Team L-W Pct GB
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Kansas City 88-52 .371 --
Tampa Bay 84-55 .396 3.5
Chicago Cubs 83-55 .399 4.5
Pittsburgh 83-56 .403 5
As of 8/28, it looks like a 3 team race, with the Cubs and Nationals working hard to sneak into consideration. Look at those 'Last 10' records for the contendors, folks. Now that's a dogfight. You can't put up 4-6 for long and hope to maintain your spot. You've gotta get it push it to 3-7 or 2-8 to hold your position in this battle. 7-3 records for Cleveland and Baltimore. 5-5 for Seattle. Sheesh. They're starting to fade from the race. They clearly don't have their hearts in this battle. They don't have the need in their gut for that last-minute push you've got to put in to get the job done. Heads may roll if that kind of performance keeps up down the stretch. Colorado is trying to sneak in with a strong 3-7 mark, but their pathetic .500 play earlier in the season has them out of contention. Big matchup this week: Cubbies at Pittsburgh. They meet up for 4 more huge games next week. Tampa Bay is a darkhorse after totally owning the Orioles and giving up 3 games this weekend. They're now playing cupcakes in the ChiSox, Seattle, Twins, A's, and Yankees over the next two weeks. Huge ground can be made up with that weak schedule. However, Kansas City might have this already won. They finish up with a cakewalk of: Minny, ChiSox, Yankees, Red Sox, Cleveland, Seattle, Anaheim Angels of Anaheim of Ventura, Detroit, Minny, and Detroit again. With the schedule-makers handing them this crown all gift-wrapped like that, Selig should investigate. Still, the Royals have put together a team that seemingly can't lose this race. Kudos to KC for trying to pull of the rare repeat to go with 2005's #2 pick. I don't want to start the dynasty talk too early, but there's something special going on there. The real races appear to be Tampa's chances of running down Pittsburgh, and the Cubs trying to hold off a hard-charging Nationals team who are trying to close the gap despite Alfonso Soriano's efforts to sabotage their record. The Cubs should be commended for having twice the payroll of any of the three teams below them, and $30M more than the Nationals. Folks, in this day and age of moneyball, you just don't see fiscal planning like that very often. No complaining about having to be a large fish in a small pond, no moaning about how these small-market teams can seemingly not spend whatever they want to not land any quality player and field a team of non-all-stars at every position. No sir. The Cubs just suck it up and stay focused on the goal. Just when you think the bar can't get any lower, they find a way. Kudos. This won't be for the weak of heart of stomach. Gauntlets have been thrown. Battle lines have been drawn. Families have been torn apart. Monster trucks are revving their engines. We're barrelling down the stretch like Namath on a Kolber chase. Tune in for all the drama (MLB blackouts not-withstanding.)