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  • Game Recaps (Page 81)

A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Mausoleum

Posted on June 24, 2012 by Ron Brand in Game Recaps

Astros 7, Indians 1

WP: Happ (6-7)
LP: Lowe (7-6)

It took a while (3 2/3 innings, most of the homestand) but the bats woke up. Astro starters had a 1.88 ERA during this home stretch, but the bats were working at pretty much the same pace until these last two games with the Tribe.

Sinkerballer Derek Lowe kept the home nine in check until the fourth, when Lee, Bogey and Lowrie singled to tie the game at 1. In the sixth, Lowrie had a 10-pitch at-bat, highlighted by three shots to the right-field corner, one of which finally stayed fair for a double. Lee, trading contact for power in his twilight, followed with an RBI single for a lead they wouldn’t relinquish.

In danger of being victimized again by a high pitch count, Happ was able to stay around the plate and the Indians obliged him by being aggressive. The result was a four-hitter and only one run scored.

The Astros piled on in the seventh, scoring on a nifty glove-toss 4-6-3 double play before adding four runs in the eighth on two-run jacks by CJ and JD Martinez. It was JD’s second in two games, while CJ scrapped for a .435 average during this home visit.

El Super Raton Jose Altuve suffered what is being called a mild hamstring strain in the fourth inning, running to first on a groundout. He’s day to day right now, but Mills is not as optimistic as Altuve is.

The Friars come to town next for four games. Catch the action in the GameZone.

A Complete Win (and an unhappy Mrs. Happy)!!!

Posted on June 23, 2012 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 8, Indians 1
WP: Keuchel (1-0, 1.29)
LP: Gomez (4-7, 5.18)

by Mr. Happy

All eyes were on young Dallas Keuchel, who was making his home debut, and he would not disappoint. Today’s game started out much like last night’s game, with the Astros still mired in their hitting doldrums. Asdrubal Cabrera took Keuchel deep for a solo shot to give the Tribe what would be their only lead and only run on the afternoon.

After retiring the first 12 Astros, Jeanmar Gomez, no doubt a mixed breed mixed up Frenchman with that name, dug a hole from which he could not rescue himself, courtesy of the perfecto gris gris that the denizens in the Game Zone had put on him after the end of the fourth inning. The Astros teed off on Gomez in the fifth frame, with back-to-back doubles from Bogusevic (who was in the cleanup spot today) and CJ and back-to-back jacks from JD and Schreefer (who was in the eight) to give the home nine a 4-1 lead that ultimately proved to be more runs that Keuchel would need.

Inexplicably, agent Manny Acta had a brain fart and let Gomez (who was clearly, at least to me, done) hit for himself in the top of the sixth and come back out to attempt to pitch in the bottom half of that frame and the Astros made him pay. After a leadoff walk to Lowrie, El Caballo cranked what would prove to be his first of two doubles to plate Lowrie to increase the lead to 5-1. After getting the next two guys, Acta brought on his designated situational lefty, Tony Sipp, who struck out Castro to end the sixth.

Menawhile, Keuchel changed speeds effectively and just kept the Tribe off balance all day, mixing in a very effective Uncle Charlie that he wasn’t bashful about throwing early in a sequence. Keuchel was in command all day, throwing approximately 65% strikes. The opposing broadcasters on STO thought very highly of his poise and pitchability. The Astros brass may encounter some difficulty when they send Keuchel back down to OkC when Norris comes back, especially if Happ stinks it up tomorrow. AstroFan on talk radio will likely have an aneurysm over it, which wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing, would it?

The Astros played add-on against a hapless Jeremy “Acky” (according to our own Ron Brand) Accardo in the bottom of the eighth. Altuve welcomed Mr. Accardo to Houston with a rocket home run (his fifth on the year) in the Crawford Boxes on his first pitch. Jed Lowrie followed that up with a double, and Carlos Lee then doubled home Lowrie to make 7-1. CJ then hit his second double of the game to score Lee to finish the scoring and make 8-1.

In the ninth inning, Keuchel surrendered a leadoff two bagger to Shin Soo Choo, but he would get no further than 3B, as Keuchel surrendered only another harmless single by Kipnis. The ballgame ended with two straight flyballs to Bogusevic, who got another opportunity to showcase his cannon on a strike to home plate after catching a flyball near the line. Fortunately for Choo, he stayed put at 3B. Keuchel on the day scattered six hits en route to the complete game win, the first by an Astro this season, striking out three and only walking one, tossing just 108 pitches on the afternoon, which was a rare 3:05 p.m. saturday afternoon matinee. I say let’s play more of these if this is how our boys can play then.

Our own JA Happ goes for the series win tomorrow against the Indians, whose lefty-heavy lineup has real trouble with left-handed pitchers, hitting around .220. We’ll see. The magic number today was nine: nine innings for Keuchel and nine (count ‘em nine) extra base hits. Additionally, the Astros were an uncharacteristically high 4-11 w/RISP.

farm cheese and spinach in curry

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

Indians 2, Astros 0
By NeilT

I grew up on Cleveland’s gritty east side, in the Amish Ghetto, and the Indians have always been my team.  Who didn’t love the ‘89 Indians’ playoff run?  Take that, Yankees.  And I like saag paneer.  I love interleague play because I get to see real baseball, Cleveland American League baseball, complete with that great two-color cap and a stylized depiction of a Designated Hitter.
 
Of course I love this Astros team, too.  Ain’t they spunky!  They actually make me think of that great ‘89 Indians team.  They have a speedy centerfielder with an arrest record, a power hitter who can’t  hit, a short second baseman who never should have made the majors, and a closer with decorative tattoos.  They have a cut out with tear-away clothes in the clubhouse.  How great is that!  Just like Hollywood!  It’s too bad that redhead is leaving us.  She could have played Renee Russo.

I didn’t get to watch much of tonight’s game though.  We were driving to Tyler for a high school reunion.  I don’t know why.  Neither of us went to high school in Tyler, but there you are.  When you get old as us it’s fun to crash high school reunions.  Everybody thinks they’re supposed to know you, and can’t really remember that they don’t.
 
Harrell pitched 7 outstanding innings with 2 hits, 3 bb, one ER.  He should really be an all-star.  Wright pitched a 1-2-3 8th.  There is nothing but good to be said about Wright.  Carpenter got pulled after a hit in the 9th.  He was just about to put it all together, too.  And then my favorite Astros reliever, Abad, took the mound.  Before tonight he’d had 11 innings of work with only 10 hits.  He kept on pace, and now has 11.1 innings of work with only 11 hits.

FeRod has an era of 6, but he’s had lots of bad luck.  Did I miss something?  Where’s Myers?

12 Astros Ks.  7 lob.  Lots of fly balls that might have been but weren’t.  It’s even worse than being in Tyler.

A Royal Flushing

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

Royals 2, Astros 1
WP: Chen (6-6, 4.81)
LP: Lyles (1-4, 5.04)

by Sphinx Drummond

The thing that first comes to mind whenever I think about the Kansas City Royals is George Brett. And when I think of Mr. Brett, a great player with some amazing accomplishments, the first thing that comes to mind is always hemorrhoids followed closely by the pine-tar incident, and then the amazing catch of Brett’s head by Lee May as Brett tumbled into the Royal’s dugout making an equally amazing catch of a pop foul by Tom Nieto in the ’85 World Series.

The next thing I think about is Darrell Porter out of his mind on dope and speed. Porter was a really good player and a great clubhouse guy. No one had anything bad to say about him, except he was out of his mind on dope and speed. Porter was so wrapped up in his addictions that he once found himself so paranoid that he stayed up all night guarding his front door–clutching billiard balls and a shotgun, convinced that Bowie Kuhn was trying to sneak in his house to ban Porter from baseball for life.

Kansas City had a good run in the ’80s. They had some good pitching staffs, anchored by Saberhagen and Quisenberry. Dick Howser was a great manager. They peaked in ’85 with their WS victory against the Cardinals in what was known as the “I-70 Showdown” and alternately the “Show-Me Series.” The Royals have been pretty much a non-factor for the past 20 years. A team with no hope of winning a division. In some respects I relate to them as an American League version of the Pirates.

It drives me to nuts to see the Astros fall to such depths that they are now looking up at teams like Kansas City and Pittsburgh. Yesterday, I had to work and was too busy to even listen to a day game on radio. But I hear the Astros lost. Meaning they dropped two of three to the lowly KC Royals. It would be nice if the Astros had better players, if they’d be a better team, and won more games. In time maybe, for right now, they are just a bad team looking to get better. Not bad guys, just not good baseball players.

Stop Making Me Yell At You

Posted on June 20, 2012 by BudGirl in Game Recaps

Contributed by Reuben

Royals 2, Astros 0

W: Hochevar (4-7)
L: W. Rodriguez (6-5)

Box

Well, as this game wore on I started to get a little upset. Wandy was “laboring” as they say – struggling with his control, allowing a lot of traffic on the bases, having trouble putting guys away – and meanwhile, the Astros were no-hit until the 5th inning. By Luke Hochevar. Luke Hochevar! Allow me to throw his career stats at you (by the way, apparently there was another Hochevar, named Joseph, who pitched in the Giants’ farm system in the 50’s. Related?):

6-12 5.51
7-13 6.55
6-6 4.81
11-11 4.68
4-7 5.65

Those are Luke’s numbers since 2008. Shitty. He’s a very talented baseball player, don’t get me wrong; guy is a major leaguer, he deserves respect. But as major leaguers go, he’s shitty. I could be wrong here – maybe he deserves more credit for a great game – but it looked to me like the Astros batters did him a lot of favors last night. Pitch after pitch would end up on the opposite end of the zone from where Q set up his mitt. Down-and-in would go high-and-away, etc. Didn’t matter, the Astros were hacking, and making feeble contact. Or no contact, in the case of Justin Maxwell, who struck out 3 times (mostly hacking at balls 2 feet outside in the dirt). Then there’s Jordan Schafer. His very first AB was described quite well by SnS’s own Chuck a week or two ago:

He wastes most of his strikes fucking around trying to bunt. He’s a bad bunter so I don’t really know why he or anyone else thinks this is a good idea. He invariably finds himself 0-2 or 1-2 and with the exception of that one ten pitch at bat the other day he strikes out immediately thereafter either by lunging at a ball outside or, more likely, watching the third strike and then complaining about it. He’s about as mature as a mold spore.

Schafer continued to prove Chuck’s point later in the game, getting thrown out by the pitcher on a lame bunt-hit attempt. The real offensive goat, though, was Maxwell: in the bottom of the 6th, he had a horrible AB with men on 2nd & 3rd and one out, striking out swinging, and bottom 8th, men on 2nd & 3rd again (Lowrie and Lee both times) with 2 outs, J-Max takes a meatball on 3-1 before waving feebly at ball 4 to end the inning. Arrrgghhh, see, it’s making me upset again. Mrs. Reuben had to gently remind me a few times to not get so negative, and at least enjoy the tasty burgers I’d grilled (with grilled onions and chili and cheddar, mmmm). It was good advice.

On the bright side, Lee was 2-3 to bring his average back to .300, CJ had 2 hits, including the no-no-breaker-upper, Lowrie walked a couple times, and Wandy righted the ship in his last few innings to end up with 7 IP and 2 ER – a Butler HR in the 1st, and Escobar RBI single in the 3rd. Oh yeah, and Altuve made a couple very nice 4-3s in the field, and Maxwell had the catch of the night- a great leaping grab at the LF scoreboard to rob extra bases from… some Royal.

Anyway, it’s OK, see? No need to get angry. Shitty pitchers luck into great games every once in a while*. Go get ‘em tomorrow (er, today), boys! A series win is still within your grasp!

PS. Apologies for the late recap. Wouldn’t have been quite so late, but we caught a groundhog in our groundhog trap and had to go drive to the other side of the local reservoir and release the poor critter. Go creep around somebody else’s garden, buddy!

*Did You Know? Hochevar was the 1st overall pick in 2006. Perhaps he’s just finally fulfilling his potential. Then again, I seem to remember everyone thinking it was a horrendous pick at the time (some kind of favor to Boras, maybe? I can’t remember the deal).

Cedeño’s Here to Save the Game

Posted on June 19, 2012 by BudGirl in Game Recaps

Royals 7, Astros 9
W: Happ, L: Sanchez, S: Cedeño
box

Wow, what a game. Happ had a good outing, which he seems to do when he pitches agressive. 6 innings of 2 run baseball. The guys in the field had a good night, 9 runs off of 11 hits, 5 walks and 2 KC errors. Bixler, Bogusevic and Maxwell with a homerun each. Altuve with another multi-hit game. The bull pen is where the suspense occurred.

Normally, Brett Myers has been great this season but he left a pile of crap on the field last night. He gave up 5 runs in 2/3rd of an inning. The first batter grounds out, then single, single, single, single, sac fly, single, single, single, and another single before Mills goes out and takes the ball from Milles. Cedeño comes into a bases-loaded, two-out situation and gets Moustakas (his 2nd at bat this inning) to pop-out and close the game. Myers just didn’t have it last night. I truly hope he got his bad outing out of his system.

It was nice to see the Astros have a big inning against another team after this past weekend series. Very nice.

Here’s some game time observations you can read. And to know who’s pitching the rest of the series, check out the series preview. I have a feeling that the non-baseball topic may start an interesting discussion.

Bench Tidbits:

There is usually a Summer Reading Thread in the TalkZone and I don’t usually contribute because I enjoy light, romantic reading and that does not seem to interest many of the contributors in the Beer and Queso Forum plus the main topic of late seems to be whether or not your shoes need to match your button-down shirt. I do on occassion read a “good” book, I just prefer lighter and happier subjects. So, last night, after watching the rebroadcast of the game, I started reading Fifty Shades of Grey. So, far it has been an easy read. Granted, I have only read 5 chapters, but they went by pretty quickly. I’ll have to see if it is the raciest I’ve read. I have a feeling it won’t be. But anyway, I think Ana is going to take a trip down a dark road with Christian before she is able to turn him around into a happy-well adjusted man. And they are going to live happily ever after.

I’ll let you know if that happens.

Oh, and the Astros signed their #2 pick of the draft. Check out The Bus Ride Discussion for excellent information on the draft and the Astros farm system. You may see some great future prospects there.

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