Difference between revisions of "QMS"
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(A few months <a href=" http://www.dcaap.com.ph/?catapres-patch-tts ">catapres tablets</a> The 2013 Kansas City Royals went 86-76. They finished seven games behind in the AL Central and 5 1/2 games be) |
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− | + | A few months <a href=" http://www.dcaap.com.ph/?catapres-patch-tts ">catapres tablets</a> The 2013 Kansas City Royals went 86-76. They finished seven games behind in the AL Central and 5 1/2 games behind the second American League wild-card team in what was their first winning season since 2003 and second since 1994. They did that despite their second basemen hitting .243/.296/.304 with a collective 74 OPS . Only the last-place Cubs and Blue Jays (who shared Emilio Bonifacio with Kansas City) received worse performances from their second basemen in 2013. As a result, no team (with the possible exception of the Yankees, who just lost Robinson Cano) would have benefited more from bringing the reliably league-average Omar Infante in to fill their second base hole than the Royals. And that’s exactly what they just did, coming to terms with Infante on a four-year, $30 million contract. |
Revision as of 03:39, 9 January 2015
A few months <a href=" http://www.dcaap.com.ph/?catapres-patch-tts ">catapres tablets</a> The 2013 Kansas City Royals went 86-76. They finished seven games behind in the AL Central and 5 1/2 games behind the second American League wild-card team in what was their first winning season since 2003 and second since 1994. They did that despite their second basemen hitting .243/.296/.304 with a collective 74 OPS . Only the last-place Cubs and Blue Jays (who shared Emilio Bonifacio with Kansas City) received worse performances from their second basemen in 2013. As a result, no team (with the possible exception of the Yankees, who just lost Robinson Cano) would have benefited more from bringing the reliably league-average Omar Infante in to fill their second base hole than the Royals. And that’s exactly what they just did, coming to terms with Infante on a four-year, $30 million contract.