravath 22 12 0 4 0.545 1  
Dode Paskert 22 8 1 6 0.364 1  
Fred Luderus 23 10 2 11 0.435 0  
Milt Stock 25 4 0 7 0.160 0  
Bert Niehoff 23 6 0 2 0.261 0  
Bill Killefer 22 5 0 2 0.227 0  
Wilbur Good 2 1 0 0 0.500 0  
Bobby Byrne 10 4 0 0 0.400 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 205 62 3 32 0.302 3  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Pete Alexander 17 1 1 4 8 4 2.12
Al Demaree 12.3 0 2 9 9 2 6.59
Joe Oeschger 1.6 0 0 1 0 1 5.63
Chief Bender 4.6 0 0 3 0 3 5.87
Eppa Rixey 9 1 0 4 3 4 4.00
Erskine Mayer 5.3 0 1 1 2 1 1.70
George McQuillan 2 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 51.8 2 4 22 23 15 3.82
4/25/2011 3:10 PM


1908 Cleveland Naps over 1905 Chicago White Sox
Four games to three
MVP:  Bob Rhoads (2-0, 0.50 ERA, 8 K)
 
Even though their namesake Nap Lajoie batted only .111 with three hits in the middle of the order, the Cleveland Naps made a pretty significant comeback to win this series. The Naps were down three games to one before winning three in a row to take the series, the last two on the road. Bob Rhoads won two games and Addie Joss was almost just as good in his three starts as the Naps had a cumulative 1.40 as a team. Josh Clark did have 11 hits from the top of the order but offense wasn’t how they won this series.
 
It was true small ball from two teams from the very same era. In seven games the teams combined for one home run and 24 stolen bases; 16 by the Nats. A total of only 10 men struck out in the entire series, these teams played almost identical ball which is why it was so close. The White Sox just couldn’t close out the series when they had it including coming within a couple of outs of doing so in game 5 at home.

Games
Game 1    
At South Side Park    
08 Naps 4  
05 White Sox 5 (10 inn)
     
Game 2    
At South Side Park    
08 Naps 2  
05 White Sox 0  
     
Game 3    
At League Park    
05 White Sox 3  
08 Naps 2  
     
Game 4    
At League Park    
05 White Sox 2  
08 Naps 0  
     
Game 5    
At League Park    
05 White Sox 1  
08 Naps 2 (10 inn)
     
Game 6    
At South Side Park    
08 Naps 2  
05 White Sox 1  
     
Game 7    
At South Side Park    
08 Naps 5  
05 White Sox 2  

Stats

1908 Cleveland Naps (90-64) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Josh Clarke 28 11 0 1 0.393 6  
Nig Clarke 28 7 0 2 0.250 0  
Nap Lajoie 27 3 0 2 0.111 1  
George Stovall 29 9 0 3 0.310 3  
Bill Hinchman 26 7 0 2 0.269 3  
Bill Bradley 23 3 0 2 0.130 0  
Joe Birmingham 26 7 0 1 0.269 2  
George Perring 23 6 0 2 0.261 1  
Wilbur Good 3 1 0 0 0.333 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 213 54 0 15 0.254 16  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Addie Joss 25.6 1 1 4 1 4 1.41
Jake Thielman 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Cy Falkenberg 0.3 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Jack Ryan 1.3 0 1 1 0 0 6.92
Bob Rhoads 18 2 0 1 0 8 0.50
Glenn Liebhardt 8 0 1 3 0 4 3.38
Heinie Berger 10 1 0 1 2 2 0.90
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 64.5 4 3 10 3 19 1.40

1905 Chicago White Sox (92-60) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jiggs Donahue 28 11 0 0 0.393 4  
George Davis 30 6 0 3 0.200 1  
Frank Isbell 28 6 0 1 0.214 0  
Ed McFarland 25 9 0 5 0.360 0  
Nixey Callahan 29 9 1 3 0.310 2  
Fielder Jones 25 4 0 2 0.160 0  
Danny Green 21 2 0 0 0.095 0  
Lee Tannehill 23 4 0 0 0.174 1  
George Rohe 2 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 211 51 1 14 0.242 8  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Frank Owen 24.6 1 1 7 2 5 2.56
Roy Patterson 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Ed Walsh 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Nick Altrock 18 0 2 3 2 2 1.50
Doc White 9 1 0 2 0 2 2.00
Frank Smith 9.3 0 1 2 3 2 1.94
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 63.2 3 4 14 7 11 1.99
4/27/2011 2:30 PM


1924 Brooklyn Robins over 1982 Atlanta Braves
Four games to two
MVP: Jack Fournier (.462, 6 HR, 16 RBI)
 
We have seen no team hit like the Brooklyn Robins so far and no player dominate in a series quite like Jack Fournier. This is what this tournament is all about, remembering players that many may have forgot about and Fournier carried an offense that battered Braves pitching, the hot first baseman drove an amazing 16 runs for the series and the Robins as a team batted .393. The culmination was a 22-2 destruction of Phil Niekro and the Braves at the “Launching Pad” in Atlanta for game four. The Braves actually had a series lead going into that game but the loss took all life out of them and they were dominated the rest of the way.
 
Dazzy Vance was great both games he started for Brooklyn, including the clincher when the pitcher even hit a three run home run off of Rick Mahler. The Braves got three homers from Bob Horner and some good hitting but their pitching seemed lost in this serried and lost confidence with each passing game. Not one Braves starter had an ERA under 6.00. The Robins were impressive indeed.

Games
Game 1  
At Ebbets Field  
82 Braves 10
24 Robins 3
   
Game 2  
At Ebbets Field  
82 Braves 1
24 Robins 2
   
Game 3  
At Fulton County Stadium
24 Robins 8
82 Braves 9
   
Game 4  
At Fulton County Stadium
24 Robins 22
82 Braves 2
   
Game 5  
At Fulton County Stadium
24 Robins 12
82 Braves 2
   
Game 6  
At Ebbets Field  
82 Braves 4
24 Robins 8
 
Stats

1924 Brooklyn Robins (92-62) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jimmy Johnston 30 8 0 1 0.267 0  
Zack Wheat 32 13 0 3 0.406 0  
Jack Fournier 26 12 6 16 0.462 0  
Andy High 28 13 0 7 0.464 0  
Eddie Brown 23 12 0 1 0.522 0  
Zack Taylor 26 10 0 9 0.385 0  
Milt Stock 25 7 0 4 0.280 0  
Tommy Griffith 25 9 2 7 0.360 0  
Bernie Neis 4 2 0 1 0.500 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 219 86 8 49 0.393 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Burleigh Grimes 13.3 1 2 8 13 4 5.41
Rube Ehrhardt 7.6 0 0 5 3 2 5.92
Tiny Osborne 3.2 0 0 2 3 1 5.63
Jim Roberts 4 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Art Decatur 2.3 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Dazzy Vance 18 2 0 5 17 2 2.50
Dutch Ruether 0.3 0 0 5 0 0 150.00
Bill Doak 5 1 0 2 1 3 3.60
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 53.7 4 2 27 39 12 4.53

1982 Atlanta Braves (89-73) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Claudell Washington 23 9 1 1 0.391 1  
Dale Murphy 24 6 2 6 0.250 0  
Bob Horner 21 8 3 9 0.381 0  
Chris Chambliss 21 2 1 3 0.095 0  
Rufino Linares 25 7 0 2 0.280 0  
Rafael Ramirez 24 7 0 2 0.292 1  
Bruce Benedict 25 4 0 2 0.160 0  
Glenn Hubbard 23 3 0 1 0.130 0  
Bob Watson 4 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Larry Whisenton 2 1 0 1 0.500 0  
Terry Harper 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Totals 193 47 7 27 0.244 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Phil Niekro 9.6 1 1 10 1 2 9.38
Steve Bedrosian 9 0 0 6 4 4 6.00
Rick Mahler 11.6 0 2 8 3 2 6.21
Al Hrabowsy 2.3 1 0 0 1 2 0.00
Preston Hanna 1.3 0 0 2 0 0 13.85
Bob Walk 3 0 0 4 0 3 12.00
Rick Camp 3.3 0 0 8 3 2 21.82
Gene Garber 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Donnie Moore 3.6 0 0 10 0 1 25.00
Joe Cowley 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Carlos Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Pascual Perez 5 0 1 5 1 3 9.00
Totals 51.7 2 4 53 13 20 9.23
5/2/2011 9:16 AM


1940 Brooklyn Dodgers over 1969 Chicago Cubs
Four games to one
MVP: Pee Wee Reese (.400, 1 HR, 2 RBI)
 
Brooklyn continues its fine play in this tournament and take the star crossed Chicago Cubs out in a much easier series then most had expected. The series turned in game two as the Cubs were coming off a game one win behind their ace Fergie Jenkins. In game two the Cubs held a ninth inning lead before the Dodgers rallied for two in the tenth behind a Dixie Walker winning double. The Cubs would have been up two games and heading home if they held on. In Chicago it was a total disaster for the home team as the Dodgers won all three behind some outstanding pitching performances headlined by a game three shutout by Freddie Fitzsimmons.
 
The Cubs were held to a .208 average and only scored 10 runs in five games; stars like Ernie Banks (.150), Ron Santo (.130) and Randy Hundley (.063) all struggled. Hugh Casey was great out of the Dodgers bullpen and an unsung hero and Pee Wee Reese was the heart of the team and had a crucial home run in game three. Even with a second chance, this Cubs cursed team just cant win.

Games

Game 1    
At Ebbets Field    
69 Cubs 5  
40 Dodgers 1  
     
Game 2    
At Ebbets Field    
69 Cubs 2  
40 Dodgers 3 (10 inn)
     
Game 3    
At Wrigley Field    
40 Dodgers 5  
69 Cubs 0  
     
Game 4    
At Wrigley Field    
40 Dodgers 3  
69 Cubs 1  
     
Game 5    
At Wrigley Field    
40 Dodgers 5  
69 Cubs 2  


Stats

1969 Chicago Cubs (92-70) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Don Kessinger 22 6 0 2 0.273 0  
Ron Santo 23 3 1 2 0.130 0  
Billy Williams 23 6 0 0 0.261 0  
Jim Hickman 21 1 1 1 0.048 0  
Willie Smith 19 3 1 1 0.158 0  
Ernie Banks 20 3 0 1 0.150 0  
Glenn Beckert 20 11 0 1 0.550 0  
Randy Hundley 16 1 0 1 0.063 0  
Paul Popovich 3 1 0 0 0.333 0  
Don Young 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 168 35 3 9 0.208 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Fergie Jenkins 16 1 1 4 13 6 2.25
Bill Hands 8.3 0 0 2 3 2 2.17
Ted Abernathy 5 0 1 2 3 2 3.60
Hank Aguirre 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Ken Holtzman 7 0 1 2 4 4 2.57
Rich Nye 2 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Dick Selma 6 0 1 4 4 3 6.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 45.3 1 4 14 28 17 2.78

1940 Brooklyn Dodgers (88-65) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Pee Wee Reese 20 8 1 2 0.400 0  
Cookie Lavagetto 18 3 1 2 0.167 0  
Dolph Camilli 17 3 0 2 0.176 0  
Joe Medwick 22 6 1 1 0.273 0  
Babe Phelps 19 7 0 0 0.368 0  
Dixie Walker 21 4 0 3 0.190 0  
Pete Coscarart 18 8 0 3 0.444 0  
Joe Vosmik 20 6 0 3 0.300 0  
Pete Reiser 2 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Gus Mancuso 2 1 0 0 0.500 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 159 46 3 16 0.289 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Whitt Wyatt 14 1 1 3 12 1 1.93
Hugh Casey 9.6 0 0 3 4 4 2.81
Vito Tamulis 3 1 0 0 2 0 0.00
Luke Hamlin 6 0 0 2 6 0 3.00
Freddie Fitzsimmons 7 1 0 0 1 0 0.00
Curt Davis 6 1 0 1 5 1 1.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 45.6 4 1 9 30 6 1.78

5/3/2011 11:13 AM
This post has a rating of , which is below the default threshold.
Posted by thejuice6 on 5/3/2011 2:20:00 PM (view original):
Cool idea NK - gives me some thoughts about a possible future tournament.

Are the Cardinals supposed to be listed twice in 2004?

Thanks Juice--

And thanks also for catching a mistake. The 2004 Cardinals should not be listed twice but are actually suppose to be the 2004 Atlanta Braves who won 96 games.
5/3/2011 5:00 PM


1967 Detroit Tigers over 1912 Pittsburgh Pirates
Four games to none
MVP: Willie Horton (.357, 1 HR, 5 RBI)
 
Even though all the games were close, in the end the series wasn’t. The Tiger team only a year premature from their world championship had all the tools in place and won all four games making the big plays when they needed. A nice comeback in game one at Forbes Field set the tone as did a walk off win in game three after a bases loaded walk. Marty O Toole for the Pirates struck out 13 in only 16 innings of work but was beat both times he threw.
 
The Pirates did bat .305 as a team for the series but a serious lack of extrabase hits made the number look more dangerous then it was. Norm Cash, Al Kaline, and Dick McAuliffe combined for a .391 average and scored enough runs to make a difference; the Pirates actually out homered the Tigers in this series but in the end it didn’t matter, when ever one team sweeps another there is little doubt who the better team was.

Games
Game 1
At Forbes Field 
67 Tigers 5
12 Pirates 4
Game 2
At Forbes Field
67 Tigers 4
12 Pirates 2
Game 3
At Tiger Stadium
12 Pirates 6
67 Tigers 7
Game 4
At Tiger Stadium
12 Pirates 4
67 Tigers 5

Stats

1912 Pittsburgh Pirates (93-58) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Max Carey 17 5 0 1 0.294 2  
Bobby Byrne 18 5 0 1 0.278 0  
Honus Wagner 17 5 1 2 0.294 0  
Chief Wilson 14 5 1 2 0.357 2  
Mike Donlin 15 6 0 2 0.400 1  
Dots Miller 16 3 0 0 0.188 1  
George Gibson 12 3 0 1 0.250 0  
Alex McCarthy 15 6 1 2 0.400 0  
Tommy Leach 4 1 0 1 0.250 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 128 39 3 12 0.305 6  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Marty O Toole 14 0 2 8 6 13 5.14
Hank Robinson 4 0 0 0 4 0 0.00
King Cole 1.6 0 0 1 1 1 5.63
Howie Camnitz 7.3 0 1 4 3 2 4.93
Claude Hendrix 6.6 0 0 5 6 5 6.82
Jack Ferry 0.6 0 1 0 1 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 34.1 0 4 18 21 21 4.75

1967 Detroit Tigers (91-71) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Dick McAuliffe 15 6 0 1 0.400 0  
Al Kaline 14 7 0 4 0.500 0  
Willie Horton 14 5 1 5 0.357 0  
Bill Freehan 15 4 0 4 0.267 0  
Norm Cash 13 6 0 2 0.462 0  
Jim Northrup 15 3 0 2 0.200 0  
Ray Oyler 15 2 0 2 0.133 0  
Don Wert 15 2 0 0 0.133 0  
Eddie Matthews 2 0 0 1 0.000 0  
Dick Tracewski 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 119 35 1 21 0.294 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Earl Wilson 12.6 1 0 7 8 4 5.00
Fred Gladding 4.3 1 0 0 5 2 0.00
Mike Marshall 3.6 0 0 2 1 3 5.00
Hank Aguirre 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Denny McLain 7 1 0 1 5 1 1.29
Joe Sparma 6 0 0 3 2 3 4.50
Dave Wickersham 1 1 0 0 0 1 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 35.8 4 0 13 21 14 3.27
5/4/2011 2:51 PM
This is awesome. Can't wait to see how it turns out.
5/8/2011 3:20 PM


1946 Brooklyn Dodgers over 1928 New York Giants
Four games to three
MVP: Dixie Walker (.387, 4 RBI, 2 SB)
 
What could anyone expect differently when the Dodgers play the Giants then a all tilt series that goes down to a deciding game seven. The Giants were looking at quick elimination but won games five and six with their backs to the wall to force a seventh game. At Ebbets field game seven was up and down before the Dodgers opened up for five runs in a late inning rally to deflate the Giants and beat them 13-7.
 
Freddy Lindstrom batted .464 in the series and drove in 9 runs while Mel Ott did his job in the third hole batting .321 for the Giants. It was the pitching that didn’t step up when it needed to, losing a leads late in both game 4 and game 7. Brooklyn already have four of their teams moving on to the next round and nothing is sweeter then beating the crosstown rival Giants.

Games
Game 1  
At Ebbets Field  
28 Giants 1
46 Dodgers 5
   
Game 2  
28 Giants 7
46 Dodgers 2
   
Game 3  
At The Polo Grounds  
46 Dodgers 9
28 Giants 2
   
Game 4  
At Polo Grounds  
46 Dodgers 3
28 Giants 2
   
Game 5  
At Polo Grounds  
46 Dodgers 3
28 Giants 8
   
Game 6  
At Ebbets Field  
28 Giants 8
46 Dodgers 3
   
Game 7  
At Ebbets Field  
28 Giants 7
46 Dodgers 13

Stats

1928 NY Giants (93-61) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Lefty O'Doul 32 12 0 5 0.375 1  
Shanty Hogan 29 7 0 2 0.241 0  
Mel Ott 28 9 0 4 0.321 0  
Bill Terry 28 8 0 3 0.286 0  
Freddy Lindstrom 28 13 0 9 0.464 1  
Jimmy Welsh 29 7 0 8 0.241 0  
Travis Jackson 27 8 1 0 0.296 0  
Andy Cohen 24 5 0 1 0.208 0  
George Harper 5 2 0 0 0.400 0  
Randy Reese 4 3 0 2 0.750 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 234 74 1 34 0.316 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Larry Benton 16.3 0 2 14 7 9 7.73
Bill Walker 5 1 1 1 0 6 1.80
Virgil Barnes 4.3 0 0 5 1 1 10.47
Freddie Fitzsimmons 14 2 0 2 6 6 1.29
Joe Genewich 5.6 0 1 4 2 2 6.43
Dutch Henry 2 0 0 7 1 2 31.50
Jack Scott 1.6 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Jim Faulkner 3.6 0 0 0 2 2 0.00
Vic Aldridge 5 0 0 3 2 3 5.40
Carl Hubbell 3.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 60.7 3 4 36 21 31 5.34

1946 Brooklyn Dodgers (96-60) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Pee Wee Reese 33 9 0 4 0.273 0  
Eddie Stanky 24 5 0 4 0.208 0  
Augie Galan 26 8 1 7 0.308 0  
Dixie Walker 31 12 0 4 0.387 2  
Pete Reiser 30 10 0 3 0.333 1  
Ed Stevens 24 5 0 3 0.208 0  
Cookie Lavagetto 27 6 0 3 0.222 0  
Bruce Edwards 23 6 0 2 0.261 0  
Joe Mwedwick 5 2 0 2 0.400 0  
Billy Herman 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 224 63 1 32 0.281 3  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Joe Hatten 18.3 1 0 8 7 5 3.93
Hank Behrman 8.6 1 0 3 2 3 3.14
Kirby Higbe 13 0 1 13 7 8 9.00
Vic Lombardi 8 1 0 1 1 1 1.13
Ed Head 3.6 0 0 1 0 1 2.50
Hugh Casey 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Hal Gregg 5.6 0 1 7 3 3 11.25
Les Webber 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Rube Melton 2 1 0 1 0 1 4.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 61.4 4 2 34 20 22 4.98
5/9/2011 2:45 PM (edited)


1951 Cleveland Indians over 1987 Detroit Tigers
Four games to none
MVP: Larry Doby (,400, 1 HR, 10 RBI)
 
These Tigers won 96 games in 1987 but in this series couldn’t even find one against the very impressive Cleveland Indians lead by manager Al Lopez. The big moment of the series came in game one at Tiger Stadium in a wild game that Detroit led by four runs heading to the 7th inning. A three run home run by Ray Boone turned the game around and eventually gave the win to the Indians; from there they would never look back. In game three Bob Feller threw just about the best game we have seen yet striking out nine in his five hit shutout performance.
 
The Indians played like the Cleveland Browns in the final clinching game at home scoring 17 runs and closing out the series in emphatic fashion. Sparky Anderson had no answers in his pitching staff as the team allowed 29 runs in four games. The mighty Tigers also only hit one home run for the series and were for the most part completely run out after their heartbreaking game one loss.

Games
At Tiger Stadium  
Game 1  
51 Indians 8
87 Tigers 7
   
At Tiger Stadium  
Game 2  
51 Indians 5
87 Tigers 2
   
At Cleveland Stadium  
Game 3  
87 Tigers 0
51 Indians 2
   
At Cleveland Stadium  
Game 4  
87 Tigers 7
51 Indians 17

Stats

1951 Cleveland Indians (93-61) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Bobby Avila 16 5 0 3 0.313 0  
Dale Mitchell 16 7 1 6 0.438 0  
Larry Doby 15 6 1 10 0.400 0  
Luke Easter 19 5 1 5 0.263 0  
Al Rosen 15 5 1 3 0.333 0  
Bob Kennedy 15 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Jim Hegan 15 4 0 0 0.267 0  
Ray Boone 10 4 2 7 0.400 0  
Harry Simpson 6 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 127 36 6 34 0.283 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Bob Lemon 13 1 0 13 4 11 9.00
Lou Brissie 2.3 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Early Wynn 9 1 0 2 7 4 2.00
Bob Feller 9 1 0 0 9 0 0.00
Steve Gromek 2.6 0 0 1 1 0 3.46
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 35.9 4 0 16 21 15 4.01

1987 Detroit Tigers (98-64) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Kirk Gibson 15 4 0 2 0.267 1  
Chet Lemon 16 4 0 3 0.250 0  
Alan Trammell 15 3 0 2 0.200 0  
Matt Nokes 17 2 0 1 0.118 0  
Darrell Evans 13 3 0 0 0.231 0  
Bill Madlock 9 1 0 0 0.111 0  
Lou Whitaker 16 7 1 2 0.438 0  
Tom Brookens 14 4 0 2 0.286 0  
Pat Sheridan 13 4 0 3 0.308 0  
Larry Herndon  1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 129 32 1 15 0.248 1  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Walt Terrell 9.3 0 1 7 8 11 6.77
Eric King 1.3 0 1 3 2 1 20.77
Mark Thurmond 0.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Jack Morris 9 0 1 5 8 5 5.00
Frank Tanana 8 0 1 2 7 1 2.25
Nate Snell 1 0 0 3 0 0 27.00
Jeff Robinson 3 0 0 8 2 5 24.00
Mike Henneman 1.3 0 0 1 2 1 6.92
Willie Hernandez 0.6 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 33.8 0 4 29 31 24 7.72
5/10/2011 2:51 PM


1903 New York Giants over 1935 Cleveland Indians
Four games to two
MVP: Sam Mertes (.462, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 6 SB)
 
As we have seen so often one game seems to turn a series around and get a team going. Down two games to none and heading to Cleveland the Giants scored 15 runs and won game three to start a run of four consecutive wins. The Giants used only four pitchers for the entire series, including a young Christy Matthewson who threw 23 innings allowing only 7 earned runs. The Giants also ran all over the Indians stealing 13 bases and creating key scoring chances to help their .322 team average for the series.
 
Sam Mertes was the star in the middle of John McGraw’s lineup leading the Giants in almost all offensive categories. The Indians ERA was over 5 and their offense wasn’t consistent enough to support them. The visitors made Cleveland Stadium their home as they beat the tribe three straight on their home field.

Games
Game 1    
At Polo Grounds    
35 Indians 2  
03 Giants 1  
     
Game 2    
At Polo Grounds    
35 Indians 4  
03 Giants 3 (10 inn)
     
Game 3    
At Cleveland Stadium    
03 Giants 15  
35 Indians 9  
     
Game 4    
At Cleveland Stadium    
03 Giants 8  
35 Indians 1  
     
Game 5    
At Cleveland Stadium    
03 Giants 7  
35 Indians 1  
     
Game 6    
At The Polo Grounds    
35 Indians 1  
03 Giants 3  

Stats

1903 New York Giants (84-55) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Billy Gilbert 26 4 0 2 0.154 0  
Charlie Babb 27 7 0 2 0.259 1  
Roger Bresnahan 24 7 0 3 0.292 5  
Sam Mertes 26 12 1 8 0.462 6  
George Browne 26 9 0 4 0.346 0  
Dan McGann 23 7 0 2 0.304 0  
John Warner 24 9 0 4 0.375 1  
Billy Lauder 23 9 0 4 0.391 0  
Frank Bowerman 3 1 1 2 0.333 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 202 65 2 31 0.322 13  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Joe McGinnity 19 1 2 4 4 8 1.89
Christy Matthewson 23 2 0 7 10 8 2.74
Dummy Taylor 5 0 0 5 0 1 9.00
Jack Cronin 8 1 0 1 2 2 1.13
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 55 4 2 17 16 19 2.78

1935 Cleveland Indians (82-71) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Odell Hale 27 5 0 0 0.185 0  
Joe Vosmik 25 11 1 4 0.440 0  
Bruce Campbell 24 4 0 3 0.167 0  
Earl Averill 23 4 0 1 0.174 0  
Hal Trosky 23 5 0 2 0.217 0  
Bill Knickerbocker 25 4 0 2 0.160 0  
Boze Berger 18 4 0 0 0.222 0  
Eddie Phillips 23 7 0 1 0.304 0  
Milt Galatzer 5 1 0 1 0.200 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 193 45 1 14 0.233 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Mel Harder 12 1 1 7 2 2 5.25
Lloyd Brown 7 0 0 1 0 2 1.29
Willis Hudlin 19.3 0 1 6 3 3 2.80
Ralph Winegarner 2.3 1 0 1 0 0 3.91
Monte Pearson 2.3 0 1 6 1 3 23.48
Lefty Stewart 4.6 0 0 5 0 1 9.78
Clint Brown 0.3 0 0 1 0 0 30.00
Oral Hildebrand 6 0 1 3 3 2 4.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 53.8 2 4 30 9 13 5.02
5/12/2011 12:48 PM



1913 Cleveland Naps over 1960 Baltimore Orioles
Four games to three
MVP: Nap Lajoie (.429, 1 HR, 7 RBI, 1 SB)
 
An incredible series played itself out between the Nats and the Orioles as both teams went back and forth and carried this series into extra innings of game seven. The sentimental pick was the Nats who along with their namesake Nap Lajoie who had a big series, also claim a young Shoeless Joe Jackson. The marquee game of the series was a 16-13 scoreline from Memorial Stadium in game two. In the game the Orioles came back from an 11-1 deficit before leaving the game late. The series would also have the last two games of the series come down to the stretch with game 7 proving to be just as dramatic. Twice the Orioles had the winning run on third base with less then two out to win the series but both Ron Hansen and Walt Dropo couldn’t get the job done. The Nats would win it in the 12th behind a Lajoie triple that sparked a two run inning.
 
Cy Falkenberg won three of the games in the series that was lacking greatly of good pitching. For the Nats along with Lajoie batting .429, Jack Graney drove in 13 runs in the series in the middle of the lineup. Joe Jackson only hit .269 for the series but did have a key two run home run in game seven. It was heartbreak for the Orioles, Gene Woodling had an incredible series hitting .531 in the seven games cracking 17 hits. An outstanding series in many ways with neither team relenting or showing any quit.

Games
Game 1    
At Memorial Stadium    
13 Naps 9  
60 Orioles 3  
     
Game 2    
At Memorial Stadium    
13 Naps 16  
60 Orioles 13  
     
Game 3    
At League Park    
60 Orioles 5  
13 Naps 1  
     
Game 4    
At League Park    
60 Orioles 2  
13 Naps 6  
     
Game 5    
At League Park    
60 Orioles 5  
13 Naps 2  
     
Game 6    
At Memorial Stadium    
13 Naps 6  
60 Orioles 7 (10 inn)
     
Game 7    
At Memorial Stadium    
13 Naps 7  
60 Orioles 5 (12 inn)

Stats

1913 Cleveland Naps (86-66) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Ray Chapman 34 10 0 3 0.294 0  
Terry Turner 27 7 0 2 0.259 0  
Joe Jackson 26 7 1 4 0.269 0  
Nap Lajoie 28 12 1 7 0.429 1  
Steve O'Neill 30 10 0 7 0.333 0  
Jack Graney 29 9 1 13 0.310 1  
Doc Johnston 29 7 0 5 0.241 1  
Nemo Leibold 29 8 0 3 0.276 0  
Joe Birmingham 4 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Buddy Ryan 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 237 70 3 44 0.295 3  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Cy Falkenberg 22.6 3 0 8 13 10 3.19
Lefty James 5.6 0 0 2 3 1 3.21
Nick Cullop 7.6 0 0 5 4 1 5.92
Vean Gregg 12 0 0 6 7 15 4.50
Bill Steen 5.6 1 1 5 7 2 8.04
Fred Blanding 6.6 0 1 3 1 2 4.09
Willie Mitchell 6.3 0 1 2 4 5 2.86
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 66.3 4 3 31 39 36 4.21

1960 Baltimore Orioles (89-65) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Marv Breeding 33 11 0 4 0.333 0  
Gene Woodling 32 17 0 8 0.531 0  
Jim Gentile 35 7 1 3 0.200 0  
Brooks Robinson 33 9 0 3 0.273 0  
Ron Hansen 30 3 0 2 0.100 0  
Gus Triandos 26 7 0 1 0.269 0  
Jackie Brandt 31 12 0 3 0.387 0  
Al Pilarcik 30 9 1 7 0.300 0  
Bob Boyd 5 3 0 2 0.600 0  
Walt Dropo 5 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 260 78 2 33 0.300 0  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Steve Barber 18.6 0 2 13 6 15 6.29
Hoyt Wilhelm 7.3 0 0 6 7 2 7.40
Gordon Jones 5 1 0 0 1 0 0.00
Arnie Portocarrero 4.3 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Milt Pappas 10.6 0 0 12 5 10 10.19
Jack Fisher 3.3 0 1 5 1 0 13.64
Wes Stock 1.6 0 1 1 0 1 5.63
Chuck Estrada 9 1 0 1 3 3 1.00
Hal Brown 6 1 0 1 2 1 1.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 65.7 3 4 39 26 32 5.34
5/17/2011 10:37 AM


1904 Chicago Cubs over 1959 San Francisco Giants
Four games to none
MVP: Jake Weimer (2-0, 1.00 ERA, 7 K)
 
Maybe the most one sided of all the series we have seen thus far the Cubs who during their era were deemed “The greatest team of all time” controlled the series and swept away Willie Mays and the Giants. Mays himself was pitched around but was also a big disappointment only batting .143 in the series with zero RBI and zero steals. The Giants also didn’t use Willie McCovey who only had one at bat in the series; they hit .197 as a team.
 
Jake Weimer looked very sharp in both his wins and the Cubs only used four pitchers for the entire series; they didn’t even use young star Three Finger Brown. The only close game of the series was game two but the Cubbies rallied late to take it. Johnny Kling and Davy Jones both batted at or over .400 and drove in a combined eight runs for the series.

Games
Game 1
At West Side Ground
59 Giants 1
04 Cubs 4
Game 2
At West Side Ground 
59 Giants 6
04 Cubs 7
Game 3
At Seals Stadium
04 Cubs 4
59 Giants 1
Game 4
At Seals Stadium
04 Cubs 7
59 Giants 2

Stats

1959 SF Giants (83-71) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jackie Brandt 18 3 0 1 0.167 0  
Hobie Landrith 17 1 0 0 0.059 0  
Willie Mays 14 2 0 0 0.143 0  
Orlando Cepeda 15 6 0 1 0.400 1  
Willie Kirkland 17 7 1 4 0.412 0  
Eddie Bressoud 17 1 0 0 0.059 0  
Jim Davenport 11 2 0 0 0.182 0  
Daryl Spencer 15 3 0 2 0.200 0  
Willie McCovey 2 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Leon Wagner 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 127 25 1 8 0.197 1  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Johnny Antonelli 15 0 2 11 3 7 6.60
Sam Jones 7 0 0 2 1 1 2.57
Al Worthington 2 0 1 3 1 1 13.50
Stu Miller 1 0 0 1 0 1 9.00
Mike McCormick 7 0 1 4 0 1 5.14
Eddie Fisher 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Gordon Jones 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 34 0 4 21 5 12 5.56

1904 Chicago Cubs (93-60) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Joe Tinker 15 3 0 1 0.200 1  
Frank Chance 14 4 2 3 0.286 1  
Davy Jones 12 5 0 4 0.417 2  
Jimmy Slagle 17 3 0 1 0.176 1  
Doc Casey 17 5 0 4 0.294 2  
Johnny Evers 16 6 0 1 0.375 0  
Johnny Kling 15 6 0 4 0.400 0  
Jack McCarthy 12 4 0 2 0.333 0  
Frank Schulte 1 1 0 0 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 119 37 2 20 0.311 7  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Jake Weimer 18 2 0 2 7 9 1.00
Buttons Briggs 8 1 0 3 6 3 3.38
Frank Corridon 1 0 0 2 1 2 18.00
Carl Lundgren 9 1 0 1 3 2 1.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 36 4 0 8 17 16 2.00
5/19/2011 10:07 AM


2000 Chicago White Sox over 1996 San Diego Padres
Four games to one
MVP: Frank Thomas (.571, 6 HR, 10 RBI)
 
The 96 Padres will be seeing big Frank Thomas in their nightmares after this series and if that doesn’t keep them awake, then they may see Chris Singleton as well. The “Big Hurt” put on a show in this series and homered in four of the five games. The big show came in game three when Thomas went deep three times off Padre pitching. Singleton drove in 11 runs and three long ones of his own and the two combined for 22 hits in the five games. The Sox even beat Trevor Hoffman in game three with a two out rally in the 9th inning.
 
The Padres were torched in a five game series and the only solace they had was to avoid the sweep when Joey Hamilton pitched a shutout in game four of the series. At the plate the only star was Joe Flaherty who drove in six runs. Even the mighty Tony Gwynn was in a slump this series few could understand at the hitting wonder batted only .174. The Sox were the better side and had the biggest star we have seen with a performance to be remembered for sure.

Games
Game 1  
At Comiskey Park  
96 Padres 7
00 White Sox 8
   
Game 2  
At Comsikey Park  
96 Padres 4
00 White Sox 10
   
Game 3  
At Jack Murphy Stadium  
00 White Sox 5
96 Padres 4
   
Game 4  
At Jack Murphy Stadium  
00 White Sox 0
96 Padres 5
   
Game 5  
At Jack Murphy Stadium  
00 White Sox 6
96 Padres 2
   

Stats

1996 San Diego Padres (91-71) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Rickey Henderson 23 5 0 2 0.217 1  
Tony Gwynn 23 4 0 0 0.174 0  
Ken Caminiti 21 4 1 3 0.190 0  
Steve Finley 22 6 1 2 0.273 0  
Greg Vaughn 9 1 0 1 0.111 0  
Wally Joyner 16 4 0 0 0.250 0  
John Flaherty 20 8 2 6 0.400 0  
Jody Reed 19 7 0 1 0.368 0  
Chris Gomez 16 4 0 3 0.250 0  
Rob Deer 3 1 1 2 0.333 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 172 44 5 20 0.256 1  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Joey Hamilton 11.3 1 1 6 11 5 4.78
Dough Bochtler 5.3 0 0 3 5 1 5.09
Willie Blair 6.3 0 0 5 4 4 7.14
Bob Tewskbury 3.3 0 1 7 4 2 19.09
Scott Sanders 1 0 0 2 1 2 18.00
Dario Veras 3.6 0 0 1 3 1 2.50
Fernando Valenzuela 5 0 0 2 5 2 3.60
Trevor Hoffman 1 0 1 2 1 1 18.00
Andy Ashby 6 0 1 1 4 1 1.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 42.8 1 4 29 38 19 6.10

2000 Chicago White Sox (95-67) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Ray Durham 20 5 0 3 0.250 1  
Paul Konerko 10 2 0 1 0.200 0  
Frank Thomas 21 12 6 10 0.571 0  
Charles Johnson 21 4 1 1 0.190 0  
Magglio Ordonez 17 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Herbert Perry 20 4 0 0 0.200 0  
Jose Valentin 20 8 1 1 0.400 3  
Chris Singleton 19 10 3 11 0.526 1  
Carlos Lee 17 4 1 2 0.235 0  
Jeff Abbott 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 166 49 12 29 0.295 5  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Jim Parque 11 0 1 10 2 5 8.18
Mark Buerhle 1.3 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Lorenzo Barcelo 2.6 1 0 0 1 0 0.00
Bobby Howry 5 1 0 1 6 2 1.80
Keith Foulke 2 0 0 2 1 2 9.00
Mike Sirotka 7 1 0 3 6 2 3.86
James Baldwin 6 0 0 4 3 2 6.00
Kelly Wunsch 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Cal Eldred 5 1 0 0 7 1 0.00
Bill Simas 2 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
Kevin Beirne 0.6 0 0 2 1 0 30.00
Sean Lowe 0.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Totals 43.8 4 1 22 29 15 4.52
5/23/2011 4:09 PM
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