MadduxFanII
Swallowed by Mark Bowman
Since we're the in the middle of a re-building season that has officially entered the stage where winning is counter-productive, it seems like a reasonable enough point to do some retrospectin' and look back at happier times. And since we've had plenty of happy times over the last couple decades, I figured we could all talk about our favorite Braves' teams. Mine are going to be quite recent, but obviously the old-timers can talk about the 80's or the 60's or the 10's (hi 50PoundHead!).
MadduxFanII's indisputable ranking of his favorite Braves' teams:
1. 1999: I was a fan since 1991 (total seven-year-old bandwagoner), but this is the first team I remember following day-in and day-out, and it was really a damn delight. Experienced a ton of adversity before and during the season- Ligtenberg and Galaragga went down before the season, while Javy Lopez tore his ACL during the season, O'dalis Perez experienced arm trouble and Rudy Seanez went down in August. Still won 103 games and bested a much fawned-over Mets' team with one of the greatest infields in baseball history. That we got swept in the World Series was a tragedy, since it meant no one really respected how impressive a season we really had.
Season highlight: Chipper destroying the Mets in September, NLCS victory over the Mets.
2. 2002: No offense at all, an all-Franco platoon at first base (with a 43-year-old getting the most ABs), Vinny Castilla posting an OPS+ of 60 in 578 ABs...and we won 101 games behind the best pitching staff in the league and a dominant bullpen staffed with guys like Mike Remlinger, Darren Holmes and Chris Hammond. One of those "just knows how to win" teams that always seemed to find a way to score just enough runs in a given game. The '02 LDS was when I realized once and for all that the "team of destiny" nonsense was just that- I knew, just KNEW, that this team was going to do great things in the postseason.
Season highlight: Three-game sweep at Boston which left Red Sox beat writers in awe of the Braves, multi-month streak in the middle of the season of not losing a series
3. 2013: The culmination of the franchise's resurgence after the debacle in 2008. We were a good team from 2009-2012, but it was deeply satisfying to win the division for the first time since 2005. And straight bitch-slapping a Nationals' team that had been anointed in the pre-season as one of the best in recent memory was so incredibly sweet. Exciting if occasionally frustrating offense, Justin Upton's hot streaks, Heyward's all-around brilliance, a well-rounded pitching staff capped by Kimbrel's brilliance and some nifty in-season front office maneuvering to patch up bullpen holes caused by injuries.
Season highlight: Clinching the division in Chicago, a 5-2 victory over the Nationals on September 18, with Upton providing the winning home run on one of his patented laser beams.
4. 2003: Returned pretty much the exact same lineup from the previous year that proved to be one of the worst offenses in the league, plus Robert Fick, and scored 907 runs, best in the league. Thunder up and down the lineup, with Javy posting one of the greatest offensive seasons from a catcher in big league history- .328/.378/.687, with 43 homers. Watching Marcus Giles break out to the tune of .316/.390/.526 and 7.8 WAR was one of the most enjoyable experienced of my baseball fandom, and the Jones-Jones-Sheffield outfield clobbered the ball all season.
Season highlight: Giles gets standing ovation in first at-bat against the Astros on July 30 after coming in with hits in nine straight at-bats.
5. 2004: The first time in nine seasons that Chipper cracked a little bit, hitting just .248 in his first injury-plagued season. A well-rounded offense made up for it- Furcal was the worst hitter in the regular lineup, and he hit .279/.344/.414 with 29 stolen bases. Julio Franco hit .309 as a 45-year-old. Johnny Estrada made the Millwood trade look much, much better than we had any right to expect. Jaret Wright was arguably Mazzone's finest reclamation project, throwing 186 innings at a 130 ERA+ after looking for all the world like a man on the verge of washing out of baseball. But the revelation here was a healthy JD Drew, who hit .305/.406/.569 and posted 8.3 WAR in what was one of the best, most well-rounded and aesthetically pleasing performances in recent franchise history.
Season highlight: June 27 at Baltimore- sitting at 35-39 and 4.5 games back in the division, the Braves come back from 7-0 in the 7th inning against the Orioles to win 8-7, keyed in large part by a Drew homer, producing this awesome win probability chart.
MadduxFanII's indisputable ranking of his favorite Braves' teams:
1. 1999: I was a fan since 1991 (total seven-year-old bandwagoner), but this is the first team I remember following day-in and day-out, and it was really a damn delight. Experienced a ton of adversity before and during the season- Ligtenberg and Galaragga went down before the season, while Javy Lopez tore his ACL during the season, O'dalis Perez experienced arm trouble and Rudy Seanez went down in August. Still won 103 games and bested a much fawned-over Mets' team with one of the greatest infields in baseball history. That we got swept in the World Series was a tragedy, since it meant no one really respected how impressive a season we really had.
Season highlight: Chipper destroying the Mets in September, NLCS victory over the Mets.
2. 2002: No offense at all, an all-Franco platoon at first base (with a 43-year-old getting the most ABs), Vinny Castilla posting an OPS+ of 60 in 578 ABs...and we won 101 games behind the best pitching staff in the league and a dominant bullpen staffed with guys like Mike Remlinger, Darren Holmes and Chris Hammond. One of those "just knows how to win" teams that always seemed to find a way to score just enough runs in a given game. The '02 LDS was when I realized once and for all that the "team of destiny" nonsense was just that- I knew, just KNEW, that this team was going to do great things in the postseason.
Season highlight: Three-game sweep at Boston which left Red Sox beat writers in awe of the Braves, multi-month streak in the middle of the season of not losing a series
3. 2013: The culmination of the franchise's resurgence after the debacle in 2008. We were a good team from 2009-2012, but it was deeply satisfying to win the division for the first time since 2005. And straight bitch-slapping a Nationals' team that had been anointed in the pre-season as one of the best in recent memory was so incredibly sweet. Exciting if occasionally frustrating offense, Justin Upton's hot streaks, Heyward's all-around brilliance, a well-rounded pitching staff capped by Kimbrel's brilliance and some nifty in-season front office maneuvering to patch up bullpen holes caused by injuries.
Season highlight: Clinching the division in Chicago, a 5-2 victory over the Nationals on September 18, with Upton providing the winning home run on one of his patented laser beams.
4. 2003: Returned pretty much the exact same lineup from the previous year that proved to be one of the worst offenses in the league, plus Robert Fick, and scored 907 runs, best in the league. Thunder up and down the lineup, with Javy posting one of the greatest offensive seasons from a catcher in big league history- .328/.378/.687, with 43 homers. Watching Marcus Giles break out to the tune of .316/.390/.526 and 7.8 WAR was one of the most enjoyable experienced of my baseball fandom, and the Jones-Jones-Sheffield outfield clobbered the ball all season.
Season highlight: Giles gets standing ovation in first at-bat against the Astros on July 30 after coming in with hits in nine straight at-bats.
5. 2004: The first time in nine seasons that Chipper cracked a little bit, hitting just .248 in his first injury-plagued season. A well-rounded offense made up for it- Furcal was the worst hitter in the regular lineup, and he hit .279/.344/.414 with 29 stolen bases. Julio Franco hit .309 as a 45-year-old. Johnny Estrada made the Millwood trade look much, much better than we had any right to expect. Jaret Wright was arguably Mazzone's finest reclamation project, throwing 186 innings at a 130 ERA+ after looking for all the world like a man on the verge of washing out of baseball. But the revelation here was a healthy JD Drew, who hit .305/.406/.569 and posted 8.3 WAR in what was one of the best, most well-rounded and aesthetically pleasing performances in recent franchise history.
Season highlight: June 27 at Baltimore- sitting at 35-39 and 4.5 games back in the division, the Braves come back from 7-0 in the 7th inning against the Orioles to win 8-7, keyed in large part by a Drew homer, producing this awesome win probability chart.