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OFFENSE

Yankees
Chuck Knoblauch, 2B .265/.361/.405 .272 EQA
Derek Jeter, SS .324/.384/.481 .301 EQA
Paul O’Neill, RF .317/.372/.510 .304 EQA
Bernie Williams, CF .339/.422/.575 .332 EQA
Tino Martinez, 1B .281/.355/.505 .292 EQA
Chili Davis, DH .291/.373/.447 .281 EQA
Jorge Posada, C .268/.350/.475 .280 EQA
Shane Spencer, LF .373/.411/.910 .388 EQA
Scott Brosius, 3B .300/.371/.472 .287 EQA
(Joe Girardi, C .276/.317/.386 .237 EQA)

Indians
Kenny Lofton, CF .282/.371/.413 .280 EQA
Omar Vizquel, SS .288/.358/.372 .258 EQA
David Justice, LF .280/.363/.476 .283 EQA
Manny Ramirez, RF .294/.377/.599 .314 EQA
Travis Fryman, 3B .287/.340/.504 .276 EQA
Jim Thome, 1B .293/.413/.584 .326 EQA
Jimmy Sexson, DH .310/.344/.592 .298 EQA
(Brian Giles, LF .269/.396/.460 .292 EQA)
Sandy Alomar, C .235/.270/.352 .199 EQA
Enrique Wilson, 2B .322/.354/.456 .260 EQA
(Joey Cora, 2B .276/.357/.370 .253 EQA)


(The Indian lineup is the one they use against lefthanders,
which they will see in two of the first three games of the
series. Against righties, Joey Cora plays second base and bats
ninth, and Brian Giles bats seventh and plays either DH or
left, shifting Justice to DH in the latter configuration.)


The Yankees had the best offense in the AL this year, in part due to a
league-leading .364 OBP and 653 walks. Despite a so-so Division Series
performance by the lineup, and the loss of LF/DH Darryl Strawberry
to cancer surgery, there’s no reason to expect the team to be shut
down the way the Red Sox were. The balance–no hitter in the lineup
was under a .350 OBP or a .270 EQA–is great insurance against
slumps.


Note that Joe Girardi caught both Andy Pettitte and David Cone in
the Division Series, and may continue to do so in the ALCS. Joe
Torre
‘s insistence on keeping his two starting backstops happy yields no
gain behind, and a considerable loss at, the plate.


The Cleveland lineup is formidable, but the presence of out-machine
Sandy Alomar and the middle infielders, none of whom are special
with the stick, means it doesn’t sustain innings as well as the
Yankee nine. Its core is on par with the Yankees’, however, and
is a definite strength. Watch for Torre to be aggressive with his
bullpen: the Indians platoon at two spots, and two other starters
(Thome and Justice) will have some problems with left-handed relievers.


On balance, give the Yankees the edge, thanks to better depth 1-9.
I expect them to score a considerable number of runs in this
series.


DEFENSE


The Indians’ defense is an underrated contributor to their success.
The infield, when Enrique Wilson plays, is excellent, and while
Kenny Lofton has lost some range, he remains a good center fielder.
Game 4 heroics aside, Dave Justice isn’t anything special, and
Manny Ramirez’ strong arm doesn’t make up for his problems getting
a jump.


The Yankees are a veteran team defensively. They have players with
unexceptional range, such as Paul O’Neill and Derek Jeter, who
make the plays they get to. Jorge Posada has an excellent arm,
which–when he plays–may be a factor in controlling Kenny Lofton.


Strong edge here to Cleveland.


For what it’s worth:


Range Factors
New York: 4.13
Cleveland: 4.18
AL Average: 4.15


STARTING PITCHING

Yankees
Jumbo Wells 3.49 ERA, .239/.265/.398
David Cone 3.55 ERA, .237/.302/.371
Andy Pettitte 4.24 ERA, .274/.344/.395
‘El Duque’ Hernandez 3.13 ERA, .222/.299/.341

Indians
Jaret Wright 4.72 ERA, .277/.358/.431
Charles Nagy 5.22 ERA, .298/.353/.493
Bartolo Colon 3.71 ERA, .260/.329/.379
Doc Gooden 3.76 ERA, .262/.337/.394


The Yankees have the clear advantage here, helped along by Mike
Hargrove
‘s insistence on putting his second-best starter, Dave
Burba, in the bullpen, and starting his fifth-best, Charles
Nagy, in the second game.


Not that it would matter much. The gap here is huge, and while
there will be a lot of discussion of Wright’s strong performance
against the Yankees in the 1997 Division Series, and the quality
starts by Colon and Nagy against the Red Sox, this is a terrific
mismatch. Expect the Yankees to control the first five innings of
every game.


I will point out one potential chink: Orlando Hernandez. He
did pitch well in his first start against Cleveland, but was
touched up in their second matchup. His style and motion chew
up right-handed hitters, but he can be susceptible to patient
left-handed hitters, and the Indians have a number of those.
If Cleveland can win even one of the first three games, I
like their chances to make this a series in Game 4.


BULLPEN

Yankees
Mariano Rivera 1.91 ERA, .215/.270/.309
Jeff Nelson 3.79 ERA, .278/.387/.392
Ramiro Mendoza 3.25 ERA, .264/.314/.379
Hideki Irabu 4.06 ERA, .233/.321/.405
Mike Stanton 5.47 ERA, .239/.307/.414
Graeme Lloyd 1.67 ERA, .191/.234/.294

Indians
Mike Jackson 1.55 ERA, .195/.252/.290
Steve Reed 3.14 ERA, .194/.275/.316
Doug Jones 4.54 ERA, .292/.328/.490
Paul Shuey 3.00 ERA, .229/.327/.370
Dave Burba 4.11 ERA, .269/.330/.440
Paul Assenmacher 3.26 ERA, .286/.351/.418
Jim Poole 5.26 ERA, .301/.353/.494


John Hart did an excellent job midseason, shoring up his bullpen
with some excellent underrated and underperforming talent, and doing
it cheaply. The Indians have had some of the best pens of the decade,
and this one, while not the best, is another talented and effective
collection. And as we saw in Game 4 of the Division Series, Mike
Hargrove is more than willing to use all of the tools at his disposal.


Don’t be fooled by the ERAs of Poole and Jones. Both pitched better
down the stretch after joining the Indians, and are kept within
their limits by Hargrove.


The Yankee bullpen is also deep, with the now-healthy Jeff Nelson
and rotation expatriate Hideki Irabu. Joe Torre has the luxury of
going deeper into the game with his starters, which lets him
be aggressive about matchups late in the game because he usually
only has to get 4-6 outs in front of Mariano Rivera.


For both teams, the pen is a strength. I would give the Indians
the edge, however. Their best arms are better than the Yankees’,
and Hargrove knows how to use them.


BENCH

Yankees
Tim Raines, LF .290/.395/.383 .282 EQA
Chad Curtis, OF .243/.355/.360 .261 EQA
Ricky Ledee, OF .241/.299/.392 .240 EQA
Homer Bush, PR/2B .380/.421/.465 .306 EQA
Luis Sojo, INF .231/.250/.265 .161 EQA
(Girardi or Posada)

Indians
Mark Whiten, OF .283/.372/.425 .272 EQA
Jeff Branson, INF .200/.221/.290 .146 EQA
Einar Diaz, C .229/.286/.375 .225 EQA
(Giles or Sexson)
(Cora or Wilson)


The loss of Strawberry hurts the Yankees, but it does create more
playing time for Everybody’s Hero, Shane Spencer. Ricky Ledee, a
similiar though lesser player than Strawberry, comes up to take
the roster spot. The team continues to hamstring itself by carrying
Luis Sojo, who serves no obvious purpose. I rarely propose carrying
11 pitchers in the postseason, but Darren Holmes would really be
a better use of the roster spot. Hell, Larry Holmes might be.
Or Oliver Wendell Holmes, who would at least provide some great
post-game quotes. If he wasn’t already dead, of course, which brings
us back to what he has in common with Sojo’s bat.


The Cleveland bench gets little use aside from their platoons, and
that’s a good thing, as the Indians have their own Girardi and Sojo,
without the Raines and Curtis to go along. Hargrove is carrying
11 pitchers, but with the rotation he’s got, you can’t disagree with
that decision. 15-1 against Branson and Diaz combining for 2 PA
in the series.


Edge to the Yankees, but it doesn’t matter much.


OVERALL


Picking a best-of-seven isn’t done with much more confidence than a
best-of-five. Once again, the Yankees have large advantages in
scoring and preventing runs over their opponent, and it’s easy
to see how they should walk over the Tribe on their way to
Atla…er, the World Series. But Eric Gregg could happen; Lenny
Webster
could happen; Jim Leyritz could happen.


I like the Indians to win Game 4 and one other. Yanks in six.

Thank you for reading

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