We now stand a little over a fifth of the way through the
season, past the point were divisions can see a total flip-flop over night.
They haven’t fully stabilized yet, though; it’s still only been just over 30
games, after all, and there’s plenty that could still happen. I decided to take
this thought to the optimistic end and ask “Which team currently in last place
is most likely to turn it all around?”
Right now, there are actually essentially seven teams in
last in their divisions, thanks to a tie out east: the Orioles, the Red Sox,
the Indians, the Athletics, the Phillies, the Brewers, and the Rockies. There
are undoubtedly some good teams in the bunch, as is usually the case after only
a month and a half of third. Heck, I
even picked some of those teams as division winners. But is there any
reason to expect differently now that they’re in last? Going over them
one-by-one:
Philadelphia Phillies
The Phillies are probably the least likely to turn things
around, out of this seven. Right now trail the NL East, with an 11-23 record
that leaves them 9.5 games back. For as bad as having the worst record in the Majors
sounds, what makes it worse is that they’re still outpacing they’re Pythagorean
record by two games. Even GM Ruben Amaro, Jr. admitted
they’re a little outmatched. And if they decide to start trading off
veterans like Cole Hamels, it’ll only get worse. So yeah, this one is probably
a no.
Milwaukee Brewers
Technically not as bad as the Phillies, with a 12-22 record.
But playing in the same division as the current best team in baseball leaves
them even further behind, at 11.0 back. On top of that, they’ve already fired
their manager and announced
that they’re sellers this year. So, once again, it seems pretty unlikely
here.
Colorado Rockies
While we’re on the topic trade rumors, there’s one
going around now that Troy Tulowitzki will be demanding one out of Colorado
soon. It’ll already be difficult for the Rockies to bounce back with him;
they’re 11-18 and 9.5 back. I predicted them to be in the running for worst
team in the Majors at the start of the year and they’ve certainly lived down to
that expectation. Troy Tulowitzki and Nolan Arenado are a nice starting point,
but their ace is 24-year-old rookie Eddie Butler and their number two is Kyle
Kendrick.
Oakland Athletics
They’re 13-22, so a tad better than the other teams covered,
and only 8.0 games out, so there’s less work to do. Also, it seems they have
less to turn around than most last-place teams; the A’s are one of two
last-place teams with a winning Pythagorean record (the other, funnily enough,
are the O’s). So the talent definitely seems to be there (although losing
Jarrod Parker to
injury again hurts, seeing as he
would have helped a rather thin rotation). (Edit: Also, they'll be getting Ben Zobrist back, which should be a shot in the arm.)
Cleveland Indians
They’re a little worse off than the Athletics, thanks to an 11-20
record and a 9.0 game deficit, but I also anticipated them being stronger in
the pre-season than the Athletics. Yan Gomes’s injury hurts, but Jason Kipnis
is bouncing back, and Michael Brantley, Ryan Rayburn, and Carlos Santana are staying
strong. Their starting pitching seems to be doing okay (Fangraphs puts them
tenth in WAR), so if the lineup and rotation aren’t the big issues, what’s
wrong? Well, their bullpen (21st) and fielding (25th) are
bad. Are those going to keep up? Maybe, but I’d imagine they’re easier to fix
(whether through concentrated effort or just a change in luck, since they’re
both rather tempermental) than the first two things. Still, that’s a big early
hole. It can be done, though.
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
These two are easily the most likely. Despite being tied for
last, they’re both doing rather respectably (15-18 for Boston, 14-17 for
Baltimore), and are fewer games back from first (5.5) than some second-place
teams are (the Cubs and the Giants, specifically). Starting from that close is
already a pretty sizable advantage when handicapping these things.
If you want to bet on a single worst-to-first story, one of
these two is your best choice. But which one? Well, while they are “tied”,
Baltimore seems much better positioned to strike than Boston. They haven’t been
outscored nearly as badly (a 16-15 Pythag, to Boston’s 13-20). Plus, there’s
help coming off the DL: the Orioles finally got back J.J. Hardy, will see the
return of Matt Wieters soon, will hopefully move young starter Kevin Gausman to
the rotation upon his return, and will get Jonathan Schoop back eventually. Add
in that Manny Machado, Chris Davis, and Ubaldo Jimenez seem to be having
bouncebacks from weaker 2014 while the Red Sox struggle to find one
above-average starter and that seems to make the difference. The Red Sox may
also turn it around; even with their pitching weakness, they still have a
lineup that can club any opposing team into submission. They just seem a little
less well-rounded.
So there you have it. Maybe it’s partly my Orioles fandom
clouding my judgment, but even trying to set that aside, no other last place
team looks as ready for a turnaround.