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  • News (Page 25)

In Search of Home Cooking

Posted on April 10, 2016 by Waldo in Game Recaps

April 10, 2016

Brewers 3, Astros 2

W – Nelson (1-1)
L – Keuchel (1-1)
S – Jeffress (3)

Box Score

GameZone thread

Not a whole lot of good to come out of this one.  The Astros managed only three hits – although two of them solo home runs – against Brewers pitching and Dallas Keuchel looked less than sharp.  The Brewers took the game 3-2 and the series as the Astros’ opening road trip ends with a whimper.  Here’s hoping some games at home can get their heads right.

Home runs from Jose Altuve in the 1st and Preston Tucker in the 5th, and a single by George Springer also in the 1st, accounted for their only real offensive production of the day.  They scattered some walks but had a lot of difficulty mounting a consistent offensive threat.  Altuve, Springer, and Carlos Correa also gave away some outs on the basepaths.

Unfortunately, with Keuchel having a rough day on the mound the bats picked a poor time to slump.  Keuchel gave up six hits and also walked six in just 5.2 innings.  Despite the early Astros lead the Brewers got it right back in the bottom of the 1st on an Aaron Hill 2-run single.  Domingo Santana added an RBI double in the 4th inning.

The closest the Astros came to tying the game was with one out in the 8th.  Luis Valbuena walked, then advanced to third when Altuve reached on a throwing error and advanced to second.  Jake Marisnick came in to pinch run for Valbuena, and Springer then drove a fly ball to center field.  Marisnick held at third when, in hindsight, he probably could’ve tagged and scored on the throw.  However, I can understand not wanting to risk being the third out when Correa is coming up to bat.  (Correa hit a routine grounder to end the inning.)

White Meat and Colby Jack

Posted on April 9, 2016 by Waldo in Game Recaps

April 9, 2016

Astros 6, Brewers 4

W – Fister (1-0)
L – Peralta (0-2)
S – Gregerson (2)

Box Score

GameZone thread

The pitching wasn’t terrible!  We’ll take it.  Colby Rasmus and Tyler White combined for three dingers and drove in all of the Astros’ runs en route to a 6-4 victory.

The Astros got off the schneid early, loading the bases with no one out in the top of the 1st.  Back to back sac flies from Colby Rasmus and Tyler White gave the good guys an early 2-0 lead.  In the 3rd Rasmus cranked a homer into the bullpen in left-center to gain a 3-0 lead.  Rasmus and White went back-to-back again in the 5th, this time of the leaving-the-yard variety.  Colby’s massive blast went about 10 rows deep into the second deck in right-center and White’s bomb was a no-doubter to just left of straightaway center field.  Brewers starter Wily Peralta got the “credit” for all six runs, earning his second loss of the young season.

Doug Fister didn’t look too bad in his first Astro outing, not allowing a hit until the third inning and being able to limit the damage where necessary.  The Brewers manufactured a run on him in the 5th and then he did give up a solo shot to Scooter Gennett, his second of the series.  Hinch pulled Fister after five innings; he pitched just well enough and just long enough to be the first starter not named Keuchel to earn a W.  Pat Neshek allowed a solo shot to Kirk Niyuoewlkjturhnfaslk in the 6th, and Will Harris, Ken Giles, and Luke Gregerson each tossed a scoreless inning to close out the game.  Gregerson did allow a 2-out single to Yadier Rivera and Jonathan Villar subsequently worked a pretty decent walk by laying off of Gregerson’s sliders, but Gregerson notched the save nevertheless.

One thing that might get lost in the box score is Carlos Gomez’s baserunning in the top of the 8th.  Just reading the play-by-play might look like this:

Carlos Gomez singles on a bunt ground ball to third baseman Yadiel Rivera.  Carlos Gomez advances to 3rd, on a throwing error by third baseman Yadiel Rivera.  Carlos Gomez out at 3rd, first baseman Chris Carter to shortstop Jonathan Villar.

This doesn’t quite tell the whole story, and one might be inclined to blame Gomez based on his recent blunder getting caught between second and third.  In this instance, Rivera’s throw went past first base and it took surprisingly long for anyone to get close to it.  As Gomez approached second his eyes were locked on third base coach Gary Pettis, who (as replays would later show) was waving Gomez to third.  In actuality, it took a perfectly placed throw from Carter(!) to make Gomez a sitting duck as he slid into third.  If the throw was long or wide in either direction GoGo probably makes it in fairly easily.  Hard to blame either Gomez or Pettis, and instead we’ll just credit Carter for throwing a hell of a strike from 40 yards away.

White’s 1×2 game dropped him to just .667 on the season, and suddenly he’s tied with Correa for the lead in homers.

Mama Mia, Those Were Some Spicy Meatballs

Posted on April 8, 2016 by Waldo in Game Recaps

April 8, 2016

Brewers 6, Astros 4

W – Anderson (1-0)
L – Feldman (0-1)
S – Jeffress (2)

Box Score

GameZone thread

Friday’s game against the Brewers gave you that same early queasy feeling that you got Wednesday and Thursday.  For the third day in a row an Astros starting pitcher dug an early hole for the team.  Despite a late rally that got cut short thanks to a new rule, the Astros fell to the Brewers 6-4.  Five of the Brewers’ six runs came on big home runs to center or deep right-center.

Scott Feldman’s control was all over the place to start the game.  Scooter Gennett started the happy fun times with one out and nobody on in the 1st, absolutely crushing a Feldman pitch that is probably still in low orbit over Lake Michigan.  A couple batters later, Chris Carter did what we all were kind of expecting, taking Feldman deep for a two-run shot.  Domingo Santana added an RBI double in the 2nd to take the score to 4-0.  Although Feldman was able to stop the bleeding after that, he still only lasted four innings.  In the last three games Astros starters have combined for just 9.1 innings.  This is a problem.

Chris Devenski made his MLB debut for Houston and came in for three fairly impressive scoreless innings.  Josh Fields did quite the opposite, serving up the third bomb to center to make the lead 6-0.

On offense, for almost the entire night the good guys could never put together a sustained rally when it mattered despite getting a runner into scoring position several times.  One of those times was Carlos Gomez, who was erased to retire the side while getting caught in a rundown in the 5th.

Things did get interesting in the 9th, though.  Correa singled and Gomez tapped an infield single to second.  Tyler White then unloaded an opposite-field bomb off the top of the wall in right-center to make it 6-3.  White went 3×4 on the night, is hitting a sweet .692 through four games, and is seeing beachballs at the plate right now.  Marwin then walked and scored from home on a Preston Tucker double to left-center.  Rasmus then walked to bring Altuve to the plate with two on and one out.  On a grounder to second, Gennett flipped the ball to Jonathan Villar at short for the force play on Rasmus.  Instead of a standard slide that might have actually beaten the throw, Rasmus slid with his left foot high and then slid past the bag.  Thanks to the new Utley Rule to protect fielders in such a situation, Altuve was called out despite Villar not even making an attempt to throw to first.  Ballgame, and a disappointing way for a promising rally to end.

There were a couple of defensive bright spots as well.  Gomez made a nice diving catch in shallow left-center, and although Jason Castro is 0-fer the season at the plate, he is doing some good work behind it, nailing two runners on the night.

Astros @ Brewers – Hope for a New ERA

Posted on April 8, 2016 by Waldo in Series Previews

SERIES PREVIEW

Carlos Gomez’s Sloppy Seconds @ Chris Carter’s Sloppy Seconds
April 8-10, 2016

It’s early.

Must not panic.

Mustnotpanicmustnotpanicmustnotpanic.

What’s up with the pitching staff?  Through three games the Astros have a MLB-worst 9.36 ERA and have a couple of guys that could deservedly be referred to as Refined Petroleum Product Storage Apparatuses.  Sure didn’t see that coming.  Since it’s still way too early to hit the panic button, I choose to delude myself and blame the staff’s rocky start on the following factors, in no particular order:

  • Early season jitters
  • Weather delays, postponements, and generally unfavorable conditions
  • Players still getting tuned up
  • Bud Selig (on principle)
  • Angel Hernandez (on principle)
  • That abominable Austin Automotive Specialists radio commercial

Don’t judge me.

The offense, on the other hand, is off to a strong start.  Despite finally looking human at the plate on Thursday, Carlos Correa is in early beast mode form.  Tyler White has a hitting streak for his career.  Preston Tucker is more than adequately holding down the DH slot in Evan Gattis’s absence.  Carlos Gomez finally showed signs of life Thursday after some shameful ABs earlier in the series.  Springer (salami notwithstanding) and a kinder, gentler, more patient Altuve are having their fits and starts, but… it’s early.

With any luck, a middling Brewers team and the guarantee of (at worst) climate-controlled games could be a good opportunity to shake off the rust in the Rust Belt.  The Brewers got shelled 12-3 on Opening Day, dropped a 2-1 decision on Tuesday, and eked out a 4-3 win on Wednesday.  Despite being bottom-third in runs scored their overall offensive production is firmly middle of the pack and is actually quite comparable to the Astros’.  Aside from the Opening Day shenanigans the Brewers pitching hasn’t been bad.

Friday, April 8 – 7:10pm CDT
Scott Feldman (2015: 5-5, 3.90) vs. Chase Anderson (2015: 6-6, 4.30)

I said as much in my last series preview, but I was a big fan of Feldman’s work in 2015.  Keuchel, McCullers, and McHugh stole the spotlight from him and deservedly so, but he turned in a lot of solid yet understated pitching performances, gobbling innings (completed the 6th inning in all but five games) and dropping his ERA by a full run over the summer before his shoulder gave out.  He’s in the walk year of a front-loaded contract so he could be a huge value to the Astros this year (either on the field or as trade bait) if he can put up similar numbers.  He turned in a decent spring training performance so we’ll have to see how the shoulder is holding up.

Anderson, a newcomer to the Brewers, battled injuries in the second half of 2015 for Arizona and struggled with consistency, watching his sub-3 June ERA rise to 4.52 in early September.  He was slated to be the Brewers’ #5 but got moved up in the rotation since Matt Garza was placed on the DL. Since this is only Anderson’s third season in the bigs he has never faced the Astros, and he had a horrific spring (16 ER in 14+ innings and a .409 opponents’ batting average).

Saturday, April 9 – 6:10pm CDT
Doug Fister (2015: 5-7, 4.19) vs. Willy Peralta (0-1, 9.00)

The Astros’ newest acquisition in the rotation gets his first start of the season after a very unimpressive spring.  Fister was hardly terrible (or even bad) in 2015, and the Astros are hoping that he’ll return to the 3.50-ish ERA guy he has been in the past.  He did face the Brew Crew once last year and it did not go well, surrendering four runs (three earned) in just over an inning in relief.

Peralta was the main perpetrator of the Brewers’ opening loss, giving up 4 ER in as many innings before getting chased.  He had a rough spring (6+ ERA), missed a huge chunk of time in 2015, and was consistently inconsistent before and after his injury.  That he was the Brewers’ Opening Day starter says a lot about the state of the Brewers’ pitching staff coming into the season.

Sunday, April 10 – 1:10pm CDT
Dallas Keuchel (1-0, 2.57) vs. Jimmy Nelson (0-1, 2.45)

I can give Dallas a pass for his early trouble in New York on Tuesday.  Hell, I wouldn’t want to be out there throwing an ice-cold ball of leather in 20mph winds.  (Then again, I am grossly nonathletic.)  It didn’t take him too long to settle in once the damage was done, and he ended up lasting seven innings when such a thing looked extremely unlikely after the first three.  With a start under his belt and much more agreeable conditions, I expect him to be closer to his true form.  He has never pitched against the Brewers, but rumor has it that Chris Carter is 7×9 against him in intrasquad slow-pitch softball from Carter’s time on the Astros.

Nelson made some strides in his first full big league season for the Brewers in 2015 and tossed a pretty good game against the Giants earlier this week.  He pitched into the 8th and the only real trouble he got into was a solo homer in the 3rd and allowing just one run in a 4th inning, bases loaded, no-out jam.  He also threw a pretty impressive 1.17 ERA in four spring starts.  This could be a pretty good pitching showdown.

Too high? What do you mean, too high?

Posted on April 8, 2016 by MusicMan in Game Recaps

Who gives a shit? It’s gone!

Game 3: April 7, 2016

Yankees 8, Astros 5

W: Shreve (1-0) L: Harris (0-1) S: Miller (1)

HR: White (1), Tucker (1), and pretty much every Yankee

Box score

Game Zone

Win Probability

OK, let’s get this out of the way up front.  Winning pitchers and losing pitchers are such bullshit.  Take it away, HH:

Harris is the only one who hasn’t pitched like shit, and now he’s on the hook for the loss.

If you click on that “win probability” link, the stats show what was obvious to our eyes – Harris did a much better job than any other Astro pitcher, and he gets hung with the loss.  Life is short, and brutal, and unfair.

This all got off to a nice start as youngsters White and Tucker went back-to-back (although I incorrectly described White’s shot as opposite field, because for some reason, I keep trying to make him a lefty) in the 2nd inning for a 3-0 lead.  Fiers immediately gave 1 run back in the bottom, limiting that damage only because Astro-killer Starlin Castro did an interpretive dance instead of sliding into second base to end the inning.

Fires did nothing to fool the Yankees, and even as White delivered a two-run single for a 5-2 lead in the 4th, his slop-throwing inspired no confidence.  Per Mark in the 5th:

Astros will be losing the lead this inning. Fiers has nothing.

Three posts later:

ARod hammers an 0-2 hanging fastball into CF to plate Ellsbury to tie it up

Yeah, it was that kind of day.

In a 5-5 game in the 7th, Harris got a leadoff grounder, followed by a Gardner single.  That was enough to make him the loser, because Ken Wagner Giles followed him, and proceeded to allow a 3-run “Tex Message” to close out the scoring.

5 runs, 6 runs, 5 runs… and 1 win.

Get your shit together, pitchers.

 

Astros Blown Up By The Bombers

Posted on April 7, 2016 by Sphinx Drummond in Game Recaps, News, Uncategorized

No chance for perfect record now.

WP Pineda (1-0)
LP: McHugh (0-1)
SV: Nova (1)

BOXSCORE

GAMEZONE

Backed by a first inning solo homer by Carlos Correa, Colin McHugh was ready to face the Yankees in the bottom of the first. He was awful. He couldn’t be blamed for the catcher’s interference call that put lead off hitter Jacoby Ellsbury on and opened the flood gates, but everything else was on McHugh. Walks, Singles, Doubles, McHugh seemed in an extremely inappropriate charitable mood. Finally after 5 runs had scored and only one out recorded, A.J. Hinch had seen enough and replaced McHugh with Michael Feliz.

Feliz didn’t make it too much harder for the Bombers but eventually retired the side allowing only one more run to score, making it 6-1 in favor of the Yankees at the end of the first inning. It looked like it was going to be one of those night. But, then for a moment it didn’t.

The Astros came roaring back in the top of the second climaxed by George Springer’s grand slam to pull the Astros to within one run at 6 to 5. For a moment it looked like we had a game, and then it didn’t.

The Yankees just kept scoring runs, ex-Cub Starlin Castro hit a three run homer to make it 9 to 5 after two innings of play, after three innings it was 12 to 5 in favor of the Yankees. Stayed that way ‘til Carlos Correa hit another bomb (460 feet or something) in the fifth inning to complete the Astros scoring, and making it a 12 to 6 ballgame.

The Yankees added a few more runs for good measure and Ivan Nova earned a four inning save pitching in relief of Pineda. It was a horrendous night for the Astros and McHugh particularly. McHugh is currently sporting a 135.00 ERA. Ouch.

Thursday’s game has a 3:05 CT start, Mike Fiers will face mound opponent homeboy Nathan Eovaldi. Friday the team travels to Milwaukee for a weekend series.

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