Wednesday, November 5, 2025

How To Fix Baseball - Part 4 - How Do We Fix The Rule 4 Draft*

 The amateur baseball draft, known more precisely as the Rule 4 draft, is held once a year in July.  It consists of 20 rounds and is limited to high school graduates, junior college players and college juniors, seniors and draft-eligible sophomores. It is followed by a period in which teams can sign undrafted but draft-eligible players, called non-drafted free agents (NDFAs).

The draft has evolved since its first year in 1965 with the current version somewhat favoring teams with the worst records in the previous year. Recently, changes were made to the draft creating a draft lottery to disincentivize losing to improve a team's draft slot.  Other changes over the years included giving teams that made the playoffs in the previous year lower draft slots that are based on the round in the playoffs a team lost in, followed by ranking teams that lost in a particular round by the inverse of their record.  Other rules added have been designed to disincentivize losing for many consecutive years and for signing qualifying free agents.  Provisions also exist to remove draft picks if teams exceed their draft budget in a particular year by more than 4.99%.

The two things I would like to see changed in the Rule 4 draft is how the draft order is determined and making teams with limited resources spend a lot of money on this draft.

DRAFT ORDER

I would like to see the following changes in how the draft order is determined:

1. Eliminate the draft lottery

2. Eliminate round of elimination from the playoffs as a determiner of draft order

2. Determine the draft order using the following criteria in this order:
    a. Non-playoff teams draft first
        (1) Competitive balance teams draft first
        (2) Worst 2 records in each league draft next (if not in above group
        (3) Remaining non-playoff teams 
        (4) Highest team payrolls draft first in each category

    b. Playoff teams
        (1) Competitive balance teams draft first, sorted by highest payroll first
        (2) Non-competitive balance teams draft next, sorted by worst record.  

As an example of how this would work, see Appendix 1 below to see how this would work compared to the raw draft order for the 2026 Rule 4 draft

DRAFT BUDGETS
Draft budgets would continue to be determined by the sum of a team's draft slot bonuses in the first ten rounds of the draft.  However, all competitive balance teams and the teams with the worst 2 records in each league would have an additional $5 million added to their draft budgets. The catch is that it would be mandatory that teams receiving the extra $5 million would have to spend at least 100% of their draft budget or be fined $10 million.  All teams can, of course, still spend up to 104.99% of their total draft budget without losing future draft picks.

TRADING DRAFT PICKS

Competitive balance teams and other, non-playoff teams from the previous year can't trade draft picks.
Teams that can trade draft picks can only trade picks from rounds 11-20 (competitive balance picks can no longer be traded)

WHAT THESE CHANGES ARE DESIGNED TO DO

The goals of these changes in the Rule 4 draft are to:

(1) Favor teams with limited resources (competitive balance teams) by giving them higher draft picks
(2) Favor competitive balance teams that are spending a lot on payroll over those that aren't
(3) Make competitive balance teams and teams with the worst losing records spend a lot of money on the Rule 4 draft.  Combined with my proposed international draft, competitive balance teams would have to spend $8+ million more each year to acquire amateur talent.  Along with the salary floor I proposed, these changes would significantly increase the mandatory spending teams for the teams that are not spending a lot of money now.

These changes, in lieu of a salary cap, would move teams towards competitive balance by having them spend more on amateur talent instead of spending that money on mediocre ML free agents.

The main drawback to my plan is that the additional money that is being pumped into draft budgets would likely be used on high school players who, previously, went undrafted as teams couldn't meet their bonus demands and stay within their draft budget. Very few quality college players don't get drafted.

APPENDIX 1 - COMPARISON OF CURRENT RAW DRAFT ORDER vs DENNIS' PROPOSAL

Here are MLB's current raw draft order for 2026 and the draft order from my system, assuming that the 10 teams with CB-A and CB-B picks are still going to be: Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, St. Louis, Miami, KC, Colorado, Cleveland, Detroit and Seattle.  Remember, my system is based on rewarding competitive balance teams and penalizing teams that are not spending much money in payroll.  Advancing further in the playoffs has been removed as a penalty in my system as has, in large degree, rewardng non-playoff teams with the worst records. Penalties for finishing with a bad record too many years in a row are no longer necessary but other penalties (e.g., FA signings, leauge imposed penalties, etc.) will still be in place. The draft lottery will be discontinued under my system.


Pick    Current Raw Draft Order                Dennis Changes Draft Order
1.               White Sox                                         Baltimore            
2.                Minnesota                                        KC
3.                Pittsburgh                                        St. Louis
4.                Baltimore                                        Minnesota
5.                Athletics                                         Colorado
6.                Atlanta                                            Pittsburgh
7.                Tampa Bay                                     Miami
8.                St. Louis                                        New York Mets
9.                Miami                                            Houston
10.              Colorado                                        Texas
11.              Washington                                    Atlanta
12.              LA Angels                                     LA Angels
13.              Arizona                                         San Francisco
14.             Texas                                             Arizona
15.             San Francisco                                Washington
16.            KC                                                   Tampa Bay
17.             NY Mets                                        Chicago White Sox
18.             Houston                                          Athletics                                         
19.            Cincinnati                                        Seattle
20.            Boston                                              Detroit
21.            San Diego                                        Cleveland
22            Cleveland                                         Cincinnati                                         
23.            Detroit                                             Boston
24.            Chicago Cubs                                   San Diego                              
25.            New York Yankees                           Chicago Cubs
26.             Philadelphia                                     LA Dodgers
27.            Seattle                                               New York Yankees
28.            Milwaukee                                         Toronto                                     
29.             Toronto                                             Philadelphia
30.            LA Dodgers                                        Milwaukee

 OK, that's it for for this time. Next time we will talk about various miscellaneous rule changes that impact competitive balance and the final blog post in this series will look at various game-based rule changes.   

Monday, November 3, 2025

How Do We Fix Baseball - Part 3 - The International Amateur Draft

 

This post will discuss what I consider the single most important step we can put in place to increase competitive balance, long term, in baseball: institute a separate international draft each year on January 15th and change slightly the rules of years of player control and Rule 5 draft eligibility.  Why, you may ask, do I think an international amateur draft is important?

Currently, although there is some nuance to it, international amateur free agents can generally be signed after their 16th birthday.  Each year there is a signing period that runs from January 15th through mid-December.  There are international signing budgets that teams are supposed to stick to and, while the most recent CBAs have added some teeth to penalties for teams exceeding those budgets, the penalties are not nearly as severe as exceeding a budget in the US amateur draft (Rule 4 draft).  

As it stands now, teams 'negotiate' with the 'trainers' of these young Latin American players to, essentially, lock these kids into an organization as early as 14 years old, in anticipation of the kids signing when they turn 16.  While these commitments are non-binding, these understandings are pretty strong and I think we should find a way to eliminate them and make international amateur acquisitions favor the weaker teams. 

So, how would an international amateur draft work?

(1) As amateur baseball and travel leagues do not exist in Latin American countries to the extent they do in the US, group training and player evaluation combines would have to be set up by MLB to help identify the best players for each draft cycle.  This includes age verification.  Unlike the current system, players would only be able to be drafted if they are 16 years old on the date of the draft.

(2) Each international draft will be five rounds and the draft order will be set based solely on the inverse order of winning percentage in the previous ML season.  There would be no adjustment for playoff teams vs non-playoff teams and penalties for exceeding a draft budget would be the same as in the Rule 4 draft.

(3) Teams would be assigned draft budgets based on their draft slot values, just like they are for the Rule 4 draft and the same penalties would apply for the Rule 4 draft relative to loss of draft picks.

(4) After the 5 rounds teams could sign, as NDFAs, as many players as their would be allowed under the roster restrictions MLB has on DSL players.  Like the Rule 4 draft, an upper limit on bonuses of these NDFAs would be set up and bonuses larger than those limits would count against a team's draft budget.  

(5) To spur competitive balance, I propose giving revenue sharing teams an additional $3 million over their draft budgets that they HAVE to spend on signing international amateur players from the draft or as NDFAs.  

(6) The rules on player control and Rule 5 draft eligibility have to change, too. Players signed before they turn 17 years old would be under the control of a team for 7 years after they are drafted and their Rule 5 eligibility is pushed back one year from the current level.  These players are also automatically granted a 4th option year unless they make it to the major leagues before they are Rule 5-eligible for the first time.  These changes would address what currently happens where really good prospects are protected on the 40 man roster long before they are prepared to play in the major leagues, burning up all their option years before they can establish themselves in the majors.

OK, that's it for the international draft.  Next time we will talk about changes to the Rule 5 draft.

How To Fix Baseball - Part 2 - Salary Floor and Salary Cap And Other Things To Make Teams More Competitive

 Given the Dodgers repeat, the big off-season discussion is about how baseball needs a salary cap to keep the rich teams from buying up all the great free agents which, in theory, would give more teams the chance to compete for the best free agents by leveling the playing field, so to speak.  There is also discussion about how baseball needs a salary floor to make the cheap owners spend money to make their teams more competitive instead of just banking profits.

Here are the facts as I know them:

(1) The salary cap is going to be non-negotiable.  This is a key point that everybody needs to accept.  That horse has left the barn and it ain't coming back.  Once you have accepted that then the only choice is to continue to do what has been done previously: penalize teams for overspending and make the cheaper teams spend more money.

(2) The salary floor is something that needs to be considered.  The advantage of a salary floor is that it makes owners spend more money on payroll.  The disadvantage of a salary floor is that there are two main ways teams can reach that floor: sign free agents and extend their own players.  While the latter is a great way to raise team salaries and spur organic growth and competitiveness, the former will not end do ANYTHING for competitiveness.  Spending more money on free agents won't make teams more competitive for top or mid-tier free agents.  Instead, it will simply create a bidding war to drive up the price of those free agents who will still, likely, go to the richest teams.  The only thing a salary floor will do for free agency is make mediocre players richer as teams overpay lower free agents to make it above the floor.  In turn, this will fill roster spots with veterans making it much more difficutl for teams to play their own prospects or protect prospects on their 40 man rosters.

So, what is the solution regarding a salary floor?  Looking at team payrolls over the past few years there are always a few teams that lag way behind the rest in team payroll.  There is also another group that sits a cut above the low group but still well below the median team payroll.  I think a salary floor is necessary.  However, the floor should be low enough that we spur organic growth and not just make mediocre free agents richer.   My suggestion is the following:

(1) For the 2027 season, set a salary floor at $110 million.  Using 2025 team payrolls, that would pump close to $150 million into MLB payroll pool in 2027 compared to 2025.  That is more than enough to make teams who aren't spending money actually spend it but not enough money to make mediocre players rich by overpaying them.  

(2) Raise the salary floor by $5 million each year the next CBA is in effect.  This seems like a small increase each year but remember that the floor is designed to keep teams from shedding payrolls and banking profits, not to make mediocre players richer.  This small increase, combined with the salary floor, will give enough money for teams to have to keep their own players instead of selling at the deadline and the small increases each year will spur them to selectively pick players in their organization they want to extend, increasing organic growth compared to overspending on free agents.

A salary floor will not be enough to bring competitive balance quickly, but it will help.  Other measures that we will talk about in future posts, some of which exist and will need to be amplified and some of which are new, will be designed to further penalize the megaspending teams for their large payrolls and force the low spending teams to use their resources to improve the talent pool within their own organizations.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Ah, It's the Off-Season - Let's Look Ahead At The Next Few Weeks

The off-season officially begins today.  Lots of important dates so I thought I would summarize them, especially as they pertain to the Guardians.

November 2 

  • Eligible ML players declare their free agency: Lane Thomas, Jakob Junis can declare. Junis may actually sign between now and November 6th (see below).
  • Gold Glove Award Winners Announced: Kwan, Santana, Schneeman eligible
  • Teams can start trading ML players and prospects with each other (they could only trade minor league players not on 40-man rosters since the trading deadline)
November 6 
  • Free agents allowed to sign w/other teams (Guards likely to be quiet early w/ MLB FAs)
  • Qualifying offers must be tendered (Guardians will not extend any)
November 7
  • AL Silver Sluggers announced (Jose Ramirez finalist at 3B)
November 11
  • AL Manager of the Year announced (Steven Vogt has a chance to win his 2nd in a row)
November 13 
  • AL Hank Aaron Award winner and all-MLB Teams announced (Jose Ramirez has a chance in each category
November 18
  • 40-man rosters and AAA and AA reserve lists set for each time in preparation of the Rule 5 draft (If I had it my way, prospects signed before their 17th birthday would get an extra year of team control and not be Rule 5 eligible for an additional year compared to players drafted out of high school. The Guardians have up to 20 guys that I see who are R5 eligible who I think might play in the majors some day for some team.  They are likely to protect 3-4 with Angel Genao, Khalil Watson and Austin Peterson the most likely and Wuilfredo Antunez a dark horse.  Of course, CA and Chernof have surprised us in the past by protecting relievers (e.g., Tim Herrin).  So, it will, as always, be interesting, and start the nail-biting up to December 10 (date the R5 draft is held).
  • Players have to decide if they are going to accept QOs and, if not, go to free agency
November 21
  • Teams have to decide if they will tender players 2026 contracts.  Non-tendered players become free agents (Lively, Hentges, Allard, Festa, Brennan are among Guardians who might be non-tendered).  Non-tendered players are then added to the free agent pool.
    • NOTE: I have said for a long time that in the new CBA they should flip the 40-man roster freeze and non-tender dates.  It makes no sense to set your 40-man and then almost immediately non-tender guys who you have protected.  I know teams make that work but it makes no sense to this baseball fan.
December 7
  • The group formerly known as the Veterans Committee will announce if any player who has completed their HOF consideration period will be added to the HOF for the upcoming year.  The nominees have not been announced but we can only hope that Kenny Lofton is among them.  There is lots of internet lobbying going on, some subtle, some not so subtle, for certain players being nominated.
December 10
  • The Rule 5 Draft will be held.  Last year the Guardians had Christian Cairo selected in the ML phase and selected Will Wilson in the AAA phase.  I have ultimate faith in Antonetti and Chernof to do this right, as they seem to do every year.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

How to Fix (and improve) Baseball and Save the 2027 Season...I Hope! - Part 1 - Generalities

This blog is about Cleveland Guardians baseball.  However, I think it is time to use this site to touch on subjects, when the need arises, that talk about professional baseball, in general.

With the collective bargaining agreement up for renewal after the 2026 season, I wanted to start a discourse about how we can 'fix' (or help improve) baseball in the new CBA.

In this post I want to talk in generalities that I will flesh out in future posts.  

So, as young people say, let's gooooooooooo!

SALARY CAP 

This is the only non-starter in this discussion.  Oh, believe me, this WILL be discussed.  However, I don't think you can have it both ways.  The can't tell some owners they can't spend all the money they want and then tell other (cheap?) owners they have to spend more than they want...or can afford.  So, while other sports have salary caps, I don't see how one in baseball can be implemented at this time...or maybe ever.

Besides, we already have rules in place to discourage teams from having large payrolls.  It doesn't stop those teams, but it does penalize them if they go too crazy.  I think history shows that  those rules are at least somewhat impactful although not totally restrictive.  I think it is the best we will get, though.

SALARY FLOOR

I am one of the biggest opponents of a floor for team payrolls.   Salary floors, as I see it, will only do 2 things:

(1) Make mediocre players richer as teams try to get above the floor before opening day.  This will not be effective at leveling the talent throughout the majors. 

(2) Make the fans of teams who have low payrolls feel better.

Neither of those things helps baseball.

A positive that MIGHT come out of a salary floor, if implemented incrementally, would be to encourage teams to sign their own players to longer term deals so they don't have to play mediocre veterans more than they are worth and, by so doing, block their younger players from getting to the majors and getting valuable (and for the teams, cheap) experience.

So, there is some thought that a salary floor, if low and increasing incrementally throughout the life of the new CBA, could prompt teams to lock up their own, young players long term which, in turn, would raise their yearly payroll.

So let's proposes this:

In 2027, implement a salary floor of $100 million in payroll (only 4 teams were below this in 2025) that goes up $10 million every year for the life of the new CBA. To be sure, this is a very low bar, but it at least does work towards removing the most egregious situations of owners not spending on their teams.

MANDATING (AND REWARDING) TEAM SPENDING AND IMPROVING COMPETITIVE BALANCE
 
I have included these 2 areas together as I think they can work together to get teams to spend money on improving their teams.  Here's what I am thinking:

Change how the MLB draft is structured:

(1) Increase the bonus pool disparity between revenue recipients and the remaining worst teams (record-wise) in the league.  To do that you would add, on top of their draft pool, $5 million for those teams and make it mandatory that these teams spend greater than 100% pf their bonus pool or risk penalties paid directly to MLB for dispersal to other teams. 

(2) Re-order the draft to favor revenue recipients with the highest payrolls.  No longer is losing rewarded but, rather, winning is rewarded for teams that have limited resources. 

Implement an international draft:

This, to me, is a crucial piece to slowly bring back competitive balance.  This would be a 10 round draft with the order being based on reverse winning percentage as was done a while back to determine the order of the domestic draft.  This would involve MLB working with everyone to create a pool of draft-eligible international amateur free agents.  Each team would have an assigned bonus pool as in the domestic draft that they couldn't exceed without losing access to the international draft for the following year.  Like the ML draft, revenue sharers and the worst ML teams would receive extra bonus pool money ($3 million) and they would have to use, essentially, their whole bonus pool in every draft.

In addition to this I would like to modify the R5 eligibility for international signees under the age of 18 to give them one additional year before they have to be rostered.  Noel, et al had to be rostered before they even reached AA because of their development pathway.  Clogging the 40 man roster with kids who can't impact your ML team for years is counterproductive to competitive balance.

Reward certain teams that increase their payroll from July 15th to August 1st.

The goal here is to incentivize teams to be buyers at the deadline instead of sellers.  Potentially this could be a larger piece of the revenue share pie or additional draft picks after the 4th round or, depending on the level of the increase, after the 4th & 5th rounds of the subsequent draft.

SUMMARY

As I said, this is just a first post with some generalities.  I will go into more detail on some of these topics in later posts in this series and also suggest things that I think will be better for the games, e.g., in the playoffs revert back to the regular season rules AFTER the 12th inning.  More on that later.





Tuesday, October 14, 2025

OK, Time To Go All In on 2026

 OK, so I am a prospect hugger.  I admit it.  I've sought counseling for it for that didn't stick.

Turns out that behavior like this is either genetic or environmental.  As I don't have any squirrels or hamsters in my bloodline, I have to assume it is environmental.  Since neither of my parents were hoarders, I have to assume it is something about my life experience that led me to be this way about Cleveland Guardians' prospects.

Maybe it was the fact that when I grew up "Wait 'till Next Year" signs could be seen at Municipal Stadium soon after Memorial Day.  So, looking towards next year and the hope that prospects bring caused me to be the prospect hugger I am today.

Or maybe it was my knowledge that we will never be competitive for the big free agents and so always will need to backfill with prospects.

Maybe it's because I have seen a recent trend showing that the Guardians have SUCKED at making trades in the past few years.

But the cause doesn't matter as much as the reality that I am a prospect hugger.

So, saying what I am going to say next has taken a lot of patience and several dozen paper bags as I created this post.

But the paper bags are used up, so here goes:

It's time to go all in for the 2026 season.  

As many others have said, we won't be doing this in mainstream free agency. No Schwarber, no Tucker, no Alonso.  Besides the fact that we SUCK at free agency, we just don't have the money.

So, as a number of others have said, we have to do this through trades and, maybe, at the edges of free agency to backfill holes (especially in the pitching staff) that we might create this off-season.  

So, here's my plan, augmented by some articles and twitter posts I have read:

We trade for Zach Neto, Ketel Marte, Louis Robert Jr. and Willson Contreras.

And here is the part where I blow through the hyperventilation bags:

I don't care how many prospects it takes to get them.

That's right.  Except for Chase DeLauter, everyone else is on the table.

If we have to empty the whole farm system and throw in Arias, Rocchio, Kayfus, Valera, Noel, JRod, Brennan I am fine with that.  I am even OK with including Messick (though I would rather trade Cecconi).  I would like to keep Aleman and Walters as bullpen insurance but I am even OK with including them if it gets these deals done, especially if I can get some quality veteran RPs coming back to us in these deals.

To put it another, more dramatic way, if you take a snapshot of our current NLB Pipeline top 30 prospects and all of them are gone by next spring training to get these 4 guys, I am fine with that. I am even better with it if we get some quality RPs and a maybe a couple of AZL/GFL or DSL prospects back.

Now it's likely we wouldn't have to include all the top 30 prospects so there should be some left but...whatever it takes.

It's time to get something done and it's time to make our run while keeping the window wide open with long-term deals or years until free agency even if, as is the case with Robert Jr., the contract may be bloated compared to the production the player might provide.

Since we won't open our wallets to bloated free agent salaries, it's time to open the prospect vault to get it done, even if it means loosening those purse strings to pay the salaries of these 4 guys.

If the lineup next year looks like this, I am satisfied:

C - Naylor
1B - Contreras
2B - Marte
SS - Neto
3B - Ramirez
LF - Kwan
CF - Robert Jr.
RF - Delauter
DH - Manzardo

Bench - Fry, Schneeman, Martinez, Hedges 

I am good with this IF we keep our pitching staff (minus Messick, if necessary) intact.

This is how we make a statement.  This is how we put ourselves in contention to go to the WS. If it all collapses due to injuries or poor performances, it collapses.  It's time to take a gamble in any area where we have a chance to improve...through trades.

Wow, I've gotten through this whole post without having to use one paper bag.  Maybe even a prospect hugger like me can be cured.!

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Thoughts for September 16th

 MINOR LEAGUES

Akron has finished their season.  Here are my thoughts on several position players who started in Lake County or were injured during the season but finished the season in Akron:
  • Ralph Velazquez finished the season in Akron and finished with an OPS of .994.  I see him as a top 100 prospect in baseball this winter on at least some ranking websites
  • Wuilfredo Antunez hit well at both Lake County and Akron, maintaining his OPS and SB rate with a drop in power and walk rate after the promotion.  The Guardians will have an interesting choice deciding on whether he will be placed on the 40 man this winter in order to protect him from the Rule 5.
  • Angel Genao was hampered by injury but remains a top prospect in the Guardians' system.  He finished the year strong, pushing his BA to .260 with concomitant improvement in his SLG, OBP and, of course, his OPS. 
  • Jorge Burgos is an under-the-radar prospect who stays interesting.  He ended the season injured but put up good numbers leading to 73 RBI and 14 HRs in only 355 ABs.  
  • Jacob Cozart looked like a AAAA catcher in his time in Lake County but hit a little better when promoted to Akron.  I still think he profiles as a ML backup, something that that you don't want to see in a 2nd round catcher.  BTW, Antonneti said that they really liked Khal Stephen in the 2024 draft but just couldn't draft him.  Well, Cozart was drafted BEFORE Stephen in the 2nd round, meaning they liked Cozart better than Stephen. 
  • Alfonsin Rosario struggled upon his promotion to Akron but finished with 5 HRs and 6 2B in 128 ABs after a good season in Lake County. 
I will have a complete article on Akron after the baseball season is complete but suffice it to say that there is a lot of talent on the current roster and it will be interesting to see how many of these guys are rostered by the Guardians this winter to protect them from the Rule 5..

Lynchburg goes for the Carolina League championship tonight with Joey Oakie on the mound.  Oakie finished strong in the ACL and carried that momentum to Lynchburg where he has just been dominating.  I think it likely will help him that he has not faced Columbia in the past.  If he is on, the Hillcats have a good chance of winning the league title.  Even if they lose tonight they still can win tomorrow but it would be great for Oakie if they could win tonight with him on the mound.

Columbus finishes their season this week and it would have been great to see Valezquez get a cup of coffee with the Clippers or DeLauter get back for a few games. But I guess that is not to be unless there is an injury that requires a replacement.  Still, if we could get a promotion for a guy like Austin Peterson it would decrease a little suspense regarding who is getting promoted this off-season.

Lake County ended their season by getting swept in the playoffs but defeating Great Lakes (Dodgers) head-to-head in the last series to make the playoffs was, by far, better than any first round win in the playoffs, especially since the Dodgers held off promoting their best players until after their season was done, likely with the goal of keeping the roster strong just to make the playoffs.  If you look back, the Guardians DID promote some of their better players at Lake County to Akron in August, meaning they were actually more concerned with player development than winning a meaningless (unless a Cleveland farm team wins, of course, LOL) minor league championship.

GUARDIANS

At the beginning of the year I didn't think the Guardians had a chance to make the playoffs as they actually got weaker from last year, trading away Gimenez and Josh Naylor. I predicted that the most likely result, even factoring in the returning players and that Vogt was really a good manager, was an 84-78 record.  Given everything that has happened this season, the Guardians being 78-71 going into Detroit tonight is pretty remarkable.  

I promised about 23 weeks ago that I wouldn't scoreboard watch but I have already broken that promise.  So, resetting to tonight's game, I promise to just enjoy my favorite team, whatever happens,  and only peak, out of the corner of one eye, at the scoreboard.  Look, it isn't perfect, but it's the best I can do which, I guess, is the output of the Guardians playing meaningful games in the last half of Setptember.

Go Guards!