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First Place, Baby!
2007-09-27 22:49
by Mike Carminati

The Phils charged out of the gate tonight scoring four runs in the first inning with some timely hitting and even more timely Brave errors.  Jimmy Rollins got it going, lining a single on the first pitch from John Smoltz.  He scored on a Victorino bunt and a throwing error by Smoltz. Another error and line-drive homer from Ryan Howard put them up to stay 4-0.

 

Meanwhile the Mets behind Pedro Martinez were in the midst of being shut out by Joel Pineiro on a three-hitter.  And—poof!—the Phillies were in first place for the first time this season. Hell, it’s the first time they have been in first place since opening day last year (April 2) and that’s just because all of the teams in their division were 0-0.  The last time they were tied for first with an actual record was a year earlier, April 6, 2005, when they were tied at 1-1 with three other teams in the division.

 

This all comes after trailing the Mets by 7 games just 15 days ago—right before the Phils swept the Mets. Since September 12, the Phillies are 11-3 while the Mets have slouched to 4-10, including their current four-game losing streak.  The Mets now play host to the Marlins and the Phils welcome the Nats. Things look bright, bit the Phils do have Adam Eaton and the slumping Jamie Moyer starting in the last two games.

 

Anyway, if the Phillies pull off the division title, they will be the first team to come back from at least seven games back after September 6.  Here are the latest that any team trailed by at least seven games and then went on to win a division or league title, of course, led by the Cards dancing on the ’64 Phils grave:

 

Team

Yr

Lg

Div

GB

MoDay

W

L

St. Louis Cardinals

1964

NL

 

7.5

0906

93

69

St. Louis Cardinals

1934

NL

 

7

0906

95

58

Chicago Cubs

1938

NL

 

7

0904

89

63

Boston Beaneaters

1891

NL

 

7

0904

87

51

Boston Red Stockings

1873

NA

 

7

0903

43

16

Seattle Mariners

1995

AL

W

7.5

0831

79

66

New York Giants

1951

NL

 

7

0831

98

59

St. Louis Cardinals

1930

NL

 

7.5

0830

92

62

Baltimore Orioles

1974

AL

E

7

0830

91

71

New York Yankees

1978

AL

E

7

0830

100

63

 

Only one other team was behind by seven games as late as September 12 and was able to grab a division/league lead. The 1964 Reds were seven games behind the Phillies on September 18.  They grabbed a share of the league lead (with the Cards) on October 3 only to fall to third by the end of the year.

 

Meanwhile, the Yankees locked up their thirteenth straight playoff appearance while eliminating the reigning AL champ from postseason. The reigning World Series champ, the Cards, were already out.

 

The Tigers and Cards are actually competing for the worst combined record by two World Series competitors the year after the Series.  At least, they are in the top ten:

 

Yr

NextYr W

NextYr L

PCT

Winner

Loser

 

1914

126

178

.414

Boston Braves

Philadelphia Athletics

 

1997

143

181

.441

Florida Marlins

Cleveland Indians

 

1966

149

174

.461

Baltimore Orioles

Los Angeles Dodgers

 

1993

109

121

.474

Toronto Blue Jays

Philadelphia Phillies

 

1985

155

168

.480

Kansas City Royals

St. Louis Cardinals

 

1964

157

166

.486

St. Louis Cardinals

New York Yankees

 

1990

158

166

.488

Cincinnati Reds

Oakland Athletics

 

1973

161

163

.497

Oakland Athletics

New York Mets

 

2006

161

156

.508

St. Louis Cardinals

Detroit Tigers

 

 

1918

141

136

.509

Boston Red Sox

Chicago Cubs

 

As far as the Yankees feat—it grows to 14 straight years if you include the strike shortened 1994 season—is the longest streak in baseball history:

 

Yr Missed Pos

Team

Last Yr Missed Pos

Diff

None

New York Yankees

1993

14

2006

Atlanta Braves

1994

11

1954

New York Yankees

1948

5

1965

New York Yankees

1959

5

1976

Oakland Athletics

1970

5

2000

Cleveland Indians

1994

5

1889

St. Louis Browns

1884

4

1925

New York Giants

1920

4

1940

New York Yankees

1935

4

1959

New York Yankees

1954

4

2004

Oakland Athletics

1999

4

 

As far as the other end of the spectrum is concerned, the Brewers are looking to end their 25-year postseason drought.  That ties them for the 14th longest streak in baseball history:

 

1944

St. Louis Browns

None

42

1995

Cleveland Indians

1954

40

1971

Oakland Athletics

1931

39

1959

Chicago White Sox

1919

39

1984

Chicago Cubs

1945

38

1950

Philadelphia Phillies

1915

34

1996

Texas Rangers

None

34

1948

Boston Braves

1914

33

1960

Pittsburgh Pirates

1927

32

1965

Minnesota Twins

1933

31

1915

Philadelphia Phillies

None

31

1948

Cleveland Indians

1920

27

1946

Boston Red Sox

1918

27

1976

Philadelphia Phillies

1950

25

None

Milwaukee Brewers

1982

25

1934

Detroit Tigers

1909

24

1983

Chicago White Sox

1959

23

None

Kansas City Royals

1985

22

1924

Washington Senators

None

22

1968

Detroit Tigers

1945

22

1966

Baltimore Orioles

1944

21

1967

Boston Red Sox

1946

20

1961

Cincinnati Reds

1940

20

1941

Brooklyn Dodgers

1920

20

 

Comments
2007-09-28 11:08:04
1.   Peter
In all fairness to the Braves, they were the wildcard leader when the '94 season ended.
2007-09-28 12:40:46
2.   Mike Carminati
Maybe it's splittin hairs, but I am just giving the division leaders credit. It's arbitrary but it's my site after all, and it was the first year for the wild card. If you give the Braves credit for the wild card, that gives them the lead with 15 years (above plus 1991-94).
2007-09-28 17:54:59
3.   rbj
I'd have to not count 1994 at all. No telling what would have happened.
2007-09-30 14:23:46
4.   Murray
Congrats, Mike! Enjoy the playoffs. Hope you can score some tickets.
2007-10-01 04:36:48
5.   Yu-Hsing Chen
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
2007-10-01 09:53:29
6.   Mike Carminati
Thanks, Murray.

Congrats to all Phillies fans, big and small.

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