I went to Yahoo Answers yesterday and posed the same question I posted here. Got sixteen responses, some voting twice, some not at all. Here’s the result:

I went to Yahoo Answers yesterday and posed the same question I posted here. Got sixteen responses, some voting twice, some not at all. Here’s the result:

Hey, another first for me. I’m the featured blog this uh…day? Week? Arbitrary amount of time? Anyway, thanks to whomever picks that stuff, that’s awesome! Oh the pressure…



I’ve got baseball on the brain, but at the same time I’m trying not to spend too much time and effort over analyzing every little thing about today’s game. So instead I revisisited one of my favorite baseball sites, Flip Flop Fly Ball to see what latest and greatest graphs and charts were available to peruse. And much to my delight, there was a bobblehead chart! Check it.

With the real season coming up here quick, let’s take a moment to see what we look like in the grand scheme of things before we add another year of numbers. (AKA, another excuse to make charts in Excel!)
From beginning of time to last season, the Giants rank #2 in the league for win percentage. Not bad really. The Yankees are the winner, of course, and it doesn’t look like they will be dethroned anytime soon. Dodgers are catching up, but we still got a decent enough gap there. (And just as an FYI, we rank #1 in total actual wins, but since not every
team started in the 1800s, that standing isn’t exactly a fair comparison.)
And since I was at it, here’s the rest of the league, for my imaginary readers whose team didn’t make the top 15:
I’m betting Rays fans are hard core.
Now about some head-to-head? How do we compare to other teams on a face-to-face level?
Giants are still beating out everyone else in the National League. They have more wins vs losses than each and every team, though it looks like the Dodgers are a few wins away from pushing that bar to the left. But that’s what makes good rivalry, right? Who wants to have a rivalry with a team that sucks?
American League is kicking our butts a bit harder. Of course, we face them much less, which makes each loss much more powerful than the National League chart. Looks like 6 out of 14 teams are beating us more than we’re beating them, including the A’s, which…sucky! Still above average though.
All-in-all not a bad state of affairs. Again though, this is over the Giants entire history, so I’m betting a lot of their momentum was built back in the day. Best make sure we keep things going so we can stay on top, eh?
Mottoes? Subtitles? Tag lines? Slogans?
I don’t know what they’re called, but some teams have “we rock!” type sayings on top of their websites, as well as in their stadiums, on merchandise, and anywhere else they can think to plaster it.
Up until Spring Training came along, the Giants’ slogan read, “Your Giants.” Now it reads, “It’s Magic Inside.”
I don’t know how often these things change, or whether anyone even pays attention to them when they do, but can I say yuck on the new idea? Now they sound like they play at the Magic Kingdom or were turned into candy bars or something.
Here’s a commercial with the new slogan, invented by the marketing genius that is Swirl:
I liked “Your Giants” better. It sounded more personal to us, like “Hey! We have our very own team! Cool, huh?” It also sorta paralleled or bizarro-fied the evil Dodgers slogan of “This is My Town.” Yours. Mine. See? It goes together.
So who else has tag lines? I tried to Google the answer, but either I can’t effectively search for a complete list because I do not know what to call them, or no one cares about them and hasn’t bothered to make one.
So I’ll make one.
As of right now, at least based off their websites, of the 30 major league teams, 11 have slogans, 5 on the American League and 6 on the National League.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
So who wins? I don’t know, maybe the Dodgers, doesn’t that suck? I like the Pirates’ and White Sox’ too, though “Sox traditions” make me think of cheating, so maybe that’s not so hot.
It’s Magic Inside. Bleh.
Craig Robinson’s Flip Flop Fly Ball site is my new favorite thing. As self-described:
A love of baseball plus a love of infographics equals Flip Flop Fly
Ball.
The thing is loaded with fun statistics in graphics form, and while I haven’t perused them all yet with equal scrutiny, here’s my current favorite (so far):
CLICK FOR FULL SIZE
It’s crazy that the “best team” has only won the series three times since 1995, isn’t it? (Since the Wild Card system has been in effect.) I suppose that’s what playoffs are for, but so much for the reliability of stats, eh folks? Also specifically interesting to the theme of this blog, the last time the Giants made it to the series was the only time that that two Wild Card teams went head to head. (Giants lost of course – boo!)
Get it?

Anyways…
Congratulations to the 2009 AL MVP, Joe Mauer. Never heard of you, but you seem nice, and I’ve never heard of hardly anyone at this point, so don’t be offended. Lucky #7 indeed.

I’ve heard of the term MVP before of course, but I didn’t realize there were official awards given out for it, let along three (or five, if you count each league). But reading about it, guess who’s won the most?

Aww yeah.
Seven wins, second closest having three, so a pretty nice lead. Although maybe Bonds isn’t the best guy to brag with. Even I’ve heard what he was about…
Now guess which team has won the most MVP awards?

Shocking. At least the Giants tied for third with the A’s. (And beat the Dodgers!)
Now…who’s up for the NL MVP this year?
I came across this cool applet that displays a team’s salary by year and compares/contrasts it to their performance for the same year. You can slide the date bar on top around to see how your team did throughout the season, but here’s a screen shot for the end of 2009:
I don’t know how accurate this information is, or what to even take from it really. I keep reading here and there about how money makes teams in the MLB, but this chart doesn’t necessarily confirm that. Although the Yankees pay the most and are #1, so there’s that. But there are also a lot of red lines (bad performances) in the top 10 salary positions, so maybe money isn’t everything. At least the Giants appear to have used their money wisely!
Last war, I swear, and this one’s all out. Let’s see how the Giants fair in the National League:
| National League | Fans |
|---|---|
| Arizona Diamondbacks | 57,822 |
| Atlanta Braves | 209,828 |
| Chicago Cubs | 446,474 |
| Cincinnati Reds | 72,063 |
| Colorado Rockies | 89,973 |
| Florida Marlins | 74,655 |
| Houston Astros | 102,833 |
| Los Angeles Dodgers | 118,844 |
| Milwaukee Brewers | 133,330 |
| New York Mets | 155,838 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 272,750 |
| Pittsburgh Pirates | 59,735 |
| San Diego Padres | 58,558 |
| San Francisco Giants | 300,691 |
| Saint Louis Cardinals | 243,610 |
| Washington Nationals | 38,962 |
And the winner is…

Alas, Chicago takes it, but second place for the Giants, not bad! Even with the Phillies headed for the World Series, they still fall into 3rd place. Nice!
Now let’s look at that other League we only care about once a year:
| American League | Fans |
|---|---|
| Baltimore Orioles | 78,528 |
| Boston Red Sox | 908,460 |
| Chicago White Sox | 186,300 |
| Cleveland Indians | 121,942 |
| Detroit Tigers | 197,837 |
| Kansas City Royals | 98,031 |
| Los Angeles Angels | 79,211 |
| Minnesota Twins | 211,973 |
| New York Yankees | 1,018,320 |
| Oakland Athletics | 186,981 |
| Seattle Mariners | 101,736 |
| Tampa Bay Rays | 93,549 |
| Texas Rangers | 98,296 |
| Toronto Blue Jays | 97,056 |
And the winner is:

Shocker…
How about if you mix them all together?

