Quantcast
Channel: SB Nation - Toronto Blue Jays
Viewing all 2466 articles
Browse latest View live

Orioles ride Delmon Young's mastery of Mark Buehrle to 4-2 victory over Blue Jays

$
0
0

The Orioles kicked off a four-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays with a 4-2 victory on Thursday night. They opened up a lead in the first inning when Delmon Young homered off Mark Buehrle and they never looked back.

Coming into Thursday night's game, the Blue Jays had scored more runs than all but two other teams in baseball. In the first game of a four-game series, the Orioles countered with Kevin Gausman, whose debut last season was spoiled by the Blue Jays. Gausman triumphed this time around, turning in a strong six inning start to help the Orioles to a 4-2 victory against first place Toronto.

There was more than just the offense that looked to favor the Jays on paper. The Orioles also had to face the surprising Mark Buehrle, a plodding innings-eater who's turning in the year of his life at age 35. He came into the game with a 10-2 record and a 2.04 ERA, second best in the AL. With an average fastball velocity of 83.4mph, he fits the image of a dreaded lefty junkballer. Against those types, the Orioles must proceed carefully.

Naturally, that was prime time to insert Delmon Young into the lineup at the #2 spot. What on earth? There was method to the madness: Young, in his career, was 17-45 off of Buehrle, with two doubles and three home runs. That's nonsense, you might say, especially since the last of the home runs came in 2010, when Young was a much, well, younger man.

As it turned out, Young got his spot to shine in the first inning. Nick Markakis did what he does, getting a first inning hit so nobody would expect him to do anything else. Young stepped up to face Buehrle and walloped a fly ball that just kept carrying and carrying into the left field seats. This came two seconds after MASN broadcast duo Gary Thorne and Mike Bordick were discussing Young's history against Buehrle. "Push that button, Buck Showalter!" exclaimed Thorne, because he is the best, and possibly because he was inebriated.

Another run came in the third inning. The rally began with Manny Machado getting his first base hit in nearly a week. He doubled to right. With a man on second and no one out, Jonathan Schoop sacrificed to move him up, because we must constantly be reminded that to live is to suffer. Actually, Schoop may have been bunting for a base hit, but still, bunting is the worst.

At any rate, Machado was on third, which meant the Jays had to play the infield in to try to cut off the run at the plate. I see you out there with your hand waving in the wind. You are right, the Jays did not have to play the infield in. They chose to do so, probably because the batter was Caleb Joseph. All people underestimate Joseph at their peril. He drove a single between third and short to score Machado and plate the Orioles third run.

Staked to that lead, Gausman went to work. He did not do the Oriole thing and immediately give up the lead the next half inning. He did not give up the lead at all. Gausman worked his way around three walks over the first few innings, with none of the walks coming in to score - another very un-Oriole-like thing to do. It helps when you can reach back and throw 99mph. It helps a whole lot.

Over six innings, the Jays touched up Gausman for only one run. That came in the fifth inning, when Juan Francisco led off with a double into the right-center field gap. Anthony Gose tried to bunt his way on. He was thwarted thanks to a fine pounce-and-throw by Orioles catcher Joseph, who earned a post-game pie in the face. It was good pie, he said. Back to the game at hand, Gausman's defense helped him out one batter later: J.J. Hardy ran a long way to track down a pop-up by Jose Reyes that looked like it might fall into a Bermuda Triangle.

Gausman got two strikes on the next batter, Melky Cabrera, before throwing one of those 99mph heaters to try to finish him off. This was not a bad idea, but he left it in the middle of the plate and Cabrera smoked a single up the middle to score Francisco and put the Blue Jays on the board. Gausman very nearly gloved the liner, but he was just a little too late.

Over six innings, Gausman allowed only one run while giving up five hits and three walks. He struck out only three Jays batters. In general, you'd like to see more than that from a guy who can crank it up to 98-99, but it's hard to complain about tonight's results. On whether Gausman would be getting another start at the big league level, manager Buck Showalter was his usual cagey self post-game, telling reporters that Gausman "has done what it takes to be considered."

The Orioles added another run in the seventh inning when Markakis doubled off the out-of-town scoreboard to score Schoop, who had also doubled to reach. With two hits on the night, Markakis tied and passed Brian Roberts for seventh place on the all-time Orioles hits list. Now with 1,453 career hits as an Oriole, he sits two behind Ken Singleton for sixth place.

In the eighth inning, the Jays got one run back off of Ryan Webb, but it was never a hold on to your butts kind of game, not even when former Team Steve standout Steve Tolleson reached on an infield single in the ninth. Zach Britton induced a double-play grounder by pinch hitter Darin Mastroianni and the game was over. The save was Britton's sixth of the year.

With their second straight win, the Orioles pulled a game closer to the first place Jays. They now sit 3.5 games back. They'll look to make it three straight on Friday night behind... oh, geez. It's Ubaldo Jimenez's turn to start. Well, okay. Toronto sends Drew Hutchison to the mound, who has allowed five runs in two of his last three starts. That sounds promising enough.

Poll
Who was the Most Birdland Player for June 12, 2014?

  423 votes |Results


Cubs Minor League Wrap: June 12

$
0
0

Kane County continues to be the bright spot in the Cubs system.

Tomorrow night the Boise Hawks start their season. Just so you know that, because the nightly wraps are going to appear later in the evening most nights. Iowa is on the West Coast right now anyway.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs lost to the Fresno Grizzlies (Giants), 5-2.

Starter Eric Jokisch gave up a grand slam in the fifth inning to Joe Panik, after the Grizzlies loaded the bases on two infield singles and a walk. His final line for the night was five runs on five hits over six innings. He walked four and struck out four.

First baseman Chris Valaika hit a solo home run in the sixth inning, his fifth of the season. Valaika was 1 for 4.

Left fielder Josh Vitters was 2 for 4.

Tennessee Smokies

The Tennessee Smokies fell to the Mississippi Braves, 4-2.

Dae-Eun Rhee pitched the first six innings and allowed two runs on six hits. He walked three and struck out two.

Zach Cates took the loss when he allowed two unearned runs in the seventh inning, but it was his own error so he's got no one to blame but himself. Cates tossed two-thirds of an inning and walked two batters but did not allow a hit. Both outs he recorded were sacrifice bunts.

Center fielder Rubi Silva went 2 for 4 with an RBI triple. Third baseman Kris Bryant went 1 for 3 with a double and a walk. He scored both of Tennessee's runs.

Daytona Cubs

The Daytona Cubs were swept in a doubleheader by the Dunedin Blue Jays5-1 and 5-2.

In game one, Tayler Scott started and took the loss. Scott pitched 4.2 innings and allowed five runs on six hits, including back-to-back solo home runs in the fifth inning. Scott walked five and struck out three.

Daytona did not have a hit in this game before Wes Darvill hit a solo home run in the sixth inning. Darvill was 1 for 1 with a walk. Willson Contreras got the only other Daytona hit in the seventh.

In game two, starter Nathan Dorris got hammered for five runs on five hits in 2.1 innings. He walked two and struck out one.

Left fielder Zeke DeVoss hit an RBI double in the sixth inning, stole third and scored on a sacrifice fly. He was 1 for 2 with a walk.

Kane County Cougars

The Kane County Cougars turned the hoses on the Peoria Chiefs (Cardinals), 4-1.

Juan Paniagua was on his game tonight as he threw six scoreless innings and allowed only three hits. He struck out six and walked one as he improved his record to 3-3.

James Pugliese struck out the side in the ninth for his second save.

Second baseman Danny Lockhart was 2 for 4 with an RBI. Center fielder Trey Martin was 2 for 4 with a run scored. He also stole a base. And left fielder Shawon Dunston was 2 for 4 with an RBI and a run scored.

The win over Peoria puts the Chiefs two games out of a playoff spot with three games to play in the first half.

Around the A.L. East - Orioles, Yankees gain a little ground on Blue Jays

$
0
0

The standings didn't end all that different than they started after another week of play in the East.

W-L20146/6-6/12GB
Blue Jays39-292-5-
Orioles34-314-33.5
Yankees34-314-23.5
Red Sox30-363-48
Rays25-422-513.5


1. Toronto Blue Jays

SBN Blog: Bluebird Banter
2014 record: 39-29
2014 RS/RA: 323/290 (+33)
6/6-6/12 RS/RA: 12/30 (-18)

Week in Review

The Jays finally cooled off a little bit this week, dropping two of three to both the Cardinals and Twins before dropping last night's contest against the Orioles.  Their offense scuffled a bit, getting shut out for three of the five losses, and their pitchers combined for less than three runs allowed only once.  So maybe this team is finally coming back to earth, although the rest of the East doesn't appear to be especially eager to capitalize on it.

Toronto will finish out the series here in Baltimore, then head right up the coast to play three against the Yankees in New York.

2. Baltimore Orioles

2014 record: 34-31
2014 RS/RA: 278/277 (+1)
6/6-6/12 RS/RA: 24/21 (+3)

Week in Review

The Orioles kept doing what they do, dropping two of three to Oakland before winning two against Boston and notching the first contest against Toronto.  Another .500ish week, though, was enough to pick up a couple games on division-leading Toronto following their not-so-hot week.  Limiting Boston to one run for an entire series was nothing to sneeze at, even with the team overall still frustrating, and even if the Red Sox offense isn't what it used to be.

The Orioles play three more against Toronto to close out an extended homestand, then ship on down to Florida to play three against the Rays.

3. New York Yankees

SBN Blog: Pinstripe Alley
2014 record: 34-31
2014 RS/RA: 262/287 (-25)
6/6-6/12 RS/RA: 22/19 (+3)

Week in Review

The Yankees had themselves a nice week, picking up a couple games on Toronto and moving into a tie with the Orioles.  Their offense still isn't putting up big numbers with all its injuries -- they only scored more than four runs in a game once -- but their pitching is keeping them in most contests, with everyone except David Phelps keeping the Yankees in striking distance this week.

New York will finish a short west coast swing with a three-game set in Oakland, then return home to face Toronto in the Bronx before the Orioles roll into town the following weekend.

4. Boston Red Sox

SBN Blog: Over the Monster
2014 record: 30-36
2014 RS/RA: 259/281 (-22)
6/6-6/12 RS/RA: 19/30 (-11)

Week in Review

Another tough week in Beantown, with the Sox dropping two out of three to Detroit and the Orioles alike.  Boston scored some runs in Detroit (13 runs in three games), but just got outscored twice as their pitching faltered a bit.  Then their bats went totally dead in Baltimore, scoring one run in the whole series even as the Orioles pitchers giften them baserunners all over the place.  If that one run didn't come in a 1-0 shutout in a rain-delayed Brandon Workman start, the week would look a lot uglier for the Sox.  Snagging the first game of a four-game set against Cleveland helped, too.

Boston will finish out that Cleveland series, then host the Twins for three games, an easier run that might let them get something back together.

5. Tampa Bay Rays

SBN Blog: DRays Bay
2014 record: 25-42
2014 RS/RA: 242/294 (-52)
6/6-6/12 RS/RA: 14/19 (-5)

Week in Review

The Rays' miserable season continued, dropping three out of four to the Mariners and splitting a two game set with the Cardinals.  They were shut out on three consecutive days and for 31 consecutive innings.  The Rays' two wins both came on starts from our old friend Erik Bedard, who's lowered his season ERA below 4.

It will be interesting to see if the Rays go into seller mode soon, to load up on prospects for next year with trade bait like Ben Zobrist and David Price.  In the meantime, Tampa will head to Houston and play the Astros this week, then host the Orioles for a three-game set Monday-Wednesday.

1999: Bobby V sits while Rey-Rey hits

$
0
0

This week in 1999: Bobby V sits a few out and Rey Ordoñez lets his hair change his mind.

The Mets were once again embroiled in controversy as they began a six-game road trip in Cincinnati on June 14. There was the aftermath of Bobby Valentine's costumed antics, of course, but other culprits chipped in to add to the mess.

During the Mets' season-endangering eight-game losing streak, an unnamed player spoke out against Valentine's ever shifting lineups. The subject came up once again, and this time Rickey Henderson eschewed anonymity. The future Hall of Famer had seen his playing time curtailed by the dual emergence of Roger Cedeño and Benny Agbayani, and per usual, he wasn't inclined to keep his opinions to himself. "It seems like it’s two days on, one day off," Henderson griped about the frequency of his starts. "I don’t know the system. And I may need to go ask about the system. Because I would just like to know the system, just to be on the same page."

On top of this, rumors continued to swirl that Bobby Bonilla was benched when the Mets hosted the Blue Jays, the reported reason being his refusal to pinch hit during the second game of that series. The next day, the outfielder and his manager had engaged in a shouting match prior to the 14-inning game that ended with Valentine playing dress up. (He also exchanged angry words with Newsday reporter Marty Noble around the same time; his lungs were getting quite a workout.) This would explain why Bonilla was never used as a pinch hitter during that marathon while pitcher Jason Isringhausen was told to be ready to pinch run in the wee hours.

Bobby V and Bobby B held a closed-door meeting to clear the air, with GM Steve Phillips playing peacemaker, hoping things could be patched up and he wouldn't have to release him and eat his contract. Shortly thereafter, Bonilla made a brief appearance during the Mets' series against Boston, hitting a pinch hit single in extra innings. He was removed for a pinch runner and seen exchanging an awkward high five with his manager. The endless controversies were enough to prompt an unnamed Mets exec to wonder aloud to the Times, "Is this the way it was with the Yankees?"

Bonilla received a rare starting nod in the series opener in Cincinnati, as Valentine took advantage of his team's recent hot streak to give rest to regulars like Mike PIazza and John Olerud. The compromised offense stranded 10 runners, and the bullpen allowed things to get out of hand, the biggest blow a three-run homer by Aaron Boone off of Turk Wendell, in an eventual 8-4 loss.

The Mets' big bats were out in full force the next night, however, as they tied a franchise record by belting six homers in a nine-inning game. Henderson hit the 74th leadoff homer of his illustrious career and drove another one out in the seventh ("It's brilliant, isn't it?" Henderson said of his feat), while Piazza, Olerud, Edgardo Alfonzo, and Matt Franco also went deep in an 11-3 drubbing. Rick Reed pitched well despite suffering from kidney stones, an ordeal the Daily Newschose to discuss in disturbingly graphic detail.

While the Mets' bats got angry, Valentine received the news that the appeal of his suspension for reentering the dugout incognito was denied, and he would have to begin serving his punishment immediately. He watched the final game in Cincinnati at Cinergy Field's press box, trading his uniform for a checkered suit that reminded Mike Piazza of Connie Mack. He did so under the careful watch of Phillips, who brought along assistant GM Omar Minaya for backup. Managing in Valentine's absence, coach Bruce Benedict was so nervous he left the clubhouse hatless, then could only scrounge up a batting practice cap. The hitters didn't notice his uni snafu, as they smacked six doubles in a 5-2 victory.

Benedict went a flawless 2-for-2 in his brief managerial stint when the Mets won their first game in St. Louis on June 17 by the score of 4-3, though John Franco nearly let the game get away from him by putting the winning run on base in the bottom of the ninth with nobody out. (Dennis Cook was forced to clean up his mess.)

Valentine returned to the helm the next night and watched the Mets take another nailbiter. New York jumped to a 5-0 lead before the bullpen nearly spit the bit again. Mark McGwire came to bat in the bottom of the eighth as the tying run, and Armando Benitez fell behind him 3-0, only to fight back to get a called strike three to end the inning, a borderline call that sent Cardinals skipper Tony La Russa over the edge. After a Piazza homer extended the Mets' advantage, Benitez earned the save in a 6-2 win.

The offensive explosion of the late 1990s led to increased game times for all teams. All season, the Mets had repeatedly threatened to play their longest nine-inning game ever and finally did so on June 18, when a tight strike zone and general mound mediocrity combined for a staggering 372 pitches thrown and a nearly four-hour running time. A rough outing from Jason Isringhausen put the Mets in arrears 7-2 after five innings before they launched a comeback attempt, only to fall just short, 7-6. Piazza likened the game to "a walk across the desert. As soon as you see some water, it’s not there. It’s a mirage."

In the St. Louis finale, the Mets found themselves trailing 6-2 going into the top of the sixth when a five-run rally put them on top. They tacked on late to win 9-6, a victory whose biggest offensive star was Rey Ordoñez, of all people. The shortstop went 3-for-4 and took advantage of some shoddy Cardinals defense to score from second on an infield single—twice. He scored the Mets' first run when he ran all the way home on a slow roller by Roger Cedeño, abetted by first baseman McGwire, who had to his back to the plate and never bothered to turn his attention homeward until it was too late. Ordoñez also hit a two-run single that tied the score at 6. Cedeño followed with another slow grounder that prompted a foot race between the hitter and reliever Rick Croushore. The speedy Cedeño won the sprint while Croushore fell over in foul territory, then watched helplessly from a seated position as Ordoñez dashed home with the go-ahead run.

Ordoñez was usually allergic to lumber but was lately experiencing a rare spot of offensive non-futility. During the team's ugly losing streak, he dyed his hair bright orange and had been hot with the bat ever since, hitting an astonishing (for him) .294 since his visit to the salon. He'd raised so many eyebrows that he was now second in all star balloting, trailing only the NL's All Star Shortstop For Life, Barry Larkin.

This was surely more coincidence than causation, though Rey was inclined to see a connection. He admitted he felt more relaxed now that his clashes with Bobby Valentine and concerns over job security were in the rear view, but also surmised, "Maybe the hair changed my mind,"

The American League East Teams and Their World Cup Twins

$
0
0

With the World Cup beginning yesterday with a SPOILER ALERT 3-1 victory for hosts Brazil over Croatia, many baseball fans will be splitting time between their usual following of their favourite baseball teams as well as keeping tabs on their adopted country for the biggest tournament in the world. It seems like a perfect time to combine the two sports and find the World Cup team that fans of each of the American League East teams should be cheering for down in Brazil. If the current standings are any indication, then whoever matches up with the Blue Jays is winning the crown, while the Rays twin is likely crashing and burning out of the group stages. Without further ado, let's get matching!

Boston Red Sox - Brazil

It doesn't get a whole lot easier than this. First the argument in GIF form!

Brazil cheats:

Boston cheats:

8704381479_6387415d3f_o_medium

via cdn1.sbnation.com

Boston and Brazil both have massive fan bases and people who aren't from the specific geographical location of these teams still cheer for them because they win! Ask a random person wearing a Brazil jersey in Iowa who is on the team and they probably answer Ronaldinho, while the answer to the same guy in a Red Sox jersey likely ends up being Manny Ramirez.

Unfortunately for people who love to hate these teams, they've both won major tournaments in the past year. The Red Sox of course brought home the World Series last fall and Brazil won the Confederations Cup last summer. If the 2014 Red Sox are any indication, Brazil better savour their trophy from last year because it doesn't seem likely they'll get another one just a month from today.

New York Yankees - Uruguay

This selection is a little tougher because you essentially have to answer the question, "What World Cup squad does everyone hate". The answer to that varies from region to region, but it's a safe bet that almost everyone dislikes Luis Suarez for all of his racistbitinghandball shenanigans in the past couple years. The Yankees and Uruguay both have likeable players such as Edinson Cavani and Ichiro alongside veterans that everyone at least respects in Diego Forlan and Derek Jeter. But the sum of the parts is so putrid, that it's impossible not to root against them every time they take the field. Both teams are usually in the discussion for winning trophies, but oftentimes they end up falling just short allowing everyone else in the world to breathe a huge sigh of relief.

Baltimore Orioles - Netherlands

The Baltimore Orioles and the Dutch National Team both find themselves in weird positions currently, with an unpredictable mix of young and old providing the possibility of challenging for a title, but more likely just staying in contention before being eliminated by more experienced competition. Veterans like Nelson Cruz and Arjen Robben provide the skill and experience needed to make deep runs. They also are similar in the fact that Nelson Cruz can only bat from the right side of the plate, while Robben can only do things with his left foot likely including walking and driving.

They also have skilled players with question marks over their heads because they do crazy things, such as:

Ninjakick2_medium

via assets.sbnation.com

THESE SORTS OF ACTIVITIES ARE AGAINST THE RULES!

Cheer for Netherlands and Baltimore if you want to see them in a World Cup quarterfinal or a MLB Wild Card game (or if you're Woodman663).

Tampa Bay Rays - Belgium

The easiest connection between an American League East team and a World Cup squad has to be Tampa Bay and Belgium. Both teams are oh so 'sexy' and are loved by people who want to cheer for a team that is under the radar. The people saying Belgium goalie Thibaut Courtois is the best keeper in the world are the same people saying Ben Zobrist is the most underrated player in baseball. They may be right, but they may also be annoying. Both teams were also horrid for a long period of time and fans had lost hope before a new wave of talent came along like Eden Hazard and David Price.

Both squads looked like contenders for championships entering 2014, but if Tampa Bay is any indication, Belgium is about to be demolished by Algeria, Russia, and South Korea. Don't cheer for the cool Belgians, it's not worth the heartache!

Toronto Blue Jays - Argentina

The Blue Jays and Argentina have serious talent. Lionel Messi and Jose Bautista are arguably the top players in their respective sports, but it hasn't come together yet when it matters the most. Argentina should be good, but they haven't made it to the World Cup Final since 1990, while the Blue Jays obviously haven't done anything since 1993. While there's a ton of talent on the field, the teams have never come together to do anything serious and 2014 could be the year it all works out for Argentina and Toronto.

See the resemblance?

Messidestroyssbn_medium_medium

via cdn0.sbnation.com

Jbhomer_medium

via gamereax.com

So if you're a Blue Jays fan without a World Cup squad, cheer for Messi and the Argentineans. If you already have a dog in the fight let us know in the comments. Personally, I'll be cheering for Les Éléphants of Ivory Coast. Enjoy the baseball and enjoy the soccer!


Around The Nest Blue Jays Minor League Question Thread - Week 11

$
0
0

It's always great to see players in the minor leagues progress and do well. Last summer in late August, I visited Lansing and got a chance to chat with Daniel Norris, who had just come off of a frightening comebacker to the mound. A couple weeks later he was promoted to Dunedin to end the season. This season, starting in Dunedin, he has just been dealing, ending the first half of the Florida State League season with a one-hit no-run effort over five innings. He is now off to the FSL All-Star game. It will be interesting to see if he returns to Dunedin in the second half, or if he will get a promotion to double-A New Hampshire to fill the vacant spot left by the promotion of Aaron Sanchez.

I'm sure both Norris and Sanchez will get a good share of air time on this week's Around The Nest podcast. Hosted by Lugnuts broadcaster Jesse Goldberg-Strassler and joined by the broadcasters from every active affiliate in the Blue Jays organization, Around The Nest gives Jays fans a weekly look into the goings-on in their farm system. You can ask the broadcasters your questions in this question thread, and they will do their best to answer as many as the can on the air.

You can tune in for their live broadcast using this link this Friday at 5 pm Eastern, and the same link will point you to a downloadable version after the live show wraps up.

Today, Jesse will be joined by broadcasters from Dunedin, New Hampshire, Buffalo, and Lansing. And at the end, the Bluefield Blue Jays' new broadcaster Kevin Fitzgerald will make his Around The Nest debut!

So, after a busy week of promotions and drafts and trades, I'm sure you have a bunch of questions to ask the broadcasters. What are you waiting for? Go write them down in the comments below!

Blue Jays 4 @ Orioles 0: Drew Hutchison and the Blue Jays Shutout Orioles

$
0
0

Blue Jays 4 @ Orioles 0

The Blue Jays got back on the winning track tonight with a 4-0 win over the Baltimore Orioles. The victory brings the Blue Jays record to 40-29 and makes them the second team in the American League to break the 40-win plateau. It also widens the gap between Toronto and Baltimore to 4.5 games. If you're keeping score at home, the Blue Jays scored one less run against the Baltimore Orioles tonight than the Dutch National Team scored against Spain this afternoon.

On offence, Juan Francisco's two-run home run in the second inning drove home Brett Lawrie after he walked to give the Blue Jays an early lead. A 20-minute rain delay after the seventh inning slowed things down, but the game resumed and the offence got to work right away. In the eighth against Tommy Hunter, a walk, error, and wild pitch scored Anthony Gose, while Jose Reyes scored shortly thereafter on a Jose Bautista single.

On the pitching side of the ball Drew Hutchison was pretty good, going 7.0 innings before the rain delay ensured he wasn't coming out for the eighth. He allowed six hits and struck out three, while walking zero bringing his ERA down to 3.62 in the process. Hutchison pounded the strike zone throwing 70 of his 96 pitches for strikes and forcing the Orioles hitters into pitcher's counts. For Baltimore, Ubaldo Jimenez was not very good, but the Blue Jays were unable to do much damage to him. Jimenez went 6.0 innings striking out just two, while tying a season-high with five walks. The only runs Toronto scored on the right-hander were the two from Francisco's home run.

Brett Cecil relieved Hutchison in the eighth and made things interesting allowing a couple singles before hurting himself. If we're being honest, I was watching hockey at the time, but:

Dustin McGowan came in for Cecil (who actually hurt his groin) with men on first and second before getting the final strike needed to strikeout Chris Davis. Nelson Cruz then grounded out in a close play that was reviewed after Edwin Encarnacion's foot slipped off the bag just as he was catching the ball. McGowan came out again for the ninth and allowed just a single to bat-thrower Manny Machado before getting Delmon Young to fly out to end the game. Since the tying run was on deck when McGowan entered the game, he actually received his first MLB save. What a feel-good story he has been this year.


Source: FanGraphs

Jays of the Day are Drew Hutchison (+.450 WPA) and Juan Francisco (+.147).

Suckage Jay is Adam Lind (-.115), but I just realized he has a .331 batting average on the season so I don't really want to give him one.

Tomorrow is a 4:05 pm start in the third game of the four-game set, with R.A. Dickey taking on righty Bud Norris. See ya then!

Orioles can't overcome five walks by Ubaldo Jimenez, or score at all, in 4-0 loss to Blue Jays

$
0
0

Ubaldo Jimenez walked five batters in six innings in a 4-0 Orioles loss to the Blue Jays on Friday night. Jimenez only allowed two runs, but the Orioles scored no runs, so that was that.

When I was a little kid, my parents would take me to the zoo in Baltimore. As we made our way through the various zoo exhibits, we would invariably end the day by going through the hippo house. It is the worst thing I have ever smelled, an enclosed space where the stench of hippos permeated completely. There was no skipping the trip in to the hippo house, because where else are you going to be in close proximity to a hippopotamus? You have to see the hippos while you can.

I mention all of this tonight because Ubaldo Jimenez is the pitching equivalent of hippopotamus shit. Sometimes I might go into the hippopotamus house and not be as offended by the smell as my worst memory, but still, at all times, I was fully aware that I was being buffeted by the smell of hippo in a controlled environment. In much the same way, there are days where you can watch Jimenez and he's less terrible than the worst you've seen him, but you still can't escape the basic fact that he is what he is.

The big difference between the hippopotamus and Jimenez is that the hippo is this exotic creature from a distant, not-easily-accessible ecosystem, where Jimenez is just a pitcher who looks terrible. We have seen plenty of those pitchers and we do not care to see more.

The Orioles lost Friday's game to the Blue Jays by a 4-0 score. They were never in the game, would never be in the game. The hitters turned in one of their trademark pathetic performances, this time against Jays starter Drew Hutchison. And then, on the other hand ... Jimenez.

If you didn't watch him, if you're only checking the box score, you might not be aware of how bad he looked. If you saw those hippos through glass, you would not know the smell, either. Jimenez only gave up two runs in six innings, which is, on a results-based level, not so bad. That is a quality start, and it is not the bare minimum, 4.50 ERA.

The reason for that is that Ubaldo is a lucky man. He plays on the team that has turned more double plays than any other team in baseball. With guys like Jimenez pitching, they get plenty of chances with a man on first. They turned two in support of Jimenez tonight. This is the kind of thing you need to happen when your starting pitcher walks five batters in six innings. How does that even happen? The Orioles hitters are lucky to get five walks in 60 innings. They had no walks tonight.

It was the fourth start of the season where Jimenez has walked five batters. You have to work to get that outcome.

In retrospect, the game was over after Juan Francisco homered off Jimenez in the second inning, immediately following a one-out walk to Brett Lawrie. The Orioles never scored in the game, so 2-0 would have held for the night. More on that in a minute. Right after giving up that home run, Jimenez walked the next batter. Why does he hate us? The defense bailed him out with one of the double plays, but the damage was done.

Jimenez gave up only three hits in his six innings. The five free passes hurt. Even when a good-hitting team like the Jays swings at Jimenez's offerings, they had a hard time putting it safely in play. It's just, the free passes. They hurt.

As for the Orioles hitters, well, you're probably going to lose most of the time when you go 1-11 with runners in scoring position, which is precisely what they did tonight. The lone hit with RISP was an infield single by Manny Machado. No runs were coming in from second on that play. In a particularly frustrating sequence in the seventh inning, J.J. Hardy led off with a double and never advanced. Machado and Jonathan Schoop flew out by hacking at garbage on the first pitch. It hurts so much.

Adding to the night's misfortune was an appearance by Tommy Hunter, who was determined to show why he was kicked out of the closing role. Actually, he got one scoreless inning, but then came out for the next one and things did not go so well. Hunter issued a walk to Anthony Gose, who ended up on third after Hunter could not field a grounder by Jose Reyes. The error on the play actually was charged to Schoop, who couldn't field Hunter's half-hearted deflection, but whatever.

Gose scored on a wild pitch, which moved Reyes up to second. Reyes moved up to third on a groundout, in position to easily score when Jose Bautista floated a single to center. That gets us to our 4-0 final score.

The best scoring chance for the Orioles came in the fourth inning. Adam Jones led off with a single and moved up a base on a groundout. Unfortunately, Jones then delivered a TOOTBLAN (thrown out on the basepath like a nincompoop), taking off for third on a grounder to shortstop. Reyes threw to third, where Jones was tagged out. Maybe if he was on third, then Hardy would have still singled and scored him. Instead, the Orioles got nothing.

Four Orioles batters had multi-hit games, including a three-hit effort by Machado, and two-hit games by Hardy, Jones, and Steve Pearce. Every time Pearce plays, you wonder why he doesn't play more. The problem for the Orioles was that every other Oriole had a no-hit game. That's a good recipe for getting shut out.

The series is even up at one game apiece. They continue Saturday afternoon at 4:05, with Bud Norris starting for the Orioles against R.A. Dickey of the Jays. A plague fell upon the Orioles knuckleballers on Friday, with minor leaguer Eddie Gamboa being suspended 50 games for a positive PED test, and UMBC product Zach Clark being released. Maybe some of that bad knuckleballer juju will mean a poor performance for Dickey.

Please exit through the gift shop. A portion of the proceeds from every sale will go towards the preservation of good starting pitchers in their natural habitat.


Sergio Santos activated, Darin Mastroianni sent down

Orioles ride sixth straight quality start, and a Chris Davis home run, to 3-2 victory over Blue Jays

$
0
0

Bud Norris, with a little help from his friends, turned in the Orioles' sixth straight quality start and got his sixth win as the Orioles beat the Blue Jays, 3-2, on Saturday afternoon.

The Orioles entered Saturday's game riding a streak of five straight quality starts from their pitchers. Bud Norris was up to try to make it six in a row. With a little help from his friends, he did just that. Thanks to the Orioles coming through with some timely hitting, he got a win for his trouble, too, as the Orioles closed out a nail-biter over the Toronto Blue Jays by a 3-2 margin.

Solid starting pitching has come out of nowhere, given that it was the weakness of the Orioles team for most all of the year. It is a team effort, which was on full display in the very first inning with an inning-ending double play that came after leadoff batter Jose Reyes reached with a single. That was the 82nd double play of the year that the Orioles have turned. They continue to lead the majors in double plays turned.

In the bottom of the first, the O's looked to be back to their old tricks, squandering a gift of a scoring opportunity. Nick Markakis opened up with a single and squeaked into third base as Manny Machado doubled. That gave the O's second and third with no one out and their 3-4-5 hitters due up. Adam Jones flew out to center, not deep enough to risk trying to score Markakis. Then came a pair of first pitch hack jobs from Chris Davis (weak liner to short) and Nelson Cruz (popout to third).

One day after going 1-11 with runners in scoring position in a shutout, it looked like the frustration was going to continue. They continued this pattern in the third inning, when a one-out walk from Markakis followed by a single by Machado amounted to nothing at all.

The Blue Jays took advantage of a less than sharp second inning from Norris to get on the board first in the game. Adam Lind and Edwin Encarnacion each hit singles. Norris hit Brett Lawrie with a pitch, which is kind of understandable in a general sense because he seems like a huge douchebag, but is less than advisable when it will result in the bases loaded with no one out. He then walked knuckleball catcher Josh Thole to force in a run and put the Blue Jays up 1-0.

Rather than slip into disaster, though, he came through to strike out Anthony Gose and then fielded a comebacker from Reyes to end the inning with minimal damage. The Jays did not get another runner into scoring position until the seventh inning, when they mustered a two-out rally to chase Norris from the game. Darren O'Day came on to spoil their plans. He did so.

With Norris good for 6.2 innings and only one run surrendered, that made the sixth straight quality start for the Orioles rotation. The starting pitchers now have a 2.28 ERA in the nine games of the homestand. That will do, indeed. Credit to manager Buck Showalter for pulling Norris just about right when he should have been pulled, giving him the chance to finish the seventh but being ready to pounce when he couldn't.

Norris left the game with a lead thanks to the Orioles reversing their recent woes with RISP. They got on the board with a run manufactured almost solely by Delmon Young in the fourth inning. Young hit a one-out single, then motored around to third base on a blooper by Ryan Flaherty. Who knew the big guy could run like that? Since he'd gotten himself up to third, he was able to score on a sacrifice fly by Nick Hundley. Not everyone on the team is always able to go first to third. Young did and it helped the Orioles tie the game at 1-1.

The Orioles took the lead for good the next inning. Jones reached thanks to an error by third baseman Juan Francisco, his seventh of the season. The throwing error allowed Jones to get to second base, though  not without bowling over first base umpire Hunter Wendelstedt in the process. Wendelstedt was none the worse for wear.

As it turned out, it didn't matter which base Jones was on. The knuckleballing sensation R.A. Dickey floated a pitch to Chris Davis in the wrong place and Davis mashed it into the Orioles bullpen, where Tommy Hunter grabbed it before it could land in the Blue Jays bullpen. That was Davis' eleventh home run of the season, and the major league-leading 18th home run of June for the Orioles as a whole. They are now 29-15 when they hit a home run.

The Jays pulled back a run in a dramatic eighth inning. O'Day hit Jose Bautista to lead off the top of the eighth. With one out, Edwin Encarnacion hit a double down the left field line that rolled all the way to the wall. With Cruz lumbering towards the ball, Jays third base coach Luis Rivera thought this was the time to test Cruz's arm. Cruz picked up the ball and fired in to the cutoff man Hardy, who then relayed the ball home to Hundley just in time for Hundley to slap a tag on Bautista.

Jays manager John Gibbons talked the umpires into initiating a crew chief review as to whether Hundley was blocking home plate. Hundley was not blocking home plate by any stretch of the imagination; the very request was nothing more than the hope of a fool - though it took replay central a minute and 41 seconds to signal what everyone should have seen within five seconds: Bautista was out any way you slice it.

Encarnacion ended up scoring anyway because relievers are fallible, as are all humans. Brian Matusz came on in relief and walked pinch hitter and former Team Steve standout Steve Tolleson, getting himself the NOOGY (No Out Guy) award for being completely and totally useless in every way. Having failed at his job, he was lifted for Ryan Webb, who unfortunately allowed Lawrie to single in a run.

Thole hit a sinking line drive to left field and it looked like the Jays might tie the game, but Cruz made a nice diving catch to save the run and possibly the game.

Holding on to a 3-2 lead in the ninth, the Orioles summoned closer Zach Britton, who was chucking in sinkers at up to 97 miles per hour. He walked Reyes with one out, then induced the 6-4-3 double play to end the game and get the Orioles back in the win column.

Following the game, Hundley received the now-traditional pie in the face for no apparent reason other than that he was the one MASN grabbed for a post-game interview.

The O's and Blue Jays will play the final game of the four-game series on Sunday afternoon at 1:35. Chris Tillman gets the ball for the Orioles, opposite Toronto's J.A. Happ.

Poll
Who was the Most Birdland Player for June 14, 2014?

  6 votes |Results

Two-Start Pitchers: Week 12 (June 16-22)

$
0
0

Ranking and tiering the two-start pitchers for Week 12, including Jon Niese, Jake Odorizzi and Marcus Stroman.

My Week 11 recommendations might have been my worst yet, but that won't keep me from trying again. Francisco Liriano was a risk going in, I admit, but even I can't predict injuries (although in Liriano's case, the argument is less convincing); Jason Vargas lost his two-start status, but pitched well against the Indians (7 2/3 innings, six hits, three runs, no walks, five strikeouts); Ryan Vogelsong gave up nine runs in 11 innings, falling one inning short of a quality start on Saturday.

Season Results (through Week 11)

26-14
7.01 K/9
2.32 BB/9
3.32 ERA
1.10 WHIP

Start!

Max Scherzer: Tue-KC (Ventura), Sun-@CLE (Tomlin)
Masahiro Tanaka: Tue-TOR (Stroman), Sun-BAL (Chen)
Johnny Cueto: Tue-@PIT (Cumpton), Sun-TOR (Stroman)
Adam Wainwright: Mon-NYM (DeGrom), Sat-PHI (Hamels)

Tier 1

Cole Hamels: Mon-@ATL (Teheran), Sat-@STL (Wainwright)
Julio Teheran: Mon-PHI (Hamels), Sat-@WSH (Fister)
Michael Wacha: Tue-NYM (Niese), Sun-PHI (Kendrick)
Dallas Keuchel: Tue-@WSH (Roark), Sun-@TB (Bedard)
Jon Lester: Tue-MIN (Hughes), Sun-@OAK (Milone)
Tyson Ross: Mon-@SEA (Young), Sat-LAD (Beckett)
Jason Hammel: Mon-@MIA (Koehler), Sun-PIT (Cumpton)

Tier 2

Tanner Roark: Tue-HOU (Keuchel), Sun-ATL (Santana)
Phil Hughes: Tue-@BOS (Lester), Sun-CWS (Danks)
Hyun-Jin Ryu: Mon-COL (Matzek), Sun-@SD (Stults)
Jered Weaver: Tue-@CLE (Tomlin), Sun-TEX (Lewis)
Jonathon Niese: Tue-@STL (Wacha), Sun-@MIA (Turner)
Ervin Santana: Tue-PHI (Kendrick), Sun-@WSH (Roark)
Justin Verlander: Mon-KC (Vargas), Sat-@CLE (Bauer)
Jake Odorizzi: Mon-BAL (Chen), Sat-HOU (Peacock)
Marcus Stroman: Tue-@NYY (Tanaka), Sun-@CIN (Cueto)
Kyle Lohse: Tue-@ARI (Miley), Sun-@COL (TBD)

Tier 3

Trevor Bauer: Mon-LAA (Shoemaker), Sat-DET (Verlander)
Yordano Ventura: Tue-@DET (Scherzer), Sun-SEA (Elias)
Jacob deGrom: Mon-@STL (Wainwright), Sat-@MIA (Koehler)
Drew Pomeranz: Mon-TEX (Lewis), Sat-BOS (De La Rosa)
Wei-Yin Chen: Mon-@TB (Odorizzi), Sun-@NYY (Tanaka)
Jason Vargas: Mon-@DET (Verlander), Sat-SEA (Young)
John Danks: Tue-SF (Cain), Sun-@MIN (Hughes)
Tommy Milone: Tue-TEX (Darvish), Sun-BOS (Lester)
Rubby De La Rosa: Mon-MIN (Correia), Sat-@OAK (Pomeranz)
Wade Miley: Tue-MIL (Lohse), Sun-SF (Bumgarner)
Wily Peralta: Mon-@ARI (McCarthy), Sat-@COL (Nicasio)
Brandon McCarthy: Mon-MIL (Peralta), Sat-SF (Vogelsong)
Roenis Elias: Tue-SD (Stults), Sun-@KC (Ventura)

Not this week

Erik Bedard: Tue-BAL (TBD), Sun-HOU (Keuchel)
Kevin Correia: Mon-@BOS (De La Rosa), Sat-CWS (Rienzo)
Brandon Cumpton: Tue-CIN (Cueto), Sun-@CHC (Hammel)
Kyle Kendrick: Tue-@ATL (Santana), Sun-@STL (Wacha)
Tom Koehler: Mon-CHC (Hammel), Sat-NYM (DeGrom)
Colby Lewis: Mon-@OAK (Pomeranz), Sun-@LAA (Weaver)
Eric Stults: Tue-@SEA (Elias), Sun-LAD (Ryu)
Josh Tomlin: Tue-LAA (Weaver), Sun-DET (Scherzer)
Jacob Turner: Tue-CHC (Samardzija), Sun-NYM (Niese)
Chris Young: Mon-SD (Ross), Sat-@KC (Vargas)

My Week 12 Picks

Jon Niese, Mets
2014: 3-3, 85 IP, 6.56 K/9, 2.33 BB/9, 47 GB%, 2.54 ERA, 1.13 WHIP

Niese definitely falls under the underrated umbrella, as I was able to scoop the veteran right-hander off the waiver wire in a competitive experts league this past week. You have to go back to September of last year to find the last time Niese has given up more than three earned runs in a start. Ten of 13 games this year have been quality starts, including three in a row against the Brewers, Giants and Phillies (1.98 ERA, 0.97 WHIP in those three starts). I like to mix in a safe bet every week, and Niese is that guy. Road matchups against the Marlins and Cardinals aren't that great on paper, but they rank 28th and 29th, respectively, in terms of wOBA in June.

Jake Odorizzi, Rays
2014: 2-7, 65 IP, 10.52 K/9, 3.60 BB/9, 37.3 GB%, 4.85 ERA, 1.42 WHIP

Odorizzi was excellent in his last start against the Cardinals, giving up one run on three hits and one walk and striking out five in 7 1/3 innings. Odorizzi was saddled with the tough-luck loss, but he's appeared to turn the corner in the process. Over his last four starts, Odorizzi has walked only three while striking out 24 in 21 2/3 innings. In Week 12, the 24-year-old right-hander faces the Orioles and Astros at Tropicana Field, where he owns a 3.13 ERA, 1.23 WHIP and 46 strikeouts in 37 1/3 innings (compared to a 7.16 ERA, 1.66 WHIP and 30 strikeouts in 27 2/3 innings on the road). Odorizzi has burned me before, but that was before he started showing command. I'm all for second (and third) chances.

Marcus Stroman, Blue Jays
2014: 3-1, 24.1 IP, 7.77 K/9, 1.11 BB/9, 56 GB%, 5.18 ERA, 1.52 WHIP

I've been conducting the Stroman train at Fake Teams since his call-up, and the rookie right-hander has not disappointed. In three games as a starter, the 5-foot-9, 185-pounder is 2-1 with a 2.50 ERA, 1.28 WHIP and 17:2 K:BB ratio in 18 innings. Stroman gets two road starts in Week 12, starting with the Yankees on Monday and ending with the Reds on Saturday. Both offenses rank in the bottom third in wOBA, and only San Diego has scored fewer runs than Cincinnati. Stroman has been unlucky thus far, with a .386 BABIP. I do anticipate some uneven performances from the rookie, but the strikeout upside is appealing. He's done everything the right way, from a 56 percent groundball rate to a 2.7 percent walk rate.

Stats from FanGraphs.

Today In Predictable Trade Rumours

$
0
0

The Blue Jays have been linked to Chicago Cubs right-hander Jeff Samardzija for months now, so it's not exactly a surprise that the rumours are heating up with the "North Siders" slipping way out of contention in the National League Central and the Blue Jays obviously making quite a run at the American League East crown. Samardzija has 4.028 years of service time entering this season, meaning he'll be a free agent after the 2015 season making him a little more attractive than a straight-up half-season rental player. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports had the initial report of the Blue Jays scouting Samardzija, which would be a bigger story if they weren't scouting him:

Video: Full Count: AL East eyeing Samardzija?

Samardzija is definitely a quality pitcher, currently sitting at an ERA of 2.77 in 14 starts this season, although he is in the NL Central. With a $5.345 million contract this season and a pay raise expected in his final year of arbitration, it wouldn't be a huge financial commitment to the "cash-strapped" Blue Jays.

Before the season, Theo Epstein and the Cubs were apparently asking for Drew Hutchison and one of either Marcus Stroman or Aaron Sanchez in return for the tall right-hander Samardzija. Hutchison and Stroman have definitely increased their stock this year, while Sanchez has at best remained stationary despite his promotion to AAA Buffalo.

It's anybody's guess what it will take to get Samardzija, considering there's an AL East bidding war almost surely going to take place in the weeks leading up to the trade deadline between the Blue Jays, Orioles, and Red Sox. There's a clear lack of depth in the Blue Jays rotation though and it's up to Alex Anthopoulos to decide if he wants to really stick his neck out and make one more big move to try and secure the first Blue Jays playoff berth in 21 years.

Poll
Jeff Samardzija?

  924 votes |Results

Orioles 2, Blue Jays 5: Splitsville

$
0
0

The Orioles, despite great performances by Adam Jones and Nelson Cruz and a decent start from Chris Tillman, lost today to split the four-game series with the Blue Jays.

3, 3, 2, 4, 3, 1, 5, 2, 3, 2, 4, 1, 1, 1. Those are Chris Tillman’s walk totals in each game this year. After today you can add a nice round zero to the list. That's right -- he didn't walk a single batter, nor did he allow a home run. However he also didn't strike anyone out. It was a curious day for him, with every plate appearance ending in a ball in play. That means the defense had to work, and they did, keeping the game close during Tillman’s time on the mound.

The Blue Jays took just three batters to score their first run. Jose Reyes singled to open up the game, moved to second on a groundout by Melky Cabrera, and scored when Jose Bautista doubled off the right-field wall on a 3-2 pitch. The second run scored in the fourth, when Dioner Navarro singled home Edwin Encarnacion, who’d doubled and moved to third on flyout by Brett Lawrie. The last run against Tillman came in the fifth. After Anthony Gose led off with a single, Jose Reyes slapped a double to right field. Gose moved to third and scored when Melky Cabrera hit a sacrifice fly.

Meanwhile, the Orioles put runners on against Blue Jays starter J.A. Happ but couldn't push any across. A frustrating moment came in the third, with the Orioles down 1-0. J.J. Hardy doubled and Jonathan Schoop followed with a single. Nick Hundley then hit a mistake pitch all the way to the warning track in center field. It stayed in the yard but it was hit far enough that both Hardy and Schoop tagged and moved up a base. With two runners in scoring position and one out, Nick Markakis worked the count full but struck out. Manny Machado then stepped in and hacked at three terrible pitches to end the inning.

The plate appearances contrasted sharply. Happ was consistently throwing at Hundley’s and Markakis’s knees, trying to get ground balls, but he kept missing. Hundley was patient and waited for a pitch he could drive; Markakis battled but ultimately struck out. Against Machado, though, Happ intentionally went outside the zone, taking advantage of Machado’s eagerness to drive runners in. I hope Buck Showalter uses that as a "teachable moment."

The Orioles got a couple of hits the second time through the order but had to wait until the third trip to get off the schneid. In the bottom of the sixth, Adam Jones doubled with two outs. Nelson Cruz, who’s been so dangerous against lefties this year, promptly singled to center field to cut the Jays’ lead to 3-1. It was part of an impressive day for Cruz, who after being in a mini slump went 3-3 with a walk.

Neither side could push the score until Tommy Hunter entered the game in the 8th. Since Tillman hadn’t walked anyone, Hunter decided to treat the fans to a couple free passes. He started by walking Jose Bautista on five pitches. Edwin Encarnacion then timed a 96 MPH heater perfectly and ripped a ground-rule double over Nelson Cruz’s head in left. With Bautista now at third, Brett Lawrie chopped at the first pitch he saw and sent a sharp grounder to J.J. Hardy, who quickly fired to Hundley at the plate to nail Bautista trying to score. It was a close play; manager John Gibbons challenged the ruling but it was upheld.

O’s fans breathed a sigh of relief, but Navarro doubled to bring in Encarnacion and make it 4-1. Hunter then walked backup catcher Eric Kratz. He got Steve Tolleson to ground into a fielder’s choice, but that same play also brought Lawrie in to score. Showalter removed Hunter for T.J. McFarland, who worked out of it. 5-1 Jays.

In the bottom half, Adam Jones banged his 11th homer of the year to bring it up to 5-2, but it was too little, too late. Jones also had a fine day, going 2-4 with a double and a home run.

Here's how the game progressed. Notice the sharp drop in Orioles' win expectancy in the third inning, That was when Machado struck out.


Source: FanGraphs

Great pairing of J.A. Happ and Erik Kratz lead Blue Jays over the Orioles 5-2

$
0
0

Blue Jays 5 @ Orioles 2

Having attended J.A. Happ's previous start and watched him struggle--very slowly--against the Twins, I did not expect the outing he had against the Orioles today, leading the Blue Jays to beat the Orioles 5 to 2 on a sunny Father's Day game in Camden Yards. Happ pitched into the seventh inning, giving up just one run on seven hits. Most importantly, Happ walked none but struck out six. Out of the 60 starts Happ has had with the Blue Jays, he has walked zero in just two of them: today and in August 12, 2012 against the Yankees.

Compared to that Tuesday start against the Twins, probably the biggest change for Happ was having Erik Kratz behind the plate. Like chardonnay and Brie, Happ seems to like working with Kratz more than any other catcher. Take a look at these numbers from Baseball-Reference (entering today's game):

SplitGIPERERAPAABRH2B3BHRSBCSBBSOSO/WBAOBPSLGOPSTBGDPHBPSHSFIBBROEBAbiptOPS+sOPS+
Erik Kratz634.1184.7215013718408164112292.42.292.347.496.84368400100.330101128
Dioner Navarro37.056.4337288910210870.88.321.472.5711.04416101000.368152183
Josh Thole26.000.0024200300001420.50.150.292.150.4423000000.1671320

It is hard to isolate the catcher's factor--especially with Happ's small sample sizes-but it was clear that today Erik Kratz called for a lot of fastballs, and Happ threw a lot of strikes with them. Against the Twins, around 43% of Happ's pitches were fastballs, getting strikes on 58% of the fastballs. Today against the O's, 67% of his pitches were fastballs, and 78% of those fastballs went for strikes.

Overall, Happ threw 96 pitches, 69 of which were strikes, for a well-deserved sixth win of the season. The only real damage Baltimore did to the Jays' starter was an RBI-single by Nelson Cruz in the bottom of the sixth. Happ was a bit shaky that inning, not only allowing a double and the run but a deep fly ball to Steve Pearce to end the inning. I was surprised when John Gibbons allowed him to return for the seventh inning--especially with Monday's offday--but Happ was quickly removed after allowing Delmon Young's leadoff hit, a 30-foot roller down the third baseline.

McGowan continued his roll since his removal from the rotation, logging another solid relief effort despite being tagged for a solo shot by Adam Jones. After a walk later that inning, Casey Janssen, who hasn't pitched for almost a week, was called in for a four-out save, which he did with apparent ease, striking out two more Orioles batters on the way to his 12th save. In the bottom of the ninth, Janssen induced a Jonathan Schoop grounder to third, but Brett Lawrie threw badly to second base. The ball bounced off the dirt well short of second base, but Steve Tolleson had a great play to recover the ball then scrambled back to tag the bag to at least force out the lead runner.

At the plate, Blue Jays bats produced five runs today, spread over four different innings. The blue birds got an early lead in the first when Jose Bautista doubled in Jose Reyes. In the fourth inning, Edwin Encarnacion doubled to start off the inning, advancing to third on a Brett Lawrie sac fly. Dioner Navarro then blooped a single to left in order to score Encarnacion to produce the Jays' second run. Navarro had quite the day today, also adding an RBI-double in the eighth to finish the day with a 3-for-4 with two doubles and a single. The Jays also got runs off of a fifth inning Melky Cabrera sac fly and a fielder's choice on Steve Tolleson's ground out in the eighth.

Edwin Encarnacion also looked like he was ready to break out of his recent slump, getting good contact on the ball, resulting in two doubles and a single for his effort. He would've had another hit if not for a tremendous play on a hard-hit ball by Orioles third baseman Manny Machado to end the fifth inning.

While the Orioles were struck out 10 times by Blue Jays pitching, no Toronto batter struck out this game--marking just the 40th time in franchise history that the entire offence has gone with striking out.

There was little to complain about this game, but I will do so anyway: in the top of the eighth, Edwin Encarnacion followed a Jose Bautista leadoff walk, so there were runners on second and third with none out with the Jays enjoying a 3-1 lead. When Brett Lawrie bounced one to shortstop J.J. Hardy, Bautista inexplicably ran home on contact. Hardy threw a strike to catcher Nick Hundley and Bautista was called out on the tag play. The play was reviewed, but the evidence was deemed inconclusive to overturn the call, despite replays showing that Bautista slid around the catcher and that the tag was not applied before Bautista touched home plate. Even if the run had counted, the Blue Jays would've had a pretty good chance of scoring a run in that inning so to me, that risk was not worth taking.

Jays of the Day! Happ (+.194 WPA), Navarro (+.178), and McGowan (+.139).

Suckage Jay of the day is Brett Lawrie (-.115) for a 0-for-5 day plus that misthrow in the ninth.

The Blue Jays will now board an Amtrak for the three-hour train ride to New York City (cheap Rogers!), where they will enjoy an offday on Monday before beginning a three-game series against the Yankees. The Jays salvaged a series split against the Orioles, so they remain 4.5 games above Baltimore and remain in 11 games above .500 and in first place in the American League East.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 6/16/14

$
0
0

Pinstriped Pundits | Chris Mitchell: Rob Refsnyder might make it to the majors this season, but what are the chances that it will be a significant contribution?

LoHud | Chad Jennings: Chase Whitley has been good out of the rotation, but for a rookie who was a reliever, he seems to look like he belongs.

NJ.com | Brendan Kuty: Brett Gardner, Brendan Ryan, Adam Warren, among others, talk about the best gift they ever gave their dads on Father's Day.

Newsday | David Lennon: The move to first base will allow Peter O`Brien to focus on what he does best – hit home runs.

The Record | Bob Klapisch: The Yankees might be facing their biggest test when they face the Blue Jays on Tuesday.

Pinstriped Prospects | Jed Weisberger: While many are quick to say that Rob Refsnyder's bat could help the Yankees now, he still has a lot to work on with his defense.

The Times-Tribune | Donnie Collins: The Yankees need to start building for the future, but they also have the minor league talent to give the current team a boost.

New York Post | Joel Sherman: If you think the Yankees have it bad, you should consider the Texas Rangers.

Pinstripe Pundits | Chris Mitchell: Despite bad starts from Brian McCann and Carlos Beltran, it's more likely they hit better than it is they continue to struggle.


Orioles Rotation Questions

$
0
0

Miguel Gonzalez is due to return to the Orioles rotation on Tuesday leaving the team with six starters. What should they do to fix the logjam?

When Miguel Gonzalez comes back from the disabled list, the Orioles are going to have a problem. They will have six starters for five slots in the rotation. Since Miguel Gonzalez is due to come off of the DL and start Tuesday against Tampa Bay, that problem is going to come to the forefront quickly. Let's take a look at a few different solutions to the Orioles problem.

1.) Demote Kevin Gausman to AAA

When Miguel Gonzalez went on the DL, Kevin Gausman was called on to replace him. After biding his time in AAA Norfolk to begin the season and being limited in both innings and pitch counts, Gausman was turned loose on the American League. In his first start after he was called up, he went seven innings while only allowing four hits and one run against the Athletics. He also struck out six and walked one, which lends even more credibility to the outing. In his second start, he held the Blue Jays to one run and five hits over six innings while walking and striking out three batters.

The two offenses Gausman was tasked with shutting down were no patsies. They rank fourth and second in team wOBA respectively making the two outings even more impressive than they appear at first glance. His first strike percentage is up to 66% from 61% last season. The whiff rate on his splitter is up to an elite 24%. Maybe even more impressive than that is this: when he got in trouble against the A's in the sixth inning when the first two batters reached base in the sixth inning, he reached back and hit 100 mph three times to get out of trouble unscathed. The last two batters of the inning were Josh Donaldson and Brandon Moss, and they both struck out swinging.

Needless to say, I don't think the Orioles should demote Gausman. I think he's ready to succeed in the major leagues and has the most upside of anyone on the Orioles staff.

2.)  Go with a six man rotation

For at least one turn through the rotation, the Orioles will go with a six man rotation. However, Buck has said that he doesn't want to do this for the long term. The downside to going with a six man rotation is that it most likely takes a pitcher out of the bullpen to accomplish. The arm that would most likely get sent down would be Josh Stinson but he doesn't have any options left so he would have to clear waivers before he could be sent down to AAA. It's tough to get through this part of the season with only six pitchers in the bullpen so this isn't a great option for any length of time.

The only way going with a six man rotation works is if the player removed from the roster is Delmon Young. Steve Pearce can handle all of the playing time that Young was getting, and probably deserves it anyway. Young doesn't help much as a bench player anyway because he's not fast enough to be a pinch runner or good enough on defense to be a defensive replacement. While this would be unlikely, I believe it's the only way to make a six man rotation work. A three man bench would be difficult but workable in this case.

3.) Move Miguel Gonzalez to the bullpen

Miguel Gonzalez has actually pitched pretty well in 2014. He has a 4.17 ERA but has increased his strikeout rate to almost 20% this season. However, if you remove his first two starts of the season, his ERA drops to 3.12 with a 22% strikeout rate. That rate would be 25th in the league for starting pitchers, tied with pitchers like Michael Wacha and Jeff Samardzija. It seems like Gonzalez gets demoted to the bullpen for a period of time each season and this year is no exception. He's already pitched out of the bullpen once on May 14.

I think Gonzalez has earned his spot in the rotation. Shifting him to the bullpen doesn't make the team better.

4.) Move Ubaldo Jimenez to the bullpen

Ubaldo has struggled mightily in his first year in the Orioles rotation. So far, he's compiled a 4.86 ERA with a 1.51 WHIP. His fielding independent numbers support his high ERA so it's definitely not bad luck holding him back. Perhaps the biggest culprit behind the high ERA is his lack of ability to avoid walks. This season, his walk rate is all the way up to 13.5% which would be a career high. Furthermore, the velocity on his fastball continues to slip which leads to him using more and more sinkers which are harder to control, which then leads to more walks. It's a vicious cycle.

The whiff rate on his four-seam fastball is all the way down to 4.5% from 8.8% last season. His strikeout rate is down almost five percentage points from last season as well. This is not what the Orioles were hoping to get when they signed him to a four year, $50 million contract this offseason. It's a good thing he has that contract. If there's anything that saves him from being sent to the bullpen, it's his contract. It would be an absolute failure for the club to have a reliever signed to such a large money long term deal. For that reason, I doubt it happens.

5. Move Chris Tillman to the bullpen

Tillman's numbers are just as bad as Ubaldo's when you really look at them. There are less strikeouts but also less walks than Ubaldo, which means a lot more contact. Unfortunately, he's not getting weak contact. He's put up a 4.91 ERA on the season but since April 23 his ERA is an absurd 6.57. As most starting pitchers are wont to do, he has lost some velocity this season. The velocity on his fastball is down a full mile an hour from last year, down to 91.8. Another mark in the negative column is that he's sporting the worst walk rate of his career at 10.1%.

The last two seasons, Tillman has probably been the best starting pitcher on the Orioles staff which buys him some leeway. It may ultimately buy him a reprieve from being sent to the bullpen now. He opened the season with three excellent starts but hasn't been able to find his groove since.

If this decision were based solely on performance, either Jimenez or Tillman would be shifted to the bullpen. Unfortunately, it's more complicated than that. There are contract implications to consider as well as fragile psyches. Buck also has to make sure to keep enough fresh arms in the pen to cover for a rotation that doesn't go deep into games. It's a difficult decision but that's why Buck makes the big bucks. I'm sure he's hoping that someone develops a blister or  some other minor injury the next time through the rotation and the decision is made for him.

Short of that, I think we're going to see option six. If I chose to make another option, it would have been to make up an injury to either Ubaldo Jimenez or Chris Tillman. Both of them are pitching poorly this season. Neither one of them really deserve to stay in the rotation, but there are other factors to consider before giving them the boot. It would look bad for the club to have either it's opening day starter or it's prized free agent acquisition demoted to the bullpen in June. A convenient minor injury resulting in a short disabled list stint including a minor league rehab assignment could be the perfect alternative. To MLB's dismay, not all DL stints are real injuries. Sometimes a team needs a guy to go on the DL to alleviate difficult roster decisions just like this one.

I think that's the easiest way out of this problem for the Orioles. I'd hate to see Gausman demoted back to the minors considering the state of the rotation as a whole.

What do you think the Orioles will do? What do you think they should do?

Blue Jays Minor League Promotions: Daniel Norris and Derrick Chung promoted

$
0
0

Not Derrick Norris and Daniel Chung, as I told people in a drunken stupor this weekend.

The Blue Jays organization had several minor league promotions this weekend. No, not like Beer, Bacon, and Fireworks Night or Star Wars Night or Hump Day or Jayson Werth Bobblebeard giveaway day, but promotions up the organizational ladder. Last week's headline promotion in the Blue Jays' system was Aaron Sanchezfrom double-A New Hampshire to triple-A Buffalo, this week's headline promotion fills the propsect void Sanchez left in New Hampshire, with lefty Daniel Norris getting the call up from Dunedin along with Derrick Chung. The news of the transaction came from Sportsnet's Shi Davidi and has not been made official yet (as of time of writing), but Norris has confirmed the promotion on his Twitter account.

Norris and Chung just helped the Dunedin Blue Jays win the Florida State League North first-half division championship with a spiffy 46-20 (.697) record and were in Bradenton for the FSL All-Star game when the promotions were announced.

Norris, number 3 on Bluebird Banter's Top 40 Prospects list, enjoyed his half-season in the FSL, recording a 1.22 ERA (and matching 1.78 FIP) over 13 starts, in which he averaged just over five innings a start. His strikeout rate increased to 29% while his walk rate was reduced to 7%--all good signs for a pitcher. Norris managed the transition from the class-A Midwest League to the FSL pretty well, but the advanced-A to double-A jump is supposedly to be particularly difficult. The Fisher Cats were running on four starters since Sanchez's promotion, so there is an opening on Wednesday for Daniel Norris to make his debut.

Chung, 26, has always been old for his league ever since being drafted in the 31st round from Cal State. He was drafted as a shortstop and he played a utility role in Vancouver after the draft, but was converted to catcher in spring training 2013 and sent to Dunedin, skipping Lansing.

"I wasn’t sure what the plan was for me at the end of [2012, but] I was pretty happy that the Blue Jays gave me a shot as a catcher," Chung told Bluebird Banter in an interview this offseason, "I did both catching and infield last two years at Sac State, but I had more of an infielder’s mentality. This past year was the first time I actually felt committed to being a catcher."

Last year, Chung was off to a great start with his bat in the FSL, batting .330/.385/.352 in April and May, but caught a bad break when he was run over at the plate by Mets prospect Rylan Sandoval during Josh Johnson's rehab start with the D-Jays on May 20. While getting run over by Rylan was probably better than getting run over by Pablo, Chung did get knocked unconscious on the play and injured his left thumb on the collision. He returned to the lineup in mid-June but his numbers at the plate suffered in June and July.

"I had a hard time holding onto the bat for a while," Chung recalled, "my rhythm was a little off as well."

His numbers bounced back in August, and he had an eye-opening stint at the Arizona Fall League where hit .390/.447/.439. He was invited to big league spring training--and Montreal--this season and followed it up with a solid .320/.395/.390 slash line. He has even flashed some power this season (.118 ISO)--hitting his first two pro home runs and surpassing last year's doubles in just a half-season. All the while calling good games and playing solid defensive behind the plate. He was named FSL Player of the Month for May.

Other Promotions

With the D-Jays losing their primary catcher, Santiago Nessy was promoted from the Lansing Lugnuts. He will likely split time with Canadian Michael Reeves in Dunedin. To complete the chain, Daniel Klein, who had just started his season with one game in Vancouver, was transferred to Lansing.

Next in line for a promotion from Dunedin to New Hampshire would probably be right hander Taylor Cole. The 24-year-old was given the honour of starting the FSL All-Star Game after a solid first-half where he recorded a 2.19 ERA and 1.000 WHIP in 13 games (12 starts), striking out 95 and walking just 16.

Wayback Video: Todd Redmond plunks Erik Kratz, bench-clearing ensues

$
0
0

Hat tip to shortofbrillant for sharing the video.

Yankees Weekly Preview: Looming AL East showdowns

$
0
0

This week, the Yankees return to the Bronx with a big chance to make up ground in the division, as the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles will each visit New York.

Last week, the Yankees reeled off four straight wins, sweeping the Mariners in Seattle and taking the first game in Oakland before losing two straight to the Athletics.  The Yankees now sit at 35-33 and are 4.5 games back in the AL East, tied for second with the Baltimore Orioles, who both trail the Toronto Blue Jays. This week, the Yankees will take on both of these teams in the Bronx, allowing an excellent opportunity for New York to make up some ground in the AL East.

The Blue Jays and the Orioles

Blue Jays: 1st in AL East (41-30), 3rd in runs scored, 2nd in OPS (.764), 1st in wRC+ (112), 19th in ERA (3.96), 23rd in FIP (4.04), 28th in xFIP (4.27)

Orioles: 2nd in AL East (35-33) 15th in runs scored, 8th in OPS (.727), 12th in wRC+ (99), 21st in ERA (4.03) 29th in FIP (4.24), 27th in xFIP (4.14)

Quick hits

Bautista and Encarnacion raking in 2014: The Blue Jays have gotten out of the gates so well mainly because of the monstrous starts from their sluggers Edwin Encarnacion and Jose Bautista.  Encarnacion is second in the majors in home runs with 20, tied for second in RBIs with 54, and posts a .257/.342/.567 triple slash with a 149 wRC+.  Bautista has an even better wRC+ (171) and has hit .311/.434/.542 with 15 home runs and 46 RBI of his own.  Add that to Melky Cabrera's big start (123 wRC+ through 69 games) and no wonder the Blue Jays have one of the best offenses in the league.

Hutchison having sneaky good year for Toronto: While Mark Buehrle's 10-3 start has gotten a lot of attention, Drew Hutchison is having a solid season, even posting a lot of numbers better than Buehrle's.  His xFIP is better (3.95 vs 4.19), as is his K/9 of 7.68 (vs. 5.23 for Buehrle), and his average against of .238 is also better than Buehrle's.  The Yankees had better not overlook him, as this series may come down to the third game, when Hutchinson and David Phelps will face off.

Yankees didn't make a mistake passing on Jimenez: When the Yankees were looking for free agent pitching this offseason, many floated the idea that they sign Ubaldo Jimenez if they missed on Masahiro Tanaka.  Luckily they got Tanaka and didn't have to think about Jimenez, who has been awful so far for the Orioles.  At 2-8 with a 4.33 xFIP and an ugly 5.33 BB/9 rate, Jimenez has had a rough go of it in the AL East.  With him pitching the first game on Friday, look for the Yankees to get a leg up early in the series.

Yankees weekly notes

Beltran struggling since return: Carlos Beltran has had little success since returning form the DL, hitting just .171 with two doubles and one home run in 35 at bats.  That home run did come on Sunday, a day which saw Beltran go 2-4, so perhaps he's finding his comfort zone and getting ready to go on a tear.  With some of the other big bats in the lineup struggling, the Yankees could really use Beltran's production.  For more on Beltran's struggles, check out Jesse's latest post here.

Whitley proving to be quite the asset: Chase Whitley still hasn't lost a game since he came up to the big leagues in mid-May, and has proved to be quite an asset for the Yankees and their decimated pitching staff.  Whitley has won his last two starts, even going seven innings plus in both of them.  A lack of longevity has been the only knock against Whitley, and if he can give the Yankees six quality innings each start, I'm sure everyone would be thrilled.  He's been terrific so far this season, posting a 2.41 ERA and a 3.81 xFIP by limiting walks (0.80 BB/9) and long balls (0.27 HR/9).  He has a tough matchup against Buehrle this week, but don't be surprised if the youngster out-pitches the veteran.

Prediction: 4-2 (2-1 vs. Toronto, 2-1 vs. Baltimore)

The Yankees had a good week last week, and they need to continue that success this week as they start a stretch of four straight series against AL East opponents.  While Toronto is one of the best offensive teams in the league, Tanaka should be able to stymie them, and I think one of Phelps and Whitley will turn in a quality start.  That should be enough for the Yankees to take two out of three from the AL East leaders.  The Orioles are also one of the better offensive teams in the league, but their pitching is incredibly weak.  Look for Hiroki Kuroda to outpitch Jimenez and Tanaka to win the series finale (because I refuse to believe he can lose).  Should be a good week for Yankees fans!

How do you think the Yankees will fare this week?  Vote in the poll and sound off in the comments below!

Pitching matchups

Monday, June 16:  Off

Tuesday, June 17: Masahiro Tanaka (10-1, 2.02 ERA, 2.35 xFIP) vs. Marcus Stroman (3-1, 5.18 ERA, 3.36 xFIP)

Wednesday, June 17: Chase Whitley (2-0, 2.41 ERA, 3.81 xFIP) vs. Mark Buehrle (10-3, 2.28 ERA, 4.19 xFIP)

Thursday: David Phelps (2-4, 4.32 ERA, 4.30 xFIP) vs. Drew Hutchinson (5-4, 3.62 ERA, 3.95 xFIP)

Friday: Hiroki Kuroda (4-5, 4.32 ERA, 3.79 xFIP) vs. Ubaldo Jimenez (2-8, 4.86 ERA, 4.33 xFIP)

Saturday: Vidal Nuno (1-2, 4.97 ERA, 4.32 xFIP) vs. Bud Norris (6-5, 3.73 ERA, 4.41 xFIP)

Sunday: Masahiro Tanaka vs. Chris Tillman (5-3, 4.91 ERA, 4.74 xFIP)

Poll
How will the Yankees do against the Jays and Orioles?

  127 votes |Results

Matt Wieters to have Tommy John surgery Tuesday

$
0
0

The Orioles catcher will miss the remainder of the season after rest and rehab didn't improve the tear in his right ulnar collateral ligament.

Orioles catcher Matt Wieters will undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery Tuesday to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing arm, according to MLB.com's Brittany Ghiroli.

The news isn't entirely unexpected since Wieters was shelved with a tear in his right UCL in early May. The Orioles and Wieters initially tried to rest and rehab the injury in hopes the 28-year-old would be able to return sometime this season.

That approach has proven unsuccessful, however, with the Georgia Tech product choosing to opt for surgery, which should enable him to be fully ready by next spring. Rehab from Tommy John surgery is generally shorter for position players, of course, and Wieters will likely need nine months before his arm is completely healthy once again.

A two-time All-Star, Wieters played in just 26 games in 2014, batting .308/.339/.500 with five home runs and 10 extra-base hits. He was coming off a 2013 campaign in which his on-base percentage dropped to a career-low .287, though he still belted 22 home runs. Coming into this year, Wieters had hit more than 20 home runs in three straight seasons.

Despite his down 2013, losing Wieters has a big impact on Baltimore's outlook. The team sits 4½ games behind the Blue Jays for the AL East lead and is just one game back from the Royals for the AL's second wild-card spot.

The Orioles have already added to their depth at catcher when they traded for Nick Hundley on May 24. The 30-year-old Hundley hasn't given Baltimore much production, however, hitting just .147/.184/.147 in 38 plate appearances since the trade.

Without Wieters, the Orioles have had to turn to a trio of Hundley, Caleb Joseph and Steve Clevenger, none of whom has the talent or experience that Wieters has. In fact, Baltimore backstops have posted a below-average .656 OPS this season and have hit .238/.291/.365, ranking in the bottom 10 in most offensive categories. Since Wieters landed on the DL, the Orioles have gone 15-19.

Losing Wieters is clearly unfortunate for Baltimore, then, and unless Hundley's production improves, the club has few appealing options to turn to at catcher. With the Orioles still in playoff contention, that could pose a problem as the season goes on, and one imagines GM Dan Duquette will need to find a solution if the Orioles want to give themselves the best chance of playing in October.

Having Wieters back in 2015 will surely be a boost for the Orioles, but there is a lot of baseball to be played before then. There is no denying losing Wieters is a blow to Baltimore's playoff hopes.

Viewing all 2466 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images