I've been replaying the 1991 baseball
season with APBA now for 609 days and I've reached June 1, 1991. I
finished Game # 600— the last replay game for the month of May —
late the other night when Nolan Ryan struck out 12 in a complete game
and led the Texas Rangers over the Seattle Mariners.
Six hundred games in 609 days. That's
less than a game a day with this replay. In the past, I've been able
to play four to five games a day. In my previous life, I would have
easily completed this 1991 replay and its 2,106 games within 609
days. But life changes and priorities differ. At least, though, the
game is still part of that life as limited as it is now.
That said, I've recently picked up the
pace of games and still find time to roll three or four games some
nights. And, like I say during every single replay I've done, this
is a good replay. The 1991 season is fun because it's a year I
closely watched baseball. The Minnesota Twins, my favorite team, won
the World Series that year. I'm hoping the replay replicates that
success. However, the Twins have to get past Seattle first; the
Mariners are a surprising team in this replay. In the real season,
the team finished in fifth place. Currently, at June 1, the Mariners
are three games ahead of the Twins and with 31 victories already,
they have the second most wins of any team in the league.
Here are the standings through May 31,
1991:
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division W L GB
Toronto 33 15 -
Boston 24 22 8
Detroit 24 22 8
Milwaukee 21 25 11
New York 19 25 12
Baltimore 19 26 12.5
Cleveland 12 32 19
West Division W L GB
Seattle 31 17 -
Minnesota 28 20 3
Chicago 24 20 5
California 24 23 6.5
Texas 22 21 6.5
Kansas City 22 24 8
Oakland 18 29 12.5
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division W L GB
Pittsburgh 30 15 -
St. Louis 27 19 3.5
New York 25 20 5
Philadelphia 24 23 7
Chicago 22 25 9
Montreal 10 37 21
West Division W L GB
Cincinnati 31 15 -
Atlanta 28 16 2
San Diego 28 21 4.5
Los Angeles 24 23 7.5
Houston 16 31 15.5
San Francisco 14 34 18
And here are the leaders in a few
categories as well:
American League
Home runs : Canseco, Oak., 16; Thomas,
Chi., 15; Tettleton, Det., 13; Hrbek, Minn., 12
Wins: Wegman, Mil., 8-2; Stottlemyre,
Tor., 7-2; Key, Tor, 7-3; Tapani, Minn., 7-4
Saves: Harvey, Cal., 10; Montgomery,
KC, 10; Reardon, Bos., 9; Russell, Tex., 9
National League
Home runs: Strawberry, NYM, 15;
Mitchell, SF, 14; Johnson, NYM, 13; McGriff, S.D., 13
Wins: Glavine, Atl., 10-0; Cone, NYM,
8-3; Smiley, Pitt., 7-1; Z. Smith, Pitt., 7-2
Saves: Dibble, Cin, 12; L. Smith, StL,
9; Franco, NYM, 8; Howell, LA, 7
Along with Seattle, there have been a
few other surprises. The New York Mets have played well and are in
third place, paced behind Howard Johnson and Darryl Strawberry's
bats and David Cone's pitching. Even Mets' reliever John Franco is
chipping in, saving eight games so far. In the real season, Franco
saved 30 games in 1991.
Cincinnati won 12 games in a row at the
end of May and winning 15 of 16, overtaking Atlanta for first in the
West Division. Chris Sabo and Barry Larkin lead the Reds with seven
home apiece.
Toronto is no surprise. The Blue Jays
are running away with their division. During each replay I've done in
the 18 years I've played APBA baseball, I've discovered that there's
always one team in a season that finds a variety of ways to win.
Toronto is that team this year. The Blue Jays could fall behind by
three or four runs early in a game and then have an explosive inning
and take the lead. Nine Blue Jays have hit homers already. (There are
only 12 players carded for the Blue Jays in APBA's 1991 season, not
including the eight pitchers.)
Montreal continues to be really, really
bad and San Francisco is trying to mirror the Expos. The Giants lost
10 games in a row from May 21 to May 30.
Finally, in a stunning development, I
have decided to keep more detailed stats in this replay. I've tried a
few times before to compile batting averages and ERA only to have my
computers crash each time. I had planned to use zip drives, but never
got around to copying my stat results on them. This time, I plan to
log batting averages, RBIs, home runs, innings pitched, walks and
strike outs. I've gone back and recorded stats from about 170 games
so far. It's opened an entirely new realm of this game and I
understand why APBA players do it. For example, after the 170 games,
I can see that Tony Gwynn is batting only .217 and Vince Coleman is
hitting a stellar .377 so far.
It's still very early in the season. I
am only 28 percent of the way done with this year, so things can
change. I'm hoping the Twins taking over first place will be one of
those changes.
It's true about that one team in every replay. You'd be happy to hear that in my '79 replay it was my world champion Twins!
ReplyDeleteI'm digging this 91 replay, but have one question, isn't Fred McGriff on the Pads? I'm currently doing only the 91 Braves, and I wish they had the Crime Dog, but Bream plays first most days.
ReplyDeleteKeep on rolling sir, love it!!
You are correct! McGriff is on San Diego this season. I tend to get bleary, I guess when I file these blogs early in the morning (note time stamp of 2:54 a.m.) I made the correction. Thanks for catching that one.
Delete