World Series Preview
The 101st World Series includes two teams in the Astros and White Sox that, entering this season, not only weren't expected to reach late October, but weren't even expected to win their respective divisions. Having some of the best pitching in baseball, though, has allowed both teams to steamroll through the playoffs, proving critics wrong.
As the Wild Card representative in the National League, the Astros can become the fourth team in as many years to win the World Series without winning a division. And though the city of Houston may not admit it, just making the World Series for the first time in the history of the franchise is an accomplishment of its own. While Chicago does have a World Series history, it is not long. The White Sox most recently had a chance to win it all in 1959, when they lost the Series to the Dodgers, and the last year they won the World Series was in 1917.
The biggest storyline of the American League Championship Series was the dominance of the White Sox starters, who, after a Game 1 loss, pitched four consecutive complete-game wins, becoming the first team to do so in the postseason since the 1956 Yankees. As impressive as Chicago's bullpen abandonment was, no single White Sox pitcher enters the World Series with as much respect or past success as any member of the Astros' daunting ace machine that includes Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte and Roy Oswalt. While Clemens and Pettitte are postseason veterans, Oswalt will be making his first World Series appearance. But by winning two games in the National League Championship Series -- including an outstanding performance in the series clincher following his team's incomprehensible Game 5 loss -- Oswalt, still unbeaten in six career postseason starts, proved that he can handle playoff pressure.
Sox starter Jose Contreras, who allowed six runs over 17 1/3 ALCS innings, has matured immeasurably since his days as a big-game bust with the Yankees, and is being trusted, justifiably, with a Game 1 start against Clemens. Games 2 and 3 (Pettitte vs. Mark Buehrle; Oswalt vs. Jon Garland) will likely be decided late, but Chicago holds a clear edge in Game 4, starting Freddy Garcia against Brandon Backe.
Both teams lack power on offense, instead manufacturing runs with a small-ball approach rarely seen in the American League. While any edge may not be
drastic, the White Sox do hold an advantage over the Astros offensively. Should seven games be played, Houston will have to play four on the road, where an alarming number of Astros batters hit far worse than at home this season. Craig Biggio hit .295 at Minute Maid Park this year, but just .235 on the road. Shortstop Adam Everett's road average was .216, compared to .282 at home. Catcher Brad Ausmus hit .280 at home, but only .237 on the road, while Jason Lane (.298) nearly reached .300 in Houston, but managed just a .239 average away from home.
Lance Berkman and Morgan Ensberg are major threats, but without runners on, they're far less intimidating. The White Sox, conversely, have pests at the top of the order in AL stolen-base runner-up Scott Podsednik and Japanese import Tadahito Iguchi, complemented by sufficient power in Paul Konerko -- Ensberg's equal -- and Jermaine Dye. Third baseman Joe Crede, suddenly erasing regular-season fan and media gripes with a stellar postseason, adds punch to the bottom of the lineup.
Each bullpen could struggle more than expected, but for contrasting reasons. The strength of Chicago's rotation during the ALCS made just two-thirds of an inning
from Neal Cotts the only necessary relief work from the Sox in the series. But whether the rest will hurt or help Chicago may not ever be known if the team's starters can pitch as deep into games as they did against the Angels. For Houston, Brad Lidge's blown save in Game 5 gets perhaps more attention than it deserves, but by setting the Cardinals up with runners on first and third with nobody out in the ninth inning of Game 4, he nearly surrendered a one-run lead in what was likely the most important game of the series. Lidge's most breathtaking pitch is his slider, which was fatal in the 2004 postseason, very effective throughout the 2005 regular season, but at times has been flat and entirely hittable this October, possibly due to the closer's appearance in more games than necessary down the stretch.
This series will be controlled by pitching from the start, and could closely resemble the 2001 World Series, which went seven games and featured a Yankees team that had three pitchers with a sub-4.00 ERA and a Diamondbacks team led by future Hall of Famers Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson. And as in that series, the team with home-field advantage this time may find a way to put together just enough hits to win a decisive game.




















By the next day, Oakland's fortunes had changed. Crosby returned on May 30, beginning a stretch of hitting safely in 25 of 28 games to raise his average to .339 on July 2. From May 30-Aug. 13, Chavez hit .316, keyed by a .379 June average. But most importantly, Zito had turned his season completely around. As if a 3-2 record and 3.05 ERA in June weren't impressive enough, the left-hander's 2.51 ERA in July helped him win all six of his starts in the month and become just the second A's pitcher since 1991 to 
