Greatest baseball Team simulation Topic

I just discovered this today.  It is beyond awesome.  
10/29/2011 9:20 PM
*Preliminary Round*



2006 New York Mets over 1962 LA Dodgers
Four games to two
MVP: Jose Reyes (.357, 2 RBI, 4 SB)
 
The Mets are able to knock off a 100 win team and move on after six games where their bats proved the better of the fabled Dodger pitching. Tom Glavine pitched like the Hall of Famer in the opening game showing poise in a shutout despite his advancing age. The Mets took all three games at Dodger Stadium and looked quite under the sun. Sandy Koufax pitched quite the game in game three as the Mets went on a minirun to tie the series, but Johny Podres had issues in both his starts including losing to Steve Traschel in the sixth game.
 
The Mets batted .333 as a team and had contributors like Carlos Beltran who hit .440 and Jose Reyes who was the perfect man at the top of the Mets order. Maury Wills gave the Dodgers a stellar leadoff man as well but the lack of power in the middle of the Dodger lineup proved to be a factor in these games. This Mets team seems to be quite better when they play as the underdog.


Games
Game 1  
At Dodger Stadium  
06 Mets 8
62 Dodgers 0
   
Game 2  
At Dodger Stadium  
06 Mets 8
62 Dodgers 5
   
Game 3  
At Shea Stadium  
62 Dodgers 10
06 Mets 1
   
Game 4  
At Shea Stadium  
62 Dodgers 3
06 Mets 2
   
Game 5  
At Shea Stadium  
62 Dodgers 4
06 Mets 6
   
Game 6  
At Dodger Stadium  
06 Mets 6
62 Dodgers 2

Stats

2006 New York Mets (97-65) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jose Reyes 28 10 0 2 0.357 4  
Paul Lo Duca 29 10 0 5 0.345 0  
Carlos Beltran 27 7 1 5 0.259 0  
Carlos Delgado 25 11 1 4 0.440 0  
David Wright 26 9 1 4 0.346 0  
Shawn Green 23 6 1 4 0.261 0  
Jose Valentin 21 4 1 4 0.190 0  
Endy Chavez 20 10 1 2 0.500 0  
Xavier Nady 3 1 0 0 0.333 0  
Cliff Floyd 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Michael Tucker 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Totals 204 68 6 30 0.333 4  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Tom Glavine 15.6 1 1 2 5 3 1.15
Steve Trachsel 9.6 1 0 5 5 8 4.69
Darren Oliver 1.3 0 0 0 1 1 0.00
Aaron Heilman 6.6 0 0 4 2 1 5.45
Pedro Martinez 5 0 1 8 1 3 14.40
Brian Bannister 4 0 0 2 1 2 4.50
Chad Bradford 2.6 0 0 0 3 1 0.00
Orlando Hernandez 5 0 0 3 7 2 5.40
Billy Wagner 1 0 0 1 1 0 9.00
Duaner Sanchez 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
Totals 51.7 2 2 25 27 21 4.35

1962 LA Dodgers (102-63) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Maury Wills 29 10 0 1 0.345 4  
Ron Fairly 25 5 2 4 0.200 0  
Tommy Davis 29 10 2 7 0.345 0  
Frank Howard 27 6 0 1 0.222 0  
Willie Davis 24 2 0 1 0.083 0  
Johnny Roseboro 23 6 0 1 0.261 0  
Daryl Spencer 17 3 0 2 0.176 0  
Jim Gilliam 23 11 0 3 0.478 0  
Duke Snider 4 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Tim Harkness 1 1 0 1 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 202 54 4 21 0.267 4  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Don Drysdale 15 1 1 10 8 10 6.00
Pete Richert 6.3 0 0 0 6 4 0.00
Johnny Podres 10.6 0 2 8 8 3 6.79
Ed Roebuck 4.3 0 0 3 1 0 6.28
Larry Sherry 3 0 0 2 1 1 6.00
Sandy Koufax 5 1 0 1 7 3 1.80
Phil Ortega 1 0 0 0 0 2 0.00
Ron Parranoski 2 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
Stan Williams 6 0 1 4 1 3 6.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 53.2 2 4 28 34 26 4.74
11/3/2011 2:19 AM
Have you done any of the Rockies in 07 yet?

11/11/2011 2:03 PM
Posted by judahw on 11/11/2011 2:03:00 PM (view original):
Have you done any of the Rockies in 07 yet?

No I have not. Pennant winners and world champions will be coming up in the next round.
11/12/2011 10:53 PM
*Preliminary Round*


1971 San Francisco Giants over 1944 Pittsburgh Pirates
Four games to one
MVP: Willie McCovey (.368, 2 HR, 9 RBI)
 
Other then a dominant pitching performance by Rip Sewell in game four that gave the Pirates a 2-0 win this series was controlled and dominated by the aging but able SF Giants. Sewell had actually pitched well in game one but was paced by Juan Marichal and the Giants got to the Pirate relievers late and won the opener going away. Behind Gaylord Perry the Giants won game 2 by ten runs and Steve Stone was solid in the clinching game as the Giants took four out of five.
 
The older Giant bats such as Willie Mays and Willie McCovey were at their ripe best contributing 14 RBI in the series. The Pirates on the other hand hit .144 as a team and were in a fog for most of the series. Long story short in this one the better team wrapped things up quickly.

Games
Game 1    
At Forbes Field    
71 Giants 12  
44 Pirates 4 (10 inn)
     
Game 2    
At Forbes Field    
71 Giants 10  
44 Pirates 0  
     
Game 3    
At Candlestick Park    
44 Pirates 2  
71 Giants 7  
     
Game 4    
At Candlestick Park    
44 Pirates 2  
71 Giants 0 (11 inn)
     
Game 5    
At Candlestick Park    
44 Pirates 2  
71 Giants 8  

Stats

1944 Pittsburgh Pirates (90-63) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Pete Coscarart 21 4 0 0 0.190 0  
Babe Dahlgren 22 4 0 2 0.182 0  
Jim Russell 20 3 1 2 0.150 0  
Bob Elliott 21 2 1 2 0.095 0  
Johnny Barrett 15 6 0 0 0.400 5  
Vince Dimaggio 18 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Frankie Gustine 17 3 1 3 0.176 2  
Al Lopez 18 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Frank Coleman 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 153 22 3 9 0.144 7  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Rip Sewell 18 1 0 4 9 12 2.00
Xavier Rescigno 5 0 0 1 3 1 1.80
Ray Starr 0.6 0 1 3 0 0 45.00
Cookie Cuccurullo 5.3 0 0 9 2 5 15.28
Max Butcher 6.3 0 1 4 1 1 5.71
Nick Strincevich 4.6 0 1 6 0 3 11.74
Preacher Roe 6 0 1 2 5 2 3.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 45.8 1 4 29 20 24 5.70

1971 SF Giants (90-72) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Ken Henderson 24 7 0 3 0.292 0  
Dick Dietz 22 7 1 5 0.318 0  
Willie Mays 22 5 0 5 0.227 0  
Bobby Bonds 21 8 1 6 0.381 2  
Willie McCovey 19 7 2 9 0.368 0  
Al Gallagher 22 6 0 2 0.273 0  
Tito Fuentes 22 5 0 2 0.227 0  
Chris Speier 21 6 1 3 0.286 0  
Dave Kingman 4 1 0 0 0.250 0  
George Foster 3 3 0 0 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 180 55 5 35 0.306 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Juan Marichal 17.6 0 1 6 11 3 3.07
Steve Hamilton 3.6 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
Don McMahon 3 1 0 1 2 4 3.00
Jim Barr 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Gaylord Perry 9 1 0 0 4 1 0.00
Ron Bryant 6.3 1 0 2 2 4 2.86
Steve Stone 6 1 0 1 4 1 1.50
Rich Robertson 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 47.5 4 1 10 26 13 1.89
11/12/2011 11:05 PM

Have you noticed any trends yet?  Like better records usually wins, HR teams, home field advantage...ect. ?
11/15/2011 9:28 PM
*Preliminary Round*


1983 Chicago White Sox over 1997 Sand Francisco Giants
Four games to none
MVP: La Marr Hoyt (2-0, 9 K, 1 HR, 4 RBI)
 
Tony LaRussa always has his teams ready to play and his strategy to beat the 1997 Giants and slugger Barry Bonds worked out just as planned after Chicago swept away the Giants in four straight games. Aftery fighting out the first two games in Comiskey Park by a single run, the Sox had an easier time of it in the Bay and closed things out. La Marr Hoyt was the star of the clinching game earning the win and hitting a first inning grand slam with the bat to humble the Giants.
 
Bonds did hit .313 with a couple of home runs and did his part, but the Sox arms avoided the big innings and pitched around Bonds when they had the chance; backup hitters like JT Snow (.111) and Jeff Kent (.188) made the plan work well. Shawn Estes in this series allowed 14 earned runs and walked 11 men in his weak 9 innings of work. The White Sox were the much better team here hands down.

Games
Game 1  
At Comiskey Park  
97 Giants 7
83 White Sox 8
   
Game 2  
At Comiskey Park  
97 Giants 5
83 White Sox 6
   
Game 3  
At 3 Com Park  
83 White Sox 4
97 Giants 1
   
Game 4  
At 3 Com Park  
83 White Sox 10
97 Giants 5

Stats

1997 San Francisco Giants (90-72) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Stan Javier 17 7 0 1 0.412 2  
Bill Mueller 19 6 1 2 0.316 0  
Barry Bonds 16 5 2 7 0.313 0  
Brian Johnson 17 5 1 4 0.294 0  
J.T. Snow 18 2 1 1 0.111 0  
Jeff Kent 16 3 0 1 0.188 0  
Mark Lewis 8 3 0 0 0.375 0  
Jose Vizcaino 15 5 0 1 0.333 0  
Darryl Hamilton 16 6 0 0 0.375 0  
Rich Aurelia 2 0 0 0 0.000 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 144 42 5 17 0.292 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Shawn Estes 8.6 0 2 14 9 11 14.65
Doug Henry 3.6 0 0 0 3 6 0.00
Julian Tavarez 1 0 1 3 1 1 27.00
Kirk Rueter 6.3 0 0 5 3 3 7.14
Rich Rodriguez 0.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Mark Gardner 8 0 1 3 10 1 3.38
Joe Roa 2 0 0 0 1 1 0.00
Terry Mulholland 1 0 0 0 2 0 0.00
Keith Foulke 1.3 0 0 1 0 0 6.92
Danny Darwin 1.6 0 0 0 3 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
Totals 33.7 0 4 26 32 23 6.94

1983 Chicago White Sox (99-63) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Rudy Law 18 6 0 4 0.333 3  
Tom Paciorek 8 5 0 4 0.625 0  
Carlton Fisk 16 4 1 3 0.250 0  
Ron Kittle 16 3 0 1 0.188 0  
Greg Luzinski 15 4 1 3 0.267 0  
Harold Baines 16 3 0 2 0.188 0  
Scott Fletcher 12 1 0 1 0.083 0  
Julio Cruz 14 3 0 1 0.214 0  
Vance Law 14 6 0 2 0.429 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 129 35 2 21 0.271 3  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
La Marr Hoyt 14.3 2 0 8 9 1 5.03
Salome Barojas  2.6 0 0 3 1 1 10.38
Dennis Lamp 1.3 0 0 2 1 0 13.85
Richard Dotson 7.6 0 0 3 7 2 3.55
Floyd Bannister 7 1 0 1 6 4 1.29
Juan Agosto 0.6 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Dick Tidrow 0.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 33.7 3 0 17 24 9 4.54
11/19/2011 6:43 PM
Posted by skinndogg on 11/15/2011 9:28:00 PM (view original):

Have you noticed any trends yet?  Like better records usually wins, HR teams, home field advantage...ect. ?
There have been 79 series played already.
  •  The home team or favored team has won 43 times and the road team 36 times.
  • There have been 10 sweeps
  • 23 series have gone the distance.
  • The Cincinnati Reds are an incredible 8-0 in the series they have participated in.
  • Remember no pennant winners or world series winners have been inlcuded yet.
If you have anyother specific questions please ask as stats are being recorded.

Thanks
11/21/2011 5:43 PM
Interesting to see the Reds at 8-0, but how about all the others? When the preliminary round s complete, I would love to see the records of all the franchises.
11/21/2011 9:55 PM
*PRELIMINARY ROUND*


1945 St. Louis Cardinals over 1917 Philadelphia Phillies
Four games to three
MVP: Red Barrett (2-0, 8 K, 1.50 ERA)
 
Another outstanding series not decided until the last out. Red Barrett and Pete Alexander faced off no less then three times in this series as it went the distance. Barrett carried his team is a shutout of game four and then a thrilling 2-1 win in game seven as the Cardinals did just enough to beat the Phillies. Pitching was definitely the story throughout even if the defense behind the pitcher wasn’t the greatest. Both teams had ERA’s under three and let their starters throw deep into games.
 
Other stars were Whitey Kurowski who hit .500 for the series driving in five behind 14 hits. Kurowski was so consistent in the middle of the Cardinal lineup that he soon began to be pitched around. Dave Bancroft was the best bat for the Phillies going deep twice in game in game three and batting .435.

Games
Game 1    
At Sportsmans Park    
17 Phillies 10  
45 Cardinals 4  
     
Game 2    
At Sportsman's Park    
17 Phillies 2  
45 Cardinals 6  
     
Game 3    
At Baker Bowl    
45 Cardinals 2  
17 Phillies 3 (10 inn)
     
Game 4    
At Baker Bowl    
45 Cardinals 2  
17 Phillies 0  
     
Game 5    
At Baker Bowl    
45 Cardinals 8  
17 Phillies 1  
     
Game 6    
At Sportsmans Park    
17 Phillies 4  
45 Cardinals 2  
     
Game 7    
At Sportsmans Park    
17 Phillies 1  
45 Cardinals 2  

Stats

1917 Philadelphia Phillies (87-65) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Milt Stock 31 7 1 1 0.226 2  
Gavvy Cravath 26 6 1 2 0.231 0  
Fred Luderus 30 8 1 3 0.267 0  
Dode Paskert 28 7 0 3 0.250 2  
Possum Whitted 30 11 0 3 0.367 0  
Bert Niehoff 27 3 0 2 0.111 1  
Bill Killefer 28 9 1 2 0.321 0  
Dave Bancroft 23 10 2 5 0.435 0  
Frank Schulte 5 1 0 0 0.200 0  
          #DIV/0!    
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 228 62 6 21 0.272 5  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Pete Alexander 22 1 2 6 9 3 2.45
Jimmy Lavender 8 1 0 4 1 2 4.50
Paul Fittery 0.6 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Eppa Rixey 15 1 1 3 6 4 1.80
Joe Oeschger 9 0 0 2 6 6 2.00
Erskine Mayer 5 0 1 2 1 1 3.60
Chief Bender 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 60.9 3 4 17 23 16 2.51

1945 St. Louis Cardinals (95-59) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Red Schoendienst 32 6 0 2 0.188 2  
Ray Sanders 26 8 1 2 0.308 0  
Whitey Kurowski 28 14 2 5 0.500 0  
Buster Adams 27 8 0 4 0.296 0  
Johnny Hopp 27 5 0 1 0.185 4  
Marty Marion 27 7 0 3 0.259 0  
Emil Verban 27 5 0 4 0.185 0  
Ken O'Dea 25 5 0 1 0.200 0  
Debs Garms 3 2 1 2 0.667 0  
Augie Bergamo 0 0 0 0 #DIV/0! 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 222 60 4 24 0.270 6  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Red Barrett 24 2 0 4 8 3 1.50
Al Jurisich 7.3 0 1 6 5 4 7.40
Bud Byerly 1 0 0 3 0 0 27.00
Glenn Gardner 4 0 0 1 2 2 2.25
Blix Donnelly 14.6 1 1 6 6 3 3.70
Ken Burkhart 7 0 0 0 1 1 0.00
Harry Brecheen 6 1 0 1 2 3 1.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 63.9 4 2 21 24 16 2.96
11/24/2011 1:09 AM
Glad to see Red Barrett have a good series. He is from my home town. Barrett holds the record for the fastest 9 inning complete game in history, and he also threw the fewest pitches ever to do it. The game, in 1944, lasted 1 hour and 15 minutes and he only needed a ridiculous 58 pitches to record the 2-0 shutout. 
11/24/2011 8:32 PM
*Preliminary Round*


1963 St. Louis Cardinals over 1921 Cleveland Indians
Four games to none
MVP: George Altman (.647, 11 hits, 6 RBI)
 
Younger, faster, and more explosive the 1963 Cardinals made easy work of the 1921 Indians in what was as one sided of a series as we have seen yet. The Cardinals an eye opening .396 as a team and never were challenged by anyone in the Cleveland staff. George Altman smacked 11 hits in four games while Curt Flood batted .450 and Dick Groat .444. Ernie Broglio won the first and the last game of the series while young Bob Gibson wasn’t dominant, but did enough to win game two and break Cleveland’s back at home.
 
With an ERA well over 7.00, Steve Covelski was one of many Indian pitchers who saw red all series and allowed more earned runs then innings pitched. The Indians were competitive and even held the lead for game one but when they dropped the game by a run, the rest of the series turned into a runaway. The Cardinal teams of the 1960’s will be a very good group to watch progress.

Games
Game 1  
At League Park  
63 Cardinals 7
21 Indians 6
   
Game 2  
At League Park  
63 Cardinals 8
21 Indians 5
   
Game 3  
At Sportsman's Park  
21 Indians 2
63 Cardinals 10
   
Game 4  
At Sportsmans Park  
21 Indians 4
63 Cardinals 8

Stats

1921 Cleveland Indians (94-60) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Bill Wambsganss 20 7 0 4 0.350 1  
Steve O'Neill 16 2 0 2 0.125 0  
Tris Speaker 17 5 0 0 0.294 0  
Elmer Smith 14 4 0 3 0.286 0  
Joe Sewell 16 4 0 3 0.250 0  
Larry Gardner 16 5 0 1 0.313 1  
Doc Johnston 17 5 0 0 0.294 0  
Charlie Jamieson 15 5 0 1 0.333 0  
Joe Wood 2 2 1 1 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 133 39 1 15 0.293 2  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Stan Coveleski 7 0 2 9 3 1 11.57
Ray Caldwell 5.6 0 0 4 3 1 6.43
Guy Morton 7 0 0 5 2 1 6.43
George Uhle 8 0 0 5 5 1 5.63
Jim Bagby 3.6 0 1 2 3 0 5.00
Allen Sothoron 2.6 0 0 3 2 1 10.38
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 33.8 0 3 28 18 5 7.46

1963 St. Louis Cardinals (93-69) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Julian Javier 20 6 0 1 0.300 2  
Curt Flood 20 9 0 5 0.450 2  
Bill White 19 7 1 3 0.368 0  
Ken Boyer 15 5 1 4 0.333 0  
Dick Groat 18 8 0 2 0.444 0  
George Altman 17 11 0 6 0.647 0  
Charlie James 15 5 0 7 0.333 0  
Tim McCarver 17 4 0 0 0.235 0  
Gary Kolb 3 2 0 1 0.667 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 144 57 2 29 0.396 4  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Ernie Broglio 13.3 2 0 4 1 3 2.71
Bobby Shantz 4.6 0 0 1 4 1 1.96
Ed Bauta 1 0 0 0 1 1 0.00
Bob Gibson 7 1 0 4 5 3 5.14
Curt Simmons 8 1 0 0 2 2 0.00
Ray Washburn 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Harry Fanok 0.6 0 0 1 1 0 15.00
Barry Schultz 0.3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 35.8 4 0 10 14 10 2.51
12/2/2011 9:59 PM
*Preliminary Round*


1920 New York Giants over 1912 Washington Senators
Four games to three
MVP: Fred Toney (3-0, 0.31 ERA, 6 K)
 
In game seven John McGraw and his men put down the hammer to end a very close and deeply contested series that went the full seven games. The Giants murdered the Senators at Griffith Stadium 12-1, beating Walter Johnson in the process as the Washington ace was betrayed by bad defense, but still wasn’t himself with a 5.05 ERA in three starts. The home team had taken everygame of the series up until game seven with the most memorable being game six that went 14 innings, the longest game we have seen yet. The Senators refused to lose and fought back twice down to their last out to win 8-6 and even the series.
 
The hero for the Giants had to be Fred Toney who became the only player to win three games as he won all his starts and even made a relief appearance in the series. Toney allowed an amazing one earned run in 29 innings, truly a masterful effort. Other stars for the Giants included Ross Youngs (.400) and Larry Doyle (.333). There was only one home run hit in this entire series which was a great one.

Games
Game 1    
At Griffith Stadium    
1920 Giants 2  
1912 Senators 3  
     
Game 2    
At Griffith Stadium    
1920 Giants 1  
1912 Senators 2 (11 inn)
     
Game 3    
At Polo Grounds    
1912 Senators 4  
1920 Giants 5  
     
Game 4    
At Polo Grounds    
1912 Senators 0  
1920 Giants 5  
     
Game 5    
At Polo Grounds    
1912 Senators 6  
1920 Giants 9  
     
Game 6    
At Griffith Stadium    
1920 Giants 6  
1912 Senators 8 (14 inn)
     
Game 7    
At Griffith Stadium    
1920 Giants 12  
1912 Senators 1  

Stats

1920 New York Giants (86-68) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Frankie Frisch 32 8 0 4 0.250 4  
Larry Doyle 30 10 0 5 0.333 0  
Ross Youngs 30 12 0 6 0.400 2  
George Burns 27 7 0 7 0.259 0  
Lee King 29 9 0 8 0.310 0  
George Kelly 29 7 0 3 0.241 0  
Frank Snyder 27 6 0 1 0.222 0  
Dave Bancroft 31 6 0 5 0.194 0  
Benny Kauff 3 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Fred Lear 1 1 0 0 1.000 0  
          #DIV/0!    
Totals 239 66 0 39 0.276 6  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Fred Toney 29 3 0 1 6 5 0.31
Bill Hubbell 3.3 1 0 3 1 3 8.18
Phil Douglas 8.6 0 1 3 1 3 3.14
Jesse Winters 4.6 1 1 2 3 4 3.91
Jesse Barnes 12 0 0 2 1 1 1.50
Art Nehf 5.3 0 0 2 0 0 3.40
Rube Benton 5.6 0 0       0.00
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 68.4 5 2 13 12 16 1.71

1912 Washington Senators (91-61) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Danny Moeller 30 8 1 7 0.267 2  
Rip Williams 32 9 0 2 0.281 0  
Chick Gandil 30 5 0 2 0.167 1  
Clyde Milan 27 4 0 1 0.148 1  
Eddie Foster 27 5 0 2 0.185 1  
Ray Morgan 27 3 0 0 0.111 1  
George McBride 28 9 0 2 0.321 1  
Howie Shanks 31 10 0 1 0.323 0  
Frank LaPorte 5 3 0 4 0.600 1  
Germany Schaefer 4 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Tilly Walker 2 1 0 0 0.500 0  
Totals 243 57 1 21 0.235 8  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Walter Johnson 19.6 0 1 11 7 7 5.05
Barney Pelty 5.6 1 0 1 2 1 1.61
Bob Groom 14.1 0 0 3 2 8 1.91
Hippo Vaughn 3 0 0 1 2 3 3.00
Dixie Walker 8 1 0 1 6 1 1.13
Tom Hughes 7.3 0 1 8 3 7 9.86
Carl Cashion 7 0 2 6 1 10 7.71
Joe Engel 2 0 0 1 0 3 4.50
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 66.6 2 4 32 23 40 4.32
12/10/2011 12:42 AM
Why didnt you include the 1996 Cardinals....WHO beat the 1996 Padres before choking on a 3-1 lead in games in LaSleep at the Wheels first year in St. Louis?
12/19/2011 9:22 PM
*Preliminary Round*


1991 Pittsburgh Pirates over 1937 Chicago Cubs
Four games to Two
MVP: Barry Bonds (.462, 1 HR, 8 RBI)
 
The Pirate bats were just too much in this series as Jim Leyland and Pittsburgh hit .327 as a team and scored 48 runs in the six game series win over Chicago. Barry Bonds and Andy Van Slyke were in particular lethal batting .449 between them; this was the young Bonds that could steal bases and change the complexion of a game without the long ball. Zane Smith turned out to be the ace on the mound for the Pirates winning two games and with a 2.94 ERA. The Cubs swung the bats well also with Billy Herman driving in 9 and batting .393.
 
In their four wins Pittsburgh scored almost four runs a game including 14 runs in game two and raking the ball at Wrigley Field where they took two out of three. The decider back in Pittsburgh was a close one but Stan Hack couldn’t come through in the final inning with the tying run 90 feet away. The Pirates were deserved winners and have weapons on offense that rarely can be slowed down as the Cubs found out with their 8.09 team ERA, the highest we have seen so far.

Games
Game 1  
At Three Rivers Stadium  
1937 Cubs 6
1991 Pirates 2
   
Game 2  
At Three Rivers Stadium  
1937 Cubs 5
1991 Pirates 14
   
Game 3  
At Wrigley Field  
1991 Pirates 8
1937 Cubs 9
   
Game 4  
At Wrigley Field  
1991 Pirates 10
1937 Cubs 5
   
Game 5  
At Wrigley Field  
1991 Pirates 10
1937 Cubs 7
   
Game 6  
At Three Rivers Stadium  
1937 Cubs 2
1991 Pirates 3


Stats

1937 Chicago Cubs (93-61) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Augie Galan 27 6 0 2 0.222 0  
Stan Hack 26 9 0 1 0.346 0  
Gabby Hartnett 26 12 2 4 0.462 0  
Billy Herman 28 11 1 9 0.393 0  
Frank Demaree 28 9 2 5 0.321 0  
Ripper Collins 26 12 0 3 0.462 0  
Phil Cavarretta 23 8 0 3 0.348 1  
Billy Jurges 22 5 0 4 0.227 0  
Joe Marty 3 0 0 1 0.000 0  
Lonny Frey 2 1 0 0 0.500 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 211 73 5 32 0.346 1  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Bill Lee 12.3 1 0 7 8 5 5.12
Clay Bryant 11.3 1 1 4 8 6 3.19
Larry French 8.6 0 2 10 6 3 10.47
Curt Davis 7 0 0 4 3 4 5.14
Clyde Shoun 0.6 0 0 3 0 0 45.00
Tex Carleton 4.6 0 0 8 3 5 15.65
Charlie Root 3.3 0 1 6 1 2 16.36
Ray Parmalee 4.6 0 0 5 3 2 9.78
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
              #DIV/0!
Totals 52.3 2 4 47 32 27 8.09

1991 Pittsburgh Pirates (98-64) AB H HR RBI AVG SB  
Jay Bell 29 8 0 2 0.276 0  
John Wehner 28 8 0 2 0.286 0  
Barry Bonds 26 12 1 8 0.462 1  
Bobby Bonilla 26 7 1 9 0.269 0  
Andy Vanslyke 23 10 0 9 0.435 0  
Orlando Merced 25 10 1 5 0.400 0  
Jose Lind 25 5 0 7 0.200 0  
Mike Lavalliere 22 7 0 3 0.318 0  
Don Slaught 1 0 0 0 0.000 0  
Lloyd McClendon 3 1 0 1 0.333 0  
          #DIV/0! 0  
Totals 208 68 3 46 0.327 1  
               
  IP W L ER BB  ERA
Doug Drabek 13 1 1 9 5 6 6.23
Stan Belinda 4.6 0 0 3 3 2 5.87
Bob Patterson 3 0 0 5 2 1 15.00
Zane Smith 15.3 2 0 5 5 4 2.94
Neal Heaton 0.3 0 0 1 1 1 30.00
Vincente Palacios 2.3 0 0 1 2 0 3.91
John Smiley 5.6 0 0 6 3 1 9.64
Roger Mason 0.6 0 0 0 1 0 0.00
Bill Landrum 1 0 1 3 0 0 27.00
Bob Kipper 2.3 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Randy Tomlin 6 0 0 1 3 2 1.50
Totals 54 4 2 34 25 17 5.67
12/28/2011 3:01 PM
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