Category Archives: Uncategorized

September 29, 2014

Hinch in a Pinch

The Astros give A.J. Hinch his second chance at managing:

Hinch managed Arizona from May 2009 until July 2010, when he was fired after a 31-48 start. He was the vice president of professional scouting for San Diego from 2010 until August.

Porter was a first-time manager, and Luhnow said he wanted someone who had managerial experience this time around. Hinch also was attractive to Luhnow because he had worked in baseball front offices as well as been a manager.

“He’s well-rounded — understands my perspective,” Luhnow said. “He comes with a breadth of experience that very few guys have. The whole combination, the whole package was very unique.”

Hinch is very smart, a Stanford graduate. The Baseball Musings Hinch archive is here. He seemed to start well with the Diamondbacks. Players were skeptical at first as A.J. was perceived at too close to the front office, but he won over at least Dan Haren. He made some unusual moves, which players don’t often like. The DBacks simply did not win with Hinch, and he was gone, along with the GM who hired him.

It strikes me that an analysis driven front office like Houston should get along well with a manager like Hinch. We’ll see.

July 26, 2014

Peavy to a Contender

It look like the Red Sox are giving up on the 2014 season as they traded Jake Peavy to the Giants:

San Francisco is sending right-hander Heath Hembree and lefty Edwin Escobar to the World Series champion Red Sox in the swap.

Peavy will make his Giants debut in Sunday night’s series finale (8 p.m. ET on ESPN) against the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants held a half-game division lead in the NL West against their rival going into Saturday night’s middle game at AT&T Park.

Peavy had decent strikeout and walk numbers, but allowed 20 home runs in 124 innings. He might do a better job keeping the ball in the park playing in San Francisco.

Hembree had a cup of coffee with the Giants in 2013, striking out 12 and walking two in 7 2/3 innings. His minor league strikeout numbers are outstanding, and he brought his walks under control his last two seasons. He is seasonal age 25, so he’s not exactly a prospect at this point. Edwin Escobar is just 22, and his having some problems in his first year at AAA. Getting out of the old PCL probably will help his ERA. Looks like the Red Sox made out well in the deal, getting one pitcher who can likely help now, and one that should be part of the rotation in 2015 or 2016.

July 10, 2014

Tanaka in the Tank

The Yankees placed Masahiro Tanaka on the disabled list, and he is off to see possibly a group of the best orthopedic doctors:

As King notes, Tanaka is coming off his worst start of this, his first season in the U.S. major leagues. Additionally, Heyman reports that Tanaka did indeed mention some discomfort to the team after Tuesday night’s rough outing against the Indians.

This season, Tanaka, 25, has pitched to a 2.51 ERA and 7.11 K/BB ratio in 18 starts and 129 1/3 innings. He was recently named to the AL All-Star team and is generally regarded as a strong Cy Young contender at the mid-point.

With CC Sabathia out for the season and Michael Pineda progressing slowly, the Yankees keep losing depth to their rotation.. Four fifths of the opening rotation is on the disabled list, two of them unlikely to return this season. They received a ton of innings out of a very good bullpen, but Tanaka was giving them a rest every so often. There will be more pressure on that group now.

Tanaka’s injury is another data point in poor performance linked to injury spectrum. Maybe this goes back to the Napoli home run. It could be he wanted to throw the fastball there because he felt he couldn’t throw another pitch that put pressure on the elbow.

July 4, 2014 June 22, 2014 June 18, 2014 June 18, 2014 June 2, 2014

Games of the Day

The Mariners and Yankees play a make-up game, and the Yankees get to face the King, Felix Hernandez. David Phelps stands in opposition. Hernandez is what an innings eater should be. He stays in games because he pitches well, he doesn’t just hang around to save the bullpen. Hernandez trails David Price by 1/3 innings for the most pitched in the AL this season. Phelps adjusted well moving from the bullpen to the rotation, with a 3.18 ERA in five starts. He allowed just one home run 28 1/3 innings after giving up three in 11 2/3 innings coming out of the pen.

On the west coast, Jose Quintana of the White Sox takes on Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers. Quintana’s three-true outcomes are very good, making his 3.61 ERA look a bit high. He does give up a line drives at a high rate, however, and line drives tend to turn into hits. Kershaw reached nine strikeouts in a game four times this season, but has yet to crack double digits.

Enjoy!

April 23, 2014

Marrero Passes

The oldest living major league player, Connie Marrero, died just two days short of his 103rd birthday.

Marrero made his debut at age 38 and pitched for the Washington Senators from 1950-54. He was an All-Star in 1951, going 11-9 with a 3.90 ERA in 187 innings. Marrero went 39-40 with a 3.67 ERA in 735 1/3 innings in his career.

So he was still young, it seemed, in his last 30s. Maybe that helped him live a long time.

The oldest living ex-big leaguer is now Mike Sandlock, an infielder who played for three teams from 1942-53. He is 98.

Does anyone know the record for age of a former major leaguer? 102 and 363 days has to be near the top. Looking at this list, there are now 21 living former MLB players older than my dad.

Update: Here it is:

Throughout all of baseball history, the Major League player who lived to be the oldest ever was Chet Hoff who lived to be 107 years, 132 days old before passing away on September 17, 1998. When Hoff made his pitching debut on September 6, 1911, the first batter he faced was Ty Cobb (Hoff struck him out).

April 23, 2014

Games of the Day

There are a number of low ERA pitchers on the mound this Wednesday. The earliest game with two pits Matt Cain and the Giants against Tyler Chatwood and the Rockies. With their win Tuesday, a 2-1 game at Coors, the Rockies moved ahead of the Giants into second place in the NL West. Cain is back to his old form, pitching well but losing. His 2.88 ERA in four starts resulted in an 0-3 record as the Giants scored just seven runs in his games. Chatwood makes his third start of the season, having struck out 11 and walked one in 13 innings.

A few minutes later, Martin Perez leads the Rangers against Sonny Gray and the Athletics. Both youngsters own 3-0 records with similar ERAs, Perez at 1.86, Gray at 1.80. Neither has allowed a home run. A win by Texas moves the Rangers into first place in the AL West.

Michael Wacha faces Jonathon Niese as the Cardinals continue their series with the Mets. Wacha seems to be on his way to being a right-handed Cliff Lee, walking just three and strikeout out 25 in his first 26 innings this season. Niese stays out of trouble, with only 18 of his 74 batters faced having a runner in scoring position.

Tyson Ross and Kyle Lohse meet in Milwaukee as the Padres play the Brewers. Ross has some control issues, but makes up for his high walk rate with one home run allowed and 25 strikeouts in 25 1/3 innings. Lohse allowed just two home runs in 27 innings this season.

Finally, the only late game of the day features the 2014 debut of Cole Hamels as the Phillies face Zack Greinke and the Dodgers. This will be the third time Hamels pitched at Dodger Stadium, and the first time in five years. He allowed just two runs in 16 innings at the venue. Greinke allowed five home runs so far this season, but all of them were solo shots. He only allowed one other run this season.

Enjoy!

April 20, 2014

Good Seats, eh Buddy?

My daughter was invited to the Orioles Red Sox game, and wound up with very good seats.

Fenway Park, Orioles Red Sox

The ceremony before the game between the Orioles and the Red Sox.

The Orioles lead 1-0 early on a home run by Nelson Cruz.

Update: Here’s a panorama, taken from next to the first base dugout.

Fenway Park Orioles Red Sox

Panorama of Fenway Park game between the Orioles and the Red Sox 4/20/2014

April 4, 2014

Games of the Day

The Red Sox celebrate their 2013 World Championship as they open at home against the Brewers. Marco Estrada faces Jake Peavy. Estrada completed the transition from reliever to starter in 2013, posting a 3.87 ERA in 21 starts with an outstanding walk rate. He does tend to give up a high number of home runs, however. Peavy tries to continue a fantastic start for the Boston pitchers, who have walked four and struck out 26 in 26 innings.

The Dodgers finally come home as they battle division and ancient rivals the San Francisco Giants. Ryan Vogelsong makes his 2014 debut, while Hyun-jin Ryu takes the mound for the third time. Age appeared to catch up with Vogelsong in 2013 as his strikeout rate dropped and his ERA ballooned. Ryu allowed just five hits in 12 innings, along with four walks, none of them leading to a run. He’s yet to allow an extra base hit as well.

Finally, the Yankees travel to Toronto as Masahiro Tanaka makes his major league debut against Dustin McGowan. Tanaka’s Japanese career was off the charts. At age 25, the Yankees are getting him in his prime. His spring stats did not betray those previous numbers as he walked three and struck out 26 in 21 spring innings. McGowan is back in the rotation after working as a reliever in 2013. It’s been a very long road back for Dustin, as he missed three of the last five seasons due to shoulder surgery. He did pitched well in relief in 2013, however, and earned a spot in the rotation his spring.

Enjoy!

February 12, 2014

Farewell Tour

Derek Jeter announced that 2014 will be his last season.

A Major League Baseball executive confirmed Wednesday that Jeter informed the Yankees’ principal owner, Hal Steinbrenner, of his plans to retire.

In a statement that he began by saying thank you, Jeter wrote: “I’ve experienced so many defining moments in my career: winning the World Series as a rookie shortstop, being named the Yankees captain, closing the old and opening the new Yankee Stadium. Through it all I’ve never stopped chasing the next one. I want to finally stop the chase and take in the world.”

I have my doubts about him playing much this season. The ankle injury that ended his 2012 playoff run never healed that well in 2013. He’s back on the field now, but who knows what the strain of real play will do to the foot. Jeter needs just four hits to pass Paul Molitor for ninth on the all-time list, but 120 to catch Carl Yastrzemski, Honus Wagner, and Cap Anson for the sixth spot. That will be much tougher.

I also wonder if he will get the Mariano Rivera treatment. Mariano was that rare ball player who was a great man on and off the field. While Jeter manages his public image very well, no one really knows how much people like him. They certainly respect his accomplishments and leadership, but I’m not sure there will be the outpouring we saw for Rivera outside of New York.

Although he played quite a bit during the steroid era, the taint never landed on the Yankees shortstop. He’ll be an easy first ballot Hall of Famer, as the voters seem to want to lionize players like Derek and Frank Thomas, who appear to have played clean.

February 4, 2014

Cameron for Griffey

Dave Cameron posts about how the Mariners fleeced the Reds when they traded Ken Griffey, Jr. for Mike Cameron (no relation, I presume).

Cameron was, by all rights, one of the most valuable contracts in the game at that point. Four years of team control of a +3 WAR player headed into his prime? A rough equivalent of that in current form would be something like Desmond Jennings. Can you even imagine the Rays (or even a franchise with more money than the Rays) giving up Jennings for a rent-a-player today, even if that rent-a-player was a guy as good as Cano?

Even the much maligned Wil Myers/James Shields trade didn’t involve a player coming off a +5 WAR season, and Shields had two years of team control remaining, not just one. And the Royals got killed for making that trade. The Reds decision to include Cameron in a trade for Griffey was orders of magnitude worse than the Royals decision to include Myers in the Shields trade, especially given that the Reds were acquiring Griffey to bolster their short term chances to win.

And here’s the kicker; this was the trade the Reds made after Griffey had invoked his no-trade clause to block a deal to the Mets, and had publicly declared that he would only agree to go to Cincinnati. The Reds didn’t have to win a bidding war for Griffey; they were the only team allowed to bid.

The 2001 Mariners went on to win 90+ games four years in a row, including the 116 win 2001 season. They did not make it to the World Series, however, and have been at best okay since then.

October 22, 2013

Paying the Price

The Reds hired pitching coach Bryan Price to manage the team:

The Cincinnati Reds stayed in-house for their next manager, giving pitching coach Bryan Price a three-year deal Tuesday to take the team deep into the playoffs.

The job carries enormous expectations for the 51-year-old Price, who has been one of the most successful pitching coaches in the majors but has never managed at any level. He and Triple-A manager Jim Riggleman were two in-house candidates considered for the job.

During Price’s time as the pitching coach, their opponents have hit just .248/.313/.397 against the Reds. The strength of the team was their low walk rate, particularly important at home, as Great American Ballpark tends to help home runs. We’ll see how he does in the big chair.

October 22, 2013

Opposite of Expected

The Red Sox go into the World Series facing a Cardinals pitching staff that shares traits with the Tigers staff. The Cardinals are good at controlling walks and power, two strengths of the Red Sox hitters. It was my opinion going into the ALCS that Detroit would own an advantage pitting their strength against the Red Sox strength. That was incorrect. Instead of limiting walks and power, the Tigers high K rate limited Boston’s batting average, resulting in a .202/.277/.332 slash line for the Red Sox offense. That’s terrible, but the team walked enough and hit for enough power to beat an equally poor Tiger’s offense.

To break this down more, the Red Sox walked a lot against the Detroit starters, and hit for power against the relievers. In 160 PA against the Tigers starters, the Red Sox walked or struck out 70 times. That’s 70 PA where they forced the Tigers pitcher to throw a high number of pitches. It was that discerning batting eye of the Red Sox hitters that helped force the Tigers starters out of the game early so they could pound the bullpen.

The trick now is to do the same against Adam Wainwright and Michael Wacha. Wainwright will be tough, since he has Cliff Lee like control this season. Wacha is a rookie, so they might have a better chance with him. The Cardinals bullpen has been lights out this post season, so chasing the starters may not make that much difference.

September 27, 2013

Game of the Day

Friday presents a number of excellent pitching matchups as we start the final weekend of the regular season. In addition, the AL Wild Card and NL Central Championship will be decided this weekend.

A.J. Burnett and Homer Baily get the ball rolling as the Pirates and Reds battle for home field in the NL Wild Card game. Pittsburgh leads the Reds by one game, and the teams split the 16 games they played so far. Which ever team wins two will have the advantage, although there is a low probability that a Pirates sweep will lead to a tie for the division lead. Burnett struck out 28 Reds in 18 2/3 innings this season, but he also walked eight. Bailey missed a lot of Pirates bats as well, with 23 K in 18 innings. The fans should stay cool in Cincinnati this evening.

Cliff Lee faces Kris Medlen as the Phillies try to spoil Atlanta’s bid for best record in the NL. Lee topped 210 innings for the fifth season in a row, ranking 5th in innings pitched in that time frame. Now in his fifth season in the majors, Medlen has consistently walked about a batter every four innings. This is a great game to watch to see pitchers who can control the strike zone.

Former Rangers starter C.J. Wilson tries to spoil Texas’s bid for the wild card as the Angels face Alexi Ogando. The Rangers beat up Wilson pretty handily, as he owns a 7.92 ERA in seven starts against his former team since moving to the Angels. In a mixed role as starter and reliever this September, Ogando allowed just one run in 18 innings of work.

Stephen Strasburg and Patrick Corbin square off in a battle of great young pitchers. STrasburgh should end the season with a better ERA than in 2012, but without blowing away batters at the same rate. He still strikes out more than a batter an inning, but the rate is now extremely good, rather than unworldly. Corbin owns a 2.68 ERA at home this season. The league did seem to figure him out a bit, as his overall ERA stands at 4.93 since the All-Star break.

Oakland has an outside chance of catching the Red Sox for best record in the American League and home field advantage through the playoffs. They send Bartolo Colon against Felix Hernandez. A win by Colon tonight would mark the fourth time he reached the 18 win level in his career. His 2.64 ERA rates as the lowest single season mark of his career. Felix struck out 200 batters for the fifth year in a row, and since the start of the 2009 season ranks second in the category behind Justin Verlander, although Clayton Kershaw is right on his tail.

Enjoy!

September 26, 2013

Games of the Day

The Rays try to keep their winning streak alive as they send Alex Cobb against the Yankees and Ivan Nova. Cobb showed great control down the stretch, walking seven and striking out 31 in his last 28 innings. Nova is coming off his third complete game of the season, a six-hit shutout against the Giants. That reversed what appeared to be a late-season fade.

Texas hosts the Rangers west as Jerome Williams and the Angels take on Matt Garza. Former Rangers Josh Hamilton and C.J. Wilson had split results. Hamilton batted poorly with a .304 OBP going into the final weekend of the 2013 season. Wilson who pitches on Friday, lived up to his contract with a 17-7 record and a 3.36 ERA. It’s the Rangers, without the financial burdens of those two, however, who are fighting for a playoff spot.

The Indians travel to Minnesota for their last series of 2013, Zach McAllister facing Andrew Albers. Zach had his way with the Twins this season, posting a 2.03 ERA in 13 1/3 innings, striking out 12. That’s a much higher K rate than Zach normally exhibits. Albers appears to be a throw back to Terry Ryan’s glory days of development. Andrew strikes out few batters, but he walked just five in 54 1/3 innings. Give him a good defense, and he should do fine with this team.

Enjoy!

September 25, 2013

More on Ties

With the AL Wild Card three-way tie the most likely massive tie available, it’s interesting to note that the tie-breaker for this eventuality is a bit unusual.

Three-Club Tie for Two Wild Card Spots:
After Clubs have been assigned their A, B and C designations, Club A would host Club B on Monday, Sept. 30 (tentatively). The winner of the game would be declared one Wild Card winner. Club C would then host the loser of the game between Club A and Club B on Tuesday, Oct. 1 (tentatively) to determine the second Wild Card Club.

Most three-way tie breakers are designed to eliminate two teams, so one loss and the team is out. In this case, however, only one team gets eliminated, so it’s winner advances.

Note that the A,B,C designations are not automatic. The clubs are ranked based on winning percentage against each other, and other tie breaker rules. The team with the best rank gets to pick which of the three designations they prefer, then the second team picks from the remaining two.

The three-way head-to-head, which I believe would be used here, has Cleveland 7-5, Tampa Bay 7-6, and Texas 5-8. So Cleveland would need to decide if they want to play the first game at home, and if they lose go on the road, or take their chances with a single game at home on day two with an extra day of rest. Right now, Danny Salazar would be in line to pitch on Monday, but with a day off, Zach McAllister could pitch on Tueday instead. The only way to get Ubaldo Jimenez the start would be to give him Sunday off, but if the tie is in play, that’s not going to happen. I think the Indians would be better off taking the two shots.

Then Tampa Bay would need to decide if they want the possibility of two road games, or the day off and playing at home. No doubt they take the day off. They have David Price lined up for the game either way, but the Rays are 51-30 at home. So my best guess is that Cleveland would host Texas on Monday, and the loser would travel to Tampa Bay on Tuesday.

September 21, 2013

Using Baseball Analytics

image

The final panel of the day discusses the use of analytics in baseball. From left to right, Eric Van, formerly of the Red Sox, Ben Baumer formerly of the Mets, and Vince Gennero of SABR. Andy Andres moderates.

Update: Ben points out that teams are ahead of the public researchers, but that research isn’t public. The public isn’t necessarily making progress; teams are probably doing it first.

Update: Teams have developed their own datasets. The ones with more robust data have an advantage.

Update: Ben doesn’t think you need to separate range and positioning. PMR takes that philosophy. Eric points out there is a huge managerial effect to positioning.

Update: Andy asks about analytics contributing to determining a player’s makeup. Vince says big companies do this for executives.

Update: Ben changed his mind about makeup in his time with the Mets. He came to appreciate the importance of it. Could they play in New York?

September 21, 2013

Completing the Marathon

Richard Smith of UNC presents his research on completing the Boston Marathon results.  It’s a matrix completion problem, one that comes up in recommendation systems and biological systems. The idea is to allow 2013 participants who were stopped due to the bombing to have a completion time.

Update: K nearest neighbors algorithm worked best.

Update: Can be used as a better predictor of finish times during the race.

September 20, 2013

Games of the Day

The Indians get a test against Houston for the second night in a row as the Astros send Brett Oberholtzer against Zach McAllister. Since the name Oberholtzer refers to someone who lives above wood, it’s appropriate that his four-seam fastball stays up in the strike zone. 🙂 McAllister does get hit hard at home, as eight of the 12 home runs against him were hit in Cleveland.

Two aces who struggled in 2013 face off in New York as Tim Lincecum takes on CC Sabathia as the Giants visit their old New York rivals. Lincecum won two of this three September starts despite a 4.58 ERA in the month. Sabathia has not allowed a long ball in September after giving up five in August, but he walked 10 in 20 2/3 innings.

Cincinnati and Pittsburg trot out their aces as Mat Latos and Francisco Liriano battle for both wild card and division supremacy. Latos has mixed results against Pittsburgh. In four starts, he lasted just 22 2/3 innings. He struck out 27 but walked 10 and allowed four home runs. Liriano lost three of his four starts against the Reds. Like Latos, he hasn’t lasted in the games, just 16 1/3 innings. He struck out 21 and walked seven, and three home runs against him were all solo shots. Of the eight runs he allowed, only five resulted in RBI, so he may have not received much support from his bullpen or fielders.

Jon Lester goes for his 100th career win against Toronto this evening.

Texas sends Martin Perez against Ervin Santana as the Rangers find themselves fending off the Royals in the AL Wild Card race. I’m pretty sure no one marked this as an important series early in the season. 🙂 Perez is a great pitcher to throw against switch hitter, since as a left-hander, he gets better results against right-handed batters. Santana pitched seven scoreless inning against Texas earlier in the year, but did not get a decision.

Enjoy!

September 12, 2013

Pinto Watch

A.J. Griffin pitched seven strong innings as the Athletics beat the Twins 8-2. Griffin struck out eight in his seven innings of work, walking one and allowing two hits. The first of those hits was by Josmil Pinto, who went 1 for 4 on the day to lower his slash line to .467/.515.733. He can go five more at bats without a hit before falling under .400, as he’s currently 14 for 30 with three walks.

Oakland increased their lead over the Rangers to 3 1/2 games.

September 7, 2013

A Little Revenge

Yusmeiro Petit made the Diamondbacks regret they let him go on waivers as he nearly throws a perfect game in the Giants 3-0 victory. He allowed just one hit, a two-out single in the ninth. Patrick Corbin went the distance for Arizona, but yielded to pinch-hitter Eric Chavez, who singled. That was it as Petit struck out seven. He’s shown great control this year, walking four and striking out 30 in 26 1/3 innings. Those kind of numbers might very well lead to low-hit games.

Earlier in the evening, Scott Kazmir struck out 12 and walked none in six innings against the Mets. The Indians have to hope he can harness that power for the rest of the season.

August 31, 2013

Justin Time

The Pirates just acquired Justin Morneau from the Twins:

Morneau, 32, hit .259/.315/.426 (102 OPS+) with 17 home runs in 127 games for Minnesota before the trade. He’s been a homer machine in August, posting a 129 OPS+ with nine of those 17 long balls this month. Morneau is owed roughly $2.5 million for the remainder of the year and will become a free agent this winter.

This was a salary dump, with Alex Presley as a throw in to the Twins. Alex has posted decent minor league numbers throughout his career, but never made it in the majors. He seems like the definition of a AAAA player.

The Pirates appear to be convinced that the power Justin showed in August is real. He slugged .543 this month, but he is still an out machine. The power comes at a cost of a .293 OBP. I’d rather see Pittsburgh go for someone with a great OBP, since they already have Garrett Jones and Pedro Alvarez, who supply power while spending a ton of outs. I’m not sure this really helps.

August 31, 2013

Games of the Day

The Orioles try to extend their lead on the Yankees as Baltimore sends Scott Feldman against Ivan Nova. Feldman owns a 4.56 ERA since joining the Orioles, but pitched better over his last three starts. He does walk a few too many batters, however. Nova’s big step forward came from cutting down on home runs allowed, just five in 100 1/3 innings this year.

The Cardinals and Pirates continue their NL Central battle with Lance Lynn and A.J. Burnett on the hill. The winner of this game is guaranteed to finish the three game set at least tied for first place in the division. Lynn has struggled a bit since the start of June, posting a 4.77 ERA. None of his three-true outcomes are that bad, so it may just be a string of bad luck. He’s allowed a .357 BA with runners in scoring position in that time. Burnett is having his own troubles in August, with great TTO numbers, but a .343 BA with runners in scoring position. Looks like the key for both pitchers is to hold batters to walks and singles, and never allow two in a row! 🙂

The Indians need a win as Scott Kazmir faces Anibal Sanchez and the Detroit Tigers. Kazmir isn’t lights out this season, but his comeback is successful it that he is a very useful pitcher. He got his walks under control, but does allow a high number of home runs. Sanchez leads the AL in ERA, but will likely be at the low end of innings for ERA qualifiers. We’ll see how the low ERA compares to the great innings and more wins of his teammate, Max Scherzer when it’s time to vote for Cy Young.

The White Sox face an old teammate as John Danks takes on Jake Peavy in Boston. Danks is getting hammered by home runs, having given up 23 in just 117 innings. Peavy is showing great control since joining the Red Sox, walking just five in 32 2/3 innings with his new club.

Finally, the Rays and Athletics continue their battle for the top spot in the AL Wild Card race (and a possible division title) as Alex Cobb faces Sonny Gray. Cobb blows batters away, with 92 K in 100 1/3 innings. Gray is even better, with 30 K in 28 1/3 innings.

Enjoy!

August 25, 2013

Games of the Day

The Diamondbacks and Phillies return to the field after a very late night with Patrick Corbin facing Roy Halladay in Halladay’s return from the disabled list. Corbin is just what the Diamondbacks need after last night, a pitcher who is capable of going the distance. Halladay comes back from the rehabilitation early to make the start due to the need for pitching after Saturday’s 18 inning game. In the past, Roy would be a lock to pitch a complete game, but with him returning from injury, the Phillies have to hope for six efficient frames.

The Rays go for a sweep of the Yankees as Tampa Bay tries to stay in first place in the AL east. Ivan Nova takes on Alex Cobb. Nova’s been pitching like a Cy Young candidate since returning from the disabled list with 8.0 K/9 IP, 2.2 BB per 9 IP, and 0.38 HR per 9 IP. Cobb, too, recovered well from his injury, with two earned runs allowed in 11 innings since coming back from a line drive to the face.

Finally, the Cardinals go for a sweep of the Braves as Mike Minor battles Lance Lynn. The Cardinals pulled back into a tie with the Pirates for first place in the NL Central, holding the Braves to five runs in the first three games. Minor owns a 2.51 ERA on the road compared to 3.52 in Atlanta, mostly due to allowing just five of his 15 home runs away. Lynn’s home ERA is about two runs lower than his road mark, again due to a better job limiting power.

Enjoy!

August 17, 2013 August 17, 2013 August 17, 2013