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He Who Comes Back Last, Wins

Posted on June 19, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros lose to Nationals 6-5

WP: Aaron Barrett (3-0)
LP: Darin Downs (1-1)
SV: Rafael Soriano (15)

contributed by Sphinx Drummond

BOX

The Astros’ attempt at a comeback victory was usurped by the Nationals’ own comeback. After falling behind the Nationals by two runs early, the Astros scored four runs in the 4th to take the lead for a couple of innings. Gio Gonzalez was cruising though the first three innings before walking Jose Altuve to open the fourth. He promptly hit George Springer with a pitch and Jon Singleton loaded the bases with a single to center. Matt Dominguez hammered a single to left to score Altuve and Springer. Jason Castro doubled to score Singleton and Domiguez came in on Jonathan Villar’s sacrifice fly.

The Nationals tied the game in the bottom of the 6th inning. The Astros were able to go ahead once again in the seventh on a wild pitch that allowed Robbie Grossman to score from third. However, it was short lived and that lead turned into a two run deficit when the Nationals tacked on three in the bottom of the seventh to seal the scoring for the night.

Scott Feldman started the game and didn’t suck. The same couldn’t be said for the relief pitching, in fact it was the opposite, they did suck. Josh Zeid gave up 3 hits and 3 runs in his inning of work, Downs allowed 1 run on 1 hit and didn’t retire anyone, and Farnsworth blew the save opportunity by allowing the runner he inherited from Downs to score. Tony Sipp is good and did well finishing the game.

Homeboy Anthony Rendon hit his 10th long ball in the seventh, his star is really starting to shine. Thursday the Astros travel to St Petersburg to take on the TBRs. Collin McHugh (4-4) will face off against Chris Archer (3-4) in a 6:10 pm CST game.

WEATHER: 86º, Partly Cloudy
ATTENDANCE: 25,453
GAME TIME: 3:42

The Worst Team

Posted on June 16, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Rays 4, Astros 3

W: Price (5-6)
L: Williams (1-3)

Submitted by Reuben

The Astros were hot! I mean literally hottttt! Who could possibly cool them off? Who could even fathom, much less accomplish, the Herculean task of winning a series against them for the first time since May 19-21?!? The absolute worst team in baseball, that’s who. Those losers, the Rays – or, as the common folk call them, when they’re not winning their division over teams with 5 times their payroll, the Devil Rays.

And this game was very devilish indeed. Who else could have convinced Bo Porter that it was a good idea to bring Jerome Williams into a tight game, and leave him there? Satan! Who else could it have been speaking into the headphones of the umpires, telling them to overturn an out call at first base in the 6th inning, prolonging the inning and allowing the tying run to score for the Rays? An umpiring crew in New York, watching video replays? Fool! It was Lucifer himself who reversed that call!

Even the bizarre events of the 8th inning, when Porter sparked mass confusion amongst umpires and announcers alike with his shift of Tony Sipp to left field, were not immune from attempted meddling by the Lord of Darkness, according to the game story on mlb.com:

‘Sipp did touch base with center fielder Dexter Fowler and right fielder George Springer for advice.

“He had me as the angel and [Springer] as the devil saying, ‘Hey if you have to dive for it…’ and I’m saying, ‘Don’t dive,'” Fowler said.’

Fortunately, Sipp did not have to choose between the heavenly guidance and the hellish kind; as the ball was not hit to him while he manned left field. Alas, the damage was already done by that point though, because Porter ignored that sweet golden voice on his other shoulder, the one that said “Farnsworth, Bo! Bring in Farnsworth! Or Qualls! Or Zeid…Jesus H, Bo, bring in the bat boy, anyone but freaking Jerome Williams!”

***

Futility Watch: Despite the series loss, the Astros continued their upswing this week, and at present have the 23rd-best record in baseball, 4.5 games better than the #30 Rays, and tiny percentage points ahead of the Mets and Red Sox.

***

And lastly, Happy Fathers’ Day to my dad, and all the other dads who visit this site.

Pod People

Posted on June 15, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 7, Rays 3

W: Cosart (6-5)
L: Archer (3-4)

Seven out of their last ten. 21-12 over the last month or so. Who are these guys?

Down 1-0 early on Evan Longoria’s RBI single in the first, the Good Guys came roaring back against a faltering Chris Archer in the third. They rang up five tallies, the big blow coming on Matt Dominguez’ three-run double.

Fowler drove in two with a double in the fourth and Longoria answered in the fifth with a two-run homer, but that was it the rest of the way. Cosart went seven and scattered nine hits, while Sipp, Fields and Zeid closed it out. Fields experienced forearm tightness during his appearance and went to the 15-day DL after the game.

Florida Man

Posted on June 14, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 1
Rays 6

contributed by NeilT

I think someone forgot to tell the Rays this season that they were supposed to be an enviously well-oiled machine competing in the AL East, though last night I was envious. I think someone forgot to tell the Red Sox, too, and the Yankees, but they’re not the subject of this recap.

But the Rays! They are supposed to be the very model of a modern major-general, and instead they are casting back to Astro’s very recent past. It’s a tangled line, a fouled hook, a snagged fly, but I think it’s all about the name change. Here you have a perfectly good name, the Devil Rays, named after a perfectly interesting fish. There are a lot of fish names in sports. There’s the Marlins, and the Dolphins. There’s the Texas City Stingarees and the Port Isabel Tarpons. There are Barracudas, Tunas, and Walleyes. And of course there are Hooks. So what do the Rays do? They scrap a perfectly good fish name to name themselves after Florida Man.

So the Florida Men are playing Astrolinean baseball, with a 25-42 record. Granted, they have a lot of players on the DL, but what do you expect when everyone on your team lives in Florida and is named Ray? Just look at some of these headlines:

Florida man in tiny white shorts and belly shirt gets DUI after crashing into three cars.

Florida man run over by van after dog pushes accelerator.

Hallucinating Florida man seeing imaginary aliens walks into store with large knives and asks not to be eaten

Florida man accused of faking black mamba snake bite.

Police arrest Florida man for drunken joy ride on motorized scooter at Wal-Mart.

Those are all from a single NPR broadcast, but they’re small fish for Florida Man. If the Rays wanted to stay off the DL, they wouldn’t have picked such a Florida Man name. There are plenty of other names to build a team around. They could have been the Reubens, or the Rons. They could have been the Sphinxes or the Neils. For Gods sake, they could have been the Happys.

Instead they’re the Florida Men, with Tim Ray Beckham, Brandon Ray Guyer, Jeremy Ray Hellickson, Matt Ray Moore, and Will Ray Myers all out for the season or on the DL. Alex Ray Cobb, who isn’t long off the DL, pitched for the Rays and beat the ‘Stros. But still, it’s Alex Ray Cobb, pitching for a team of guys named Ray.

The Rays provided lots of traffic for McWho. Jimmy Ray Loney reached at the top of the second on a Villar fielding error, then Benny Ray Zobrist doubled. Both Benny Ray and Jimmy Ray scored on a Matt Ray Joyce double. Kevin Ray Kiermaier tripled in the third, but was stranded. McWho walked David Ray DeJesus and Matt Ray Joyce in the fourth, and got his first coach’s visit to the mound. Desmond Ray Jennings led off the fifth with a double and Jimmy Ray Loney walked. Benny Ray Zobrist drove them both in on the second triple of the game.

Zeid pitched the sixth and seventh with only one walk to Matt Ray Joyce. Downs gave up a single to Benny Ray Zobrist in the 8th. Kyle Farnsworth gave up the final two runs in the ninth, with singles from Ryan Ray Hanigan, Desmond Ray Jennings, Kevin Ray Kiermaier, and Evan Ray Longoria.

The only Astros score came from a Singleton homer in the fourth off of Matt Ray Joyce, who looked strong. Brad Ray Boxberger replaced Cobb in the seventh, Brad Ray Boxberger pitched the eighth, Joel Ray Peralta the eighth, and Kirby Ray Yates and Jake McGee pitched the ninth. At least they went through a bunch of the bullpen.

Here’s maybe the strangest headline of the lot: Florida Man Beats Astros with Quality Pitching.

A Free Baseball Win!!!

Posted on June 13, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 5 Snakes 4 (10)

WP Sipp (1-0) LP Putz (1-1)

contributed by Mr. Happy

The Good Guys knotted their 2014 free baseball record at three at the expense of the Snakes 5-4 before a crowd of 33,457 at MMPUS last night, bringing their record to 31-37. Look out .500!!! We had to resort to free baseball because of a Qualls blown save, his second in ten chances. However, Qualls and the Astros were redeemed by a clutch Chris Carter long ball in the tenth frame, his 13th of the season. Earlier in the game, young Jon Singleton mashed his third home run to put the Astros in an early 2-1 lead. The blown save robbed Scott Feldman of a win, although he pitched a good game, surrendering but four hits and no walks while striking out six in 6.1 frames. The Astros put up 11 hits and were led by Dexter Fowler and Carlos Corporan, who each had three knocks. The only downer to this game is that the Astros were again woefully deficient with ducks on the pond, going 0-6 w/RISP.

Last night, I took in an Indianapolis Indians/Durham Bulls game here in Indy. I got to see retread Wilson Betemit strike out swinging twice at pitches that weren’t in the zone. He looked like the same ole Betemit to me. It was a lovely night for baseball. And each person in my row won a free Chick-fil-A grilled chicken sandwich. Woo hoo!!!

Snake Handling Made Easy

Posted on June 12, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Charismatic Kuechel and Carter power Astros past Snakes 5-1

WP: Keuchel (8-3)
LP: McCarthy (1-9)

contributed by Sphinx Drummond

Wednesday night the Astros continued their attack on the MLB. Like a sweaty fevered Pentecostal tent preacher on a hot summer night, the Astros charmed the shit out of the Diamondbacks. The serpentine bastards had no answer for the spell that Keuchel threw upon them. And the bats weren’t afraid to lay a bit of wood to the reptilian creeps.

George Springer got the Astros on the board in the bottom of the first with a single. He moved to second on a Singleton walk and scored on a single by Castro. The Astros made it 2 to 0 in the third following singles by Villar and Springer, a wild pitch by McCarthy, and a run scoring ground out by Singleton. The Diamondbacks got a run back in the 4th after an Aaron hill solo HR, alas that would be all their scoring for the night.

Chris Carter hit his first HR of the night, his 11th, in the bottom of the 4th inning and led off the bottom of the 7th with his second solo shot of the evening, number 12. The Astros tacked on one more run in the 7th when Alex Presley singled, advanced to second on a walk to Marwin Gonzalez, moved to third on a single by Villar, and scored on Springer’s sacrifice fly to CF.

Keuchel pitched 8 solid innings allowing 4 hits while walking 1 and striking out 5. Chad Qualls pitched a scoreless ninth in relief in a non-save situation. Qualls has lowered his ERA to a stellar 1.99.

Dallas, from Oklahoma, keeps the ball down. His ERA is 2.38 and is ninth best in the Big Leagues. He has 8 wins and is allowing opponents a lowly .226 batting average against. He keeps the ball low in the zone. He has two complete games, one a shut out. He has cranked out seven quality starts in a row. He has induced 15 double plays, he leads MLB in ground ball outs. He has only walked 18 batters. He keeps the ball down. His WHIP is cracking at 0.99. He doesn’t strike out a ton of batters but he does have 75 in 90.2 innings. He’s hit two batters and you just know they were asking for it.

Carter from California, has no problem striking out, 67 times in 191 at bats. That ties him among Astros with George Springer, he is also tied with Springer for the team HR lead with 12. He also got his average back to .200. Now he can set a goal to get it to .210. And from there who knows, maybe .230.

Thursday the Astros and D-backs square off one more time with Scott Feldman going against Wade Miley. They are supposed to start the game at 7:10pm CST.

Attendance – 24319
Game Time – 2:22
Temperature – 73

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