October 25, 1995
Houston, TX
The 1995 regular season is in the books, and the final dozen games in September did not lack for drama.
The Los Angeles Hollywood Knights was able to clear the Chicago Wind for the pennant, which meant they would take the bye in the playoffs while Chicago would face Houston for the Wildcard. The Philadelphia Brothers were able to keep pace with Houston, but sadly fell to tiebreakers and would have to sit out the playoff season (I really don't know why OOTP didn't schedule a playoff between the Noise and the Brothers, but I didn't think to schedule one manually, so tough luck Philly). New York and Denver just didn't have enough gas at the end of the season, but put up a respectable fight. Meanwhile, Phoenix continued their futility, even more embarassing as they couldn't even overtake San Francisco to avoid the basement of the league.
With the standings as they are, we're able to get a look at the new playoff tree for the 1995 season.
The first two games were split by Chicago and Houston, so it would come down to a deciding game 3:
Houston was able to take down Chicago and deny them a chance for their first championship, which for the Chicago faithful was painful considering how close they were to securing the Bye. Houston was able to come back in the 7th and never looked back, and got their date with destiny:
It did not look promising for the Noise, with Los Angeles dominating the season series 7-1. But the first six games of the championship would be a back and forth affair:
It would be the second series in league history to go the distance, and Houston was hoping to make it a repeat of their 1990 Championship run. Of course, they'd have to get over the 19-2 shellacking that they took in game 6 from Los Angeles' big bats.
In what will go down as the most exciting championship series in league history, game 7 had to be decided in extra innings. Houston was able to tie the game at 3 all in the eighth inning, and after a scoreless ninth we had an extra frame to decide the championship. Houston was able to game a run in the 10th off a single from platoon 2B Scott Sotero and closer Leon Glenn was able to close out the bottom of the inning for the second championship in Houston's history. While Los Angeles had some historic production from their bats, Houston proved throughout the season that they knew how to win when the stakes were the highest.
The MVP went to right fielder Sean Moore of LA, who in a losing effort nonetheless carried over from historic pace in the season, scoring 5 HRs and hitting 16 RBIs with .469 AVG through the 7 games.
With 1995 sorted out, all that's left is to announce our players of the year and take a look ahead to the Free Agent class of 1996.
1995 Players of the Year
MVP - Sean Moore RF LA .439 AVG 28 HRs 70 RBIs
Pitcher of the Year - Mario Marquez SP HOU 7-2 88 Ks 2.05 ERA (3rd year in a row, gonna have to spotlight him soon)
Manager of the Year - Travis Parrott CHI (Not a really great consolation for the fans at home)
Reliever of the Year - Dave Corral LA 47 IP 33 Ks 2.11 ERA
All Stars -
P - Mario Marquez HOU 92 IP .098 WHIP 3.3 WAR
1st - Jesse Huffman LA .314 AVG 14 HRs 2.3 WAR
2nd - Adam Fleenor CHI .344 AVG 5 SBs 2.4 WAR
3rd - Yale Pelton PHX .322 AVG 12 HRs 1.3 WAR
SS - Jeff Bradley PHI .329 AVG 15 HRs 19 SBs 5.1 WAR
LF - Willie Morales LA .350 AVG 23 HRs 15 SBs 3.8 WAR
CF - Shaun Shook DEN .307 AVG 12 SBs 2.5 WAR
RF - Sean Moore LA .514 OBP 1.410 OPS 5.9 WAR
The story of the season was Sean Moore, as he is the 3rd player in League history to take a triple crown in batting. Not only that, he did so in a fashion that will be hard to top in the future. The 1991 season had the hard hitting, flash-in-the-pan Billy Phares, and while before this season no one had come within .050 of his slugging rate (which is basically a measure of extra bases, if a player only hit singles his SLG would be the same as his AVG) from that magical year, Sean Moore surpassed it with a .896 SLG (So basically he had a little more than a double for every hit he struck), meaning it wasn't just the extra games that contributed to his record marks.
Top 5 Free Agents
Sean Moore RF Demands: $12,000 (Not surprising, he wants to be the most valuable player after being the most valuable player)
Willie Morales LF Demands: $9,333
Eric Farmer SP demands: $6,833
Josh Cagle RF demands: $6,250
Adam Fleenor 2B demands: $5,780
Other Notables: Sergio Franco C.
The biggest story out of this offseason will be Los Angeles allowing Sean Moore, Willie Morales and Sergio Franco to venture into the market. They combined for 73 HRs and 191 RBIs, so LA better hope they have the players waiting in the wings that can replace that sort of production.