This is my time of year.
As the
leaves are starting to fall, the baseball season is in full tilt with the
annual run to the World Series.
There is no
sport more exciting than baseball, especially in the games leading up to the
Fall Classic.
The eight
best teams in baseball are all vying for the ultimate prize, the World Series
Championship, and this year, I think that any one of the eight teams could win
it all; there isn't a bad one in the bunch, and they all deserve to be where
they are.
The playoffs
started yesterday with a bang, as Phillies pitcher Roy Halladay pitched the
first post-season no-hitter since Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World
Series, leading the Phils over the Reds 4-0.
This was
preceded by the Texas Rangers and Cliff Lee topping the Tampa Bay Rays 5-1, and
was followed by the New York Yankees defeating the Minnesota Twins 6-4.
Today has a
slate of three games: Texas at Tampa Bay, New York at Minnesota, and in the
first game of their series, Atlanta at San Francisco.
Anybody who
says that baseball is too slow, too boring, and too old fashioned, should watch
these games. Every pitch, every play, and every at-bat is important, and with
the crowds as loud as ever, you just know that even as we approach the middle
of October, this is still baseball season.
Sorry,
football lovers and ESPN, in spite of what you think--and in spite of what your
brackets tell you--this is baseball season, and will be until the final pitch
is thrown in the final World Series game, which might be in early November.
Halladay's
triumph yesterday was clearly incredible. He joined the Yankees' Larsen, who
defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers with his perfecto, as the only pitchers in
baseball history to throw a no-hit, no-run game in the postseason. Again, this
feat was not done against some also ran, although that would have been
impressive too--this was done against the Reds, one of the top teams--and top
hitting teams--in the sport.
Texas has
proven that they are a team to be dealt with. They haven't been this far in a
season in years, and they are a legitimate contender, as are the Rays, who
faltered yesterday but won't do that too consistently.
The Yankees
always seem to be one of the teams that could be in the World Series, and they
always seem to dominate the Twins, but one game does not make this series a
done deal. As a die-hard Yankees fan, I know the Twins are to be reckoned with.
And the
Giants and Braves are two very good teams that will duke it out starting today.
What more
can I say? The National Pastime is as strong as ever, and even though it
doesn't generate as much betting interest as football does, it is our national
sport because it is pure sport--no betting, no phony fans just in it to win
their brackets, no hangers-on.
Baseball is
for real sports fans, and with that being the case, real sports fans really
enjoyed the regular season and can now sit back and watch eight finalists vie
for the World Series trophy, which the Yankees are defending.
It doesn't
get better than this, does it?
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