As we get ready for another season to begin, here are my predictions for this season.
AL East: Toronto Blue Jays
You could literally make a case for any team in this division to finish on top. The AL East is more bunched
together than ever before. There's no dominant team and they all come filled with question marks. Toronto has become the trendy pick after they raided the Marlins roster this off-season and added reigning NL Cy Young, R.A. Dickey. A healthy Jose Bautista would go a long way toward getting the Jays to the top as well. On paper, they seem to be the best choice in this division, but there's still a lot of things that can go wrong. What if Bautista's wrist isn't fully healed to the extent that he'll still be able to hit for the massive power we expect from him? Will Dickey's knuckleball find the same kind of success against the deeper lineups in the AL? How will Jose Reyes' legs hold up playing on turf? Spring Training is always full of optimism, so for now the Jays are looking great, but don't be shocked if things fall apart on them.
If the Jays do stumble, which team will be there to steal the division from them? Baltimore made the playoffs as a Wild Card last year, but their record was aided by an unsustainable level of luck in one run games and extra innings games. Considering they made no notable changes to their roster, it's hard to find reasons they will improve unless youngsters Manny Machado and Dylan Bundy develop quickly. The Rays are still dangerous, with their deep pitching staff and spectacular defense, but they did just lose a couple key players. BJ Upton went to join his brother in Atlanta and the rotation lost 200+ reliable innings from James Shields, who was traded for prospect Wil Myers. One of the game's top hitting prospects, Myers will eventually be a great player, but the low budget Rays will almost certainly wait until July to call him up from the minors to delay his arbitration eligible years.
The Yankees and Red Sox have perennially dominated this division, but both are struggling right now. Boston is looking to rebound from a miserable 69 win season that saw them sink to the bottom of the division. Giving Bobby Valentine the boot to bring back John Farrell as manager should help improve the toxic clubhouse and hopefully he can get Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz back on track. New rules with the luxury tax have forced even the free spending Yankees to cut back in a desperate attempt to get under the tax line by next year. They had to shop for bargains this off-season and have little depth to cover the injuries that are already piling up. Curtis Granderson is out until mid-May, Derek Jeter will start the year on the DL for at least a couple weeks and Mark Teixiera is hoping to make it back by June. Then there is A-Rod, who makes more money than the entire Astros team combined, but nobody knows when he'll play again. You can't count out either of these powerhouse teams from making a run at the division title, but they both could just as easily finish at the bottom.