Getting the hang of this Unfiltered gewgaw is really not as easy as it looks.
The teams forgotten by Prospectus Matchups in 2007 have the floor in this edition.
After snap judgments two weeks into the season, how well have the players picked fared in the meantime?
Jim passes along some words of wisdom for the aspiring baseball writers among us.
Jim looks around the league and considers Nomah’s Hall of Fame case, a little Sox-on-Sox action, and a disturbing tidbit from the NL Central.
How often do we get what we expect from some sorts of series, and who’s headed in what direction relative to last year?
Some of this weekend’s series feature an improbably good tilt, given previous history.
Jim digs up one of his older ideas to spread some All-Star love among baseball’s different divisions.
Jim explores what the Red Sox could do to entertain their fans in the second half, while two former No. 1 prospects square off in Kansas City.
Good things come in threes, like bags on triples, or thousands of hits.
Jim proposes a solution to what might just be the greatest problem facing baseball today.
Jim looks at two overrated elements in today’s game, plus the VORP All-Stars and the longest trips between home run #499 and #500.
It’s Texas instead of Florida where you can find the worst against the worst, while the Pads and Red Sox might give us a series of pitching duels.
As interleague action continues, Jim ponders lineup meltdowns, the high times in LA, and more
When it comes to wasted at-bats, one AL team has thrown away more than any other.