Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Championship Series
Big game tomorrow. Averey vs Diego. Scherzer vs Ubaldo. Diego up 2-1 in the series. Who ya got? I'll be at class tomorrow and i'll also be pumping iron like a true "Bro", but I'm glad some showdown action will finally be taking place after a long absence.
Season 2 Summary
After our inaugural season, the league found out about a guy named Colby Tallafuss who, along with a friend named Mathew Pennertz, was keeping showdown alive through a blog and custom sets being released each year since 2009. The decision was made to order a set of the most recent season (2013) and hope that it wouldn't be some sort of ripoff. Luckily for us, the guys followed through on their end and we drafted the cards in time for season #2.
Ave improved upon his first taste of showdown the prior season, going a solid 16-16. He was lead at the top of the rotation by Matt Harvey, in the bullpen by Jim Johnson, and one of the most unconventional leadoff men in showdown history: David Ortiz.
AJ flipped from first to worst in his first crack with unofficially licensed cards.
Diego also had a forgettable season. So much so that both he and AJ's records were lost among the wreckage in the backroom, wreckage probably brought upon by a wrath of flying dice and cards being thrown against a wall after Miguel Cabrera failed to deliver time after time for Diego. Who knew an 11 OB 18-20 homer could suck so much? Miggy could have raised tons of march of dimes money with the amount of times he walked. Singling early became a much more important part of scouting cards in Diego's future seasons.
The real race was at the top of the standings. Gus had powered his way through the regular season behind the electric bats of Chris Davis, Yasiel Puig, Carlos Gomez, and Hanley Ramirez (and some favorable strategy card rules), The on base ability of Matt Carpenter and Dustin Pedroia, and Desmond Jennings, Brett Wallace (7 OB typo), and Starling Marte lengthened a lineup full of Power and Speed. Jose Fernandez and Clay Bucholtz lead the rotation, but as the season neared the end, Ben got really hot. Bens squad had an average first half, but really caught fire in the second half behind the bats of Mark Texiera, and Brian Roberts. Ultimately, even his torrid second half wasn't enough to secure home field advantage from Gus.
It wouldn't end up mattering much, as Ben still took home the crown in a classic series that went the distance and featured several extra inning and walk off finish games. Those who were there to see it would call it possibly the best world series ever played, although plenty of drama still unfolded in future seasons.
After this season a rule change would be enacted that would lock rosters before playoffs started, so that teams could no longer adjust roster construction to help them in a playoff series. Both Ben and Gus made changes to their team that effected the outcome of the series, and many felt that we didn't get a sense of which regular season team was truly the best.
Ave improved upon his first taste of showdown the prior season, going a solid 16-16. He was lead at the top of the rotation by Matt Harvey, in the bullpen by Jim Johnson, and one of the most unconventional leadoff men in showdown history: David Ortiz.
AJ flipped from first to worst in his first crack with unofficially licensed cards.
Diego also had a forgettable season. So much so that both he and AJ's records were lost among the wreckage in the backroom, wreckage probably brought upon by a wrath of flying dice and cards being thrown against a wall after Miguel Cabrera failed to deliver time after time for Diego. Who knew an 11 OB 18-20 homer could suck so much? Miggy could have raised tons of march of dimes money with the amount of times he walked. Singling early became a much more important part of scouting cards in Diego's future seasons.
The real race was at the top of the standings. Gus had powered his way through the regular season behind the electric bats of Chris Davis, Yasiel Puig, Carlos Gomez, and Hanley Ramirez (and some favorable strategy card rules), The on base ability of Matt Carpenter and Dustin Pedroia, and Desmond Jennings, Brett Wallace (7 OB typo), and Starling Marte lengthened a lineup full of Power and Speed. Jose Fernandez and Clay Bucholtz lead the rotation, but as the season neared the end, Ben got really hot. Bens squad had an average first half, but really caught fire in the second half behind the bats of Mark Texiera, and Brian Roberts. Ultimately, even his torrid second half wasn't enough to secure home field advantage from Gus.
It wouldn't end up mattering much, as Ben still took home the crown in a classic series that went the distance and featured several extra inning and walk off finish games. Those who were there to see it would call it possibly the best world series ever played, although plenty of drama still unfolded in future seasons.
After this season a rule change would be enacted that would lock rosters before playoffs started, so that teams could no longer adjust roster construction to help them in a playoff series. Both Ben and Gus made changes to their team that effected the outcome of the series, and many felt that we didn't get a sense of which regular season team was truly the best.
4
|
|||||
3
|
|||||
2
|
|||||
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Season 1 Summary
The first Stockton Showdown season had late season drama that would change the way future seasons would be played. As the league was in its infancy, many players devised strategies that we would only see in that first season. Strategy cards such as "quick pitch" were being used while others slugged their way through stacked +2's to the swing. Our standings were kept in a notebook at the time, and many of the papers were lost, but our place in the standings are accurate in every season.
Averey created a team that was lead by a solid starting staff, which would be a recurring them for most of his future seasons, but Ave's roster construction and in game managing were still rough around the edges. Despite Jason Giambi and Jason Kendall in the lineup, and David Cone and Greg Maddux on the hill, Ave finished dead last in the first season.
Ben featured triple 5 controls out of his rotation, but they ultimately failed him, as he finished 4th in the standings despite the bat of Frank Thomas in his lineup.
AJ cruised through the season after sweeping Gus, a theme that would continue in future seasons (Gus maintains that AJ put a hex on him in that first season). AJ finished in 1st place thanks to a balanced team and the effective use of "clutch hitter" to get leadoff man Rickey Henderson to cross the plate once he was on. Robin Ventura and Derek Jeter helped knock in runs as well, while Mike Matheny shut down the run game.
Diego had the monster Pedro Martinez in his rotation, who was pretty much unbeatable, the rest of the rotation was solid enough to keep Diego at .500 until the end of the season, where everything got a little whacky.
As Gus' season neared a dissappointing end, a scheduling opportunity popped up. Sitting at 5-8 on the year, he needed a sweep of Ave to finished tied with Diego, and force some sort of tiebreaker. After the league vote was split on whether or not a 3 game, or 1 game series should be played in case of a tie, Diego found himself with the deciding vote, and Pedro looming for the decisive game. For reasons unknown to most, Diego decided to play a 3 game series instead of the for sure 1 game Pedro start. Many believe Diego partly believed it was unlikely Ave would get swept, and partly felt that the better team would win anyway. So it went.
Since Ave was busy at the moment, Gus and Diego decided to play their 3 game series first in the interest of saving time for the league. If Diego won 2 of 3, Gus could just skip the series with Ave, and the Diego/AJ World Series could start.
---Wait! ----
Historical accuracy requires me to bring up the fact that Diego and AJ actually started their World Series before the season was over lol. This would never happen again in future seasons.
As luck would have it, Gus would win 2-1 over Diego (Pedro of course winning the 1 start he made), and then going on to sweep Ave thanks to John Olerudes walkoff heroics (the video of that final roll may be out there somewhere, a clip that likely still keeps Diego awake at night, "We going to the ship nigga!). After winning 5 or 6 games, Gus continued his hot streak into the World Series where he defeated AJ 4 games to 2.
Gus was lead by the bats of John Olerud, Bobby Abreu, and Scott Rolen, and featured the first ever all 6 control starting rotation: Ramon Martinez, Curt Schilling, and John Smoltz. The rotation was backed by perfect outfield and infield defense, and mike matheny's arm behind the dish.
|
Regular Season
5000 pt/ 2000-2001 Combo
|
Wins
|
Losses
|
Pct.
|
Pts
|
Seasons
|
|
AJ
|
|
|
|
4
|
1
|
|
Gus
|
8-8
|
|
.500
|
3
|
1
|
|
Diego
|
8-8
|
|
.500
|
2
|
1
|
|
Ben
|
|
|
|
1
|
1
|
|
Averey
|
|
|
|
0
|
1
|
|
World Series
|
Wins
|
Losses
|
Pct.
|
|
|
Gus
|
4
|
2
|
.667
|
|
|
AJ
|
2
|
4
|
.333
|
|
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Intro
Here it is fellas. This is where we will keep track of all of our league standings, rules, season/game summaries, anything else worth keeping track of.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)