71Bear said:
philbert said:
Quite frankly, I believe the Giants also would have struggled v. Atlanta for the same reason LA is struggling. Both teams were emotionally and mentally drained after the NLDS. Of course, the NLCS isn't over yet and LA did come back v. the Braves last year when down 3-1 but this year, ATL/LA has a different feel to it.
Regardless, what happens, I am 100% rooting for Dusty Baker to finally get a WS ring as a manager. He's a great guy who came so close several times, I am hoping this is his turn….
One reason why 2021 has a different feel is that the Braves feel like a better post-season team right now, and felt that way for most of September. Heck, over the last 1/3 of the season, they were pretty much the equal of the Giants and Dodgers as a regular season team, finishing 36-18.
They were the favorite to win the division and certainly given a good chance of winning the pennant (not as good as the Dodgers, but a good chance) but they were a big disappointment even when Acuna got hurt, playing .500 ball. As it turns out, the team that improved the most with mid-season acquisitions were the Braves. How many times in history have mid-season acquisitions hit back to back HR's in the post-season? Answer -- 1, yesterday.
A month ago I thought the Brewers seemed better built for the post than any NL teams, but the Braves, except for a brief blip in September when they lost 4 in a row 92 to the Rockies and 2 to the Giants, looked like the best built for post-season by the end. The Brewers' big 3 starters lost some mojo and they lost their 8th inning set up man (which did impact the NLDS). Meanwhile, the Braves big 3 starters started looking solid. I liked them better than the Giants or the Dodgers as a post-season team.
The Braves did have to hold off the Phillies, but they got to relax for their last four games. They were able to take care of the Brewers in 4. Unlike the Dodgers, who had to give everything they had to try to win the division, then to win the Wild Card, then to win the NLDS. If the Braves were an equal to or better than the Dodgers as a post-season team shortly before the season ended, it became worse for the Dodgers when they lost Muncy and now Turner (and maybe losing Kershaw, though I'm not convinced that was a negative). I gave the Braves the best chance of winning the pennant before the series started, I would have done the same if they had played the Giants. Now that they are up 3-1, I still think they have the best chance.
Last year, coming into the NLCS, the Dodgers were a well rested team, no big health issues. The Braves were pretty well rested, too, but the Dodgers were playing like the better team (with all games at a neutral site, the Dodgers were favored in all 7 games). The Dodgers never had to play a game in Atlanta. Perhaps the Dodgers would have been better off with 4 in LA and 3 in Atlanta, but it is nice to be down 3-1 and never have to face a road crowd.
Right now the Dodgers are trying to come back 3-1 with the last two games on the road, which is ALMOST never done. Almost the operative word. In a 7 game LCS? Happened twice, starting with the Marlins (with help from Steve Bartman) winning games 6 and 7 in Chicago after taking game 5 in Miami, and ending with the Red Sox coming from 3-0 then 3-1, winning the last two in NY. So yeah, it can be done, but it is a way bigger challenge than what they faced in 2020, both needing games 6 and 7 on the road, and that's if they can get game 5 with a bullpen game against a starter who has been pitching really well, AND when, unlike 2020, they seem like the inferior team, not the superior team.
It's baseball. Anything can happen, and things that have never happened keep happening. But I'll mostly just root for Dusty to finally win a World Series and see what happens.