The Philadelphia Brothers were indeed the class of the league as prognosticated at the beginning of the season, but there were others surprises as well. While Chicago was able to win their final game, they rolled into the final day of the season on a 15 game losing streak. At midseason they were comfortably in the wild position, but their second half futility was one for the record books. And while youth was served this season, there were still familiar names on the statistical leaderboards, with Jorge Orrego leading in Home Runs and Adam Williquette taking the stolen base title.
A look at the best players of the season:
MVP - Jeff Bradley PHI .350 AVG 8 HRs 30 RBIs (Also the #1 draft pick in this year's draft)
Pitcher of the Year - Mitch Kurak PHI 9 SVs 3 Ws 1.42 ERA (Philly really won that trade last year)
Manager of the Year - Nate Watson PHI (Surprisingly he held onto his job the first three seasons as Philly was horrible, but he sure delivered in 1992)
Reliever of the Year - Mitch Kurak PHI 19 IP 34 Ks .186 OAVG
Rookie of the Year - Danny Sain NY .394 AVG 9 HRs 31 RBIs
All-Stars
P - Mario Marquez HOU 5 Ws 34 Ks 2.81 ERA
C - Danny Sain NY .415 OBP 15 doubles (led league) 2.7 WAR
1st - Dan McGaughey PHI .328 AVG 7 HRs 1.5 WAR
2nd - Jake Gilmartin PHI .364 AVG 6 HRs 2.8 WAR
3rd - Jorge Orrego NY .289 AVG 13 HRs 1.9 WAR
SS - Jeff Bradley PHI .350 AVG 13 HR 2.8 WAR
LF - Justin Shults HOU .360 AVG 26 RBIs 1.5 WAR
CF - Brandon Honora PHI .362 AVG 6 HRs 2.4 WAR
RF - Jonathan Harrill PHI .329 AVG 28 RBIs 0.8 WAR
The standings also meant that Philadelphia would be playing in their first championship against the Houston Noise, and all the bookmakers had them as prohibitive favorites, mostly because of the 9-2 record they recorded against the Noise during the regular season.
But as famous boxer Yogi Berra once said, it ain't over til it's over.
Philadelphia leads series 1-0
Philadelphia leads series 2-0
Philadelphia leads series 3-0
Houston trails series 3-1
Houston trails series 3-2
Philadelphia wins series 4-2!In what was a more exciting series than anticipated, Houston was able to stave off elimination twice but fell in Game 6 to the pitching of Reginald Kelly, who bookended the series with shutouts. With 18 scoreless innings and 10 Ks, he was named MVP of the series. After Game 6, Reginald declared that this would be his last season and retired from the ABL, truly leaving the sport on top. While he began his career with Chicago in the inaugural 1989 season, he's only pitched 38 regular season innings in the ABL over 4 years, but he definitely saved his best for last.
America Salutes You!With the season ending on a storybook note, America looks forward to the 1993 season, with a new expansion team, the Phoenix Nightmare, and free agency, where we have a new crop for teams to choose from, including a familiar face (Who really should be under a big contract by now).
Top Free Agents
RF Yoshiyau Kimura Age: 25 demands: $5,060 (Show this man the money, damnit!)
C Chris Murphy Age: 24 demands: $1,200
RP Chad Erickson Age: 23 Demands: $1,100
RP Matt Hartenberger Age: 21 Demands: $1,100
SP Greg Potter Age: 29 Demands: $1,100
Other Notables: RF Omar Stephens Age: 21, RF Billy Phares Age: 34, RP Mike Homola Age: 33, 2B Kevin Gibbs Age: 31
For those concerned, Billy Phares did indeed revert to mean (and hard) this season on the Kings roster. After his record setting 18 homers in 1991, he ended up becoming a part time player and only hit 2 HRs at a .271 AVG in 77 plate appearances. At age 34, he could indeed be hitting the wall, though as Reginald Kelly demonstrated, you can't count the old guys out, even in a season dominated by youth.