The first basemen of the central divisions of baseball may be as stacked as they ever have been in the history of baseball. Ferocious power hitters and tenacious defenders, these guys have their names all over the offensive leaderboards. All eleven of the eleven central teams have a great first baseman.
National League
The first basemen of the NL Central have combined for 69 homers this season, including 15 by Albert Pujols and Joey Votto each, 10 by Garrett Jones and Derrek Lee each, 6 by Lance Berkman and 13 by Prince Fielder. St. Louis' Pujols, a three-time MVP of the NL, can be counted on for consistent power production like this for years to come. Votto is one of the NL's top young stars, leading the Reds in their push for first at age 26. Fielder, also only 26, has had great power for years now and became one of few Milwaukee Brewers to hit 50 home runs in a season back in 2007. Derrek Lee, who mashed 46 HR in 2005 and 35 HR in 2009 on the Cubs, really hasn't hit as well as anyone would've liked him to in 2010 but he got hot this last weekend and looks to keep his roll going. Lance Berkman is on the downside of his career at 34 but still is the main run producer for a failing Houston Astros offense. Jones took Pittsburgh by storm in 2009 after his summer call-up, a thrilling young talent who, with Andrew McCutchen, has given something for Pirates fans to root for.
American League
The first basemen of the AL have combined for 65 home runs, including 7 by Billy Butler, 17 by Paul Konerko, 8 by Travis Hafner, 19 by Miguel Cabrera, and 14 by Justin Morneau. Butler is the offensive face of the Kansas City franchise, a young slugger with dominant power still in developing stages. Paul Konerko is having a big comeback year, flashing back to his 40 HR days of old. Morneau is leading the AL in walks and has become a perennial fixture for the Twins. Hafner's career has been damaged much by injury, and he hasn't played a full season since 2007 but could be getting back to his old productive self. Cabrera has been the best offensive player in the American League in 2010. If the Tigers make the playoffs, he is my surefire MVP. His 19 HR and 60 RBI lead the AL, and the .328 AVG ain't too bad either.
Significance? 69 HR by NL 1B, 65 HR by AL 1B. What's the big deal?
Well, many scouts and baseball personnel like Ryne Sandberg agree, power at the corners is crucial. Ryno's theory is simple: power in the corners (1B, 3B, RF, LF) and speed and defense up the middle (C, 2B, SS, CF). There is more power in the Central than any other division in both leagues, where there are 59 HR from the NL East (Ryan Howard, Ike Davis, Adam Dunn, Gaby Sanchez, and Troy Glaus) and 44 HR from the NL West (James Loney, Aubrey Huff, Todd Helton, Adam LaRoche, Adrian Gonzalez). In the AL, there are 49 HR from the AL East (Kevin Youkilis, Mark Teixeira, Carlos Pena, Lyle Overbay, and Garrett Atkins) and 26 HR from the AL West (Daric Barton, Mike Napoli filling in for Kendry Morales, Justin Smoak, and Casey Kotchman). While steals are on the rise in today's game, the home run ball is becoming underrated as the home run in critical in the winning formula. With no power, there are no wins. With no power, you get the 2010 Seattle Mariners who are last in the league in home runs and their home run leaders are Milton Bradley and Mike Sweeney with a whopping six.
The Final Home Run Stats
AL East: 49
AL Central: 65
AL West: 26
NL East: 59
NL Central: 69
NL West: 44
Want more on home runs?
Check out hittrackeronline.com and tatertrottracker.com for all the stats you want.
No comments:
Post a Comment