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A Triple Crown, big trades, Giant victory ... oh my!

SoCal stretches its wallet, Toronto loads up as 2012 season comes to close

Image: Miguel CabreraReuters file
Detroit Tigers' Miguel Cabrera joined an elite fraternity when he won the Triple Crown in 2012.

Tony DeMarco
Another year of baseball history has been written, and we'll consider it memorable because:

In a season in which he also made a major position change, Cabrera joined the ultra-select fraternity — Hall of Famers all: Carl Yastrzemski, Frank Robinson, Mickey Mantle, Ted Williams, Lou Gehrig, Joe Medwick, Jimmie Foxx, Chuck Klein, Rogers Hornsby, Ty Cobb, Nap Lajoie.

Among Triple Crowns, Cabrera's wasn't extraordinary: His 44 homers were the fifth-highest total; his 139 RBIs ranked sixth; his .330 batting average was third-lowest. And yes, a batting title isn't the jewel it used to be.

But a Triple Crown season had just been a concept to any baseball fan under the age of 40 or so. Not any more. Maybe we haven't seen the last 300-game winner, either.

Trout scored 129 runs in 139 games — and lead the AL by 20 runs scored. He led the league with 49 steals — in only 55 tries. His OPS+ of 171 also was the AL's best. And how about a .330/.399/.564 slash line and seemingly regularly scheduled highlight-reel catches?

A season for the ages — never before done by somebody so young.

R.A. Dickey's story could be a movie some day, and he could write the screenplay. His baseball career is extraordinary enough, let alone what life has thrown his way. The best part about him winning the award over Clayton Kershaw and the rest of a very strong field may just be that it goes way beyond the game. It's given him a bigger platform from which to be heard.

The New York Mets chose to sell high despite a body of evidence of knuckleballer standouts — Hall of Famer Phil Niekro, Charlie Hough and Tim Wakefield — effectively pitching into their early-to-mid-40s. The Mets got their catcher of the future; Dickey a chance to win and a new audience north of the border.

Nobody's mistaking the Giants' championship rosters for those dominating Yankees' teams filled with All-Stars and a few Hall of Famers. The Giants' connective tissue is dominant pitching and Buster Posey. And that's why architect Brian Sabean and even-tempered, bullpen mastermind Bruce Bochy also have risen to the top of their respective fields.

Not long after Melky Cabrera was named MVP of the All-Star Game, his 1 1/2-season move from underachieving fourth outfielder to feared offensive force was exposed. Two weeks before the end of the regular season, he pulled the plug on his candidacy with the union's backing. His .346 average turned out to be 10 points better than that of the eventual winner — Posey.

Cabrera is the Toronto Blue Jays' issue now.

The Oakland A's and their AL-lowest payroll didn't need an expanded field to get in. They smoked the heavily favored Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Angels down the stretch to win the AL West.

Meanwhile, the Baltimore Orioles extended the New York Yankees as much as they could before settling for a wild card, and a complete record reversal from 2011 — 69-93 to 93-69.

The Washington Nationals weren't much of a surprise, but the last time before this October that there was post-season baseball in the nation's capital, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was in office.

And the 10-team, four-wild card format seems just about right, doesn't it?

Larkin also guided one of the big upsets of the calendar year as manager of Brazil's fledgling World Baseball Classic entry that knocked off heavily favored Panama on its own turf to advance to the WBC's 16-team field. If Larkin ever wants to be a big-league manager, his resume looks that much better.

But everybody knows the gory details: New stadium, big payroll expansion, colossal on-field failure, the PR nightmare of Ozzie Guillen's unraveling, and then a salary purge that alienated their remaining star. Good luck, Mike Redmond.

Philadelphia Phillies v Miami Marlins
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The nation grieved for those hurt, killed and affected by the Boston Marathon bombings. After one of the suspects was caught on Friday — following a day-long lockdown and manhunt — sports returned to Boston over the weekend.

The former just made Zack Greinke the highest-paid right-handed pitcher in the history of the game at a guaranteed $147 million over six years, capping a $650-million spending spree since taking over from the failed Frank McCourt era earlier this year.

Since July, they've added Hanley Ramirez, Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford, Brandon League, Hyun-jin Ryu, Nick Punto, Skip Schumaker and Greinke, and will shoot their payroll to more than $220 million in 2013. But strangely, there seems to be more pressure on the Angels to win now.

That's because Arte Moreno continued an impulse-buying spree from last off-season by taking a risky plunge on all that is Josh Hamilton. The $125 million over five years is the most money promised on a per-season basis than everybody in history, except Alex Rodriguez.

The combined Albert Pujols-Hamilton-C.J. Wilson-Jered Weaver outlay will be $527.5 million. And the trend numbers don't line up well for Pujols, 33, and Hamilton, 32, especially from 2015 and beyond.

But that's for another year. See ya, 2012.

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