Monday, May 29, 2017

Drinking the 50 States

I've always said that I want to drink a beer from all 50 states.  I finally tried to figure out how many I have under my belt (I'll get to it).  One of the states I didn't have was New Jersey.  I figured I'd cross that one off because I went to a minor league game in Trenton over Easter vacation.  The Trenton Thunder are the Yankees' Double-A team.  They were taking on the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, a Blue Jays affiliate at 10:30 on a Thursday morning.  I was able to take the train and be home by about 5:00 that day.

The Thunder play at Arm & Hammer Park.  Right past the right field wall is the Delaware River, which George Washington crossed on Christmas Night 1776 to surprise the Hessian mercenaries the next day.  The only other interesting thing about Arm & Hammer Park was that they had pictures of some Yankees that had played for the Thunder (like Derek Jeter on a rehab assignment).  The Thunder had Dante Bichette Jr. Playing first base for them.  That was really the only name that sounded familiar from the two teams.  The Thunder took a 2-0 lead in the first inning and never trailed.  Leading 2-1 in the fourth inning, the Thunder scored three runs on a ball that didn't get out of the infield.  The bases were loaded.  It took a diving stop from the second baseman to keep a grounder from getting through.  But then he tried to flip it to the shortstop covering second and threw it away.  New Hampshire got the ball and tried to throw out the second runner at home plate and threw it away.  That allowed the third runner to score.  It got interesting in the ninth as New Hampshire scored two to make it 5-4, but Trenton held on for the win.

This was the view I had for most of the game.  As you can see, I could have sat pretty much wherever I wanted to.
George Washington crossed this guy.
They had Andy Pettitte, Gary Sanchez, and Brett Gardner on the other side.

To eat, I had a pork roll.  When I googled food at Arm & Hammer Park, that was one of the things that came up.  It turned out to pretty much just be a glorified ham and cheese.  It was fine, but definitely nothing exciting.  I was hoping to enjoy some New Jersey beer (which my googling indicated would be available), but they were only serving like Bud Light and Michelob and some other not good beer.  There was a bar and another concession stand that looked like there was a decent selection and both were closed.  It was probably because it was a game that started at 10:30 in the morning and you had lots of kids on school trips there for the game.  But that's going to hurt Arm & Hammer Park in my rankings.  In fact, it's going last on the list (which I'll update in my next post on a minor league game).

Like I said, a glorified ham and cheese.

So I didn't get to drink New Jersey beer.  I have a trip to visit Adam in New Jersey coming up this summer.  So hopefully I'll get to cross New Jersey off the list.  With the help of several old blog posts, here's my beer list by state in the order that I've been to the states (not necessarily the order that I've consumed beer from the states) to the best of my knowledge:

1. New York- Bluepoint, Sand City, Brooklyn, Bronx, etc.
2. Pennsylvania- Yuengling
3. Ohio- Great Lakes Brewing Company, Rivertown Brewery
4. Massachusetts- Sam Adams, Harpoon
5. Delaware- Iron Hill, Fordham and Dominion Brewing Company
6. Maryland- Flying Dog Brewery
7. Illinois- Goose Island, I think I had one that wasn't an Anheuser Busch-InBev beer last year when I was in Chicago
8. Georgia- Sweetwater Grass Monkey
9. Michigan- Bell's
10. California- Point the Way IPA (Golden Road Brewing), Coronado Brewing
11. North Carolina- Olde Hickory Pale Ale, Foothills
12. Colorado- Boulder
13. Wisconsin- Leinenkugel's
14. Texas- Shiner (probably some other stuff too when I visited Wilhelm)
15. Washington- Fremont
16.. Missouri- Schlafly, Boulevard
17. Utah- Some beer at a Jazz game, I don't remember what I drank, but I remember wondering how available beer would be in a Mormon state, but I do have a picture of me holding a beer at the game.
18. New Mexico- Some beer at an Isotopes game, I don't know what it was, but I mentioned drinking a local beer in the blog post
19. Alabama- Yellowhammer Brewing
20. Minnesota- Surly, Summit
21. North Dakota- Fargo Brewing Company
22. Montana- Uberbrew
23. Idaho- Crooked Fence Barrelhouse Welcome to Idaho, Grand Teton Ale 208
24. Oregon- Widmer Brothers
25. Maine- Shipyard
26. Vermont- Long Trail
27. Louisiana- Courtyard Brewery
28. Mississippi- Biloxi Brewing Company
29. Hawaii- Waikiki Brewing Company
30. South Carolina- Palmetto Amber

So as far as I remember, I have not had a beer from these states:

1. New Jersey
2. Connecticut
3. Florida
4. Rhode Island
5. Virginia
6. Indiana- I mean I did go to Notre Dame, but I don't remember drinking much craft beer when I was there other than Sam Adams
7. Kentucky
8. Tennessee
9. New Hampshire
10. Nevada
11. Arizona
12. Wyoming
13. Arkansas
14. Oklahoma
15. Kansas
16. West Virginia
17. Iowa
18. Nebraska
19. South Dakota- I did taste some wine at a South Dakota winery, but wine is stupid.
20. Alaska

I feel fairly confident about being able to cross off at least three of these states before the end of the year with some trips I have coming up.  If you know of any beers from any of these states that would be easy for me to get, please let me know.

Saturday, January 14, 2017

Not Pass Interference

We had quite a game on Monday night.  I have some thoughts.  The game reminded me of Super Bowl XLIII.  I thought the first three quarters weren't great, but it was an especially great fourth quarter.  I was rooting hard for Clemson and it was nice to see them win.  I think I'm happy that they won on pretty much the same play that we didn't win on against Florida State.  I could be bitter, but I feel like this is vindication.  And also, I'm no Brian Kelly fan right now.  So even if we had won that game, I'm sure the rest of the season still would have been pretty bad.





It's interesting to see the direction Notre Dame and Clemson have gone in since meeting in October 2015.  We lost that game by two points.  It's worth pointing out that Brian Kelly went for two when he didn't need to and didn't get it (like he did against Northwestern in 2014, which is one of the reasons we lost that game too).  We scored a touchdown to make it 21-9 with 14:13 left.  That's a lot of time left.  Sure, making it 21-11 means that a touchdown and field goal will tie the game.  But that assumes Clemson won't score again.  Clemson kicking a field goal is a very realistic scenario.  And that's exactly what Clemson did with 10:56 left.  So now being down 14, we were down 15.  We scored two touchdowns (the second one coming with seven seconds left).  Instead of needing an extra point to tie, we needed a two point conversion and we didn't get it.  And if Clemson didn't get that field goal, you could go for two on the second touchdown in the two touchdowns, one two point conversion, and one field goal to tie scenario.  Anyway, since that game, Notre Dame is 10-10 and Clemson is 24-2.  Yikes.

I was thinking about why Alabama is good.  It makes sense that USC, Texas, and any of Florida/Florida State/Miami are good.  They are in the three most talent rich states.  USC is in southern California and they are the top team in the biggest state in the country.  Texas is in a football crazy state that's the second biggest in the country.  Florida is talent rich, the weather is fantastic.  The only thing for those schools is that they have each other to compete with.  But why is Alabama so good?  Sure, it's close to Florida and Georgia and it's not too far from Texas.  They're near huge states with lots of talent, but Alabama itself is only the 24th biggest state.  I took a look at Alabama's records over the years.  They won a National Championship in 1992 under Gene Stallings (I have no memory of him at all).  The last season for Stallings was 1996.  From 1996-2006, Alabama was 67-55 (.549) under three different head coaches.  They had two top 10 finishes (8 in both 1999 and 2005) and only one other top 25 finish (11 in 2002).  And then what happened?  They hired Nick Saban.  Since then:  114-19 (.857) with four National Championships, three for three in making the playoff, and nine straight top ten finishes.  So the answer for why Alabama is so good is pretty simple, it's Nick Saban.  All it took was a great coach for them to go from mediocre to the most successful program in college football.  Notre Dame is 150-99 (.602) since Lou Holtz left.  All it will take is hiring the right coach.  Alabama had three bad hires and then they hired Saban.  Notre Dame has had four bad hires.  The problem is that one of those bad hires is still our coach.  And even when he's not anymore, I'm not confident that we'll get it right.  But if we do get it right, we can get back to being an elite college football program once again.  And I know that it's really hard to find Nick Saban, but look at how Dabo Swinney turned Clemson around.  Look at what Jim Harbaugh did at Stanford and what he has done with Michigan so far.  Are we going to get somebody as good as Saban?  Probably not, but I would think that there are coaches out there that could get us to a .750ish winning percentage.  Dan Devine was .764 and Lou Holtz was .765 and both won National Championships.

One last thought about the game.  Dabo Swinney went to Alabama.  I could never coach against Notre Dame in a meaningful game.  If I was a football coach, I couldn't ever coach a team that might play Notre Dame.  If I took my basketball coaching career from middle school girls to let's say Stony Brook (we have improved from zero wins two years ago and not having enough girls that wanted to play last year to two wins so far this year), I might be able to coach a meaningless December non-conference game against Notre Dame, but I certainly couldn't coach a tournament game against Notre Dame.  But that's what Dabo Swinney did with his alma mater.  Clemson found the right football coach.  Notre Dame needs to do that also.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Holiday Power Rankings

Today is a federal holiday.  We observe New Year's Day today since it was a Sunday.  So let's celebrate the holiday with a ranking of the federal holidays.  I'm going to go from first to worst because you're more likely to be surprised by the bottom of the list than by the top.  I'm judging these holidays mostly based on what we're celebrating and less so on other factors (New Year's Day bowl games aren't going to help New Year's Day much).  But being celebrated on the same date every year is a plus.  I like knowing that as a teacher I will never have to go to work December 24-January 1, July 4 (you could say the whole summer, but I did work during the summer for the first four years of my teaching career), and November 11.

1.  Christmas.  This one is obvious.  We celebrate the birth of the greatest human being ever.  As a Catholic, this has to be first on my list.  The only mark against Christmas is that it is highly unlikely that Jesus was born on December 25, but since we don't know when he was actually born, December 25 is just as good as any other day.  The only question is what day of the week is the best for Christmas.  There are a few factors to consider.  As a Catholic school teacher, when does my Christmas vacation start and end?  I like not working on Festivus and January 2.  How long is my Christmas vacation?  How long is my last week before Christmas?  I hate having a five-day week immediately before Christmas vacation.  What days of the week are All Saints Day and the Immaculate Conception?  How many days of school do I have between Thanksgiving and Christmas?  What day of the week is my birthday (since it's 15 days after Christmas)?  So here are my day of the week rankings for Christmas:

1. Friday- 7 days off from school, a three-day week going into vacation, school starts again on January 4, 17 days of school between Thanksgiving and Christmas, my birthday on a Saturday.  The downside is being in school through Festivus.

2. Thursday- Thursday and Wednesday are the two days of the week where you might get a full two weeks off.  I actually prefer not having that.  Let's bang out an easy two day week on either side of the vacation rather than having those two days at the end of the year.  But you don't go back until January 5, it's only 14-16 days of school between Thanksgiving and Christmas, and my birthday is a Friday.

3. Wednesday- Possibly two full weeks off, School ends on December 20, but that's a five-day week, 15 days of school between Thanksgiving and Christmas, back on either January 2 or January 6, my birthday is a Thursday.

4. Tuesday- 7 days off from school, you only go until December 21, easy three-day week coming back.  The downside is that since the Immaculate Conception is a Saturday, I have 20 days of school between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

5. Saturday- only 6 days off from school, you go until Festivus, full week coming back, 18 days of school between Thanksgiving and Christmas.  The good news is that you don't have a full five days before vacation and my birthday is a Sunday.

6. Sunday- 6 days off from school, you have a full five-day week before vacation that goes through Festivus, 19 days between Thanskgiving and Christmas, my birthday is a Monday.  The good news is that you don't go back to school until January 3 and it's a four-day week.

7. Monday- 6 days off from school, a full five-day week going into vacation, 19 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas, back on January 2 (which will be awful next year when the College Football Playoff games are on January 1).

Back to ranking the holidays:

2.  Independence Day.  We should be celebrating July 2, but I can live with July 4.  It's early summer, the days are long, and we can celebrate not having a queen.  Good times.

3.  Washington's Birthday.  It's Washington's Birthday (a day worth celebrating), not Presidents Day (a day that would not be worth celebrating).  The problem is that Congress messed up the holiday by moving it to the wrong Monday.  I can live with not always celebrating it on Washington's actual birthday, but Congress moved it to a Monday that is never Washington's actual birthday.  I get a week off that coincides with Washington's Birthday.  Lincoln's Birthday should be a federal holiday too, but that's a different issue.

4.  Thanksgiving.  Now admittedly, Thanksgiving is more fun than Washington's Birthday.  But I'll take the birth of the person I consider to be the greatest American of all time over an arbitrarily chosen Thursday in November to give thanks.  But I do like Thanksgiving.  We should give thanks for all the blessings we have in this country.  As much as my brother doesn't like it, we are very fortunate to live in this country.  We celebrate with food, football, and family.  And there's a lot of history associated with Thanksgiving.  Of course you have the Pilgrims.  But I'm more concerned with history since the US became independent.  George Washington proclaimed a Thanksgiving holiday in 1789 to give thanks for God's protection prior to the Revolution, assistance in achieving independence, and help in establishing a constitutional government.  Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a Thanksgiving holiday in 1863 to celebrate the Union victory at Gettysburg.

5.  Veterans Day.  Memorial Day is probably more important, but Veterans Day is getting the nod for always being November 11.  It started as a day to remember the end of World War I.  It's now a holiday for all veterans, but I like how it's still on the day that World War I ended.

6.  Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.  It's a day that honors one of the greatest Americans ever.  He was also not a president of the United States. It's good to remember that this country is much more than just who the president happens to be at a particular time.  I would like it more if it was always celebrated on January 15.

7.  Memorial Day.  You could easily put this one higher on the list.  If not for Veterans Day, I might have this one as high as number 3.  But it's position on the calendar is arbitrary and we have another holiday that honors people who have served in the military.

8.  Columbus Day.  Whatever you think of Columbus, his arrival in the Americas is one of the most important events in the history of the world.

9.  New Year's Day.  This is a completely arbitrary celebration of something that doesn't need to be celebrated.  January 1 being the first day of the year is arbitrary.  And what are we celebrating anyway?  Putting up a new calendar?  Who cares?  I really don't get it.  I was asleep when 2017 began because it's a really silly thing to be celebrating.  And I've always thought New Year's resolutions were just silly.  If you want to improve your life, why do you have to wait until January 1?  Just make your life better whenever you can.  But going back to January 1 being an arbitrary start of the year, my year starts with the first weekend of college football (which leads into the new school year).  If I want something to celebrate, the start of college football is much better.

10.  Labor Day.  Let's be honest, it's a made up holiday.  And as a teacher on Long Island, it just marks the end of my summer.  So Labor Day for me means I have to go back to work.  It's not something I have any interest in celebrating.

And I don't feel like doing another post, but let me make some comparisons involving Brian Kelly.  Take a look at these tables (the formatting might be weird because of some copying and pasting from Word):



Brady Hoke at Michigan
Brian Kelly- Last Four Years
Record
31-20
31-20
Major Bowls
1-0
0-1
Worst Season
5-7
4-8
Status
Fired
Still Employed


Mark Helfrich at Oregon
Brian Kelly- Last Four Years
Record
37-16
31-20
College Football Playoff Record
1-1
0-0
Top 10 Finishes
2
0
Top 20 Finishes
3
1.5 (24/20 in 2013)
2016
4-8
4-8
Status
Fired
Still Employed


Gene Chizik at Auburn
Brian Kelly-Last Four Years
Record
33-19
31-20
National Championships
1
0
Bowl Record
3-0
2-1
Status
Fired
Still Employed


Les Miles at LSU
Brian Kelly at Notre Dame
Winning Percentage
.770
.656
National Championships
1
0
Major Bowls
2-1
0-2
Bowl Record
7-4
3-3
Percentage of Seasons Ranked Top 4
25%
14%
Percentage of Seasons Ranked Top 10
42%
14%
Percentage of Seasons Ranked Top 25
75%
43%
Status
Fired
Still Employed


Les Miles Since 2010
Brian Kelly at Notre Dame
Record
63-19
59-31
Top 10 Finishes
2
1
Top 20 Finishes
5
2.5
Major Bowls
0-1
0-2
Status
Fired
Still Employed

We finally found something where Kelly wins,  but it’s winning in that he’s gotten to one more major bowl than Miles since 2010, but neither have won any in that time.


Tyrone Willingham at Notre Dame
Brian Kelly- Last Three Years
Record
21-15 (.583)
22-16 (.579)
Worst Season
5-7
4-8
Bowl Record
0-1
1-1
Major Bowls
0
0-1
Top 15 Finishes
0
1
Top 25 Finishes
1
1
Status
Fired
Still Employed

We had to go to Tyrone Willingham for a comparison where Kelly might win, but even if he does, it's not by much.

Kelly has been at Notre Dame for seven years.  Going 4-8 in year 7 is just not good enough and there's nobody to blame for than besides Kelly.  These are all his players.  All of his records and winning percentages are giving him credit for the losses which have been vacated by the NCAA (Notre Dame is appealing).  I don't think those wins should be vacated.  Notre Dame gets punished for doing the right thing when it found out about academic misconduct.  At just about any Big 12 or SEC school (probably except for Vanderbilt), those things get swept under the rug and nobody gets in trouble.  So while I don't think the wins should be vacated, there have been too many academic issues under Kelly.  There were the arrests this summer.  And he's just not winning enough.  It's time to go.  And he probably would be gone if not for the fact that Jack Swarbrick gave him an extension after last season.  I think Jack Swarbrick has done some things very well as athletic director.  But in overseeing the football program, he has failed.  It's time for both Swarbrick and Kelly to go.  As Ara Parseghian said when Notre Dame was blown out by Miami to end the 1985 season, "From these ashes, Notre Dame will rise."  And we will once again when we have the right athletic director and head coach.

Friday, October 14, 2016

My Future Book(s)

I've been told that I should write a book on my travels when I'm all done.  I have two states to go and maybe a few more baseball stadiums (I would like to get to the Braves' new stadium next year, we'll see about Tampa and Oakland).  Australia was really the country that I want to get to.  I mentioned in that post that I'd like to get to Italy and the Vatican and maybe Poland.  The one I left out was Norway.  It would be great to visit the birthplace of the greatest football coach of all time.

But I don't know if that's ever going to happen and that's not what this post is about.  My favorite student is a San Francisco Giants fan.  She has to be pretty awesome if she's my favorite despite that obvious character flaw.  I've had her for four straight years, I'm her Mr. Feeny.  We give each other a hard time about baseball.  I tell her that when I retire, we're going to write the book about the greatest day in the history of sports.  That day, of course, was October 15, 1988.  In the afternoon, good prevailed over evil in the Catholics vs. Convicts game and Notre Dame was on its way to a National Championship.  At night, Kirk Gibson hit the game winning home run off of Dennis Eckersley in Game 1 of the World Series and the Dodgers were on their way to being World Series Champions.  I have no memory of college football in the 1980s, but the Dodgers winning the World Series is the first sporting event that I remember being aware of.  I probably didn't watch the games, but I knew they won the World Series.  If I remembered that day, it would definitely be the greatest day of my life.  I recently bought Game 1 of the 1988 World Series on iTunes (apparently the whole game is also available for free on Youtube, but I had gift cards, so whatever).  With Vin Scully retired, I have to have some of his classic games available to me.  So I have that, Game 7 of the 1965 World Series (51 years ago today), no-hitters by Hideo Nomo and Clayton Kershaw, and a few others so far.  Major League Baseball has classic games going back decades and Games of the Year going back to 2013 available on iTunes.  For some unknown reason, Clayton Kershaw's Opening Day shutout/home run in 2013 is not included for that year.  I was at the game, which was awesome, but I'd love to rewatch the whole thing and listen to Vin Scully's call.  If anybody knows of a way to do it, please let me know.




And after last night, I might have found my second book, Game 5 of the Dodgers-Nationals Series.  That was an absolutely classic game.  I was hoping for a little more out of Rich Hill.  I knew he wasn't going deep into the game, but I was hoping for more than two and two-thirds.  Still, he kept the Dodgers in the game.  Dave Roberts made a good move and got four big outs from Joe Blanton.  He brought his eighth inning guy into the game in the third inning.  And it was the right move.  The Dodgers were down 1-0 and you had to keep it as close as possible.  As expected, Julio Urias came in to start a fresh inning and got the Dodgers through six (with some help from the Nationals' third base coach).

I was unusually calm even though the Dodgers were trailing.  And then the seventh inning happened.  I told my favorite student that Joc Pederson was going to hit a home run and he did to tie the game at 1 (I also told her Adrian Gonzalez would hit a home run in Game 4, so let's keep this going, I'll say Justin Turner hits a home run in Game 1 against the Cubs).  Yasmani Grandal walked and Howie Kendrick singled.  Urias was due up.  Roberts put in Charlie Culberson to bunt.  He didn't get the job done.  I was critical of Roberts for that move.  Before the game, he said Kershaw was absolutely not available to pitch.  I assumed that he was telling the truth (and maybe he did mean it) so I said he should have used Kershaw there (the lesson, as always:  I'm an idiot).  Kershaw is the active leader in sacrifice bunts (Baseball Reference has him second to Elvis Andrus, but I'm pretty sure they're counting sacrifice flies too).  I also didn't know Roberts's plan for the bullpen.  Anyway, the Dodgers took the lead on a pinch hit single by Carlos Ruiz and then tacked on two on a triple by Justin Turner (Ruiz came up big in this series, but I still miss A.J. Ellis).

After the Nationals used six pitchers in the top of the seventh, the Dodgers had a three-run lead and nine outs to get.  I assumed Pedro Baez or Josh Fields was coming in because I figured Roberts would save Grant Dayton for Bryce Harper and Daniel Murphy.  Instead, he wanted Dayton to turn around Danny Espinosa and face Clint Robinson.  That didn't work.  He walked Espinosa, gave up a home run to Chris Heisey, and gave up a single to Clint Robinson.  Dayton has been good this year, but he was the only relief pitcher who didn't get the job done for the Dodgers last night.

After Dayton gave back the insurance runs and left the tying run on base, I was as nervous as I've been watching a baseball game for the rest of the game.  With the top of the order coming up and the tying run on base, Roberts went to Kenley Jansen in the seventh inning.  At that point, I realized it was a real possibility that Kershaw would pitch.  But Jansen had to get as many outs as he could.  He got Trea Turner to fly out, but then Bryce Harper singled.  With runners on the corners, Harper stole second on strike three to Jayson Werth.  That opened up first base to walk Daniel Murphy intentionally.  Jansen struck out Anthony Rendon with the bases loaded to end the inning.  Jansen walked Stephen Drew to start the eighth.  He got Danny Espinosa to pop up a bunt, and then a fly ball to center and a strikeout to get out of the eight without much difficulty.

Clayton Kershaw went out to the bullpen to get ready for the ninth.  Bryce Harper was due up second so I thought Kershaw was getting ready to face him.  Harper has decent numbers against Jansen and bad numbers against Kershaw.  But Jayson Werth was after Harper and he has good numbers against Kershaw.  Jansen struck out Trea Turner to start the inning.  Then he stayed in to face Harper and Werth.  He walked both of them.  Then Dave Roberts went to Kershaw to face Murphy.  There was a chance Kenley Jansen would get the loss.  If that happened, I couldn't be mad at Jansen.  He threw more pitches than he ever had in the Majors and he got seven outs.  He gave it everything he had.  I definitely thought about how Kershaw had been left in too long in playoff games by Don Mattingly and maybe even by Roberts in Game 4.  Now I worried that Roberts waited too long to go to Kershaw.  And Dodger nemesis Daniel Murphy was coming up.  Kershaw got Murphy to hit a pop up on the infield.  The Nationals had to go to their last pinch hitter, Wilmer Difo, to hit for the pitcher.  Kershaw struck him out on a beautiful curve ball.  It was in the dirt so Carlos Ruiz had to throw to first to end the game.  It was a good feeling.  It was Kershaw's first save in the Majors.  He had one save in the minors and his catcher for that save was Kenley Jansen.  Pretty amazing.  This will be the fourth trip to the NLCS for the Dodgers since the 1988 World Series.  In their last three trips, they won a total of four games.  And they never took five games to win the Division Series before.  So last night was probably the most exciting Dodger win since the 1988 World Series.

I don't think they give out a series MVP until the NLCS, but I was thinking about who would get it for this series.  When the Dodgers took the 2-1 lead, the first name I thought of was Joe Blanton.  Yep, Joe Blanton.  He pitched five innings and allowed one hit, one walk, and no runs.  But with the way the game ended, I think you'd have to split it between Justin Turner and Clayton Kershaw.  Kenley Jansen gets an honorable mention.

I certainly hope the Dodgers aren't done.  The Cubs should be favored.  They have home field and they have their rotation set up the way they want it.  I'm assuming Kershaw will pitch Game 2 and Rich Hill will pitch Game 3.  But the Cubs don't have Matt Carpenter or Daniel Murphy.  If you offered me a split in the first four games and then it's a three game series with the last two in Chicago, I'd take my chances with that.  And I hope the Indians beat the Blue Jays for three reasons.  First, the Blue Jays play in Canada.  Canada can have hockey, this is baseball.  Second, they don't play on grass.  Putting the dirt around the whole infield definitely makes their stadium look better, but still, baseball should be played on grass.  And finally, the Indians will provide a better contrast in uniforms with either NL team than the Blue Jays would.

Let's go Dodgers!