Down the Stretch – The Pacific League
For the first time since the current 3-team playoff system was introduced, all six Pacific League teams have a reasonable shot at qualifying for the post-season. Here are the current standings:
GAMES | WINS | LOSSES | TIES | WIN % | GB | ||
1 | Seibu | 98 | 55 | 42 | 1 | 0.567 | – |
2 | Nippon Ham | 101 | 52 | 47 | 2 | 0.525 | 4 |
3 | Softbank | 101 | 52 | 49 | 0 | 0.515 | 5 |
4 | Lotte | 102 | 49 | 53 | 0 | 0.48 | 9 |
5 | Orix | 101 | 48 | 52 | 1 | 0.48 | 9 |
6 | Rakuten | 99 | 43 | 54 | 2 | 0.443 | 13 |
The six teams’ performance has actually been a little closer than their won-loss records might indicate. Let’s take a look at the Pacific League Pythagorean standings:
RUNS SCORED | RUNS ALLOWED | RUN DIFF | EXP WIN % | EXP WINS | EXP LOSSES | ||
1 | Seibu | 499 | 419 | 80 | 0.586 | 57 | 41 |
2 | Nippon Ham | 365 | 377 | -12 | 0.484 | 49 | 52 |
3 | Softbank | 423 | 429 | -6 | 0.493 | 50 | 51 |
4 | Lotte | 471 | 485 | -14 | 0.485 | 49 | 53 |
5 | Orix | 430 | 427 | 3 | 0.504 | 51 | 50 |
6 | Rakuten | 415 | 404 | 11 | 0.513 | 51 | 48 |
*Apologies for the somewhat crappy quality of the formatting on these charts — I made them in Excel and didn’t test on a wide variety of browsers.
I was surprised to see that Orix has a positive run differential, but aside from that this is about what I expected. Only Seibu has really separated themselves from the pack, mostly due to a powerful offense. The teams are mostly even with each other; home/road splits and interleague performance might explain the differences in won/lost records.
Now for some thoughts on how things will play out for the rest of the season…
Seibu
The Lions would have to really slump to miss the playoffs, but if someone else is going to take a run at them, now would be the time. Ace Hideaki Wakui, slugger GG Sato, and PL batting avg Hiroyuki Nakajima are all representing Japan in the Olympics and will miss most of August. I think they’re a lock at this point.
Nippon Ham
The Fighters get it done with pitching and defense, outplaying their expected won-lost record by 3 games. The absence of Yu Darvish for the Olympics will be felt in Sapporo, as will that of leading batter Atsunori Inaba. Still I think they’re in good shape for a playoff berth.
Softbank
Masayoshi Son’s team wasn’t able to acquire the big bat they were looking for, and now they’re faced with losing twin lefty aces Toshiya Sugiuchi and Tsuyoshi Wada to Olympics, as well as table-setter Munenori Kawasaki. They’ll have to rely on rehabbing Nagisa Arakaki and their foreign starters throughout August to stay competitive.
Lotte
After a slow start, Lotte has played back into contention. Lotte is losing three key guys to the Olympics — lefty starter Yoshihisa Naruse, infielder Tsuyoshi Nishioka, and catcher Tomoya Satozaki, but has Julio Zuleta and Shingo Ono returning from the injured list. Those guys don’t quite balance out the stars that will be gone, but Bobby Valentine is confident. I’d love to see these guys make it the playoffs; Bobby has done a ton for Japanese baseball, they have great fans and a good group of guys.
Orix
New manager Daijiro Ohishi seems to have energized the Buffaloes back to competitiveness, along with the resurgence of veteran import sluggers Tuffy Rhodes and Alex Cabrera. The presence of Kazuhiro Kiyohara could serve as motivational factor as well. Orix isn’t sending anyone to the Olympics, so now is their time to strike. I’d love to see these guys make the playoffs; Ohishi turning the team around mid-season is a great story and I’d like to Tuffy in the playoffs again.
Rakuten
The Golden Eagles are sitting in last place despite their +11 run differential, which is 2nd best in the league. They’d have to go on a tear to come back from 11 games under .500, but it’s possible. Young righthander Masahiro Tanaka is Rakuten’s only Olympic representative. I’d love to see these guys make the playoffs; manager Nomura has done a great job making the team competitive and they have some great pitchers that would really be tough in a short series.
So the Olympics will loom large in the already tight Pacific League playoff race. Should be a great pennant race!
08/08/2008 at 9:55 am Permalink
Rakuten shouldn’t be in last place, as they have the second best run differential in the league! This team’s been puzzling me all season. I guess they win big but can’t hold onto small leads late in games (opposite of Tigers and Fighters), gotta be the only explanation.
13/08/2008 at 8:21 am Permalink
I took a look at Rakuten’s relief staff — they don’t have the same kind of bullpen as Hanshin or Nippon Ham. I suppose that’s why they acquired Marcus Gwyn at the deadline.