Posts tagged: chicago champions

Season Spotlight: 1982 Illowa APBA League

1982 ILLOWA LEAGUE W L PCT GB Manager
1 Twin Cities Thunderchickens 93 68 0.578 0 Dennis Jennings
2 Chicago Champions 92 69 0.571 1 Tedd Mallasch
3 Northeast Cardinals 85 76 0.528 8 Tom Reisdorph
4 Davenport Fire 83 78 0.516 10 Don Smith
5 East Moline Bombers 82 79 0.509 11 Mike Bunch
6 Illini Athletics 77 84 0.478 16 Tom Nelson
7 Chicago Stockyards 73 88 0.453 20 Rob Taylor
8 Northside Hitmen 59 102 0.366 34 Chuck Lucas

IAL Champion: Chicago Champions

MVP: Mike Schmidt Cy Young: Steve Carlton

1982 saw the arrival of Rob Taylor managing the Chicago Stockyards taking over for (now sadly departed) Dale Smith. Dennis Jennings grabbed first placed for the second time in three years but it was the second place Chicago Champions behind Tedd Mallasch who won the IAL championship in 1982.  They had the homerun leader in IAL MVP Mike Schmidt (41) and the batting champ in Mike Hargrove (.318).  In addtion, Jim Rice (28 HR, 109 rbi) lent a hand. Cardinal hurler Steve Carlton won the Cy Young and for good reason.  He hit the trifecta leading the IAL in wins (24), ERA (1.69), and strikeouts (266).  Carlton’s 1.69 ERA remains the second lowest all-time to this day. Record performances in 1982 (and rank all-time):

Steve Carlton Northeast Cardinals 1.69 ERA 2nd
Steve Carlton Northeast Cardinals 24 W 3rd
Cecil Cooper Chicago Stockyards 61 2B 4th
Tim Raines Davenport Fire 104 SB 5th
Dick Drago Northside Hitmen 104 G 1st
Fernando Valenzuela Northeast Cardinals 8 Sho 2nd

My Steve McCatty Story After my Geneseo Athletics placed last in 1981, the league, in its infinite wisdom, passed a rule, which allowed a team that placed last two years in a row to pick any player in the MLB in lieu of any player on their team.  We called it the “Loser’s Pick”. This was a retroactive rule and my team qualified for this new rule.  I could have ANY player not already on an IAL team.  The field was open!  I could pick any superstar, any proven player, anyone with lots of potential.  A franchise player to build a team around.  So who did I pick? Steve McCatty. Granted, he was an A starter that year.  I had Bob Knepper already.  He was also an A and I was so focused on what it would be like to have a one-two punch like that. One can’t fault my fellow managers in the IAL.  One by one they tried to convince me that maybe “Cat” wasn’t the pick for me.  Maybe a middle infielder or a proven big bopper who would be around for years to come.  But I wouldn’t listen and Steve McCatty became an Athletic. What happened?  Well, McCatty actually had a great year for me in 1982.  He went 16-8 with a 2.11 ERA.  His 2.11 ERA remains 9th all-time on the single season list.  We didn’t make the playoffs though finishing 6th with a 77-84 record.  But I betcha we had the best dang ERA in the league (actually 3.50 ranked 5th). McCatty declined after his initial season.  He was a CZ the next season and a DW the one after that.  I think that was all the IAL could take of the “Cat”.

Tom

Player CLUB HR Player CLUB AVG
Mike Schmidt CHAMP 41 Mike Hargrove CHAMP 0.318
Andre Dawson HTMN 37 Carney Lansford STKYD 0.313
Gorman Thomas BMBRS 33 Bill Buckner FIRE 0.311
Bobby Grich TCHIX 32 Mike Schmidt CHAMP 0.306
Jim Rice CHAMP 28 Pete Rose CARDS 0.302
Player CLUB SLG Player CLUB OBP
Mike Schmidt CHAMP 0.584 Mike Schmidt CHAMP 0.411
Andre Dawson HTMN 0.552 Mike Hargrove CHAMP 0.406
Bobby Grich TCHIX 0.529 Joe Morgan CHAMP 0.400
Gorman Thomas BMBRS 0.499 Gary Matthews A’s 0.391
Bill Buckner FIRE 0.496 Tim Raines FIRE 0.386
Player CLUB RBI Player CLUB R
Mike Schmidt CHAMP 136 Andre Dawson HTMN 113
Andre Dawson HTMN 111 Dwight Evans STKYD 111
Jim Rice CHAMP 109 Ken Griffey CHAMP 108
Dwight Evans STKYD 104 Mike Schmidt CHAMP 106
Bobby Grich TCHIX 103 Pete Rose CARDS 102
Player CLUB 2B Player CLUB 3B
Cecil Cooper STKYD 61 John Castino TCHIX 12
Dave Concepcion CARDS 48 Tommy Herr A’s 12
Dwight Evans STKYD 44 Garry Templeton BMBRS 11
Bill Buckner FIRE 42 Ron Oester FIRE 10
Cesar Cedeno CHAMP 42 Ken Griffey CHAMP 9
Player CLUB H Player CLUB BB
Pete Rose CARDS 194 Mike Schmidt CHAMP 96
Cecil Cooper STKYD 187 Gary Matthews A’s 94
Ken Griffey CHAMP 177 Joe Morgan CHAMP 94
Bill Buckner FIRE 177 Toby Harrah A’s 81
Dusty Baker TCHIX 174 Tim Raines FIRE 79
Player CLUB SB Player CLUB SO
Tim Raines FIRE 104 Dale Murphy HTMN 120
Bill North A’s 48 Mike Schmidt CHAMP 117
Andre Dawson HTMN 38 Gorman Thomas BMBRS 115
Tommy Herr A’s 37 Dwight Evans STKYD 100
Cesar Cedeno CHAMP 37 Jim Rice CHAMP 97
Pitcher CLUB W Pitcher CLUB ERA
Steve Carlton CARDS 24 Steve Carlton CARDS 1.69
Doug Corbett BMBRS 22 Steve McCatty A’s 2.12
Dave Stieb CHAMP 20 Dennis Lamp BMBRS 2.4
Steve McCatty A’s 18 Bob Knepper A’s 2.42
Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 18 Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 2.61
Pitcher CLUB SO Pitcher CLUB CG
Steve Carlton CARDS 266 Steve Carlton CARDS 19
Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 250 Steve McCatty A’s 18
Steve McCatty A’s 156 Dave Stieb CHAMP 14
Bill Gullickson FIRE 148 Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 13
Dave Goltz STKYD 145 Bob Knepper A’s 13
Pitcher CLUB Sho Pitcher CLUB IP
Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 8 Dennis Leonard CHAMP 316 1/3
Steve Carlton CARDS 6 Steve Carlton CARDS 288
Bob Knepper A’s 5 Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 283
Rick Langford TCHIX 5 Dave Stieb CHAMP 280 2/3
Ken Forsch FIRE 5 Steve McCatty A’s 276
Pitcher CLUB WHIP Pitcher CLUB K/9IP
Steve McCatty A’s 0.68 Steve Carlton CARDS 8.31
Steve Carlton CARDS 0.85 Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 7.95
Jerry Reuss BMBRS 0.93 Bruce Berenyi HTMN 6.76
Vida Blue TCHIX 0.96 Ron Guidry TCHIX 6.19
Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 0.98 Dave Goltz STKYD 5.9
Pitcher CLUB BB Pitcher CLUB L
Bob Welch CARDS 107 Rudy May HTMN 22
Fernando Valenzuela CARDS 103 Frank Pastore HTMN 21
Bruce Berenyi HTMN 97 Dave Goltz STKYD 20
Steve Carlton CARDS 92 Bob Welch CARDS 19
Dennis Martinez FIRE 90 Dick Ruthven STKYD 16
Pitcher CLUB Sv
Rollie Fingers CARDS 31
Al Holland STKYD 30
Jeff Reardon CHAMP 24
Doug Corbett BMBRS 19
Joe Sambito TCHIX 17

Season Spotlight: 1979 Illowa APBA League

1979 ILLOWA LEAGUE

W

L

PCT

GB

Manager

1

Chicago Champions

99

62

.615

0

Tedd Mallasch

2

Maquoketa Cardinals

96

65

.596

3

Tom Reisdorph

3

East Moline Bombers

91

70

.565

8

Mike Bunch

4

Quad Cities Thunderchickens

87

74

.540

12

Dennis Jennings

5

Davenport Fire

83

78

.516

16

Don Smith

6

Merrionette Park Rocket-Fire

77

84

.478

22

Dale Smith

7

Northside Hitmen

68

96

.415

32 1/2

Chuck Lucas

8

Gehlen J’s

47

114

.292

52

Nick Tegeler

IAL Champions: Chicago Champions

MVP: Jim Rice Cy Young: Bob Knepper

1979 was a year in which the Chicago Champions, largely helped by outfielder Jim Rice, took it all.  They garnered first place missing the century mark by one win and won the World Series.  MVP Rice quite simply dominated the league.  He belted 66 homeruns, an IAL record that would stand for 17 years.  He also led the league in runs (129), rbis (125), and slugging pct (.622), batting leadoff much of the year, incredibly he had nearly 40 at bats left unused.  The Maquoketa Cardinals’ Al Oliver won the batting title with a .326 mark.  Cardinal Bob Knepper won Cy Young honors due to his 1.97 ERA and 21 wins, including nine shutouts.

Take a look a couple of articles from 1979 newsletters (below, click to enlarge).  I wish I could include them all.  I have Tedd’s because after all, he won it all.  I also included Don Smith’s since not only does he have a penchant for writing well, his article also includes a lot of history of the IAL from that time.

cctynote1
Champions’ article page 1
cctynote2
Champions article page 2
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Davenport Fire page1
Resize_of_Image-11
Davenport Fire page 2
Player

CLUB

HR

Player

CLUB

AVG

Jim Rice

CHAMP

66

Al Oliver

CARDS

.326

Larry Hisle

FIRE

39

Garry Maddox

RFIRE

.313

Bobby Bonds

TCHIX

38

Pete Rose

CARDS

.312

Don Baylor

WASPS

34

Steve Garvey

TCHIX

.311

Willie Stargell

BMBRS

34

Dave Concepcion

CARDS

.307

Player

CLUB

R

Player

CLUB

RBI

Jim Rice

CHAMP

129

Jim Rice

CHAMP

125

Rod Carew

HTMN

107

Steve Garvey

TCHIX

118

Dave Concepcion

CARDS

103

Larry Hisle

FIRE

102

Pete Rose

CARDS

102

Al Oliver

CARDS

101

Dave Parker

TCHIX

100

Ted Simmons

BMBRS

101

Player

CLUB

2B

Player

CLUB

3B

Pete Rose

CARDS

54

Dave Parker

TCHIX

18

Ted Simmons

BMBRS

45

Al Oliver

CARDS

11

Ellis Valentine

CHAMP

45

Garry Templeton

BMBRS

11

Ken Griffey

RFIRE

44

Andre Dawson

HTMN

11

Ron Cey

TCHIX

36

Rod Carew

HTMN

10

Player

CLUB

SLG

Player

CLUB

OBP

Jim Rice

CHAMP

.622

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

.379

Dave Parker

TCHIX

.551

Al Oliver

CARDS

.379

Larry Hisle

FIRE

.536

Rod Carew

HTMN

.371

Ted Simmons

BMBRS

.512

Dave Concepcion

CARDS

.370

Steve Garvey

TCHIX

.504

Lou Whitaker

RFIRE

.368

Player

CLUB

SB

Player

CLUB

BB

Bump Wills

CHAMP

54

Darrell Evans

WASPS

91

Ken Griffey

RFIRE

45

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

88

Rod Carew

HTMN

43

Jeff Burroughs

TCHIX

78

Ozzie Smith

TCHIX

42

Bobby Grich

TCHIX

77

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

41

Garry Carter

CHAMP

76

Pitcher

CLUB

ERA

Pitcher

CLUB

W

Bob Knepper

CARDS

1.97

Steve Carlton

CARDS

24

Ron Guidry

TCHIX

2.60

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

23

Ross Grimsley

CHAMP

2.71

Bob Knepper

CARDS

21

Dave Goltz

RFIRE

2.76

Jim Palmer

CARDS

20

Dennis Lamp

BMBRS

2.85

Dennis Martinez

FIRE

20

Pitcher

CLUB

SO

Pitcher

CLUB

CG

Ron Guidry

TCHIX

231

Jim Palmer

CARDS

18

Bob Knepper

CARDS

205

Ron Guidry

TCHIX

18

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

196

Dennis Martinez

FIRE

17

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

182

Bob Knepper

CARDS

16

Vida Blue

TCHIX

181

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

15

Pitcher

CLUB

Sho

Pitcher

CLUB

IP

Bob Knepper

CARDS

9

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

314

Jim Palmer

CARDS

7

Jim Palmer

CARDS

296

Ron Guidry

TCHIX

5

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

295

Steve Carlton

CARDS

5

Dennis Martinez

FIRE

274

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

4

Ron Guidry

TCHIX

273 1/3

Pitcher

CLUB

BB

Pitcher

CLUB

L

Jim Palmer

CARDS

123

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

19

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

113

Dave Rozema

WASPS

17

Bob Knepper

CARDS

101

Roger Erickson

CARDS

16

Roger Erickson

CARDS

98

Don Sutton

WASPS

16

Don Sutton

WASPS

93

Dennis Eckersley

HTMN

16

Pitcher

CLUB

Sv

Rollie Fingers

CARDS

26

Ron Reed

BMBRS

21

Elias Sosa

CHAMP

12

Mike Marshall

CHAMP

11

Al Hrabosky

HTMN

10

Season Spotlight: 1978 Illowa APBA League

1978 ILLOWA LEAGUE

W

L

PCT

GB

Manager

Davenport Fire

97

64

.602

0

Don Smith

Chicago Champions

95

66

.590

2

Tedd Mallasch

Gehlen J’s

85

76

.528

12

Nick Tegeler

Northside Hitmen

81

80

.503

16

Chuck Lucas

Maquoketa Cardinals

79

82

.491

18

Tom Reisdorph

East Moline Bombers

71

90

.441

26

Mike Bunch

Quad Cities Thunderchickens

69

92

.429

28

Dennis Jennings

Merrionette Park Rocket-Fire

67

94

.416

30

Dale Smith

1978 IAL Champions:  Chicago Champions

MVP:  Greg Luzinski

Cy Young:  Sparky Lyle

The race for first place in ’78 was a tight one as the Fire beat out the Champions by two games.  With MVP and home run king Greg Luzinski and Cy Young reliever Sparky Lyle the Fire squad was a powerhouse.  Luzinski totaled 104 homeruns for the past two years.  For the year, he had 58 along with 129 rbis.  Newly acquired 1978 Sparky Lyle  had 23 saves with a 2.33 ERA.  Despite leading the league in wins (24) & ERA (2,26) Lefty Steve Carlton was snubbed in postseason Cy Young Award voting, due to a perception by voters that he was matched up against bad starters.

Alas, it was the Chicago Champions who prevailed in the post-season and won the World Series (see a scanned image of Manager Tedd Mallasch’s final stats from the original 1978 newsletter at right).

Here is Tedd Mallasch’s account of what went down in ’78:

TWO OUT OF THREE AIN’T BAD…

For the 2nd time in his three years at the helm Manager Mallasch guided the Chicago Champions to the Championship. The Champs finished two games behind the Davenport Fire, but put it altogether in the playoffs to capture the title. Interesting note that these two teams pulled off a blockbuster trade before the season, the Champions sent 1978 MVP Greg Luzinski to the Fire in exchange for a young catcher Gary Carter. Carter would have a monster year for the Champs leading the team in 2B’s, HR’s, & RBI’s (42,41,134). Luzinski never played for the Champs as the trade was actually a three way deal involving the Bombers. The Champs were a powerhouse launching 210 longballs, Jim Rice 35 and Ellis Valentine 32 were the only other hitters to belt more than 30 home runs as the lineup featured power up & down the order. Workhorse Dennis Leonard completed 16 of his 35 starts finishing with a 21-7 record. Elias Sosa was the team’s closer figuring in 24 victories in the 42 games in which he appeared.

1978 IAL Hitting and Pitching Leaders
Player

CLUB

HR

Player

CLUB

AVG

Greg Luzinski

FIRE

58

Dave Parker

TCHIX

.361

Gary Carter

CHAMP

41

Thurman Munson

J’s

.361

Jim Rice

CHAMP

35

Rod Carew

HTMN

.356

Ted Simmons

HTMN

35

Ted Simmons

HTMN

.328

Ellis Valentine

CHAMP

33

Pete Rose

BMBRS

.322

Player

CLUB

R

Player

CLUB

RBI

Joe Morgan

BMBRS

131

Gary Carter

CHAMP

134

Jim Rice

CHAMP

122

Greg Luzinski

FIRE

129

Rod Carew

HTMN

113

Thurman Munson

J’s

129

Ken Griffey

RFIRE

107

Jim Rice

CHAMP

126

Greg Luzinski

FIRE

106

Dusty Baker

J’s

110

Player

CLUB

2B

Player

CLUB

3B

Dave Parker

TCHIX

51

Garry Templeton

BMBRS

24

Larry Hisle

FIRE

49

Ken Griffey

RFIRE

17

Pete Rose

BMBRS

44

Bob Watson

CHAMP

16

Thurman Munson

J’s

43

Bobby Bonds

TCHIX

14

Gary Carter

CHAMP

42

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

14

Player

CLUB

SLG

Player

CLUB

SB

Greg Luzinski

FIRE

.689

Cesar Cedeno

CHAMP

72

Gary Carter

CHAMP

.632

Joe Morgan

BMBRS

71

Ted Simmons

HTMN

.584

Dave Lopes

FIRE

56

Thurman Munson

J’s

.583

Bobby Bonds

TCHIX

48

Jim Rice

CHAMP

.574

Dave Concepcion

CARDS

45

Player

CLUB

ERA

Player

CLUB

W

Steve Carlton

CARDS

2.26

Steve Carlton

CARDS

24

John Candelaria

CHAMP

2.72

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

21

Bert Blyleven

FIRE

2.85

Jim Palmer

CARDS

20

Doug Rau

J’s

3.35

Don Sutton

J’s

17

Don Sutton

J’s

3.38

Rudy May

HTMN

17

Player

CLUB

SO

Player

CLUB

CG

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

253

Jim Palmer

CARDS

26

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

219

Dave Goltz

RFIRE

18

Steve Carlton

CARDS

216

Steve Carlton

CARDS

17

Jim Palmer

CARDS

201

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

16

Dennis Eckersley

HTMN

177

Vida Blue

TCHIX

16

Player

CLUB

Sho

Player

CLUB

IP

Steve Carlton

CARDS

4

Jim Palmer

CARDS

311

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

4

Dave Goltz

RFIRE

286 1/3

Don Sutton

J’s

4

Steve Carlton

CARDS

283

Tommy John

BMBRS

4

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

278 2/3

Dave Goltz

RFIRE

3

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

277

Player

CLUB

BB

Player

CLUB

L

Phil Niekro

RFIRE

136

Vida Blue

TCHIX

19

Jim Palmer

CARDS

122

Jim Barr

CARDS

19

Jerry Reuss

CARDS

121

Dave Goltz

RFIRE

18

Steve Carlton

CARDS

114

Jim Palmer

CARDS

17

Dennis Eckersley

HTMN

113

Dennis Eckersley

HTMN

17

Player

CLUB

Sv

Sparky Lyle

FIRE

23

Rollie Fingers

CARDS

20

Elias Sosa

CHAMP

16

Tom Johnson

RFIRE

15

Bill Campbell

CHAMP

14

Season Spotlight: 1977 Illowa APBA League

1977 ILLOWA LEAGUE

W

L

PCT

GB

Manager

Chicago Champions

92

69

.571

0

Tedd Mallasch

Merrionette Park Rocket-Fire

89

72

.553

3

Dale Smith

Davenport Fire

83

78

.516

9

Don Smith

Quad Cities Thunderchickens

81

80

.503

11

Dennis Jennings

East Moline Bombers

81

80

.503

11

Mike Bunch

Monmouth Shooting Star

77

84

.478

15

Terry Wade

Maquoketa Cardinals

77

84

.478

15

Tom Reisdorph

Baldwin Bums

64

97

.398

28

Barry Rowold

IAL Champions:  Quad Cities Thunderchickens

MVP:  Mike Schmidt

Cy Young:  Ferguson Jenkins

1977news
Scanned IAL newsletter from 1977
In 1977, Dennis Jennings and his Quad City Thunderchickens (81-80) won his first  IAL championship, after winning a one game playoff game versus the Bombers to make it into the playoffs, with the help of Jay Johnstone and Rick Monday and the arm of Mark Fidryrch.  Tedd Mallasch and his Chicago Champions garnered first place behind bat of MVP thirdbaseman Mike Schmidt who led the league with 45 homeruns and 130 rbis.  Rocket-Fire outfielder Garry Maddox picked up the batting title with a .356 batting average, teammate Graig Nettles, using BIG DICE (squares cut from a fence post by Dale Smith’s father) finished 2nd in the league in home runs with 37, also finishing 2nd in RBIs with 127.  On the pitching side of things, Cy Young winner Ferguson Jenkins led the league with a 2.43.  Amazingly, reliever Rollie Fingers led the league with 21 wins.  That’s even more of a feat considering his Maquoketa Cardinals only won 77 games for the years.

I’d like to share with you a couple of interesting happenings.  Champs outfielder Cesar Geronimo hit two homers in 464 at bats, back-to-back versus the Cardinals.  In another game against the Cards, the Champs were up 4-0 in the 1st inning of a ballgame, two outs, bottom of the first, runners on 2nd & 3rd, with the pitchers ondeck, the 8th place hitter was walked to get to the pitcher, Don Groove Baylor came off the bench & hit a grand slam!

1977 IAL Hitting and Pitching Leaders
Player

CLUB

HR

Player

CLUB

AVG

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

45

Garry Maddox

RFIRE

.356

Graig Nettles

RFIRE

37

Rod Carew

SSTAR

.350

Rick Monday

TCHIX

31

Bill Madlock

FIRE

.315

Sal Bando

SSTAR

30

Cesar Geronimo

CHAMP

.313

Reggie Jackson

FIRE

29

Bill North

BMBRS

.307

Player

CLUB

RBI

Player

CLUB

R

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

130

Rod Carew

SSTAR

113

Graig Nettles

RFIRE

127

Bill North

BMBRS

112

Reggie Jackson

FIRE

100

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

109

Willie Montanez

CARDS

100

Carl Yastrzemski

CARDS

106

Larry Hisle

FIRE

96

Cesar Cedeno

CHAMP

101

Player

CLUB

2B

Player

CLUB

3B

Garry Maddox

RFIRE

45

Rod Carew

SSTAR

12

Jay Johnstone

TCHIX

45

Garry Maddox

RFIRE

11

Bill Madlock

FIRE

42

Dave Cash

CARDS

11

Bob Watson

CHAMP

41

Joe Morgan

RFIRE

10

Pete Rose

BMBRS

39

Fred Lynn

BUMS

10

Player

CLUB

SLG

Player

CLUB

SB

Mike Schmidt

CHAMP

.558

Bill North

BMBRS

95

Gary Matthews

SSTAR

.525

Dave Lopes

FIRE

81

Graig Nettles

RFIRE

.515

Cesar Cedeno

CHAMP

72

Rod Carew

SSTAR

.514

Lou Brock

CARDS

64

Joe Morgan

RFIRE

.512

Joe Morgan

RFIRE

63

Player

CLUB

ERA

Player

CLUB

W

Ferguson Jenkins

RFIRE

2.43

Rollie Fingers

CARDS

21

Jim Palmer

BUMS

2.45

Luis Tiant

CHAMP

19

Dennis Eckersley

SSTAR

2.53

Bert Blyleven

FIRE

18

Doug Rau

BUMS

2.70

Ferguson Jenkins

RFIRE

17

Vida Blue

BMBRS

2.70

Jerry Augustine

CHAMP

15

Player

CLUB

SO

Player

CLUB

CG

Vida Blue

BMBRS

219

Bert Blyleven

FIRE

25

Dennis Eckersley

SSTAR

213

Mark Fidrych

TCHIX

21

Steve Carlton

CARDS

201

Vida Blue

BMBRS

19

Bert Blyleven

FIRE

195

Jim Palmer

BUMS

18

Jim Palmer

BUMS

195

Catfish Hunter

TCHIX

18

Player

CLUB

Sho

Player

CLUB

IP

Dock Ellis

SSTAR

6

Jim Palmer

BUMS

312

Vida Blue

BMBRS

5

Catfish Hunter

TCHIX

286

Catfish Hunter

TCHIX

4

Bert Blyleven

FIRE

286

Dennis Eckersley

SSTAR

4

Vida Blue

BMBRS

283

Dennis Leonard

CHAMP

4

Luis Tiant

CHAMP

273

Player

CLUB

BB

Player

CLUB

L

Phil Niekro

BMBRS

131

Don Sutton

BUMS

22

Dennis Eckersley

SSTAR

100

Phil Niekro

BMBRS

17

Jim Palmer

BUMS

96

Steve Carlton

CARDS

16

Steve Carlton

CARDS

95

Jim Kaat

SSTAR

16

Dave Goltz

BMBRS

95

Ken Holtzman

BUMS

16

2010 Rookie Draft

clip_image002

I’m already tossing & turning about the upcoming IAL Rookie Draft, which isn’t until March, 2010.  The upcoming crop of rookies seem to be a very good one, with five B starters, a A&C* relief pitcher, a star catcher, thirdbaseman, & shortstop available, along with three fulltime outfielders (one may be moving to 2B).  What to do?

Last year I even caught myself by surprise when I selected reliever (A&B* K) Joey Devine over the dominant 20 year old lefty starter Clayton Kershaw.  My bullpen was a glaring weakness going into last year’s draft, so passing on Devine would’ve been very difficult.  Later in the draft we bolstered the pen further by selecting Cory Wade & Sergio Romo.  In the past we’ve chosen Julian Tavarez & Guillermo Hernandez in the first round, the Highlanders have taken one year stop gap graded A*’s Armando Benitez, Jorge Julio, & Mike Gonzalez, you can never go wrong filling a team need & helping your ballclub in the now, i.e., drafting a card.  So it looks pretty clear, if Andrew Bailey’s still on the board, we’ll take him.

But then there are the other talented rookie options out there that keep me up at night, what to do!  Tommy Hanson & David Price are the real deal, unfortunately I don’t think either pitcher will fall to me.  Then there are B starters J.A. Happ & Randy Wells, both proved their worth, and don’t look to be one hit wonders, they probably won’t be there when I pick.  There are still a couple of more B starters, Brad Bergesen & Josh Outman, both are limited, both were injured, but both are B’s.  Then there are good young starters Rick Porcello, Trevor Cahill, Brett Anderson, Brett Cecil, Jeff Niemann, Homer Bailey, Tommy Hunter, & Clayton Richard.  Surely some of these gems will fall beyond the first round, because there are also alot of talented position players in the draft.

Matt Wieters looks like the 2nd coming of Joe Mauer, or as CLuke points out, maybe Brian McCann.  Over at the hot corner (or maybe a future SS) is Gordon Beckham, who is not just a pretty bat, this kid can pick it.  Shortstop Elvis Andrus is young, only going to get older (& better), maybe he’s Edgar Renteria, or when he grows into his body, Hanley Ramirez.  Four outfielders stand above the rest, one is Chris Coghlan, batted .320, but might move to 2B.  Another is Dexter Fowler, who can fly, but is that enough to be a regular outfielder in the IAL?  And then there’s the Bucs Andrew McCutchen, maybe he’ll be an important building block to the Pirates resurgence, or another talented youngster to be dealt when payday rolls around (he won’t be taken by DonS as he doesn’t draft from losing ballclubs, went against his rule drafting Cincy pitchers last year, don’t think he’ll do that again).  Don’t overlook St. Louis Cardinals power hitting outfielder Colby Rasmus.  It’ll be hard to overlook oldster Garrett Jones, who really showed he could mash, when given a shot in Pittsburgh, plays OF/1B.  Then there’s my hyped outfielder Travis Snider, will he be the next Brad Komminsk or Cory Snyder?

The funk of this whole draft day situation is that there are managers in the IAL (I’m sure you have them in your league as well), who’ll go to the rookie draft with their prospect book in hand, and say, “I’ll take that phe-NOM named Tommy Hanson.  Is he a righty or a lefty & what team does he play for anyway?”  Hey, where can I get one of those prospect books & a bottle of sleeping pills?

Half a Season in Under 24 Hours

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October baseball, ya gotta love it! MLB is down to four teams standing, two from LA, one from NY, and then there’s the defending champion team from Philadelphia. There is a big contrast played between games on the east coast and those played in sunny California. The Angels have had to battle the elements as well as the Bronx Bombers, they’re currently down 2-0 heading back to Anaheim. While Phillies outfielder Shane Victorino needed to change his jersey during game two because it was soaked with sweat, the two teams head to the City of Brotherly Love with their series knotted at one. Of the teams left playing ball, I’m probably more of a Phillies fan than anything else, because I watch them a lot during spring training in Clearwater, FL, although I think the Yankees will win it all, money talks!

The Illowa APBA League is finally on its way to achieving parity, there is no longer such a thing as the big two. Before our two October series, nine games each, we were fortunate enough to have amassed a seven game lead, with 36 games to play. Three teams were tied for 2nd place, followed closely by a team eight games out, with another ballclub ten games behind. Our October opponents featured two heavyweights, the Three Rivers Gamblers (8 out) and the Northside Hitmen (7 out). More nerve racking was the fact that we would be playing these series Friday night/Saturday morning, within a 24 hour window.

First up a Skype series from Pittsburgh to Chicago, the Gamblers against the Champions. Both teams started their aces in the opener, C.C. Sabathia for them, Tim Lincecum for us. Sabathia nailed a homer off Lincecum, Justin Morneau jacked one off Sabathia for us, but the winning run scored in the bottom of the 9th when Morneau lined an RBI double off Jensen Lewis, 4-3 win. Mark Buehrle didn’t have it for the Champs, Armando Galarraga had it for them, Victorino hit two long balls & drove in four, one game apiece, 9-3 score, bad guys. Three Rivers outlasted the Champs in 11, 7-6, Jose Arredondo blew the save, but picked up the win, and Joey Devine picked up the L, another bad guy winner, 7-6. Champion hitters pulled out the big lumber against John Lannan in game quatro, evening up the series at two, two homers each by ARod & Ryan Doumit, driving in all 9 runs, for a 9-5 victory, Greg Maddux went five for the win. Game #5: Josh Beckett was in charge, taking no prisoners, 3-1 Chicago winner, now leading the series 3-2, we were the home team for the first half, now it was time to take our act on the road. Freak Lincecum got lit up for six runs (a three run dinger for Gregg Zaun & a two run shot by Sabathia) in five innings and the Gamblers held on to the "pitcher’s dual" win, C.C. got the victory, Craig Breslow got the save, taking over the team’s closer role, 6-5, even at three, with three games to go. In the 7th game Buehrle again got clocked for eight extra base hits in four innings, including four homers, accounting for 12 runs, as Galarraga cruised to a 12-4 win, 4-3 them. Matt Cain & three relievers brought the series back to even with a 2-1 win. Lannan faired much better in his rematch against Maddux in the series finale, we couldn’t overcome 2 two run homers, losing 4-3, and dropping the series 5-4.

Now the race for postseason in the IAL was tightening up a bit, no time to lick our wounds, the Northside Hitmen were dropping by Crackerjack Park to play shum APBA. JRoll hit the first pitch over the wall off Boof Bonser, and we never looked back, Josh Beckett cruised to the complete game victory, even hit a two run tater, 8-4 us. JRoll again hit a leadoff homer, a two run 8th inning blast by Ryan Doumit provided the difference as Lincecum notched the 6-4 win, 2-0 series lead. Maddux went the first five & Lincecum pitched the last four, for a 2-0 victory, three zip good guys. The Hitmen scored seven unearned runs, they counted none the less, ARod’s two HR & 5 RBIs weren’t enough, 9-5 them, 3-1 in Chicago, time to head over to the Northside. Neither starter Cole Hamels, nor Lincecum were around when the 5th game was decided, in 12 the Champs won 5-3, Sergio Romo picked up his 1st career victory going two, ARod ripped a two run double, 4-1 us. Beckett went six, Devine got the save, 4-2 Champions, 5-1 in the series. Cain didn’t have it in the 7th game, down 4-0 after one, Carlos Delgado with a three run first inning Del-got-it shot, bad guys win it 5-2, series at 5-2 still us. Maddux got ripped for five runs in three innings, 4 coming courtesy of a Miggy Cabrera big fly with the bags juiced, 6-3 winner for Jake Peavy, series slips to 5-3 lead, still us, but barely. Now with one game to go the Champs were in danger of kissing their sister BIG TIME, an 18 game split, which wouldn’t be the worst thing, but it could’ve been better. We hit for the cycle of A.J. Burnett in the 2nd inning, a 3 run blast by JRoll, another by B.J. Upton in the 3rd, and a complete game win by Mark Buehrle, for a 6-3 series winner, good guys, YES!

IAL Hall of Fame: Jeff Bagwell

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Jeff Bagwell

Firstbaseman

inducted in 2008

Drafted with an extra pick, Bags did his magic off the bench for three years, before earning a regular job as the Champions starting firstbaseman.  All he did in his first year as a regular in 1995 was win the MVP, batting .380, with 52 homers, 58 doubles, 97 walks, 20 steals, 116 RBIs, and an amazing 157 runs scored, leading his ballclub to a first place finish, and the first of back-to-back championships.  In eight straight years he scored over 100 runs.  Jeff played his entire 14 year career with Chicago, finishing with 1,405 runs, 431 home runs, 1,126 RBIs, 1,131 walks, 180 stolen bases, a .286 batting average, and an OBP of .392.  Not bad for a player drafted to beef up his team’s bench.

YEAR

CLUB

G

AB

R

H

2B

3B

HR

RBI

BB

SO

SB

AVG

SLG

OBP

1992 CHAMPS 105 112 10 35 7 0 5 15 15 23 1 .313 .509 .394
1993 CHAMPS 110 141 22 41 10 0 2 13 28 17 0 .291 .404 .408
1994 CHAMPS 118 224 37 83 14 2 10 24 28 34 0 .371 .585 .440
1995 CHAMPS 154 553 157 210 58 0 52 116 97 96 20 .380 .767 .472
1996 CHAMPS 124 420 63 101 26 1 14 39 48 106 6 .240 .407 .318
1997 CHAMPS 162 568 125 145 27 3 36 109 115 149 26 .255 .504 .381
1998 CHAMPS 162 535 144 155 46 0 53 121 131 116 27 .290 .673 .429
1999 CHAMPS 147 530 126 158 39 3 35 96 99 99 31 .298 .581 .409
2000 CHAMPS 162 549 150 176 47 0 44 116 124 112 24 .321 .647 .446
2001 CHAMPS 159 565 133 157 41 0 41 97 106 130 7 .278 .568 .392
2002 CHAMPS 160 595 135 162 42 1 39 104 93 121 12 .272 .543 .371
2003 CHAMPS 158 563 101 143 31 2 30 98 88 130 6 .254 .476 .355
2004 CHAMPS 159 603 105 151 31 1 40 108 75 117 13 .250 .504 .336
2005 CHAMPS 152 500 97 127 27 1 30 70 84 111 7 .254 .492 .363
14 Total 2032 6458 1405 1844 446 14 431 1126 1131 1361 180 .286 .559 .392

IAL Hall of Fame: Mike Schmidt

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Mike Schmidt

Thirdbaseman

inducted in 1996

If anyone epitomized the Chicago Champions and their dynasty, it was Mike Schmidt, a charter member of the Hall.  Until recently, Schmidty was the homerun king with 535 lifetime dingers.  He finished his career with 1,400 runs scored and 1,468 RBIs.  Mike was the backbone of the Chicago Champions team that won seven championships.

YEAR

CLUB

G

AB

R

H

2B

3B

HR

RBI

BB

SO

SB

AVG

SLG

OBP

1975 CHAMPS 120 450 71 101 20 7 25 68 0 0 20 .224 .467 .224
1976 CHAMPS 153 562 109 119 27 1 34 92 0 0 39 .212 .445 .212
1977 CHAMPS 152 548 109 131 34 3 45 130 88 130 18 .239 .558 .344
1978 CHAMPS 149 527 102 125 21 14 22 88 98 128 17 .237 .455 .357
1979 CHAMPS 145 513 90 140 34 0 25 88 88 99 41 .273 .485 .379
1980 CHAMPS 156 540 119 135 33 1 50 133 90 117 8 .250 .593 .357
1981 CHAMPS 147 548 113 157 36 5 48 110 74 121 13 .286 .633 .371
1982 CHAMPS 151 536 106 164 22 2 41 136 96 117 21 .306 .584 .411
1983 CHAMPS 137 507 82 124 17 0 47 106 58 129 7 .245 .556 .322
1984 CHAMPS 153 528 102 137 22 0 36 103 121 152 6 .259 .506 .398
1985 CHAMPS 143 528 78 138 20 3 41 80 68 132 2 .261 .544 .346
1986 CHAMPS 150 540 87 131 33 1 30 77 84 124 0 .243 .474 .345
1987 CHAMPS 152 551 109 142 22 1 41 106 77 101 0 .258 .525 .349
1988 CHAMPS 146 521 94 140 28 0 39 118 90 104 0 .269 .547 .376
1989 CHAMPS 86 236 19 47 9 0 7 21 25 36 1 .199 .326 .276
1990 CHAMPS 42 107 10 21 4 1 4 12 15 19 0 .196 .364 .295
16 Totals 2182 7742 1400 1952 382 39 535 1468 1072 1509 193 .252 .519 .343

IAL Hall of Fame: Cal Ripken

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Cal Ripken

Shortstop Thirdbase

inducted in 2004

Cal “Iron Man” Ripken, Jr. played every game and usually every inning from 1984 to 1999.  During this tenure, Ripken helped lead the Chicago Champions to six IAL World Championships.  Cal belied the image of a no-hit shortstop and hit over 30 homeruns in a season six times and drove in 100 runs five times.  He is the IAL all-time leader in hits (2,843), rbis (1,652), games played (2,935), and at-bats (10,822).  At the time of his induction, Ripken was 5th all-time in homeruns with 468, 2nd in doubles with 562 and 6th in runs with 1,391.

YEAR

CLUB

G

AB

R

H

2B

3B

HR

RBI

BB

SO

SB

AVG

SLG

OBP

1983 CHAMPS 157 581 64 141 25 2 38 88 48 90 0 .243 .489 .300
1984 CHAMPS 162 618 84 164 34 3 23 103 40 99 3 .265 .442 .310
1985 CHAMPS 162 634 95 191 35 10 33 92 72 98 1 .301 .544 .373
1986 CHAMPS 161 615 71 155 24 0 34 88 52 52 1 .252 .457 .310
1987 CHAMPS 161 596 101 166 28 2 38 107 69 75 0 .279 .523 .353
1988 CHAMPS 161 610 97 154 25 3 41 115 77 77 0 .252 .505 .336
1989 CHAMPS 161 572 86 134 25 1 33 82 79 94 1 .234 .455 .327
1990 CHAMPS 161 593 73 138 26 0 30 80 61 103 0 .233 .428 .304
1991 CHAMPS 161 582 75 137 31 1 20 70 58 62 2 .235 .395 .305
1992 CHAMPS 161 650 102 181 31 1 28 114 48 58 7 .278 .458 .328
1993 CHAMPS 161 607 56 158 41 0 9 61 41 55 0 .260 .372 .307
1994 CHAMPS 161 589 64 140 20 2 23 73 58 55 0 .238 .396 .306
1995 CHAMPS 161 606 77 196 31 4 14 96 55 47 0 .323 .457 .380
1996 CHAMPS 161 610 74 157 39 1 22 92 36 66 0 .257 .433 .299
1997 CHAMPS 162 629 80 163 42 2 29 125 48 79 0 .259 .471 .312
1998 CHAMPS 162 582 59 152 41 0 16 89 51 83 1 .261 .414 .321
1999 CHAMPS 161 564 67 149 26 0 14 68 54 74 0 .264 .385 .328
2000 CHAMPS 86 330 37 114 27 0 16 68 12 24 0 .345 .573 .368
2001 CHAMPS 64 201 24 43 10 1 7 40 16 23 0 .214 .378 .272
2002 CHAMPS 48 53 5 10 1 0 0 1 4 9 0 .189 .208 .246
20 Totals 2935 10822 1391 2843 562 33 468 1652 979 1323 16 .263 .450 .324

IAL Hall of Fame: Jim Rice

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Jim Rice

Outfielder

inducted in 1997

“Mr 66″.

For years, Rice held the single season record for most home runs hit when he hit 66 in 1979.  In that MVP season Jim also had 125 rbis and 129 runs that year, mostly batting out of the leadoff spot, he ended the season with 34 at bats leftover, Champs won the Championship, finished in 1st place, and won 99 ballgames.  He was partially responsible for the Chicago Champions’ first place finish in 1984, another MVP season for Rice, when he hit 59 homeruns with an amazing 154 rbis with 139 runs scored.  Jim was a part of six championship teams with the Champions.

YEAR

CLUB

G

AB

R

H

2B

3B

HR

RBI

BB

SO

SB

AVG

SLG

OBP

1976 CHAMPS 128 474 58 140 26 0 12 57 0 0 5 .295 .426 .295
1977 CHAMPS 140 520 65 132 12 2 22 76 25 112 5 .254 .412 .288
1978 CHAMPS 156 601 122 191 37 6 35 126 61 101 9 .318 .574 .381
1979 CHAMPS 161 643 129 175 15 6 66 125 55 137 7 .272 .622 .330
1980 CHAMPS 156 615 108 193 31 4 42 133 54 109 9 .314 .582 .369
1981 CHAMPS 124 484 74 133 19 0 37 86 34 96 4 .275 .543 .322
1982 CHAMPS 161 644 85 174 26 2 28 109 40 97 0 .270 .447 .313
1983 CHAMPS 140 525 63 145 21 0 21 70 44 80 0 .276 .436 .332
1984 CHAMPS 155 619 139 196 22 0 59 154 52 82 3 .317 .638 .370
1985 CHAMPS 158 581 63 125 17 5 22 62 42 88 0 .215 .375 .268
1986 CHAMPS 121 359 28 85 10 2 17 44 39 47 0 .237 .418 .312
1987 CHAMPS 155 617 96 185 33 1 32 127 56 89 0 .300 .512 .358
1988 CHAMPS 105 98 6 33 2 0 5 11 10 20 0 .337 .510 .398
1989 CHAMPS 67 62 5 16 2 0 4 7 3 14 0 .258 .484 .292
14 Totals 1927 6842 1041 1923 273 28 402 1187 515 1072 42 .281 .505 .331

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