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It’s Not Cosart’s Fault

Posted on May 6, 2014 by BudGirl in Featured, Game Recaps, Uncategorized

Astros 0, Tigers 2
L: Cosart, W: Scherzer, S: Nathan
box

Cosart pitched a great game against one of the best pitchers in baseball right now. Not surprisingly he got no run support and shoddy defense. I appreciate Cosart coming back from a couple bad starts and one horrendous start to work on being one of the best, if not the best, pitcher the Astros have.

There is a need for a new phrase for “Worrell Button.” So, if you read this recap or the GameZone please share your suggestions. I have hope that Mike Fast reads this or the GameZone and tells those that have the power to make positive changes to get rid of Ash before a TV deal is done and more people are forced to listen to him. I would rather listen to Milo on the telly.

Oh and Manager Brad is damm fine looking. Oh yeah.

Astros @ Tigers Series Preview

Posted on May 5, 2014 by Ebby Calvin in Featured, Series Previews

submitted by austro

Springtime in Detroit

Houston Astros (10-21) @ Detroit Tigers (17-9)

Ahh, the pleasure of Detroit in the springtime. You never know if you’ll get a 40-degree day or 40-mph winds. Actually, the weather is supposed to be pretty decent this week. There may be some showers Monday afternoon, but they’re supposed to stop and things should be clearing by game time. Tuesday should be sunny with a high in the 60s. There’s another chance of rain on Wednesday, and then Thursday should be sunny with a high in the 70s. Could be worse; could be Seattle.

Monday, May 5, 6:08 CDT
Cosart (1-2, 5.52) vs Scherzer (3-1, 2.08)

The only Tigers to have faced Cosart so far are Rajai Davis and Ian Kinsler, and they’re a combined 2-for-5, so there’s not much history to go with here. Cosart hasn’t been great, but if you ignore his true stinker on 4/18 against the A’s (0.1 IP, 7 ER, 0 K), he’s been averaging 6+ IP and 2.4 ER per start, which ought to keep you in the game. Until the bullpen takes over, of course, at which point you can abandon all hope.

Eight Astros have faced Scherzer, with Fowler having seen him the most (10 ABs). All told, they’re 7-for-39 (.179), so it could be a long night. Scherzer is in the midst of a debate with the Tigers’ front office about his worth. One might hope that would prove to be a distraction, but in his last 3 starts he’s 3-0, 19.0 IP, 1.42 ERA, and 26 Ks. Carter probably can’t wait to start whiffing.

Tuesday, May 6, 6:08 CDT
Oberholtzer (0-5, 5.63) vs Ray (0-0, 0.00)

Again, only two Tigers have faced Oberholtzer: Kinsler (1-for-4) and Andrew Romine (1-for-2). Oberholtzer has been having some issues this spring. The issues stem mainly from the fact that opposing batters, putzes that they are, keep swinging their bats and hitting his pitches. Obie’s last three starts have yielded 14 IP, 27 H, 6 BB, 13 ER, and – not coincidentally – 2 losses. But I’m sure he’ll have no trouble at all with Miguel Cabrera.

Ray came to the Tigers as part of the Doug Fister trade with the Nationals and has been doing well in AAA. He has been pressed into duty because of Anibal Sanchez’s injury (see below), and this will apparently be his first big league action. Ordinarily that would mean doom for the Astros, but this time is different: he’s a lefty. It’s only the unknown right-handers that bury the Astros.

Wednesday, May 7, 6:08 CDT
Peacock (0-2, 5.26) vs Porcello (4-1, 3.66)

Hey, guess how many current Tigers have faced Peacock? If you guess anything other than two, you haven’t been paying attention. Kinsler is 1-for-6, and Davis is 0-for-3. In Peacock’s three starts he’s gone 1-2 with 16.0 IP, 16 H, 12 (!) BB, and 7 ER. As with Cosart, that’s not going to get you on anybody’s All-Star roster, but it ought to keep you in the game. Unless, …

The six Astros who have faced Porcello have put up an ugly combined 2-for-16. Porcello is 3-0 in his last three starts, with a 3.32 ERA and 14Ks. The Astros will have to win this one with pitching and defense, and that hasn’t been a very productive strategy so far this year.

Thursday, May 8, 12:08 CDT
Keuchel (2-2, 3.96) vs Smyly (
3-2, 2.45)

Alright, this is more like it: eight Tigers have combined for 40 ABs against Keuchel and produced 12 hits, with Kinsler leading the way at 5-for-15 thanks to all of his appearances with the Rangers. Keuchel’s pattern seems to be that he does ok the first couple of times through a lineup, but then is prone to a blow-up later. That’s certainly what happened in his last start, where he gave up two runs in the first six innings but then walked the bases loaded to start the 7th and wound up getting charged for two more runs when Cisnero came in and couldn’t work out of the jam.

Five Astros have batted against Smyly, but they only have 6 ABs, and only Presley has a hit. Jared apparently smells a rat, however, since he’s picked up Smyly for his fantasy team this week. Thought you could slip that one by us, didn’t you, Jared? What a turncoat.

 

Injuries

 

Astros

 

Matt Albers: Right shoulder tendonitis.

Jesse Crain: Still recovering from biceps surgery. Could be back in mid-May. Hurry up, guys; the bullpen needs you.

Scott Feldman: Bicep tendonitis.

Alex White: Still recovering from Tommy John surgery. Could be back in May, but I wouldn’t count on it.

Asher Wojo: Still suffering from a lat strain. Day-to-day, I guess.

 

Tigers

 

Andy Dirks: Back surgery. Maybe back in June.

Joel Hanrahan: Tommy John surgery, maybe back in June.

Jose Iglesias: Stress fractures in both shins (ouch!). You’re supposed to open the umbrella before you jump off the garage, big guy.

Luke Putkonen: Right elbow inflammation. NTTAWWT.

Bruce Rondon: Out for the season with Tommy John surgery.

Anibal Sanchez: Laceration on right middle finger. Seriously. Must have flipped off the wrong guy.

 

Special Promotions

During Wednesday’s rain delay, Ausmus will do his rendition of the striptease skate from “Slapshot” while he dances around the bases. Paramedics will be standing by at BudGirl’s house.

Won 8-7 (the M’s)

Posted on May 5, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

SEA 8, uh, HOU 7

W: Maurer (1-0)
L: McHugh (2-1)

Submitted by Reuben

There’s not a whole lot to say about the Astros’ Sunday loss at the hands of their ancient rivals, the Mariners, that wasn’t already said by Ron Brand in his write-up of Saturday’s game. The Astros’ pitching staff put the team in a big hole, and the offense, surprisingly, came very close to climbing all the way out of it. But close only counts in horseshoes and hand-grenades, and maybe depth charges, which come to think of it might have been the perfect thing to fight the Mariners with; in any case, it didn’t compel the commissioner of the American League (whoever that is) to award the Astros the victory.

The trouble started early for Collin McHugh, who gave up an unearned run in the 1st after cHRis Karter kouldn’t handle his slightly-off-target pickoff throw, allowing the baserunner to advance all the way to 3rd, later scoring on a groundout to a drawn-in cHRis Karter, who for some reason did not throw the ball home. Perhaps he just really wanted to tag out Robinson Cano.

The wheels really fell off McHugh’s wagon in the 3rd, when he allowed a walk, 2 doubles, a triple, and 2 singles, plating 4 more runs for the scurvy SEA-dogs. The 5 hits in that inning equaled the total number allowed by McHugh in his first two starts for the Astros. It got better only relatively from there, as McHugh and long/mop-up man Jerome Williams allowed 3 more runs combined over the next 5 frames.

They would prove to be vital insurance for the M’s, however, as the Houston bats got mad as hell and weren’t gonna take it anymore, again (?). Jonathan Villar is now your team leader in Home Runs after going deep for the 2nd straight game. Jason Castro had a nice night, going 2-4 with a Run, RBI, and a walk, as did Alex Presley, who doubled and homered. In total the home team banged out 4 doubles and 2 homers.

The latest addition to the revolving-lefty-reliever-carousel, Darin Downs, tossed a scoreless 9th inning in his Astro debut, allowing for some drama in the bottom of the frame – Castro singled in Altuve with 2 outs to draw them within 1 and bring the winning run to the plate in form of Matt “Closah Killah” Dominguez. This time, though, it was the Astros’ bid for a series win that got murdered, as Matty D struck out on a 96-mph “rising” fastball to snuff the rally, permanently.

box score

Tres de Mayo

Posted on May 4, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Mariners 9, Astros 8

W: Iwakuma (1-0)
L: Keuchel (2-2)
SV: Rodney (7)

The needs of the marketing department clashed with an uncompromising calendar Saturday, as the Astros held their annual Cinco de Mayo celebration on Tres de Mayo. Just like their season, close is the best you can hope for these days.

Keuchel and Iwakuma dueled through the first five innings and Houston had a 2-0 lead going to the sixth. The Astros claimed the lead in the third, on a single-triple-sac fly run by Gonzalez, Villar and Altuve. Non-Mexicans, all. Oh, the irony.

In the sixth, Romero tripled and was driven in by Cano’s single. Keuchel later said that he’d started to feel sluggish in the sixth and in the seventh the luchador masks came off for good. After walking the bases loaded, Keuchel was lifted and so were the Shit Gates.

Cisnero gave up a walk to tie the game, and then a two-run double to Saunders, followed by a two-run single by Romero and an RBI single by Cano before he got Hart to fly out. Valdes replaced him and continued the flood of excrement by serving up a double and then a two-run homer to Smoak. After giving up that eight-spot in the seventh, Cisnero’s ERA is 7.36 and Valdes’ is 12.27.

Fields (8.74) and Williams (6.35) pitched the last two innings. The only way to measure the Astros’ bullpen strength is by judging the speed of the current in the Shit River they travel on every day.

Houston made it interesting in the bottom of the seventh when they picked up four runs, two on homers by Karter and Villar and an error by Miller on Fowler’s single that scored Altuve. In the eighth, Karter tripled, scoring Dominguez and was later driven in by Presley to make it 9-8. With the bases loaded and two out, Rodney came on and got Altuve to fly out to right. The Astros went quietly in the ninth and this battle of bad teams was over.

There were actually some bright spots. There was a decent-sized crowd. Keuchel was good, for a while. Karter got a couple of loud hits and didn’t strike out(!). Gonzalez got three hits, Villar got two and drove in three.

Dios mio, that bullpen es malo. Muy mal.

Fish Toss

Posted on May 3, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 5
Sea Cucumbers 4

contributed by NeilT

I’m obsessed with the Mariners. I don’t just hate them, I despise them. I loathe them. I can spend days thinking of nothing but their despicableness, their foulness, their utter . . . utter . . . Marinerness. I delight in their failures. And what holds for my feelings for the club holds double for their fans, the Gobs.

But my late father was the best of men, and he always said you couldn’t really understand others until you knew their story. “Walk a mile in their shoes,” he would say, “before you criticize.”

I needed to spend a day as a Seattlun. For one day in Houston, I would live the Seattle life.

I woke up early and went straight to yoga. I picked hot yoga, because I figured it was the weirdest kind of yoga that didn’t involve contact with other people’s body parts, and I figured weird would be the kind of yoga Seattluns would like. Have you been to hot yoga? I threw up once at hot yoga. The room smells, your mat smells, you smell. So does the person next to you. It was the perfect start to my Seattle day.

***
Not much happened in the first two innings. Altuve led-off with a double, but was stranded. King Felix got two Ks. Smoak–there’s something I’m supposed to remember about Seattluns and smoke–was the first Mariner on base with a walk in the second. King Felix struggled a bit in the second, giving up walks to Krauss and Dominguez.

***
On my way home from yoga, I passed State Senator Rodney Ellis in bike lycra riding his bike to work, and I remembered: it’s take your bike to work day. That was perfect, just the sort of thing a Seattlun would do. I took my shower in the yard under the irrigation system–it wasn’t raining so I had to improvise–loaded up my bike and drove to work.

***
Stuff happened for the Stros in the 3rd. Altuve led off with a bunt single, and the Stros scored two on three singles and an error.

***
On the way up the elevator I had a funny conversation with my partner. Just like a lot of Seattluns, this guy I share my life with is my partner. I actually have a lot of partners.

“Neil, are those yoga pants?” Well of course they were, I was a Seattlun for a day, and I told him so. “They don’t fit very well.” “They’re Kris’s,” I told him, “so are the sandals.”

“Birkenstocks aren’t they? They looked a little small.” I explained that you had to sacrifice for authenticity. I also explained that I didn’t have any wool socks, so the brown dress socks were the best I could do.

***
In the fourth Peacock looked like the 30-game winner that we know he is. Villar stole second but was stranded.

***
I went to Catalina coffee after my 9:00 conference call. I know Seattluns like coffee, but I couldn’t think of any coffee shops with ties to Seattle in Houston. Catalina was sure to be chock full of scenesters, and sure enough my yoga pants fit right in. So did my press-on compass neck tat. They didn’t serve granola though. I didn’t know what else Seattluns eat, so I had a chocolate croissant, which I like, with my cortado, which I didn’t know anything about but which sounded Northwestern.

***
In the 5th, Peacock struggled, giving up two on a Zunino homer. Zunino started on my fantasy team, but I felt no joy. The Astros took the lead again in the bottom of the 5th on a Krauss single to drive in Castro.

***
I wanted to go to Goro and Gun for lunch. I figured vegetarian ramen would be the very thing, but it turned out I had a lunch to go to. The lunch was banquet chicken, but I pretended it was tofu. It was lousy chicken but delicious tofu. There were engineers at my table. “I didn’t remember you had so many piercings” one of them said. They were fake, but I explained that all of us Seattluns had piercings.

***
In the 6th the Mariners went up on a two-run Seager double. Like every Astros game, the sold-out stands were packed equally with Mariners and Astros fans. “Did you see that, dude!” the guy next to me in the number 420 jersey for player “Smoke It” chortled. I took off the fake piercings.

***
I had another call in the afternoon and went back to my office. I ran into another of my partners in the elevator. “Neil,” he sounded concerned, “is that flannel?” I told him it was. “It’s an odd color for a shirt.” Teal and silver I explained. “And it matches the dye in your hair. Are you ok?”

***
The seventh came, the seventh went. Cisneros replaced Peacock for two outs, then Sipp came in for Cisneros. Sipp? Who is Sipp? King Felix was also done. The guy next to me did his yoga stretches, and I went off to the wash room to rinse out the dye and wash off the fake tat.

***
I had a package from REI at work, a new seat post for my road bike. It was just a little taste of Seattle. I left early and went to D & Q for a Pike’s Pale Amber Ale, from Seattle. I was also listening to Seattlun music as I drove around town today. I started out with that weird baby record by Nirvana, but something was wrong with the stereo and it sounded really distorted. I switched to Jimi Hendrix, but I have to admit, Jimi Hendrix is kinda cloying to me. Band of Horses sang that song that’s either about dumpsters or a horse with no name. Bill Frisell fiddled with pedals, and may or may not have played something. I liked the Fleet Foxes though.

***
Sipp–Sipp? SIPP!–pitched well through the bottom of the 8th striking out Hart and Smoak–Smoke? In the bottom of the 8th the Astros tied it on a walk and a single.

***
I love Airline Seafood. It is one of the finest places in Houston, and it sells great Gulf seafood. Normally I’d go and buy some fine redfish or grouper, maybe even snapper, and usually shrimp, but today I went and bought some salmon. “Will you throw it to me?” They are such good people, “we can throw you a whole fish if you want.” “No, I might miss the whole fish,” they had told me that a whole salmon was slippery.

He put my filet in a plastic bag, took a couple of steps back, and tossed me the salmon. I caught it.

Tie game.

***
SIPP! got the first runner in the 9th, then Qualls came in for SIPP! Bass replaced Qualls in the 10th and pitched through the 11th. The bullpen was outstanding. Defense was fine too, the whole game. It wasn’t just that there were no errors, there were fine double plays in the third and fourth. There was a bam-bam challenge call-out that was the highlight of the game in the top of the 10th, Altuve to Guzman. It was tight. Pitching was tight.

And in the bottom of the 11th Furbush—let’s not allow any cheap humor here, let’s have some empathy for Hoes—loaded the bases then allowed a Singleton Baltimore chop over the third baseman’s head to drive in the winning run. Astros 5, Sea Pricks 4.

***
I hate yoga pants on men. I hate granola. I find Nirvana inane, and Jimi Hendrix cloying. I don’t like King Felix’s neck tat, and Birkenstocks never fit right unless you’re wearing wool socks. And I hate the Mariners. When I fart, I face Cancun.

I’ve got to admit though, fish tossing is kinda fun.

The Number Came Up

Posted on May 1, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros get shut out by Nats 7-0

WP: Zimmermann (2-1)
LP: Oberholtzer (0-5)

contributed by Sphinx Drummond

BOX

All time Houston Astros great and future Hall of Famer Craig Biggio wore number seven. There are seven notes in the traditional Western diatonic scale. Agatha Christie wrote The Seven Dials Mystery and Seven Pillars of Wisdom is a book by T.E. Lawrence. Stephen Covey wrote The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. Someone spent seven years in Tibet and wrote a book about it.

In Islam there are seven heavens. The number of layers of the Earth in Islamic religion is seven. According to Hinduism, there are seven worlds in the universe, seven seas in the world and seven Rishies (seven gurus) called sapta rishis. Of course there are the so-called Seven Deadly Sins: lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, and pride. And the contrasting Seven Virtues: chastity, temperance, charity, diligence, kindness, patience, and humility. And the seven days it took to create this mess.

There were Seven Cities of Gold. Atlantis had seven islands. It is also the number of stellar objects in the solar system visible to the naked eye from Earth – the Sun, the Moon and the five classical naked eye planets: Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn.

Did you know almost all mammals have 7 cervical vertebrae? A seven-spot Ladybird has, you got it, seven spots. There is a Seinfeld episode “The Seven:” Seven is the name George Costanza desires to give his first-born, having allegedly promised this to the widow of baseball great Mickey Mantle (whose uniform number was 7). The 7th Inning stretch is attributed to the 27th U.S. President, William Howard Taft.

In Buddhism, Buddha walked 7 steps at his birth. The Seven Virgins mountain range is in Sri Lanka. Mahatma Gandhi’s list of the destructive Seven Blunders of the World that cause violence: Wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, religion without sacrifice and politics without principle.

In Galician folklore, a seventh son will be a werewolf.

The Astros got whacked by seven runs last night.

If you care to find out more about the game check out the Game Zone commentary. Thursday is an off day, Friday the Astros welcome the Sea Hags with Brad Peacock facing off against Felix Hernandez.

Damn, that Gandhi dude was smart.

Umpires: HP: Paul Schrieber. 1B: Will Little. 2B: Mark Carlson. 3B: Ted Barrett.
Weather: 74 degrees, partly cloudy.
Wind: 13 mph, In from CF.
T: 3:02.
Att: 25,172.
Venue: Minute Maid Park.

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