Monday

KOUFAX Ks 21 IN OPENING DAY PERFORMANCE FOR THE AGES!


7/4: DEAD-BALLERS 5 - DODGERS 0

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In a highly-anticipated battle of the aces on VLB's Opening Day In Los Angeles Sunday afternoon, one man took his game to a level never seen on a Major League Field. While the Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw had a surprisingly hard time with the Dead-Ballers' offense, allowing five runs in six innings of work, Sandy Koufax would carve through the powerful 2017 Dodgers offense like a hot knife through butter, en route to a two-hit complete-game 5-0 victory over their intracity rivals.

Sandy Koufax Delivers the First Pitch in VLB History
From nearly the first pitch in Virtual League Baseball history, through his 145th and final pitch of the ballgame, "The Left Arm of God" was in complete control, establishing a VLB single-game record of 21 strikeouts that is unlikely to fall anytime soon. The total eclipses the Major League record of 20 strikeouts jointly held by Roger Clemens (twice), Kerry Wood and Max Scherzer. Koufax would twice reach the 18 K plateau in his career to set his personal-best MLB game total.

It would take a few batters for Koufax to settle into a groove, though. Chris Taylor laced a line-drive single to open the game, and with one out Koufax hit Justin Turner with a pitch to put him in a jam. But that's when the dominance would begin, as the Dead-Baller ace fanned Cody Bellinger and Kiké Hernández to wriggle off the hook.

By the time Koufax had recorded two outs in the ninth inning, no other Dodger batter had reached on a hit. Taylor, Hernández, Joc Pederson and Logan Forsythe were all sporting a golden sombrero (three strikeouts), while Bellinger had just been fitted for a grand sombrero with his fourth of the contest. Hernández then drove a double into the right-center field gap before Koufax would retire Yasiel Puig on a ground ball to third to put the Dodgers out of their misery. His final line: 9 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 21 K, 3 BB.

Koufax was working with more run support than he's used to receiving, which was all the more surprising given the presence of Kershaw as his mound foe. The Dodgers' ace was not entirely off his game, allowing just five hits and no walks against eight strikeouts. But two of those hits left the yard. The first came in the third inning, when Lou Johnson followed up a run-scoring double by Ron Fairly with a two-run shot. Fairly would launch a two-run homer of his own the following inning to cap the Dead-Ballers' scoring on this historic day.


7/4: ORIOLES 4 - BRAVES 2  (11 INNINGS)

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Braves fans were treated to an exciting, extra-inning opener at Fulton County Stadium on Sunday. Unfortunately for them, the happy ending went to the visiting 1970 Orioles thanks to an eleventh-inning two-run homer served up to Frank Robinson by side-winding reliever Brad Clontz.

Frank Robinson Puts Baltimore Ahead for Good in the 11th Inning
The fireworks didn't end there, though. Boog Powell, following Robinson, was sent sprawling to the ground by a Clontz fastball that struck him square in the helmet. That slowed him down not in the least, as the 6'4", 230-pounder leaped to his feet and was on the pitcher's mound in a flash, flushed bright as his orange uniform, ready to crash down on the 180-lb. reliever like a tidal wave. Somehow Clontz ducked clear of the maelstrom and thankfully, although benches cleared and some heated wrestling ensued, no punches were thrown. Both Powell and Clontz were ejected.

It was a game that began with two pitching greats, Greg Maddux (7 IP, 2 R, 6 H, 11 K, 0 BB) and Jim Palmer (7 IP, 2 R, 5 H, 11 K, 2 BB) dueling to a draw. Both surrendered their only runs in the first inning. Don Buford led off against Maddux with a double that almost cleared the center field wall. Paul Blair followed that with a shot that did clear the wall in left to give the O's an early lead. But Fred McGriff would return the favor against Palmer in the bottom of the frame.

It was nine innings of goose eggs from then until Robinson's homer put the O's on top. The taste of victory would sour for the O's, however, when after the game VLB Commissioner Ethan Peterson handed down a four-game suspension to Powell for his actions. The Braves will likewise lose Clontz for two games for hitting Powell intentionally, in Peterson's view.


7/4: ASTROS 12 - ATHLETICS 3

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It was a raucous crowd on hand at Minute Maid Park in Houston to see the '17 Astros run away with a 12-3 Opening Day victory over the '89 A's. Fans blew whistles and banged on garbage cans as Dallas Keuchel nearly went the distance, fanning 14 in 8.1 innings for the win.

It started as a tight, back-and-forth contest, but Houston pulled away for good in the fourth when Jose Altuve launched a two-out, two-run homer on a 3-2 slider from Dave Stewart. The Oakland ace would also surrender home runs to George Springer and Yuli Gurriel (his first of two on the night) before Altuve's blast knocked him out of the game. A puzzled Stewart said afterwards that it was as if they knew what was coming.


7/4: YANKEES 5 - REDS 3

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O'NEILL
Yankee favorite Paul O'Neill thrilled an enthusiastic crowd in the Bronx with a pair of solo homers against '75 Reds starter Don Gullett, propelling the Bombers to a 5-3 Opening Day win. The veteran outfielder, who announced that this would be his final season, was honored in an emotional pregame ceremony before celebrating with a three-RBI day against the franchise he originally came up to the big leagues with.

Reds catcher Johnny Bench pulled Cincinnati to within a run with a solo shot in the seventh. But the Yanks Mike Mussina would fan 12 Reds in outlasting Gullett for the 5-3 victory. Mariano Rivera recorded the final four outs for the save.


7/4: RED SOX 7 - METS 3

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The '86 Mets opened at Shea Stadium by taking Pedro Martinez deep three times. But none came with runners aboard and the Mets managed little else against the Boston ace, who worked into the ninth, striking out 12 in a 7-3 Red Sox win.

Mets starter Dwight Gooden also missed a lot of bats, fanning 11 Red Sox batters, but a few too many connected. Dr. K was touched up by a Jason Varitek homer and a two-run Manny Ramirez double on the way to a disappointing loss. Ramirez would punctuate the Sox win with a ninth-inning solo homer against Rick Anderson.


7/4: GIANTS 9 - MARINERS 7

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Jamie Moyer and the '01 Mariners took a 3-0 lead into the bottom of the fourth inning of their Opening Day contest at AT&T Park in San Francisco. But with one out Buster Posey would break through for the 2012 Giants with a two-run homer. By the time he made the final out of the inning, the Giants would have a 7-3 lead that would ultimately stand up behind their ace, Matt Cain.


Friday

VLB Opening Day Is Just Around the Corner

July 2, 2020

Baseball is back! (Sort of.)

Virtual League Baseball will debut on Sunday, when the first of 22 three-game series' for each team will begin. Coverage here will be daily for the Opening Series games before settling into reporting at the end of each series throughout the season. VLB Digest wil return to daily coverage for the pennant races and post season.

Opening Day of course means marquee pitching matchups, and Virtual League Baseball will not be lacking for must-see battles as it gets started on the nation's Bicentennial, July 4, 1976.


Series One Previews


2017 LA Dodgers (104-58) @
1965 LA Dead-Ballers (97-65)

No VBL pitching pairing generates more anticipation than the duel between Dodger icons Clayton Kershaw and Sandy Koufax set for Sunday's opener on the Chavez Ravine mound. Franchise bragging rights will be on the line right out of the gate, as two clubs with starkly different offensive approaches battle to support front-line pitching: '17 Dodgers (221 HR, 77 SB); '65 Dead-Ballers (78 HR, 172 SB).

7/4: Clayton Kershaw (18-4, 2.31) vs. Sandy Koufax (26-, 2.04)
7/5: Rich Hill (12-8, 3.32) vs. Don Drysdale (23-12, 2.77)
7/6: Hyun-Jin Ryu (5-9, 3.77) vs. Claude Osteen (15-15, 2.79)


1989 Oakland Athletics (99-63) @ 2017 Houston Astros (101-61)

It's a battle of the cheaters to open the season in Houston, as the 'roid-raging A's come into the sign-stealing den of the outlaw Astros. Dave "Smoke" Stewart and Dallas Keuchel will be the first to take the mound and face the dirty lineups on Sunday. As good as the pitching may be, expect to see the ball flying all over Minute Maid Park in this opening series.

7/4: Dave Stewart (21-9, 3.32) vs. Dallas Keuchel (14-5, 2.90)
7/5: Mike Moore (19-11, 2.61) vs. Charlie Morton (14-7, 3.62)
7/6: Bob Welch (17-8, 3.00) vs. Lance McCullers, Jr. (7-4, 4.25)


2004 Boston Red Sox (98-64) @ 1986 New York Mets (108-54)

GOODEN
Seven decades into The Curse of the Bambino, this '86 Mets team dealt yet another crushing blow to Red Sox fans (and Bill Buckner's reputation) that was to be eased only when these '04 Sox finally broke the 86-year-old drought.

Led by catchers Jason Varitek and Gary Carter, the clubs will take the field on Opening Day at Shea Stadium featuring another mound battle for the ages between Pedro Martinez and "Dr. K," Dwight Gooden.

7/4: Pedro Martinez (16-9, 3.90) vs. Dwight Gooden (17-6, 2.84)
7/5: Curt Schilling (21-6, 3.26) vs. Bob Ojeda (18-5, 2.57)
7/6: Derek Lowe (14-12, 5.42) vs. Ron Darling (15-6, 2.81)


1970 Baltimore Orioles (108-54) @ 1995 Atlanta Braves (90-54)

This series features the best pitching matchups from game one through three in a clash of two of the more professional ballclubs in VLB. Both squads led their respective leagues in run prevention, though the Braves outpaced their nearest competition by a whopping half-run per game. They'll need to be on their game to stop these O's, who also scored more than any league opponent behind MVP Boog Powell and the Robinson Boys.

7/4: Jim Palmer (20-10, 2.71) vs. Greg Maddux (19-2, 1.63)
7/5: Mike Cuellar (24-8, 3.48) vs. Tom Glavine (16-7, 3.08)
7/6: Dave McNally (24-9, 3.22) vs. John Smoltz (12-7, 3.18)


2001 Seattle Mariners (116-46) @ 2012 San Francisco Giants (94-68)


ICHIRO
The record 116-win '01 Mariners, take the league's highest winning percentage (.716) into AT&T Park in in San Francisco to open with the '12 Giants, who feature the lowest (.580). But these games aren't played on paper (they're played by electrical impulses on a circuit board), so anything can happen as league MVPs Ichiro Suzuki and Buster Posey look to help get their squads off the blocks fast. Ageless wonder Jamie Moyer, who was a first-time 20-game winner at 38, gets the call for the M's in the opener against Matt Cain.

7/4: Jamie Moyer (20-6, 3.43) vs. Matt Cain (16-5, 2.79)
7/5: Freddy Garcia (18-6, 3.05) vs. Madison Bumgarner (16-11, 3.37)
7/6: Aaron Sele (15-5, 3.60) vs. Ryan Vogelsong (14-9, 3.37)


1975 Cincinnati Reds (108-54) @ 2001 New York Yankees (95-65)

This is a battle of the heavyweights to open the season in The House That Ruth Built. The Bronx Bombers had an impressive 804-713 run differential, but that was dwarfed by Cincy's otherworldly 840-586 in 1975. The '76 edition of the Big Red Machine would sweep the Yankees to win a second straight championship, but these '01 Yanks figure to bring tougher pitching and a bit more firepower into this dogfight.

7/4: Don Gullett (15-4, 2.42) vs. Mike Mussina (17-11, 3.15)
7/5: Gary Nolan (15-9, 3.16) vs. Andy Pettitte (15-10, 3.99)
7/6: Fred Norman (12-4, 3.73) vs. Roger Clemens (20-3, 3.51)


Wednesday

VLB Modern Division Preview

2004 Boston Red Sox


Manny Ramirez / Pedro Martinez
Perhaps only a team of self-proclaimed "Idiots" would lack the acumen to understand that a team does not rally from down three-zero in a seven-game post-season series. But ignorance would prove to be bliss for a club that against all odds  finally broke the 86-year Curse of the Bambino to bring Boston it's first Championship since the year Yankee fans once loved to chant: 1918.

With a Caveman roaming in center field, "Manny Being Manny," Schilling being Schilling, Pedro with his Yankee Oedipus complex, Kevin Millar speaking a language of his own, and a bigger-than-life Big Papi, this team certainly doesn't lack for characters. Or talent.

The pairing of Curt Schilling (21-6, 3.26) with Pedro Martinez (16-9, 3.90) gives the Sox a one-two punch atop their rotation to rival any in the league. They feature a similar dynamic duo in the lineup as well, with the oft-perplexing Manny Ramirez (.308, 43, 130) and the clutch DH David Ortiz (.301, 41, 139) manning the heart of the order. Johnny Damon (.304, 20, 94, 123 runs) gets the offense off and running from the leadoff spot. Brittle Boston icon Nomar Garciaparra (.308, 9, 41) remains their shortstop, but this team's emerging leader is catcher Jason Varitek (.296, 18, 73).

They may be a flaky bunch. But nobody should count this team out.  Ever.


2012 San Francisco Giants


The San Francisco Giants from the first years of the previous decade were among the strangest not-quite dynasties in baseball history. Although they won three intermittent World Championships in five years, they weren't really good in the off years, and featured very different rosters for each winner, often relying on a collection of castoffs and temporary fixes to augment a core that would shift over time. This 94-win squad was the winningest and arguably best of the random champs.

Buster Posey / Pablo Sandoval
The one constant for these Giants is catcher Buster Posey (.336, 24, 103) who was the league's Most Valuable Player for 2012. Third baseman Pablo Sandoval (.283, 12, 63) struggles to maintain his weight and consistent performance, but the "Kung Fu Panda" does have a knack for the big moment and is adored by the team's fans. This edition of the team relies heavily on the tainted offensive output of Melky Cabrera (.346, 11, 60), he of a failed PED test.

The pitching staff is in transition from the era of Matt Cain (16-5, 2.79) and Tim Lincecum (10-15, 5.18), to the era of Madison Bumgarner (16-11, 3.37), with help from crafty veterans Ryan Vogelsong (14-9, 3.37) and Barry Zito (15-8, 4.15).

The Giants championships were little miracles for their fans (and puzzles for others). It may take a digital miracle for this team to win a VLB Championship, but it's not wise to count anything out where this inordinately lucky bunch is concerned.


2017 Houston Astros


If a theory of this league is that every division needs a villain, the 2017 Astros are clearly the Darth Vader of Virtual League Baseball. The '86 Mets may have been too intense for their own good at times. The '89 A's had a rotten core of inflated egos and inauthentic talent. But these Astros engaged in a team-wide sign-stealing scheme that used cameras to capture signs, front-office formulas to decode them, and dirty deeds to relay pitch information to batters in real time. This team carries a stink as strong as perhaps only the dirty 1919 Black Sox of Chicago.

George Springer / Carlos Correa / Jose Altuve
Complicit in stealing the 2017 World Championship, though only benefiting from offensive support, the pitching staff features the theoretically authentic performances of Dallas Keuchel (14-5, 2.90), Charlie Morton (14-7, 3.62), and Brad Peacock (13-2, 3.00).

It's anyone's guess how much the sign bandits' offensive output is inflated by their cheating, but there are sure to be pitchers muttering throughout the league at the exploits of Jose Altuve (.346, 24, 81, 32 SB), Carlos Correa (.315, 24, 84), George Springer (.283, 34, 84), Alex Bregman (.284, 19, 71) and the rest of the Houston outlaws. There will be many hoping they will face the justice of falling well short of victory in the upcoming VLB season.


2017 Los Angeles Dodgers


Cody Bellinger / Justin Turner / Yasiel Puig
When the Astros evil deeds were exposed, there were many in Los Angeles agitating for a transfer of the Word Series trophy from Houston to LA. But the only title this worthy squad can possibly hold now is VLB Champion.

These Dodgers, the fifth of seven straight NL West Championship teams (and counting) might be the strongest of their divisional dynasty to date. The arrival of 21-year-old rookie phenom Cody Bellinger (.267, 37, 97) to man first base has a lot to do with that. But he is just one of eight Dodgers with double-digit home run production, including a career-high from mercurial right fielder Yasiel Puig (.263, 28, 74). All-Star shortstop Corey Seager (.295, 22, 77) anchors an infield that also includes team leaders in third baseman Justin Turner (.322, 21, 77) and veteran second baseman Chase Utley.

The Dodgers' time in Los Angeles has been marked by a perennially enviable assemblage of world-class starting pitching, and this team features one of the faces of that franchise tradition, the great Clayton Kershaw (18-4, 2.31). He is supported in the rotation by All-Star Alex Wood (16-3, 2.72), determined veteran Rich Hill (12-8, 3.32), and Japanese import Kenta Maeda (13-6, 4.22). Plus closer Kenley Jansen (1.32, 41 saves, 109 K, 7 BB, 0.746 WHIP) is among the very best in the game.

Perhaps more than any, this Dodgers team was best poised to finally bring Los Angeles its first Championship since Orel Hershiser and Kirk Gibson led them to their improbable 1988 title. They head into this VLB season with a strong appetite for redemption and vengeance.


Monday

VLB Millennial Division Preview

1989 Oakland Athletics


If the '86 Mets are the rakish bad boys of the Classic Division, The 1989 Oakland A's are the clear villains of the Millennial Division, having served as the lab from which the steroids epidemic spread throughout Major League Baseball well into the current century. With over a thousand tainted lifetime home runs among them staining the record books, "The Bash Brothers," Mark McGwire (.231, 33, 95) and Jose Canseco (.269, 17, 57, in an injury-shortened 65 games), did as much as anyone to hurt the game during this era. Veterans Dave Parker (.264, 22, 97), Dave Henderson (.250, 15, 80) and Carney Lansford (.336, 2, 52, 37 SB) help make the lineup a ticking time bomb.

Jose Canseco / Mark McGwire
The Oakland rotation is rock solid, from their intense ace Dave Stewart (21-9, 3.32), to Mike Moore (19-11, 2.61), Bob Welch (17-8, 3.00), and Storm Davis (19-9, 4.36). And they have the bullpen to match, with veteran lefty Rick Honeycutt (2.35, 12 saves), and young righty Todd Burns (2.24, 8 saves) leading the support for what may be the greatest of their weapons. The remarkable Dennis Eckersley (1.56, 33 saves, 55 K, 3 BB) transitioned from all-star starter to become one of the most dominant closers in the history of the game.

Corrupt or not, this squad will be a threat to good and bad sportsmen alike in this league with their ill-gotten power coupled with a deep and reliable veteran pitching staff.


1995 Atlanta Braves


Greg Maddux / Tom Glavine / John Smoltz / Steve Avery
For fourteen straight (completed) seasons, spring training essentially extended throughout the summer for the Atlanta Braves, serving as fine-tuning for the real beginning of their season, known to other teams as the playoffs. That's the good news. The bad news is that in all of those chances, it was only these '95 Bravos who would take home the World Series trophy.

As was the hallmark of this dynasty, the thing that makes this Braves team relentless is its starting rotation, featuring the three-headed Hall-of-Fame monster of Greg Maddux (19-2, 1.63, 0.811 WHIP), Tom Glavine (16-7, 3.08), and John Smoltz (12-7, 3.18).

Offensively, "The Crime Dog," Fred McGriff (.280, 27, 93) takes a bite out of opposing pitchers, as do young outfielders Ryan Klesko (.310, 23, 70) and David Justice (.253, 24, 78). Switch-hitting rookie third baseman Chipper Jones (.265, 23, 86) provides the finishing piece to the divisional dynasty's only completed puzzle.


2001 New York Yankees


There has only been one true modern Major League dynasty, and (surprise) it's the New York Yankees, turn of the century edition. The strength of the team is its core (really five, not four) of Bernie Williams, Andy Pettitte, Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter.

Bernie Williams / Paul O'Neill / Derek Jeter
This playoff edition of the team carried the weight of New York City on its shoulders more heavily than others, as American society was still in shock and just beginning its long recovery from the 9/11 terrorist attacks which saw the World Trade Center towers fall in lower Manhattan, killing more than 2,500 people.

They used that emotion and determination to beat the winningest team of all time en route to a suitably dramatic seven-game heart breaker of a Game Seven World Series loss far away in the Arizona desert.

This team has a very real chance to get their championship in the upcoming VLB season. The core is productive as ever: Williams (.307, 26, 94), Pettitte (15-10, 3.99), Posada (.277, 22, 95), Rivera (2.34, 50 saves, 0.905 WHIP), Jeter (.311, 21, 74, 27 SB). The "supporting cast" includes the 'roid-fueled "Rocket," Roger Clemens (20-3, 3.51), Hall-of-Fame pitcher and professional, Mike Musina (17-11, 3.15), and former Don Mattingly replacement Tino Martinez (.280, 34, 113) manning first base.

Upon the retirement of Mattingly in 1995, the Yankees were to go without a Captain until Jeter became "The Captain" in 2003. But if not in name, teammates will tell you that Paul O'Neill (.267, 21, 70, in his final MLB season) is every bit of a captain for the Yankees of this era.


2001 Seattle Mariners


Brett Boone / Ichiro Suzuki
So. The winningest single-season team in the 150+ year history of Major League Baseball is...? Somehow not the Yankees. In fact, some (including many of the team's tortured fans) would say the distinction belongs to perhaps the least likely franchise in professional sports existence today.

That's because to the Seattle Mariners, "winning" is a relative term. It's something the franchise failed to taste (or even get a whiff of) until a generation into its existence. But when it did, the taste was sweet... and franchise saving. Unfortunately, none of the teams featuring the generational talents of Ken Griffey, Jr., Randy Johnson and Alex Rodriguez was able to reach, let alone win, a World Series.

To say it was a surprise that only after the last of these carrier ships had sailed away that Seattle baseball would achieve its greatest success is an understatement. So how did they do it? One big factor is health. The rotation takes every turn, delivering at a consistently high level, with Jamie Moyer (20-6, 3.43), Freddy Garcia (18-6, 3.05), Aaron Sele (15-5, 3.60), and Paul Abbott (17-4, 4.25) shouldering the bulk of the load. Reigning AL Rookie of the Year, closer Kaz Sasaki (3.24, 45 saves) is no sophomore slumper.

The entire club fits the same mold, with not a weakness among them. Beginning his Mariners tenure way back in the Year Two B.G. (Before Griffey), DH Edgar Martinez (.306, 23, 116) is now this club's spiritual leader and still amazingly productive at the advanced baseball age of 38. Unflappable first baseman John Olerud (.302, 21, 95) is steady as usual. Second baseman Bret Boone (.331, 37, 141) is bringing his game to a whole new level. And center fielder Mike Cameron (.267, 25, 110, 34 SB, with other-worldy defense) achieves the seemingly-impossible by more than adequately replacing "The Kid" in center field.

But the spark that puts this team over the top comes from a wildly successful experiment. Never before has a position player been imported from Japanese professional baseball into the MLB ranks. Ichiro Suzuki makes it clear that it was about time. The right fielder with the agility of Spider-Man and an arm "like something out of Star Wars," shows America what Japan has known for years, that Ichiro is their generational talent. He would take home the AL Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player Awards, and win both a Gold Glove and a Silver Slugger Awards, topping the Senior Circuit with a .350 batting average and 56 stolen bases in '01.

All this would add up to 116 wins and still no trip to the Fall Classic for Seattle. Maybe this (whatever this is) will finally be the Mariners year?


Saturday

VLB Classic Division Preview

1965 Los Angeles Dodgers (Dead-Ballers)


What this club lacks in offense it more than makes up for with great defense and some of the best pitching in baseball history. But the Dead-Ballers (so-called to distinguish them from the much different 2017 Dodgers team that will play in the Modern Division) aren't entirely useless with the sticks. The outfield corps will be relied upon for most of the heavy lifting, with speedy center fielder Willie Davis flanked by Tommy Davis and Ron Fairly.

Don Drysdale / Tommy Davis / Sandy Koufax / Maury Wills
But their offensive fortunes rest with the igniter at the top of their lineup, "The Mouse That Roared,” shortstop Maury Wills (.286, 94 stolen bases). A typical Dead-Ballers rally may consist of Wills beating out an infield hit, stealing second, moving to third on a fly ball and scoring on a wild pitch. That such a rally would often prove to be the entirety of the team's offense on a given night would be a major problem for just about any team, but not this one.

"The Left Arm of God" has a lot to do with that. Perhaps the most dominant pitcher over a five-year period in Major League history, Sandy Koufax won his second of three Cy Young Awards in 1965, posting a 26-8 record, 2.04 ERA, and 382 strikeouts in 335.2 innings of work. But opponents are far from off the hook once they've taken their medicine from Koufax, with a second ace in Don Drysdale (23-12, 2.77), and lefties Claude Osteen and veteran Johnny Podres rounding out the rotation. If you somehow knock out one of these starters, the Dead-Baller bullpen, led by Ron Perranoski (2.24, 18 saves), Bob Miller and Jim Brewer, is on hand to provide lock-down relief.


1970 Baltimore Orioles


Boog Powell / Brooks Robinson / Frank Robinson
This squad was at the heart of a near dynasty that saw Baltimore represent the American League in the Fall Classic four times in a six-year span. They swept the Dodgers in 1966, dropped to the Miracle Mets in ‘69, and were on the losing end of a seven-game thriller with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1971. These O’s, who topped the Reds in the Fall Classic, are one of the most balanced teams in this league, having excelled in all aspects of the game, leading the American League in runs scored, fewest runs allowed, and finishing second by a percentage point in fielding.

The pitching staff is led by 24-year-old righty Jim Palmer (20-10, 2.71) and lefties Mike Cuellar (24-8, 3.48) and Dave McNally (24-9, 3.22). Contributing greatly to their success is a left side of the infield that ranks among the best defensively in baseball history, with perennial Gold Glover Brooks Robinson manning third base and “The Blade,” Mark Belanger at shortstop. Scoring runs is no issue either, with AL MVP Boog Powell (.297, 35, 114), Frank Robinson (.306, 25, 78), and Brooks Robinson (.278, 18, 94) presenting a formidable heart of the order.


1975 Cincinnati Reds


Cincinnati’s “Big Red Machine” is in the running for the best team ever to take the field, winning their division by 20 games and outlasting the Red Sox in one of the true Fall Classics. They feature arguably the best catcher of all time in Johnny Bench (.283, 28, 110, plus his eighth straight NL Gold Glove Award), perhaps the best second baseman in history in 1975 NL MVP Joe Morgan (.327, 17, 94, 67 SB, Gold Glove), and the all-time Hit King in Pete Rose (.317, 7, 74, 112 runs scored).

The Big Red Machine's "Great Eight"
That would be enough to make this a great team, but their riches hardly stop there. The Red’s position players were known as the “Great Eight,” without a weakness among them. First baseman Tony Perez (.282, 20, 109) and slugging left fielder George Foster (.300, 23, 78) would be enough to power an offense on their own. The Big Red Machine manufactured over 100 runs more than their nearest NL competition with these precision lineup parts.

And their air-tight defense is further fortified up the middle by Gold Glovers in shortstop Dave Concepcion and center fielder Cesar Geronimo. If there’s a weakness to be found on this team it’s their lack of elite pitching. But it’s a corps that is deep in solid consistent performers, in the rotation and the bullpen, serving as more than enough to make this team one to fear.


1986 New York Mets


One of the more colorful teams competing in this VLB season is the ‘86 Mets. The talent of a pair of troubled prodigies is at the heart of things: 24-year-old right fielder Darryl Strawberry (.259, 27, 93, 28 SB) and 21-year-old phenom Dwight Gooden (17-6, 2.84, 200 K) provide a core that is deftly supported by a band of veteran winners.

Darryl Strawberry / Dwight Gooden
Catcher Gary Carter is the glue that holds things together. “The Kid” handles the pitching staff and the opponents’ running game as well as any catcher to put on the gear, while also providing key offensive production (.255, 24, 105). First baseman Keith Hernandez (.310, 13, 83) is also one of the best ever to play his position, and young center fielder Lenny Dykstra (.295, 8, 45, 31 SB) provides a spark at the top of the lineup.

Add in the pitching and you have a team to be reckoned with. Behind Gooden, the rotation is top-shelf, with Ron Darling (15-6, 2.81), Bob Ojeda (18-5, 2.57), and Sid Fernandez (16-6, 3.52) giving them ace-quality work on a daily basis, and Roger McDowell (3.02, 22 saves) and Jesse Orosco (2.33, 21 saves) providing a potent righty-lefty bullpen punch.


Thursday

Plans for New Virtual League Baseball Unveiled for World Cryo-Net Citizens

June 25, 2020

With thousands of humans each week joining the virtually connected cryogenic bunker network revealed and enacted by the United States military, and now coming online in countries around the world in an attempt to save our species from extinction at the hands of the rapidly-mutating Covid-19 virus, entertainment neural networks are rapidly rolling out to help counteract the tedium of this wakeful sleep that is our new reality for the foreseeable future.

For many Americans life without baseball is virtually unthinkable. Thankfully, Virtual League Baseball has been announced to fill that void. The league was founded by formerly-useless citizen Ethan Peterson, a 50-year-old Dodgers fan who ended up with the job simply by virtue of being the first of us to consider baseball an essential for human survival.

Peterson, who will serve as the VLB Commissioner, says the tools for simulating the game have their limitations, but make up for them with abilities to manipulate reality to accommodate possibilities formerly limited to the imagination. Based on the tastes of some of the earliest fans to gravitate to the new league, Peterson says he's designed an inaugural schedule that will serve as an experimental proving grounds for what may be possible going forward.

The League's structure will consist of three four-team divisions:

CLASSIC DIVISION
1965 Los Angeles Dodgers (who will be known as the Dead-Ballers)
1970 Baltimore Orioles
1975 Cincinnati Reds
1986 New York Mets

MILLENNIAL DIVISION
1989 Oakland Athletics
1995 Atlanta Braves
2001 New York Yankees
2001 Seattle Mariners

MODERN DIVISION
2004 Boston Red Sox
2012 San Francisco Giants
2017 Houston Astros
2017 Los Angeles Dodgers

Teams will play a 66-games schedule, with a three-game home series and a three-game road series against each team in the league. The winners of each division plus a wild card team will qualify for seven-game Championship Series leading to a seven-game Virtual World Series.

All players from those historical teams, in addition to a handful of virtual players from among our own population, will fill the major league 25-man rosters and AAA minor league rosters for each team. There will be no player transactions between teams, but injuries and suspensions will occur. This league will take place in the virtual year 1976, with Opening Day falling on July 4.

Once the seasons starts, watch these pages for game recaps and an expanded site which will allow you to view box scores, standings, stats and much more. Further details and previews of each division will be published in these pages in the days leading to Opening Day.

Virtual Baseball Fever! Catch it (instead of a Coronavirus fever).