What's Going to Happen in the AL East?

Monday, June 27 2005 @ 12:25 PM EDT

Contributed by: Pepper Moffatt

Not in the sunshine or the distance between
The cigarettes we burn
The books we claim to read

Standings as of June 27th, 2005

1. Boston       44-30 .595         (11-1 2WK)
2. Baltimore    42-33 .560  2.5 GB  (6-7 2WK)
3. New York     38-37 .507  6.5 GB  (8-5 2WK)
4. Toronto      38-38 .500  7.0 GB  (7-6 2WK)
5. Tampa Bay    26-50 .342 19.0 GB  (5-8 2WK)
Boston's lone loss over the last two weeks was a 2-0 loss to the Pirates in an epic Tim Wakefield vs. Dave Williams matchup. The team went 2-1 vs. the Pirates, 3-0 vs. Cleveland, and 3-0 vs. the Phillies. The Red Sox gained 5.5 games on the Orioles after playing only 12 games - and the Orioles haven't been playing all that badly! Youneverknow.

Are the Red Sox for real? The gaming community over at Tradesports.com seems to think so:

Percentage Chance of Winning the Division

Boston:    58% (36% 2 Weeks Ago)
New York:  33% (33% 2 Weeks Ago)
Baltimore: 17% (27% 2 Weeks Ago) 
Toronto:    2% ( 4% 2 Weeks Ago) 
Tampa Bay:  0% ( 0% 2 Weeks Ago)

Percentage Chance of Winning the Pennant

Boston:    23% (16% 2 Weeks Ago)
New York:  18% (20% 2 Weeks Ago)
Baltimore:  8% ( 9% 2 Weeks Ago)
Toronto:    1% ( 1% 2 Weeks Ago)
Tampa Bay:  0% ( 0% 2 Weeks Ago)
I've been trying to figure out what's going to happen in the division and I'm at a bit of a loss. There's a number of ways this division could play out. Here's a few that I've seen:

Boston Red Sox - Plus Scenario

The Red Sox continue to chug away on all cylinders and add some bullpen help (Eddie Guardado?, Octavio Dotel?) at the deadline as Matt Mantei and Keith Foulke have struggled all year long. Clement continues to pitch well and Schilling comes back strong near the end of August. THe team wins 100 games and easily takes the division.

Boston Red Sox - Minus Scenario

The bullpen implodes and the team is unable to find that the Yankees have driven the price of quality relievers too high on the trade market. Schilling is unable to return this season and Clement and/or Arroyo falter down the stretch. The team still wins nearly 90 games but it isn't enough to take the division or the Wild Card from surging Orioles and Yankees teams.

Boston Red Sox - Likely Scenario

The team plays .580 ball for the rest of the season, wins about 95 games, enough for a playoff position.

Baltimore Orioles - Plus Scenario

The cast of nobodies in the rotation slows down a bit but still pitches strong enough to let their powerful bats win games for them. The team adds a veteran pitcher (Kip Wells?) to shore up the staff as well as an additional bat for the outfield. The bullpen remains solid and the team finishes in the low-mid 90s for wins, enough for a playoff spot.

Baltimore Orioles - Minus Scenario

The rotation completely collapses and Erik Bedard is unable to return to form from his knee injury. Brian Roberts turns back into a pumpkin and the team loses a lot of 7-5 games, falling behind both the Yankees and the Blue Jays in the standings.

Baltimore Orioles - Likely Scenario

The team adds a couple of players at the deadline, but no one significant. The team hums along at a .550 clip for the season, finishing at 90 wins - 4 games behind the Wild Card winner.

New York Yankees - Plus Scenario

George Steinbrenner opens his wallet and acquires practically every player at the deadline including a gaggle of relivers and Bret Boone from the Mariners. This improves the team while at the same time makes it difficult for the Orioles and Red Sox to acquire reinforcements. Randy Johnson turns back into the Randy Johnson of old, and teamed with a revitalized Mike Mussina provide a potent 1-2 punch down the stretch. The team goes on fire during the second half, wins nearly 100 games in total along with another division title.

New York Yankees - Minus Scenario

Instead of acquiring anyone good the Yankees deal for a bunch of washed up players like Bret Boone from the Mariners. They do little to help and the clubhouse turns to chaos. A-Rod goes out for six weeks with an ankle injury, devastating the offense. The team finishes with 74 wins, their lowest full-season total since 1991. People still complain about New York's sprendthrift ways and what it is doing to the sport.

New York Yankees - Likely Scenario

They acquire everyone at the deadline and play well during the second half and finish in the low 90s in wins, which may or may not be good enough for a Wild Card.

Toronto Blue Jays - Plus Scenario

Boston and Baltimore's minus scenarios come true and the Yankees continue to play at a .500 clip. Sensing an opportunity, the Jays acquire A.J. Burnett at the break, but at a hefty price. Roy Halladay continues to be Roy Halladay and Ted Lilly finds his groove. Vernon Wells becomes the team leader we all know he's capable of and carries the team on his back to a 95-win season and a wild card spot.

Toronto Blue Jays - Minus Scenario

Roy Halladay feels a twinge in his arm and Vernon Wells pulls a hamstring. J.P. does little at the deadline, not liking the prices being offered for his veterans. Alex Rios is overmatched at centre, the team loses a lot of low scoring games and goes 30-56 over the next few months, finishing the year at 68 wins. But they still finish ahead of Tampa!

Toronto Blue Jays - Likely Scenario

The Jays are neither a buyer nor a seller at the deadline and continue with the same team they've had all year long. Everyone plays at about the same level they have all year and the Jays finish right around the .500 mark - about 7 games better than I expected them to at the beginning of the year.

Your Thoughts?

So what do you expect will happen down the stretch?

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