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Baseball: The World's Game (OOTP 22 Fictional World)

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Old 05-05-2024, 03:00 PM   #1201
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2002 WAB Hall of Fame

For the first time since 1997, West African Baseball didn’t induct any players into the Hall of Fame. Only one guy on the 2002 ballot even was above 50% with SP Elodie Belem at 59.7% on his fifth try. SP Kasim Shuaibu was the top debut with 39.0%.

Closer Joe Kelley was dropped after ten ballots. He was an American player who came out of independent leagues, pitching only six years in WAB with Conakry. In that short time, he had two Reliever of the Year awards, 224 saves, 1.73 ERA, 531.2 innings, 914 strikeouts, 198 ERA+, and 23.6 WAR. It was a dominant short run before leaving for MLB and a few more forgettable years. Still, he managed to end with a peak of 42.0% after bouncing around between the low teens and mid 30s.

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Old 05-06-2024, 03:51 AM   #1202
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2002 SAB Hall of Fame




South Asia Baseball had two inner-circle level Hall of Famers for the 2002 class. SP Zainal bin Aziz earned the very rare distinction of being unanimous. As of 2037, he’s one of only five in all of the world leagues with such an honor. 2B VJ Williams was close behind with 97.7%. Closer Harini Shreenath just missed out on also being a first ballot pick, getting 64.1%. C Krish Balvinder also had a nice showing with 59.5% on his fourth try.



Zainal bin Aziz – Starting Pitcher – Vientiane Vampires – 100% First Ballot

Zainal bin Aziz was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Johor Bahru, Malaysia’s second-largest city. He was known for having tremendous stuff, excellent movement, and very good control. Zainal was a rare player with six pitches, led by a 96-98 mph sinker. He also had an incredibly potent curveball, changeup, splitter, and knuckle curve, plus a circle change. Bin Aziz was an absolute master at changing speeds and mixing pitches.

Defensively, bin Aziz was good and he was great at holding runners. His stamina was good, but not outstanding. Zainal had great durability though until his career-ending injury, tossing 230+ innings in all but his first and final seasons. He wasn’t a big personality, but he became extremely popular as the Southeast Asia League’s first megastar pitcher.

Entering the 1982 SAB Draft, bin Aziz was viewed by many to be the top prospect available. He’d get selected second overall by Vientiane, sending him to Laos. His rookie year was split between the bullpen and starting, but he looked decent in limited action. Year two saw bin Aziz as a full-time starter and by year three, he was arguably the best pitcher in SAB.

In 1984, bin Aziz was third in Pitcher of the Year voting, then second in 1985. 1985 began a streak of six straight seasons leading SEAL in both WAR and FIP. With the Vampires, he’d lead the league five times in strikeouts, five times in WHIP, thrice in ERA, twice in wins, once in innings, and four times in K/BB. In 1989, bin Aziz became SAB’s second-ever Triple Crown winning pitcher with a 22-6 record, 2.02 ERA, and 367 strikeouts. Zainal did it again in 1990 with a 21-5 record, 1.48 ERA, and 360 strikeouts.

With Vientiane, bin Aziz won Pitcher of the Year in 1986, 87, 89, and 90; while taking third in 1988. On May 21, 1987, bin Aziz tossed a no-hitter with five strikeouts and one walk against Yangon. He had five seasons worth 9+ WAR and three above triple digits, peaking with 12.1 in 1987; which set the SAB record for a pitcher at the time. The 381 strikeouts in 1987 was also briefly the SAB record.

Despite bin Aziz’s dominance, Vientiane was a mid-level team in SEAL. They would get wild cards in 1986 and 1987, but fall in the first round both years. His three playoff starts with the Vampires saw a 2.16 ERA over 25 innings and 31 strikeouts. Zainal also pitched for his native Malaysia from 1984-96 in the World Baseball Championship. In 197 WBC innings, he had a 13-11 record, 3.15 ERA, 280 strikeouts, 115 ERA+, 61 FIP-, and 7.1 WAR.

Vientiane would extend bin Aziz after the 1987 on a four-year, $3,030,000 deal. While he thrived, the Vampires seemed stuck in the mid-tier. His contract expired after the 1991 season with the soon to be 32-year old bin Aziz looking at his next step. Vientiane was disappointed, but knew they couldn’t match the big money bin Aziz would certainly command. At that point, SAB had largely turned into a bidding war for the top talent between Ho Chi Minh City and Ahmedabad, as both were a few years into their respective dynasties.

With Vientiane, bin Aziz had a 151-80 record, 2.27 ERA, 2057.2 innings, 2791 strikeouts, 500 walks, 206/259 quality starts, 163 ERA+, 56 FIP-, and 76.3 WAR. The Vampires would retire his #53 uniform and he’d remain a beloved franchise icon for years to come. Although he went into the Hall of Fame in the Vientiane hat, he managed to somehow get even better in his second run.

Ho Chi Minh City signed bin Aziz to a five-year, $4,250,000 deal. Entering 1992, the Hedgehogs had made five straight LCS appearances and won three SEAL titles, but they couldn’t get around Ahmedabad in the SAB Championship. The hope was adding the best pitcher in the game might get them over that hump. Zainal immediately delivered with his third Triple Crown season at 22-6, 1.93 ERA, and 396 strikeouts. The Ks mark was a new single-season best that still holds as of 2037 and he broke his own WAR record with 12.4, earning his fifth Pitcher of the Year and a third place in MVP voting.

HCMC won another SEAL title in 1992, but again lost to the Animals in the final. Zainal won his sixth POTY in 1993 as the Hedgehogs had an incredible 126-36, setting a new world record for wins in a season. The season ended in tremendous disappointment as they lost to Johor Bahru in the first round. HCMC bounced back with pennants in 1994 and 1995, but again couldn’t be Ahmedabad. 1995 was the historic showdown between the two with both squads at 124-38.

With Ho Chi Minh City, bin Aziz led in ERA thrice, WAR four times, FIP- four times, K/BB four times, strikeouts four times, and WHIP three times. Zainal broke his WAR record again with 13.1 in 1994, then broke it once more with 13.4 the next year. That gave him eight Pitcher of the Year awards, something very few pitchers in any world league can claim. As of 2037, the most any other SAB pitcher has is five.

Of the top seven WAR seasons by a SAB pitcher, bin Aziz has six of them, including the top four. His 1.48 ERA in 1990 is the third-best in SAB history. He holds the fist, fifth, and tenth most strikeouts in a season. 1995 saw 26 wins for bin Aziz, a mark no other SAB pitchers have reached. On April 8, 1994, bin Aziz made history again with SAB’s second-ever perfect game. He struck out 14 in the perfect effort against Mandalay.

Zainal was also great in the playoffs as expected. He had 16 starts with Ho Chi Minh City with a 1.45 ERA, 9-3 record, 163 strikeouts, 19 walks, 244 ERA+, 38 FIP-, and 5.8 WAR. His 2.0 WAR in the 1994 playoffs is a SAB record and his56 Ks from that run is the third most in SAB history. Adding the Vientiane starts, bin Aziz’s playoff career is 10-5 in 19 starts, 1.57 ERA over 143 innings, 194 strikeouts, 228 ERA+, and 6.6 WAR. As of 2037, he’s the playoff leader in complete games (6), second in WAR, and seventh in both wins and strikeouts.

In 1996, bin Aziz became the first SAB pitcher to 250 career wins. He had already become the first to 4000 strikeouts the other year. Things were looking as impressive as ever for the now 36-year old lefty with a 1.81 ERA and 5.5 WAR through 124 innings. But then, disaster struck.

On June 12, 1996, bin Aziz suffered a torn flexor tendon in his elbow. The prognosis was 14 months, meaning the rest of the 1996 season and probably most to all of 1997. Zainal’s contract was set to expire with the 1996 season and Ho Chi Minh City didn’t re-sign him. In his five seasons as a Hedgehog, bin Aziz had a 104-21 record, 1.84 ERA, 1124 innings, 1692 strikeouts, 171 walks, 193 ERA+, 37 FIP-, and 55.7 WAR. He’d be beloved by Hedgehogs fans for decades to come as well.

Zainal didn’t retire right away and he hoped to make it back. He spent the rest of 1996 and 1997 rehabbing. Unfortunately once he could get back to throwing, bin Aziz’s previous 96-98 mph velocity was down to the 91-93 mph range. His stuff went from rated a 9/10 in his prime to 3/10. Dejected, bin Aziz retired in the winter of 1997 at age 38, never making it back on the field after the injury.

For his career, bin Aziz had a 255-101 record, 2.12 ERA, 3181.2 innings, 4483 strikeouts, 671 walks, 324/402 quality starts, 82 complete games, a 173 ERA+, 49 FIP-, and 132.0 WAR. The accolades are eight Pitcher of the Year awards, six ERA titles, eight seasons as the strikeout leader, four as the wins leader, ten as the WARlord, and seven double-digit WAR seasons.

Even with the early end to his career, bin Aziz still is the all-time pitching leader in WAR by nearly 30 points as of 2037. He’s also the leader in shutouts (36) while sitting third in wins and fourth in strikeouts. No other Hall of Fame starting pitcher has a lower ERA. Had his elbow not exploded, bin Aziz’s tallies would’ve been even more bonkers. Even still, few would argue against him being South Asia Baseball’s GOAT pitcher, fittingly giving him a unanimous induction in 2002.



V.J. Williams – Second/First Base – Ahmedabad Animals – 97.7% First Ballot

V.J. Williams was a 6’3’’, 190 pound left-handed hitting infielder from Baraut, India; a city with around 100,000 inhabitants in the northern Uttar Pradesh state. Williams was a great contact hitter with excellent power and a solid eye. He was excellent at earning extra base hits, averaging 41 home runs, 37 doubles, and 8 triples per 162 game average. Williams was quite quick and was a very intelligent and crafty baserunner as well.

Defensively, Williams made about 2/3s of his starts at second base and the rest at first. Although a tremendous bat for a 2B, Williams was a lousy defender there, lacking the range and glovesmanship needed. However, he graded out as very good defensively at first, even winning a Gold Glove in 1983. Williams was an absolute ironman, playing 156+ games in every season but his rookie year. He was scrappy and a hard worker, helping him become one of the most endearing and beloved players of his era.

Williams timed out as being eligible in SAB’s first-ever rookie draft in 1980. He was picked third overall by Delhi, where he’d spend the first seven years of his career. Williams was mostly a backup as a rookie, but a full-time starter after that. He soon would absolutely light up the leaderboards, posting six straight seasons worth 9+ WAR.

From 1982-87, Williams led the Indian League in WAR four times, runs five times, hits five times doubles twice, RBI twice, total bases six times, batting average four times, OBP five times, slugging six times, OPS six times, and wRC+ six times. He won four straight MVPs from 1984-87, while taking third in 1982 and second in 1983. Williams also won Silver Sluggers in all six seasons. His 138 runs scored in 1984 stood as SAB’s single-season best until 2007. Williams also smacked 40+ homers in all six years with Delhi.

Despite all of that, the Drillers stunk. They averaged 79 wins per season and didn’t make the playoffs once during his tenure. Williams was still beloved by Delhi fans and he had his most efficient seasons there, although most fans don’t remember him in Drillers brown. For his seven seasons, Williams had 1264 hits, 746 runs, 252 doubles, 294 home runs, 229 stolen bases, a .334/.408/.608 slash, 220 wRC+, and 71.1 WAR.

Williams was a megastar throughout India and also a regular for them in the World Baseball Championship. From 1983-96, he had 141 games and 133 starts with 151 hits, 106 runs, 37 doubles, 46 home runs, 108 RBI, 37 stolen bases, a .296/.384/.663 slash, 193 wRC+, and 9.0 WAR. As of 2037, he’s second all-time in WAR among all Indian players in the WBC and first in OPS.

Williams also won tournament MVP in 1993 as he led India to its first-ever finals appearance, falling in the championship to China. In 23 starts, Williams had 29 runs, 30 hits, 10 doubles, 13 home runs, 23 RBI, a .345/.426/.908 slash, 269 wRC+, and 2.5 WAR. At the time, that was the fifth-most runs scored in a single WBC. From all of this, Williams was an absolute megastar throughout India.

That afforded Williams opportunities in and outside of baseball. When his Delhi deal ran out after the 1987 season, Williams was 28 years old. The bidding wars between Ahmedabad and Ho Chi Minh City for all of the top free agents limited his options generally between the two. Williams didn’t want to leave India, but he also couldn’t reach a satisfactory arrangement with the Animals or anyone else. Thus, apart from the WBC, Williams didn’t play baseball in 1988, instead pursuing other interests.

Williams got the itch to come back soon after and was able to figure out compensation with Ahmedabad. The Animals gave him a one year return deal for 1989 at $424,000. The dynasty was underway at this point with SAB titles in 1986 and 1987, but the level of dominance to come after was still unknown at that point. After returning at MVP form, Ahmedabad gave Williams a seven-year, $5,490,000 extension.

During Williams’ run from 1989-96, Ahmedabad won seven championships (89-92, 93-95) and won 107+ games each season. They set the Indian League record in 1995 at 124-38, defeating fellow 124-win Ho Chi Minh City in one of the most epic title showdowns in baseball history. Williams would be a massive reason that the Animals dynasty went from merely great to perhaps the greatest in baseball history.

Williams had 7.5 WAR in seven straight seasons, debuting with 12.1 WAR and 12.5 WAR efforts. Clearly, rust wasn’t an issue. In those first two years, Williams led in hits, average, slugging, OPS, wRC+, and WAR. He also led with a career best 146 RBI in 1990. Williams topped the IL in total bases in 1990 and 1991. He also was the WARlord in 1995 at 10.9, his seventh time leading in WAR and his eighth season hitting double-digits.

Naturally, these efforts got Williams more hardware. He won his fifth MVP in 1990 and took second in 1989’s voting and third in 1995. Williams won seven straight Silver Sluggers, giving him 13 for his career. His greatness carried into the postseason, winning ILCS MVP in 1990, 92, and 94. In 118 playoff starts, Williams had 123 hits, 74 runs, 23 doubles, 29 home runs, 66 RBI, a .275/.345/.542 slash, 176 wRC+, and 6.2 WAR.

After posting 7+ WAR in all but his rookie year, Williams regressed to a mere 3.0 WAR in 1996. This was the final year of his deal and Ahmedabad didn’t sign him to a new contract. Williams shopped around in 1997, but didn’t find a home, retiring that winter at age 38. The Animals quickly retired Williams’ uniform #8. In his run, he had 1392 hits, 848 runs, 289 doubles, 302 home runs, 895 RBI, 393 stolen bases, a .301/.367/.588 slash, 200 wRC+, and 71.5 WAR.

Williams’ final stats were 2656 hits, 1594 runs, 541 doubles, 115 triples, 596 home runs, 1638 RBI, 938 walks, 622 stolen bases, a .316/.386/.620 slash, 209 wRC+, and 142.6 WAR. He was the first in SAB history to 2500 hits, 1500 runs scored, and 1500 RBI, as well as the second to 500 home runs. The later high-offense eras of SAB would knock him down leaderboards, falling out of the top ten in the counting stats. However, his career WAR still ranks sixth-best in SAB history. Williams was one of India’s first-ever major baseball stars and a no-doubt Hall of Famer, getting 97.7%. He and Zainal bin Aziz make up the 2002 class, perhaps as the best one-two in the SAB Hall’s history.
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Old 05-06-2024, 10:33 AM   #1203
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2002 ABF/ALB Hall of Fame

Catcher Razak Mohiyoudeen again came close to being the first Asian Baseball Federation Hall of Fame, but ended up just short of the 66% requirement. On his second try, Mohiyoudeen earned 59.9%, just down from his 63.2% the prior year. Two others made respectable debuts with RF Hakim Baig at 47.9% and 1B Hazan Sheikh at 46.1%. Three others were above 30%.



Closer Paul Arfaoui received 41.4% in his third time on the still new Arab League Baseball Hall of Fame ballot. This was the highest anyone had gotten yet in ALB, but still plenty shy of the 66% requirement. No one else reached double-digits.

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Old 05-06-2024, 03:24 PM   #1204
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2002 World Baseball Championship



The 2002 World Baseball Championship was the 56th edition of the event and the first to be hosted in the capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa. In Division 1, Ukraine advanced at 7-2, edging out both Egypt and Sweden by one game. This was the seventh division title for the Ukrainians, although they hadn’t done it in a decade. The two-time reigning world champ United States grabbed D2 at 8-1, two games ahead of both Colombia and Ethiopia. It was the 47th time getting to the elite eight for the Americans.

After a five year title drought, China advanced with an 8-1 record in Division 3, fending off a spirited 7-2 Bangladesh. This was the 20th division title for the Chinese. Division 4 saw a tie for first at 7-2 between Japan and Poland. The head-to-head tiebreaker went to the Japanese, advancing for the 16th time. They ended their own significant drought dating back to 1989. Russia, last year’s runner-up, tied for fourth in the division at 5-4.

Cuba claimed a tough Division 5 at 8-1, beating both Argentina and Australia by one game. This was the fifth division win for the Cubans, who last did it in 1993. Division 6 went to 8-1 England, besting Brazil by one game. It was the sixth division title for the English, who last made it in 1999. The Brazilians are now on a three-year drought for the first time since the early 1980s.

In Division 7, Spain and the Netherlands tied at 6-3, while the Dominican Republic, Mexico, and Tanzania were each 5-4. The Dutch had the head-to-head tiebreaker, moving on for the sixth time and the first time since 1989. In D8, Germany rolled at 8-1, while Indonesia, Italy, Myanmar, and Pakistan were each 6-3. The Germans now have eight division titles, ending a drought back to their 1991 runner-up effort. With that, the defending champion US was the only team in the playoff field who also was in the field in either 2001 or 2000. For the first time since 1983 as well, half of the division winners were European teams.

The United States dominated Round Robin Group A at 6-0, earning a third straight semifinal berth and a 41st final four appearance. Germany took second at 3-3, while the Netherlands was 2-4 and Cuba was 1-5. The Germans picked up their fifth-ever semifinal appearance. In Group B, Japan and China both advanced at 4-2, while both Ukraine and England finished 2-4. It was the seventh semifinal for the Japanese and 15th for the Chinese.

The Americans won their semi 3-1 against Japan to earn an unprecedented 37th championship appearance. China and Germany went the distance with the Chinese surviving in five games. That earned China its tenth championship berth and first since 1996. Germany officially was third and Japan was fourth, which was the best finish for either nation in more than a decade.



The 56th World Championship was the sixth finals meeting between the United States and China. The Americans won in their 1971, 74, 75, and 96 encounters, while the lone Chinese win came in 1994. That was the most recent world title for China, with their most recent appearance being the 1996 loss. The series was a classic, the first to go all seven games since Canada’s epic win over the Chinese in 1995. China took the series to deny another American three-peat. The win makes China 5-5 all-time in the final with titles in 1970, 79, 93, 94, and now 2002. The US sits at 32-5 in their finals tries.



Although Japan lost in the semifinal, they had the tournament MVP and Best Pitcher. The former was RF Koji Iwasaki, a 28-year old fresh off a 71 home run season with Saitama. In 19 starts, Iwasaki had 27 hits, 21 runs, 4 doubles, 12 home runs, 23 RBI, a .342/.391/.848 slash, 255 wRC+, and 2.1 WAR. Natsu Kishimoto won Best Pitcher, a 24-year old lefty for Kyoto. He tossed 10.2 scoreless innings in three appearances with 17 strikeouts, one walk, and five this allowed.

Other notes: For the entire event, the United States compiled 269 hits as a team, setting a new WBC record. This would remain the high until the Americans beat it in 2031 with 272 hits. Taiwan’s Ying-Shan Hu became the ninth player to hit for the cycle in the WBC, doing it against Switzerland. With their title, China is now tied with Mexico for fourth in the all-time tournament stats.

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Old 05-07-2024, 03:26 AM   #1205
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2002 in AAB




Four-time defending AAB Southern Conference champion Johannesburg took the top spot in the standings for the fourth year in a row, finishing at 105-57. They were closely trailed by Antananarivo, who earned its first playoff berth in AAB’s eight seasons to date. The Eagles were 102-60 to set a franchise record. After wild cards in the prior two seasons, Dar es Salaam dropped to third at 93-69. Durban was fourth at 91-71, setting a new high mark for the Deer.

Although Lilongwe was sixth, they had RF Felix Chaula repeat as Southern Conference MVP. The 26-year old Tanzanian righty led in home runs (57), OBP (.436), slugging (.714), OPS (1.150), wRC+ (209), and WAR (9.9). Chaula added 114 RBI and a .306 average. Pitcher of the Year was Antananarivo righty Lucas Wachira, who broke out as the leader in wins (22-7), ERA (2.39), innings (275.1), and quality starts (26). The 24-year old Kenyan added 272 strikeouts and 7.9 WAR. Also of note, Dar es Salaam’s Tewderos Tadesse became the second AAB player to win Reliever of the Year thrice.



Kinshasa returned to first place in the Central Conference standings, taking the spot at 105-57. It was their fifth time taking first, as the Sun Cats still have been in the playoffs in each season of the AAB. Defending champ Lubumbashi would fall short though, finishing third at 98-64. They were bested by Mogadishu, who snagged the second place spot at 102-60. This was the second-ever playoff berth for the Mighty Mice, who also were a wild card in 1998. There was a steep 15 game drop from third to fourth.

Fifth place Brazzaville had the Central Conference’s MVP in Mohau Sibiya. The 29-year old South African smacked 76 home runs, passing his own AAB record of 69 from 1999. Sibiya also had 158 RBI, one shy of Abebe Chekol’s record from the prior year. He’d lose the home run record in 2006, but he stands in elite company in world history. Sibayi also led the conference in runs (134), total bases (419), slugging (.754), OPS (1.121), wRC+ (193), and WAR (11.5). It would be his last year with the Blowfish, as he’d be traded across the river to Kinshasa in the offseason.

Pitcher of the Year was Kampala’s Mulumba Mwamba. He became the first-ever reliever to win the award in AAB, posting 35 saves in 87.2 innings, a 1.23 ERA, 152 strikeouts, 335 ERA+, and 5.5 WAR. Shockingly he won POTY and NOT Reliever of the Year, as the latter went to Lubumbashi’s Rajab Hamadi. The 27-year old led in saves (41) and had a 1.11 ERA, 188 strikeouts in 81 innings, 368 ERA+, and 6.9 WAR. It remains baffling to historians years later that a reliever won POTY despite not being the top reliever by many metrics.

Johannesburg’s reign atop the Southern Conference ended as Antananarivo denied them the five-peat. The Eagles upset the Jackalopes 4-1 in the Conference Championship for their first-pennant. Joahnnesburg would have to wait more than a decade for their next pennant, while Antananarivo would assume the mantle for the next few years. The Central Conference Championship was a rematch of the 1998 final. It was a seven game classic, but Kinshasa again came out on top of Mogadishu. The Sun Cats earned their sixth pennant through eight seasons.



Kinshasa was upset that Lubumbashi broke up the dynasty in 2001. They took that frustration out on Antananarivo in the eighth Africa Series, winning it 5-1. The Sun Cats earned their fifth title in six years with the win, a feat matched by few teams in any world league. 1B Matthew Roberts led the way, winning MVP of the Africa Series and the Conference final. A 32-year old Canadian who joined Kinshasa in 2000 after nine years in Montreal, Roberts had 13 hits, 9 runs, 6 home runs, and 13 RBI in 12 playoff starts.



Other notes: On April 10, Antananarivo’s Seth Zoontjes tossed the first-ever perfect game in AAB, striking out eight against Durban. The next perfecto wouldn’t come until 2013. Joel Mwasesa became the first pitcher to 2000 career strikeouts. CF Tico Samo won his sixth Gold Glove, becoming the second in AAB to win six.
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Old 05-07-2024, 12:15 PM   #1206
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2002 in ALB




The Arab League’s Western Conference saw a shakeup with three new division champs than the prior two seasons. The top record went to Alexandria at 97-65 atop the Nile Division. The Astronauts finished six games ahead of Cairo for the top spot, ending a seven-year playoff drought. Tripoli took the Mediterranean Division at 96-66, edging Algiers by two games. The Privateers ended the four-year division title streak of Casablanca, who took third in the division at 89-73. Amman dominated the Levant Division at 91-71, ending a two-year playoff drought. Jerusalem, the division winner in the prior two seasons, fell off hard to 73-89.

Western Conference MVP went to Casablanca 3B Abderrazak Zouari for the second time in three years. The 28-year old Moroccan righty bounced back after missing half of 2001 to injury, leading in runs (131), home runs (55), RBI (147), total bases (401), OBP (.409), slugging (.706), OPS (1.115), wRC+ (206), and WAR (12.0).

Cairo’s Mahmoud Al-Fandi won Pitcher of the Year and became the first-ever Triple Crown pitcher in Arab League Baseball history. The 26-year old Syrian lefty had a 24-8 record, 2.71 ERA, and 319 strikeouts over 259 innings. Al-Fandi also led in WHIP (0.95), quality starts (31), FIP- (69), and WAR (7.7).

Tripoli swept Amman in the first round of the playoffs, earning their third Western Conference Finals appearance (1991, 1997). For top seed Alexandria, their only prior playoff berth saw a WCF defeat in 1994. The Astronauts would sweep the Privateers 3-0 to win their first-ever pennant.



The battle for the top record in the Eastern Conference was centered in the Saudi Division as Riyadh and Medina both finished at 96-66. The Rats defeated the Mastodons in the one-game tiebreaker for their second division title in three years. Jeddah, last year’s conference finalist, dropped to .500. Dubai repeated as Gulf Division champ at 95-67, fending off Kuwait by two games. Reigning ALB champ Mosul had their worst record since 1994, but still firmly took the Iraq Division at 89-73. The Muskies extended their postseason streak to eight years, the longest in ALB history to date.

Riyadh first baseman Samer Al-Mousa won Eastern Conference MVP and posted the fourth ALB Triple Crown season for a hitter. The 26-year old Syrian lefty smacked 62 home runs with 141 RBI and a .348 average. Al-Mousa also led in runs (124), doubles (48), total bases (440), OBP (.433), slugging (.773), OPS (1.206), and wRC+ (226) while adding 11.0 WAR. Riyadh was delighted with their investment, as they had given Al-Mousa an eight-year, $8,990,000 extension the prior winter. The Rats also had the Pitcher of the Year with eighth-year lefty Ali Sabet. The 28-year old Egyptian led in wins (20-6), ERA (2.50), WHIP (0.88), and WAR (7.1). Sabet added 282 strikeouts over 255.2 innings.

Dubai edged Mosul 2-1 in the first round, keeping the Muskies out of the Eastern Conference Final for the first time since 1994. This would be the official end of their dynasty run, as Mosul would fall below .500 the next year. Despite it being their eighth time in the playoffs, this was only the second time the Diamonds had been in the ECF (1991). For Riyadh, this was their first conference final. Dubai would upset the Rats 3-2 to win their first pennant.



The 13th Arab League Championship was guaranteed to have a first-time winner and the ninth different franchise with a title. Dubai downed Alexandria 4-2, led by veteran LF Junoon Asghar. The 32-year old Palestinian was finals MVP in his second year with the Diamonds, making 14 playoff starts with 17 hits, 10 runs, 4 doubles, 8 home runs, and 18 RBI. Asghar set ALB playoff records for both homers and RBI. The HR mark still hasn’t been topped as of 2037, while the RBI mark held until 2025.



Other notes: Basra’s Sami Al-Malki had a 17 strikeout no-hitter on August 2 against Baghdad, setting the ALB record for most Ks in a no-no. Dubai’s Salem Aldani had a 27-game hit streak, a new ALB top mark. 1B Bilal Hamdan won his ninth Gold Glove and SS Mohammed Mohamed won his eighth. Mohamed also won his ninth Silver Slugger, the first ALB player to do so.
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Old 05-07-2024, 03:50 PM   #1207
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2002 in ABF




The ABF’s East League had the same four playoff teams as the prior year, although positions were switched around. Bishkek took the top spot at 105-57 led by great pitching. They allowed the third fewest runs (387) and earned runs (358) in EL/Pakistan League history with the third-best ERA (2.13) and second-best WHIP. The Black Sox extended their playoff streak tot here seasons.

Multan took second place at 95-67 to repeat as a playoff team, while defending ABF champion Dushanbe was third at 91-71. The Dynamo secured a third consecutive playoff berth. Tashkent took the fourth and final playoff spot at 87-75, besting Hyderabad by four games and Peshawar by five. Including their Eurasian Professional Baseball days, the Tomcats have an eight-year playoff streak.

East League MVP was Multan RF Oudeh Ashraf. The 27-year old led in runs (102), home runs (52), RBI (116), total bases (349), slugging (.599), OPS (.939), and wRC+ (216), while adding 8.1 WAR. It would be his penultimate season with the Mighty Cocks, as he’d leave for MLB and Kansas City in 2004. Bishkek’s Nadir Kaliev was Pitcher of the Year in his second season as a full-time starter. The 27-year old Uzbek lefty led in wins (21-8), and complete games (17). Kaliev had a 2.24 ERA over 269.2 innings with 274 strikeouts and 7.7 WAR.

The #3 and #4 seeds earned upset wins in the first round of the playoffs. Tashkent topped top ranked Bishkek 3-1 and Dushanbe edged Multan 3-2. This put the 2001 ABF champ Dynamo against the 2000 champ Tomcats in the East League Championship Series. Tashkent clobbered Dushanbe with a sweep, earning their second EL pennant in three years. Counting the EBF Asian League, the Tomcats have earned four pennants in the last five years.



The West League had Isfahan and Ankara tied for the top spot at 96-66. The tiebreaker went to the Imperials, who extended their ABF-record playoff streak to eight years. The Alouettes picked up a third consecutive playoff appearance. Defending WL champ Bursa extended their own postseason streak to six seasons, placing third at 93-69. The fourth and final spot went to 88-74 Izmir, who hadn’t made the playoffs in a decade.

Adana, last year’s WCLS runner-up, dropped to seventh at 77-85. Still, their star LF Humayun Kahil won his fourth MVP in five years. The 25-year old Pakistani lefty became the first four-time MVP in ABF history and earned his second Triple Crown. It was the fourth Triple Crown season for an ABF hitter. Kahil led in home runs (60), RBI (139), total bases (406), stolen bases (74), average (.330), slugging (.701), OPS (1.102), wRC+ (210), and WAR (12.4).

Isfahan’s Yazeed Anwari won a historic seventh Pitcher of the Year. He was the first and as of 2037, one of two pitchers to reach that distinction. The 29-year old Pakistani righty led in wins (24-7), innings (290.1), strikeouts (416), WHIP (0.82), K/BB (14.9), quality starts (30), and WAR (11.5). Anwari had a 1.80 ERA, falling just short of a Triple Crown behind Bedirhan Uzun’s 1.66. Anwari also had a 21 strikeout game in May against Gujranwala.

Isfahan swept Izmir in the first round of the playoffs, while Bursa upset Adana 3-2. This set up another West League Championship Series between the Imperials and Blue Claws, who met each year in the final from 1997-00. Isfahan beat up Bursa 4-1 to win their fourth pennant in six years. The Imperials now have six pennants total (1986, 87, 97, 98, 00, 02).



The 18th Asian Baseball Federation was a rematch of the 2000 finale while saw Tashkent top Isfahan. The Tomcats prevailed again, topping the Imperials 4-1. Tashkent now has two titles after three seasons in the ABF. Along with Dushanbe’s 2001 win, each title has gone to a former EPB team since those squads joined the ABF for the 2000 season. 3B Oleg Slutsky was finals MVP, as the 29-year old Russian in 13 playoff starts had 18 hits, 10 runs, 4 doubles, and 4 RBI. It was Sltusky’s final season with Tashkent, as he’d move back to Russia and sign with EPB’s Omsk in the offseason.



Other notes: Isfahan’s Frantisek Kasa pitched the ninth Perfect Game in ABF history, striking out 15 against Baku on June 30. Vahid Hadadi became the first ABF slugger to 600 home runs, retiring with 603. He’d hold the top spot until 2010. Hasan Afshin became the first to 4000 strikeouts. CF Shahruz Rowhani won his seventh Gold Glove.
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Old 05-08-2024, 07:39 AM   #1208
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2002 in SAB




Another year, another top seed in the Indian League for Ahmedabad. The eight-time defending IL champs finished 118-44 to extend their postseason streak to 18 years and their West Division title streak to 15 years. The second best record was also in the West with 97-65 Mumbai, who easily repeated as wild card. Jaipur earned a third consecutive Central Division at 96-66. The South Division was abysmal with Bengaluru taking first at 74-88, ending a six-year playoff drought. Visakhapatnam, who had won four straight division titles, had the worst record in the league at 64-98.

Indian League MVP went to Mumbai veteran 3B Gotem Sarwar, who led the league with 54 home runs. The 31-year old added 117 RBI, 102 runs, a .263/.342/.605 slash, 201 wRC+, and 8.2 WAR. Ahmedadbad’s Arkakara Raja won Pitcher of the Year in his first full-time season as a starter. The 23-year old Indian lefty led in ERA (1.55), strikeouts (364), FIP- (55), and WAR (9.5). Raja pitched 255.1 innings with a 22-4 record, falling two wins short of a Triple Crown.

Ahmedabad beat divisional foe Mumbai 3-1 in the first round and Jaipur downed Bengaluru 3-1. This set up a third consecutive Indian League Championship Series battle between the two squads and the fifth in seven years. The Animals dominated yet again and swept the Jokers for a historic ninth pennant in a row. Since 1986, Ahmedabad has been the Indian League’s champ 15 times.



Ho Chi Minh City yet again had the top record in the Southeast Asia League, winning a 13th straight South Division title. The Hedgehogs extended their epic playoff streak to 16 years. Dhaka had an impressive turnaround from 71 wins to 99-63 atop the North Division. This was their first playoff appearance in six years. Reigning South Asian Champion Yangon had the first wild card at 97-65 to extend their playoff streak to eight seasons. Chittagong at 89-73 was the second wild card for only their second-ever playoff berth (1985).

SEAL MVP was Dhaka shortstop Sameer Sheikh. The 25-year old Pakistani righty won the batting title at .333 and was the WARlord at 11.8. He added 53 home runs, 121 RBI, a 1.120 OPS, and 191 wRC+. Sheikh beat out an impressive 69 home run effort by HCMC’s Tritha Upadhyaya, who added 11.1 WAR. The nice 69 tally tied the third most homers in SAB history behind Dhuna Itar’s 74 in 2000 and Amoda Shah’s 70 in 1998.

In his Yangon debut, Suhrawadi Baisya won Pitcher of the Year. It would be his only season with the Green Dragons, posting a 2.46 ERA over 216 innings, 242 strikeouts, 6.2 WAR, and a 13-5 record. Also of note, Ho Chi Minh City closer Saroth Bora became SAB’s second-ever four-time Reliever of the Year winner. He led in saves with 47 and posted a 1.09 ERA over 90.2 innings, 157 strikeouts, and 5.1 WAR.

HCMC downed Chittagong 3-1 while Dhaka ousted reigning SAB champ Yangon 3-1. This was the first time in the Southeast Asia League Championship Series for the Dobermans since 1994. For Ho Chi Minh City, this was their ninth consecutive LCS. For back-to-back years, the Hedgehogs were stunned and denied the pennant. Dhaka won the series to become four-time SEAL champs (1981, 84, 91, 02).



The 23rd South Asia Baseball Championship was a rematch of the 1991 final, which Ahmedabad won over Dhaka. After falling short in the last two finals, the Animals rolled to a sweep of the Dobermans. For the fourth time in his career, CF Anjan Sumanjit won finals MVP. In his final season, the 32-year old Indian in 12 playoff starts had 14 hits, 5 runs, 2 doubles, 1 triple, 3 home runs, and 5 RBI.



With that, Ahmedabad earned a historic 12th SAB championship over 17 years (1986, 87, 89, 90, 91, 92, 94, 95, 96, 98, 99, 02). It was a two decade stretch of dominance never before seen in any professional baseball league. Although the Animals would remain a contender for the next few years, their 2002 title would mark the end of the dynasty and would be their last championship for the next 20+ years.

Other notes: Amoda Shah became the first SAB hitter to 600 career home runs. Van Loi Phung and Manju Abbas were the second and third to 2500 hits. Abbas became a 13-time Gold Glove winner, the most by any player in SAB history. SS Aman Aveesh and CF Mansoor Gurinder became seven-time Gold Glovers. 2B Tirtha Upadhyaya won his eighth Silver Slugger.
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