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Prospectus Hit List for April 26



by Matthew Kory

Hit List for April 25 Hit List for April 29
Teams are ordered based on Adjusted Hit List Factor, a computer generated number, and the author isn't responsible for the order of the teams.

Half of all the baseball teams that played yesterday lost.

RkTmWLW1W2W3HLFAHLFWin Div%Win WC%Playoff%1-Day7-Day
1

15

7

15.2

14.6

13.7

.607

.626

66.6%

14.6%

81.1%

2.5%

12.6%

Nick Tepesch threw 6 1/3 innings, walking none and striking out just one. It was the first batter of the game, it was on a full-count called strike, and it was outside.
2

15

7

13.9

13.4

13.6

.582

.601

35.1%

30.7%

65.8%

3.7%

0.5%

If you believe in pitcher wins, Clay Buchholz is 5-0. If you don't believe in pitcher wins, Clay Buchholz is still 5-0.
3

15

6

15.3

15.1

14.5

.613

.593

53.8%

17.4%

71.2%

1.8%

-3.2%

The Braves lead baseball in ERA which, of course, means Justin Upton has been pitching when we weren't paying attention.
4

12

9

11.7

11.2

11.1

.556

.575

44.3%

27.2%

71.5%

3.5%

1.8%

After the Yankees acquired Vernon Wells, it seemed like everyone said Wells is going to hit 50 homers. Well, he's not going to hit 50 homers. That's silly. Instead, he's on pace for 51.
5

10

10

10.3

11.3

11.0

.552

.571

71.4%

8.7%

80.1%

-4.0%

-8.2%

The four-year waiting period should be dropped so that intentionally walking Jeff Francoeur in the 10th inning of a tie ballgame can go into the Hall of What The...? Immediately.
6

13

10

13.5

13.1

12.3

.538

.557

16.3%

22.1%

38.3%

-3.5%

-16.6%

When you see "Chavez" pitched the ninth for Oakland, you automatically think blowout, but then you remember that Eric Chavez doesn't play for the A's anymore.
7

13

10

14.1

14.4

13.3

.575

.555

48.9%

20.0%

68.9%

-4.1%

-4.6%

Joey Votto homered! Meaning he didn't walk! (In that at-bat anyway.)
8

13

9

12.9

12.8

13.2

.527

.547

4.2%

10.5%

14.8%

2.2%

5.9%

Here in April the Orioles are leading the Wild Card race—what in the ever-loving heck am I talking about???
9

11

8

11.1

10.3

10.4

.519

.539

11.9%

12.3%

24.2%

4.6%

5.8%

Has anyone been both a high-profile bust and a low-profile star like Alex Gordon?
10

10

12

10.5

10.9

12.0

.514

.534

12.6%

20.0%

32.6%

-6.1%

8.3%

Jeremy Hellickson is continuing to show that you can pitch pretty well for most of your start, but a few lapses or missed executions can be the difference between success and failure. [poop joke!]
11

13

9

13.1

12.3

12.7

.554

.534

27.3%

27.4%

54.7%

2.9%

3.8%

I guess you could be upset by the uniforms that say "D-backs" on them, but at least the road ones don't say "'zona!"
12

13

9

11.5

12.1

12.3

.539

.519

22.4%

21.2%

43.6%

-3.2%

4.1%

Rivalry Update: The Giants have outscored the Dodgers by 28 runs (a lot for 22 games), are still the defending champions, Vin Scully is considering jumping ship, and brown brings out the color in your eyes better than blue.
13

10

11

8.5

11.5

11.6

.535

.515

44.9%

22.5%

67.5%

2.1%

-3.8%

If any of you out there are worried about your favorite team's performance to date, take heart, Nick Punto is hitting .360. It's still early.
14

13

8

13.4

10.2

10.2

.532

.512

25.5%

18.9%

44.4%

-0.1%

7.6%

The Cardinals are 0-2 in extra-inning games and 2-3 in one-run games. Close the clutch casket and bury them now.
15

14

8

12.9

14.0

13.4

.528

.508

4.7%

7.2%

11.9%

-1.4%

-1.0%

Jorge De La Rosa pitched six innings, walking three and striking out one. You might call it the typical 2013 Rockies start, except Colorado lost.
16

8

13

8.2

9.2

9.5

.484

.504

15.5%

25.8%

41.2%

-4.4%

0.3%

Mike Trout, Albert Pujols, and Josh Hamilton: 3-for-12 with three singles. And in completely unrelated news, the Angels lost.
17

13

9

11.9

11.6

12.0

.522

.502

16.2%

16.3%

32.6%

5.5%

15.3%

The Pirates dropped 14 hits on the Phillies, begging the question, which Pennsylvania team would you rather be over the next five seasons? (Neither is not an acceptable answer.)
18

10

10

11.5

11.2

11.2

.520

.500

9.4%

10.2%

19.5%

-4.5%

-1.2%

Pitcher Jeremy Hefner fittingly attended Oral Roberts University, because both of those aren't real, they're euphemisms.
19

8

11

8.8

9.0

8.7

.477

.497

10.9%

9.7%

20.6%

0.3%

2.3%

Last place in the AL Central is like being last in line to travel to Mars. You might get there eventually, but when you do, you'll realize it's not that great anyway.
20

9

12

10.1

10.4

9.7

.470

.490

5.2%

6.3%

11.5%

2.8%

-1.4%

The White Sox are behind Minnesota and Kansas City, which is like waking up to find out both of your younger brothers are now older than you.
21

11

11

9.7

10.0

9.9

.500

.480

31.1%

17.8%

48.8%

3.4%

-10.5%

The Nationals are back at .500! You may now go back to destroying this country, Nation's Capital.
22

9

9

7.9

9.1

9.2

.444

.464

0.6%

0.7%

1.2%

-0.4%

0.4%

Twins hitters struck out once all game while Twins pitchers struck out two opponents. There's some sort of pattern here, but I'm struggling to find it!
23

11

9

9.7

8.9

9.0

.477

.457

6.8%

8.0%

14.9%

0.5%

2.2%

The Brewers are 18th in ERA, 18th in batting average, and 19th in not being 18th in everything. So close!
24

9

14

8.3

7.4

7.8

.436

.455

3.7%

7.7%

11.4%

-2.0%

-7.0%

Many fans feared Mark Buerhle in the AL East would be B-movie-horror-movie brutal. So far, however, they've been wrong. It's only been regular-horror-movie brutal. In your face, people who were wrong!
25

9

15

8.5

9.3

9.4

.430

.449

1.7%

3.9%

5.6%

0.7%

-4.5%

Carlos Peguero hit one that went off the center-field batters eye. It was estimated to travel 440 feet, making it the second-longest homer hit this season.
26

7

14

8.6

10.1

10.6

.457

.437

2.6%

4.1%

6.7%

0.6%

-2.6%

Anthony RIzzo is on pace to hit 46 homers and 108 total hits, which would be the all-time best-worst season in baseball history.
27

9

14

8.9

9.1

9.6

.449

.429

5.6%

7.3%

12.9%

-3.2%

-4.0%

Ryan Howard update: The first baseman is hitting .284/.302/.432 and is owed less than $100 million! Let's all have a (cheap) parade!
28

6

15

7.2

6.8

7.7

.399

.380

0.7%

1.4%

2.1%

-0.1%

-2.1%

The fences are in and the team is still in last place. The moral, as always, is the way to win is to field a good team.
29

7

15

7.5

7.1

7.6

.358

.377

0.0%

0.1%

0.1%

0.0%

-0.1%

Phil Humber threw a perfect game!!! Oh, no, not yesterday. Like three years ago. But still, can you believe that?!
30

5

17

5.8

4.8

5.3

.331

.314

0.1%

0.2%

0.3%

-0.2%

-0.2%

If the Marlins play the Cubs in early April after a fire sale, is anyone there to see it? According to the club, 15,394, though that's probably including the players.