Would the real playoff contenders emerge already?
The trade deadline is 14 days away, and too many general managers still don't know whether they'll upgrade or downsize. Blame Bud Selig for pushing baseball toward a level playing field. Blame the Yankees for having an off year and allowing ordinary teams to think they have hope. Blame the Padres for not taking better control of a shabby division.
At the All-Star break, 22-of-30 teams were no worse than four games below .500, and three of the remaining eight teams belong to the National League West, where public concessions are rare because the Padres are such a fragile first-place team.
From June 1 until the break, the Padres went 15-22 -- and actually gained ground in the NL West. The Diamondbacks were 13-25 over the same stretch. The Dodgers and Giants were 14-23.
The wild card taints nearly every team's view of itself, misguided in many cases, and AL teams are equally to blame now that the Yankees are vulnerable, coming out of the break for the first time since 1996 without a hold on first place in the AL East.
Only the Cardinals and White Sox know how to distance themselves from the pack, leading the Central divisions by 11 1/2 and nine games, respectively, at the break. Since 1933, the year of the first All-Star Game, 26 teams owned at least a nine-game lead at the break, and only two blew it: the 1978 Red Sox and the 1993 Giants (as much as a team that wins 103 games can blow it).
Although one team wasted a six-game lead at the break just two years ago, the Cardinals and White Sox shouldn't worry about missing the playoffs in 2005. That team, after all, was the plunging-to-earth Royals, who led the White Sox by six and the Twins, the eventual division champs, by 7 1/2.
"I don't think it's possible," Brewers manager Ned Yost said of any team but the Cardinals claiming the NL Central. "They've got too many good players, and they're got too much depth. They're too good. Their coaching, their manager ... they've just got too many things going for them. I don't see it happening."
Twins pitcher Johan Santana said of the White Sox, "The way they've played, they've been unbelievable. No one can compare with them right now. But we're doing fine. It's just that they're the best team in baseball right now."
The Cardinals have a lineup fit for the AL, led by Albert Pujols (he might finally snag an MVP with Barry Bonds' absence), and their rotation alone has more wins (50, entering the weekend) than the entire staffs of 24 other clubs. Proving their dominance in the NL Central, they're 28-9 against division foes and are on pace for their second straight 100-win season.
The future is equally bright for the White Sox, who are gunning for their first pennant since the "Go-Go Sox" of 1959. They own the majors' best record after winning only 83 games last year, and they offer solid pitching (Jon Garland has 13 wins after opening the season as the No. 5 starter) and startling acquisitions (Dustin Hermanson has 22 saves in 23 chances, and A.J. Pierzynski is suddenly not a bad guy).
At least these teams know they'll be buyers leading to the trade deadline, if only to better prepare for the postseason.
Cardinals GM Walt Jocketty, who annually makes big-time acquisitions in July, wants another outfield bat and left-handed reliever (Billy Wagner would be perfect, but pricey). White Sox GM Kenny Williams is seeking depth in both the rotation and bullpen and remains interested in Jason Schmidt and A.J. Burnett.
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