Mile High Sports

Five reasons to tune into the Rockies’ final series of the season

Sep 15, 2015; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Colorado Rockies first baseman Justin Morneau (33) beats the throw to Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner (10) for a triple in the eleventh inning of the game at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

The Rockies’ final series of the season starts Friday against the San Francisco Giants. It will be six months before you can catch another regular season game. There’s that, and five other reasons you should watch this weekend.

No. 5 – Unlucky 13

Kyle Kendrick gets the start tonight against the San Francisco Giants, with a 6-13 record. Ending the season with 13 losses can only mean bad things, and the Rockies don’t need any more help in their pursuit of mediocrity. Since nothing matters anyway, pray that Kendrick gets loss No. 14 to help the Rocks avoid an offseason full of bad luck. Nothing, at this point, can fix his ERA, however.

https://twitter.com/purpledinocast/status/650036226565603328

No. 4 – The end of suffering

Welcome to the end of the Rockies season, where the record is atrocious and the points don’t matter. At 66-93, the Rockies have easily one of the worst records in baseball (however it is still not the worst), and have missed the playoffs for the sixth year in a row. Yet all of our suffering will come to a close on October 4.

No. 3 – Defensive magic

Despite a generally inept pitching staff, the Rockies have still managed to come up with some stellar defensive plays throughout the season, like this Brandon Barnes-grab:

And, of course, there’s always the possibility that Gold Glove-winner Nolan Arenado makes a spectacular play. This one came against the very same Giants that the Rockies play tonight:

No. 2 – Goodbye George

After 19 years, Rockies color analyst George Frazier will hang up the microphone and head back to his home state of Oklahoma.

Say a last goodbye to George and all those famous mispronunciations and errants turns of phrase.

No. 1 – NL Home Run chase

Carlos Gonzalez and Nolan Arenado are both vying for the National League home run crown. Washington Nationals-slugger Bryce Harper and Arenado are tied with 41 apiece. Cargo has a little bit more work to do at 40 home runs.

Meanwhile, Arenado has all but won the National League RBI title, with 20 more than runner-up Paul Goldschmidt, and may indeed grab the league title with 127 total RBI’s. Currently that’s four more than Toronto’s Josh Donaldson. Best case scenario? Nolan mimics his 40th home run, as seen here:

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