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  • Articles posted by MusicMan (Page 18)

Finally… TWiB has come back to SnS!

Posted on May 21, 2009 by MusicMan in Featured, SnS TWIB

twib_largeThis Week Month Season to Date in Baseball
Once upon a time, a humble writer took it upon himself to summarize the goings-on in the rest of baseball (even in that bastardized “American” League) for the unwashed masses that stumble across the SnS front page. As the name would imply, this was to be a weekly recap, featuring hot teams and players, the biggest goings-on from the TZ, and a grab bag of other information that may or may not have been interesting. Unfortunately, as both of my regular readers know, the last edition of this “weekly” endeavor was at the beginning of the Beijing Olympics. It was a simpler time, when Shawn Johnson was doing gymnastics instead of dances, and Michael Phelps was doing laps instead of lap dances. A time when the stock market was at 11,782. A time when people even might have thought that Cecil Cooper was remotely competent at his job.

So I’m back, back again, tell a friend. We’ll start with some breaking news: The Friars have agreed to trade Jake Peavy to the White Sox. First of all, this is outstanding news if it keeps Peavy away from the (FT)Cubs. Second, this does remind me that the White Sox seem to be the AL version of the Astros; a team with a lot of old pieces that are continually predicted to fall on their face, and sometimes do, but more often surprise the “experts” with a successful season. A team led by a batshit crazy manager. A team that may cut some costs, but will always be willing to make the big move. The fact that these two teams met in the 05 WS was almost destiny, it seems.

Of course, Peavy could veto the deal and continue the drama.

Looking around the rest of the majors – what moves worked, what moves didn’t, and how do things look from here on out:

AL East
The Blue Jays are easily the suprise of the division, and likely the majors, with their 27-16 record. Apparently JP Ricciardi, when not insulting other teams’ players, managed to stockpile an amazing array of young arms that have helped to carry the team (along with Roy Halladay’s continued brilliance). It doesn’t hurt that Aaron Hill is absolutely murdering the ball, especially since there is nobody else in that lineup that strikes fear into you. Pitching and defense, folks. Remember that.
The Rays, on the other hand, are working their way back toward .500 after a rough start. Scott Kazmir hs fllen off the map, and their other starters aren’t doing much better; the fact that David Price remains at AAA is mind-boggling.
Oh, and some guy named Rodriguez came back with a crazy .189/.412/.595 line, making the “3 true outcomes” crowd absolutely orgasmic. The Yankees have also won 8 straight and are busy killing any media members who mention that their billion-dollar stadium is a joke.

AL Central
The Tigers have kept Jim Leyland out of the firing pool with some – wait for it – pitching and … well, pitching at least. The fire sale my be postponed, especially as the Twins and White Sox are struggling, and the Indians are just an absolute disaster. No pitching, no defense, and a bunch of pieces that don’t fit at all. The Royals are in the “happy to be here” category, but I may have to get Extra Innings on DirecTV just to watch Zach Greinke. The guy has always had a world of talent, and it’s great to see him putting it all together. (Am I the only one that takes more pleasure in seeing young pitchers blossom than position players? Yes? Let’s move on.)

AL West
Up is down, water is dry, and the Texas Rangers are the season’s biggest “pitching and defense” success story. Moving Young to 3b improved their defense at 2 positions, they made out like bandits in the Mark Texeira trade, and they sit in an IMMENSELY winnable division. Of course, it’s may, and the Rangers always suffer an August swoon, so let’s not start sucking each other’s… um, pospicles… just yet.
Oakland is 15-22 and the rest of baseball waits to see what Billy Beane will ask for on guys like Matt Holiday. It might actually be an interesting time for Michael Lewis to go back to Oakland, as well as Toronto, and find that for all of the economically interesting viewpoints that Moneyball provided, the actual lesson of the A’s is that young pitchers are, and will always be, the most valuable commodity in baseball.

NL East
Let’s see… the Phillies are 8-12 at home and still lead the division? Brad Lidge has given up 35 baserunners in 18 innings, and the Phillies still lead the division? I see a group of teams failing miserably to take advantage of the situation. The Mets can’t pitch, the Braves can’t hit, and the Marlins have fallen apart after setting the world on fire in April.
Oh, and the fact that the Astros left Washington without a win is shameful. 11-28, folks. 11-28. They allow a full run per game more than the next-worse team in the league. Other than Ryan Zimmerman, there is NOTHING to see there.

NL West
I’ve got nothing. The Dodgers will win this division before Labor Day, and I can’t see a single team out there doing anything of note.

NL Central
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the best division in baseball. Any ESPiN mediot that breaks out the “Comedy Central” routine this year should be fired, unless they are on Sunday Night Baseball, in which case they should be waterboarded on general principle.
Only the Reds have a losing record outside the division. Overall, the Central is 55-36 (or a .604 clip) against the East and West. Compare:

NL Central 55-36 .604
AL East 63-48 .568
AL West 45-47 .489
NL West 38-43 .469
AL Central 49-62 .441
NL East 39-52 .429

The Astros currently sit at 2 games under .500, yet look up at the entire division. Folks, everyone who thought the Cubs would run away and hide were WRONG. These Brewers continue to pitch, and they are beating up on their division rivals – 16-8 within the division. That’s how you stay in contention. And I must say that it disturbs me that the Astros have given up more runs than anyone in the division, despite a performance from Wandy Rodriguez that would be Cy Young worthy if Johan Santana weren’t winning or losing every game 1-0.

And just so we don’t forget…
Chocolate starfish of the season to date:
Lots of candidates here, but I’ll go with Cecil Cooper. You can debate a manager’s decisions, you can debate the wisdom of his moves. But you cannot debate that by sitting in the dugout and not even explaining the situation in last night’s game to the players involved, “Coop” completely abdicated his job responsibilities.
I stand by my prediciton – Coop will not be managing the Astros come the All-Star Break.

Hopefully I’ll be back sooner next time.

Bullpen overtaxed in Washington

Posted on May 5, 2009 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

Astros at Nationals, 5/4/09
Nats 9, Astros 4
W: Lannan (1-3) L: Wright (1-1)

Box Score
Seidel (not the Footer)

This is where you recognize that managers cannot play for the single game in the regular season; you’re trying to win as many of 162 games as you can. And when your bullpen is short one injured pitcher (Sampson), has two guys who were starting last week, and has its top two guys on the DL, then pitching 12 innings over 2 games leaves you somewhat exposed for the next game.

So it really came as no surprise when the bullpen inherited a 4-2 lead and quickly turned it into a 9-4 loss. The only surprise was that the offense couldn’t mount anything further after the four early runs.

The good – Moehler looked pretty good, the first of the two runs in the fifth scoring when he absolutely sawed off Elijah Dukes. Some times, the ball doesn’t fall your way. Also, Kaz Matsui reaching base 3 times.

The bad – I believe two posts from the GZ will sum it up:

HH: 5 runs on three fucking singles.

Jim R: Wright caused that. Paulino is being screwed by all concerned, including the Astros brain trust. That arm is too good to waste.

The ugly:

Remember that time we gave up 9 unanswered runs to the worst team in baseball?  That was awesome.

Remember that time we gave up 9 unanswered runs to the worst team in baseball? That was awesome.


The Houston Astros have issued a reward for anyone who can locate Wesley Wright.  Please call 1-800-4ASTROS.

The Houston Astros have issued a reward for anyone who can locate Wesley Wright. Please call 1-800-4ASTROS.

Also, playing a game in 55 degree drizzle in front of “official” attendance of 14,115, when the actual crowd appeared to be 2 or 3 SnS’ers and a small student group.

Roy tries to make it a winning road trip, bright and early today at 11:35.

Skyline Chili: The Cure for What Ails Ya

Posted on April 28, 2009 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

Astros at Reds, 4/27/09
Astros 4, Reds 1
W: Sampson (2-0) L: Cordero (0-1)
HR: Berkman (5)

Roy Oswalt. Lance Berkman. The mainstays of the team. If you want to know how the Astros are doing, you generally look to these guys. And the Astros have pretty much been a .333 team thus far.

So it was timely that the Astros traveled to Cincy, a place where Roy and Lance close their eyes and visualize the Reds as the Gimp from Pulp Fiction.

(ed. note: I was all set to do an xtranormal movie here featuring Roy and Lance as Jules and Vincent, asking a trembling Jay Bruce if Cecil Cooper looked like a bitch. Alas, they are still down for maintenance. Damn you, xtranormal, for hooking us and then taking away our fix.)

Roy Oswalt: 23-1 lifetime vs. the Reds. Roy was cruising most of the night, but I’m sure our astute readers will not be surprised that the one run he allowed came immediately after the Astros had taken a 1-0 lead in the top of the 6th on a Berkman solo shot. That was Berkman’s 20th HR in GA Ballpark, a place he wants to make sweet, sweet love to.

Otherwise, it was the typical story of wasted opportunities by the Astros’ offense; for example, a 1-out double by the New Michael Bourn and a Puma walk set the table for Lee, but a GIDP quickly erased that. Tejada led off the next inning with a single to set things up, but was erased trying to stretch to a double. And so on, and so forth.

Come the 9th, Dusty played things by the book and brought in his closer. POW! – a Carlos Lee single. BAM! – Tejada rips a single past 3b. BOOM! – Pence rips a double the other way, plating both. (Something he is apparently not supposed to do. Fundamental hitting is boring, let’s get ribbies!) And in a seemingly insignificant, but actually important, insurance run, Blum brought Pence in from third after he had advanced on the bobble by the Reds’ “new and improved OF defense”. This made the score 4-1 and allowed Coop to do the sensible thing for once, and leave Sampson in the game to close things out.

The Good Guys look to continue living on the air in Cincinnati tonight as Wandy takes on Harang.

It’s the same old song

Posted on April 21, 2009 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

Reds at Astros, 4/20/09
Reds 4, Astros 3
W: Arroyo (3-0), L: Geary (0-2), S: Cordero (5)
HR: Berkman (3), Lee (2)

(Request to programmers: please set macro for “the Astros lost a heartbreaker as the bullpen and offense were unable to support a surprisingly effective starting pitching performance.” Thanks – MM.)

Hampton came out with struggling with command a bit, and was unable to put hitters away; Taveras and Votto both singled with two strikes, moved up on a grounder to second, and Encarnacion plated both with another two-strike hit. The flip side is that each hit featured the type of take-the-pitch-the-other-way, adjust-for-two-strikes approach that is sorely lacking from the home team. Following those struggles, though, Hampy settled down and mowed his way through the next five innings.

As far as Astros “hitting” goes, a run was scratched out on singles by Pence and Blum in the second. Berkman and Lee then won the “it’s about time” award by absolutely unloading on Arroyo for back-to-back homeruns, giving the Astros a 3-2 lead in the sixth. Following Lee’s trot, Pence slashed a single into CF. Unfortunately, the Franchise did not realize that he had hit a routine single into CF and blew right past first, resulting in the look on his face at left.

Sorry about that… I meant, the following look on his face:
penceuhoh

If you did not see the result… picture Biggio’s 3,000th hit. Pence was out by much, much more than that at second.

On to the seventh, where Hampton allowed a leadoff single. Hampton provided the bookend to his 2-strike struggles by allowing Arroyo to bunt the runner over on an 0-2 pitch, and gave way to Geary and Byrdak. If you don’t know what happened next, you haven’t been watching real closely this season. At least Bourn and Miggy combined for a nice 8-6-2 at the plate to stop it from becoming 5-3.

Bottom 8 featured the Astros with runners on 1st and 3rd for Berkman with only one out, but no runs. Lance popped to 2b, Lee walked, and Pence, in his most impressive AB, actually battled to a 3-2 count before taking called strike 3. Baby steps, people. We’re taking baby steps.

Final score: Reds 4, Astros 3. But in better news, Baseball Prospectus declared the Astros a 3-1 series winner based upon their better run differential over the 4 games.

Pirates 7, Astros 0

Posted on April 13, 2009 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

W: Duke (2-0)
L: Moehler (0-2)

I will hereby put more effort into this recap than the Astros appeared to put into today’s game:

Moehler left with a sprained knee, Matsui left with a stiff back, the team’s best non-Oswalt pitcher was burned in mop-up duty, Cooper threw out a panic-induced lineup (again), Berkman struck out with aplomb, Pence was the most patient hitter on the team, Cooper completely mismanaged the only scoring opportunity in the game, and through 7 games, the Astros have been outscored 43-16.

Want a box score? Check mlb.com.

And so it begins: Cubs 4, Astros 2

Posted on April 7, 2009 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

Cubs at Astros, 4/6/09
Cubs 4, Astros 2
W: Zambrano (1-0), L: Oswalt (0-1), S: Gregg (1)
HR: Soriano (1), Errormiss (1)
MLB Box score
Footer recap

Opening day. A time of memories, revelry, and in this case, reminding yourself that, much like certain other activities, even bad baseball is better than no baseball at all.

The scoresheet will reflect that the Cubs beat the Astros on opening day. The full story will tell you that the Astros did just as much to beat themselves…
Read More

FTC, recaps
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