Well this thread has been all but dead, but just the same in case anyone is interested, here are ESPN"s Strange But True Feats from 2010.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/s ... id=5939646
I will add a few of the more notorious ones here.
And btw a belated congrats to the SF Giants for winning the WS.
Who btw had some weirdness on their way to the WS, ie.
• On the way to winning the World Series, the Giants had themselves possibly the weirdest five-game stretch by any offense ever. From Aug. 23-25, they scored in double figures three games in a row. And what they did do on either side of those three games? They got shut out, naturally. So how many teams have ever been bookended three consecutive double-figure scoring games with shutouts? That would be none, according to Elias.
The Seattle Mariners had quite a year of ineptitude. Here are a few mind boggling stats:
Again from ESPN....
• It took the Mariners 151 games to score 481 runs. That's as many as the Red Sox scored before the All-Star break.
• A total of 32 Mariners made it into the old batter's box last season. They combined to score a mere 513 runs. That wasn't just a record for fewest runs scored by an American League team, over a full season, in the DH era. It was even fewer than any National League team has ever scored, over a full season, in the DH era. The former AL record was 530, by Mitchell Page's 1978 A's. The NL record is 531, by Bombo Rivera's 1976 Expos.
• If you went to a Mariners game, there was a heck of a chance of a World Cup score breaking out, because this team scored three runs or fewer an astounding 103 times. No team in the American League was within 20 of that. And no team in the American League had done it more than 98 times in any full season in the DH era -- again (repeat after us) until now.
• This team was so incapable of scoring runs that Ichiro -- the guy who was first in the American League in hits -- still managed to score fewer runs (74) than Mark Reynolds (79), the guy who was last (among qualifiers) in the National League in hits. Friends, that just shouldn't be possible. But it was that kind of season for the Mariners.
And then there is the Pittsburgh Pirates
Strange But True Road Warriors Of The Year
If there's any team in baseball we hope stays home for the holidays, it's those Pittsburgh Pirates -- because they were MLB's version of the Griswolds. When they hit the road, nothing good seemed to happen. For instance:
• This team went 17-64 away from home last season. Yeah, 17-64. That tied the Buccos with Choo Choo Coleman's 1963 Mets for the worst road record by any team in the 50-season expansion era. Hard to do.
• After the All-Star break, the Pirates won exactly six road games. Six. That's the fewest by any National League team since Downtown Ollie Brown's '69 Padres went 6-26 after the break, and the fewest by a non-expansion team since Otto Bluege's 1933 Reds went 5-26.
• Want more? How 'bout this? The Pirates were swept in half the road series they played (13 of 26) -- including 12 sweeps just in their last 18 series.
• Or this: 10 different Pirates pitchers had road ERAs of 9.00 or higher. Yep, you read that correctly -- 10.
• And finally, there's this, courtesy of loyal reader Eric Orns: After May 25, the Pirates went 8-50 away from home. Right -- 8 and freakin' 50. The Cubs won eight games on one September road trip. The Pirates won eight road games in fourt months. And friends, it doesn't get any Stranger But Truer than that.
Strangest But Truest Inning Of The YearBottom of the eighth inning. July 30. Cubs-Rockies. Coors Field. (Where else?) The Rockies took a 5-2 lead into the inning. Their first two hitters in the eighth made an out. Now here's what happened next:
• The Rockies then got 11 hits in a row. Just to put that in perspective, the Diamondbacks went more than three weeks (and 20 straight games) without getting 11 hits in a game in August and September.
• The Twins made it from Opening Day until the last series of the season without allowing 12 runs in any game. But the Cubs allowed 12 runs with two outs in this inning.
• The Rockies had just come off a road trip in which, over the final six games, 223 hitters came to the plate and combined to score 13 runs. Then they headed home and, after making two outs in the eighth, 14 hitters came to the plate and (naturally) put up 12 runs. Gotta love that Coors Field.
• And how did the Cubs finally manage to stop that streak after giving up 11 straight hits? They walked the next two hitters. Of course.
In Other Strange But True News …
• What were the odds of this? In the first game Lou Piniella managed in 2010 (i.e., Opening Day), the Cubs lost to the Braves 16-5. And on Aug. 22, in the final game Lou managed in 2010, the Cubs lost to the Braves by a score of (yep) 16-5. Before that, no other team in the live-ball era had ever lost two 16-5 games to the same opponent in the same season.
Just a few highlights. The rest are for viewing by clicking the link.