Hasta la vista...baby |
Maybe he has just shifted into full salary drive following a good, but not great, 2011 regular season, but one cannot ignore an impressive postseason performance thus far: he's hitting .419 and reaching base half the time he steps to the plate.
This 2011 performance is not an aberration to the positive, as Albert has notched consistently strong postseason numbers. In addition, this will be the third time he has led the Cardinals to the World Series in eight years. Forget all the free agency and monster contract talk you have heard (and will hear); let's look at what Pujols has done thus far in postseason play and compare that to the "original" Mr. October, Reggie Jackson:
- Pujols: 67 games, 15 HRs, 46 RBI, .339 BA & .441 OBP
- Jackson: 77 games, 18 HRs, 48 RBI, .278 BA & .354 OBP
There's Only One Reggie! |
Here are two other high profile players (Derrick Jeter and Alex Rodriguez) with a similar frequency of postseason play (amazing...Jeter has almost played an entire year of post season play):
- Jeter: 152 (!) games, 20 HRs, 59 RBI, .307 BA & .374 OBP
- Rodriguez: 68 games, 13 HRs, 41 RBI, .277 BA & .386 OBP
So maybe there is only one "Mr. October"...but Albert Pujols can certainly stake him claim on "Sr. Octubre" status.
...maybe I should take my act back to South Beach? |
He has managed to make the final out (striking out no less) to end the Yankees' season two years in a row. He was 2 for 18 in this just-completed series; 9 for 50 over the past two post-seasons.
I am no math wizard, but that works out to a batting average of
Hey A-Rod! You Swing 'Like a Prayer' |
Baseball's Night to Remember I have bashed on baseball in previous columns regarding the length of season, games, etc. and how it losing the young viewers and we can assume, fans and future players. Want more proof? Darren Rovell of CNBC reported that the median age of LCS Game #5 audience for FOX has risen accordingly over the past five years: 1996 (46 years), 2001 (49 years), 2006 (51 years), 2011 (55 years). Thank goodness I watched and could bring that cumulative age down.
Still, it is a great sport when played well. When games really matter, and you get nights like Wednesday, September 28th, it is downright magical (or exceedingly painful, depending upon your perspective.) Those of you who stayed up late witnessed two playoff winners and losers determined within minutes of one another's games (Cards, Rays, Braves, and Red Sox.) If you want to relive the anguish from the perspective of a die-hard Boston Fan, here is Bill Simmons' recap from his Grantland website: "A Running Diary of Game 162."
I have to say that it was as great an evening of Fall Madness that I can ever remember. Perhaps it helped that I am a St. Louis Cardinal fan and could just sit back and watch the others win and/or lose after the Cards eeked out an 8-0 win, but to have bottom-of-the-ninth heroics and collapses and extra inning dramatics all happen simultaneously...a viewing treat.
Baseball could use more nights like these. For the dozen or so of us who will be watching the World Series, let's hope we get a few more.