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- Dear Michael Chang
You ruined my tennis career. Thanks for nothing.
Huan Hsu
posted July 23, 2008 - Derek Jeter vs. Objective Reality
Why baseball researchers are obsessed with denigrating the Yankee captain's defense.
Nate DiMeo
posted July 14, 2008 - The Great Basketball Exodus
What would happen if America's best high-school hoopsters went to Europe? A Slate thought experiment.
Jacob Leibenluft
posted July 10, 2008 - Defense Wins the Wimbledon Championships
How Rafael Nadal finally took down Roger Federer.
Daniel Seidel
posted July 7, 2008 - Hi-Ho, Steroids, Away!
Why it matters that racehorses are on the juice.
Daniel Engber
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Winning Isn't EverythingMy Baltimore Orioles could be playoff contenders, and I don't like it.
By Tom ScoccaPosted Tuesday, April 10, 2007, at 1:04 PM ET

Ten years ago this month, the Baltimore Orioles beat the Kansas City Royals on Opening Day, claiming a share of first place. After a week, they were 4-2 and still in first. And they stayed in first for another week, and another. First baseman Rafael Palmeiro slugged 38 home runs, second baseman Roberto Alomar batted .333, and superstar manager Davey Johnson used savvy, mature starting pitchers and a dominant bullpen to keep opponents off the scoreboard. The Orioles won 98 games in 1997 and led the division from April through September.
Now, for the first time since that heady summer, the Orioles—the team I've rooted for since I was an infant—look like a potential champion. The first baseman eked out 21 home runs last year, bouncing between two other teams. The second baseman hit .286 and grounded into 16 double plays. The manager, a semianonymous Baltimore lifer, has never skippered a winning major-league season; the starting rotation features one emerging ace followed by a mix of raw youngsters and sore-armed has-beens. A week into the season, they were in last place with a 2-4 record.
At first glance, the Orioles might not seem like championship material. But championship material means the material of which champions are made. And as of the 2007 season, that means mediocrity. The reigning champs of baseball are the St. Louis Cardinals—a team that rode the sixth-best hitting and ninth-best pitching in the National League to 83 wins, a Central Division title, and a ticket to the postseason. Eleven playoff wins later, they took their place alongside the 1967 Cardinals and the 1927 Yankees: World Series winners. A week into this new season, the Cardinals were 2-4, just like the Orioles.
But why care about wins and losses? Major League Baseball has fulfilled the promise it made back in the mid-1990s, when it split the leagues from two divisions to three and added a wild-card playoff team: Glory is no longer reserved for the deserving.
Last year's St. Louis team won the World Series despite having the fifth-best record in the National League. In last year's NL, it was possible to be as good as the Cardinals without even trying. Philadelphia tried to quit on its season in July, sending slugger Bobby Abreu to the Yankees in a midseason salary dump. The Phillies then accidentally bounced back into semicontention, winning 85 games—two more than the Cardinals—and barely missing a wild-card berth. (That honor went to a sleepwalking 88-win Dodgers team.)
Unlike in the NBA, where it's hard for a bad team to beat a good one in a playoff series, any baseball team can get hot or lucky enough to go 4-3 (or 3-2) against a superior foe. That was the whole point of baseball's 162-game regular season: The random fluctuations that happen each week would even themselves out, and the best teams would rise to the top.
Now, playing better than other teams for 162 games is for suckers. "My shit doesn't work in the playoffs," Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane declared, infamously, in Michael Lewis' Moneyball. If he was trying to reverse-jinx his team, it didn't work. Beane's Athletics are built for success over the long haul. They haven't won fewer than 87 games, let alone 83, since Beane's first season in 1998. But they've been to the same number of World Series in that time as the Orioles or the Milwaukee Brewers—or the Washington Mystics or the Ruppert Mundys, for that matter. Zero.
If the expanded playoffs murdered meritocracy, it's the Orioles who bear the mark of Cain. In 1996, the O's became the first wild-card team to win a playoff series, sneaking through the newly opened side door to bump off the majestic, 99-win Cleveland Indians. Before they could even savor that guilty victory, the O's were bumped off by the Yankees, in a championship series marred by one of the worst blown calls in baseball history.
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