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Postseason Baseball Schedule

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LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Best-of-7)
American League
Kansas City 4, Baltimore 0

Friday, Oct. 10: Kansas City 8, Baltimore 6, 10 innings

Saturday, Oct. 11: Kansas City 6, Baltimore 4

Monday, Oct. 13: Baltimore at Kansas City, ppd., rain

Tuesday, Oct. 14: Kansas City 2, Baltimore 1

Wednesday, Oct. 15: Kansas City 2, Baltimore 1

National League
San Francisco 4, St. Louis 1

Saturday, Oct. 11: San Francisco 3, St. Louis 0

Sunday, Oct. 12: St. Louis 5, San Francisco 4

Tuesday, Oct. 14: San Francisco 5, St. Louis 4, 10 innings

Wednesday, Oct. 15: San Francisco 6, St. Louis 4

Thursday, Oct. 16: San Francisco 6, St. Louis 3

 

WORLD SERIES
(Best-of-7)
All games televised by Fox
San Francisco 3, Kansas City 3

Tuesday, Oct. 21: San Francisco 7, Kansas City 1

Wednesday, Oct. 22: Kansas City 7, San Francisco 2

Friday, Oct. 24: Kansas City 3, San Francisco 2

Saturday, Oct. 25: San Francisco 11, Kansas City 4

Sunday, Oct. 26: San Francisco 5, Kansas City 0

Tuesday, Oct. 28: Kansas City 10, San Francisco 0

Wednesday, Oct. 29: San Francisco (Hudson 9-13) at Kansas City (Guthrie 13-11), 8:07 p.m.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FS1 to Air Alternate Telecast of NLCS Game 1

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — Fans will be able to watch an alternate telecast of Game 1 of the NL Championship Series focused on sabermetrics.

The main broadcast of Saturday’s opener between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals will be on Fox. Cable channel Fox Sports 1 will also show it, with extended replays and statistical analysis of batter-pitcher matchups, umpiring tendencies and defensive shifts.

Kevin Burkhardt will call the game from the studio alongside Gabe Kapler, CJ Nitkowski, Rob Neyer and San Diego Padres manager Bud Black. The broadcast will sometimes use a “double box” to show the commentators and live action at the same time.

FS1 will air the main coverage of five of the last six NLCS games, with Fox showing only a possible Game 6.

Qualifying Offer for Free Agents Set at $15.3M

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — The price of qualifying offers for eligible free agents has risen to $15.3 million from $14.1 million.

The 8.5 percent increase was finalized Tuesday by Major League Baseball and the players’ association. It is up from $13.3 million after the 2012 season, the first of the new system.

Baseball’s labor contract sets the price at the average of the 125 highest contracts by average annual value.

A club has until 5 p.m. Eastern time on the fifth day following the World Series to make a qualifying offer and a player has until 5 p.m. EST on the 12th day after the World Series to accept it. An offer can only be made to a free agent who was with the team for the entire system.

If a player rejects a qualifying offer and signs a major league contract with another club before the June amateur draft, his former team would receive a draft pick as compensation at the end of the first round.

The club signing that player loses its first-round pick in the following amateur draft, unless that pick is among the top 10, in which case the club signing that player loses its next-highest pick.

None of the 22 qualifying offers made after the last two seasons was accepted.

Trips to Mound Limited in Arizona Experiment

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — Teams will be limited to three trips to the mound by managers, coaches and catchers during a game, except for pitching changes, under experimental speed-up rules to be used during the Arizona Fall League.

The pace of game committee established last month by baseball Commissioner Bud Selig announced a series of initiatives Wednesday that will be tried in the AFL, which opens Oct. 7 and runs until Nov. 15. The three-trip limit will apply even if a game goes to extra innings.

The average time of nine-inning games in the major leagues was a record 3 hour, 2 minutes this year, up from 2:33 in 1981.

MLB Crowds Drop Slightly for 2nd Straight Year

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — Major League Baseball attendance has dipped slightly for the second straight season.

The 30 teams drew 73,739,622 for an average of 30,458, the commissioner’s office said Monday, a 0.2 percent drop from last year’s average of 30,515. Teams averaged 30,895 in 2012, down from a peak of 32,785 before the Great Recession.

Total attendance of 73.74 million was down from 74.03 million last year and 74.86 million in 2012 but was still MLB’s seventh-highest.

Pittsburgh, in the playoffs for the second straight season following a 21-year absence, set a team home record at 2.44 million, drawing about 6,000 fans more than during PNC Park’s opening season in 2001.

Kansas City made the postseason for the first time since 1985 and drew 1.96 million for its highest total since 1991.

3-Way Race for NL MVP; Trout Takes His Turn in AL

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — When it comes to baseball’s MVP debate, sometimes the names change from year to year more than the arguments do.

For instance, take a look at the top contenders in the National League this season.

You’ve got Pittsburgh center fielder Andrew McCutchen, the all-around star on a playoff team. Then there’s Miami powerhouse Giancarlo Stanton, the premier slugger from a second-division club. And of course, Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw, the dominant pitcher throwing his hat in the ring against everyday players.

It’s made for an intriguing race that feels awfully familiar.

How to measure value in a player who fell short of the postseason? How much weight to give a starting pitcher who participates only once every five days?

“It’s not the most valuable hitter award, it’s Most Valuable Player, which is everybody on the roster. But I think in order to win it as a pitcher, you have to have just an unbelievable year,” Washington Nationals first baseman Adam LaRoche said.

“You’re playing in a fifth as many games as the hitters. It should be a very rare thing. I don’t think they should get in the habit of giving that out to pitchers. It should be an exception every once in a while, when you just have no choice and that guy is clearly the MVP.”

Kershaw has a strong case. Despite missing several starts with a back injury early this season, he went 21-3 in 27 outings for the NL West champions with 239 strikeouts and a 1.77 ERA — the lowest in the National League since 1995.

He also became the first pitcher to lead the majors in ERA four straight seasons.

The last pitcher to win the NL MVP award was Bob Gibson in 1968. Five years before that, it was another great Dodgers lefty, Sandy Koufax.

Of course, Kershaw was brilliant last season, too, and finished seventh in the balloting. McCutchen easily beat out Arizona bopper Paul Goldschmidt after leading the Pirates to their first postseason appearance in 21 years.

Many thought it might be a close election, but Goldschmidt failed to receive even one first-place vote despite pacing the NL in home runs, RBIs, slugging percentage and OPS for a .500 team.

Over in the American League, the power hitting of Miguel Cabrera trumped Mike Trout’s multi-skilled excellence the past two years as Cabrera won division titles with Detroit while Trout stayed home in October.

And back in 2011, it was pitcher Justin Verlander of the AL Central champion Tigers topping Boston outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury and Toronto slugger Jose Bautista, who both missed the playoffs. In the NL, Ryan Braun reached the postseason with Milwaukee that year while runner-up Matt Kemp of the Dodgers did not.

The common theme here is that making the playoffs pays off in the MVP chase. To many voters from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America, that’s what defines the word valuable in Most Valuable Player.

“That’s a very important part, and rightfully so,” Toronto pitcher R.A. Dickey said.

That doesn’t bode well for Stanton, because the Marlins (77-85) finished fourth in the NL East. In fairness, though, they were still on the fringe of the wild-card race when he was hit in the face by a pitch Sept. 11, forcing him to miss the remainder of the season. Miami went 6-11 the rest of the way.

It was an unfortunate break, but he still ended up leading the league in homers (37) and slugging percentage (.555) while finishing second in RBIs (105).

McCutchen, meanwhile, had nearly identical stats in several major categories. His power numbers (25 homers, 83 RBIs) didn’t match Stanton’s, but the four-time All-Star actually had a better season at the plate than last year, when he won his first MVP award.

Despite spending 15 days on the disabled list in August with fractured rib cartilage, McCutchen led the NL in on-base percentage at .410 and OPS at .952, which was two points better than Stanton. Pittsburgh went 5-9 while he was sidelined, but took off in September on the way to a second straight wild-card berth as McCutchen posted an outstanding OPS of 1.048 during the final month.

Throw in his speed on the bases — 18 steals in 21 attempts — and defense at a premium position, and McCutchen is the pick to repeat as MVP.

But don’t count out Kershaw when results are announced in November.

___

A look at the other big awards:

AL MVP: Widely considered the best all-around player in baseball, Trout was runner-up to Cabrera the last two seasons. But this time, Trout and the Los Angeles Angels (98-64) boast the top record in the majors, making him a heavy favorite.

“He’s waited his turn, so to speak, and he’s deserving,” Dickey said. “He’s been deserving the last couple of years, if it weren’t for the big guy over there in Detroit.”

Cabrera’s teammate on the playoff-bound Tigers, Victor Martinez, actually led the league in OPS at .974. He’s mainly a designated hitter, though.

Trout had 36 homers and ranked first in RBIs (111) and runs (115). His strikeouts are way up and his stolen bases are way down — but no matter, Dickey said: “He, to me, is just such a presence.”

NL Cy Young: Kershaw rolls to his third in four years. Tough luck for Johnny Cueto of the Reds and Adam Wainwright of the Cardinals, who both went 20-9 in Cy Young-caliber seasons.

AL Cy Young: It’s a toss-up between Seattle ace Felix Hernandez, the 2010 winner, and Cleveland right-hander Corey Kluber, who virtually came out of nowhere this season.

“You have to take into consideration the ballparks they pitch in, the division they pitch in. I know I would look at a lot of those things,” Baltimore manager Buck Showalter said. “What kind of defense was played behind them? If you look at all those things, I think there’s a clear-cut winner.”

Hmmm, still looks awfully close from here, Buck. Nip and tuck. Call it in the air … Kluber.

NL Rookie of the Year: Sort of slim pickings this season after a bumper crop in 2013. Make it New York Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom over Cincinnati speedster Billy Hamilton.

AL Rookie of the Year: Cuban first baseman Jose Abreu of the Chicago White Sox is the clear choice from a deep class.

NL Manager of the Year: Clint Hurdle of the Pirates could become the only back-to-back winner in either league besides Atlanta’s Bobby Cox (2004-05).

AL Manager of the Year: Kudos to Ned Yost for guiding Kansas City out of a 29-year playoff drought, and Lloyd McClendon for leading the turnaround in Seattle. But the winner is Showalter, who managed the ace-less Orioles to a runaway AL East crown despite playing large chunks of the season without All-Stars Matt Wieters, Manny Machado and Chris Davis. There’s a nice symmetry here: Showalter won this award 10 years ago with Texas and 20 years ago with the New York Yankees.

A’s, Tigers, Cards Win Playoff Races on Final Day

mlb bigSonny Gray pitched Oakland into baseball’s last playoff spot, Detroit and St. Louis clinched division crowns and Jordan Zimmermann threw a no-hitter in a final-day drama made even more memorable by Derek Jeter’s farewell.

Going into Sunday, not a single postseason matchup was certain. David Price and some pals across the majors quickly settled all of them.

Gray shut out Texas 4-0, helping the Athletics hold off Seattle for the second AL wild-card slot. The A’s will open this year’s postseason at Kansas City on Tuesday night, with Jon Lester facing the Royals’ James Shields.

On Wednesday night, Madison Bumgarner and San Francisco visit Edinson Volquez and Pittsburgh in the NL wild-card game.

The best-of-five AL division series puts the wild-card winner at the Los Angeles Angels and the Tigers at Baltimore. In the NL, the wild card plays at Washington and the Cardinals are at the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Manfred, Clark on MLB Length of Games Committee

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — Incoming baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred and players’ association head Tony Clark have been selected to participate in a new Major League Baseball committee tasked with decreasing the times of games.

The committee announced Monday by outgoing Commissioner Bud Selig will be chaired by Atlanta Braves President John Schuerholz. The group includes Boston Red Sox Chairman Tim Werner and partner Michael Gordon, New York Mets general manager Sandy Alderson and Major League Baseball Executive Vice President Joe Torre.

The average time of a nine-inning game has increased from 2 hours, 33 minutes in 1981 to a record 3:03 this year.

Selig says the group plans to make recommendations for the 2015 season.

After NFL, Baseball Addresses Domestic Violence

mlb bigRepresentatives of Major League Baseball and the players’ union are opening talks about establishing new policies and punishments for domestic violence.

The first meeting is scheduled for Friday in negotiations that could continue for several weeks or even months.

The recent spate of high-profile domestic violence cases involving Ray Rice and other NFL players prompted the discussions.

Like baseball, other top professional sports organizations surveyed by The Associated Press — including the NBA, NHL, NASCAR, PGA Tour and ATP — currently have rules covering various kinds of inappropriate or criminal behavior away from arenas but do not address domestic violence on its own.

AL Wild-Card Game Sept 30 Begins MLB Playoff Sked

mlb bigMajor League Baseball is scheduled to begin the postseason with the AL wild-card game on Sept. 30.

MLB announced the schedule Thursday. The NL playoffs will start with the wild-card game on Oct 1.

The regular season ends Sept. 28, and any tiebreakers would be played the next day.

Both AL division series openers are scheduled for Oct. 2. The NL division series openers will be Oct. 3.

The AL championship series begins Oct. 10 and the NLCS opens the next day.

The World Series is set to start on Tuesday, Oct. 21 at the home of the AL champion.

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