Culture
The First Designated Hitter Is Ready for the Universal D.H.
On April 6, 1973, two letters modified Ron Blomberg’s life.
The lefty-swinging Yankee arrived at Fenway Park in Boston on opening day and located “DH” scribbled subsequent to his title on the lineup card. He batted within the first inning and have become the primary designated hitter in Main League Baseball historical past.
A controversial change for some — and one the Nationwide League refused to undertake for many years — the place is now common, having been completely added to the N.L. upon the ratification of baseball’s new collective bargaining settlement.
Blomberg is all for it.
The place helped him keep off the disabled record in 1973, which was an even bigger deal again then, and it impressed the Jewish ballplayer’s first e-book, “Designated Hebrew: The Ron Blomberg Story.”
Blomberg, 73, who lives in Atlanta, doesn’t all the time benefit from the fashionable sport. “It’s laborious for me to observe,” he stated, citing defensive shifts, the explosion of analytics and the shortage of small ball and prolonged pitching performances as its flaws.
The growth of the designated hitter, nevertheless, is a supply of satisfaction for him.
“Being the primary D.H., I all the time inform individuals I screwed up the sport of baseball,” he stated with fun. “However now, as an alternative of half a ballplayer, I turned an entire ballplayer when it turned the common D.H. in each leagues.”
What does the world’s first designated hitter consider the common designated hitter?
I feel it’s nice. They need to have executed this a very long time in the past.
To be trustworthy with you, I by no means thought the D.H. was going to reside this lengthy. After I turned the D.H. in ’73, I assumed it was a short-term repair. Have a look at it now. It’s 49 years later. Sadly, the Nationwide League didn’t wish to undertake it for regardless of the motive was.
It places plenty of curiosity within the sport of baseball, and it places plenty of offense in it. It’s an awesome place now. After I got here up, mainly it was like a part-time participant. Now it’s a full-time participant. In the previous couple of years, you’ve received David Ortiz within the Corridor of Fame, and naturally Edgar Martinez turned the primary D.H. within the Corridor of Fame. So it’s a place participant now, and it’s going to remain. It’s a hard and fast a part of the sport.
What made you suppose it was going to be a short-term factor when it first took place?
I assumed it was a joke. No one had any concept what it was. All people used to name it a pinch-hitter. All people thought it was a joke. That is what individuals used to do after they performed stickball and out within the entrance yard. For those who can’t hit, someone’s going to hit for you.
Once we went all the way down to spring coaching in ’73, no person had any concept what the D.H. was. Then we began to make use of it and all of the groups began to make use of it. The pitchers, let’s be trustworthy, 98 p.c of the pitchers can’t hit. They don’t receives a commission to hit. However there are some nice hitters which can be pitchers.
The M.L.B. Lockout Involves an Finish
For those who have a look at it now, it’s a wasted at-bat within the Nationwide League, aside from a number of pitchers that may actually hit.
It appears that only a few pitchers are against the designated hitter as we speak. Was that the case while you had been enjoying, or had been pitchers mad concerning the rule when it was new?
They had been completely mad as a result of they needed to hit. They all the time had contests. Pitchers on each massive league crew, mainly what they did was whoever had probably the most hits would win a contest.
I do know on my groups, Mel Stottlemyre was a wonderful hitter. Fritz Peterson was a wonderful hitter. They went out early and took B.P. They took it significantly. You’ve received a D.H. in Little League now. You’ve received a D.H. in highschool. You’ve received a D.H. in faculty and nearly all of the minor league system. Pitchers these days hardly take any B.P.
I do know three or 4 highschool pitchers whose dad and mom gained’t even allow them to choose up a bat. They don’t need them to get harm.
Stroll me by means of April 6, 1973, the day you turned the primary designated hitter. What was your response to seeing these two letters subsequent to your title? Do you know you had been going to D.H.?
Ralph Houk and Dick Howser and Elston Howard instructed me I used to be going to be the D.H. towards Boston’s Luis Tiant. Down in spring coaching that yr, I used to be not the D.H. in any respect. The explanation I turned the D.H. was as a result of I injured myself 5 days earlier than we broke camp in Fort Lauderdale. I pulled a hamstring. Dick Howser and Ralph Houk requested me if I may play. For those who inform them you can’t play, if you happen to go on the disabled record — and we had one-year contracts — and someone had an excellent season down in Triple-A, it’s going to be like a Wally Pipp, like a Lou Gehrig.
There have been additionally managers, even American League ones, who disliked the designated hitter rule. One persisting thought within the Nationwide League all these years is {that a} D.H. takes technique out of the sport. What do you say to that?
It completely doesn’t. What takes technique out of the sport is placing a pitcher in that may’t hit!
Aside from elevated offense, in what methods do you count on the common designated hitter to influence the game?
It’s going to avoid wasting plenty of older gamers time in baseball. After I was the primary D.H., I used to be a younger man, however the different man I performed towards that sport was Orlando Cepeda. Orlando had a number of years on me, and it extended his profession.
Nelson Cruz is an instance. He’s 41 and simply signed with Washington, a Nationwide League crew. He would have by no means been ready to do this in years previous as a result of he’s solely a chosen hitter. Are there another gamers you suppose would possibly profit from the common D.H., or guys who may have benefited up to now?
Nelson Cruz was an ideal man for the D.H. Edgar Martinez was not the best third baseman, and he turned an awesome D.H. You’d have saved plenty of gamers extra time, like Barry Bonds or Mark McGwire.
These guys are recognized for historic house runs. Now you’ve received Albert Pujols, age 42, closing in on 700 homers. Perhaps he will get that probability now that there are extra D.H. jobs.
I completely agree as a result of he was a heckuva good ballplayer, and he’s a heckuva good hitter. And he’s enjoyable to observe although he’s up in age. And folks come out to observe him.
Placing up a pitcher that’s going to have a batting common of .031 and doesn’t know methods to bunt? That’s not serving to the sport of baseball.
This interview has been edited for readability and size.
Culture
“Se habla LIDOM”: How Peligro Sports fuels Dominican baseball passion in New York City
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, NY — Once inside Peligro Sports, one thing above all else is clear: if you ever need a baseball cap, jersey or a T-shirt for one of the six teams in La Liga de Béisbol Profesional de la República Dominicana, the Dominican winter baseball league (or LIDOM, as it is known), this is the place to be.
And that’s rare.
When it comes to LIDOM gear, whether you’re a diehard fan born and raised in the Dominican Republic, part of the Dominican-American diaspora in the United States, married into a Dominican family or just a collector who can never have enough baseball caps, finding merchandise, especially the caps, is way harder than it should be.
Options for merchandise are limited. You can go to a live game and check the stadium stores or try your luck at a Dominican mall. You can visit the official LIDOM website, but it often sells out. Or, just slightly less fun than a trip to the Dominican Republic, you can go to Peligro Sports, a baseball merchandise mecca centered around LIDOM, MLB, the World Baseball Classic and Latino pride. (Can’t make it to Washington Heights? Peligro is also on Amazon and eBay).
LIDOM hits full swing in the late fall and winter, nestled between the final out of the World Series and pitchers and catchers reporting for MLB spring training. The league’s six teams — Tigres del Licey, Estrellas Orientales, Leones del Escogido, Toros del Este, Gigantes de Cibao and Águilas Cibaeñas — jockey for the top four positions in the standings to qualify for the round robin tournament that determines a champion each season. That champion then represents the Dominican Republic in the Caribbean World Series. Multiple generations of Dominican baseball players have played in LIDOM over the years at the beginning and ends of their pro baseball careers from Miguel Tejada (Águilas) to Elly De La Cruz (Licey).
Before opening Peligro’s doors, a display window greets customers with two mannequins decked out in the full uniforms of Dominican baseball titans Águilas and Licey, the island nation’s two most popular teams and LIDOM’s most intense rivalry. It’s Santo Domingo vs. Santiago. A clash of blue and gold with a wealth of titles between the two. Think New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox or San Francisco Giants vs. Los Angeles Dodgers, and then sprinkle a lot of sazón on it. Licey is the current LIDOM champion, having won back-to-back titles in 2023 and 2024 and has (for now) surpassed Águilas for most in LIDOM history with 24 to Águilas’s 22.
The mannequins speak without saying a word. At Peligro Sports, se habla LIDOM.
Jose Mateo, the owner of the shop, arrived in Washington Heights from his hometown of La Vega, Dominican Republic in 1989, bringing with him his love of Dominican winter baseball. He started his first business in 1991, a semi-prelude to Peligro Sports called Peligro Sandwiches. The top draw was the “chimi,” a toasted Dominican specialty, but there were also arcade games to be played and baseball cards to be bought and traded. A local high school baseball star and fellow Dominican named Manny Ramirez was a regular customer and now a long-time friend of Mateo’s (a signed and framed Ramirez jersey hangs in his office). When the record shop next to Mateo’ sandwich business went up for sale, he bought it with the intent of turning it into a sporting goods store.
Between 2009 and 2010, after years of renovation and investment, Peligro Sports was born, offering a mix of LIDOM caps, jerseys and other memorabilia, baseball bats and gloves, shoes, and WBC merchandise. That fire, sky blue Mexico fitted from the WBC? Peligro’s got it.
Mateo remembers the pre-internet days of the early ‘90s when Dominicans in New York had to go to extremes for LIDOM game recaps and box scores. Some would wait for days after a game until Dominican newspapers were delivered to New York. Others, who couldn’t wait that long, would purchase phone cards to make long-distance calls to relatives in the Dominican Republic who could give them live updates of games over the phone.
Passion for LIDOM baseball in New York was undeniable both then and now, giving Peligro an ongoing purpose in Washington Heights’ vibrant Dominican community.
“(Peligro Sports) happened with a little bit of business vision,” Mateo said in Spanish. “I saw (Dominican fans in New York) had needs for (LIDOM) products because no one else had them anywhere, and the Dominican community (in Washington Heights) was growing. People would ask where they could get this (hat) and that (T-shirt). More than just me being a fan of Dominican baseball, I realized as much as I like (LIDOM merchandise) other people can like it too.”
Mateo is a LIDOM encyclopedia for anyone who enters Peligro Sports with questions on the league’s merchandise. And not just because LIDOM is also a family affair for him. His cousin, Wellington Cepeda, is the manager of Gigantes de Cibao, the last team to win a LIDOM title before Licey’s current reign.
Mateo points out that LIDOM’s baseball cap situation is unique. If you want to wear the same caps that the players wear on the field (a common desire for any baseball fan), you’ve got to pay attention. New Era, the official maker of every MLB team’s caps, is the current manufacturer for four of LIDOM’s six teams: Gigantes, Toros, Estrellas and Águilas.
San Diego Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. could be seen in previous LIDOM seasons wearing an Estrellas uniform alongside his father, former St. Louis Cardinal Fernando Tatis Sr., who manages the team. Another former Cardinal and Puerto Rico World Baseball Classic team manager Yadier Molina (recently named LIDOM manager of the year by the Santo Domingo Sportswriters Association), now wears the black and yellow cap of Águilas. That star power combined with New Era’s brand recognition as the official cap of the grandes ligas is a powerful combination for fans when considering a purchase.
“What people like most are the New Era caps,” Mateo said. “They’ve got más flow.”
Licey and Escogido have their hats manufactured by a Dominican company called 4Fans, and with Licey winning consecutive championships and Escogido managed by Albert Pujols that local brand is getting a boost.
“It could be 4Fans, it could be another company, (LIDOM) fans are still going to get it,” Mateo said. “There was a time when every team (in LIDOM) used New Era for their caps. But just like here in the United States, sometimes sports teams (in the Dominican Republic) change the companies that make their uniforms. Escogido and Licey haven’t used New Era for years, but I feel they’ll return to New Era soon.”
Keeping up with the business logistics of LIDOM’s cap manufacturing can be a complicated dance at times. Sometimes Mateo has ordered directly from LIDOM. Other times New Era. 4Fans being in the mix means he’ll always have to make more than one call if he wants every LIDOM cap in stock at Peligro Sports.
Ordering LIDOM jerseys is similarly complex, according to Mateo. Mexican company Arrieta makes the jerseys for Estrellas, Águilas and Gigantes. Escogido’s jerseys are manufactured by Wilson. Licey has jerseys manufactured by Wilson and Arrieta. Mateo hasn’t bothered trying to sell Toros jerseys because the team doesn’t have much of a following in New York, but you can get Toros caps at Peligro.
The most popular LIDOM jerseys at Peligro Sports? Águilas. Which Mateo attributes to the team’s history of success and many of Washington Heights’ Dominican residents hailing from El Cibao, where Águilas fandom is commonplace.
One jersey that could soon be a best seller for Peligro is that of Juan Soto — but not just his New York Mets jersey. Soto has reportedly asked the Mets if he could play for Licey in the future. If that happens, Mateo could see many of the Soto fans who bought Yankee caps at Peligro Sports when Soto was traded to the Bronx returning for Soto Licey jerseys, given his popularity in New York’s Dominican community. Mateo said many of the Soto fans who bought Yankee caps have already returned to purchase Mets caps.
Peligro Sports allows its customers to personalize purchased jerseys with names and numbers on the back, although Mateo points out that no LIDOM team puts player last names on the back of its jerseys (that’s prime real estate for advertising). If a customer wanted a Licey jersey with “Soto” on the back they could request it for as simple a reason as their own last name being Soto. But Mateo is holding off on proactively making any Juan Soto merchandise for now.
“Supposedly, Soto might play five or 10 games (for Licey),” Mateo said. “Out of respect I won’t make a Soto jersey until a deal is done. Not all money is welcome money. But from the moment I can (legally), I will. I don’t want to break the good relationships I’ve built with LIDOM. (A Soto Licey jersey) would be a great impact for the league and for me as a businessman. Soto is in his moment right now. Many (superstar) Dominican players play in LIDOM when their careers are coming to an end. It would be incredible if it could happen.”
¡Una familia de GANADORES… Una familia de CAMPEONES! @JuanSoto25_ 💙 #LiceyFamily 👑 pic.twitter.com/dNBOq8fOKK
— Tigres del Licey (@TigresdelLicey) January 8, 2025
Mateo has been in Washington Heights for over three decades and selling LIDOM merchandise more than half of that time. From the titans to the contenders and pretenders, he says LIDOM continues to be good business for him because of the passion he believes the Dominican Republic will always have for baseball and the pride those baseball fans share in their nation.
“It’s a way to identify where you’re from,” Mateo said. “Latinos, even more so the youth, love to say ‘I’m Dominican,’ ‘I’m Puerto Rican.’ Each person wants to represent their country. The Dominican league is so strong in popularity, the people feel it in their soul. People want to show where they’re from and where their allegiances are.”
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(All photos: David Betancourt)
Culture
Could a small-market team be a surprise fit for Roki Sasaki? Parsing his agent’s words
At last month’s Winter Meetings in Dallas, agent Joel Wolfe held court in front of a large group of reporters and caused a stir when discussing his client, Japanese right-hander Roki Sasaki, who is expected to sign with a major-league team after the international signing period begins on Jan. 15.
Speculation about where Sasaki would ultimately land in MLB has simmered since his Nippon Professional Baseball debut in 2021, stoked by his stellar performance in the 2023 World Baseball Classic. The Dodgers are currently seen as a favorite, but it’s clear they’re not the only team in the hunt.
At the Winter Meetings, Wolfe said that Sasaki was looking for a team that has had success on the field and a history of developing pitchers. He also mentioned access to direct flights from his new city to Japan as a consideration. But perhaps most interestingly, he said that because of Sasaki’s personal experiences growing up in the spotlight in Japan, a small market team outside of the media glare might have a greater chance than some might think.
“I think that there’s an argument to be made that a smaller, mid-market team might be more beneficial for him as a soft landing coming from Japan, given what he’s been through and not having an enjoyable experience with the media,” Wolfe said. “It might be — I’m not saying it will be — I don’t know how he’s going to view it, but it might be beneficial for him to be in a smaller market.”
Teams took note, with some altering their presentations to account for the perceived preferences.
Sasaki, 23, was officially posted last month by Japan’s Chiba Lotte Marines. He can pick his team, but because he is not a free agent, he will be bound by international signing bonus limits.
Just before the new year, Wolfe held a teleconference and said 20 teams submitted pitches for Sasaki.
But where will he go? And could it really be a team outside of the big coastal juggernauts? Would it be possible to break down which teams might be good fits for Sasaki, using only the criteria Wolfe laid out? (While of course understanding that there are many, many factors at play beyond these.)
For this exercise, we looked at all 30 teams and graded them on four factors (history of success, small media market, pitching development and access to Japan), ranking each team from one through 30 based on a specific metric. The best earned 30 points and the worst earned one point in each category.
We don’t know who will ultimately win the Sasaki Sweepstakes, but perhaps some teams have a better chance than we previously thought.
History of success
What Wolfe said: “The best I can say is, he has paid attention to how teams have done, as far as overall success, both this year and years past. He does watch a lot of Major League Baseball.”
Methodology: This is pretty straightforward. Does the team win? For this, we’ll look at the winning percentage of MLB teams over the last four full seasons.
Limitations: Using just the regular-season win totals from the last four seasons doesn’t include postseason success. This formula also weighs each season equally, and the 2021 Orioles (52 wins) and the 2021 White Sox (93 wins) are in much different situations than their 2025 counterparts.
Team winning percentage, 2021-24
Team | 2024 | 23 | 22 | 21 | Total | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
98 |
100 |
111 |
106 |
415 |
30 |
|
89 |
104 |
101 |
88 |
382 |
29 |
|
88 |
90 |
106 |
95 |
379 |
28 |
|
94 |
82 |
99 |
92 |
367 |
27 |
|
93 |
92 |
86 |
95 |
366 |
26 |
|
80 |
99 |
86 |
100 |
365 |
25 |
|
95 |
90 |
87 |
82 |
354 |
24 |
|
85 |
88 |
90 |
90 |
353 |
23 |
|
80 |
79 |
81 |
107 |
347 |
22 |
|
74 |
89 |
92 |
91 |
346 |
21 |
|
93 |
82 |
89 |
79 |
343 |
20 |
|
89 |
75 |
101 |
77 |
342 |
19 |
|
92 |
76 |
92 |
80 |
340 |
18 |
|
83 |
71 |
93 |
90 |
337 |
17 |
|
81 |
78 |
78 |
92 |
329 |
16 |
|
91 |
101 |
83 |
52 |
327 |
15 |
|
82 |
87 |
78 |
73 |
320 |
14 |
|
83 |
83 |
74 |
71 |
311 |
13 |
|
86 |
78 |
66 |
77 |
307 |
12 |
|
77 |
82 |
62 |
83 |
304 |
11 |
|
89 |
84 |
74 |
52 |
299 |
10 |
|
78 |
90 |
68 |
60 |
296 |
9 |
|
63 |
73 |
73 |
77 |
286 |
8 |
|
62 |
84 |
69 |
67 |
282 |
7 |
|
86 |
56 |
65 |
74 |
281 |
6 |
|
41 |
61 |
81 |
93 |
276 |
5 |
|
76 |
76 |
62 |
61 |
275 |
4 |
|
69 |
50 |
60 |
86 |
265 |
3 |
|
71 |
71 |
55 |
65 |
262 |
2 |
|
61 |
59 |
68 |
74 |
262 |
2 |
Conclusion: The Dodgers are good. We knew that. Only once in the last four years has the team failed to win 100 games — and in that season, they won the World Series. With no repeat World Series winners over that period, it is clear that if winning is all that matters, joining the Dodgers is the way to go.
But don’t count out the Braves. Atlanta has the second-most regular-season victories over the last four seasons and a recent World Series title of their own. The Astros, who won the World Series in 2022, have the third-most victories over that time. The Rangers won a World Series in 2023, but only eight teams have fewer regular-season victories over the last four years.
If there’s a sleeper in this group, it’s the Milwaukee Brewers. Milwaukee’s won the fifth-most regular-season games (366) and only the New York Yankees have won more regular-season games (367) without a World Series title in that timeframe.
Small media markets
What Wolfe said: “I think that there’s an argument to be made that a smaller, mid-market team might be more beneficial for him as a soft landing coming from Japan.”
Methodology: Not all media markets are created equal. Boston is the seventh-largest TV market in the country, but playing in Boston is traditionally considered a particularly intense media experience. Boston, New York and Philadelphia have reputations as among the toughest media markets, while large markets like Los Angeles, Dallas and Atlanta don’t have the same reputation. For this exercise, we’ve used the 2024 Baseball Writers Association of America rolls and ranked each chapter by the number of members listed in that chapter as a reflection of the media attention.
Limitations: Using the BBWAA chapters just tells total numbers, it does not include just how many writers are at the ballpark every day. Also, there are five chapters — New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Baltimore-Washington and San Francisco-Oakland — with two teams. Both teams share the same score, even if the media surrounding the Dodgers or Cubs is greater than the Angels or White Sox. The New York chapter is by far the largest because many national writers also live in New York. Of the one-team chapters, only Boston had more members in 2024 than Miami, although many of Miami’s members cover players from Spanish-speaking countries as much or more than the Marlins. Also, this metric does not include TV or radio coverage. It also doesn’t factor in the Japanese media, which travels to cover the country’s best players, regardless of where they are playing. In 2020, at least two Japanese media members were in Cincinnati for much of the season just for Shogo Akiyama, who spent that season mostly as a platoon player.
Media market size
Team | Chapter | Members | Points |
---|---|---|---|
Milwaukee |
8 |
30 |
|
Tampa Bay |
10 |
29 |
|
Cincinnati |
11 |
28 |
|
Colorado |
13 |
27 |
|
San Diego |
13 |
27 |
|
Cleveland |
14 |
25 |
|
Kansas City |
15 |
24 |
|
Arizona |
16 |
23 |
|
Houston |
17 |
22 |
|
Dallas-Fort Worth |
18 |
21 |
|
St. Louis |
18 |
21 |
|
Pittsburgh |
19 |
19 |
|
Atlanta |
20 |
18 |
|
Minnesota |
20 |
18 |
|
Seattle |
21 |
16 |
|
Detroit |
23 |
15 |
|
Philadelphia |
28 |
14 |
|
San Francisco-Oakland |
30 |
13 |
|
San Francisco-Oakland |
30 |
13 |
|
Toronto |
32 |
11 |
|
Chicago |
33 |
10 |
|
Chicago |
33 |
10 |
|
Miami |
34 |
8 |
|
Baltimore-Washington |
37 |
7 |
|
Baltimore-Washington |
37 |
7 |
|
Boston |
39 |
5 |
|
Los Angeles |
60 |
4 |
|
Los Angeles |
60 |
4 |
|
New York |
132 |
2 |
|
New York |
132 |
2 |
Conclusion: The Brewers, Rays, Reds and Rockies could really bear down on Wolfe’s comments about small markets and media attention in their pitch.
Developing pitching
What Wolfe said: “He’s talked to a lot of players, foreign players, that have been on his team with Chiba Lotte. He asked questions about weather, comfortability, pitching development.”
Methodology: For this exercise, we’ll use Cy Young Award voting from the past four years. This, of course, benefits teams with established pitchers and teams like the Yankees who sign big-name free agents, but using the cumulative voting totals hopefully gives credit to teams whose pitchers consistently garner votes. For pitchers who were traded during the season in which they earned points, we’ve used the team that pitchers started the season with because the bulk of the innings and the preparation were from the first team.
Limitations: This is less quantifiable than simple W-L records. Some teams are known for developing their pitchers at the minor-league level and some, like the Astros and Rays, are known for taking talented pitchers and improving them.
Using just the Cy Young voting limits the pool to mostly starters, which is OK since Sasaki is going to be signed and used as a starter. But this method only measures the very best performances, and how much of that is on the pitcher and how much of that is on the team? It also discounts previous advancements, such as giving the Yankees credit on Gerrit Cole, who became an ace while with the Astros and was drafted by the Pirates. It also gives more weight to the voting results, with unanimous selections earning a much higher point total than close decisions.
Cy Young votes, 2021-24
Team | 2024 | 23 | 22 | 21 | Total | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 |
86 |
88 |
207 |
381 |
30 |
|
133 |
28 |
48 |
141 |
350 |
29 |
|
199 |
64 |
75 |
0 |
338 |
28 |
|
0 |
210 |
4 |
123 |
337 |
27 |
|
59 |
204 |
7 |
0 |
270 |
26 |
|
18 |
6 |
224 |
14 |
262 |
25 |
|
0 |
0 |
210 |
0 |
210 |
24 |
|
210 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
210 |
24 |
|
0 |
13 |
20 |
172 |
205 |
22 |
|
0 |
0 |
97 |
93 |
190 |
21 |
|
18 |
86 |
32 |
7 |
143 |
20 |
|
141 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
141 |
19 |
|
0 |
0 |
66 |
73 |
139 |
18 |
|
0 |
115 |
0 |
8 |
123 |
17 |
|
0 |
68 |
45 |
0 |
113 |
16 |
|
0 |
0 |
0 |
113 |
113 |
16 |
|
47 |
42 |
0 |
0 |
89 |
14 |
|
0 |
0 |
82 |
1 |
83 |
13 |
|
67 |
0 |
5 |
0 |
72 |
12 |
|
38 |
31 |
0 |
69 |
11 |
||
25 |
31 |
0 |
0 |
56 |
10 |
|
53 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
53 |
9 |
|
0 |
1 |
0 |
41 |
42 |
8 |
|
0 |
19 |
10 |
0 |
29 |
7 |
|
1 |
16 |
6 |
1 |
24 |
6 |
|
0 |
0 |
0 |
23 |
23 |
5 |
|
4 |
0 |
1 |
3 |
8 |
4 |
|
5 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
5 |
3 |
|
2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
2 |
|
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
Conclusion: The Blue Jays, surprisingly, top the list. Much of that comes from Robbie Ray’s 2021 Cy Young campaign, but the team also had third-place finishers in 2022 (Alek Manoah) and 2023 (Kevin Gausman). Manoah is the only one of those three to come up through the Blue Jays’ system (and we’ll ignore what’s happened since then), while Ray won the award in his first full season. Gausman’s third-place finish came in his first year with the team after signing as a free agent.
The Phillies finished second, followed by the Braves. The Brewers finished ninth by this metric, but that would seem low considering the pitching the Brewers have gotten over the last four years. The Astros, a team credited with turning around several pitching careers, finished sixth.
Direct flights to and from Japan
What Wolfe said: “When we supply information to our Japanese players, long before they come over here, one of the things that we provide for them is direct flights from Japan and the amount of time it takes for family to come and visit you. I think about five or 10 years ago that was something that maybe they weighed a little bit more, but now you can fly direct from Japan to most of the major cities in the U.S.”
Methodology: There are direct flights to Japan from 15 different airports in the continental United States. Toronto also has direct flights to Japan. For this exercise, we will use the distance from the team’s home ballpark to the nearest airport with a direct flight to Japan.
Limitations: There are a ton, but we’ll start with the fact that when traveling, the most relevant unit of measurement is time, not distance. However, variables including frequency of flights, schedules, traffic and overall distance come into play — a flight with a stop from the West Coast will likely take less time than a nonstop flight from the East Coast to Japan. And, yes, O’Hare airport may only be 14 miles from Wrigley Field, but there are times of day that it can be a long drive.
Direct flights to Japan
Team | Nearest non-stop | Miles from park | Points |
---|---|---|---|
SAN |
4 |
30 |
|
BOS |
6 |
29 |
|
JFK |
9 |
28 |
|
DFW |
10 |
27 |
|
MSP |
12 |
26 |
|
SFO |
12 |
26 |
|
SEA |
12 |
26 |
|
ORD |
14 |
23 |
|
IAH |
17 |
22 |
|
JFK/EWR |
17 |
22 |
|
LAX |
19 |
20 |
|
ORD |
20 |
19 |
|
DTW |
20 |
19 |
|
DEN |
22 |
17 |
|
ATL |
23 |
16 |
|
YYZ |
25 |
15 |
|
IAD |
28 |
14 |
|
LAX |
39 |
13 |
|
IAD |
61 |
12 |
|
ORD |
80 |
11 |
|
EWR |
85 |
10 |
|
SFO |
96 |
9 |
|
DTW |
157 |
8 |
|
IAD |
238 |
7 |
|
DTW |
251 |
6 |
|
ORD |
298 |
5 |
|
SAN |
360 |
4 |
|
MSP |
435 |
3 |
|
ATL |
450 |
2 |
|
ATL |
655 |
1 |
Conclusion: San Diego is the clear winner here. San Diego International Airport doesn’t have the volume of flights available at LAX, but it does have the bonus of not being LAX or having LAX traffic, which can add hours to travel time. The Twins are a sneaky good spot with direct flights.
Of note: Though it isn’t reflected in our calculation, Seattle offers the shortest flight time (10 hours, 10 minutes) to Tokyo.
Final conclusion
Final totals
Team | Total | Wins | Development | Flights | Media |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
103 |
20 |
26 |
30 |
27 |
|
97 |
28 |
25 |
22 |
22 |
|
91 |
29 |
28 |
16 |
18 |
|
89 |
26 |
22 |
11 |
30 |
|
81 |
22 |
20 |
26 |
13 |
|
78 |
27 |
27 |
22 |
2 |
|
77 |
21 |
30 |
15 |
11 |
|
77 |
24 |
29 |
10 |
14 |
|
75 |
23 |
10 |
26 |
16 |
|
75 |
14 |
17 |
26 |
18 |
|
72 |
30 |
18 |
20 |
4 |
|
70 |
12 |
24 |
19 |
15 |
|
63 |
18 |
12 |
8 |
25 |
|
63 |
25 |
7 |
2 |
29 |
|
59 |
9 |
2 |
27 |
21 |
|
58 |
16 |
8 |
29 |
5 |
|
57 |
13 |
11 |
23 |
10 |
|
55 |
19 |
6 |
28 |
2 |
|
55 |
5 |
21 |
19 |
10 |
|
53 |
10 |
16 |
4 |
23 |
|
52 |
6 |
19 |
3 |
24 |
|
48 |
15 |
14 |
12 |
7 |
|
48 |
11 |
3 |
6 |
28 |
|
47 |
17 |
4 |
5 |
21 |
|
47 |
2 |
1 |
17 |
27 |
|
40 |
7 |
24 |
1 |
8 |
|
39 |
2 |
16 |
14 |
7 |
|
39 |
4 |
9 |
7 |
19 |
|
38 |
8 |
13 |
13 |
4 |
|
30 |
3 |
5 |
9 |
13 |
Why are the good teams good? Well, those good teams win games, develop players and have money. Those three are actually tied to the categories given — with market size in part determining both direct flights to Japan and media attention, both of which impact revenue. That’s why it’s no surprise that the top three teams in our exercise are the Padres, Braves and Astros.
It is only when we get to fourth place that we have one of those small-market teams in the Brewers. The Brewers tick all those boxes, with an out-of-the-box pick in O’Hare International. (It may be in a different state, but O’Hare is just over an hour and a $114 Uber ride from Milwaukee.)
Will the Brewers be the pick? It seems unlikely, but Matt Arnold’s team can make some interesting points in its sales pitch.
The Padres had already been a team seen as having a shot at Sasaki’s services, and not just because of the team’s recent history of handing out major contracts and making big splashes. The Padres tick all the boxes that Wolfe laid out, both in general terms and in our exercise. While the top 10 is littered with big-market bullies, the Mariners, who have as much history with Japanese players as any team, finished 10th, followed by the Twins. Both teams are ahead of the Dodgers on this list, but somehow, it seems Los Angeles still has a pretty good chance of landing another Japanese superstar.
(Photo of Roki Sasaki: Eric Espada / Getty Images)
Culture
NFL QB stock report: Josh Allen reigns supreme; Aaron Rodgers plummets in final rankings
Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen closed out the best season of his career with six consecutive weeks at No. 1 in The Athletic’s QB stock report, maintaining his lead over Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson after his own six-week run up top.
As we entered the season with a maiden voyage in this quarterback project, the most daunting question was obvious while the answer remained wildly unclear: How was anyone going to leapfrog Patrick Mahomes?
Every week, these rankings focused on a confluence of primary factors — current performance, career résumé, future potential and the situations around the QBs. So with Mahomes winning three of the last four Super Bowls, it was going to take something extraordinary for his demotion.
Of course, some extraordinary things happened. Mahomes and the Chiefs kept winning despite their uncharacteristic struggles, while Allen and Jackson duked it out in the MVP race for the final three months of the season. And while Joe Burrow played at a higher level than Mahomes, the Bengals missed the playoffs, thereby invoking the situational parameter within his ranking.
On the flip side, Aaron Rodgers is a Super Bowl champion and four-time MVP. Mahomes is the only active QB with a superior résumé, but Rodgers finished in the bottom-10 of the rankings and has been in the 20’s since Week 11. His individual performances, with a few exceptions, were to blame along with the Jets’ circumstances and a cap on the 41-year-old’s potential.
The Athletic’s Final 2024-25 QB rankings
Along the way, we dove deeper into certain quarterbacks, tapping into valued insight from a host of coaches and executives around the league. Their viewpoints also carried weight in the rankings. Among the topics hit this season: We examined Allen’s MVP surge, Rodgers’ downfall with the Jets, Bryce Young’s midseason revival, Jordan Love’s contract validation, Caleb Williams’ resurfacing flaws and C.J. Stroud’s regression.
We hope you enjoyed the first season of rankings as much as we enjoyed putting them together. Let’s close it out by recognizing some of the biggest trends of the year.
Biggest preseason riser
Sam Darnold, on his fourth team in five years, opened training camp as the likely backup to rookie J.J. McCarthy, so expectations ranged from nonexistent to minimal.
Sure, Darnold’s pedigree as the No. 3 pick out of USC couldn’t be ignored, nor could coach Kevin O’Connell’s QB-friendly system. But no one could’ve predicted this.
Darnold finished fifth in the league in both passing yards (4,319) and touchdowns (35) and finished sixth among qualified QBs with a 102.5 passer rating.
Darnold opened the season as the 28th-ranked quarterback, and he rose 19 spots. He’s been a mostly steadying presence for the team that was tied for the third-most wins in the NFL. Star receivers Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison never missed a beat.
Despite the meteoric rise, Darnold did dip for a bit, going No. 11 in Week 10 to No. 18 in Week 12. He still finished the season with his only three weeks in the top 10. Darnold will enter the offseason with the potential to become the crown jewel of the free agent market.
Biggest preseason faller
Aaron Rodgers was still viewed by many around the league as one of the NFL’s premier quarterbacks at the start of the season, even coming off the torn Achilles, so the New York Jets QB debuted at No. 5.
He remained in the top six for the first five weeks of the season before the evidence became too great to ignore, and he plummeted to No. 15 in Week 6. Rodgers fell to No. 20 in Week 11 and never improved his standing. He finished the season ranked ahead of only two quarterbacks who were expected to open the season as their team’s starter.
Rodgers’ 63.0 completion percentage was his lowest since 2019, but he actually finished with more yards (3,897) and touchdowns (28) and fewer interceptions (11) than in his final season with the Packers.
Rodgers’ future is very much up in the air. Whether he wants to continue playing and if the Jets would want him back remain open questions. He may still be an asset for a veteran team that believes it’s a QB shy of the playoffs, but Rodgers will have to play much better than he did amid the Jets’ chaos.
Biggest midseason riser
Carolina Panthers QB Bryce Young’s turnaround was one of the most spectacularly unexpected stories of the season.
The 2023 No. 1 pick was benched after coach Dave Canales’ second game. And although Young’s performance justified the demotion, it raised significant questions about Young’s future with an organization that has made more than its recent share of impulse decisions.
It’s not like the Panthers benched Young with a definitive timeline for his return to the field, either. Young only got his job back after Andy Dalton injured his hand in a car accident.
And yet, Young played well down the stretch with 15 touchdown passes, five touchdown runs and six interceptions over his final 10 starts. They were also 4-6 during that stretch, which is no small feat for a team that had lost 22 of its previous 25 games.
Canales has had a nice history with his quarterbacks, so it was surprising to see it start so poorly. But now that Young is entering the offseason playing his best football, the Panthers will be an intriguing team entering 2025.
GO DEEPER
‘We got our guy’: Bryce Young and the Panthers go into the offseason on high note
Biggest midseason faller
It was supposed to be C.J. Stroud’s year. It never played out that way.
The Houston Texans QB debuted at No. 7 and soared to No. 3 just a week later. That’s where he remained for most of the first half, including as late as Week 9, but Stroud steadily fell the rest of the way. His ranking worsened in eight of the final 10 weeks, all the way down to No. 15.
Stroud’s numbers were down across the board. He completed 63.2 percent of his passes for 3,727 yards, 20 touchdowns, 12 interceptions and an 87.0 passer rating. His rookie numbers were superior in every category, which is even more noteworthy considering he played two fewer games in 2023.
The Texans need to build a better offensive line because the pressure was the main deterrent to Stroud’s success. The injuries didn’t help, either.
And yet, Stroud and the Texans are back in the playoffs. There are plenty of reasons to remain bullish on Stroud.
Best rookie
This wasn’t difficult.
Jayden Daniels opened the season at No. 22, jumped to No. 13 by Week 6 and into the top 10 in Week 9. The Washington Commanders QB closed the season with three consecutive weeks at No. 8.
Daniels completed 69 percent of his passes for 3,568 yards, 25 touchdowns, nine interceptions and a 100.1 passer rating; he added 891 rushing yards and six touchdowns.
He was so composed in tense moments, highlighted by four game-winning drives. Daniels’ Hail Mary against the Bears was an all-time moment, but the late drives against the Eagles and Falcons were more meaningful and should provide optimism the rookie is capable of repeating the feat in the playoffs.
Caleb Williams had a rocky season, but the Chicago Bears QB still put up some numbers for a team that went through a ton of adversity. Bo Nix wasn’t asked to carry the Denver Broncos, but he carried his weight to end their playoff drought. Drake Maye was often lost in the chaos in New England, but the young Patriots QB showed evidence of being a special player. Finally, Atlanta Falcons QB Michael Penix Jr. created momentum for next season with his solid play in three starts.
It’s shaping up to be a great draft class.
Incomplete …
And then there was one.
J.J. McCarthy missed his rookie season with a torn meniscus, leading to teams around the league wondering what the Vikings plan to do at quarterback. Conventional thinking suggests they’ll let Darnold hit free agency and turn toward their first-round pick in 2025. It’s just practical asset management.
But what if Darnold leads the Vikings to the Super Bowl or even the NFC Championship Game? The Vikings will have $75 million in cap space, according to Over The Cap, so they can pay Darnold to keep everything intact.
There’s an even bigger factor at play, though. McCarthy would rank as the No. 1 quarterback if he were in the 2025 draft class, according to several executives and coaches who have evaluated Miami’s Cam Ward and Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders. The Vikings would certainly have a market if they decided to move McCarthy.
Who’s next?
On a related note, there was a major shakeup in the draft order over the final two weeks, and that should have a significant impact on the quarterback class.
For so long, the QB draft discussion focused on the Giants and Raiders. After all, they were viewed as the two most quarterback-desperate teams in the league, and they built what seemed to be an indestructible residence atop the draft order.
So much for that. The Giants will pick third after a Week 17 victory against the Colts, while the Raiders’ late wins against the Jaguars and Saints dropped them to No. 6.
Even until Sunday, when the Patriots had a temporary hold of No. 1 until they beat the Bills, QB-needy teams knew the pick was likely up for auction. Anyone willing to pay could get their guy.
Then the Titans and Browns entered the chat.
The Titans, who hold the top pick, aren’t going to build around Will Levis if this season was any indication. And the Browns know they have to get younger to find Deshaun Watson’s successor, whether that’s in Week 1 of 2025 or sometime thereafter. Watson’s setback from his Achilles injury could accelerate his to-be-determined successor’s timeline.
The Titans are in a great spot if they love Ward or Sanders — or McCarthy, which could open up a new range of options. As for the Browns, they’ve made moves in the past to ensure Watson would have an unobstructed path to the starting job, so they’re slightly more of a wild card. Maybe the star attraction of Colorado’s Travis Hunter shifts their focus to a QB in a later round.
Any way you look at it, the draft just got a lot more interesting.
Dropped out: Mason Rudolph (No. 31 last week), Dorian Thompson-Robinson (No. 32 last week).
(Photo of Josh Allen: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)
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