With just a few games played between last week’s Hit List and today’s, Jay steps back a bit to look at the rankings in more detail.
Jay has the newest rankings, plus a first-half breakdown of all major league teams.
Five teams that look like contenders, with only one from the National League. (Hint: it’s not the Cubs.) Jay dissects the week that was.
The Tigers have the top spot, the NL West gets reshuffled, and the Cubs join the hapless Devil Rays and Royals as cellar-dwellers.
Jay anoints the Mets in their first week at No. 1 after thrashing the quickly dropping Snakes, while the Reds are the only other “rising” team in an increasingly fractured top 10, all in this week’s Prospectus Hit List.
Jay looks back on the tumultuous professional life of the recently deceased Eric Gregg.
Jay names the Yankees No. 1 on this week’s Hit List, and it shakes out just as well for fans of the Tigers, Snakes, and Dodgers.
Jay looks at a crazy week of interleague play that included a dominant Tiger squad, the surging Dodgers and Indians, and the discolored wreckage of the long-awaited Teal Deal in this week’s Hit List.
Jay watches the Tigers re-ascend to the top spot while leading the league in ERA, the red-hot Padres feast on below-average competition, and the Yankees deal with a litany of problems.
The New York teams sandwich the Tigers at the top of this week’s rankings, and Kansas City’s got some AL Central company down at the bottom.
The Tigers assume the No. 1 spot. Yes, you heard that right.
The Yankees and White Sox reclaim the top spots, and the Royals continue to camp out at the base of the List.
This week’s Hit List says goodbye to the PECOTA win projections, and says hello to the Tigers and Rockies in the Top Five.
We kick off Hit List’s regular season mode with a tribute to the Small Sample Size.
The Prospectus Hit List returns with some PECOTA-driven rankings of the 2006 MLB season.
With Jeff Bagwell’s career potentially coming to an end, Jay looks at his Hall of Fame chances, plus the chances of some other players who may call 2005 their last year.