Today we do our first EFL Trivia Question of the season. See the Rosebuds comment for the question, and the bottom of the post (beyond the full MLB standings) for the answer.
EFL | ||||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB | RS | RA |
Old Detroit Wolverines | 43 | 25 | .631 | — | 380.0 | 290.7 |
Portland Rosebuds | 43 | 27 | .608 | 1.3 | 356.2 | 280.3 |
Haviland Dragons | 42 | 28 | .597 | 2.1 | 344.5 | 286.6 |
Canberra Kangaroos | 40 | 30 | .571 | 4 | 341.9 | 292.8 |
Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 36 | 32 | .535 | 6.6 | 328.4 | 304.0 |
Peshastin Pears | 36 | 34 | .519 | 7.6 | 302.1 | 290.7 |
Flint Hill Tornadoes | 35 | 33 | .509 | 8.3 | 299.6 | 294.4 |
Cottage Cheese | 32 | 35 | .482 | 10.1 | 328.5 | 333.3 |
Kaline Drive | 27 | 43 | .382 | 17.2 | 315.0 | 402.2 |
D.C. Balk | 23 | 47 | .324 | 21.3 | 274.0 | 402.0 |
Old Detroit: W, 8 – 4. (.317, .349, .488; no pitching). The W’s have the fifth-best pitching in the league. But they have the best offense. So — how should they spend their money in the upcoming end-of-June draft? Suggestions are welcome.
Portland: “W”, 2 – 3. (.231, .273, .346; 6 ip, 0 er). The Rosebuds have the best pitching in the EFL — even Tom Koehler (6 ip, 0 er) looks like a gold-ribbon-winning ace Rosebud in his red uniform. But they have only the second-best offense — a lineup comprising Mookie Betts, Carlos Correa and, frankly, no other heralded stars. Maaaaaybe Ian Desmond.
Here’s a trivia question: Who are the three Rosebuds OPSing over 1.000 this month? I bet you cannot answer that one — maybe not even the Rosebud ownership. (Answer below) I’ll even help you: here are the three OPSing in the .900’s in June: Betts (.939), Justin Turner (.938, no surprise to those who have had the pleasure of owning this exemplary EWIE), and Ian Desmond (.937). See that? .939, .938, and .937, for the 4th, 5th and 6th best Rosebud hitters.
Shall we list the 4 Rosebuds OPSing in the .800’s? No, that might make the trivia question too easy. How about the five “crummy” Rosebuds OPSing between .482 and .704 — ie, the rest of the roster? Ditto.
Of course, it IS June, and this is the peak month for Rosebuds. They’ll probably wilt before they subject the Wolverines to the harsh, thorny reality of being thrown into the rosebrier patch. Right?
Haviland: W, 8 – 2. (.306, .375, .583; 10.3 ip, 2 er). A very nice Father’s Day, gaining on the league leaders, including a son — what more could you want? Oh. Yes. I did forget to activate Hank Conger as the injury replacement for JD Martinez. So this doesn’t count ALL of Conger’s 0 for 2 yesterday. And I still haven’t activated Desmond Jennings to replace Souza (DL). Let me take care of that…
So — adding Desmond Jennings 20% unallocated time to the OF added 0.1 runs to Haviland’s team total runs scored — and removes 0.1 runs from their total runs allowed. No visible movement in the standings.
Now let’s see what Conger does. I can only add 39% since Haviland asked for the move on June 18 with 13 days left in June (counting the 18th). This will leave 1% of Conger unallocated, which I believe is the record smallest slice of unallocated time in EFL history. Imagine if that’s the difference at the end of September… Anyway, Conger’s crummy defense adds back that 0.1 run allowed the Dragons saved with Jennings. Conger’s slugging ways, however, increase their scoring by 0.8 runs. The net gain for both moves is an extra 0.9 runs scored, a .001 improvement in winning percentage to .598, and no doubt some improvement in the standings, although the D’s are still listed as 2.1 games behind the W’s.
Thanks, Haviland, for this opportunity to explore scientifically the impact of in-month roster changes.
Canberra: W, 5 – 0. (.314, .368, .400; 22.3 ip, 7 er) The Kangaroos have leveled off after their late-May swoon that dropped them out of first place. It wouldn’t take much for them to hop right back to the top of the pennant race. Cleaning up the 5.7 innings of replacement pitching, for example.
Pittsburgh: “L”, 2 – 1. (.171, .255, .268; 16 ip, 5 er). Not so much a real loss as a penalty for Pittsburgh’s paltry performance at the plate.
Peshastin: “L”, 12 – 8. (.381, .441, .903; 5 ip, 4 er). It only looks like a loss. The Pears are on the move — and this time, it’s upward. They take the loss only because regulations require them to, eventually. If they keep on going as they have been, they may give the loss back soon.
Flint Hill: “W”, 3 – 4. (.152, .222, .364; 7 ip, 3 er). According to EFL Storm-Tracker, the Tornados continue to move straight east along Interstate .500, threatening no EFL urban areas other than Flint Hill itself. Teams needing to cross Interstate .5oo to get to their eventual destinations should watch out for everything from Tornados, Whirl Winds, Dust Devils, all the way down to Wafts.
Cottage: W, 13 – 3. (.400, 421, .800; 11.3 ip, 4 er.) Eventually the Cheese will be over .500. If the Pears can do it, why not the Cheese?
Kaline: L, 0 – 3. (.154, .214, .308; 5.3 ip, 8 er). It was a rough weekend for the Drive. Michael Saunders (1.217 OPS in June), Kris Bryant (.981) and Yoenis Cespedes (.824) have been carrying the team’s offense, including nine teammates with OPSes of .632 or below. Pitchers have been unlucky, compiling a 5.17 ERA even though their FIP says they’ve really been over a run better — 4.09.
D.C.: W 2, L (-1); 11 – (-2). (.419, .486, .710). The Balk’s great day compressed the league standings by 0.9 games, D.C. gaining the most on first place of any EFL team. It also elevated the Balkan winning percentage by .022 points, the largest gain on the day anywhere in major league baseball. If you look at the standings tracker you’ll see that strong upward surge in what has been a definite trend of improvement for the Balk this month.
AL East | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
Old Detroit Wolverines | 43 | 25 | .631 | — |
Baltimore Orioles | 40 | 28 | .588 | 2.9 |
Boston Red Sox | 39 | 29 | .574 | 3.9 |
Toronto Blue Jays | 39 | 33 | .542 | 5.9 |
Flint Hill Tornadoes | 35 | 33 | .509 | 8.3 |
New York Yankees | 34 | 34 | .500 | 8.9 |
Tampa Bay Rays | 31 | 36 | .463 | 11.4 |
NL East | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
Washington Nationals | 43 | 27 | .614 | — |
Canberra Kangaroos | 40 | 30 | .571 | 3 |
Miami Marlins | 37 | 32 | .536 | 5.5 |
New York Mets | 36 | 32 | .529 | 6 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 30 | 40 | .429 | 13 |
Atlanta Braves | 23 | 46 | .333 | 19.5 |
D.C. Balk | 23 | 47 | .324 | 20.3 |
AL Central | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
Cleveland Indians | 38 | 30 | .559 | — |
Kansas City Royals | 38 | 31 | .551 | 0.5 |
Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 36 | 32 | .535 | 1.6 |
Detroit Tigers | 34 | 35 | .493 | 4.5 |
Chicago White Sox | 33 | 36 | .478 | 5.5 |
Minnesota Twins | 21 | 48 | .304 | 17.5 |
NL Central | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
Chicago Cubs | 47 | 20 | .701 | — |
St. Louis Cardinals | 35 | 33 | .515 | 12.5 |
Cottage Cheese | 32 | 35 | .482 | 14.7 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 33 | 36 | .478 | 15 |
Milwaukee Brewers | 31 | 39 | .443 | 17.5 |
Cincinnati Reds | 27 | 43 | .386 | 21.5 |
AL West | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
Texas Rangers | 45 | 25 | .643 | — |
Haviland Dragons | 42 | 28 | .597 | 3.2 |
Seattle Mariners | 36 | 33 | .522 | 8.5 |
Houston Astros | 34 | 36 | .486 | 11 |
Los Angeles Angels | 31 | 38 | .449 | 13.5 |
Oakland A’s | 28 | 41 | .406 | 16.5 |
Kaline Drive | 27 | 43 | .382 | 18.3 |
NL West | ||||
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PCT. | GB |
San Francisco Giants | 44 | 26 | .629 | — |
Portland Rosebuds | 43 | 27 | .608 | 1.4 |
Los Angeles Dodgers | 38 | 33 | .535 | 6.5 |
Peshastin Pears | 36 | 34 | .519 | 7.7 |
Colorado Rockies | 32 | 36 | .471 | 11 |
Arizona Diamondbacks | 32 | 39 | .451 | 12.5 |
San Diego Padres | 29 | 42 | .408 | 15.5 |
Trivia Answer: The three top Rosebud OPSers in June are: Starling Marte (.385, .418, .654), EWIE Steve Pearce (.413, .438, .609), and EWIE Chris Iannetta (.333, .429, .604).