Keep the vibes high
No denying it, the vibes are good right now. Sure doesn’t feel like the Dog Days, does it?
Those vibes don’t happen by accident. The Padres made five trades on Deadline day involving 22 players -- and their clubhouse hasn’t missed a beat.
“Obviously, the biggest tip of the hat to the players,” Shildt said. “Tip of the hat to [general manager] A.J. [Preller] for acquiring them. Tip of the hat to the clubhouse and staff for acclimating. Because that transition was really done well. … These guys came in, and they’ve just absolutely embraced what we’re about. Just great fits.”
As Shildt noted, I think the front office deserves some credit there. Those moves weren’t made on a spreadsheet. They were made with the firm belief that the different personalities they’ve added to this clubhouse would be a fit -- and thus far, they absolutely have been.
Take advantage of the schedule
Tonight, the Padres begin a three-game series against a good Mariners team in Seattle. When it’s over, they’ll have about a month left in their season. Schedule-wise, nobody in baseball has an easier final month.
That’s true based on the average winning percentage of their opponents. But it’s also true anecdotally. They’ll be playing lots of games against teams with little to play for. After Seattle, the Padres only have two series against teams in playoff position -- the Mets in mid-September and then the Brewers.
Meanwhile, San Diego has 10 games in September against the Rockies and White Sox, owners of the two worst records in baseball. Generally, the Padres have done a fantastic job of beating up on inferior opponents this year. (Good teams do that.) They’re 49-24 against sub-.500 teams.
If the Padres can keep the pedal to the floor against the teams they should beat, there’s a good chance they’ll be celebrating a first division title in 19 years.