NL East: The Big Picture
Written by Colin on May 25, 2008 – 10:01 amHere’s the big picture in the NL East right now:
Florida Marlins: Can they hold it together? Nobody expected to see these guys in first this far into the season. I think even the Marlins are surprised. That hasn’t kept them from acting like they belong in first. Anchored offensively by Uggla, Hermida, and Ramirez, the Marlins have come out to score this year - currently ranked 10th in the league with runs scored. The rotation has been solid as well - only six different pitchers have started games this year. The Marlins recently picked up Jacque Jones to shore up their outfield after he was released by the Tigers. But if the Tigers can afford to release him, will he help? The biggest question remains: can the Marlins keep it up?
Atlanta Braves: Sure, the Braves can win at home, but they have to be able to win on the road or nothing will come of it. The Braves have a rock solid offense led by the mighty Chipper Jones, but they’ve had some injury issues on their pitching staff - Smoltz is moving to the bullpen, Rafael Soriano has spent significant time on the DL, but they’ll get those two plus Mike Gonzalez back from the DL here soon. The question - will they trade for another starter? Not if Jorge Campillo can keep up his Greg Maddux impression (and get rid of some pesky blisters).
Philadelphia Phillies: The Phillies are shadowing the Braves as they both stalk the Marlins. Their offense has been good but hasn’t been firing on all cylinders for more than a game or two at a time, and past Cole Hamels their other starters have ERAs at or above 4.37. Brett Myers has dropped his last four starts, and Adam Eaton is still winless. If the Phillies’ starters can get their acts together, this is a much more dangerous team - already they’re fourth in the NL with 26 quality starts - but they have potential for much more. On the other hand, their bullpen has been great - lowing the team ERA to a 5th best 3.98. The Phillies could come together to be a very dangerous team.
New York Mets: The Mets’ manager Willie Randolph is under fire for his team’s poor play. And the Mets have had poor play as of late. They’re now in fourth place struggling to beat decent teams. The team is oft-injured. Ryan Church likes concussions, Moises Alou caught Mike Hampton syndrome, and Marlon Anderson pulled up lame. And that’s just the last series in Atlanta. Pedro comes back soon, but will he really help? Johan Santana hasn’t been the savior he was billed as, either. This team has got to start playing ball if they want to hang it at the top of the division.
Washington Nationals: The Nationals are just chilling out in the NL East basement, 7.5 games out of first with a .420 winning percentage. Their offense is one of the worst in the NL, ranking third to last in runs scored, second to last in OBP and OPS, and last in batting average, slugging percentage, and stolen bases. Their pitching staff is better, but not by much, ranked 12/16 in ERA and 13/16 in Batting Average Against. This is likely something we see continued for most of the season.
What do you see happening? Can the Marlins hold it together? Will the Braves start winning on the road? Can the Phillies fire on all cylinders? Are the Mets and Willie Randolph doomed to oblivion?
Tags: Atlanta Braves, Florida Marlins, New York Mets, NL East Blogs, Philadelphia Phillies, Washington Nationals
Posted in League Analysis |

