It’s been a long arduous journey. About 17,000 words over the span of one month on all 30 teams. If you didn’t happen to read all 30, I wanted to offer a handy recap with standings, playoff predictions, and awards lists.
AL East
1. Toronto Blue Jays
2. Baltimore Orioles
3. Tampa Bay Rays
4. Boston Red Sox
5. New York Yankees
AL Central
1. Detroit Tigers
2. Cleveland Indians (WC)
3. Kansas City Royals
4. Chicago White Sox
5. Minnesota Twins
AL West
1. Texas Rangers
2. Los Angeles Angels(WC)
3. Oakland Athletics
4. Seattle Mariners
5. Houston Astros
NL East
1. Washington Nationals
2. Atlanta Braves (WC)
3. Philadelphia Phillies
4. Miami Marlins
5. New York Mets
NL Central
1. St. Louis Cardinals
2. Cincinnati Reds (WC)
3. Pittsburgh Pirates
4. Milwaukee Brewers
5. Chicago Cubs
NL West
1. Los Angeles Dodgers
2. San Francisco Giants
3. Arizona Diamondbacks
4. San Diego Padres
5. Colorado Rockies
AL Wild Card:
Los Angeles over Cleveland
NL Wild Card:
Atlanta over Cincinnati
AL Divisional
Detroit over Texas (3-0)
Los Angeles over Toronto (3-0)
NL Divisional
Washington over Los Angeles (3-1)
St. Louis over Atlanta (3-2)
AL Championship
Detroit over Los Angeles (4-1)
NL Championship
Washington over St. Louis (4-3)
World Series
Washington over Detroit (4-1)
AWARDS
AL MVP
1. Miguel Cabrera
2. Mike Trout
3. Jose Reyes
NL MVP
1. Justin Upton
2. Joey Votto
3. Andrew McCutchen
AL Cy Young
1. Justin Verlander
2. Yu Darvish
3. Felix Hernandez
NL Cy Young
1. Clayton Kershaw
2. Mat Latos
3. Cliff Lee
AL Rookie of the Year
1. Chris Archer
2. Jackie Bradley Jr.
3. Brandon Maurer
NL Rookie of the Year
1. Julio Teheran
2. Hyun-Jin Ryu
3. Jedd Gyorko
AL Manager of the Year
1. Terry Francona
2. Ned Yost
3. Jim Leyland
NL Manager of the Year
1. Davey Johnson
2. Mike Matheny
3. Fredi Gonzalez
There are a lot of reason for me to be excited for baseball in 2013. I’ll be visiting Dodger Stadium, barring rain or illness, on Tuesday for the first time. I’ll also plan to head to Bowie, Maryland a few times this season to see top-shelf Orioles prospects Kevin Gausman and Dylan Bundy. And, sometime this summer, I’ll try to knock another park off the list. Maybe I’ll even see the Indians, Mariners, and Royals and finally see all 30 teams play a game at least once.
But the biggest reason of all is that the Washington Nationals enter this season as the best team, on paper, in baseball. I fully understand that nothing in life, baseball or otherwise, is a guarantee. The 2012 Nationals battled injuries throughout the season. That Nationals never got to put their best lineup on the field. Michael Morse and Ryan Zimmerman started the year hurt, Wilson Ramos tore his ACL, and Jayson Werth broke his wrist. And of course there was the Strasburg shutdown. The Nationals will open play tomorrow at absolute full strength. No injuries. Denard Span, Jayson Werth, Bryce Harper, Ryan Zimmerman, Adam LaRoche, Ian Desmond, Danny Espinosa, and Wilson Ramos can have their names written in ink on the lineup card. You were never able to say, last year, that the Nats put their best team on the field.
The road won’t be easy. It will certainly be a slog at times. Even the best teams still lose 60 games during the season. The Nats will be swept once or twice. There should be no panic. This team is built to win. And they will.
Happy Opening Day! Happy Baseball!