We're back and better than ever, after unloading the AL East last Friday, this time we are bringing you the NL East, another loaded division full of talent, whether it is in the NL East Champion Atlanta Braves, or the bottom of the standings ladder Washington Nationals, what a sad fall for Washington. The amount of depth in this division truly made it an interesting one in a shortened season. Also this division is loaded with young talent that will keep this division strong for years to come, the obvious Atlanta youth of Acuna, Albies, Fried and Ian Anderson, Miami and its surprising season, including the MLB debut of Sixto Sanchez and his awesome card, the Nationals with Juan Soto and many more in this division will be fun to see the players develop their charts over the years.
5. Washington Nationals 26-34
Batters: The returning World Series Champs started like they did the previous season, too bad the season wasnt full length as they went 7-3 over their last 10 games and may have found last seasons form. The good news is, Juan Sotos card is absolutely amazing. He and Trea Turner lead this offense as a dominant 1-2 punch. The rest of the offense will need a little help from the pitchers, but the Nationals offense certainly isn't the same as last year.
4. New York Mets 26-34
Batters: The Mets sometimes fall close to that previous example of a great rotation not making the playoffs. This offense leaves a lot to be desired but is pretty strong at the top. Pete Alonso sadly fell off his previous years marks, but the top 4 batters are all impressive.
Rotation: DeGrom and Peterson make a good 1-2 punch at the top of the rotation but after that, this team will be searching for answers to get the job done over a long game. Steven Matz keeps up his impressive number, with a home run rate high enough to be the first pitcher to net a 2 HR chart. Draft him please.
Bullpen: A bullpen with high expectations that fell flat as well. Edwin Diaz returned to his 2018 form, but Seth Lugo regressed and the other main players didn't impress any one either. The 2 control pitchers are always an interesting gamble late in a game.
3. Philadelphia Phillies 28-32
Batters: The NL East is loaded with batting talent, another team with a super solid top 4, and another youngster that made his mark this season, Alec Bohm. The top needs to carry this offense, but a couple cheap 8s also follow the big bats that will come up big when needed. I can see Halsey being drafted really early in a salary cap league to get a 8 ob for 180 pts and OF+2 flexibility.
2. Miami Marlins 31-29
Batters: The ever surprising Miami Marlins, in a beautiful shade of blue. A true underdog story that no one saw coming this year. Miguel Rojas leads the team on the field, and put up a tremendous shortstop card and chart. I love the Corey Dickerson cutout, I think it looks so sharp, great job Peter.
Rotation: A pretty nice rotation from the Marlins, led by Alcantara and rookie sensation Sixto Sanchez, in the playoffs he looked like a veteran, and big things will be in that kids future for sure. The NL East can look forward to Sanchez vs Soto, Harper, and Acuna for many years to come.
Bullpen: The bullpen has some really good pieces at the top end. The back end can't be relied uon but that shouldn't be much of a problem with the top end guys. This team would be really intersting to see playout in a season long format.
1. Atlanta Braves 35-25
Batters: Ah yes, the Atlanta Braves, and the most devastating 1-2-3 punch of cards in a long time for one team. When I was making these cards I sent a picture of Acuna, Ozuna and Freeman to the guys and was like is this our new version of Pujols Edmonds and Rolen. It sure feels like it, as pitching through this part of the order is a nightmare, but not only them, the rest of this lineup can be absolutely devastating. A pretty good reason why we see them getting ready to kick off the NLCS tonight vs the Dodgers.
So there you have it, the NL East and all of its glory. In a NL East only draft which batter are you taking first Acuna, or Soto? DeGrom, Fried or Sixto? Also comment below on who you believe each teams foils should be, always interesting hear your guys perspectives and takes. Until Next time go play some more showdown.
Feels like just yesterday I uploaded that photo of Gomes and made it the main photo on his Wikipedia article. What's that on Chasen Shreve's shoulder? Love Dom Smith's big double. Surprised to see Nimmo so much more valuable than McNeil. Also surprised that Andres Gimenez didn't make the team despite playing in 3.5x as many games as Todd Frazier.
ReplyDeleteConsidering the players' numbers and notoriety, I think the foils would be as follows:
Nationals: Soto, Turner, Scherzer
Mets: deGrom
Phillies: Harper, Realmuto, Nola
Marlins: Rojas, Sanchez
Braves: Acuna, Freeman, Ozuna, Fried
That Gomes picture is gorgeous, truly an A+ picture!!
DeleteI didn't make the Mets cards, but we'll update Shreve.
Yeah, Nimmo and McNeil really highlight how little love batting average gets from the Showdown formula -- it's all about the OBP and power numbers, especially since 2Bs were relatively nerfed to the 00 calcs on doubles.
Frazier played a bunch less than Gimenez on the Mets, but had cumulatively 40 more PAs, which is a lot in the truncated season
Love the foil suggestions -- I think I'd add Nimmo or Diaz for the Mets!
I did have Conforto as a foil but removed him and added Scherzer to the Nats. Something told me not to go above 13 for a division.
DeleteI didn't give much consideration to relievers as foils but apparently 2001 had EIGHT bullpen foils so maybe I should've given Diaz and his ilk more thought.
But, as a Mets fan, I can tell you Brandon Nimmo isn't nearly sexy enough to be a foil - despite being a leadoff hitter, all he's good for is a .260 BA, 3 SB, marginal defense and zero highlights per year.
Have you considered looking at the Statcast sprint speed leaderboards for players' speed?
ReplyDeleteWhy do so may pitchers give up HR on their charts? To me no matter how good a pitcher is if he gives up a HR I count them as useless
ReplyDeleteHere is my go for foils for the NL East:
ReplyDeleteWashington-may be the lowest foils for a defending World Series team-Soto
New York-Nimmo, Cano (PR version), deGrom, Diaz
Philadelphia-Harper, Bohm (PR), Realmuto, Nola
Miami-Marte, Rojas, Alcantara, Sanchez (PR), Kintzler (PR)
Atlanta-Acuna, Freeman, Swanson (PR), Anderson (PR), Minter, O'Day
Breakdown:
C-1
1b-1
2b-1
3b-2
SS-2
LF/RF-1
CF-3
SP-5
RP-4
Total-20 players make the first cut of foils
Base-14
Pennant-6
Guys did you guys catch the Mistake on Brandon Kintzler 1-3-SO then 20-20-PU 4-13-GB Out 14-18 FB Out. 19 Single 20 Double. Can you please tell me what you had in mind with the PU out. Because that must of been a mistake.
ReplyDeletehey thanks for pointing that out, hes supposed to not have a pop up, ill fix the card and update it later
DeleteThank you so much I see what you did and I love the cards that you posted I can't wait to see my White Sox players that's my team.
DeleteThey got themselves a nice team this year. Only two divisions left. Both the central so you will be seeing them soon enough
DeleteI know when they are coming out on Friday and on Monday I saw that Eloy should be about a 10 with lots of home run also Jose Abreu Should have a lot of home runs as well. They were both very hot at the end of the year but 2020 was a very shorten season though. Also Giolito had a no hitter as well this year and Colome was reliver of the year award winner this year should be awesome for the White Sox!!!
DeleteAs a Marlins fan I'm surprised that Brian Anderson only has a 3B +0.
ReplyDeleteyeah in defensive score he ranked 36/42 third basemen in the set
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