The Best World Series Champ of the Decade Debate – The Surprising 2003 Marlins Reign Supreme

November 9, 2009

Read the arguments by Sports Geek and Bleacher Fan about which teams they believe were the best World Series champions of this decade.



Since the final World Series of this decade was just completed, The Sports Debates must debate which specific World Series winning team was the best of the decade. (The 2006 St. Louis Cardinals do not belong in the discussion. That team was eliminated from consideration quite early in our conversation.) Almost everyone, at least almost everyone outside of New York, was thrilled to see the Boston Red Sox win in 2004. In 2001, the Arizona Diamondbacks defeated the heavily favored New York Yankees in the post 9/11 World Series. To me, that remains the best World Series I have ever personally watched, with the exception of the 1991 World Series (minus the outcome, of course). But as far as team of the decade, I really feel the 2003 Florida Marlins got hot at the right time and ended up being the best World Series championship team of this decade.

The Florida Marlins have been either hit or miss since its inception in 1993. The team won the World Series in 1997, too, but this 2003 team just had something about it. Not many experts expected much out of it. Sure the team won 91 games in the regular season (a full ten games behind division winner, Atlanta). The 91-win season occurred after starting the season 19-29 and changing managers (Jeff Torborg was replaced by Jack McKeon). And the team was not really expected to do much in the playoffs. But, they defeated San Francisco in the first round, a series that concluded with Ivan Rodriguez holding on to the ball at home plate after being run over by J.T. Snow.

Many people, fair or not, think of Steve Bartman when they think of the 2003 NLCS. But the Marlins deserve some serious credit for overcoming a 3-1 deficit in the series. The Marlins won Game six and seven against the Cubs in Chicago when the Cubbies featured young guns Mark Prior and Kerry Wood on the bump.

After the NLCS came the supposed mismatch against the heavily favored New York Yankees. The Marlins payroll was $54 million, compared to the $164 million payroll of the Yankees. However, behind dominant starting pitching, Florida won its second World Series in six seasons, winning four games to two. Josh Beckett pitched the clincher, going the distance on three days rest in one of the most clutch starting pitching performances in postseason history.

The postseason was the coming out party for then-20 year old Miguel Cabrera. Cabrera was called up midseason but he really caught the attention of the baseball world during the postseason. The highlights include hitting three home runs in the NLCS and hitting a home run off of Roger Clemens in the World Series (in what was supposed to be Clemens’ last season… hahahaha!).

What carried the Marlins was the young pitching trio of Beckett, Brad Penny, and rookie sensation Dontrelle Willis. Those three showed no fear in being thrust unexpectedly into the postseason spotlight.

The 2003 Marlins were a true underdog pretty much the entire season. The team overcame that stigma to win a title. For that, the 2003 Florida Marlins deserve to be called the team of the decade!

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The College World Series Debate – If a Game is Played and Nobody Watches, Does it Count?

June 18, 2009

Check back today to read Sports Geek and Loyal Homer’s arguments.



March Madness is, arguably, the single best sports competition in America.

Bowl Week is a chance to see the college football powerhouses face off in separate but (mostly) equal battles for bragging rights.

Both of these post-season college events, orchestrated by the NCAA, are designed to play out as the epic climax of their respective sports following a build-up of drama, upsets, and excitement over the course of each regular season. Because these are college events, run by the NCAA, there is no money on the line. (And, if you believe that, I’ve got a bridge to sell you.) These events are all about bragging rights, the opportunity to earn glory for your beloved employer (I mean university).

The amount of money generated by these events is astounding. Both command national media attention, and both are coincidentally timed with some of the highest absentee rates in all of Corporate America!

The popularity of these events is enough to rival even the Super Bowl, which is generally accepted as the king of sporting events and is often regarded as an unofficial national holiday.

But wait a minute… aren’t we forgetting something? Like Macaulay Culkin in Home Alone, the scrawny, geeky, often overlooked College World Series (CWS) is left behind while it’s bigger and much cooler brothers get to run all over the country, creating excitement wherever they go.

The College World Series (which is going on right now, in case you needed reminding – I’m not joking, here’s some proof), contains the exact same formula for success that March Madness and Bowl Week have. Collegiate-level athletes, competing in a national tournament, complete with Cinderella Stories, all building up to the spectacle that is (or SHOULD be) the College Baseball National Championship.

So, where does the national championship take place this year? Who’s the favorite? Which teams are the likely Cinderella stories this year, and which teams are destined for a rude and painful fall from grace?

For those of you who know the answers to those questions (thanks for all your support, Moms and Dads of the players!), you can attest to the excitement that goes on at the CWS. To the vast majority of the population, though, you probably have no clue as to how those questions should be answered.

How is it that in this country where baseball is considered the national pastime, that the College World Series seemingly fails so miserably at attracting the excitement and fascination that March Madness and Bowl Week are able to realize? Thank goodness we have Sports Geek and Loyal Homer on our side to help us find out the answer to these types of questions.

The question we are debating today:

Is the College World Series the best sporting event with the fewest viewers?

Sports Geek will argue that the College World Series is the best sporting event with the fewest viewers, and that it commands the same excitement and drama as its basketball and football counterparts do with drama that many sports fans are missing.

Loyal Homer will argue that the College World Series, despite a formula for success, is just not that appealing. He will take the position that there are other sporting events out there which deserve the media attention more than the CWS, and that the fans know exactly what they are missing – they just don’t care.

So if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got Game 10 of the Bracket 2 Super Regional to watch, because my whole office pool is riding on a potential upset!!!


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