Sunday, June 17, 2012

MLB Mid-Season Report: National League




Best Team: Los Angeles Dodgers
Even despite a pair of DL stints for the league’s best player Matt Kemp, the Dodgers find themselves with baseball’s best record sitting fifteen games over .500 thru Friday. While Kemp’s void has been felt, it’s been a cumulative effort from the supporting cast to help keep a firm grip on the National League West standings. 2011 Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw has been his usual dominate self, while career journeyman Chris Capuano has been spectacular, posting an 8-2 record with a sparkling 2.87 ERA. There’s no reason to think L.A. won’t continue a charge towards the postseason, and with Kemp’s return to lineup just a few weeks away, the Dodgers are sitting pretty.


Surprise Team: New York Mets
Knuckleballer R.A. Dickey has been the biggest pleasant surprise in all of baseball. The Cy Young front-runner has posted an astonishing 10-1 record with a 2.20 ERA, while positioning the Mets as a major player in the National League East. Following an off-season that saw star shortstop Jose Reyes walk away, New York has capitalized on great seasons from third baseman David Wright and right fielder Lucas Duda en route to a 35-30 record. It’s apparent that second year manager Terry Collins has changed the culture of losing that plagued the Mets for the better part of the last decade, as New York emerges as a legitimate Wild Card contender.


Disappointing Team: Philadelphia Phillies

Just one season removed from an 102 win season, the wheels have fallen off in Philly. Thanks in part to a litany of devastating injuries to key contributors (1B Ryan Howard, 2B Chase Utley, and SP Roy Halladay), the Phils find themselves in the National League East cellar, five below .500. Most indicative of Philly’s struggles: Thru 11 starts this season, ace lefty Cliff Lee is yet to record a win. Most figured that even with sluggers Howard and Utley sidelined for the first half of the season, Philly would get by on an elite starting rotation and the addition of all-star closer Jonathan Papelbon. But it’s looking more and more like Philadelphia may just be a spectator when the playoffs roll around in October.


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