Linked by History and Mediocrity: the Phillies and the Blue Jays
After Joe Carter hit his historic home run to end the 1993 World Series in devastating fashion, Phillies and Blue Jays fans had no idea their fandom would be linked for the next decade. Ironically, the elation in Toronto and the deep depression in Philadelphia would give way to a long period of painful mediocrity for both teams and to a long period without post-season play.
Over the past 10 years, excluding the 1994 strike-shortened season (1995-2004), 22 different teams have played in the playoffs. The Yankees and the Braves lead the way, having made the playoffs in each of the past 10 seasons. The White Sox, Reds, and Rockies are on the opposite end of the spectrum, having seen playoff action only once. (But at least their fans have had that thrill.) Even the expansion Diamondbacks, in existence for only 7 seasons, have made the playoffs 3 times, including 1 World Series championship.
The Phillies and Blue Jays, on the other hand, have been 2 of only 8 teams in baseball to have not made the playoffs during this period. What's worse: they did so while compiling the most wins of those eight playoff-less teams. In other words, the teams performed just well enough to tempt their fans with hope but still poor enough to leave our playoff dreams unfulfilled.
Since the 1993 post-season, the Phillies and Blue Jays have kept company with 6 of the sorriest franchises in baseball that have not made the playoffs: the Expos, Pirates, Brewers, Royals, Tigers, and Devil Rays. But unlike those franchises, the Phillies and Blue Jays have actually won at close to a .500 clip over the past 10 years. (Because of the strike-shortened beginning to the 1995 season, 80.1 wins per year over the past decade is .500 baseball.)
Here's a list of the average yearly wins for the 8 non-playoff teams from 1995-2004:
Phillies 78.9
Blue Jays 77.2
Expos 73.4
Pirates 70.5
Brewers 70.3
Royals 69.3
Devil Rays 64.4
Tigers 64.1
Three things about this list that are striking:
1) Only the Phillies, Blue Jays, and Tigers play in large markets; the other teams are decidedly small-market teams. These three teams have a built-in revenue advantage by virtue of where they play. The Phillies and Blue Jays have ridden that advantage to regular season mediocrity but have squandered it when it comes to post-season play.
2) The Phillies and the Blue Jays have been consistently much better than the other teams on this list, but have nonetheless joined them in their post-season futility over the past 10 years.
3) 4 of the 8 teams, including the Phillies and the Blue Jays, play in the Eastern divisions, which not coincidentally have featured the Yankees and Braves juggernauts. However, the Phillies and Blue Jays (as well as the Devil Rays and Expos) still could have benefited from the Wild Card, as the Marlins (twice) and Red Sox (once) each won the World Series title as an Eastern Division Wild Card entrant over the past 10 years.
What conclusions can be drawn from this? The Phillies and Blue Jays have had built-in advantages that they have ridden to pure mediocrity from 1995-2004. They've both had GM changes during this time, but the new blood has yet to pay off. Neither GM has been able to do anything to get his team over the hump and into the playoffs. Both sets of fans have been left wallowing in the mediocrity of .500 baseball that ends the last weekend in September. Both sets of fans have been left with nothing more than remembering Joe Carter's home run, for better or, for us Phillies fans, for worse.
There is one bright side, however: we're not Detroit.
Postscript: Today's standings reflect the same:
Blue Jays, 42-41, 4th place
Philadelphia, 42-42, 4th place
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Cursed?
It pleases him to see them suffer.
the not-so-great eight
The other five teams have a grand total of two--the 1994 Royals (managed by former Phils hitting coach Hal McRae) at 64-51, and the 2003 Royals, who somehow won 83 games.
And yet, in terms of future prospects for success, the Tigers, Brewers and maybe the Pirates all might claim a brighter tomorrow than our Fightin's. And Kansas City and Tampa Bay might well be put out of their miseries when the no-contraction agreement expires in 2006.
The raw data
Atlanta Braves 10
New York Yankees 10
Cleveland Indians 6
Boston Red Sox 5
Houston Astros 5
St. Louis Cardinals 5
San Francisco Giants 4
Seattle Mariners 4
Oakland Athletics 4
Los Angeles Dodgers 3
Arizona Diamondbacks 3
Texas Rangers 3
Minnesota Twins 3
Los Angeles Angels 2
New York Mets 2
San Diego Padres 2
Chicago Cubs 2
Baltimore Orioles 2
Florida Marlins 2
Chicago White Sox 1
Cincinnati Reds 1
Colorado Rockies 1
Philadelphia Phillies 0
Toronto Blue Jays 0
Montreal Expos 0
Pittsburgh Pirates 0
Milwaukee Brewers 0
Kansas City Royals 0
Tampa Bay Devil Rays 0
Detroit Tigers 0
More raw data
Atlanta Braves 97.7
New York Yankees 96.6
Boston Red Sox 88.8
Cleveland Indians 87.4
San Francisco Giants 87.3
Houston Astros 86.9
Seattle Mariners 86.5
Los Angeles Dodgers 85.8
St. Louis Cardinals 85.6
Oakland Athletics 85.4
Arizona Diamondbacks 82.1
Chicago White Sox 81.6
Los Angeles Angels 81.2
New York Mets 80.1
Texas Rangers 80.0
Cincinnati Reds 78.9
Philadelphia Phillies 78.9
San Diego Padres 78.1
Toronto Blue Jays 77.2
Chicago Cubs 77.1
Baltimore Orioles 76.7
Minnesota Twins 76.5
Florida Marlins 76.5
Colorado Rockies 76.2
Montreal Expos 73.4
Pittsburgh Pirates 70.5
Milwaukee Brewers 70.3
Kansas City Royals 69.3
Tampa Bay Devil Rays 64.4
Detroit Tigers 64.1
phils vs. twins
And while the Phils' payroll only reached the stratosphere in the last 2-3 years, I'm guessing it was always higher than that of the Twins, who have suffered under an owner who actively wanted to contract them at one not so recent point and who still refuses to invest in the team.
Of course, what investment the organization does make goes to scouting, minor-league instruction, and restocking the system with talent year after year. Novel approach, huh?
ugh. i meant...
Phils v. Marlins
It all comes back to Ed Wade's CYA philosophy - he's looking to do just enough to get by and not get fired; he has no clue how to go further than that.
by David S. Cohen on Jul 6, 2005 5:01 PM EDT up reply actions


























