Series XV Preview: New York Black Yankees @ San Francisco Sea Lions
It hasn't been too long since we visited these two teams: the
San Francisco Sea Lions were featured in
series IX and the
New York Black Yankees in
Series XI.
#New York Black Yankees
Really, not a lot has changed. The Black Yankees are still in first place, they still look like a dominant team, and they still have no idea what to do at 2B.
They are, pretty clearly, the best offensive team in the WBL, and while the production of
Babe Ruth (1.122 OPS, 19 homeruns, 51 runs, 54 RBIs) and
Lou Gehrig (somehow, a quiet 1.033 OPS) was expected, that of
Albert Belle (.981 OPS in less than a full time role) and especially
Eric Davis (.928 OPS, tied with Ruth for the league lead at 19 homeruns and leading the league with 59 RBIs) was not.
Add in
Thurman Munson, who has an argument to be included in the elite catchers of the league and steady production from
Mickey Mantle and
Don Mattingly, and you have a nightmare for opposing pitchers.
The only black mark are the continued struggles of
Willie Randolph (.622 OPS) and
Craig Counsell (.577 OPS) at 2B. Randolph has actually been hitting much better of late, raising his OPS about 20 points in the last month. Counsell would be demoted immediately if there were any other options--right now, the minor league system is totally barren in the middle infield.
Ron Guidry (5-5, 3.67 ERA) has struggled a little bit more of late, although he still leads the WBL in strikeouts and remains the ace of the staff. At the other end,
Dave Righetti (3-4, 5.43 ERA) seems to have lost his mojo and may actually be facing demotion to the bullpen. The other starters--
Red Ruffing,
Waite Hoyt, and
Jack Scott--have combined for a 16-5 record with solid secondary numbers.
#San Francisco Sea Lions
The Sea Lions are, perhaps, more interesting. They trail Portland by 5 games in the
Marvin Miller Division, and feel like a team that is underperforming.
Part of the conundrum remains what to do with
Rickey Henderson, who leads the WBL in walks (47) and stolen bases (41), but has an OPS barely over .700. He still has an OBP around .400, so he holds on to his leadoff spot, but the choice is much clearer when he's doing something besides walking to help out at the top of the order.
San Francisco has a frightening big three behind Henderson, led by triple crown contender
Reggie Jackson, who is leading the league in batting average and on base percentage with an OPS of 1.134.
Bobby Bonds is slashing 331/382/577 and
Pedro Guerrero--who started the year at AAA--continues to hack, posting a .933 OPS. Add in 9 homeruns from
Jimmy Bloodworth at 2B and 10 homeruns from
Jack Clark, as well as the emergence of
Dick Lundy as a solid infield presence, and you have a very strong offensive team.
So the problem must be on the mound, right?
It's certainly not in the bullpen.
Rod Beck has 14 saves and an ERA of 0.66, and the rest of the back end--
Ron Robinson,
Chad Bradford, and
Ken Howell--have great numbers.
Lefty Grove hovers just outside the elite starters of the league, at 5-2 with a 3.23 ERA and
Diego Segui has been fantastic since he joined the rotation (2-2 with a 2.18 ERA). But beyond that ... well.
Cy Falkenberg,
Jim Devlin, and
Eddie Plank have all struggled, with Devlin replaced in the rotation by
Charlie Root.
So there it is: if the starters can do their job, the Sea Lions have a shot.
#Projected Starters
Black Yankees starter listed first.
Dave Righetti (3-4, 5.43) @ Lefty Grove (5-2, 3.23)
Waite Hoyt (4-1, 3.84) @ Eddie Plank (4-3, 4.27)
Ron Guidry (5-5, 3.67) @ Cy Falkenberg (3-2, 5.11)
Jack Scott (5-3, 3.75) @ Diego Segui (2-2, 2.18)
It could be a great series, but I think it's more likely the Black Yankees take 3 of the 4--losing to Grove and winning the rest.