The Hamilton Spectator

ROCKY ROAD

Seven MLB teams on pace to lose 100 games

- GABE LACQUES

It seemed so simple when the Houston Astros did it: Strip-mine the major league club, rack up 100-loss seasons while saving money and accumulati­ng high draft picks, and pivot to championsh­ip-calibre baseball when the time was right.

Yet, as the 2018 Major League Baseball heads toward the twomonth mark, it appears there’s no such thing as a trustworth­y process.

One year after the Astros claimed a World Series title just four years removed from three straight 100-loss seasons, baseball is flush with terrible teams. A staggering seven ball clubs are on pace to lose 100 games, exceeding the combined total from the past seven seasons.

Not since 2002 have as many as three teams lost 100 games, but that mark will be in peril this season. In order of putridity, as of May 15, the Chicago White Sox (10-28), Baltimore Orioles (13-28), Kansas City Royals (13-29), Cincinnati Reds (14-29), Miami Marlins (15-26), Texas Rangers (16-27) and San Diego Padres (17-27) are on track to lose between 100 and 119 games.

With the season barely onequarter finished for most teams, things can surely get better. In fact, the Orioles won for the fifth time in six games Sunday, while the Reds reeled off six straight wins against the New York Mets and Los Angeles Dodgers.

But the cyclical gains made by many of these clubs very well could be nullified by roster deletions before the July 31 trade deadline.

All but the White Sox, Royals and Padres are already doubledigi­t games out of first place; all are looking up at three or four teams in their division.

Is tanking to blame? Largely, but not entirely.

The process popularize­d by the Astros and, to a lesser extent, Chicago Cubs in winning the past two World Series championsh­ips has been mimicked to various degrees.

“It worked for them,” Royals lefty Danny Duffy, a holdover from their 2015 championsh­ip club, said of the Astros.

“There’s no wrong way to eat a Reese’s, right? If you get to the promised land and you win, it doesn’t matter how you got there.”

The big losers of 2018 find themselves mired in various points of the process — and some illustrate the perils of getting in too deep.

The Orioles? Avoiding a rebuild as long as possible, as they make one more (apparently futile) run with franchise player Manny Machado and several other key free agents-to-be.

The Rangers? Like the Orioles, undercut by an ineffectiv­e pitching staff, and stuck somewhere between veterans on the downside and the emergence of promising youngsters.

The Royals? Just getting started after their championsh­ip window closed with the departure of three key free agents.

The Padres? In half-tank mode, as their signing of ex-Royal Eric Hosmer to a $144 million deal signals a ramping up — but skimping on a rotation that’s yielded an NL-worst 5.16 ERA indicates they’re not yet ready to go all in.

The Marlins? It’s what they do, though this time under the auspices of new ownership eager to shed debt.

Then there are the Reds and White Sox, who can’t seem to change the course they charted.

White Sox GM Rick Hahn noted that this might be the toughest year of their rebuild, and it’s certainly playing out that way.

The White Sox are 5-2 against the Royals and 5-25 against everybody else; the starting rotation has a major league-worst 5.78 ERA, as veteran stopgaps have struggled and youngster Lucas Giolito (6.91 ERA) holds the dubious distinctio­n of walking more batters (32) than he’s struck out (24).

In the meantime, they’ve kept their top prospects, fireballin­g right-hander Michael Kopech and power-hitting outfielder Eloy Jimenez, in the minor leagues, which is probably prudent.

All the big-losing clubs present case studies of what a fan base can endure. The Reds have averaged 93 losses over four seasons since their last playoff appearance and look bound for their first 100-loss season since 1982. In the meantime, average attendance has fallen from 31,000 in 2013 to 22,000 last year. The Reds are averaging 17,000 so far this season, though the usual earlyseaso­n weather and school caveats apply.

The White Sox drew 1.63 million fans in 2017, their lowest since drawing 1.34 million in 1999. The Padres drew 2.46 million fans in 2015, when veterans like Justin Upton, Craig Kimbrel and James Shield were added and helped boost attendance.

That number fell to 2.14 million last year.

The Orioles already saw attendance dip even before the on-field product suffered last year, and a reluctant rebuild could dent attendance further in coming years. The team countered by offering free admission to children 9 and under this season, and on Sunday drew more than 25,000 on a chilly Mother’s Day.

“Winning solves everything,” says All-Star outfielder Adam Jones, like Machado a free agent after the season. “If you contend, the fans should be there.”

For nearly a quarter of major league teams, however, that impetus may not exist in what could be some very long seasons.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cincinnati starting pitcher Matt Harvey, late of the New York Mets, helped the Reds reel off six straight before a loss to the Giants on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Cincinnati starting pitcher Matt Harvey, late of the New York Mets, helped the Reds reel off six straight before a loss to the Giants on Tuesday.

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