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NL Central looks entertaining and competitive By Peter Gammons Special to ESPN.com January 31 If (when?) Ken Griffey Jr. gets traded to Cincinnati, the National League Central will have Griffey, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Jeff Bagwell. The Cardinals and Cubs are already two of the game's emerald franchises, and within three years the division will have new parks in Houston, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee and Cincinnati. Except for Chicago, playing in the Heartland Division in each league is not exactly the elite address. In the five years of three-divisional play, Cleveland is the only AL Central team to make the postseason, and while the Astros, Reds, Cards and Cubs have all made it to the playoffs, only in 1995 and 1996 -- when Cincinnati beat Los Angeles and St. Louis beat San Diego -- has a team from this division won a series.
And no one in Houston has to be reminded that the Astros have never won a postseason series. It is no consolation that two of the three best National League playoff series since division play began in 1969 involved the Astros, against eventual World Series champions Philadelphia in 1980 and New York in 1986. In those series, as against the Padres in '98, when Jim Leyritz hit the foul pole, and last October against the Braves when Walt Weiss made his great stab, there was some luck involved; if it were John Rocker with the sudden elbow twinge, not Billy Wagner, the Astros would have won that series and might have made it to the World Series. Houston could have won either of the last two years. It had a dominant No. 1 starter (Randy Johnson, then Mike Hampton), three stars (Bagwell, Craig Biggio and Moises Alou and Carl Everett). Hey, the Cardinals could have won the NLCS in '96 when they had Atlanta down 3 games to 1. No one from this division has had one of those magical runs like the Padres in 1998, not that anyone else in the NL West has won a series, either. But as the fans in Houston watched while ownership demanded payroll be slashed despite moving into their new park this season, there was a clear reminder that payroll remains a most important factor. If Astros general manager Gerry Hunsicker had been able to afford an extra $10 million last season -- which still would have left them about $13 million behind the Braves' $79 million payroll -- the depth of his pitching staff and bench might well have been enough to get them over the hump. Don't you think Jim Bowden could have made a serious run at the Braves in 1995 with an extra $8 million? Or the Cardinals in 1996? This season, St. Louis is going to be somewhere between $56M and $60M, thanks in large part to Mark McGwire. The Cubs will be in the Fifties, Houston in the lower Forties (after being at $56M last year), Cincinnati somewhere around $35-38M -- until and if they get Griffey, who management figures would generate at least $7-10 million in added revenue this season -- and the Pirates and Brewers somewhere a little lower. In contrast, the Mets, Dodgers and Braves will all be in the $78-$87 million range. Those extra dollars mean one more top starter, a couple of more experienced middle relievers and added depth. But put aside the whole postseason business. Think about a division with Griffey, Barry Larkin, Sean Casey and Pokey Reese on one team. Then look at Bagwell, Biggio, Alou and Wagner on another. Then McGwire, Fernando Tatis, Ray Lankford and J.D. Drew. Then Sosa, Kerry Wood and Corey Patterson, not to mention manager Don Baylor, who may change the persona of that franchise. Then factor in Pittsburgh's young starting rotation. And even Milwaukee's corner outfielders, Geoff Jenkins and Jeromy Burnitz. If Pittsburgh's rotation -- with Kris Benson a future No. 1 -- is what it appears to be, Mike Williams' elbow can hold up throwing all those sliders, Jason Kendall is healthy and Chad Hermansen and Aramis Ramirez come through, it is possible for the Pirates to sneak into wild-card contention. The problem for the Pirates is that the Astros, Cardinals and Reds are all dead serious about making the postseason. People forget that Cincinnati won 96 games last year, and Dante Bichette may not replace Greg Vaughn's home runs, but could equal his overall production; remember, this is a team with 10 players who reached double figures in homers. If they add Griffey, other than catcher, third base and probably right field, wouldn't you take the Reds over the Braves at the each position? Think about it. The Cardinals look to be the most improved team, thanks to the innings that Pat Hentgen (who threw very well in September), Darryl Kile and Andy Benes bring, the anticipated return of Matt Morris by the ides of May and the luxury of working Rick Ankiel into the fifth spot in the rotation. Fernando Vina gives them a legitimate leadoff hitter, Lankford has his knee operation more than a year in his rearview mirror and one can expect dramatic improvement from Drew and catcher Eli Marrero. What we don't know is what to expect from the Astros, except that with Biggio, Bagwell, Alou and friends, they will play hard. The Mets don't think Roger Cedeno can play center field, which means Richard Hidalgo may play in the middle. Presuming they keep Alou, who has a no-trade clause to everywhere but Atlanta, Colorado and Chicago, they have to figure out how to use prized young hitters Lance Berkman and Daryle Ward. They've lost one of the game's best pitchers in Hampton, Scott Elarton isn't expected to be ready to open the season off shoulder surgery and they haven't been able to fill the bullpen. If the new park plays much smaller than the Astrodome -- and it's supposed to have a shorter porch in left and a lot of territory in right-center -- then Octavio Dotel will have to make an immediate jump into the rotation behind Jose Lima and Shane Reynolds. "I really don't know how good Dotel is," says one NL scout. "He has a great arm, but he's primarily been a fastball/slider guy, and while his fastball has velocity, it's straight, so if he's off with his slider he's hittable. If he could ever come up with a changeup, he could be really good." Houston may have the perfect influence to convince Dotel the worth of a changeup in Lima. Is there a team in this division that on Groundhog Day you'd pick to make the World Series ahead of the Braves, Mets or Diamondbacks? Probably not. But in terms of competitiveness and everyday entertainment value, this is perhaps the best division. McGwire, Sosa, Bagwell, Biggio, Griffey ...
News, notes and rumors
Up and up and up If Jeter's contract is completed, it will not have a staggering impact on the market. But if the Tigers do sign Juan Gonzalez to the eight-year, $140,000,000 deal, that will have a staggering impact. Considring Gonzalez' back problem and declining defensive skills, is he one of the game's 10 best players? No. But there will be Gonzalez at $17.5M and Shawn Green at $14M. Before looking over at the long list of significant players who are free agents at the of next season, look at the short list: Positional players: Junior Griffey, Alex Rodriguez, Chipper Jones, Manny Ramirez, Barry Larkin, Carl Everett, Juan Gonzalez. Clubs have options on Jeff Bagwell. Mark McGwire and Rondell White. Starting pitchers: Mike Mussina, Brad Radke, Mike Hampton, Roger Clemens, David Cone. The Phils have an option on Curt Schilling, the Braves have one on John Smoltz. Relievers: Robb Nen, Armando Benitez. The Angels have an option on Troy Percival. If the Reds can satisfy the Mariners with players after Scott Williamson and Brett Tomko, what will they now have to pay Junior -- even with the theoretical hometown discount -- to ensure that he makes his run at Henry Aaron in the new Cincinnati ballpark? What will the Braves have to ante up for Chipper? Will the Indians even try to keep Ramirez? Haven't Gonzalez and Green jacked Everett's price up in Boston? Whoever wants Alex Rodriguez may have to hire Democratic fund-raiser Terry McAuliffe to raise the capital to get it done. The Mets are willing to go to $11M a year for five years for Hampton, but aren't optimistic that they will get it done in this climate. Peter Angelos has let Mussina know that he'd like to get him signed, but Mussina is not going to allow Angelos the hometown discount this time around. Kevin Brown is 79-44 the last five years, Mussina 84-45; while Brown has the superior ERA, he has pitched four of those five years in the National League and in pitchers' parks. Mussina will be only 31 when he hits the market, and agent Arn Tellum says that for the first time Mussina is willing to leave Baltimore and its proximity to his hometown of Montoursville, Pa., to which he gives so much of his life. Tellum says New York, Cleveland and Boston are all close enough, and that he's certain Mussina would go most anywhere. Could Ted Kennedy get McAuliffe to help out John Harrington and get Pedro Martinez and Mussina on the next staff and end the 1918 whines? Owners have given Bud Selig theoretical powers to force more revenue-sharing down the throats of the big-market teams. Steinbrenner, Fred Wilpon, Angelos and others figure the Players Association will never give in to a more radical spreading of revenues, and, in fact, one large-market club's front office was told to ignore Sandy Alderson's "socialist ideas" when they attended a recent executive development seminar in Virginia. Understand that the Players Association has never been the source of labor strife in the '90s. It was always big-market owners vs. small-market owners, with the players on the big-markets' side. Selig is trying to control internet revenues and spread that money out 30 equal ways. Small-market owners, who know the NFL isn't a direct comparison because it is driven by national TV revenue as opposed to baseball being driven by local revenue, have heard the suggestion that they shouldn't allow the likes of the Yankees and Mets to televise out of small-market ballparks without an increased share of their local TV revenues. The theory is that the Yankees can't sell a game against the Royals to MSG without the Royals, and that if George doesn't believe that, he should try to televise 162 intra-squad games. There are those who believe that come December, some players will be disappointed by the market because there just aren't enough teams that can shell out contracts that start talking at $15M per year. But we've heard that since before A-Rod was born, and if Gonzalez can get $17.5M a year for eight years, then forget about that first $20 million player. The question now is whether A-Rod be the first $25 million-a-year player? Don't think Scott Boras hasn't thought about it.
Closing comments
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