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Baseball Brunch: Halfway Home

Daisuke Matsuzaka, Manny Acta, Dan Haren, Gary Sheffield
Every Sunday, MLB FanHouse empties out its notebook in Baseball Brunch.

The most remarkable thing about this season as we hit the not-halfway halfway point of the All-Star break isn't Albert Pujols' RBI total. Or Zack Greinke's ERA. Or the PED suspension of one of the game's biggest stars.

It's the standings. And they not only reflect the season so far, they give us a clue as to the weeks head leading up to the non-waiver trade deadline.

The Phillies and Dodgers are the only first-place team with a lead of more than 2 1/2 games. And 21 of the 30 teams are within 7 1/2 games of a playoff spot: nine of 14 in the AL and 12 of 16 in the NL.

Not Even Yankee Stadium Can Stop Blue Jays Rookie Ricky Romero

Toronto's Ricky Romero wobbled early against the Yankees but settled in to improve to 7-3 in his impressive rookie season.NEW YORK -- Yeah, he was nervous, he admitted with a shy smile. Ricky Romero was pitching against the Yankees, in front of more than 46,000 people on a perfect summer day in the Bronx. The Blue Jays' 24-year-old rookie left-hander was fired up and throwing way too hard, which is why he darn near Yahtzeed* the scorecard in the first inning.

"I was excited, I'm not going to lie," Romero said when the Jays' 7-6 victory was over and he'd improved to 5-1 with a 2.22 ERA in his last seven starts. "Packed house, pitching against the Yankees -- I was overthrowing. And that is something that has just not been me. Not this year, at least."

Not for the past month, for sure. In that time, Romero has been one of the best pitchers in baseball.


Baseball Brunch: Imbalance, Irregularities Abound in Interleague Play

Every Sunday, MLB FanHouse empties out its notebook in Baseball Brunch.

"This concludes our test of the emergency attendance enhancement system. We now return to the regularly scheduled season."

Yes, the 13th season of interleague play wraps up Sunday, except for a Cubs-White Sox makeup game. We have survived six San Diego-Seattle games (that's more zeroes than an A-Rod paycheck).

We didn't learn much we didn't already know: the system has inherent flaws and the American League rules.

For the sixth straight year, the AL has had** the better record in interleague play – 129-108 going into today.

Take out Cleveland and Oakland, and the AL is 119-84.

"It probably is" as big a gap between leagues as in past years, one AL team official said, "until you get to the World Series. Then it doesn't matter."

Gaston: Use DH in All Interleague Games

PHILADELPHIA – Even before Tuesday night's game, Cito Gaston was calling for the designated hitter in all interleague games.

And then the Blue Jays manager got even more of a reason to push for a rule change.

Toronto closer Scott Downs suffered an injury to his left foot pushing out of the batter's box while grounding out in the top of the 10th inning. Gaston allowed Downs to hit because he had a five-run lead at that point and only his backup catcher left on the bench.

"I know that a lot of people like this interleague play," Gaston said, "I know it's great for the fans and all that, but that's what happens. My guys don't take batting practice every day. They don't run. So things like this are going to happen until somebody wakes up and says, 'Look, let's just play [with] the DH all the time or call it off.' "

Blue Jays Flying High in AL East

OAKLAND -- You heard all that talk over the winter about how the American League East was going to be a tight three-team race.

The Blue Jays apparently didn't.

"You don't have to believe what you hear," Toronto shortstop Marco Scutaro told FanHouse. "In baseball, anything can happen. Last year if you would have told me in spring training that Tampa Bay would be in the World Series, I'd say you are crazy."

The first-place Blue Jays improved to 22-12, best in the American League, by taking two of three from the A's this weekend. Toronto has lost only one series so far this season.

Always Be Closing: Ryan Looks Awful

B.J. Ryan hasn't had a good first week, and that's an understatement. He's now appeared in two games and looked pretty awful. In his first outing, he blew a save by allowing a game-tying Brandon Inge home run. His second time out should have been a nice, leisurely way to get himself on track. He had been spotted a four run lead, thanks to Roy Halladay and the Jays' bats. Plus, he was facing the bottom of the scuffling Indians' batting order.

Ryan walked three hitters and allowed a single. He also mixed in a double-play ball, so Mark DeRosa came to the plate with the bases jacked and 2 outs. DeRosa doubled in three, cutting the Blue Jays lead to 5-4. Ryan was promptly removed from the game.

Beware the Dugouts of March: The Toronto Blue Jays' 2009 Preview

The Blue Jays are one of The Dugout's forgotten teams. It's not intentional, it's just that they're a little thin in the wacky hijinx department.

In fact, I'm not certain that they even exist. How can we know for sure? We can't. As such, the Blue Jays chat room is an immense dark void, populated only by a reflective, curious Cito Gaston. What would happen if gravity suddenly worked in reverse? Is Marco Scutaro really an everyday player at the major league level? The answers to these questions are grasped for in this evening's Dugout, after the jump.

Ricky Romero Wins Jays' Rotation Spot

With Dustin McGowan and Shaun Marcum on the shelf -- not to mention A.J. Burnett's following the almighty dollar to the Bronx -- the Jays' rotation looks a bit less stout this season. After Roy Halladay, they line up with Jesse Litsch and David Purcey. You can add a fourth name to the list, because Cito Gaston has announced the next spot in the rotation will go to Ricky Romero.

The 24-year-old left-hander has never thrown a pitch in the majors, and he has only made seven starts in Triple-A.

The Dugout: the Canadian Dollar

Bad news for the Blue Jays. The Canadian dollar is still somehow weaker than the American dollar. Team CEO Paul Beeston says that since his native currency holds about as much relevance as Aboriginal wheel money, they won't be spending much this offseason, even if they don't re-sign pitcher A.J. Burnett.

Beeston and manager Cito Gaston attempt to make sense of our awesome and jealous global economy in tonight's Dugout, after the jump.

Footprints in the Snow: Toronto Blue Jays

Footprints in the Snow is FanHouse's look at the paths to be forged by MLB teams this winter as they look ahead to 2009.

We're coming up on that crossroads season for the Blue Jays. For years they've had a team that, in the prism of the AL East, was merely OK. And each year they were also the team that was expected to break that Red Sox/Yankees stronghold on the division. But those two teams were also the built-in excuse for the Jays when they didn't break through. They have been pretty consistent with their win total over the last 10 seasons (in the 80s every season except for two), but it was never good enough to approach the upper echelon. "Well, the Red Sox and Yankees are in the pantheon of baseball ... who's going to beat them?"

Umm, it was the Rays. And now that the Rays have busted through, the pressure is on the Jays to finally kick this franchise into another gear and make their move. There's no reason to think they can't do it, as the club went 51-37 after replacing John Gibbons with Cito Gaston as manager ... a pace that would have placed them just a hair short of the Sox for the wild card. That's a significant stride, but not enough to be a playoff team quite yet. And with the imminent departure of A.J. Burnett, there will be some work to do to get there.

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