As it stands, the most likely outcome of the first round is the Cubs over the Dodgers in four games, the Phillies over the Brewers in five games, the Red Sox upsetting the Angels in four games, and Tampa Bay sweeping the White Sox.
Then, in the LCS round, the Cubs oust the Phillies in five, and the Rays go seven with Boston. Tampa Bay goes seven again with the Cubs in the World Series to prolong 100 years of misery for Chicago.
Fortunately, for baseball fans, it should be a great, competitive postseason. With no team given a greater than 25 percent chance of winning the World Series and five teams at 10 percent or higher, the title is up for grabs and anything is possible.
Unfortunately, for fans who want to see a fair game, Michael Young's sacrifice fly off of Brad Lidge in the bottom of the 15th of the All-Star game may have a lot to do with the final outcome.
With so many teams of equal-caliber (on paper), yet with A.L. teams that play drastically different at home (four of the five possible AL teams won at least 15 more games at home than away), home-field advantage in the World Series may be vital.
If a rule were in place to give the team with the best record home-field advantage, the Chicago Cubs would be even with Boston at 20 percent to win it all and just behind Tampa Bay at 22 percent. (This is why I was advocating all Cubs fans try to vote Jason Bartlett or Jose Vidro into the All-Star game instead of players like Michael Young.)
The Red Sox taking out the Angels in the first round is our only predicted upset by record. Despite having the league's best record, the Angels are an average-to-below-average offensive team that played an easy schedule and lucked into more close victories than they should have.
The Angels also lose the advantage of having five solid starters when they enter the playoffs against teams that will rely on three (or four) starters. Boston is almost the opposite.
The Red Sox won 95 games and still slightly underachieved. Josh Beckett's first start will be delayed, but he'll still pitch Game Three. Beckett, Jon Lester, and Daisuke Matsuzaka give the Red Sox a formidable rotation that bests any three starters the Angels could choose.
Home-field advantage has been negligible for the Angels this season, yet significant for Boston. L.A. may win Game One at home against Jon Lester, but look for Boston to take the rest in the series.
The Philadelphia/Brewers series is the other opening series of note because it is so close. Milwaukee is the slightly better team, yet with games this close, Brad Lidge and Citizen's Bank Park will play big roles. In fact, in five games, it may come down to a Brad Lidge save opportunity against a big bat like Ryan Braun or Prince Fielder to advance (Albert Pujols anyone?).
We'll see if the 2008 playoff Lidge is closer to the 2008 regular season Lidge or the guy we have seen in the playoffs before and recently saw in the aforementioned All-Star Game.
You still may be wondering: "Why the Tampa Bay Rays?"
The biggest reason is that they have the easiest first round matchup of any team. Getting to the second round almost 10 percent more often than anyone else will go a long way to ensuring the best odds of winning it all.





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