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With apologies to People Magazine, I thought it would be fun to figure out the "Top 25 Most Intriguing People" of the 2007 American League playoffs. Why wasn't the National League included as well? Until last week, I didn't watch a single inning of an NL game -- you know, the whole Quadruple-A thing -- and felt vindicated by the decision when Red Sox castoffs Joel Piniero, J.C. Romero and Wily Mo Pena played prominent roles in last week's pennant race. Look, I don't have anything against the National League. As it proved last October, it's perfectly capable of giving us a World Series champion. It's just that there's only so much time in the day. I watch every Red Sox game and spend the rest of my baseball TV time rooting against the Yankees, following the guys on my AL-only keeper team (I watched more of Andrew Miller's starts than Miller's family did) and getting angry about stuff like one of the "Baseball Tonight" guys deciding in mid-August that the Mariners had a better chance of getting the wild-card than the Yankees. Somewhere along the line, I became a one-league guy and jettisoned the NL from my life. I didn't even know how to spell Troy Tulowitkowski's name correctly until Monday night. Er, Troy Tulowitzki. Is this acceptable? Of course not. I should be following both leagues just as diligently. Starting next season, I'm joining a second keeper league (NL-only) to further that purpose, even if it's a decision that will inevitably lead to my first divorce. (Note: I said "first" because I'm good for at least three before everything's said and done.) But that's a year away. For now, I can only offer you thoughts about the American League playoffs. And I have many. Without further ado, the 25 most intriguing AL players, coaches and "others," in reverse order ... ![]() As long as he doesn't have to move to his left or right, Rivera should be fine. With Junior Matthews scratched from Round 1, the Angels have a little problem: Vlad Guerrero is their only hitter with any power, only he's hobbling around right now like a boxer who just got punched in the cup. Vlad needs to DH and the Angels desperately need Rivera to play one of the corner outfield spots, but he's just coming back from being sidelined the longest for a broken leg in recorded sports history. When he broke it playing winter ball, everyone thought he'd be back by July. For my AL-keeper league, my buddy Hench and I drafted him for $3 and stashed him away. July rolled around and there was no sign of Rivera -- we even wondered if the leg had gotten infected and had to be amputated, only nobody was telling us. Then our Web site started giving us updates on Rivera's player page like this one: "Aug. 8, 2007: Juan Rivera [leg] has been unable to begin a minor league rehab assignment because he's having trouble running the bases and breaking for balls defensively. Rivera has been fine running on a straight line, but is having problems turning." Put it this way: When the good news is that one of your key second-half guys is "fine running on a straight line," and it's early August, it's probably time to give up on your fantasy baseball team. Rivera finally returned in September and didn't look terrible, even playing the outfield in a few games (although he didn't look that sharp). At the very least, he's a legitimate X factor (only a year removed from a .310/23/85 season) and a much-needed righty bat, assuming he's healthy enough to play outfield all month. On a personal note, he scares the hell out of me when he's up, ... which gives him something in common with no other Angels hitter except Vlad. Fortunately for Sox fans, it looks like the Angels will sit Rivera and play Chone Figgins out of position in right field, at least for the first two games.
24. Manny Delcarmen There's a chance both guys will shine; there's a chance both guys will stink; there's a chance one will shine and one will stink. We don't know. But here's one thing I do know: If Eric Gagne pitches in a close playoff game this month, there better be a team of paramedics within three minutes of my father's house, as well as one person watching the game with him who knows how to dial "9-1-1." 22. Travis Hafner It would be one thing if Hafner turned 40 this year, ... but he turned 30. Bizarre. He did show some life in September (98 ABs, 5 HRs, 23 RBI, .414 OBP, .551 SLG), but looking at those '07 numbers, it's hard to take the Indians too seriously when their best slugger's OPS was nearly 200 points short of Micah Owings. 21. Ronan Tynan 20. Reggie Willits (One more Willits note: His "game" (for lack of a better word) translates better to the postseason because he gets on base (.391 OBP), swipes bags (27 for 35), plays good defense and takes a ton of pitches (4.44 per AB, the highest in either league). Isn't that the playbook for one of those typically pesky postseason guys who invariably stumbles into a series MVP at some point?) ![]() "Donnie, don't get upset that you don't have a ring. Here, you can have one of mine." This 2007 Yankees team is right in his wheelhouse -- no loose cannons, no head cases and, most importantly, no black people. (Just kidding, I made that joke for Gary Sheffield.) Even if they get swept by the Tribe, nobody will be pointing fingers at Torre; they'll be too busy blaming A-Rod and/or Brian Cashman's game plan of building his starting rotation around Chien Ming-Wang and three guys who are a combined 125 years old. But Torre fascinates me this month for one reason -- for the first time since Rivera was his set-up guy in '96, Joba Chamberlain gives him a seventh/eighth-inning workhorse, someone who could do a reasonable imitation of K-Rod in 2002. Even better, he's had Joba for only a couple of months and hasn't had a chance to blow out his arm yet. (If Joba had started the season with the Yanks, he'd be wincing his way through a handshake with Dr. James Andrews right now.) Which brings me back to my original point: This 2007 Yankees team is right in Joe Torre's wheelhouse. 18. Eric Wedge Which reminds me -- kudos to TBS for banging out its new HD channel just in time for the playoffs. This briefly renewed my faith that TV networks actually care about their customers. Then I remembered how Fox blacked out Red Sox and Yankees games on the West Coast every Saturday for six straight months, refused to go to a split-screen for Phils-Nats and Pads-Brewers on Saturday, and didn't even send a sideline reporter to the Pads-Brewers game, leading to a terrifying ninth inning in which Eric Karros (breaking out the full-fledged monotone) called the start of Milwaukee's comeback by himself because Matt Vasgersian was headed down to the clubhouse to interview the victorious Padres. Seriously, Fox, you couldn't have pulled a cute girl out of the stands, handed her a microphone and told her to ask everyone, "How does it feel?" Would that have made too much sense? 17. Terry Francona 16. Cal Ripken Jr. ALDS PICKSRed Sox over Angels in 4Yankees over Indians in 5 14. CC Sabathia My Yankee friends (sadly, I have a few of them) seem nonplussed about the Sabathia/Carmona combo, even though it's the best 1-2 punch in the league, even though Fausto had a monster second half, and even though Sabathia might be the best big-game pitcher of the four A.L. playoff teams. I don't quite get it. And while we're here, how could anyone pick Josh Beckett for the the Cy Young Award over Sabathia when Sabathia threw 41 more innings and had similar stats? What am I missing? I mean, I'm the biggest homer on the planet and even I don't think Beckett deserves it over Sabathia. Why is this even a debate? 13. Scot Shields ![]() It could be konichiwa and sayonara for Dice-K in the playoffs. My dad is convinced that Scott Boras pulled a double-whammy on the Red Sox by rigging the Dice bidding in their favor, then demanding that they overpay J.D. Drew with a lavish long-term deal as a return for that favor. He's been begging me to put this in a column since June. I didn't do it because I didn't want you to think that he was a lunatic. Here's what we weren't counting on: Heading into the 2007 playoffs and having more faith in Drew than Dice -- I mean, at least Drew has been hitting lately. Regardless, all bets are off with Dice in the playoffs. He could go 4-0 with a 2.22 ERA and I wouldn't be shocked. He could go 0-3 and get left off the World Series roster and I wouldn't be shocked. The ceiling and the basement have both been removed. (Random note: I can't remember a front office having greater range of hits and misses than the Red Sox over the past five years. Somehow, it's working. This is a franchise that spent more than $265 million the past three winters on Dice, Drew, Edgar Renteria, Matt Clement and Julio Lugo. They're like the anti-Patriots.) 11. Grady Sizemore 9. Roger Clemens 8. Joba Chamberlain (Wait, why am I giving advice to the Yankees? Um, forget everything I just wrote -- they should make Joba a starter! Who needs closers? They're a dime a dozen!) 7. John Lackey But you know what really hurts? Seeing Vlad as a DH and not getting to see him unleash that cannon in right field. During a Sox-Angels game two months ago, after somebody flied out on the Red Sox, the Boston runner on third did the stutter-step thing to draw a throw from Vlad. Now, we all knew the runner wasn't going. You don't run on Vlad. But Vlad jumped at the chance to uncork a 275-foot frozen rope as everyone ooohed and ahhhhhed, almost like he wanted to remind everyone that he still had a cannon arm. It was like seeing someone with 36D's jump at the chance to put on a T-shirt that was two sizes too small. Heeeeeeey, look at these! If Vlad is headed for DH City, it's too bad he can't sign over his cannon arm to Reggie Willits or something. I'm gonna miss it. 5. J.D. Drew So here's a Red Sox stat to cheer you up (if you're a Sox fan), as well as a stat that partially explains why they overpaid for Lugo and Drew: The Red Sox finished with nine of the top-42 AL batters in pitches-per-at-bat. Together, Youkilis (6), Varitek (13), Ortiz (15), Drew (29), Crisp (33), Lugo (35), Ramirez (37), Pedroia (41) and Lowell (42) averaged a shade under four pitches per at-bat, which means that starters were going through Boston's lineup three times and that's it. Plate patience is one of those things that only works if everyone is doing it -- in a playoff series, it's the easiest and best way to wear out an opposing bullpen. Which is why the Boston offense will be tougher in October than people realize, whether Drew and Lugo are hitting or not. (Note: This might not be true, I just like telling myself this.) ![]() Don't let the haters fool you, Mo's numbers in the postseason are freakin' scary. Funny how roles can reverse: Back in '96, Rivera was the unhittable set-up guy and John Wetteland was the veteran closer who always made it interesting. Now, we have Joba as the unhittable set-up guy and 37-year-old Rivera as the veteran closer who's been making it interesting lately (and by lately, I mean, "the last week"). But when you study the 37-year-old Rivera's career stats, four things stand out about the 37-year-old Rivera. First, his statistical consistency from 1996 through 2007 is absolutely incredible. You can't even tell the seasons apart. It's creepy. Second, his postseason pitching resume is even more incredible -- in 73 postseason games, the 37-year-old Rivera is 17-8 with 34 saves and a 0.80 ERA in 112.2 innings. Third, he's carrying all that postseason mileage on a 37-year-old body and we haven't seen any real effects yet. And fourth, he turns 38 in November. Here's one thing we haven't seen during the 37-year-old Rivera's career: A Yankee reliever who was clearly more effective than him. In 19 games and 24 innings, Chamberlain has allowed 18 baserunners and one earned run and struck out 34 guys. He isn't just the best reliever on the team, he's the best pitcher on the team. How will this affect the psyche of the 37-year old Rivera? We don't know. But I hope and pray it ends poorly. 3. David Ortiz In 2007, he stopped locking in. He looked tired. It looked like his knees were bothering him. Something wasn't right. Statistically, there wasn't a significant difference from 2004-06 except for the home run drop ... but something wasn't right. You could see it. Then he caught fire in mid-August, kept it going into September and morphed into the old Big Papi again. In the process, the Red Sox stopped resembling the team that broke out to a 36-16 start thanks to starting pitching, two great relievers and a solid offense; now they have decent starting pitching, one great reliever, three decent relievers and a much more dangerous offense. In other words, they look like the 2004 team, mostly because David Ortiz looks like the 2004 David Ortiz again. For the other seven playoff teams, this is a bad thing. 2. Joe Borowski 1. Alex Rodriguez
Bill Simmons is a columnist for Page 2 and ESPN The Magazine. You can check out his revamped "Sports Guy's World" site here.
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