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  • Featured (Page 73)

Toys In The Attic

Posted on July 22, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Arizona 8, Houston 2

W: Collmenter (2-2)
L: Lyles (2-7)

This one actually started out pretty well. Sure, Kubel got his home run, but so did Maxwell and the Astros actually had a 2-1 lead after 5 1/2. Lyles had done a good job spotting his pitches and keeping the Dback bashers off balance.

The AAAstros found a new way to squander an opportunity in the top of the sixth, doubly frustrating because they get so few opportunities at all and this is not a team that can hold one-run leads. This time. with one out, CJ on third and poised to score, Maxwell is asked to squeeze the run home. CJ dashes with the pitch but it’s inside. Maxwell pulls the bat back and the baseball equivalent of Pickett’s Charge results in a massacre of any hopes Houston had for adding more to the ledger. You can argue all you want about why you’d ask a flyball hitter to squeeze, but the fact is that Maxwell blew the chance that was given to him.

In the bottom of the frame, Lyles lost his command and began hanging pitches over the heart of the plate. Three singles loaded the bases and Montero smacked a hard shot over second, picked up by Gonzalez and flicked desperately at Altuve, who caught it with his shoulder and then paused to think about how wrong that was. This compounded the error and allowed a second run to score on the play, giving up the lead for good.

Mills wanted to keep Lyles in to learn how to pitch out of trouble, and the 21-year-old demonstrated that need still exists when he served up a rocket by Chris Young that plated three. Two singles later and Mills had had enough.

More crap happened. More runs were given up. The game devolved into a sleepwalk through the sewer of a .250 AAAstro road team, but as usual the GZ was rife with pithy discussions and entertainment through oblique cultural salvos.

Back home, Your Minor Leaguers Wearing Major Leaguers Uniforms will comfort themselves with their woobies and familiar sippy cups tonight. Maybe they’ll have a better day tomorrow, and the ride on this Shit Train will take a day off.

Veni Vidi Vomit

Posted on July 22, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Diamondbacks 12, Astros 3

WP: Miley (11-5, 3.02)
LP: Keuchel (1-2, 4.03)

by Mr. Happy

Well, today was an interesting day for Astros fans everywhere, as the club bid farewell to Brett Myers, shipping him to the ChiSox for a couple of prospects suspects, welcoming 37 year old Francisco Cordero as the new closer, welcoming Dallas Keuchel as the newest member of the rotation (filling the spot formerly occupied by J.A. Happ) and looking forward to playing the Snakes at the ballpark formerly somewhat affectionately known as the BOB.

Maybe Cordero would see some close action and get to notch his first save as an Astro tonight? He did pitch a scoreless frame last night. Maybe Ben Francisco (what was it about this deal with the name Francisco?—is this a mere coincidence or some sort of Luhnow fetish?) would shine in his first Astros start? After all, he did get a sharp pinch hit single last night.

Hopes and dreams were high, the possibilities were endless and the world was our oyster, even though we’d been on the short end of a 13-8 score. And just as quickly, in the very first inning tonight, our hopes and dreams were smashed flatter than a pancake when, with one on (a walk, the first of four for Keuchel, all of which scored), Jason Kubel went oppo with a two run dong, the first of three that he’d smash tonight, two off of Keuchel and one off of EDR. The ballgame was over right there. We just knew it in our gut. But the Snakes weren’t done in the first inning. Not by a long shot. In fact, they were really just warming up, adding ten more runs to best our boys, who, God bless them, fought valiantly to the bitter end, even scoring a run in the top of the ninth inning, 12-3.

A few words to those of you who were excited beyond measure by the possibilities of Dallas Keuchel after his first two outings. Curb your enthusiasm. Seriously, especially if he repeats this sorry ass performance (3.1 innings, seven hits, four walks, six earned runs and two long balls) more, as I fear that he will. In the Game Zone, Ron Brand and I were talking about how Keuchel’s approach reminded me of the way that Gaylord Perry used to pitch.

Wait a minute, Mr. Happy! Isn’t Gaylord Perry in the Hall of Fame? Well sir, the Gaylord Perry I was talking about was the by then washed up Gaylord Perry pitching, just not very well (3-10 4.94 with 18 home runs allowed in 102 innings, for more on Gaylord Perry, check out his page at the Baseball Hall of Fame website http://baseballhall.org/hof/perry-gaylord) for the Seattle Mariners close to the end of his storied career. Everything, and I mean everything, was down and away. And that was Keuchel tonight. A left-handed version of a washed up Gaylord Perry sans Vaseline.

That was Dallas Keuchel tonight. Did he challenge hitters? Did he try to work the inner part of the black? The answer to both questions is a big NO! And when he did attempt to challenge, it was usually from far behind in the count, another huge problem for him tonight, the hitters blasted him. I hate to disappoint you folks who saw Keuchel as the next best thing since the Fowl Poles or Tal’s Hill, but I’ve thus far seen nothing from him that would lead me to suspect that he is anything but a glorified AAA pitcher. A softer tossing version of J.A. Happ, who everyone knows, I loved and will miss terribly.

On a positive note, three of our hitters, Jose Altuve, Justin Maxwell and Chris Johnson, went 2-4, and that hitting phenom from last night-the one and only Carlos Corporan-had a pinch single and an RBI. Of the five pitchers who saw action, Wilton Lopez threw the only scoreless frame, as the Snakes scored at least one run in six of eight innings, batting around (again) in the fourth inning, which chased Keuchel, scoring five runs. The second best performer was EDR, who only surrendered a solo bomb to Kubel in his lone inning of work. Every other pitcher (even including EDR) walked a ton of hitters, eight in all, at least four of which scored. Walks were a problem last night too.

I used to tell young pitchers, “Fuck walking the bum. If you’re going to go down, go down like a man and challenge the hitter. Get in his kitchen. Catch him leaning over the plate with a little chin music or a snappy hammer over his shoulder. Establish ownership, no, dominion, over the inside corner. Losing by walks is reminiscent of little league games. Death by a thousand walks is a slow painful way to go.” Our staff could use that little pep talk right now. Big time.

Speaking of the club, which has gotten worse by the losses of miscreant Brett Myers and Brandon Lyon, I’ve now altered my wins projection to between 50 and 55 (which HudsonHawk thinks is still too optimistic), down from 65 at the beginning of the year in the annual Race for the Lid. I counted on Brian Bogusevic hitting between .250 and .270 with 12-15 home runs-not the groundball to the right side .215 hitting machine that he’s become.

If I was Luhnow, I’d go ahead and DFA Bogusevic right now, declaring surrender on the former 2005 No. 1 pick. And Schreefer too while he’s at it. In Schreefer, besides a pissing and moaning at strike calls, fake bunting machine/juvenile delinquent, I see a decent CF (but no Michael Bourn, by any measure) who can’t steal first base and doesn’t really get on base enough to even hit eighth, even in this lineup.

Fasten your seatbelts, folks, it’s about to get even worse than it is right now, especially if Luhnow successfully moves Wandy for more prospects.

Astros 8, Snakes more than 8

Posted on July 21, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

by NeilT

I’m really sorry that Arizona’s getting pushed into the American League next year–I know its fans are disappointed and would prefer to stay in the NL. With their titanic playoff runs against San Diego and the Rockies, it won’t feel the same when they’re playing Anaheim and Oakland. They’ve been in the NL their entire existence, but hey, like they say in accounting, last in first out. I’m not sure I could stay interested in a team with a designated hitter. It’s just not as interesting to me as Astros small ball.

We’re in San Antonio for a conference. I spoke yesterday, then skipped the rest of the conference until our reception last night at La Fogata. Cool place. I came back to the hotel where I thought I’d be just in time for the game but . . . no game, either they played in the afternoon or there’s not Astros channel in the Grand Hyatt. We went to a downtown bar, Bohannon’s, that had a good jazz band and several women sporting the showgirl equivalents of steroid enhancement but the bar wasn’t showing the game either. Good jazz though.

It actually looks like it was a great game for the Stros. Corporan and Moore homered in the 8th and 9th, with Moore driving in 3 runs, both with 2 outs. 14 hits total, with 8 runs. Really nice night at the plate.

Of course they lost.

Dancin’ with Snakes!

Posted on July 20, 2012 by Noe in Austin in Featured, Series Previews

There is a whole new level of crazy to decide to dance with a snake for sacrifical reasons. Not that there is anything appreciably wrong with folks just trying to appease the gods with such stupidity, but it just doesn’t seem like the best idea to me. I cannot imagine Jobu or any baseball god having any sort of mercy on a soul or collective soul wishing for divine intervention when there is 1) less than palatable music, 2) sweaty human(s), and 3) pissed off reptile(s) involved. But then again, one never knows if some the BBGs come from the Appalachian Mountains and like this sort of thing. Cue crazy eyed Jordan Schafer and some banjo music and we might just have us a slump-buster party. Woo-hoo!

Houston Astros vs. Arizona D’Backs
July 20-22
Chase (corrupt financial institution) Ballpark

Face it, the Houston Astros are imploding. Not in a “big bang, wow, look at the fireworks, that’s FANtastic” sort of way. More of a “death by a thousand paper cuts, can one more player be traded and/or injured this season, what the hell was that play?” sort of way. Means it’s frustrating to watch for the loyal followers of the Houston nine. Honestly, it’s getting to be borderline humiliating to watch the big bullies of the National League pick on the 90 lb weakling Astros. If only there was a super-hero in the MLB to step in and protect these under… ah… privileged? performing? talented? all of the above?…. players. No, that would take a spine on the part of Bud Selig, which leads us, of course, back to snakes. Maybe the whole thing is that Houston did dance with a snake and are now paying for their sins.

So we, as fans, are left with watching non-competitive fights betwix the Astros and whoever is lining up next to take a free punch at them. This series, coupled with the jettison of even more players today to Canada, is not going to be any different. How is this for starters: Arizona has dominated Houston in recent years, winning 14 of its last 18 overall and 15 of 21 at home.

Bud Norris vs Trevor Cahill
Friday, July 20
9:00pm CST

Pray for rain. Oh damn, they have a roof on that damn stadium of theirs! Oh well. Here is the deal, doesn’t matter who is pitching *for* the opposition. It matters who is pitching *for* the Astros. Bud Norris just doesn’t look right after coming back from an injury. He doesn’t have the sharpness on his slider and that makes him highly dependent on a fastball. Not that this is a bad thing, just that you have to locate that bad boy to make it work. Bud has not won a game, or even come close to it in his last six tries. More struggle ahead may be the order of the day because quite frankly the Arizona D’Backs don’t lose much at home. The Astros also don’t win on the road. What a perfect match. Aye!

J.A. Happ (oh wait!) vs Wade Miley
Saturday, July 21
7:00pm CST

Don’t know yet who is starting for Houston on Saturday, perhaps young Dallas Keuchel. You see, Houston, in all it’s wisdom, traded their starter to Toronto. Wise move Astros. So now we’re left with a bit of confusion, but alas, does that little shakeup hurt the chances of winning a game (or series)? Not really when you think the chances of winning aren’t that good to begin with. See versus D’Backs, losing streak. Still there is always… who am I kidding, pray for… oh nevermind!

Jordan Lyles vs Josh Collmenter
Sunday, July 22
3:00pm CST

How the heck do the D’Backs manage to trot out pitchers with under 4.00 ERAs when they have one of the worse bandbox stadiums in the league? I mean, it supposed to be a hitter’s haven this side of Colorado. Not that that means anything to the “in a funk” Houston offense. The local nine could play at the little league field near my house right now and maybe scratch out a couple of runs. They’d have to play the little league all-stars to do it though.

Okay, so it’s doom and gloom days for Astros fans. I know it and I wish I could be much more positive than this in your friendly neighborhood series preview. Maybe this picture will help?

Okay, maybe not! Seems like more of the same crazy person dancin’ with a snake to me.
Follow if dare the series goings on in the Gamezone. Barf bags not included.

We got Edinson’d!

Posted on July 20, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Padres 1, Astros 0

by Mr. Happy

The ballgame started with an Alexi Amarista (mark it in your book – this kid will be better than Jose Altuve and will be an All-Star too – Sorry OSF) oppo double, followed by a Logan Forsythe single to RF, scoring Amarista. The Fathers would garner but two more knocks in the nine innings that followed. But Edinson Volquez, 5-0 2.37 against the Astros coming into tonight’s game, made that run stand up with a sparkling one hitter, besting our boys 1-0.

Not even the presence of BudGirl in the stands last night could shake up the moribund sticks, which are now hitting below .150 on this road trip, with the Travellin’ Horseshit Show heading to Phoenix to battle the Snakes. The most exciting play of last night’s game was a smoked liner by Justin Maxwell toward the gap in right centerfield with JD Martinez, who had walked to lead off the inning, on 2B and Matt Downs, who had reached on a Chase Headley clank, on 1B. Unfortunately, Logan Forsythe leapt up and snagged it, easily doubling Martinez, who had strayed a wee tad bit too far off of 2B, and damn near tripled Downsie. That was your ball game.

The lone hit? A hot smash? A Texas Leaguer? Nope. It was a harmless infield dribbler by Matt Downs in no man’s land between the bump and 3B in the fourth inning. That was it.

Sadly, Lucas Harrell took the collar for last night’s loss, but he pitched damn well and in fact was dominant again against the Padres, scattering four hits and striking out seven. Mark my words: Lucas Harrell can really pitch.

Perdedores de Carretera

Posted on July 19, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

by Sphinx Drummond

Pads beat ‘Stros 8-4

W: Clayton Richard (7-10)
L: Wandy Rodriguez (7-8)

I didn’t realize they were playing a day game until I heard the final score on the radio. In Austin, during the daytime, the Astros’ radio station is contractually bound to broadcast the Jim Rome show over the Astros.

When I got home from work I walked my dog, which is my usual routine. My dog crapped a big heaping steaming pile and before I could scoop and bag it–it had become almost completely covered by those green iridescent colored shit-flies. Forgetting about food chains for a moment, I hesitated and contemplated. I watched those flies and couldn’t figure out for the life of me, why those flies loved that piece of crap so much.

Is that what we, who follow the Astros so closely, look like to some cosmic overlord up on high?

Wandy started the day all right, retiring the Padres in order the first time through the line-up. At the time in possession of the longest running streak of pitching at least 5 innings, Wandy was unable to showcase his positive features beyond the fourth inning, stopping the streak at 48 games. In spite of some shitty defense, he was lit up for 5 earned runs in the fourth, essentially ending the game. However, the teams still played to completion as it is part of the rules.

Playing beyond the fourth gave a few of the Astros’ players the opportunity to pad their individual stats. Matt Downs took full advantage of the opportunity to hit his 6th and 7th homeruns of the season and edged his batting average up, now at .171, a bit closer to the Mendoza line.

Clayton Richard allowed four runs in 8 1-3 innings to snap a personal two-game losing streak. The big lefty gave up nine hits and struck out, leaving the mound after Downs’ homer in the ninth.

They talk about winning ugly and beautiful losers. What a cop-out. You either win or lose, doesn’t matter how you got there. And losing is the shits.

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