A POSTMORTEM FOR
MLB'S 20 NON-PLAYOFF TEAMS
Where did it all go wrong? 10 teams in Major League Baseball
will have the privilege of playing in the postseason. Their fans will get
thrills, chills, heartbreak, disappointment, and for one lucky city, the glory
of a World Series title. The other 20 teams? Not so much. Some had seasons that
came down to the wire; others might as well have stayed at spring training.
Let's take a look at what went wrong, and when, for all 20 of baseball's
non-playoff teams.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES
Where did it all go wrong for the Pirates? Look no further
than July 31, the day they went way out of character and traded for Chris
Archer, arguably the biggest name being shopped. Fans were ecstatic, but Archer
was a flop in his first several starts, and the team endured a miserable 10-17
August that took them from right near the top of the wild card standings to
also-ran status. A 16-10 September rally gave them an 82-79 mark to end the
season, but that bad August plus a mid-May to mid-June swoon that erased a
promising 26-17 start was enough to sink the Bucs.
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS
September is supposed to be the time when pennant chases
really heat up, but for Diamondbacks fans, it was when they saw their seemingly
robust postseason hopes go up in flames. Arizona started the month in first
place in the NL West, only to suffer through a truly awful 6-17 stretch to not
only lose the division lead but fall completely out of the playoff picture altogether.
The main culprit? A pitching staff that saw its ERA balloon from the mid-threes
for the season to over five in September.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Baltimore's season was over before it started. The club set
its all-time record for losses this year with 115 and never even came close to
anything resembling contention in the rugged AL East. The Orioles did not win
more than nine games in any month, were 30 games under .500 against the rest of
the division and simply offered little to no resistance to virtually every
opponent. Baltimore's longest winning streak this season? Four games. On the
bright side, it can't get worse for the Orioles next season — or can it?
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
The White Sox, like so many other teams on this list, never
had a shot at contending. 2018 was going to be a rebuilding year from the
start. The ChiSox managed to be nearly as bad as Baltimore, especially early on
in the season. Unlike the Orioles, they managed a winning month, going 17-12 in
August, something that saved them from the indignity of a 100-loss season. It
also helped to keep them out of the cellar in the truly awful AL Central, a
division that deserves some sort of recognition for collective futility (aside
from Cleveland, of course).
CINCINNATI REDS
Another team, another season that started with exactly zero
expectation of making the playoffs, let alone having a winning year. And the
Reds paid off that expectation by starting 7-22 in March and April and firing
Bryan Price after only 18 games — during which the Reds went 3-15. Jim
Riggleman has been more effective in Price's stead, going 63-77, but this is
still another bad team that's trying to get even worse so that it can get
better. The starting lineup has some legitimate punch, but as seems to always
be the case in the Queen City, the pitching is abysmal. It would appear that a
fifth straight 90-loss season is in the offing for 2019.
DETROIT TIGERS
Getting tired of the rebuilding theme yet? The reason it was
a story before the season around baseball is because it was true — arguably a
full third of Major League Baseball was comprised of teams that weren't really
trying to win with any degree of conviction. The Tigers were yet another
example of this. To their credit, the Tigers hung in longer than just about
every other 90-loss team, and when they won their fifth straight game on June
17, they sat a mere 2.5 games back of the first-place Indians. Then the bottom
fell out. Detroit lost 11 in a row, and the AL Central race was functionally
over.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
Would you take back-to-back American League pennants and a
World Series title, even if you knew it meant years of rebuilding immediately
thereafter? The Royals were the AL's best in 2014 and 2015, leveled off to
merely being average in 2016 and 2017 and blew everything up before this year
started. Kansas City was 7-21 at the start of May; its fans already having
endured separate nine- and five-game losing streaks in April. But hey, they
still had the memory of a title relatively fresh in their minds, which probably
helped. As a Pirates fan, I know I'd make that bargain.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS
Los Angeles' season functionally ended right around the
beginning of July when it failed to do what Oakland managed — namely, get white
hot at the right time and go on a tear that led them to the playoffs. The
Angels' biggest issue was that, besides the otherworldly Mike Trout, they were
a bad offensive club. Albert Pujols' late career spiral got even worse this
season, and L.A. will have to deal with having Shohei Ohtani only as a hitter
next year because of his impending Tommy John surgery. Trout staying great is
predictable, Ohtani's next level of development is a mystery, and Pujols
regaining his form of the mid-2000s would take a miracle. That's what the
Angels need to contend.
MIAMI MARLINS
The Marlins weren't trying to win this season, and their
offseason moves included dealing Giancarlo Stanton, Christian Yelich and
Marcell Ozuna to the Yankees, Brewers and Cardinals, respectively. Stanton,
despite having a down year, still slugged 38 homers, Ozuna hit 23 despite
scuffling at times in St. Louis, and Yelich may well win the NL MVP Award.
Perhaps some of the names they got in return for these players may help Miami
down the road, but in the here and now, bidding those stars farewell doomed the
season months before it began. Don't worry though: Derek Jeter has this all
figured out.
MINNESOTA TWINS
The Twins, like so many other teams, saw an awful losing
streak functionally doom them before the calendar turned to May. In Minnesota's
case, it was an eight-game slide that dropped them from first place on April 20
to 4.5 games back at the end of the day on April 27. Minnesota never really
mounted any sort of serious challenge to the Cleveland Indians after that
point. There were some solid enough offensive performances across the roster,
but not nearly enough pitching in the Twin Cities. Moreover, it looks like 2018
will end up being hometown hero Joe Mauer's final season in the big leagues. If
so, it's a shame it didn't go out with a bang.
NEW YORK METS
The Mets were a shocking 17-9 at the end of April. They were
32-48 at the end of June. Methinks something went dramatically wrong in May and
June. Namely, the Mets went 15-39, including a six-game losing streak to start
May, a seven-game skid at the end of June and an eight-game run of losses that
connected the two months. Despite Jacob deGrom's incredible season, the Mets
were gutted by injuries, namely to Yoenis Cespedes, and even some positive play
toward the end of the year wasn't enough to drum up any real optimism for the
future in Queens.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
The Phillies were 68-54 after beating the Mets on Aug.17.
Then the bottom fell out in swift and spectacular fashion. Philadelphia went
12-28 over the season's last 40 games and moved from a team many felt would
make the playoffs to one that didn't even finish above .500 on the season.
Philly's pitching faltered badly in September, giving up 152 runs in 28 games,
with the team going 8-20 in the month. Aaron Nola was great, but if the
Phillies want to make a leap forward in the NL East, they'll need more help in
the starting rotation.
SAN DIEGO PADRES
The Padres were one of the truly bad teams on this list, but
unlike some of the other dregs of the league, they were semi-competitive for
almost half the season. After a win on June 15, they were 34-38, and at 6.5
out, were the only cellar-dweller within 10 games of first place in their
division. Then they went 16-45 over their next 61 games to plummet to 50-83 on
Aug. 26. Like so many other teams, both those that were trying to win and those
that weren't, the Padres had the wheels come off during the dog days of summer.
There weren't too many standouts on the mound or in the field for San Diego, so
the future may still be a ways off.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
San Fran gambled and lost in the offseason. They brought in
Andrew McCutchen from the Pirates and Evan Longoria from the Rays, but they
couldn't overcome an injury to Madison Bumgarner that robbed the ace of the
first two months of his season. San Francisco was next to last in the NL with
133 home runs and simply couldn't adjust to baseball's trend back toward the
long ball. The Giants managed to stay at .500 through August, but an MLB-worst
5-21 mark in September, including an 11-game losing streak to start the month,
doomed them to an ugly 73-89 finish.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS
One game above .500 on the final day of July and left for
dead by most pundits, the Cardinals tore through August, posting a 22-6 mark
and ending the month with the second-best record in the National League.
September wasn't nearly as kind to St. Louis, as it went 12-15 for the month
and was unable to finish strong enough to outlast Colorado and Los Angeles. The
Cards peaked too early, especially their pitching, and a late sweep at the
hands of the Brewers ultimately did them in. Anyone who watched St. Louis from
Aug. 1 onward, however, knows that the Cards will likely be a force in 2019.
SEATTLE MARINERS
If you know anything about Pythagorean winning percentage,
you know that the Mariners were due for a major regression. Seattle went 89-73
despite being outscored by 34 runs on the season. The Mariners were an
extremely lucky baseball team, posting a 36-21 mark in one-run games. There was
no astonishing, eye-popping losing streak that spelled the end for Seattle —
just them gradually coming back down to earth. Oh, and playing in the same
division as Oakland and Houston didn't help matters either. The Mariners a few
nice building blocks on the field and a few intriguing pitchers, but they don't
figure to seriously challenge Houston anytime soon.
TAMPA BAY RAYS
Tampa Bay's season was over as soon as it began, but through
no fault of its own. How often does a team win 90 games and finish seven games
out of the second wild-card position? I'll answer that for you — it has never
happened. In the two-wild-card era, only two teams have won at least 90 games
and not qualified for the playoffs. Texas won 91 games in 2013, but lost to
Tampa Bay in a do-or-die Game 163, and Tampa missed out both this year and in
2012 despite having 90 wins both times. The Rays employed a radical pitching
strategy, with great success, and won more games than their talent suggested
they had any right to. Still, they'll be sitting at home in October. Blame the
Red Sox, Yankees and Athletics, I guess.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
The Blue Jays started a gaudy 13-6, but a 13-29 swoon
immediately thereafter took them out of the running in the brutal AL East.
Power wasn't the issue in Toronto, which isn't surprising. The pitching left
much to be desired, however, and the Jays didn't have a single starting pitcher
make 30 starts this season. That's not a recipe for success, particularly in a
division where two teams won 100 games and another won 90. Toronto's starting
lineup is fairly long in the tooth, so the Jays will have to reload and figure
out a way to climb back up to Boston's and New York's levels.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS
Oh, the Nationals. Every year, they have incredibly high
expectations. Just about every year, they fail to meet those expectations. 2018
was no different. The Nats were shocked by the Mets early on and then righted
themselves, only to fall victim to the rise of the Braves and Phillies. A
brutal stretch in the month leading up to the All-Star Game put them several
games back of Philly and Atlanta, and they were powerless to stop the Braves
when they opened up the throttle and put distance between themselves and the
rest of the division. The Bryce Harper Era in Washington looks like it is over,
and it will be one defined by disappointment.
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