The Atlanta
Braves: Lucky 13
by Daniel Paulling
September 29, 2004
Everyone knows the story of the Braves’ off-season.
They lost Javy Lopez, Gary Sheffield, Greg Maddux, and Vinny Castilla
in the past off-season while only adding a couple of bullpen arms
and Paul Byrd to this year’s team. Every single media outlet
was predicting the end of the Braves’ dominance - the end
of a dynasty.
Well, they were wrong. Absolutely wrong. The dynasty
of winning either the Western division or Eastern in Hotlanta continues.
Things were quite bleak in late-June for the Braves,
as they were six games under .500 and they were 6.5 games out of
first on June 23. This was supposed to be the year for the retooled
Phillies or the “can’t-do-worse-than-last-year”
Mets. Heck, even the World Champion Marlins should have beaten the
Braves in the NL East. But since Chipper Jones moved back to third
base in the middle of the year, the Braves have caught fire.
“I was very, very skeptical,” said
team leader Chipper Jones.
The clinching game was the Braves season in a microcosm.
They started out slowly, but they came from behind and won it.
So what keeps this team ticking? They don’t
have an outrageous budget like the New York Yankees or Boston Red
Sox. They don’t have a tremendous farm system like the Minnesota
Twins. What do they have in their favor?
John Schuerholz, Bobby Cox, and Leo Mazzone. Never
before have a combination of three been so perfectly apt for each
other.
What person in their right mind would want a right
handed pitcher with a career 5.11 ERA and an ERA of nearly nine
from the bullpen over the span of 2003? John Schuerholz did. With
tutelage from pitching coach Leo Mazzone, this fellow, aka Jaret
Wright, has become a Cy Young candidate with fifteen wins and a
3.33 ERA over 184 IP. What person in their right mind would want
a left handed hitter who just can’t stay healthy? John Schuerholz
did. Under the leadership of Bobby Cox, this right fielder named
JD Drew has been on the field nearly everyday and has been playing
outstanding on both sides of the field.
"The challenges that we faced this winter
were not just another year," he said. "This was a dramatic
challenge, to lose the All-Star caliber players -- Sheffield, Maddux,
Lopez, Castilla -- and [we] had [the] payroll reduced by over $15
million. That's a pretty daunting challenge, and we regarded it
as such."
And now we’ve seen that the Braves have risen
to this challenge and defeated it. Congrats on number thirteen;
hopefully fourteen will be just as easy.
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