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  • 2013 (Page 3)

Angels at Astros – They Still Play Baseball In September?!

Posted on September 13, 2013 by MRaup in Series Previews

Holy Shit. They’re still playing baseball? I thought the Astros had lost all 162 games and the season had ended already until I got a telegram from strosrays reminding me about this preview. Come to think of it, I didn’t know that telegrams still existed either. Crazy.

Minute Maid Park

Friday, Septemeber 13th, 7:10pm. CSN, mlb.tv

Saturday, Septemeber 14th, 6:10pm. CSN, mlb.tv

Sunday, September 15th, 1:10pm CSN. mlb.tv

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Astros Swab Seaman Out Of Safeco

Posted on September 12, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Peacock struts his stuff in Astros 6 – 1 victory.

WP: Peacock (5-5)
LP: Maurer (4-8)
S: Zeid (1)

Contributed by Sphinx Drummond

After getting swept at home by the scum-laden seafarers to end last month, the Astros reversed the tide and returned the favor Wednesday in front of a sparse Seattle crowd by sweeping the Swabbies in their home ballpark. As the worst team in MLB it’s great anytime you get a win, but it’s really sweet to pick up a sweep on the road. It must really suck for the home team when that happens.

Brad Peacock was kind of brilliant in his 6 innings of work, striking out 4 while allowing only 3 hits. The only score by the salty dogs was a fourth inning solo shot by Kendrys Morales. The Astros’ Kevin Chapman pitched a scoreless inning and two thirds, and Josh Fields finished the last inning and a third to pick up his first save.

The Good Guys scored all their runs in two innings, totaling two in the second inning and three in the third. Symmetry. Dominguez, Altuve, Paredes, and Kraus all ended the night with two hits. Carter drove in two of the 5 runs. He has 77 RBIs for the year and is now hitting .222 with an OBP of .321.

If my calculations are correct the Astros finish the year against the Mariners at 9 wins and 10 losses. For what it is worth, the Astros have a 9 and 7 mark against the Angels with three games left to play. With two Wednesday wins in a row, the Astros have raised their Wodansday record to an excellent 14 and 9 on the year. Thanks Wodan.

Thursday is a travel day and Friday the Astros begin the previously mentioned three game series at home against the Angels. Brett Oberholtzer takes the mound for the Astros who’ll face Jason Vargas of the Angels.

Time: 3:00
Attendance: 11,656
Weather: 80 degrees

A Bullpen-proof Lead?

Posted on September 11, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 13, Mariners 2

W: Lyles (7-7)
L: Saunders (11-14)

Contributed by Reuben

September 10, 2013.
Late evening.

Jonathan Villar started the game off with a bang, walloping his first big league homer on the very first pitch from Seattle’s grizzled lefty, Joe Saunders. The no-doubt blast from the Astros’ swift-footed leadoff man set the tone for a fun, fulfilling game for the offense. Chris Carter had 3 hits, and got his average above .220 (what I like to call “The Deer Line”). Altuve got his back over .280, and stole 3 bases. Dominguez collected a couple hits. Hoes had a couple, and knocked in 3. Villar walked and stole 2nd and 3rd over the course of 3 pitches. And Lyles, with 6 innings of 1-earned-run ball, got his ERA back below 5.

Actually, these figures may not all be accurate, because as I write this, the game is not over. Being on the East Coast, I have to draw the line somewhere, and tonight, 12:30 is it. So I’m just really hoping that when I get up in the morning, I’ll find that the 8-2 lead the Astros had built by the top of the 7th inning was, indeed, bullpen-proof. Because if not, well, that would be kind of a crappy start to the day, wouldn’t it?

The following morning.

Whoa. 13-2. Yeah…that’ll do. Good way to start the day.

Bitch, Bitch, Bitch

Posted on September 7, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

White Elephants 7, Astros 5

contributed by NeilT

We are such pikers. Bitch, bitch, bitch about a couple or three losing seasons, and it ain’t even in it. Now the As, there’s some losing.

Connie Mack (1862-1956) came to the A’s in 1901, the year the American League was formed. He had spent three years, 1894-1896, as a player-manager for the Pittsburgh Pirates, which were in the old National League—you may recall the National League—with a combined win/loss record of 149-134, for a .529 winning percentage. There’s nothing wrong with that, nothing at all. He then managed the Milwaukee Brewers, which as you know are a minor league team.

For his first seven years as a manager, Mack won 571 games and lost only 425, for a combined winning percentage of .571. His teams won the AL pennant twice, in 1902 (83-53, .610) and 1905 (92-56, .622). Over 162 games, a .622 winning percentage is 100 wins. In that year, 1905, the A’s met the Giants in the second World Serious. The first was 1903, but John McGraw refused to participate in 1904, so none was held. The Giants won the series, 4-1, and Christy Mathewson pitched and won three games. If the series had been seven games, Mathewson would probably have won four. All three games were complete game shutouts.

Of John McGraw, Mack later said “There has been only one manager, and his name is John McGraw.” Of Connie Mack, John McGraw had said in 1902 that Mack had a real white elephant on his hands.

In 1908, Mack had his first losing season, 68-85, .444. In 1909, the A’s had a 95-58 record, but it was only good enough for second to Detroit. Washington went 41-111 that year, which over 162 games would have been 45 wins, 117 losses. I feel for them.

That was ok though. In 1910, 1911, and 1913, the Elephants won the World Series, once against the Cubs and twice against the Giants. From that team, Frank Baker, Chief Bender, Eddie Collins, Herb Pennock, and Eddie Plank are in the Hall. And Mack, of course. They won the AL pennant in 1914, but lost the Series to the Boston Braves, who came from last place in late July to win the NL pennant. There’s something to be said for momentum.

In 1915, things happened. Connie Mack apparently was not a particularly good businessman. Is there a word for anti-prescient? Here’s Mack’s take on ticket prices: “The game has kept faith with the public, maintaining its old admission price for nearly thirty years while other forms of entertainment have doubled and tripled in price. And it will probably never change.”

Ticket prices were apparently not raised, and his television revenue was small, so in 1915 Mack sold off his players to make ends meet. From 1915 to 1924 the Athletics had losing seasons, for a total win-loss record of 528-961. Over a period of 10 years, that’s a win-loss percentage of .354. Did I mention that managers can no longer have an ownership interest in teams? Do you think the fans were pissed? Do you think there were any fans?

How low can you go? In 1916, the White Elephants won 36, lost 117. That’s a winning percentage of .235. They sucked.

In 1925, things turned around, and Mack put together one of the great baseball dynasties. There were old players, Ty Cobb, Zack Wheat, and Eddie Collins, and young players, Mickey Cochrane, Lefty Grove, Al Simmons, and Jimmie Foxx. Mack’s A’s won the AL pennant for three straight years, 1929, 1930, and 1931, and the World Series in 1929 (Cubs) and 1930 (Cardinals). They lost the Series to the Cardinals in 1931. You may recall the Cardinals. They still play in the National League.

In 1933, having failed to raise ticket prices and in the midst of the Great Depression, Mack sold his players off again. He would manage the A’s for 17 more years, from 1933 to 1950, and during that period he would see three .500+ seasons, 1947-1949. Barely 500+. Overall during that period he would lose 1,489 games and win 986. That’s a winning percentage of .398. Seventeen years.

Mack managed the A’s for 50 years. He holds the record for most games lost, 3,814. He also holds the record for most games won, 3,731. By the end, most things had apparently passed Mack by. From Wikipedia: “as he entered his 80s, his mental state became increasingly questionable. Mack would make strange decisions (which his coaches and players usually overruled) and call out for players from decades earlier to pinch-hit. He spent most games asleep in the dugout, leaving his coaches to run the team most of the time.” He was calling up pinch hitters from teams 20 years gone, like ghosts in the dugout.

One final Mack quote, when he retired: “I’m not quitting because I’m getting old, I’m quitting because I think people want me to.”

Meanwhile Astros lost last night, putting the A’s first in their division. Wait, our division. I keep forgetting. Keuchel gave up 5 runs in 3 1/3 innings, with 10 hits and 2 walks. Keuchel thought he was getting squeezed. Humber went 3 2/3 and gave up two more runs. Lo pitched a scoreless hitless 8th.

The ‘Stros bats were active. Villar went 3 for 5 with one double. Altuve, Crow, and Wallace all had two hits.

The good guys are now 47-94. From 1901 to 1950, the A’s had less than 47 wins three times, so hey, it’s not so bad.

Not Your NBC Peacock starring on Late Night TV!!!

Posted on September 6, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 3 Athletics 2

contributed by Mr. Happy

Brad Peacock clearly pitched his finest game of the year, pitching into the eighth frame for the first time in his big league career. Peacock outdueled a tough Sonny Gray 3-2 at the Shittyseum before a lackluster crowd of only 11,569 on an absolutely perfect night for baseball in the Bay Area. The young Astros starter surrendered five hits and two earnies in his seven-plus innings of work, fanning nine and walking but one. He had a very sharp breaking yellow hammer tonight and worked ahead in the count most of the night.

The Good Guys scored all of their runs in the first two frames. The Astros got a gift run that turned out to be important when Athletics OF Yoenis Cespedes failed to cleanly field a ball in LF, allowing Pagnozzi, who had singled, to score all the way from 1B. That’s some error, allowing a dump truck moving catcher to score from the first sack!

Bo Porter was run for vigorously protesting a safe call at the plate that scored an A’s run. I can’t figure Porter out: at times when I’d be out there defending my team, he’s sitting on his hands in the dugout, and then there are bang-bang plays like this when he decides to bitch enough to get run. Go figure. I’m unsure about Porter as a manager, but I’m not willing to give up on him yet. Like his players, Porter is the youngest skipper in MLB.

FIELDS!!! was spectacular in a four out perfect save, his third of the season. All in all, it was an excellent effort as the club improves to 47-93. Tonight, portsider Dallas Keuchel faces off against A.J. Griffin, who’s a pretty tough hombre, at the crappiest yard in the show at 10:05 EDT.

The NFL kicked off tonight with the Super Bowl champeens getting throttled by Denver 49-27. I didn’t watch as I wasn’t interested. I’m not yet ready for football, but, alas, it’s here and not going away. LSU is at home entertaining UAB. Our Toledo Rockets play their second consecutive SEC road game this weekend, travelling to Mizzou. Florida didn’t embarrass Toledo in their 24-6 win over the Rockets.

That Was Cool, What Barnes Did

Posted on September 4, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Twins 9, Astros 6

W: Thielbar (3-2)
L: Chapman (0-1)

Contributed by Reuben

Let’s just appreciate how awesome it was that Brandon Barnes hit a game-tying, 3-run homer with 2 outs, on an 0-2 count in the bottom of the 9th. That just doesn’t happen very often, yet it will get very much overlooked and soon forgotten because the Astros ultimately lost the game. In fact, Barnes had a fantastic night overall, going 3-for-4 with a walk and 5 RBI. For the year, he’s hitting about .300 vs. lefty pitchers, and heading into this game had a very nice .362 OBP and .435 SLG% against them. Barnes probably does not have a future as a full-time player, but that’s a very valuable 4th outfielder right there, particularly when you factor in his superb CF defense.

The rest of the story of this game was basically this: the Astros made several mistakes, and the no-name Twins hitters were really annoying and kept getting hits in key situations.

Villar was thrown out in a silly attempt at stretching a single into a double. Like Biggio’s 3,000th hit silly. In this case, the Astros were down 4-1, which made it bad baseball. Porter removed Villar from the game immediately.

Cosart walked too many guys, and got behind the ones he didn’t walk, allowing 2 homers and 4 runs in just 4 innings. Altuve twice grounded into double plays on 0-0 counts. Marwin got caught in a rundown with the tying run on 3rd and 2 outs.

Astonishingly enough, Lucas Harrell tossed 3 scoreless innings in relief of Cosart, despite giving up 4 hits and 2 walks.

The Astros pulled within 1 in the 7th, but unfortunately Porter chose the flappable Jorge De Leon to pitch the 8th, and he gave those 2 runs right back. After Barnes’ homer, Josh Zeid remained in the game and provided 3 very solid scoreless innings himself, notably with a simplified stretch setup. Let’s hope this is the beginning of a turnaround for him.

Finally, in the 12th, Kevin Chapman’s luck ran out, and so did the Astros’.

About the author: The author has not had running water at his house for over two days now. Please send good water vibes his way, so that the plumber coming in the morning can figure out what the hell is wrong with his well or pump, and that it won’t cost thousands of dollars to fix. The author is poor and he badly needs a shower.

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