By TERRY LYONS
BOSTON – No New York Yankees. No New York Mets. No Boston Red Sox. No San Diego Padres.
But, yes, the Mets, Yankees and Padres, with a combined $876.4 million tab for player salaries this season, all missed the postseason.
The Mets fired GM Billy Eppler and their skipper Buck Showalter while the Red Sox gave the trap-door approach to their head of Baseball Ops and defacto team GM Chaim Bloom. If you add expectations of the LA Angeles to the mix, add to the carnage with Angels Manager Phil Nevin hitting the unemployment line. The SF Giants fired manager Gabe Kapler and the Winter Meetings are two months away.
The 2023 Postseason started slowly with less-than-compelling Wild Card match-ups all ending in a short series (2-0).
The MLB Divisional Playoffs are expected to bring increased interest and batter baseball. In the National League, the Atlanta Braves – baseball’s best – are facing a tough, playoff-tested Philadelphia Phillies team while the winner of the LA Dodgers vs AZ Diamondbacks awaits (think Dodgers).
In the American League, the State of Texas planted two franchises in the divisional playoff bracket – the defending World Series champion Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers. They can meet if the Astros dispose of the Minnesota Twins and the Rangers can defeat upstart and entertaining Baltimore.
Regardless of the results this year, the Baltimore Orioles will be “here to stay” in MLB Postseasons to come.
As postseason progresses, an examination of Baseball’s vital signs shows a very healthy patient. Major League Baseball attendance experienced its largest growth in 30 years in 2023, said the league in a regular season-end statement. Total attendance of 70,747,365 was up 9.6 percent over 2022 (64,556,636) and the average attendance of 29,295 was up 9.1 percent.
Seventeen of the 30 MLB teams drew more than 2.5 million fans, matching the most in MLB history, and eight attracted more than 3 million. Eleven weekends drew more than 1.5 million fans, compared to a total of five such weekends over the previous four full seasons (2018-19, 2021-22) combined.
Factoring into the sport’s increased “watchability” waas a decrease in the average length of the games, thanks in large part to pitch clocks. The regular season games of 2023 averaged 2 hours, 39 minutes and 49 seconds, the shortest since 1985 and a decrease of 24 minutes from last season.
Only nine games lasted 3 1/2 hours or longer, down from 390 such games back in 2021.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The USA Basketball Men’s World Cup team settled for a 4th Place finish this summer in Manila with Germany, Serbia and Canada gaining the top three spots. The groomsmen instead of the groom approach continued this weekend in Amsterdam where the USA Basketball 3×3 entry from Miami took 2nd Place behind a squad from Vienna, Austria. … The second-place finish marks Team Miami’s sixth straight Top 4 finish on the World Tour, including their second runner-up finish of the campaign.
In a rematch of their Saturday “pool play” game, Vienna sought revenge vs. Miami in the Tournament Finals, winning the tightly contested battle, 21-19. Jimmer Fredetteput Miami into the lead, 8-7, with a two-pointer with just under seven minutes remaining. Vienna tried to pull away multiple times, but Miami hung-on and grabbed a 19-18 lead with 3:28 remaining after the Americans went on a 6-1 run. Both teams had empty possessions before Vienna scored the game’s final three points. Fredette led Miami with 10 points. Dylan Travis pulled down a team-high five boards. … The Miami 3×3 entry will next compete at the Doha Challenger on Oct 10-11.
NWSL VALUATIONS: Fresh off a newly reported four-year deal for game rights, divvying up coverage between ESPN, CBS, Amazon and Scripps, the sports business publications – Sportico – released valuations for the National Women’s Soccer League. Here are the Top 10:
- Angel City FC – – $180 million
- San Diego Wave – – $90m
- Kansas City Courant – – $75m
- Portland Thorns – – $65m
- Washington Spirit – – $54
- North Carolina Courage $52m
- Houston Dash – – $50m
- OL Reign – – $49m (Olympique Lyonnais)
- NJ/NY Gotham FC – – $48m
- Racing Louisville FC – – $47m
Two other clubs, Orlando and Chicago rated at $47 million or less.
The WNBA just awarded a franchise the the Golden State Warriors’ organization at the value of $50 million.
TIDBITS: The Minnesota Twins snapped an 18-game postseason losing streak with a win in their best-of-three Wild Card series vs. Toronto. It marked the longest losing streak in any major North American sports league. Minny’s 3-1 Game 1 win over the Blue Jays, was dominated by a player who was five years old the last time the Twins won a playoff game. Twins DH Royce Lewis drove in all three runs with a two-run home run in the first inning and a solo shot in the third. …
RIVALRY WEEK: Dare you to say that three times and fast! With No. 12 Oklahoma’s 34-30 upset over No. 3 Texas in Saturday’s Red River Rivalry, it’s time to wax philosophic on the greatness of college football, something city-folk in New York don’t understand.
Here’s my non-comprehensive list of the best rivalries in college football:
- Army vs. Navy This year to be played in Foxboro, Mass
- The Game – Harvard vs. Yale
- The Iron Bowl – Auburn vs. Alabama
- Michigan vs Ohio State – Usually, it settles the Big 10 championship)
- USC vs. Notre Dame – a rivalry based in great games, every year)
- Georgia vs. Florida – aka “the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party”
- Miami vs. Florida State – ‘Canes vs. ‘Noles
- California vs. Stanford – Public vs. Private
- UCLA vs. USC – West Coast elite, in the Rose Bowl
- Lafayette vs. Lehigh – The Rivalry which dates back to 1897
And, don’t forget the Catholics vs the Convicts (ND vs. Miami) of yesteryear.
THINGS TO PONDER ON A SLOW DAY: Back by popular demand are a listing of a few things I think about.
Ready?
- For years and years we’ve all been shaken by the sound of the Emergency Broadcast System … Repeat after me: “Station XYZ is conducting a test of the Emergency Broadcast System. This is only a test. If this had been an actual emergency, an official message would have followed the tone alert you heard at the start of this message.” … “This concludes the test of the Emergency Broadcast System.” … Okay, I get it. … It’s an important function and it grew from a directive from President John F. Kennedy in the very early ‘60s during the Cold War. … Now! Tell me this? During the damn GLOBAL PANDEMIC of 2019-2020 did you hear one peep from the Emergency Broadcast System? … That said, they tested an upgraded version this week.
- Why are there three different ways to describe the exact same thing?
- In New York, it’s a car ACCIDENT
- In Boston, it’s a CRASH
- In Texas, it’s a WRECK
There’s “Fender-Benders,” “Pile-Ups,” “Collisions,” and “Smash-Ups.” Can anyone explain the origin of all of these descriptions and tell is why we need so many different ways to tag the same disasterous thing? Maybe we should slow down and drive safely, especially in the local neighborhood where the speed limit states “20 mph,” and not double nickels.