With the Hall of Fame announcement coming later today, Jay concludes JAWS’ take on who should make it in by sizing up the pitchers.
It’s a mercifully McGwire-free Zone as Jay takes a look at the outfielders eligible for Cooperstown this year.
One candidate is different from every other candidate, but that doesn’t mean that the rest of the infielders on the ballot have no hope of induction. Jay uses his signature JAWS system to investigate who’s worthy of Cooperstown.
Jay suffers the exquisite torture of a Jeff Weaver-Kenny Rogers duel in Game Two of the World Series. Go along for a sometimes rocky but always informative ride.
Jay auditions for the sequel to “Three Nights in August,” tentatively titled “How I Blew the NLCS and Inured Myself to Criticism.”
Two wounded rotations, two bullpens likely to work early to often and up to the challenge… will the difference be the Mets’ eight-deep attack, or the Cardinals’ power of one at the plate?
Despite a better Hit List finish than in 2005, the White Sox are nursing their chai teas and watching from home. The last Hit List of the 2006 season finds justice and injustice up and down the majors.
Oh how the mighty Reds have fallen! The Yankees settle in at the top of this Hit List–but can they hold off the ebullient Tigers and prideful Blue Jays? Jay breaks it all down.
Angels and Blue Jays fans get the short end of the stick in the real standings, but they’ll always have the Hit List.
The surging Indians turn it on when it doesn’t count in the strongest division in baseball, while former Red Sox prospects turn it on across the country in this week’s Hit List.
Jay and Clay Davenport team up for a stroll through history, Hit List-style.
Even teams long thought to be a lock for the playoffs are feeling the heat of the pennant chase in this Mini edition of the Hit List.
The Blue Jays are in the top ten in this week’s Hit List, but is it enough to save J.P.’s job? Also, the Mets and Tigers give a little back in the postseason odds report, but are still among the top teams in the majors.
Jay chronicles the desolate and the magnificent, the scions of Los Angeles and the beggars of the Bay, the slumpers and the slumpees and the just plain lumps.
The Tigers are still at the top, the A’s help their cause with a sweep of the Mariners, and some unsurprising performances by rookies help make some pennant races pretty interesting.
The more things change, the more they stay the same on Ye Olde Hit List, as Jay follows the streaking Tigers and sorts out the contender from pretender.