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#2021 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 ALB Expansion
Arab League Baseball’s first expansion came in 2016, adding four teams to get to 28 total teams. The long-term plan was to get to 30 so that each division would have five teams, but officials wanted some time to pass to avoid potentially diluting the talent pool. They also wanted to finalize which cities would earn the new franchises.
The 2024 season marked the addition of these two new teams. In the Western Conference, the Syria-based Aleppo Alliance joined the Levant Division. In the Eastern Conference, Yemen got its first team with the Sanaa Shockers joining the previously named Saudi Division. Now that there was a team from outside of Saudi Arabia in the group, the division was renamed as the Arabia Division. The 15/15 conference divide also meant there would be limited inter-conference play for schedule purposes. ![]() ALB also decided to change its playoff format, which had been steady since the league’s formation in 1990. Previously, only the three division winners had earned playoff spots. Some in ALB had disliked the format as there had been seasons where a 90+ win second place team had to sit out while the weakest division winner made it in just above .500. Twice before a team finished at 100-62 but missed the cut as the second place team in their division. Officials didn’t want to punish great teams in strong divisions, but also wanted to maintain a reward for division titles. They decided to add a separate wild card round where the two-best wild cards met. It was a “best of three,” but the higher ranked wild card got a one-game advantage and home field. They would only have to win twice, while the lower wild card had to win three-in-a-row. The wild card winner advanced to a best-of-three hosted by the #1 seed, while the #2 seed hosted #3 on the other side. Some argued for re-seeding to avoid having a strong wild card against the #1 seed if the other division winners were weak, but simplicity won out. The second round winners still met in a best-of-five conference final, followed by the best-of-seven Arab League Championship. ![]()
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Baseball: The World's Game fictional world reports Continental Baseball Federation world reports (8-tier promotion/relegation sim and college feeder) Last edited by FuzzyRussianHat; 02-01-2025 at 04:28 PM. |
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#2022 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in ALB
![]() Reigning Arab League champ Amman took the top seed in the Western Conference at 104-58, earning their third consecutive Levant Division title. The Aviators allowed the fewest runs in all of ALB at 636 and scored the most in the WC with 878. The Levant Division also had both wild cards with Jerusalem (92-70) and Beirut (84-78). The Jets earned their second playoff berth in four years, while the Bluebirds ended a decade-long drought. Algiers repeated as Mediterranean Division at 93-69. Tripoli was a distant second at 82-80, falling two games short of the second wild card. Casablanca fell to 73-89, their first losing season since 2014. Cairo’s Nile Division title streak grew to eight years with their 90-72 finish. No one else in the division had a winning record. An interesting skillset helped Jerusalem 2B Hassan Shanshol win Western Conference MVP. The 22-year old Iraqi set the world baseball single-season record for stolen bases with 157. The previous world record was 152 by Beisbol Sudamerica’s Pascal Garcia from 1996; who was the only player to that point to crack 150. The old ALB record was 143 by Amir Rasmi from 2018. As of 2037, only Shanshol himself has topped the 157 mark. Shanshol also led in 2024 in runs (140), triples (20), OBP (.431), and WAR (9.1). He had 212 hits, 41 doubles, 5 homers, .943 OPS, and 150 wRC+. His 140 runs fell four short of Farouk Adam’s ALB record. Jerusalem gave Shanshol an eight-year, $120,200,000 extension in September 2025. It was rare for a leadoff guy to win MVP, but Shanshol had a special case. He beat out a 67 home run effort by Algiers’ Wissam Magdy. Arsenal ace Muhammad Nour won his fourth consecutive Pitcher of the Year in only his sixth full season. He became only the fifth pitcher to win POTY 4+ times in ALB history. The 26-year old Algerian led in ERA (2.19), strikeouts (357), WHIP (0.82), quality starts (27), FIP- (57), and WAR (9.3). Nour had a 202 ERA+ and 17-5 record, missing the Triple Crown by three wins. Nour had a major setback in 2025 with a bone spur in his elbow keeping him out almost all season, but he would bounce back impressively. In the first ever wild card round, Beirut upset Jerusalem 2-1. The Bluebirds were promptly swept in round two by top seed Amman while Algiers swept Cairo 2-0. In an Eastern Conference Championship rematch, the Aviators again prevailed with a 3-1 win. Amman earned its fifth pennant with the result (1999, 2009, 2010, 2023, 2024). ![]() Jeddah and Basra both extended their lengthy division title streaks with 100-62 finishes. By tiebreaker, the Jackals earned the #1 seed by extending their ALB record playoff streak to 14 seasons atop the Arabia Division. The Bulldogs led the Mesopotamia Division for the seventh year running. Neither division win came easy though with tough competition. Kuwait chased Basra and fell short by two games at 98-64. That secured the first wild card for the Whales to end a 14-year playoff drought. Mecca (96-66) and Riyadh (93-69) fought with Jeddah in the Arabia Division. The Marksmen grabbed the second wild card to end their own 14-year playoff drought. The Rats missed the cut despite having the second-most team doubles in ALB history with 396. Medina at 88-74 was also competitive and expansion Sanaa had a solid debut season at 80-82. Meanwhile defending conference champ Abu Dhabi finished 91-71 to win their third Gulf Division in a row. Muscat was their only close competitor at 84-78. At the bottom was 52-110 Dubai with a historically poor pitching staff. The Diamonds set new ALB team worsts for ERA (5.71), and H/9 (10.72). They also allowed 1691 hits, 944 runs, and 901 earned runs; each the second worst in conference history to that point. Eastern Conference MVP was American 1B Elijah Snyder, who was in his third year for Riyadh after playing nine years for MLB’s Memphis. The 32-year old led in runs (142), RBI (154), walks (87), total bases (452), OBP (.456), slugging (.775), OPS (1.231), wRC+ (193), and WAR (9.2). Snyder was two runs short of the ALB single-season record. His OPS was the seventh-best qualifying season to that point and his OBP was the third-best mark. Snyder’s efforts beat out Muscat’s Walid Bennani with 70 home runs, which was the ninth 70+ homer effort in ALB history. Pitcher of the Year was actually a split between Medina’s Bakr Mahdi and Basra's Ahmed Hussain. For Hussain, he became a four-time POTY winner by leading in WAR (10.1) and FIP- (49). The 32-year old Qatari had a 2.97 ERA over 230.1 innings, 20-3 record, and 305 strikeouts. For Mahdi, it was his fourth season in the rotation for the Mastodons. The 26-year old Omani righty led in wins (21-4), ERA (2.71), WHIP (0.95), and quality starts (28). Mahdi struck out 263 over 242 innings with a 164 ERA+ and 7.1 WAR. The Mastodons had given him a six-year, $45,240,000 extension after the 2022 season to keep him there through his 20s. Kuwait swept Mecca in the wild card round, then upset Jeddah 2-1 in the second round. The Whales earned their first Eastern Conference Championship trip since their 2009 pennant. Basra edged reigning champ Abu Dhabi 2-1 on the other side, giving the Bulldogs a sixth straight trip to the EC final. Basra’s bad luck continued though, falling to 1-5 in the conference final in that run. Kuwait ousted their divisional rival 3-1 to become three-time conference champs (2000, 2009, 2024). They also were the first wild card to earn a finals trip in the first year of the new playoff format. ![]() The 35th Arab League Championship was not the first finals meeting between Amman and Kuwait, as the Aviators defeated the Whales back in 2009. Amman rolled to a sweep in 2024 for the first repeat since 2013-14 Jeddah. It was the sixth repeat in ALB history with the Aviators also having done it in 2009-10. Amman now had four titles, tied with Jeddah, Medina, and Basra for the second most behind Casablanca (6). Finals MVP went to catcher Eyal Gazal in his first year as a starter. The 24-year old Israeli in 10 playoff starts had 17 hits, 4 runs, 5 doubles, and 1 RBI. Also notable was closer Faraj Al-Yafeai, who set a playoff record with 8 saves. The Reliever of the Year winner allowed only two runs over 16 innings for a 1.12 ERA with 17 strikeouts. ![]() Other notes: In the spring, Amman’s Alaa Dinari had a 36-game hitting streak to set the new ALB record. The previous best was 34 by Hassan El Zamek in 2010. Aleppo’s Sameh Sabry set a bad single-season record by allowing 56 home runs. Bahrain’s Ismaeel Al-Kuwari had the 14th four home run game in ALB history on April 16 against Casablanca. Damascus’s Ahmed Essa struck out 21 against Sulaymaniyah on May 11, tying ALB’s regulation single-game record. In a historical quirk, Mecca’s Samah Fathy and Iqbal both had six hit performances in the same extra innings affair versus Amman on April 17. Never before had teammates done that in all of pro baseball history. Once before in baseball history had there been two six-hit performances in the same game, happening in an extra innings European Baseball Federation game on 4/21/04 between Zurich and Naples. However, both teams had a player do it instead of it being done by teammates. Yahya bin Hakam crossed 2000 career RBI, a mark only previously hit in ALB by Nordine Soule. He still had a long way to go to catch Soule’s 2518, which was 4th in world history. Mohamed Hassan became the 7th member of the 700 home run club and Khaled Mohamed became the 12th to reach 600 dingers. Hassan and Amar Rasmi became the 18th and 19th to reach 2500 hits. Hassan and Abdham Abdallah also got to 1500 runs scored, a mark now hit by nine. Abdallah also became the 15th to reach 1500 RBI. Ahmed Hussain became the 6th pitcher to 3500 strikeouts. Hussain, Ryan El Hadi, and Ali Hussaini all joined the 200 win club in 2024, making that group 11 pitchers strong. Nasser Al-Jarrah became the 8th closer to reach 300 saves. SS Ayoud El Taib won his 9th Silver Slugger.
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Baseball: The World's Game fictional world reports Continental Baseball Federation world reports (8-tier promotion/relegation sim and college feeder) Last edited by FuzzyRussianHat; 02-02-2025 at 10:59 AM. |
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#2023 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in ABF
![]() The Asian Baseball Federation’s East League was fairly competitive with six teams emerging as contenders for the four playoff spots. Almaty took the top seed at 95-67 for their fifth consecutive playoff berth. It was the first time in that streak that the Assassins won the North Division. Faisalabad at 92-70 meanwhile secured the South Division’s title for the sixth year in a row. Hyderabad was one back on the Fire, which gave the Horned Frogs the first wild card to end a seven-year playoff drought. Multan and Shymkent tied for the second wild card at 87-75 with two-time defending EL champ Bishkek falling short at 85-77. The tiebreaker went to the Squirrels, impressively making the postseason in only their fifth season since joining with the 2020 expansion. Shymkent led the EL in scoring with 678 runs while the Mighty Cocks allowed the fewest at 540. Leading Shymkent’s efforts was East League MVP Safdar Kahlwan, who the Squirrels picked#2 overall with their first-ever draft pick in 2019. A two-way player. Kahlwan played primarily second base in 2024 with 129 games offensively, 142 hits, 86 runs, 15 homers, 71 RBI, 53 stolen bases, a .344/.439/.564 slash, 1.003 OPS, 216 wRC+, and 7.8 WAR. The 27-year old Afghani righty also tossed 225 innings with a 2.64 ERA, 15-8 record, 228 strikeouts, 130 ERA+, and 3.8 WAR. Shymkent gave Kahlwan a four-year, $21,540,000 extension in the offseason. Almaty ace Stanislav Mukhamadiev won his second Pitcher of the Year in three seasons. The 25-year old Russian led in ERA (2.28) while posting 293 strikeouts in 221.1 innings, a 19-7 record, 152 ERA+, and 7.5 WAR. Tragically, Mukhamadiev would only throw 306.1 more total innings for the rest of his career. He would be derailed by a torn UCL in 2025. Mukhamadiev did at least get paid, as the Assassins gave him five years and $54 million after the 2024 season. Division champs prevailed in the first round with Almaty over Shymkent 3-1 and Faisalabad over Hyderabad 3-0. The Assassins earned their first East League Championship Series trip since 2020, while it was the fourth in a row for the Fire. In a seven-game classic, Almaty earned their first-ever EL pennant, although it was their sixth overall counting their Eurasian Professional Baseball days. Apart from the expansion teams, the Assassins had been the only ABF team without a championship berth to that point. Almaty had gone 0-6 previously in the ELCS and hadn’t won a pennant since their 1971-73 three-peat in EPB’s Asian League. The defeat for Faisalabad was their third straight ELCS loss, putting them at 1-4 in their trips over the last six years. ![]() Bursa had the Asian Baseball Federation’s top record by a healthy margin at 105-57. The Blue Claws earned repeat playoff berths, but it was their first West Division title since 2020 and their first time as the top seed since 2005. Bursa led in scoring (863) and set new ABF team records for batting average (.300), on-base percentage (.344), hits (1732), and fewest strikeouts (1161). The 2024 Blue Claws remain the only ever team with a .300 average in ABF as of 2037. Reigning ABF champ Tabriz won the Central Division at 94-68 to grow their playoff streak to nine years, one short of the ABF record set by Tehran from 2011-19. The Tiger Sharks earned their sixth division title of the run. The first wild card was the West’s Baku at 94-68, earning a third straight playoff spot. Mashhad took the second spot at 91-71, placing the same four teams into the WL playoffs as the prior year. The Mercury finished three behind Tabriz in the division title race and three behind Baku for the first wild card. However, Mashhad was one better than Gaziantep (90-72) and five ahead of Istanbul (86-76) for the second wild card. The Mercury allowed the fewest runs in the WL at 611 to grow their playoff streak to four seasons. Although their playoff drought grew to 12 years, the Gorillas set a new franchise win record since joining ABF in a 2009 expansion. Istanbul OF Khalaf bin Abdullah repeated as West League MVP in only his fourth season, setting a new ABF record for RBI with 162. The previous RBI high mark was Fakhri Rajavi’s 158 from 2015. Bin Abduallah’s would only be passed once in the following 15 years. The 23-year old Kuwaiti led in runs (124), homers (63), total bases (439), slugging (.722), OPS (1.074), and wRC+ (173). Additionally, bin Abdullah had 8.1 WAR and a .314 average. The Ironmen gave him an eight-year, $97,800,000 extension in the offseason. To their chagrin, bin Abdullah opted out after the 2027 season and left for Major League Baseball. Mashhad’s Kristof Farago won Pitcher of the Year in his third season with the Mercury. The 31-year old Hungarian came to ABF in 2022 after mostly pitching with Lyon of the European Second League. Farago led in ERA in 2024 with 2.36 and posted a 17-8 record over 217 innings, 214 strikeouts, and 5.2 WAR. Farago’s world travels continued after this, heading to Austarlia in 2025 on a six-year, $84,600,000 deal with Melbourne. Bursa bested Mashhad 3-1 in the first round and Baku upset the reigning champ Tabriz 3-0. The Blue Claws earned their first West League Championship Series since 2020 and the Blackbirds made it for the third straight season. Baku continued to roll on the road with a shocking sweep of Bursa, staring the playoffs 7-0. The Blackbirds secured their fifth pennant (2010, 2012, 2013, 2022, 2024). ![]() The 40th ABF Championship was a 4-2 victory for Baku over Almaty for their second federation championship (2012, 2024). 39-year old Emmanouil Karakostas won finals MVP, having signed with the Blackbirds in the offseason. The ageless Greek outfielder in 13 playoff starts had 18 hits, 5 runs, 3 triples, 1 double, 2 homers, and 6 RBI. ![]() Other notes: Multan’s Farid Kerimov tossed ABF’s 17th Perfect Game on May 27, striking out 14 against Adana. Rawalpindi’s Ethan Shelton had two no-hitters in 2024, both against Hyderabad with the first April 25 and the second May 16. Shelton joined Ibrahim Bulak (2011) as the only ABF pitchers with multiple no-hitters in the same season. Mehmet Fatih Canaydin became the first ABF batter to reach 3000 hits. Canaydin was already the hit king entering the year, but also passed Shadi Alam’s 1491 runs to becoming ABF’s runs leader and the first to pass 1500. Ramin Abilov became the 9th to 2500 hits. Habib Saquib became the 5th member of the 600 home run club. Fakhri Rajavi in his final season finished with 678 home runs, falling just short of Ali Sungu’s 683 for the top spot. After 16 years with Baku, Rajavi tried to chase the spot in one final year with Shymkent, but only managed to hit 13 dingers. RF Hana Zuhair won his 12th consecutive Gold Glove, becoming only the second in ABF history at any position to win the award 12+ times. SS Nizami Aghazade won his 11th Silver Slugger. It was his 8th at shortstop with three wins at second base. Aghazade became the 1st (and only as of 2037) ABF player to reach 150+ career WAR. He led the EL with 10.8 WAR in 2024, his 10th time leading the league and getting 10+ in a season. 3B Hakan Mocuk won his 7th Silver Slugger. Baku’s Tamaz Rogava set a bad playoff record as he was caught stealing eight times. He had three successful steals. In an unusual record, Tashkent’s Agaselim Ovezov started 62 games on the mound in an opener role. He didn’t fare well, going 0-18 with a 4.45 ERA over 83 innings. |
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#2024 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in SAB
![]() In a competitive Indian League in 2024, only six wins separated the top seed from the lowest. Reigning South Asia Baseball champ Visakhapatnam took the top seed at 97-65 and repeated as South Division champ. The Volts were the only division champ to win their crown by double-digit games, 11 games better than 86-76 Hyderabad. The Central Division was again a three-team battle between Jaipur, Kolkata, and Delhi. Last year, the Jokers missed the cut at 101-61 since the Cosmos (103-60) and Drillers (102-61) both narrowly edged them out. This time, Jaipur was first at 93-69 to end a seven-year playoff drought. It was only their second berth in 15 years. Like 2023, Kolkata and Delhi ended the regular season tied, but this time only one could advance. The Cosmos won the tiebreaker game to win the wild card, extending their playoff streak to four years and ending the Drillers’ streak at four. Kolkata allowed the fewest runs in the IL at 569. Meanwhile in the West Division, Ahmedabad was first at 92-70 to end a three-year playoff drought. Last year’s division champ Pune was second at 87-75, missing the wild card by three and the division by five. The Purple Knights scored the most runs (726) despite falling short. Mumbai’s collapse was complete at 64-98, a steep drop after winning the pennant only two years prior. Ahmedabad’s Abhiji Srivas became the fifth player in SAB history to win MVP five times. The 29-year old first and second baseman had previously taken the Indian League’s top honor from 2018-21. In 2024, Srivas led in runs (114), RBI (113), triple slash (.357/.413/.721), OPS (1.134), wRC+ (242), and WAR (10.4). Srivas added 47 home runs and 39 stolen bases, winning his seventh Silver Slugger. Picking up Pitcher of the Year was Kolkata’s Bounthavy Xayavong. The 28-year old Laotian righty won the ERA title (1.99) in his sixth season. Xayavong had a 14-4 record in 194.2 innings, 233 strikeouts, 179 ERA+, and 6.6 WAR. Both first round playoff matchups needed all five games. Visakhapatnam survived against Kolkata and Ahmedabad got the road win over Jaipur. For the Animals, this was their first Indian League Championship Series berth since 2012 with a title drought going back to 2002 and the end of the epic dynasty run. Meanwhile the Volts were going for the repeat, which they had also previously done in 2012-13 (including a win over Ahmedabad). The series went all seven games and came down to the final frame. In the bottom of the ninth inning, part-time starting first baseman Gian Babul won it for Visakhapatnam on a solo home run, taking game seven and the series 4-3. The series had seen plenty of drama, including a 6-5, 12 inning Volts win back in game three. ![]() Both Dhaka and Bangkok shared the Southeast Asia League’s best record at 98-64. The tiebreaker gave the defending Baseball Grand Champion and SEAL champ Dobermans the top seed to grow their playoff streak to four seasons. The competition in the North Division for Dhaka was much weaker with their closest rivals being Hanoi and Hai Phong both at 86-76. The Bobcats ended an eight-year playoff drought and won their first South Division title since 2010. It wasn’t a cakewalk for Bangkok, who outlasted Da Nang (97-65) and Ho Chi Minh City (94-68) for the division crown. The Nailers earned repeat playoff spots and their fourth berth in five years. For the Hedgehogs, this ended a 14-year playoff drought dating back to their 2009 SAB title. The Bobcats led SEAL in scoring with 931 runs and set a new league team record with 355 doubles. HCMC allowed the fewest runs at 607. Also of note was Yangon’s drop to 76-86, ending their historic world record playoff streak at 29 seasons. The Green Dragons hadn’t missed the playoffs or posting a losing season going back to their 68-94 finish in 1994. Southeast Asia League MVP went to Bangkok CF Pyae Sin Nyo in his fifth season. The 25-year old Burmese righty led in runs (218), triple slash (.380/.426/.678), OPS (1.103), wRC+ (189), and WAR (11.3). Nyo added 217 hits, 34 doubles, 40 home runs, 135 RBI, and 69 stolen bases. Nyo was originally spotted by Hanoi, but was traded before his debut in 2019. The Bobcats found a gem and gave Nyo a seven-year, $111,300,000 extension after the 2025 season. Dhaka lefty Dusit Kyo won his second Pitcher of the Year in three seasons. The 27-year old from Thailand led in WHIP at 0.96 and posted a 2.79 ERA over 212.2 innings. Kyo had 281 strikeouts, a 14-7 record, 151 ERA+, and 6.6 WAR. Ho Chi Minh City upset Dhaka 3-1 in the first round while Bangkok survived 3-2 against Da Nang. The Bobcats were one of two original SEAL teams without a pennant and their only prior LCS trip was way back in 1987. That was against the Hedgehogs and was the first of their 14 titles from 1987-2009. Since that last one in 2009, HCMC had largely struggled with no playoff berths and only one 90+ win season until 2024. In a seven-game classic, Ho Chi Minh City prevailed to return to the throne. ![]() In the 45th South Asia Baseball Championship, Visakhapatnam defeated Ho Chi Minh City to become the first repeat champ since Hanoi in 2007-08. This also ended a run of parity for the top spot as the prior six years had seen six different champs. The walkoff hero of the ILCS Gian Babul won finals MVP as well. The 26-year old 1B had 16 playoff starts with 15 hits, 10 runs, 8 homers, 14 RBI, and 4 doubles. ![]() Other notes: World home run leader Majed Darwish became SAB’s all-time WARlord, finishing his second season with Da Nang at 172.0. This passed Ratan Canduri’s 169.1 for the top spot and made Darwish only the seventh position player in baseball history to get above 170. At age 41, Darwish led the league in home runs (53) for the 12th time and RBI (146) for the 13th time. He won his SAB-record 14th Silver Slugger and his third as a first baseman, having won ten as a DH and one in left field. Darwish’s world records grew to a staggering 1225 home runs, 2947 RBI, and 2586 runs scored. He also became the third SAB player to reach 3500 hits, ending the season at 3645. Darwish was still third behind Manju Abbas (3897) and Canduri (3770). After two years for the Nailers, the long-time Hanoi legend would sign with Dhaka in 2025 to a three-year, $46,900,000 deal. In more mortal tallies, Yasir Malkawi became the 14th member of the 600 home run club and the 19th to 1500 RBI. Saw Kyaw Hla was the 26th to reach 500 homers. Franklin Tung became the 16th pitcher to 3500 strikeouts. Amu Singh and Akram Pnnuru became the 14th and 15th to get 300 saves. Singh set a playoff record for K/9 at 18.80. He struck out 39 batters over 18.2 innings with a 2.89 ERA for Visakhapatnam. |
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#2025 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in WAB
![]() Defending West African Champion Abidjan did even better in 2024 at 114-48, the second-best record in Western League history behind their own 118-44 from 1978. The Athletes took first in the WL standings for the third consecutive year and earned their sixth playoff berth in seven years. Abidjan led in both runs scored (966) and fewest allowed (660). 17 games away in second place as Freetown at 97-65, earning their third straight wild card. There was another 15 game drop to third place Dakar at 82-80, who snapped a six-year playoff drought. It was an impressive bounce-back for the Dukes, who had lost 100+ games in three of the prior four seasons. The fourth and final playoff spot was Bouake at 81-81, who had the weakest record by a playoff team in WAB history. Seven different teams finished within six games of the Blood Hawks with Accra three back at 78-84 and both Bamako and Conakry at 77-85. Boauke earned their third playoff berth since joining in the 2009 expansion (2013, 2020, 2024). Cape Verde, last year’s WLCS runner-up, was tenth at 75-87. Western League MVP went to Dakar third baseman Junior Jose, who had won Rookie of the Year the prior year. The 24-year old Mozambican led in slugging (.714) and posted 201 hits, 128 runs, 45 doubles, 57 home runs, 138 RBI, 1.133 OPS, 164 wRC+, and 8.5 WAR. Jose took the award over some tough competition. Abdel Aziz Ashraf of Abidjan was in the mix with 66 home runs, as was Cape Verde’s Okoro Yusuf with a .407 batting average. It was the third-best average in WAB history, but Yusuf was denied winning his fifth consecutive MVP. The Dukes had another up-and-coming star in Pitcher of the Year Chidozie Iyakson. He won the award as a rookie, but was second in Rookie of the Year voting. The #1 pick from the 2023 WAB Draft debuted with an ERA title at 2.39 and a league-best 62 FIP-. Iyakson had an 11-5 record, 8 saves, 191.2 innings, 261 strikeouts, 195 ERA+, and 6.4 WAR. Bouake beat Dakar 2-0 in the first round as that young core wasn’t fully developed yet for the Dukes. Freetown then swept the Blood Hawks to set up the expected matchup in the Western League Championship Series. This was the Foresters’ first WLCS since their 2011 pennant and they were the heavy underdog against the defending champ Abidjan. The Athletes were making their third consecutive WLCS appearance. Despite the lopsided expectations, Freetown pulled off the stunning upset over Abidjan and won the series 3-1. It was the third pennant for the capital of Sierra Leone (1977, 2011, 2024). ![]() The Eastern League wasn’t nearly as top heavy, although Port Harcourt repeated as the first place finisher at 104-58. The Hillcats allowed the fewest runs in WAB at 602 and set new WAB team records for fewest walks allowed (218) and BB/9 (1.36). Five games back in second was Ibadan at 96-66, earning their third consecutive wild card. Right behind the Iguanas were Niamey (95-67) and Lagos (94-68) to take the remaining playoff slots. Just missing the cut were Yaounde (90-72), Ouagadougou (89-73), and defending EL champ Kano (87-75). The Atomics earned their second playoff spot in three years, while the Lizards ended an eight-year drought. It was the first 90+ win season for Lagos since their 2008 pennant. Although they missed the playoffs, Yaounde got plenty of attention for scoring 1003 runs, tied for the second-most in WAB history. They allowed 896 runs though, which kept them on the outside. The Yellow Birds had another historic performance from DH Fares Belaid, who took second in Eastern League MVP voting despite another record breaking campaign. The 35-year old Tunisian broke WAB’s single-season record for runs scored with 160, passing Darwin Morris’s 152 from 2001. This was the fourth-best season in any world league, only behind SAB’s Majed Darwish’s 172, 167, and 167 from 2008-10. Belaid also had 282 hits, tying his own world record from 2020. To this point, there had been only eight seasons in world history with 260+ hits and Belaid had six of them. He also had a .403 batting average, becoming the only player ever to have four seasons above .400. Another stellar year for Belaid allowed him to become WAB’s all-time leader in hits, doubles, and stolen bases in 2024. He finished the year with 3943 hits, passing Lawrence Nassif’s previous high mark of 3766. Belaid was now in striking distance of becoming the fifth in all of world history to join the 4k hit club. Belaid also got to 733 doubles to pass Nassif’s 704 and become the 11th in world history with 700+ doubles. His 1252 steals passed Mandjou Adado’s 1199 for the WAB lead. Belaid also reached 2000 runs scored for his career, a mark only previously hit in WAB by Morris. Belaid got to 2012 runs scored, needing at least two seasons still to catch Morris’s top mark of 2234. Belaid also hit for the cycle for the fifth time in his career, making him the first in world history to achieve that feat. Despite that fanfare, it was Lagos’ Desmond Jaiyeola who won MVP, but for good reason. In his second year for the Lizards, the 30-year old Nigerian DH smacked 78 home runs, breaking the WAB record of 71 set the prior year by Abdel Aziz Ashraf. That was the sixth-most homers in any season in world history to that point. Jaiyeola also led in RBI with 160, which was the 11th-best in WAB history thus far. He led in total bases (457) and slugging (.721) while adding 1.068 OPS, 160 wRC+, 6.3 WAR, 128 runs, and 189 hits. Jaiyeola was a very rare case of a batter winning MVP but not the Silver Slugger at his position, which fell to Belaid for DH. It was the ninth Slugger for Belaid with all but one as a DH. However, the voters thought the dingers and ending the Lizards’ playoff drought gave the edge to Jaiyeola. Pitcher of the Year was Port Harcourt left Ngalle Eto’o in his fourth season. The 25-year old Cameroonian lefty led in wins (20-3), ERA (2.17), WHIP (0.80), K/BB (29.3), quality starts (25), FIP- (48), and WAR (9.3). He pitched 207.1 innings with a 218 ERA+, 293 strikeouts, and only 10 walks. The Hillcats eventually locked Eto’o up after the 2025 season to a seven-year, $174,400,000 extension. Lagos edged Niamey 2-1 in the first round, but fell 2-1 in a tough second round battle with Ibadan. The Iguanas earned their second Eastern League Championship Series trip in three years, while it was a repeat try for Port Harcourt. The top seeded Hillcats won with a 3-0 sweep, earning their seventh pennant and first since 2015. ![]() Port Harcourt kept rolling in the 50th West African Championship, sweeping Freetown 4-0 to become five-time WAB champs (1980, 1989, 1995, 2015, 2024). The five rings tied them with Abidjan for the third most, while Kano (12) and Lagos (80) were still well ahead. The 2024 Hillcats (7-0) joined 2022 Conakry (9-0) as the only teams in WAB history to go undefeated in the postseason. 1B Biano Beckley was the star of the playoffs for Port Harcourt, winning finals MVP and ELCS MVP. The 28-year old first baseman from Sierra Leone had a relatively undistinguished career, but went 12-25 in his 7 playoff starts with 6 runs, 6 doubles, 3 homers, 9 RBI, 1.560 OPS, and 0.8 WAR. ![]() Other notes: Kano’s Hadj Sagna had 64 doubles, which tied for the 4th-most in WAB history. The top mark was Adrian Kollie’s 70 from 2021. Ibrahim Sani became the 4th member of the 600 home run club and the 8th to reach 1500 runs scored. Clarence Cole was the 13th to reach 500 homers. 3B Seidath Boni won his 12th Gold Glove, a WAB position record. Boni was only the third at any spot to win 12 GGs. |
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#2026 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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WAB After 50 Years
With the 2024 season complete, West African Baseball became the tenth world baseball league to complete 50 seasons of play. Below is a quick look at the history of WAB thus far
![]() The most successful team overall has been Kano with 12 championships, a mark only hit to this point in world history by EPB’s Minsk and SAB’s Ahmedabad. The Condors lead all teams in finals berths (15) and have the most playoff berths (30) and first place finishes (14) among the Eastern League teams. Despite sharing the EL with Kano, Lagos has the second most titles with 8. The EL has beaten the Western League 35-15 in the championship so far. Abidjan has been the best regular season team by a healthy margin, averaging an impressive 95 wins per season. They also led all teams in playoff appearances (34) and first place finishes (19). The Athletes have the most runner-up finishes, going 5-9 in the finals. Bamako notably has gone 0-8 in their finals tries. Abidjan and Kano are the only teams to make the playoffs in more than half of WAB’s seasons, although both Lagos and Kumasi are close at 24 berths. The Athletes and Condors also both have made it to the LCS in almost half of the seasons with 23 trips apiece. Despite the lopsided finals record between the leagues and some dynasty runs, 16 of WAB’s 22 teams have won it all at least once. All but four teams have made it to the finals at least once. Ouagadougou, Benin City, and Douala are the originals without a pennant along with expansion Bouake. The Dingos are the only of that group to never make the LCS. Douala has been easily the worst team with only one playoff trip and an average of 69.7 wins per season over 50 years. They’ve only finished above .500 in five seasons. |
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#2027 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in CLB
![]() Last year’s Northern League runner-up Dalian finished atop the standings in 2024 at 100-62. That was the best record for all of Chinese League Baseball as the Gold Dragons allowed the fewest runs at 402. 2022’s NL champ Urumqi was second at 95-67, getting back to the playoffs after missing the cut in 2023. Nanjing also was back after missing in 2023 by taking third at 93-69. The Nuggets earned their fifth playoff appearance in seven years. Reigning China Series winner Tianjin got the fourth and final playoff spot at 91-71, growing their postseason streak to three years. The Jackrabbits edged out Changchun (87-75) and Jinan (85-77) for the final slot. Qingdao led all teams in scoring with 597 runs, but allowed the most in the NL (589). Thus the Devils went 80-82, failing to earn a third straight wild card. Nanjing 1B Houzhi Ding won Northern League MVP and posted only the eighth Triple Crown season by a CLB hitter. The 26-year old lefty led in homers (63), RBI (119), total bases (405), triple slash (.319/.388/.702), runs (104), hits (184), OPS (1.090), wRC+ (255), and WAR (12.8). Ding became the fourth CLB slugger to hit 60+ dingers in a season and posted the fourth-most total bases to that point. Pitcher of the Year was Len Goh in his lone season for Dalian. He had won the award in 2021 with Shijiazhuang, where Goh played his first 11 seasons. 2024 was the last year of his deal with the Serpents and they traded him and $47,030,000 in the offseason to the Gold Dragons for two prospects. Goh won his second ERA title (1.64) and led in WHIP (0.68) and K/BB (17.3) in 2024 for Dalian. The 32-year old Hongkonger added a 13-9 record over 219 innings, 242 strikeouts, 169 ERA+, and 7.9 WAR. It was Goh’s final season in China, as he’d sign in the offseason with MLB’s Oakland Owls at $73,200,000 over four years, Urumqi fared the best in the double round robin at 4-2, while Nanjing and Dalian were both 3-3 and Tianjin was 2-4. The tiebreaker favored the Nuggets over the Gold Dragons for their third semifinal trip in four years. Their last appearance in 2022 saw a defeat to the Unicorns despite Nanjing being the top seed. Urumqi had homefield this time and again was the victory, winning 4-2 to secure their second trip to the China Series. ![]() Seven teams were realistically in the playoff mix in the Southern League. Xiamen again finished atop the standings, although they fell from 107-55 in 2023 down to 97-65. Still, last year’s SL runner-up Mutts allowed the fewest runs at 414. Tying for second at 94-68 were defending SL champ Guangzhou and Wenzhou. The Gamecocks earned their third playoff spot in four years, while the Wild ended a four-year drought. Guangzhou led the league in scoring with 590 runs. For the final spot, there was a three-way tie at 89-73 between Shantou, Chongqing, and Macau. Changsha at 85-77 faded down the stretch. The Scorpions won tiebreaker games over both the Cavaliers and Magicians to advance, ending a three-year playoff drought. Meanwhile both Foshan (75-87) and Hong Kong (71-91) struggled in 2024, which ended a six-year playoff streak by both teams. Kunming was largely irrelevant at 75-87, but they had the Southern League’s MVP in Shimin Loy. The fourth-year second baseman led in the triple slash (.321/.360/.619), OPS (.979), wRC+ (226), and WAR (12.5). Loy added 91 runs, 40 homers, 22 doubles, 11 triples, and 95 RBI. He was living up to the billing as the #1 overall draft pick in 2020. After the 2026 season, the Muscle extended Loy at eight years and $143,500,000. Another impressive up-and-comer was Chengdu’s Zhiyang Zhuang, who won Pitcher of the Year in his second season. He was one win shy of a Triple Crown with a 1.44 ERA over 249.1 innings, 349 strikeouts, and 17-9 record. Zhuang also led in WHIP (0.75), complete games (18), shutouts (7), and WAR (9.2) with a 190 ERA+. Zhuang was also a #1 overall draft pick, selected in 2022 by the Clowns. Shantou carried the momentum from their play-in game wins with a rare round robin sweep at 6-0 for their second-ever semifinal appearance (2014, 2016, 2024). Top seed Xiamen at 4-2 earned a repeat semifinal berth, while Guangzhou and Wenzhou both finished 1-5. The Scorpions kept rolling, stinging the Mutts 4-1 in the semifinal. Shantou secured its second-ever trip to the China Series (2014) while Xiamen was left holding the bag again despite their #1 seed. ![]() The 55th China Series was the first to pit two teams from the 2009 expansion against each other. It was also the first since 2016 to use all seven games, as there had been a long run of lopsided series. Urumqi outlasted Shantou 4-3 to earn their first title. RF Yang Shao won finals MVP in his second season for the Unicorns. The 27-year old RF started 19 playoff games with 15 hits, 7 runs, 3 doubles, 1 homer, 4 RBI, and 6 walks. Urumqi became the 21st of CLB’s 30 teams to win it all. ![]() Other notes: After 11 years with Shijiazhuang, the Serpents were sellers and traded Cheng Kang to Guangzhou for 2024. It was the final CLB season for the 35-year old slugger, as he’d spent the next six seasons in the Oceania Baseball Association. In his final run in China though, Kang became CLB’s all-time leader in both home runs and RBI. Kang hit 28 homers with 73 RBI in 2024, giving him 552 dingers and 1272 RBI. He passed Boyu Long’s 537 homers and 1238 RBI to take first place with Long having retired the prior year. Kang also left was the third-most WAR among position players (137.1) and was fourth in runs (1140) and sixth in hits (2210). Kang remained the homer and RBI leader until Tao Cai passed him for both in 2032. Wenzhou’s Xiaotian Shu set a playoff OPS record at 1.593 (20 plate appearances required). In six games, Shu had 11 hits,7 runs, 1 double, 2 triples, 2 homers, 4 RBI, and 1 walk. 2B Yusheng Cai and CF Zuhairi Arif both won their 7th Gold Gloves. 2B Kenny Sang won his 8th Silver Slugger. |
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#2028 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in APB
![]() Defending Taiwan-Philippine Association champ Zamboanga again sat atop the Philippine League, breaking their own franchise record at 110-52. It was the sixth time in the last decade that the Zebras won 100+ games. Great pitching led the way, setting new TPA records for ERA (1.78), runs allowed (335), earned runs (296), and WHIP (0.817). Zamboanga’s 978 hits allowed and 5.88 H/9 were both second-best in TPA history behind only 1969 Tainan. The Zebras’ ERA, runs, and earned runs were each the second-lowest in all of Austronesia Professional Baseball history. The only team better was 1985 Jakarta with a 1.73 ERA, 324 runs, and 287 earned runs. In all of world history to that point, the 2024 Zamboanga squad had the fourth-best ERA, third-fewest runs allowed, and fourth-fewest earned runs. In the Taiwan League, Kaohsiung was first at 96-66 to end a 12-year playoff drought. Last year’s top seed Hsinchu finished second at 90-72 with Tainan third at 86-76. The Steelheads led the association with 593 runs scored. Although the Sweathogs missed the cut, their superstar Binh Tang continued to dominate with his fifth consecutive Taiwan-Philippine Association MVP. It was amazingly Tang’s best season yet, setting APB single-season records for OPS (1.100), slugging (.702), and total bases (384). The 24-year old Vietnamese first baseman earned his third Triple Crown with career highs to that point of 53 home runs, 119 RBI, and a .338 average. He joined Tunggul Widhyasari as the only three-time Triple Crown hitters in APB history. Tang also led in runs (102), OBP (.398), wRC+ (241), and WAR (13.5). His WAR mark was the second-best by an APB position player in a season behind Gavin Loh’s 14.0 from 1996. Tang was the fifth player in APB history to win five MVPs and he was far from done. Pitcher of the Year was Kaohsiung lefty Shih-Hao Chuang. The 25-year old from Taiwan led in strikeouts (343), quality starts (29), shutouts (6), and WAR (9.0). Chuang had a 19-8 record and 1.69 ERA over 272.1 innings for a 161 ERA+. The Steelheads signed him to four-year, $68,100,000 extension the following spring. ![]() Pekanbaru surprised many by posting the Sundaland Association’s best record at 93-69, getting their first playoff berth since their 2014 APB title. Defending APB champ Medan was second to the Palms in the Malacca League at 89-73 with Johor Bahru (86-76) and Kuala Lumpur (84-78) both in the mix. The Marlins missed the cut despite having the top offense with 552 runs. In the Java Sea League, Bandung (87-75) edged out Surabaya (85-77) for first place. Last year’s JSL winner Jakarta fell to third at 80-82. The Blackhawks earned their second playoff berth in three years and allowed the fewest runs in the Sundaland Association at 404. MVP honors went to Pekanbaru LF James Yuwono in his fourth season. The 25-yar old Indonesian led in slugging (.553), and wRC+ (206). Yuwono had 8.1 WAR, 40 homers, 78 RBI, 78 runs, and .892 OPS. This effort got Yuwono paid big time, signing an eight-year, $100,060,000 extension with the Palms in the offseason. Surabaya’s Rahman Omar won Pitcher of the Year in his eighth season. The 29-yer old Malaysian righty led in strikeouts (384), WHIP (0.69), K/BB (16.7), FIP- (20), and WAR (13.1). Omar had a 1.66 ERA, 153 ERA+, and 16-8 record over 243.2 innings. It was the 23rd time in APB history that a pitcher had a 13+ WAR season and as of 2037, it is the last time it happened. Prior to the season, Omar and the Sunbirds signed a four-year, $97,200,000 extension. Despite Zamboanga’s historic pitching success, Kaohsiung easily upset the Zebras 4-1 in the Taiwan-Philippine Association Championship. The Steelheads earned their seventh pennant and first since 2007. Bandung bested Pekanbaru 4-2 in the Sundaland Association Championship, also earning their seventh pennant. The Blackhawks’ last title came in 2015. ![]() The 60th Austronesia Championship was the third straight final to need all seven games. Bandung outlasted Kaohsiung 4-3 to become five-time APB champs (1967, 1994, 2003, 2015, 2024). Pitcher Gosner Rahmawati had a dominant run, winning Sundaland Association Championship MVP. The 36-year old three-time Pitcher of the Year went 4-0 in four starts with a 0.53 ERA over 33.2 innings, 38 strikeouts, 4 walks, and 1.5 WAR. Rahmawati became only the fourth pitcher in APB playoff history to win four games in one postseason. ![]() Other notes: 2024 was the final season for APB home run king Wil Tabaldo, who had an impressive 17-year run with Singapore. Tabaldo retired as the APB leader in homers (766) and RBI (1658), while also retiring second in runs (1388). He got to 2524 hits, becoming the ninth to breach 2500 in APB. Tabaldo’s 121.44 WAR also placed him third among APB position players at retirement. APB’s 49th Perfect Game came on May 20 from Semarang’s Fakarudin Zainudin with 10 strikeouts against Medan. Yee Husin threw his second no-hitter in three years, this time with Medan after doing it for Palembang in 2022. Semarang’s offense was historically poor, scoring the fewest runs in APB history with 343 with the worst-ever OBP at .225. Their .183 batting average and 955 hits ranked as second-worst in Sundaland Association history. Along with his epic postseason run, Gosner Rahmawati became the 6th pitcher to 250 wins and the 21st to 4000 strikeouts. Jay Abiad and Marco Yudho became the 14th and 15th to reach 300 saves. 1B Widodo Megawati won his 14th Gold Glove, joining fellow 1B Kent Wang (15) as APB’s only 14+ time winners. C Muhammad Aqsar won his 8th Gold Glove and SS Dale Saley won his 7th. C Yi-Hsiang Chang won his 7th Silver Slugger. |
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#2029 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in OBA
![]() The Australasia League incredibly saw a three-way tie for first place as Sydney, Canberra, and Christchurch each ended the regular season at 97-65. Thus, two tiebreaker games were required to determine the champ. First, the Centurions ousted the defending champ Chinooks. Then, the Snakes defeated Canberra to give Sydney its second pennant in three years and fourth in seven years. Sydney used impressive offense to prevail as their 861 runs were the second-most in AL history. Christchurch had allowed the fewest runs (598) and had the second-most strikeouts (1729) and second-best K/9 (10.38) in league history. The Chinooks grew their streak of winning seasons to 14. The Centurions were still without their first pennant, but 98 wins was a new franchise record for the 2006 expansion team. Auckland was fourth at 90-72, successfully rebounding from a 67-95 mark in 2023. Brisbane had the opposite fate, going from 91-71 in 2023 to a lousy 68-94 in 2024. Canberra 1B Jordy Vincent won Australasia League MVP for the second time in three years. The 25-year old lefty from New Caledonia led in OPS (1.012), wRC+ (171), and WAR (7.8). Vincent added 47 home runs, 142 RBI, 117 runs, and a .333/.390/.622 slash. The Centurions eventually inked Vincent in April 2026 to a seven-year, $178,400,000 extension to remain their franchise’s star. Sydney’s Chuchuan Cao won his third consecutive Pitcher of the Year in his third OBA season. This made him an eight-time POTY winner counting his Chinese League Baseball dominance, becoming the seventh pitcher in world history to win the award 8+ times. The 35-year old Chinese lefty led in wins (23-5), WHIP (0.90), K/BB (8.6), and quality starts (25). Cao had a 2.47 ERA over 273 innings, 267 strikeouts, and 7.0 WAR. Tragically, this marked the end of a brilliant career for the former two-way star. In September, Cao suffered a torn rotator cuff, although it wasn’t though to be career-ending at the time. Sydney voided the rest of his contract fearing the worst, but Cao was determined to rehab back. In December 2024, MLB’s San Diego Seals signed him to a three-year, $55,200,000 deal. Cao seemed to be on track to return in 2025, but he suffered a setback in February 2025 that required surgery. This added another 15 months of recovery and Cao ultimately retired in November 2025, never tossing an inning for San Diego. Thus ended the run of one of the most impactful players in baseball history after three years with Sydney and ten with Shenyang. Just as a pitcher, Cao was an all-timer with eight Pitcher of the Year wins, 253-108 record, 2.02 ERA, 3482.2 innings, 4217 strikeouts, 197 complete games, 64 shutouts, 146 ERA+, and 124.9 WAR. It was his two-way efforts with the Swans that made him a legend, winning five MVPs in CLB. Playing outfield, Cao posted 63.8 WAR, 169 wRC+, .291/.332/.483 slash, .815 OPS, 1377 hits, 630 runs, 236 doubles, 160 homers, 626 RBI, and 473 steals. For his combined career, Cao ended with 188.7 WAR which placed his 7th among all players in world history at retirement and was the best among two-way guys. He remarkably got there in only 13 seasons, while most of the other guys in that WAR orbit played at least 20 seasons. Cao averaged a staggering 14.5 WAR per season, which certainly puts him in the conversations for the best player in baseball history. ![]() Reigning Oceania Baseball Association champ Port Moresby repeated as Pacific League champ at 103-59, leading the league in both runs scored (841) and fewest allowed (559). Vanuatu was their only real close foe at 97-65 with Timor third at 91-71. That did set a new franchise-best for the Tapirs, who posted their first-ever winning season in 2023 at 90-72. Guam notably dropped to 72-90, which was their first time below 80 wins since 2006. The 2024 season was the ultimate crowning moment for Vanuatu 1B Roe Kaupa, who became the sixth player to win five MVPs in OBA. The 37-year old Papuan lefty had won one in 2011 with Timor and three with Christchurch in 2013, 2014, and 2016. Kaupa had continued to thrive since joining the Wizards in 2018, leading in homers for the sixth straight season with 61. Not only was it his 11th season as the homer leader, but the effort pushed him into the top spot all-time in OBA. Kaupa finished the season with 835 dingers, passing Vavao Brighouse’s 804 that had stood since 1999. Kaupa also became the new runs scored leader at 1749 to pass Adrian Kali’s 1704. Kali’s mark only stood one season, as he retired in 2023. Kaupa was also now at 1891 RBI, putting him within striking distance of passing Junia Lava (1989) and Kali (1979) for the top spot. He won his 14th Silver Slugger, becoming the only player in OBA history to win that many. Kaupa had won eight at first base and six as a designated hitter. He led the Pacific League in 2024 in total bases (398), OBP (.406), slugging (.712), OPS (1.118), and wRC+ (211). Kaupa added 112 runs, 1266 RBI, .318 average, and 9.9 WAR. He also hit for the cycle in in June against Samoa, his second. Kaupa inked a three-year, $65 million extension in April to remain with Vanuatu. Port Moresby’s Colton Stark won his third consecutive Pitcher of the Year award. The 31-year old Australian righty won his third straight ERA title with a career-best 1.94 and led in K/BB (12.1), ERA+ (192), and FIP- (58). Stark added a 20-5 record, 213.2 innings, 230 strikeouts, and 7.7 WAR. His overall tallies were down from the prior years as he missed around two months to various injuries. ![]() In a seven-game classic, Port Moresby defeated Sydney to win the 65th Oceania Championship. The repeat victory gave the Mud Hens their third title, having also won in 1985. LF Garia Sakail earned finals MVP in his third year as a full-time starter for his hometown team. The 27-year old Papuan went 12-26 with 5 runs, 1 double, 2 triples, 1 homer, and 3 RBI. ![]() Other notes: 2024 was the final full OBA season for eight-time Pitcher of the Year winner Akira Brady. After 17-years with Fiji, he would leave for MLB’s Phoenix in 2025 and spend two full seasons there. Brady would be released in early 2027 by the Firebirds and came back for 2.1 final OBA innings in 2027 for Port Moresby. In 2024, he became only the 4th pitcher in world history to cross 350 career wins. Brady’s final two seasons with the Fiji were plagued with injuries with shoulder inflammation in 2023 and a ruptured finger tendon in 2024. Still as of 2037, Brady is OBA’s all-time leader in wins (351), complete games (328), shutouts (75), innings (4976), strikeouts (6476), and WAR (173.52). Port Moresby’s Stanley Yeo scored 134 runs, the 4th-best season in OBA history. Roe Kaupa had the record of 142 from 2016. William Buchholz became the 24th to reach 2500 hits. Buchholz and Isaac Endo became the 13th and 14th to 1500 RBI. Jarrod Hutchinson was the 12th pitcher to reach 4000 strikeouts. Aidan Wray was the 3rd closer to 400 saves. CF Pouvalu Manu won his 10th consecutive Gold Glove. 2B Trey Cruz won his 8th Silver Slugger. |
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#2030 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in EPB
![]() In a competitive European League, reigning Eurasian Professional Baseball champ Volgograd took the top seed at 96-66. The Voyagers won their fourth consecutive South Division and earned their fifth straight playoff berth. It was also the first time in that stretch they didn’t win 100+ games. Volgograd was notably second in the EL in both runs scored (617) and fewest allowed (509). St. Petersburg narrowly took the North Division at 93-69, edging out Nizhny Novgorod (92-70) by one. The Polar Bears got their second playoff slot in three years, but it was their first division title since 2006. The Ninjas earned their third wild card in four years. Nizhny Novgorod allowed the fewest runs in the European League at 506. For the second wild card, there was a three-way tie at 87-75 between Samara, Voronezh, and Minsk. The Steelers defeated both the Zephyrs and Miners in one-game playoffs to earn their first-ever playoff berth. Samara was the only remaining team from the 2000 emergency expansion that had yet to make the playoffs. Also of note was Moscow falling to 79-83, their first losing season since 1998. Samara swept the European League’s top awards with MVP going to RF Dmitri Khodakovsky in his third season. The 24-year old Russian posted the 12th Triple Crown hitting season in EPB history and led in runs (102), hits (195), home runs (51), RBI (113), total bases (381), average (.337), slugging (.658), OPS (1.052), wRC+ (215), and WAR (10.0). Khodakvosky had been picked fifth overall by the Steelers in the 2019 EPB Draft. His teammate Ivan Nikolin was Pitcher of the Year with the 15th pitching Triple Crown in EPB history. Never before in all of pro baseball history had there been a Triple Crown pitcher and hitter on the same roster in the same season. For the 29-yaer old Nikolin, he had a 21-8 record, 2.18 ERA, and 346 strikeouts over 255.2 innings. He also led in WHIP (0.81) and K/BB (11.9) while adding 139 ERA+ and 7.2 WAR. Nikolin stayed committed to Samara with a six-year, $92,400,000 extension after the 2025 season. Samara used those talents to upset reigning champ Volgograd 3-2 in the first round, earning their first-ever European League Championship Series trip. Nizhny Novgorod outlasted St. Petersburg on the road 3-2 for their second ELCS in four years. The matchup between the 2000 expansion teams guaranteed a first-time pennant winner. The Ninjas prevailed 4-2 over the Steelers to advance. ![]() The top two records in EPB battled for the Asian League’s West Division with Yekaterinburg (103-59) outracing Chelyabinsk (100-62). Both were tied for the fewest runs allowed at 483, while the Cadets actually outscored the Yaks (642 to 603) despite getting stuck as the wild card. Yekaterinburg earned repeat playoff berths, but they hadn’t been division champ since 2008. Chelyabinsk’s playoff streak grew to six seasons; all wild card appearances. Defending AL champ Krasnoyarsk dropped from 103-59 to 87-75 in 2024, but that was still enough to repeat as East Division champ. The Cossacks’ division title streak grew to six seasons and their playoff streak grew to seven. Ulaanbaatar was their nearest foe at 82-80. The Boars ended up one win short for the second wild card. The West’s Omsk and Nur-Sultan tied for the final spot at 83-79 with the Otters winning the one-game playoff to advance. Omsk earned a second wild card in three years. The Setters in their fifth season became the first of the 2020 expansion teams to post a winning record. Khabarovsk came close in 2024 at 80-82. Also of note was Perm falling to 73-89, their first losing season since 2017. The Pitbulls had won the prior four West Division crowns. RF Nikolay Kargopolcev had a remarkable resurgence, winning his fourth Asian League MVP in 2024. He had won the award for Ufa in 2011, 2013, and 2014. A decade later and now 37-years old, Kargopolcev was on top again now with Chelyabinsk. He had signed with the Cadets in 2021, but had been largely forgettable there, even getting relegated to a part-time role in 2022 and 2023. For 2024, Kargopolcev led in runs (93) and slugging (.590). He added 164 hits, 21 doubles, 15 triples, 38 home runs, 116 RBI, .906 OPS, 173 wRC+, and 7.7 WAR. Kargopolcev finished the year at 695 career home runs and seemingly now had a shot at passing Konrad Mazur (740) and Zina Gigolashvili (720) for the top spots. Kargopolcev also became the fourth to reach 1500 runs scored and was one of nine with 1500+ RBI. He earned a three-year, $43,100,000 extension in the offseason for his efforts, getting his shot to continue up the leaderboards. Chelyabinsk also had the Pitcher of the Year in fifth-year lefty Aleksandr Rossel. The 25-year old Russian won the ERA title (1.77) and led in WHIP (0.74), and shutouts (6). Rossel had an 18-5 record over 203 innings, 304 strikeouts, 182 ERA+, and 7.8 WAR. Also worth a mention was Omsk’s Vitali Kolyayev becoming a three-time Reliever of the Year winner. Yekaterinburg topped Omsk 3-1 in the first round, while Krasnoyarsk used their home field advantage to beat Chelyabinsk 3-1 despite their 13-win difference. This set up a rematch in the Asian League Championship Series, but the results would get switched. This time the Yaks prevailed 4-1 over the Cossacks, giving Yekaterinburg their first pennant since 2012. The Yaks led all Asian League teams with 12 titles. ![]() The 70th EPB Championship was the first since 2008 to end in a sweep as Yekaterinburg crushed Nizhny Novgorod 4-0. The Yaks were now eight-time EPB champs (1955, 1970, 1989, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2012, 2024). They tied the departed Kyiv for the second-most EPB rings while Minsk had the most at 13. Pitcher Georgi Nevdakh was finals MVP as the 26-year old Belarusian went 3-0 in his playoff starts with a 2.02 EREA over 26.2 innings and 21 strikeouts. Nevdakh had a one-hit shutout during the series. Teammate Abdulla Savitsky was also notable as the ALCS and first round MVP. Savitsky set a new EPB playoff record with 6 triples and added 20 hits, 11 runs, 2 doubles, 2 homers, and 8 RBI in 13 starts. ![]() Other notes: Igor Gorbatyuk became the 27th to reach 2500 hits. He also finished the year with 1597 runs scored at age 39, putting him close to Zaur Kadirov’s top mark of 1619. Evgeny Kiselev was the 20th to 500 home runs. Kaysar Alkhasov was the 29th to 4000 strikeouts. 1B Artur Sagadatullin won his 15th and final Gold Glove. He was the only 15-time winner in EPB history and one of seven in all of world history. Two others in the group played first base with Beisbol Sudamerica’s D.J. Del Valle (16) and Austronesia Professional Baseball’s Kent Wang (15). LF Brandon Chunchignorov won his 9th Gold Glove and 3B Daniil Wekshinsky won his 7th. |
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#2031 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in EBF
![]() Two-time defending European Champion Dublin again was dominant at 110-52 atop the West Division. The Dinos again were the Northern Conference top seed and earned a fifth consecutive division crown. Dublin has won 109+ games in four of those five seasons. Their offense was especially potent in 2024 with 931 runs scored, breaking Amsterdam’s conference record of 929 from 1986. The Dinos ranked third in all of European Baseball Federation history. The most competitive division was the Central with Rotterdam winning a fourth straight title at 101-61. The Ravens allowed the fewest runs in the conference by a healthy margin at 538. Rotterdam was only two games better than 99-63 Cologne, who ended a six-year playoff drought as the first wild card. The Copperheads have won 80+ games each year since 2007. Third was 93-69 Hanover, taking the second wild card for repeat playoff berths. Kharkiv claimed the East Division at 92-70 to end their own six-year playoff drought. Berlin was second at 88-74, finishing tied with the Central’s Amsterdam for the final wild card. The Anacondas defeated the Barons in a one-game playoff to advance. Amsterdam has amazingly earned nine playoff appearances in 12 years; all wild cards. The first teams out were London (86-76), Hamburg (85-77), Glasgow (83-79), and Frankfurt (82-80). This ended a seven-year playoff streak for the Hammers, although their run of winning seasons grew to 10. For the Monarchs, it was their first winning season in the EBF Elite tier since 2003. There was a lot of parity at the bottom with Paris (63-99) finishing last and getting relegated. Tallinn (65-97), Manchester (66-96), and Riga (69-93) only narrowly escaped the bottom spot or the 100+ loss threshold. The Poodles had historically been one of EBF’s strongest franchises and had won it all as recently as 2014. They hadn’t won more than 71 games from 2019-24 though and finally couldn’t avoid demotion. Third-year Hanover LF Felix Timm won Northern Conference MVP. The 2022 Rookie of the Year led in 2024 in home runs (61), total bases (412), and slugging (.703). The 24-year old Austrian added 1.064 OPS, 184 wRC+, 9.5 WAR, 140 RBI, and 117 runs. The Hitmen also had the Pitcher of the Year with veteran Federico Panesso. The 34-year old Italian lefty was in his fifth season for Hanover after spending his 20s mostly in the European Second League. Panesso won the ERA title at 2.43 and struck out 205 over 226.1 innings with an 18-5 record, 162 ERA+, and 6.1 WAR. Despite their award wins, Hanover was ousted in the first round 2-1 by Cologne. Kharkiv swept Amsterdam in round one and gave Rotterdam a fierce challenge in round two, although the Ravens escaped 3-2. Top seed Dublin downed the Copperheads 3-1, setting up a rematch in the Northern Conference Championship. Dublin again was victorious over Rotterdam with their 4-1 win giving the Dinos the conference three-peat and their fourth pennant in five years. They joined Amsterdam, Vienna, and Zurich as the only franchises to earn four finals trips in a five year stretch. The Irish capital now had 11 conference titles, which is tied for the most among all EBF teams along with Zurich. ![]() Three teams fought over the Southern Conference’s top seed with West Division champ Zurich ultimately getting it. The Mountaineers and Central Division champ Munich both finished 106-56, although Zurich had the tiebreaker for the top seed. The Mountaineers picked up their eighth playoff berth in nine years. The defending conference champ Mavericks had to outlast 104-58 Zagreb to take their fourth straight division title. Both Munich and Zagreb had their playoff streaks extended to five seasons. The Gulls earned their fourth 100+ win season in five years despite being the first wild. The other wild cards came out of a loaded Central Division as well with Rome (96-66) and Palermo (92-70). The first teams out were Valencia, Zaragoza, and Skopje each at 88-74. The Red Wolves ended a nine-year playoff drought while the Priests got their second berth in four years. Meanwhile the East Division saw Chisinau repeat as champ at 98-64 with Skopje a distant second. The Counts led the conference in scoring with 848 runs while Zaragoza allowed the fewest at 551. By far the conference’s worst team was 51-111 Toulouse, relegated after a four-year run amongst the European Baseball Federation Elite. Tirana (64-98) and Budapest (65-97) were both poor, but avoided the 100+ loss threshold and escaped demotion. Southern Conference MVP went to Chisinau 1B Theodosio Gaytan in a surprisingly breakout year. The 28-year old Spaniard has posted 5.3 WAR in seven EBF Elite seasons prior, but exploded for a conference-best 9.8 in 2024. Gaytan also led in doubles (44), RBI (134), average (.352), slugging (.693), OPS (1.087), and wRC+ (210). He added 105 runs and 46 homers in his third year with the Counts, earning a seven-year, $172,400,000 extension the following spring. Munich’s Nejc Novak won his second Pitcher of the Year in three seasons. The 28-year old Slovene righty was the WARlord at 9.0 and led with 54 FIP-. Novak had a 21-8 record in 232 innings, 2.56 ERA, 275 strikeouts, and 145 ERA+. Before the 2024 campaign, Novak inked a six-year, $153,600,000 extension with the Mavericks. Zagreb edged Rome 2-1 and Chisinau outlasted Palermo 2-1 in the first round. The Gulls then upset Zurich 3-2 in the second round, sending Zagreb to repeat Southern Conference Championship trips and their third in four years. Even more stunning was the Counts not only upsetting Munich on the other side, but sweeping the Mavericks. Only two years prior, Chisinau was playing in the European Second League. Chisinau earned their first-ever Southern Conference title, knocking out Zagreb 4-2. The Counts became the fourth pennant winner amongst teams that began with the E2L’s 2005 debut along with Zaragoza, Antwerp, and Thessaloniki. The Gulls yet again couldn’t get over the hump, now going 0-3 in four years in the conference final. Zagreb has lost five straight conference finals trips with a title drought back to 1975. ![]() In the 75th European Championship, Dublin was a heavy favorite over Chisinau and had a shot to be the first-ever three-peat champ in EBF. The Dinos had been the only team previously to win three titles in four years, doing that in 2010-13. Their party was spoiled though as the upstart Counts won decisively 4-1, bringing the cup to Moldova for the first time. Chisinau became the 29th different EBF franchise to win it all and Moldova became the 19th country to have a European champ from their nation. The Counts joined Antwerp (2015) as the only EBF Elite champs that began in E2L in 2005. Conference MVP Theodosio Gaytan was also the MVP of the European Championship and the conference finals MVP. In 17 playoff starts, he had 24 hits, 14 runs, 4 doubles, 4 triples, 5 homers, and 17 RBI. Chisinau’s Cosmin Chivu also notably scored 20 playoff runs, tying the EBF postseason record hit twice before. ![]() Other notes: 2024 featured EBF’s 38th and 39th Perfect Games. The first was April 22 by Cologne’s Vladyslav Zaporoshchenko, who struck out 12 against London. The second came from Zagreb’s A.J. Magee on May 16 with 10 Ks over Madrid. It was Magee’s second no-hitter, having also done it in 2017. Hanover’s Jaden Cardoso had 156 RBI, the first to reach 150+ RBI since 2006. Oslo SS and EBF WARlord Harvey Coyle became the 1st EBF slugger to 900 home runs, the 6th to 2000 RBI, and the 12th to 3000 hits. Coyle ended his age 37 season with 197.6 career WAR, putting him in position to join MLB/OBA legend Jimmy Caliw (214.0) and world strikeout king Mohamed Ramos (205.1) in the 200 club. Coyle passed WAB SS Darwin Morris (194.4) and CABA/MLB SP Ulices Montero (191.7) on the world leaderboard with 7.5 WAR in 2024. He had a career worst .782 OPS, but his defense at shortstop was still world class even in his late 30s. Nicolo Giotto and Johan Almgren became the 19th and 20th to reach 1500 runs scored. Nico Tofani was the 41st to reach 2500 hits. Stefanos Emmanouilidis and Sisto Contreras made the 500 home run club, now 37 players strong. Luther Bowness became the 11th pitcher to 4000 strikeouts and Forest Campbell became the 27th to 3500 Ks. |
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#2032 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in BSA
Since 2009, Beisbol Sudamerica players required ten years of service time before being eligible for free agency, which was the most restrictive of all world leagues along with Eurasian Professional Baseball. Players were finally able to fight back against that and got the requirement lowered to nine years starting with 2024. It was still quite restrictive, but still a win. BSA’s requirements had been as low as seven years from 1968-77, but had gradually grown more restrictive.
![]() The Bolivar League’s Colombia-Ecuador Division was absolutely stacked, led by Quito with a franchise-record 112-50. The Thunderbolts allowed the fewest runs at 585 and won plenty of tight games, tying the BSA record for team saves with 62. Quito ended a three-year playoff drought with the result. Barranquilla was 11 back in second place despite their own excellent 101-61 season. The Blues grew their playoff streak to three years, as did second wild card Cali at 94-68. As BSA doesn’t give division champs seeding preference, the top three seeds ended up being Quito, Barranquilla, and Cali; meaning the other two division champs were relegated to the first round series. Peru-Bolivia Division champ Santa Cruz finished 94-68, but lost the seeding tiebreaker with the Cyclones. The Crawfish ended a three-way playoff drought, besting both Callao and Lima by nine games and Arequipa by ten. Santa Cruz was the BL’s top scoring team with 853 runs. Two-time defending Copa Sudamerica champion Caracas had their three-peat bid thwarted. The Colts’ seven-year reign atop the Venezuela Division ended in 2024 by the thinnest margin. Caracas and Valencia tied for first at 89-73, but the Velocity prevailed in the tiebreaker game to advance. Although it was Valencia’s first division title since 2012, they earned their third playoff trip in four years. Leading Valencia’s efforts was Bolivar League MVP Santino Garza. The 28-year old Venezuelan designated hitter led in hits (235), doubles (49), home runs (61), RBI (161), total bases (479), slugging (.731), and WAR (9.7). Garza’s .359 average fell one point short of a Triple Crown season and his RBI tally was the fifth-best single season in BSA history. He also had 1.126 OPS, 187 wRC+, and 123 runs. In the winter, the Velocity gave Garza an eight-year, $105,400,000 extension. Santa Cruz righty Bartolo Flores won his second Pitcher of the Year, having also earned the honor in 2021. For 2024, the 26-year old Ecuadoran led in wins (21-4), strikeouts (330), WHIP (0.88), and WAR (7.8). Flores’ 2.68 ERA was second in the league to Arequipa’s Geraldo Garcia’s 2.47. Flores had 155 ERA+ over 245 innings. The Crawfish beat Valencia 2-0 in the first round, then lost 3-1 to Quito in the Divisional Series. On the other side, Barranquilla topped Cali 3-1 to send the top two seeds to the Bolivar League Championship Series. It was the first BLCS since 2006 for the Thunderbolts and the first ever for the 2009 expansion Blues. #1 seed Quito clobbered Barranquilla with a sweep to end a 29-year pennant drought. The Thunderbolts became seven-time Bolivar League champs (1963, 1964, 1965, 1981, 1983, 1994, 2024). ![]() At 103-59, Santiago was the Southern Cone League’s top seed for the third consecutive season. The Saints won their fifth straight South Central Division title and earned their ninth playoff trip in ten years. Santiago was the league’s top scoring team with 809 runs. Defending league champ Concepcion was second at 93-69, which grabbed them the first wild card. The Chiefs earned their third consecutive playoff berth and their 12th playoff appearance since 2011. The #2 seed went to Southeast Division champ Sao Paulo at 97-65, who allowed the league’s fewest runs at 583. The Padres picked up their second division title in three years. Porto Alegre was a distant second at 85-77 and ended up one game short in the wild card race. Last year, both Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro were playoff teams out of the Southeast, but both posted losing marks in 2024. A tight North Division had Belo Horizonte (87-75) edge out Fortaleza (86-76), and Recife (85-77). The Hogs ended a 17-year playoff drought, which had been the league’s second-longest active drought. The Foxes managed to get the second wild card by one game over both the Retrievers and Armadillos. Montevideo (82-80), Salvador (81-81), Asuncion (81-81), and Cordoba (81-81) were all in the mix. Fortaleza’s playoff streak grew to four years as they set a new Southern Cone League record for team hits with 1678. Santiago CF R.J. Cardenas won MVP in his eighth season with the Saints. The 27-year old Chilean led in runs (119), RBI (120), and stolen bases (82). Cardenas had 201 hits, 21 doubles, 39 home runs, .942 OPS, 174 wRC+, and 8.6 WAR. He remained committed to Santiago and signed a seven-year, $77,100,000 extension after the 2026 season. Sao Paulo’s Café Vicente won Pitcher of the Year, leading in wins (19-8), innings (267.2), and complete games (14). The 26-year old Brazilian righty had a 2.52 ERA, 224 strikeouts, 143 ERA+, and 3.2 WAR. Vicente has the dubious distinction of being tied for the lowest WAR by a POTY winner in any world league ever along with Indian League winner Gandhalata Green from 2001. Only four pitchers have ever won the honor with less than 4 WAR. Vicente was a footnote with only 11.2 WAR for his entire career. He was third in ERA in 2024, so that plus innings and wins made him jump out for traditionalist voters even if the advanced metrics were very underwhelmed. Fortaleza edged Belo Horizonte 2-1 in the first round, then pulled off the 3-2 upset of Santiago in the Divisional Series. For the third straight year, the Saints didn’t win the pennant despite being the top seed. Although Santiago won Copa Sudamerica in 2020, they’ve largely struggled recently with the one title and only two LCS trips in the decade despite nine playoff berths. The Foxes had the inverse luck, earning their third Southern Cone League Championship trip in four years. Sao Paulo defeated Concepcion 3-1 on the other side of the bracket, earning their first LCS trip since 2016. The Padres pounded the Foxes 4-1 to end a 30-year pennant drought going back to their 1993 cup win. Even with the lengthy drought, Sao Paulo still comfortably leads all Southern Cone League teams with 15 pennants. ![]() The 94th Copa Sudamerica was an all-time classic that needed all seven games and came down to the final frame. In the bottom of the ninth inning, 3B Garo Amaro had a two RBI single to give Quito a 5-4 walk-off win in game seven over Sao Paulo. It was the third time in Copa Sudamerica history that the series ended with a walk-off, joining the 1995 and 2003 finales. Finals MVP went to CF Bruno Batista, who joined Quito as a free agent the prior year after nine years with Mendoza. In Batista’s seven playoff starts, he had 10 hits, 4 runs, 1 double, 1 triple, 3 RBI, and 3 steals. It was the third cup win for the Thunderbolts (1965, 1994, 2024) and the first by an Ecuadoran team since their 1994 win. The defeat moved Sao Paulo to 6-9 all-time in the finals, tying them with Caracas for the most runner-up finishes. ![]() Other notes: Brasilia’s Zane Garbarino hit four home runs on May 9 against Buenos Aires, becoming the eighth in BSA history with a four homer day. Niccolo Coelho became the 3rd to reach 2000 career RBI, joining Milton Becker (2226) and Arsenio Araujo (2056). Carlos Ulibarri and Raul Reis became the 71st and 72nd to reach 2500 hits. Sebastian Marquez was the 66th pitcher to 200 wins. Cicero Lugo became the 21st BSA player to 1500 runs scored. Lugo was notably the first catcher in any world league to reach the mark. He won his 16th and final Silver Slugger, becoming only the fourth at any position in any league to do so. Lugo joined OBA/MLB SS/2B Jimmy Caliw (17), CABA SS Emmanuel Zavala (16) and CABA/MLB 1B/DH Prometheo Garcia (16) |
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#2033 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in EAB
![]() Two-time defending East Asia Baseball champion Fukuoka won their fifth consecutive West Division title. The Frogs took the Japan League’s top seed at 104-58 and led the league with 709 runs. Tokyo grabbed the #2 seed at 96-66 atop the Capital Division for their second division title in three years. The Tides allowed the fewest runs at 496. Last year’s division winner Chiba finished six wins back. The Central Division needed a tiebreaker game after Kobe and Nagoya both ended the regular season at 90-72. The Blaze prevailed for repeat playoff berths, while the Nightowls missed the field despite three straight 90+ win seasons. Osaka at 83-79 extended their streak of winning seasons to ten, while 75-87 Kyoto had only their second losing season since 2009. The weakest division winner was Sapporo at 84-78 who repeated in the North. Saitama finished two games behind at 82-80. Niigata was 74-88, their sixth consecutive losing season. The Green Dragons had some optimism as 1B To****sugu Kobayashi won Japan League MVP. In his second year as a full-time starter, the 25-year old lefty led in hits (225), total bases (384), triple slash (.371/.418/.634), OPS (1.052), wRC+ (224), and WAR (10.1). Kobayashi added 98 runs, 37 doubles, 36 home runs, and 108 RBI. Toshikuni Naikai’s reign as Pitcher of the Year ended in 2024 as a ruptured finger tendon kept him out four months, although he did make it back just in time for the playoffs. Assuming the top spot was Kobe’s Young-Pyo Park in his third full season, leading the league with 24 quality starts. The 24-year old righty had a 2.12 ERA over 245.2 innings, 19-6 record, 272 strikeouts, 156 ERA+, and 5.9 WAR. Despite winning 20 fewer games, Sapporo shocked the defending champ Fukuoka 3-2 in the first round. The Swordfish earned their first Japan League Championship Series trip since 2012. Tokyo topped Kobe 3-1 on the other side, ending a JLCS drought back to 2008 for the Tides. Sapporo’s hot streak continued as they downed Tokyo 4-1 for their first pennant since 1998. Even with that hefty drought, the Swordsmen lead all Japanese teams with 14 titles. ![]() Defending Korea League champ Busan took the top seed at 101-61, winning the South Division and growing their playoff streak to five seasons. The Blue Jays allowed only 505 runs, 100 fewer than the next closest KL squad. Both wild cards came out of the South with Changwon (92-70) and Gwangju (91-71) advancing, fending off Jeonju (89-73) and Hamhung (89-73). The Crabs’ playoff streak grew to four with their eighth berth in nine years. The Grays ended a nine-year drought. In a tight North Division, Seongnam (90-72) prevailed to end a three-year playoff streak. The Heat were second at 89-73, missing the division by one and the second wild card by two. Last year’s division champ Bucheon fell to 75-87. The 2022 KL champ and 2023 KLCS runner-up Daegu also notably missed the playoffs at 83-79. The Diamondbacks were the top scoring team at 743 runs. Gwangju 1B/DH Han Yi won Korea League MVP in his second year as a full-time starter. The 23-year old lefty led in runs (121), hits (212), doubles (40), average (.346), and OBP (.410). Yi added 36 homers, 111 RBI, 1.015 OPS, 176 wRC+, and 7.5 WAR. In May, the Grays gave Yi an eight-year, $136,800,000 extension. Incheon at 83-79 missed the playoffs, but their veteran lefty Il-Hwan Lee got his first Pitcher of the Year at age 35. In his tenth year for the Inferno and 13th season overall, Lee led in wins (22-8) while posting a 2.55 ERA over 257.1 innings, 220 strikeouts, 147 ERA+, and 6.3 WAR. Busan survived 3-2 in the first round against Gwangju while Changwon cruised to a road sweep of Seongnam. This set up a rematch of the 2021 Korea League Championship Series, which the Crabs won despite being the underdog. Changwon couldn’t replicate that magic with the Blue Jays winning a seven-game classic. With the repeat, Busan now has 13 Korea League pennants. ![]() The 104th East Asian Championship was not the first finals meeting between the two storied franchises, although few were still alive to remember the most recent encounters. Busan’s first title came over Sapporo back in 1933, denying a repeat bid by the Swordfish. They met again in 1944 with the Blue Jays winning in a seven game battle. Round three in 2024 would go down as one of the most exciting finales in EAB history. The series needed all seven games and extra innings in game seven. Sapporo ended up winning the finale 7-6 in 11 innings, marking the fourth time that the EAB Championship had an extra innings game seven (1987, 2004, 2018, 2024). The improbable win for the 84-win Swordfish made them seven-time EAB champs (1932, 1947, 1949, 1951, 1981, 1998, 2024), second only to Pyongyang (9). Veteran 1B Masaru Ochiai was finals MVP in his first year with Sapporo. The 35-year old had won finals MVP back in 2021 for Kyoto and had been league MVP in 2016 for Kobe. In 12 playoff starts, Ochiai had 19 hits, 9 runs, 3 doubles, 2 triples, 3 homers, and 10 RBI. The Japan League earned its fifth consecutive title over the Korea League, giving them the series lead 53-51 all-time. It was the longest streak for the JL, although the KL had a six-year run from 1953-58. ![]() Other notes: Hitoshi Kubota became the 5th EAB slugger to reach 2000 career RBI. Kunihiko Ishiguro was the 34th member of the 600 home run club. Nobuyoshi Yamauchi became the 41st pitcher with 3500 strikeouts. Yamauchi, Hyun-Min Hu, and Yasutoshi Tanada each got to 200 wins in 2024, a mark now reached by 63 pitchers. SS Min-Jae Lim and LF Ji-Hwan Kim both won their 7th Silver Sluggers. |
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#2034 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 in CABA
![]() After posting the Mexican League’s best-ever record at 117-45 in 2023, Mexico City managed to do even better in 2024. The reigning Central American Baseball Association champ broke the wins record for all of CABA at 120-42. The Aztecs became the 28th team in all of world history to win 120+ games in a season. The previous CABA best was 118-44 by 1933 Jamaica and 1969 Guatemala. Mexico City set a new ML record for runs scored with 891 and set a team slugging record of .516. The Aztecs also had a .294 batting average (second in ML history) and 1674 hits (3rd). The #2 seed was 23 games away with North Division champ Juarez at 97-65. The Jesters won their third straight division title and grew their playoff streak to 11 seasons. Both wild cards came from the North with Torreon (93-69) and Tijuana (90-72) advancing. The first teams out came from the South with Ecatepec (89-73), Puebla (88-74), and Queretaro (88-74). The Tomahawks got their second wild card in three years and extended their run of winning seasons to 25. The Toros ended a two-year playoff drought and allowed the fewest runs at 531. Leading Mexico City’s dominance was Mexican League MVP Franklin Madrid, who set a new CABA record with 481 total bases, beating Stevie Montoya’s 469 from 1998. In his second full season, the 24-year old Cuban posted CABA’s 22nd Triple Crown hitting effort and the first since 2010. Madrid led in runs (145), hits (241), home runs (68), RBI (152), triple slash (.384/.428/.766), OPS (1.194), wRC+ (249), and WAR (12.6). Madrid’s runs ranked as the third-most in a CABA season, his hits ranked eighth, homers ranked fifth, and OPS ranked sixth. By WAR, it was the 19th-best for a position player. In April 2025, the Aztecs signed Madrid to an eight-year, $154,700,000 extension. Mexico City also got an awesome Rookie of the Year effort by RF Basil Torres, who had 7.2 WAR, .922 OPS, and a league-best 30 triples. Tijuana’s Richard Wright won his fourth Pitcher of the Year in five years. Still in only his sixth season, the 26-year old Jamaican lefty got his fifth straight ERA title with a staggering 1.27. This was the second-best qualifying ERA in CABA history, only behind Lian Llanes’ 1.24 a century earlier in 1922. Wright also led in strikeouts (333), WHIP (0.80), K/BB (10.7), shutouts (7), FIP- (29), ERA+ (282), and WAR (12.4). Wright had a 17-7 record and 10 saves over 226.2 innings. His WAR was the 12th-best single season effort by a CABA pitcher thus far. Wright was the first pitcher with a 12+ WAR season since Junior Vergara in 1988. He tossed two one-hitters in the regular season and would throw another in the Mexican League Championship Series. Tijuana made it there in large part due to Wright’s efforts as the Toros shocked Mexico City 3-1 in the first round. This ended the Aztecs’ repeat bid and went down as an all-time disappointment. Of the 28 teams in world history to win 120+ games in a season, Mexico City became the 7th of those to lose in the first round. Only eight of those teams won it all with 18 of the 28 making it to the championship. Juarez swept Torreon on the other side, giving the Jesters their sixth consecutive MLCS trip and their 11th since 2012. The Toros had made it once during Juarez’s run, beating them in 2021 en route to the CABA title. In a seven-game classic, Tijuana pulled off the upset of the Jesters to become ten-time Mexican League champs (1913, 1914, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1923, 1998, 2021, 2024). Juarez is now 6-5 in their MLCS trips since 2012. ![]() Two-time defending Caribbean League champ Guatemala took the top seed and the Continental Division for the fourth consecutive season. The Ghosts finished 108-54, leading in runs scored (846) and fewest allowed (570). It was a 17 game drop to second place in the division with both Guyana and Honduras at 91-71. These teams took the two wild card slots. The Horsemen matched Guatemala’s 846 runs and earned back-to-back wild cards. The Golden Knights ended a three-year playoff drought. Haiti picked up the Island Division title for the third year running at 93-69. Puerto Rico was their closest foe at 89-73, also finishing two back in the wild card race. Last year’s CLCS runner-up Santo Domingo was a distant third at 83-79. Also of note was Bahamas at 82-80, which was the first winning season since 2005 for the generally inept Buccaneers. Meanwhile Havana dropped to 77-85, their first losing campaign since 2015. Santo Domingo 3B Jamel Forsyth was named Caribbean League MVP in his sixth season. The 27-year old Grenadan led in homers (51), average (.388), OBP (.430), OPS (1.129), wRC+ (192), and WAR (12.3). Forsyth added 239 hits, 124 runs, and 139 RBI. He beat out Honduras’s Juan Gusman for MVP despite Gusman leading in hits (251), runs (125), and RBI (154). The 251 hits fell only one short of the CABA record of 252 set by Prometheo Garcia back in 1949. Guatemala ace Israel Montague won his fourth consecutive Pitcher of the Year in his fifth season. The 27-year old Panamanian posted the 20th Triple Crown pitching season in CABA history with a 24-4 record, 2.04 ERA, and 387 strikeouts over 233.1 innings. Montague also led in WHIP (0.79), ERA+ (200), FIP- (38), and WAR (11.8). The 387 Ks were the most any CABA pitcher has gotten since the 1980s. The Ghosts topped Guyana 3-1 in the first round to keep their three-peat hopes intact while Haiti edged Honduras 3-2. It was the first trip to the Caribbean League Championship Series since 2018 for the Herons. Guatemala’s dynasty rolled on with a 4-1 victory over Haiti, becoming the first team to win three Caribbean crowns in a row since the Herons did it from 2000-02. It was the ninth pennant for the Ghosts, who had three-peated previously back from 1969-71. ![]() The 114th CABA Championship had Guatemala defeat Tijuana 4-1 for their second overall title in three years. It was only the third CABA ring for the Ghosts in total (1974, 2022, 2024). Veteran 1B Pascal Candelaria was finals MVP in his fifth season with Guatemala. The 37-year old American had posted a solid 11-year MLB run prior to signing with the Ghosts. In 13 playoff starts, Candelaria had 19 hits, 12 runs, 4 doubles, 5 homers, 1 triple, and 8 RBI. ![]() Other notes: Noah Breton became the 8th member of the 700 home run club and Lucas Martinez became the 22nd to reach 600. Both Breton and Clayton Morgan reached 1500 runs scored, making 20 CABA players to do so. Morgan, Americo Negron, and Max Valentin each reached 1500 RBI, a mark hit by 35 batters. Negron was also the 58th to 2500 hits and the 59th to 500 homers. Luis Ruiz became the 11th pitcher to 250 wins. RF James Figueroa won his 7th Gold Glove. As an opener, Costa Rica’s Chamorro Ramires started a CABA record 68 games on the mound, although he stunk with a 5.60 ERA in 106 innings. The Rays allowed 1720 hits and 909 runs as a team, both the second-worst in Caribbean League history. San Luis Potosi had only 68 home runs as a team, the third-lowest in Mexican League history. |
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#2035 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
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2024 in MLB
![]() The National Association was very competitive in 2024 as only seven wins separated the top seed from the lowest wild card. Philadelphia came out as the #1 squad at 99-63 atop the East Division, ending a four-year playoff drought. The Phillies only won the division by two games with Washington right behind at 97-65. The Admirals got the first wild card for repeat playoff trips and their third in four years. Philadelphia allowed the NA’s fewest runs at 552. Detroit was the #2 seed by winning the Upper Midwest Division at 97-65, finishing five ahead of Chicago and seven better than Minneapolis. The Tigers won the division for the 12th time in the last 17 seasons. In the Lower Midwest Division, defending World Series champ Cincinnati prevailed at 95-67. The Reds grabbed their fifth consecutive division title, edging out St. Louis by two games. Montreal had a remarkable recovery after winning only 64 games in 2023, taking the Northeast Division in 2024 at 93-69. The Maples ended an eight-year playoff drought, topping Quebec City by two games and Ottawa by five. Last year’s division winner Toronto fell to 79-83. For the remaining two wild cards, St. Louis (93-69) and Chicago (92-70) advanced with Quebec City (91-71), Minneapolis (90-72), Ottawa (88-74), and Milwaukee (85-77) as the first teams out. The Cubs extended their playoff streak to five and led in runs scored at 742. The Cardinals ended a three-year playoff skid. Notably wild cards from last year Virginia Beach and Brooklyn dropped off at 82-80 and 76-86, respectively. National Association MVP went to Milwaukee 1B Gilbert Windemere, who led in home runs (63), RBI (135), total bases (411), slugging (.712), OPS (1.100), and wRC+ (220). The 27-year old from Wadena, Minnesota had 109 runs, 193 hits, 9.7 WAR, and a .334 average. He was second in batting average to Chicago’s Milton Ramirez (.353) and was only four homers short of the MLB single-season record. Windemere was the 7th MLB slugger to hit 63+ dingers in a season. The Mustangs locked him up prior to the season at eight years and $136,500,000. In his lone season with Cincinnati, Paxton Watson won Pitcher of the Year. The 30-year old righty from Somers, New York had been mostly strong with Baltimore, but got traded in the last year of his deal after struggling in 2023. He bounced back with an ERA title at 2.12, posting a 13-5 record in 216.1 innings, 203 strikeouts, and 6.9 WAR. This effort earned Watson a six-year, $168,200,000 deal in the offseason with Los Angeles. Major injuries would ultimately make the deal a bust as he’d never pitch another full season. Cincinnati swept St. Louis and Detroit edged Chicago 3-2 in the first round, while Washington was the lone wild card winner 3-1 over Montreal. The Admirals ousted their divisional foe and top seed Philadelphia 3-1 in the second round, earning their first National Association Championship Series trip since 2008. The Reds swept the Tigers, giving them a shot at a historic three-peat. They were also hoping for a fourth title in five years, which had only happened once ever in NA history. Washington played spoiler to Cincinnati’s aspirations, winning the NACS 4-1 to end a 57-year pennant drought for the American capital. It was the fifth National Association pennant for the Admirals (1912, 1914, 1930, 1966, 2024). They’re the first team from the East Division to win the pennant since the Phillies in 2013. ![]() The American Association was far more top heavy with two teams battling for the #1 seed by the end. The top spot went to Houston at 106-56 for their second South Central Division title in three years. The Hornets outraced defending AA champ San Diego, who repeated in the Southwest Division at 103-59. Houston led all teams in scoring with 826 runs. Although they were sixth in runs allowed, the Hornets’ pitching staff set new AA single-season records for strikeouts (1457) and K/9 (8.83). Seattle repeated as Northwest Division champ at 99-63. There was a steep drop to the fourth division winner as Orlando (85-77) was the only team above .500 in the Southeast. This was only the second time (2003) that the Orcas made the playoffs since joining MLB in the 1982 expansion. Orlando had been as bad as 59-103 only three years prior. Last year’s Southeast Division champ Atlanta fell to 78-84. Austin took the first wild card at 96-66, ending a 12-year drought for the Amigos. San Francisco at 93-69 picked up the second spot for their third wild card in four years. The final slot had a tie at 91-71 between Calgary and Salt Lake City. Both Phoenix and Portland fell one short at 90-72, while Denver (88-74), Las Vegas (86-76), and New Orleans (86-76) each were in the mix much of the year. The one-game tiebreaker saw the Cheetahs victorious over the Loons, ending a lengthy 29-year postseason drought for Calgary. The only American Association team with a longer drought was Miami, which grew to 52 seasons. Despite missing the cut, the Firebirds allowed the AA’s fewest runs at 565. The Dragons fell short for back-to-back years, but still posted a 15th consecutive winning season. American Association MVP went to Calgary DH Kevin Juarez in his seventh season. The 27-year old Spaniard led in hits (214) and total bases (387). Juarez added 46 homers, 124 RBI, 125 runs, .963 OPS, 158 wRC+, and 6.7 WAR. This effort earned him one of the richest deals so far in MLB at $207,200,000 over eight years. Seattle’s Kendrick Dodd took Pitcher of the Year in his eighth season for the Grizzlies. The 28-year old righty from Columbus, New Mexico had a 2.42 ERA over 278.2 innings, 21-8 record, 259 strikeouts, 162 ERA+, and 9.5 WAR. Dodd took second in both ERA and WAR to Denver’s Oscar Dissard (2.35, 11.3). Dodd never had a season this impressive again, but he remained a steady arm for the next decade in Seattle. The big first round shock was #7 seed Calgary upsetting #2 San Diego 3-2. Austin was also a wild card winner, but that was more expected over a weak Orlando team 3-1. The lone division champ to advance was Seattle over San Francisco 3-1. The Cheetahs couldn’t keep the magic going as Houston swept them in round two. The Grizzlies meanwhile outlasted the Amigos 3-2. Seattle earned back-to-back trips in the American Association Championship Series. For the Hornets, it was their first since winning the World Series in 2019. Houston showed why they had the top seed by beating the Grizzlies 4-1 for their 11th pennant. (1905, 1906, 1908, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1920, 1922, 1952, 2019, 2024). They have the second-most behind Phoenix’s 13. ![]() The 124th World Series was the first to need all seven games since Houston’s 2019 win over Kansas City. This time, the Hornets were on the losing end to Washington, winning their third MLB title (1914, 1930, 2024). The Admirals had a 94-year gap between titles, the fourth-longest in baseball history behind Tampa (110), CABA’s Tijuana (102), and Milwaukee (98). Sixth-year middle infielder Jude Hoffer had an all-time postseason run, winning MVP of the World Series, NACS, and second round. The 26-year old from Gibbstown, New Jersey in 19 playoff starts had 32 hits, 20 runs, 2 doubles, 2 triples, 7 homers, 19 RBI, 1.332 OPS, and 2.2 WAR. Hoffer was only the 8th in MLB history to score 20 runs in a playoff run, falling one short of Patrick White’s 1959 record. The 32 hits tied for 4th most, becoming the 7th player to get 32+ hits in one postseason. The already extremely popular Hoffer signed an eight-year, $197,100,000 extension in May to remain DC’s baseball icon for the long haul. ![]() Other notes: Entering the season, Killian Fruechte, Isaac Cox, and Graham Gregor all hoped to make a run at Cody Lim’s all-time home run mark of 758. For Cox, he hit 29 homers in 2024 at age 37, which was a career low. But he still posted 5.4 WAR for the season for Detroit and got to 751 total homers, passing Elijah Cashman’s 750 for the #2 spot. Cashman had held the #1 spot for 85 years until passed by Lim in 2021. Lim’s hold of the crown at 758 seemed very likely to fall in 2025 to Cox barring a major setback. Fruechte and Gregor officially came up short at 739 and 718 respectively in their final seasons. Fruechte hit 34 the prior year, but struggled and only got 9 over 71 games in 2024. He finished with 124.46 career WAR, retiring 11th among MLB position players. Gregor retired 2nd in WAR for position players with 147.95 and was third among all players. He was one of the very select few in baseball history to play at age 45, starting all of 2024 with 1.5 WAR and 15 homers for Atlanta. Gregor became the 6th to 2000 career RBI and he ended with 1956 runs, falling short of being the 2nd to reach 2k. Gregor also retired with 3666 hits, ranking 4th in MLB. Ichisake Kawasaki became the 31st to reach 600 home runs, while Fritz Louissi and Alberto Peron became the 94th and 95th members of the 500 home run club. Louissi won his 12th Silver Slugger at shortstop, joining CF Morgan Short as MLB’s only 12+ Slugger winners at any spot. Vincent Lepp and Sunny Williams became the 45th and 46th pitchers to reach 250 wins. Raleigh’s offense had only 139 doubles all season, tied for the 2nd lowest in MLB history. Brooklyn’s Lindsey Crismond had a four home run game against Baltimore; the 30th four homer game in MLB history. SS Ledell Pinnock, LF Max Baldwin, and CF Clark Patushi each became eight-time Gold Glove winners. |
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#2036 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2024 Baseball Grand Championship
The 15th Baseball Grand Championship was hosted in Taipei, Taiwan. The auto-bids for the 2024 event were MLB’s Washington and Houston, CABA’s Tijuana and Guatemala, EAB’s Busan and Sapporo, BSA’s Sao Paulo and Quito, EBF’s Chisinau and Dublin, EPB’s Yekaterinburg, OBA’s Port Moresby, APB’s Bandung, CLB’s Urumqi, WAB’s Port Harcourt, SAB’s Visakhapatnam, ABF’s Baku, ALB’s Amman, and AAB’s Lubumbashi. The at-large spot went to AAB runner-up Antananarivo, who had finished 111-51 for the second-highest win tally amongst the field.
There ended up being a three-way tie for the top spot at 13-6 between the European Baseball Federation representatives Dublin and Chisinau along with Southern Cone League champ Sao Paulo. The head-to-head tiebreaker was useless with a rock-paper-scissors between the three. The Dinos beat the Padres 4-1, but lost to the Counts 6-1. Meanwhile, Chisinau was defeated by Sao Paulo 5-3. ![]() The next tiebreaker in line was fewest runs allowed, which ranked Dublin first (53), Chisinau second (58), and Sao Paulo third (74). The Dinos caught a break as they had the worst run differential (+21) of the three. The Counts led all teams at +37 while the Padres were at +22. Regardless, Dublin was crowned and was the first European team to win the Baseball Grand Championship. The Dinos had finished third the prior two years, which had been the best finishes for an EBF team. ![]() With Dublin’s win, ten of the 14 major world leagues had won a Grand Championship and each populated continent had one. Chisinau’s second place was the first runner-up by an EBF team. Sao Paulo’s third place meant Beisbol Sudamerica had a top four team in three straight events. Both one back at 12-7 were Bandung and Houston with the Blackhawks officially taking fourth on the tiebreaker. It was the third consecutive year without an MLB team in the top four officially. Bandung was tied with Dublin for the fewest runs allowed with 53. Next at 11-8 were Lubumbashi and Tijuana with the Loggerheads officially sixth and the Toros seventh. Lubumbashi led all teams in scoring with 96 runs. The other two teams above .500 at 10-9 were Port Harcourt and Port Moresby. Last year’s runner-up Guatemala joined Quito, Washington, and Yekaterinburg at 9-10. Visakhapatnam was alone at 8-11. Five teams (Amman, Antananarivo, Baku, Sapporo, Urumqi) finished 7-12. Busan was alone in last place at 6-13. World Series MVP Jude Hoffer of Washington continued his hot streak into the BGC, winning Tournament MVP. The 26-year old American in 19 starts had 20 hits, 12 runs, 4 doubles, 7 home runs, 13 RBI, 14 walks, 1.238 OPS, 278 wRC+, and 1.8 WAR. Hoffer had also taken second in MVP voting in the World Baseball Championship earlier in the year. Also notable offensively was Chisinau’s Abdullah Iosif with 21 runs, one short of the BGC record. Best Pitcher went to Tijuana ace Richard Wright as the four-time Mexican League Pitcher of the Year had a 0.61 ERA over 29.1 innings, six appearances, a 3-0 record, 3 saves, 56 strikeouts, 6 walks, and 2.19 WAR. Wright’s WAR was the 6th-highest by a pitcher in the event. Also notable was Guatemala’s Aamir Mujahid with a 0.39 ERA over 23 innings, which was the 3rd-lowest ERA in event history (21 IP required) Other notes: Tijuana’s Francis Newman had the 9th no-hitter in BGC history on November 22, striking out 12 with three walks against Baku. |
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#2037 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2025 MLB Hall of Fame (Part 1)
Major League Baseball boasted a strong three-player Hall of Fame class for 2025 with RF Ezekiel Thomas as the clear headliner with a near unanimous 99.3%. The other two made it with solid debuts as LF Ustad Shaikh received 83.9% and SP Easton MacGregor earned 77.9%. The top returner was catcher Sebastian Van Velzen at 59.1%, missing the 66% requirement in his penultimate try.
Five other returners were above 50%, but short of the 66% mark. 2B Adrian Vega had 58.1% in his fifth ballot. SP Victor Burke grabbed 56.0% on his seventh try. 3B Jeanpaul Vick’s sixth go landed 54.4%. CL Sebastian Gomez received 54.0% on his second ballot and CL Jeremy Dau nabbed 50.0% even for his fourth go. ![]() Catcher Brayan Varela fell off the ballot after ten failed tries, getting as close as 58.1% in 2019 and ending with 40.3%. Varela was hurt by the usual anti-catcher bias, but he didn’t have the big awards to make up for the lower counting stats of the position. He had three Silver Sluggers, 18 seasons, 2356 hits, 1096 runs, 447 doubles, 243 home runs, 1119 RBI, 678 walks, .293/.348/.448 slash, 117 wRC+, and 69.5 WAR. Varela ranks 14th in WAR among catchers and didn’t draw tons of publicity playing for mostly wear teams in the small Salt Lake City market. SP Ken Whelan also made it ten ballots, ending at only 5.0% after peaking at 30.2% in 2018. He was purely a longevity guy who never had any awards, but he played 16 years with six teams. Whelan had a 248-208 record, 3.73 ERA, 4100.1 innings, 3249 strikeouts, 1132 walks, 100 ERA+, and 43.8 WAR. Definitely a Hall of Pretty Good type RF Emmanuel Kao was also notable, falling below 5% on his eighth try at the MLB Hall of Fame. He had three tries on the West African Baseball ballot at 58.6%, 62.9%, and 59.1%, but was oddly disqualified from future WAB ballots. Kao won three MVPs in his six year WAB run, then had one MVP in MLB with New York. He had a combined 2593 hits, 1456 runs, 470 doubles, 703 home runs, 1693 RBI, .283/.346/.575 slash, 166 wRC+, and 91.3 WAR. The combined ballot would be pretty surefire in one league, but his most dominant years came in WAB. In MLB, Kao had 1597 hits, 886 runs, 232 doubles, 453 home runs, 1034 RBI, a .271/.330/.545 slash, 163 wRC+, and 52.6 WAR. He was extremely popular, but not quite tenured enough in MLB to make it. LF Leegan Shea was also worth a mention, who dropped after only six ballots. He won 1998 Rookie of the Year with a 53 homer, 8.9 WAR performance, then won MVP in 1999 with San Francisco with 56 homers. Injuries greatly limited him after that, finishing with 1787 hits, 1068 runs, 258 doubles, 449 home runs, 1115 RBI, .283/.342/.565 slash, 148 wRC+, and 60.2 WAR. It was one of the best starts to an MLB career, but Shea couldn’t sustain it. ![]() Ezekiel “Dutch” Thomas – Right Field – Montreal Maples – 99.3% First Ballot Ezekiel Thomas was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed right fielder from New York City. Nicknamed “Dutch,” Thomas was an incredible contact hitter with strong reliable power, especially against right-handed pitching. At his peak, some scouts called his contact ability a scale-breaking 11/10. He was excellent at avoiding strikeouts and solid at drawing walks. Thomas’s 162 game average got you 42 home runs and 27 doubles, consistently putting him among the top sluggers in MLB. He absolutely mauled righties with an incredible 1.036 OPS and 218 wRC+ for his career. Thomas was still plenty good versus lefties with a .803 OPS and 144 wRC+. He was a very smart baserunner, but his usefulness was limited by poor speed. His biggest flaw was defense as Thomas was truly abysmal with his glove. He played right field primarily, although he did start at first base in his final three seasons. Thomas also sporadically played left field and was hot garbage at any spot. He would’ve been ideal as a designated hitter, but he spent his whole career in the DH-less National Association. You would tolerate terrible defense when you got one of the most efficient bats of all-time. Thomas wasn’t a trouble maker in the clubhouse, but he was considered a bit of a selfish loner. He cared most about his personal results and paycheck more so than the team. But his outstanding bat made him one of the era’s more popular stars. Thomas’s missed some notable time in three of his 16 seasons, but he otherwise had decent enough durability. He attended the University of Missouri with excellent numbers, despite missing a good chunk of his sophomore season to injury. Thomas started 114 games with 138 hits, 88 runs, 25 doubles, 46 home runs, 93 RBI, 64 walks, .324/.422/.707 slash, 232 wRC+, and 10.1 WAR. In the 2003 MLB Draft, Thomas was picked fourth overall by Virginia Beach. He was a starter immediately for the Vikings and took second in Rookie of the Year voting for 2004. Thomas had 6+ WAR each of the next four seasons for Virginia Beach, winning a Silver Slugger in 2006 and earning a third place in 2005’s MVP voting. He would miss a chunk of 2009 between a fractured foot and fractured hand, then lost six weeks in 2010 to biceps tendinitis. Thomas was full strength in 2011 to win his first MVP and second Slugger. In 2011, Thomas posted only the sixth-ever Triple Crown hitting season in MLB history. It hadn’t been done in MLB since Sebastian Lunde in 1946. Thomas had 51 homers and 143 RBI with a .355 average, along with NA-bests in slugging (.659), OPS (1.072), wRC+ (222), and 9.7 WAR. The season would mark his career highs in RBI and hits (211). Virginia Beach had their best season in more than a decade at 91-71, but missed the wild card by one game. The Vikings had been largely mediocre in Thomas’s tenure with losing seasons from 2004-09. They had finally started to turn things around, but a Triple Crown in a contract year made Thomas’s stock rise dramatically. He knew he could get a historic payday and the smaller market Virginia Beach was going to have a tough time affording such a deal. To the chagrin of Vikings fans, Thomas left for free agency at age 28. With Virginia Beach, Thomas had 1390 hits, 673 runs, 200 doubles, 289 home runs, 802 RBI, 357 walks, .328/.385/.587 slash, 196 wRC+, and 49.6 WAR. He had also become very popular nationwide with some dominant runs for the United States in the World Baseball Championship. Thomas won world titles for the Americans in 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2014, and 2017. Thomas’s 2008 run was legendary, winning WBC MVP with 39 hits, 31 runs, 18 homers, 46 RBI, 39 hits, 1.453 OPS, 313 wRC+, and 3.49 WAR over 23 starts. He set new WBC records for WAR by a position player and RBI. The RBI mark is still the WBC record as of 2037 and the WAR ranks 2nd. Thomas‘s homers ranked as the 5th-best WBC, the hits rank 12th, and runs rank 8th. In 2009, Thomas was second in MVP voting with 42 hits, 25 runs, 10 homers, 36 RBI, 1.214 OPS, and 2.7 WAR. The 42 hits are tied for the 4th-best in WBC history. Thomas won his second WBC MVP in 2011 and is one of nine players in event history to win MVP twice. That run had 36 hits, 26 runs, 10 doubles, 14 homers, 32 RBI, 1.565 OPS, 317 wRC+, and 3.05 WAR. Thomas’s 2011 WAR is the 5th-best by a position player. As of 2037, the only players in WBC history to record 3+ WAR twice are Thomas, OF Connor Neumeyer, and SP Bo Jackson. That dominance certainly raised Thomas’s stock and popularity even more. Despite being one of the more notable American WBC players, the most famous years of his pro career came in Quebec. After the 2011 season, Thomas signed an eight-year, $177,600,000 deal with Montreal. The Maples had just ended an 11-year playoff drought the prior year. They fell back below .500 in 2012, but did earn three straight playoff berths from 2013-15. Montreal lost in the second round of 2013 and had first round exits in 2014 and 2015. Thomas’s bat couldn’t bring them to the promised land, but her certainly held up his end with five straight seasons with 6.5+ WAR. He won batting titles in 2013 and 2014, leading in hits and total bases both years. Thomas’s 2014 was stellar with career and association bests in runs (129), homers (53), triple slash (.384/.456/.733), OPS (1.189), wRC+ (271), and WAR (11.3). His OPS was the second-best single season to that point and still ranks fifth as of 2037. Thomas also led in OPS, slugging, and wRC+ in 2015. From these efforts, Thomas won MVPs in 2013, 2014, and 2015; while taking second in 2012. Thomas became the sixth player in National Association history with four or more MVP wins. He won Silver Sluggers from 2011-15 and hit for the cycle in 2012. In the 2018 season, Thomas had a fractured rib and torn thumb ligament keep him out nearly half of the season. His pace was still excellent that year, bouncing back after a slight dip in 2017. Thomas had a shocking decline in 2019 with a 1.5 WAR, .748 OPS season. His strikeout rate soared to 20.8% with 114 Ks after having generally kept the rate below 10% for his career. That was the final year of his Montreal deal with the Maples having fallen back into mediocrity by 2016. For Montreal, Thomas had 1343 hits, 772 runs, 181 doubles, 298 home runs, 771 RBI, a .325/.394/.592 slash, 204 wRC+, and 53.6 WAR. He hoped to fix his batting issues and play again somewhere in 2020. Between the price tag, declining bat, and atrocious defense, no MLB teams were interested in Thomas. After sitting out all of 2020, he retired that winter at age 37. Soon after, Montreal announced that they would retire his #45 uniform. Thomas finished with 2287 games, 2733 hits, 1445 runs, 381 doubles, 587 home runs, 1573 RBI, 758 walks, 889 strikeouts, .327/.390/.589 slash, .979 OPS, 200 wRC+, and 103.2 WAR. Thomas didn’t have the longevity to soar up the counting stat leaderboards. As of 2037, he ranks 61st in home runs and 45th in WAR among position players, but doesn’t crack the top 100 in the other counting stats. His efficiency stats though are quite impressive. Among MLB batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Thomas’s OPS still ranks 20th. His batting average is 45th, OBP is 43rd, and slugging is 28th. Among all of the world’s Hall of Famers as of 2037, Thomas is one of only ten with a career wRC+ of 200 or better. Few batters ever have been more consistently effective than Thomas in baseball history. Because of the lower tallies and no playoff success, Thomas’s name doesn’t come up in the inner circle conversations as often as his rate stats might suggest they should. The abysmal defense also didn’t help his cause, but most agree that there have been few pure hitters in MLB history better. Thomas was a no-doubt Hall of Famer either way at 99.3% to headline a strong three-player class in 2025. |
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#2038 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2025 MLB Hall of Fame (Part 2)
![]() Ustad “Deacon” Shaikh – Left Field – Los Angeles Angels – 83.9% First Ballot Ustad Shaikh was a 6’2’’, 195 pound left-handed left fielder from Timargara, Pakistan; a city of 47,600 people in the country’s north. He was the first Pakistani inducted into MLB’s Hall of Fame and was one of the few in world history to get inducted into a league that he didn’t begin his career in. Shaikh got the nickname “Deacon” in the United States for his booming, preacher-like manner of speaking. Shaikh was an outstanding home run hitter and was especially dominant facing right-handed pitching with a career .957 OPS and 165 wRC+. He wasn’t bad against lefties with .793 OPS and 126 wRC+. On the whole, Shaikh graded as a very solid contact hitter with a great eye for drawing walks and decent strikeout rate. His power was concentrated on dingers with 41 home runs and 22 doubles per his 162 game average. Shaikh was comically slow and sluggish on the basepaths, so he wasn’t going to leg out many extra bags. Around 70% of Shaikh’s career starts were in left field, but he was an awful defender. He played some first base near the end of his career and was only marginally better. About 20% of his starts were as a designated hitter, but most teams were content to keep him in left mostly. Shaikh had excellent durability, playing 140+ games each year from 1998-2012. He was one of the few in baseball history to play in 24 different seasons and nearly competed in four different decades. On top of his hitting prowess, Shaikh was a true fan favorite for his intelligence, work ethic, and selflessness. He became beloved at every stop and became one of the most famous baseball stars to come out of Pakistan. Shaikh pulled that off despite never playing for a pro team in his home country, splitting his career between Turkey and the United States. Despite that, Shaikh proudly represented Pakistan from 1999-2017 in the World Baseball Championship. He did so with impressive stats over 176 games and 148 starts with 147 hits, 101 runs, 16 doubles, 56 home runs, 119 RBI, 81 walks, .272/.392/.617 slash, 190 wRC+, and 9.5 WAR. Shaikh led Pakistan to a fourth place in 2007 and third place in 2010. In 2001, he was second in MVP voting with 1.822 OPS over nine games, 14 hits, 13 runs, 8 homers, 15 RBI, 1.6 WAR, and 412 wRC+. As of 2037 among Pakistanis, Shaikh ranks 2nd in WAR among position players, 3rd in hits, 2nd in runs, 2nd in homers, and 1st in RBI. He’s also 2nd in games played and is the only Pakistani with an OPS above one with more than 100 at-bats. Shaikh ranks 49th in WAR among all position players, 78th in homers, and 73rd in RBI. Shaikh’s professional career began in Turkey with Ankara, who spotted him despite humble beginnings and signed him to a developmental deal in December 1992. After three years in the Alouettes’ academy, Shaikh debuted in the Asian Baseball Federation in 1996 at age 20 with 59 games and 7 starts, although he struggled in limited use. He saw 35 games and 14 starts in 1997 with better results. Shaikh got a full-time roster spot in 1998 and started 109 games, but still wasn’t quite ready with a -0.2 WAR season. Ankara gave him the full-time job in 1999 and he put it all together with a 5.8 WAR effort. He led the league in walks thrice for the Alouettes (1999, 2001, 2002). Shaikh emerged as a top flight player in 2001 and 2002, leading both years in runs scored and on-base percentage. Both seasons had 9+ WAR, 45+ homers, 100+ RBI, and an OPS above one. Shaikh was second in MVP voting both seasons. 2002 had his career highs in runs (125), OPS (1.076), and WAR (9.7). Shaikh’s efforts and the expanded playoffs starting in 2000 helped Ankara go on a six-year playoff streak from 2000-05. They had only first round exits from 2000-02, although Shaikh was great in his limited sample size with 14 starts, 1.079 OPS, and 1.0 WAR. His final Ankara years and his excellent 2001 World Baseball Championship effort put Shaikh on the radar for franchises around the world. He decided not to re-sign with the Alouettes and entered free agency for 2003 heading towards age 27. With Ankara, Shaikh had 779 hits, 472 runs, 153 doubles, 184 home runs, 467 RBI, 408 walks, .282/.386/.542 slash, 168 wRC+, and 31.7 WAR. He was still much younger than most international stars hitting free agency for the first time, putting Shaikh in high demand. He joined Major League Baseball and landed in Tennessee on a four-year, $37,500,000 deal with Nashville. The Knights had won the World Series in 2001 and were the American Association’s runner-up in 2002. Shaikh debuted with 44 home runs and 3.9 WAR, then had 38 homers and 5.6 WAR in 2004. He won his first Silver Slugger in 2004 as a DH. Nashville just missed the playoffs in 2003, then won the division and lost in the second round of 2004. Two years in, Shaikh decided to opt-out and return to free agency heading towards age 29. With Nashville, he had 315 hits, 189 runs, 46 doubles, 82 home runs, 199 RBI, .275/.371/.536 slash, 143 wRC+, and 9.5 WAR. Next was a four-year, $45,500,000 deal with Houston, who had won three straight division titles. Shaikh also only spent two years with the Hornets, but was far more dominant than with the Knights. He won a Silver Slugger in 2006 and took second in MVP voting, leading the AA in homers (53), RBI (132), runs (123), total bases (398), slugging (.649), and wRC+ (180). Houston lost in the second round in 2005 and fell incidentally to Nashville in the 2006 AACS. In 19 playoff starts, Shaikh had 26 hits, 12 runs, 5 doubles, 4 homers, 12 RBI, .942 OPS, and 1.1 WAR. Shaikh again left and for 2007 signed a six-year, $87,400,000 deal with Los Angeles. This started his most famous run shortly before turning 31. In 2008, Shaikh led the American Association with a career-best 59 home runs and won his third Silver Slugger. He led in both homers and RBI in 2012 with 51 and 143. Shaikh also hit 50 homers in 2008 and 52 in 2011. 2010 saw Los Angeles end an 11-year playoff drought, although they lost in the first round in both 2010 and 2011. After the 2010 season, Shaikh opted out of his contract but signed a new four-year, $73,800,000 deal with the Angels. They lost in the second round in 2012 as a wild card. LA exploded in 2013 for a 119-43 record, the second-most wins in MLB history. However, the Angels were stunned with a second round upset loss to Phoenix. Los Angeles won 100 games in 2014 as a wild card behind the Firebirds in the Southwest Division, eventually losing the AACS to Phoenix. Shaikh was underwhelming in his Angels playoff trips with 27 starts, 21 hits, 10 runs, 2 doubles, 3 home runs, 12 RBI, .226/.301/.366 slash, 83 wRC+, and 0.2 WAR. Shaikh missed most of the 2014 season between a torn quadriceps and fractured finger, but did make it back for the playoffs. Although he may have underperformed in the playoffs, Shaikh’s regular season numbers were quite good and he was beloved by Angels fans. With LA he had 1092 hits, 669 runs, 115 doubles, 320 home runs, 769 RBI, 393 walks, .281/.365/.562 slash, 155 wRC+, and 35.4 WAR. The Angels retired his #34 uniform at the end of his career for his eight-year efforts. After the 2014 season, Shaikh was now 38-years old and a free agent again. Houston brought him back on a one-year deal and he returned to form with 40 home runs and 5.9 WAR. Between the Hornets stints, Shaikh had 545 hits, 314 runs, 70 doubles, 138 home runs, 326 RBI, 187 walks, .307/.389/.590 slash, 163 wRC+, and 19.4 WAR. Shaikh signed for two years and $35,200,000 with Atlanta in 2016. Back issues cost him a chunk of 2016, but he still managed 3.1 WAR over 109 games. The Aces traded him in the offseason though to St. Louis, where he put up similar stats in 2017. The Cardinals extended Shaikh for two-years and $21,000,000 and used him in a platoon role for 2018. He was reduced to the bench completely though in 2019. Although he only played 70 games and started one in 2019, Shaikh hit four homers; becoming the 26th member of MLB’s 600 home run club. For the Cardinals, Shaikh had 199 hits, 124 runs, 21 doubles, 54 home runs, 114 RBI, 85 walks, a .233/.321/.457 slash, 139 wRC, and 5.6 WAR. Those were still pretty solid numbers from a guy in his 40s. Shaikh retired after the 2019 campaign at age 43. In MLB, Shaikh played 2274 games with 2253 hits, 1356 runs, 272 doubles, 617 home runs, 1472 RBI, 850 walks, a .280/.366/.551 slash, 153 wRC+, and 73.1 WAR. As of 2037, Shaikh ranks 47th in homers, but misses the top 100 in other stats. Still, it is worth a reminder that his MLB run started in his age 27 season. Some think Shaikh could have been the first to break Elijah Cashman’s long-standing home run record had he been in MLB from the beginning. Counting his ABF stats, Shaikh had 3131 games, 3032 hits, 1828 runs, 425 doubles, 801 home runs, 1939 RBI, 1258 walks, .281/.372/.549 slash, 157 wRC+, and 104.7 WAR. That stat line would make him an easy lock and most MLB Hall of Fame voters gave him at least some credit for the Ankara run. Shaikh wasn’t an inner circle guy, but the voters felt he was worthy of the first ballot selection at 83.9%, joining the three-player 2025 class. ![]() Easton “Kingfish” MacGregor – Starting Pitcher – Memphis Mountain Cats – 77.9% First Ballot Easton MacGregor was a 6’8’’, 205 pound left-handed pitcher from Warren, Michigan; a Detroit suburb with around 139,000 people. MacGregor had very solid stuff and movement along with great control. His fastball peaked at 96-98 mph and was his best pitch. MacGregor also had a stellar changeup along with a nice splitter and okay curveball. For reasons never really explained, he earned the nickname “Kingfish.” MacGregor’s stamina was quite good early in his career and he had excellent durability for most of his run. He tossed 215+ innings each year from 2005-17. MacGregor had a very good pickoff move, but was a weaker defender. He was a team captain who earned tons of respect for his leadership, loyalty, and work ethic. MacGregor wasn’t a megastar with fans, but he was a favorite among players and coaches. Nothing gets scouts more excited than seeing a tall lefty. MacGregor had a lot of potential from the start, but most teams figured that he’d attend college. Straight out of Detroit Community High School, Memphis picked MacGregor in the sixth round of the 2000 MLB Draft. He was the 294th overall pick and would be the latest-ever draft pick to earn induction into the MLB Hall of Fame. Rarely even did guys picked that late even make the roster. MacGregor decided to sign with the Mountain Cats and skip college, spending four years in minor league Jackson. He struggled there and clearly wasn’t ready for pro baseball yet. Still, MacGregor’s high character allowed him to take his lumps and power on. He debuted for Memphis with four poor relief appearances in 2004 at age 21. The Mountain Cats didn’t give up on MacGregor, debuting him with good results as a full-time starter in 2005. He did get rocked in his one playoff start, allowing six runs in 5.2 innings. Memphis was mostly mediocre despite MacGregor’s efforts. The 2005 first round exit had ended a 12-year playoff drought. They won their division but lost in the second round of 2007’s postseason. Unfortunately, that was their final winning season for two decades. You certainly couldn’t blame MacGregor for the team’s failings, as he had seven seasons above 5+ WAR. MacGregor’s best effort came in 2008 with his lone ERA title at 2.23. He also had his career bests in strikeouts (238), innings (290.1), and WAR (9.2), but finished third in Pitcher of the Year voting. During the campaign, Memphis signed him to a six-year, $59,900,000 extension. MacGregor was third again in 2009 with a 2.34 ERA effort and 7.6 WAR. His production dipped a bit for the remaining Memphis seasons, but MacGregor remained a good starter. For the Mountain Cats, MacGregor finished with a 142-111 record, 3.13 ERA, 2399.2 innings, 1915 strikeouts, 479 walks, 121 ERA+, and 57.2 WAR. Memphis would later retire his #8 uniform for efforts. The struggling Mountain Cats decided to move on from MacGregor after the 2013 season, trading him to Philadelphia for two prospects. MacGregor started with the Phillies at age 31, joining a team that had won back-to-back National Association pennants and had won the World Series in 2012. Philadelphia wanted him long-term from the start and before his first start gave MacGregor a five-year, $116 million extension. Philly remained competitive with five playoff berths from 2014-19, although they never made it beyond the second round. In 46 playoff innings, MacGregor was quite good with a 1.96 ERA, 49 strikeouts, and 1.8 WAR. In 2015, MacGregor finished second in Pitcher of the Year voting with a 2.23 ERA, 70.0 WAR season. Then in 2016, he posted his career best ERA at 2.16 and led in wins for the only time at 21-7, which earned MacGregor his lone Pitcher of the Year win. He was solid again in 2017 and 2018, but lost some time in 2018 due to shoulder inflammation. MacGregor had one year left on his deal, but Philadelphia voided the team option year and sent him to free agency at age 36. In five seasons, he had an 81-48 record, 2.62 ERA, 1208 innings, 1040 strikeouts, 153 walks, 133 ERA+, and 27.9 WAR. MacGregor was generally well liked by Phillies fans for his efforts and had interested teams for 2019. He ended up inking a two-year, $35,800,000 deal with Dallas. He still ate innings that year for the Dalmatians for 4.4 WAR, but his ERA rose to 3.92, the second-worst of his career. Dallas traded him in the offseason to San Francisco for two prospects. Sadly, MacGregor never pitched for the Gold Rush as he suffered a partially torn UCL in spring training 2020. Instead of trying to make a comeback, MacGregor retired shortly after his 38th birthday. MacGregor finished with a 3.02 ERA, 234-174 record, 3853.1 innings, 3129 strikeouts, 675 walks, 309/476 quality starts, 237 complete games, 45 shutouts, 123 ERA+, and 89.5 WAR. As of 2037, MacGregor ranks 89th in wins, 83rd in strikeouts, 34th in complete games, 45th in shutouts, and 65th in WAR amongst pitchers. He was rarely considered THE guy, but MacGregor was a solid top ten to top five level pitcher for much of his career. He hit most of the minimum pre-requisite milestones and had a Pitcher of the Year award and an ERA title. MacGregor had garnered plenty of respect within the game and it got him 77.9% and a first ballot induction to cap off Major League Baseball’s 2025 Hall of Fame class. |
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#2039 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2025 CABA Hall of Fame
Pitcher Cristian Mata was the lone inductee for the Central American Baseball Association Hall of Fame in 2025 with a debut at 89.0%. Two other debuting pitchers barely missed the 66% requirement with Adrian Estrella at 65.0% and Mateo Ramirez at 62.9%. SP Secretario Sanz was the best returner with 54.1% on his eighth ballot. 1B Hasan Alvizo was the best position player with a 54.1% debut. Also cracking 50% was SP Montell Donald with 53.0% on his third go and LF Hugo Garcia with 50.9% with his third ballot.
![]() The lone player dropped after ten tries was RF Enrique Mendoza, who peaked at only 13.6% but managed to survive to a 5.7% tenth ballot. Mendoza was a nice leadoff man who led in hits thrice and had a batting title. However, his 18-year career had forays to Africa and Europe that greatly lowered his CABA tallies. Mendoza had 1672 hits, 719 runs, 277 doubles, 146 triples, 35 home runs, 397 RBI, 615 stolen bases, a .349/.367/.489 slash, 150 wRC+, and 36.9 WAR. He does notably rank 16th in batting average as of 2037 among CABA hitters with 3000+ plate appearances. However, few disagreed that he was a “Hall of Pretty Good” type guy. ![]() Cristian Mata – Starting Pitcher – Nicaragua Navigators – 89.0% First Ballot Cristian Mata was a 6’6’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Las Guias Oriente, a town of about 1,200 people on Panama’s southern coast. Mata was a fireballer with great stuff, movement, and control. His 99-101 mph cutter was world class and was often countered by an excellent forkball. Mata also had a good curveball and a rarely seen changeup, leading to an extreme groundball tendency. Few aces in his era splintered more opponent bats. Mata’s stamina was considered weak relative to most CABA aces, but he stayed healthy in his 20s and early 30s to still deliver solid innings. He had a strong pickoff move and was considered a solid defensive pitcher. Mata was a fan favorite and one of the hardest working guys in the game. He became absolutely adored in Nicaragua, where he spent his entire pro career. Despite growing up in a small town in Panama, Mata was tall and threw hard even as a teenager. That caught the eye of a scout from nearby Nicaragua who gave him a developmental deal in December 2001. Mata spent four full years in the Navigators’ academy and was brought up at age 21 in 2006. He struggled as a rookie in a split starter/relief role with a lousy 5.52 ERA. Mata fared much better in year two with a 3.76 ERA and earned a full-time rotation slot after that. From 2008-17, Mata was worth 5+ WAR each season. On May 24, 2008, Mata tossed a no-hitter with 10 strikeouts against Havana. He took third in Pitcher of the Year voting and helped Nicaragua end a 17-year playoff drought. They were the second wild card, but went on a surprise run and won the Caribbean League, eventually losing to Hermosillo in the CABA Championship. In 32.1 playoff innings, Mata had a 2.23 ERA, 37 strikeouts, and 1.2 WAR. Mata was second in 2009’s Pitcher of the Year voting and signed a six-year, $52,660,000 extension in the offseason. Nicaragua became a regular contender and had the top seed in 2009, 2010, and 2011. However, each year they were denied in the CLCS. The Navigators would narrowly miss the playoffs in 2012 and 2013. Mata was iffy in the 2009 playoffs, but was solid in both 2010 and 2011. He took third in 2011’s Pitcher of the Year voting, second in 2012, second in 2013, and second in 2014. Mata ultimately never won the top honor despite leading the Caribbean in WAR from 2012-14. He led with 300 strikeouts in 2012 and 303 Ks in 2014. Mata led in wins in 2014 at 20-9 and had career highs in wins, strikeouts, and WAR (8.0). Nicaragua made it back to the playoffs as a wild card in 2014 and went on another surprise run, winning the Caribbean League again. This time, they upset Torreon to win their first-ever CABA Championship. Mata was underwhelming in this run with a 4.78 ERA over 26.1 innings. However, he was excellent in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 2.12 ERA in 29.2 innings, 2-2 record, 44 strikeouts, 4 walks, 191 ERA+, and 1.6 WAR. Despite Mata’s efforts, Nicaragua finished 19th at 6-13. His career playoff stats mirrored his regular season career fairly closely with 119.2 innings, 3.08 ERA, 9-2 record, 125 strikeouts, 17 walks, 128 ERA+, and 2.9 WAR. Even with the weaker 2014 playoff run, Mata earned a six-year, $78,900,000 extension in March 2015. He never reached his previous peaks, but gave the Navigators three more solid years of starting. Nicaragua fell back into the middle of the standings at this point and were near the bottom by the 2020s. Mata was still a beloved figure for Navigators fans and his #17 uniform was often the most common at the ballpark. Nicaragua would retire his #17 at the end of his career. In 2018, the 33-year old Mata only made it two starts before suffering a damaged elbow ligament, knocking him out 12 months. It was the first major injury of his career and he rehabbed back for 2019. Unfortunately, Mata blew out his elbow again in July 2019. He hoped to return possibly in late 2020 or by 2021, but he suffered a setback in June 2020. Doctors advised Mata to retire at only age 35. Mata finished with a 179-122 record, 3.01 ERA, 2784 innings, 3029 strikeouts, 505 walks, 231/371 quality starts, 60 complete games, 12 shutouts, 132 ERA+, and 68.7 WAR. His shortened career limits his spot on leaderboards, but he does rank 84th in strikeouts and 69th in pitching WAR as of 2037. Mata never won POTY or had an ERA title, but some argued he was perhaps the best CABA pitcher that never earned the honor. His rate stats were certainly impressive and he was easily a top five pitcher in his prime. Mata’s popularity and his role in a sustained run for Nicaragua pushed him across the line for all but the most stringent doubters. At 89.0%, Mata was a first ballot selection and the lone inductee for the Central American Baseball Association Hall of Fame in 2025. |
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#2040 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,613
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2025 EAB Hall of Fame
![]() East Asia Baseball’s 2025 Hall of Fame class had two players both receiving 99.0% in their debut with OF Sang-Jun Gang and 2B/1B Yoo Sen. The best returner was SP Jong-Hyeon Chung at 50.5% on his sixth ballot. No one else was above 50% and no one was dropped after ten failed ballots. ![]() Sang-Jun Gang – Outfield – Kumamoto Monsters – 99.0% First Ballot Sang-Jun Gang was a 6’3’’, 210 pound left-handed outfielder from Daegu, South Korea. Gang was an excellent contact hitter with reliably strong power and a respectable eye for walks, although his strikeout rate was subpar. He absolutely mashed against right-handed pitching with a career 1.022 OPS and 188 wRC+. Versus lefties, Gang had .778 OPS and 129 wRC+ His 162 game average got you 40 home runs, 25 doubles, and 12 triples. Around 45% of Gang’s career hits went for extra bases. He had very good speed to leg out extra bags, although his baserunning instincts were merely okay. Gang was too aggressive on steal attempts and got caught far more than he succeeded. Still, he was dangerous enough to force pitchers to pay close attention. Gang bounced around the outfield in his career with just over 40% of his starts coming in left, where he graded as a reliably good defender. Close to 30% of his starts came in center field mostly earlier in his career, but Gang was mediocre without the needed range. He played a bit of right at the end of his career with iffy results. Gang also saw a decent number of starts as a designated hitter. The versatility helped Gang’s value as did his ironman durability. Apart from his rookie year, Gang played 153+ games in each year of his 18 year career. He did frustrate some coaches and teammates though with a perceived selfishness and poor work ethic. Even if he coasted on natural talent, that talent was remarkable and helped Gang emerge as one of the biggest Korean baseball stars of his era. Gang was impressive playing for Chung-Ang University in Seoul and was picked first overall in the 2002 EAB Draft by Kumamoto. The Monsters had him as a part-timer with inconsistencies as a rookie. Gang was a full-timer in his sophomore campaign and won his first of three consecutive Silver Sluggers in center field. It also started a streak of nine straight seasons at 6+ WAR for Kumamoto. After the 2005 season, the Monsters gave Gang an eight-year, $43,420,000 contract extension. 2006 was Gang’s first time leading the Japan League in a good stat with 129 RBI, 360 total bases, and .659 OPS. It was also his first of four seasons with an OPS above one for the Monsters. In 2007, Gang led with a career best 1.116 OPS, .704 slugging, and .412 OBP. He posted 9.9 WAR, 133 RBI, 47 homers, and 107 runs. Gang also had his career highs in hits (200) and batting average (.352), taking third in MVP voting. Kumamoto had bounced back for winning seasons from 2005-09, but it wasn’t until 2010 that they ended an 11-year playoff drought. That year, Gang won his first Silver Slugger in left field and his first MVP. He won his first batting title (.349) and led in OPS (1.079), and wRC+ (221). Gang also had a career high 117 runs. He had a strong postseason with 1.031 OPS, 13 hits, 9 runs, 5 homers, and 13 BRI in 10 starts. The Monsters would fall in the Japan League Championship Series to Kyoto. Kumamoto got the top seed in 2011 at 100-62, but was upset by Sapporo in the first round. Gang repeated as MVP and won another Slugger in 2011, winning another batting title, hitting for the cycle and posting his career bests in WAR (11.2) and wRC+ (234). In 2012, he won his lone Gold Glove in left. Kumamoto dropped to 79-83 that year and Gang disappointed Monsters fans by opting out of his contract. This made him a highly touted free agent at age 31. For Kumamoto, Gang had 1643 hits, 900 runs, 262 doubles, 120 triples, 366 home runs, 998 RBI, 492 walks, 292 steals, .307/.369/.607 slash, 190 wRC+, and 69.8 WAR. Despite the awkward ending, Gang remained very popular with Monsters fans and his #28 uniform would eventually be retired. Gang ended up returning to his hometown Daegu on a five-year, $90,800,000 deal with the Diamondbacks. Gang’s addition helped Daegu post an impressive 109-53 record in 2013, going all the way to defeat Hiroshima for the EAB Championship. Gang won his third MVP and sixth Slugger, posting league bests in homers (49), and RBI (139). He also led in OPS for the fourth time and slugging for the fifth. In the playoff run, Gang had 17 starts, 17 hits, 15 runs, 8 homers, 15 RBI, and .966 OPS. However, he did struggle with .594 OPS and -0.1 WAR in the Baseball Grand Championship. Daegu would finish at 10-9 in the event in a three-way tie for seventh. Daegu shockingly collapsed to 67-95 in 2014 and wouldn’t be back above .500 until 2019. Gang was still strong in 2014 with his seventh Silver Slugger, but did see his production decrease and strikeout rate increase the next two years. He opted out of his deal after the 2016 season, but signed a new three-year, $33,100,000 deal with the Diamondbacks. Gang bounced back a bit in 2017 to win his lone Silver Slugger in right field, giving him eight for his career. While in his hometown, Gang crossed the 600 home run and 2500 hit thresholds. The run ended after six seasons as Daegu traded him before the 2019 campaign to Busan for two prospects. For the Diamondbacks, Gang had 1030 hits, 562 runs, 139 doubles, 71 triples, 239 home runs, 623 RBI, .303/.355/.596 slash, 155 wRC+, and 28.9 WAR. Gang’s one year with the Blue Jays was impressive at age 37 with a career high 54 home runs, his only 50+ season. Gang also had a league-best 172 wRC+ and posted 6.7 WAR, although Busan finished 79-83. This surprisingly was his final season in EAB as despite his 2019 efforts, he couldn’t get the big deal he wanted. He found that money in an unexpected spot by moving to Belarus on a three-year, $35 million deal with Minsk of Eurasian Professional Baseball. He didn’t adjust well to EPB though, posting only 0.4 WAR and .739 despite starting the full season for the Miners. They got a wild card, but lost in the first round. Gang decided to retire that winter shortly after his 39th birthday. For his combined pro career, Gang had 2796 games, 2986 hits, 1651 runs, 439 doubles, 215 triples, 687 home runs, 1846 RBI, 831 walks, 539 steals, .301/.358/.596 slash, 172 wRC+, and 105.8 WAR. In EAB, Gang finished at 2635 games, 2850 hits, 1575 runs, 420 doubles, 201 triples, 659 home runs, 1739 RBI, 790 walks, 2234 strikeouts, 514 steals, 691 caught stealing, .305/.363/.605 slash, .968 OPS, 176 wRC+, and 105.4 WAR. As of 2037, Gang ranks 36th in hits, 26th in runs, 13th in total bases (5649), 92nd in doubles, 89th in triples, 20th in homers, 21st in RBI, 85th in walks, 40th in strikeouts, 9th in caught stealing, and 24th in WAR among position players. Against all EAB batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Gang’s OPS ranks 25th, his OBP is 97th, and slugging is 22nd. He falls just outside of the inner-circle tier of guys, but will crack some top 25 lists of EAB position players. Gang was certainly a slam dunk for the Hall of Fame in 2025 and was nearly unanimous at 99.0% to co-headline with Yoo Sen. ![]() Yoo “Hands” Sen – Second/First Base – Incheon Inferno – 99.0% First Ballot Yoo Sen was a 6’0’’, 200 pound switch-hitting infielder from Incheon, South Korea. He was nicknamed “hands” simply because he had unusually large hands. Sen was best known for his extraordinary eye at the plate, as he drew more walks than any other EAB player ever by a healthy margin. He was an above average contact hitter and his strikeout rate was merely decent, but his eye was so strong that he regularly was at the top of the on-base percentage leaderboards. Sen’s power wasn’t prolific, but it was healthy and reliable with 32 home runs, 26 doubles, and 3 triples per his 162 game average. Unfortunately, Sen wasn’t a baserunning threat with poor speed and skills. His career was split almost even defensively between second and first base along with occasional games as a designated hitter. In his 20s, Sen was basically exclusively at 2B, but he was an absolutely atrocious defender there. He split between 2B/1B in his early 30s before moving full-time to 1B from 2012 onward. Sen graded as below average on the whole at first, but he wasn’t actively awful like at 2B. He even showed occasional flashes of skill at first, even winning a Gold Glove in 2017. Durability was generally a strength, although he did run into some back and knee issues. Sen had a 22-year career and played 130+ games in most of those sans the very start and end. He was a true fan favorite with a terrific work ethic, strong loyalty, and selflessness. Sen became beloved by fans across all of South Korea, but he was the favorite son of his hometown Incheon. Sen got to live out his childhood dream with his hometown squad, who inked him to a developmental deal in November 1994. He spent most of four years in the Inferno academy, but did debut in 1998 at age 19 with 30 games and two starts. Sen was rostered full-time in 1999 for 120 games, but only started 47 with decent results. Sen started most of 2000, then was an undisputed starter for the next 16 years after that in Incheon. 2000 was the first of 14 seasons where Sen led the Korea League in walks. From 2000-17, he had at least 80 walks in all but one season because of injury. Sen drew 100+ walks in eight different seasons, peaking with 114 in 2007. That was the fifth-most in an EAB single-season with those in front of it all coming in the 1920s. As of 2037, there have only been 31 seasons in EAB of 100+ walks with ¼ of them from Sen. Incheon had been hot garbage for most of the 1990s, but 2001 marked the start of a four-year playoff streak. They lost in the first round in 2011, then had a surprise run all the way to the EAB Championship in 2002 as a wild card. The Inferno beat Osaka in the final with Sen getting 15 hits, 10 runs, 2 homers, 6 RBI, and 7 walks in 16 playoff games. Truly the childhood dream was fulfilled for Sen winning the title with his hometown team. The Inferno lost to Seongnam in the 2003 KLCS. That season saw Sen’s first Silver Slugger at 2B and started a five-year streak leading the KL in on-base percentage. That winter, Sen signed an eight-year, $68,800,000 extension with Incehon. He won additional Sluggers from 2004-10 at second base, then got one at first base in 2011. Incheon got the top seed in 2004 at 103-59, but was upset in the first round by Seoul. The Inferno missed the playoffs in 2005, then lost in the first round of 2006. They dropped to below .500 for the next two years before hovering around .500 from 2009-11. Sen carried on at a high level, although he generally didn’t have enough power to get MVP looks. In 2005, he had his career highs in homers (49), RBI (121), batting average (.336), OPS (1.057), wRC+ (188), and WAR (8.7). Before the 2011 season, the now 32-year old Sen signed a new five-year, $52,500,000 extension. This year he finished third in MVP voting with a career-best .439 OBP, his seventh time leading in the stat. As of 2037, this ranks as the 15th-best single-season OBP in EAB. It was also one of three seasons for Sen with 8+ WAR and one of four with an OPS above one. Incheon got back to the playoffs but went one-and-done in 2012. They were below .500 in 2013, but Sen led the league with 8.7 WAR and 181 wRC+, taking third in MVP voting. The Inferno won the division at 102-60 in 2014, but again was ousted in the first round. They spent the next three years around .500 outside of the playoffs. For his playoff career for Incheon, Sen had 47 games, 49 hits, 28 runs, 8 doubles, 7 homers, 27 RBI, 23 walks, .314/.389/.500 slash, 144 wRC+, and 1.9 WAR. He also saw limited play from 2002-05 for South Korea in the World Baseball Championship with .687 OPS, 101 wRC+, and 0.6 WAR. In 2015, he crossed the 2500 hit, 1500 run, and 500 home run milestones. Unfortunately that year, he missed the autumn with a torn back muscle. Sen didn’t meet the vesting criteria for the remainder of his contract and became a free agent for the first time at age 37. He was disappointed to leave, but understood and remained beloved in his hometown. Sen signed for two years and $24,400,000 with Seoul, maintaining his usual strong production even in his late 30s. In 2016, Sen became EAB’s all-time leader in walks by passing Ji-U Shin’s 1549 mark which had held since 1972. Both seasons, the Seahawks lost in the KLCS to Changwon. Sen made 20 playoff starts with 21 hits, 13 runs, 4 doubles, 7 homers, 15 RBI, 10 walks, a .300/.395/.657 slash, 179 wRC+, and 1.2 WAR. In total for Seoul, Sen had 305 hits, 184 runs, 42 doubles, 62 home runs, 176 RBI, 204 walks, .297/.414/.529 slash, 156 wRC+, and 12.8 WAR. Now 39-years old and a free agent again, Sen wanted to return home and finish his career with Incheon. The Inferno were bottom-tier by this point, but were happy to welcome Sen back home on a two-year, $27,600,000 deal. Sen barely played in 2018 though with a torn ACL knocking him out most of the season. He didn’t meet the vesting criteria for 2019, but negotiated a new smaller one year, $6,400,000 deal for Incheon in 2019. Sen struggled in this last year with 0.6 WAR and .680 OPS over 125 games. He wanted to play somewhere in 2020, but went unsigned and retired that winter at age 42. Immediately upon retirement, Sen’s #16 uniform was retired by Incheon. Between runs for the Inferno, Sen had 2649 games, 2671 hits, 1604 runs, 432 doubles, 52 triples, 521 home runs, 1542 RBI, 1637 walks, .299/.407/.534 slash, 156 wRC+, and 101.7 WAR. The final tallies had 2949 games, 2976 hits, 1788 runs, 474 doubles, 57 triples, 583 home runs, 1718 RBI, 1841 walks, 2025 strikeouts, 96 steals, .299/.408/.533 slash, .941 OPS, 156 wRC+, and 114.5 WAR. Sen is the undisputed EAB walks leader still in 2037 with a 292 walk gap to second place. Among all players in world history, Sen is 4th in walks behind only MLB’s Chris Louden (2106) and B.J. Pasternack (1997) as well as AAB’s Luke Tembo (1956). On the EAB leaderboards, Sen ranks 14th in games, 29th in hits, 10th in runs, 26th in total bases (5313), 37th in doubles (474), 45th in homers, 25th in RBI, and 17th in WAR among position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances, his on-base percentage is second only to Ji-Hoo Kim’s .420 and he ranks 18th amongst all world Hall of Famers. Sen’s OPS also still ranks 50th best among EAB qualifiers. Sen is the unquestionable EAB GOAT when it comes to drawing walks and is a top five level guy in world history at that skill. He’s probably just on the borderline of being considered “inner circle” for East Asia Baseball’s Hall of Fame since he never won MVP. Sen makes many top 25 and top 20 lists, but lacked the raw power or great defense needed to raise higher up the list. He was a slam dunk HOFer though and remains one of Korea’s favorite players well into retirement. At 99.0%, Sen co-headlined the 2025 class with Sang-Jun Gang. |
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