Monthly Archives: April, 2013

How Was The Game? (April 21, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

One they should have had.

Angels 4, Tigers 3

After two blowouts to open the series, the Tigers sent Doug Fister to the mound to salvage a win in LA and he was equal to the task on Sunday. Fister went 7 innings and held the Angels to 3 runs (2 earned), but those should all be unearned due to the official scorer calling something that was clearly an error on Cabrera a double. Fister didn’t get a ton of help from his defense, but he provided some of his own and limited the damaged that occurred due to errors and should-be errors. Wilson, on the other side, danced around trouble all day until Prince Fielder broke out in the 5th with a two run homerun to tie the game. Alburquerque entered in the 8th innings to relieve Fister and struck out the side which set up a failed scoring chance in the 9th in which the Tigers left the bases loaded four batters after a blown call at second cost them an out. Al-Al shut the Angels down in the 9th and sent this series finale into extra innings. Despite scoring opportunities, neither side could deliver a run until Mark Trumbo ended the game with a homerun to left field off Phil Coke in the 13 inning, Coke’s third inning of work. No one can blame the pitching for this one, as the defense and bats let the Tigers down in their attempt to win one in LA. The Tigers head home with a 9-9 record after going 4-5 on the roadtrip that ended with a sweep at the hands of the Angels. They’ll be in action again on Tuesday against the Royals behind Max Scherzer at Comerica Park.

The Moment: Trumbo walks off to sweep the Tigers in the 13th.

The Morning Edition (April 21, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • The Red Sox triumph over the Royals in their return to action, Big Papi says the f-word to celebrate, and Neil Diamond belts out “Sweet Caroline” at Fenway
  • Hellickson outduels Parker as the Rays beat the A’s 1-0
  • Harper homers twice as the Nats beat the Mets

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Royals and Sox play two at Fenway, featuring prospect Allen Webster’s debut in the nightcap (130p and 7p Eastern)
  • Zimmermann, coming off his first career CG, takes on the Mets at Citi (1p Eastern)
  • Brandon McCarthy tries to right the ship after three rocky outings, but has to face the Rockies at Coors (4p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How long until “This is our f-ing city” t-shirts starting selling outside Fenway? Six hours?

I promise this section will get more interesting once we have more that 15 games of information to talk about, and I’ll eventually stop referring to sample size, but one particular player who is near the top of the WAR leaderboard caught my eye; Brandon Crawford. The Giants shortstop is known for his glove, but his bat is doing some damage during the couple weeks of the season. In his career, he’s been a .240-.250 type hitter with very little power. In 696 plate appearances entering the season, he had 7 homeruns. He already has 3 in 68 as I write this. His .248/.304/.349 slash line last year was indicative of the type of player most people expect him to be. His wRC+ last year was 79. He’s not a black hole type hitter, but he relies on his glove. This season? This season he’s tearing the cover of the ball so far. He has 3 homeruns, but he’s also hitting .317/.397/.533, good for a 160 wRC+. He’s 5th in baseball in position player WAR at 10:53pm on April 20th. I’m not saying this means he’s going to be a good hitter going forward, not at all. It’s too early to suggest a given hitter is a new man, but I’m telling you he’s been crazy good so far this year. That’s remarkable in its own right. You want to know which players hit .310/.390/.530 or better in 2012? Trout, Braun, Posey, Cabrera, McCutchen. That’s it. That’s the whole list.

For the first three weeks of 2013, Brandon Crawford has hit like the top finishers in last year’s MVP races. Baseball is fun.

How Was The Game? (April 20, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

Kind of a laugher.

Angels 10, Tigers 0

The Tigers lost their third straight game today and we can point to two distinct causes. First, the offense has really just not gotten anything going over the last few days. Second, Rick Porcello had one of the most hard luck innings you’ll ever see. He faced 11 hitters, gave up 9 hits, 1 walk, and 9 runs, retiring just two batters courtesy of the double play. At first, you wouldn’t really see how that qualifies as hard luck, but the Angels only hit two balls hard. The rest were weakly hit balls that just barely made it through the infield or died on the infield grass. Leyland mercifully pulled him after he surrendered the second hard hit ball, a grand slam to Trout,  but it was too late for any justice for Porcello. It certainly wasn’t a great start, but it wasn’t nearly as bad as the box score indicates. Luckily for the Tigers, Drew Smyly was excellent in relief. He went 5.2 innings, allowed 4 hits and struck out 7 to really save the bullpen. The Angels and the Tigers both failed to do much else offensively and the game whimpered to its conclusion. You can imagine there will be Smyly versus Porcello speculation in the coming days, but it’s far too early to bail on your early season decisions. I’m a Porcello believer, but even if a change needs to be made eventually, you can’t make that call based on the information you have so far. The Tigers fall to 9-8 after today’s loss and lose their first series since the opening one in Minnesota. They’ll try to salvage one behind Doug Fister tomorrow.

The Moment: Mike Trout ends Porcello’s day with a grand slam to center.

The Nine Most Exciting Plays in Baseball

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

This week, inspired by a fan poll question on FSDetroit on Friday, New English D provides you with The Nine Most Exciting plays in baseball. Each of these are general in that they do not refer to a play that has occurred such as Gibson’s 1988 walk off, but rather plays such as “the inning ending double play.”

Only one of them features a specific game situation (#4), but each play is amplified by the situation. Consider them ranked based on how exciting they would, all else equal. A double play may be more exciting than a diving catch if the double play comes in the bottom of the 9th and the catch comes in the 3rd, but here we consider them context neutral with one obvious exception that will be clear when you read the list.

9. Inside the Park Homerun

Now this one is pretty low on my list compared to what most people tend to believe, but there is a very simple explanation. Almost every inside the park homerun is the result of a defensive misplay. Either a fielder overruns a ball or it takes a weird hop they weren’t anticipating. Rarely is it a feat of speed and guts. In a big park with a fast runner, it can be exciting, but you almost never see one that isn’t dumb luck.

8. Triple Play

My thoughts here are similar; most triple plays are just dumb luck. Usually they happen when the runners are trying to steal but the batter hits a line drive. That’s not really exciting, it’s more just interesting for its rarity. A true triple play is almost impossible and usually just a function of random happenstance. Triple plays are fun, but rarely very exciting because they aren’t terribly dramatic.

7. The Diving Catch

This is a pretty wide category, but diving catches are great because they build to a crescendo. There is the moment the ball is hit, then you think it’s going to be a hit, then you see the fielder closing fast, then you see him decide to dive, then there is a heart stopping moment in which you aren’t sure if he caught it. It’s a thrilling novel spread across less than five seconds.

6. The Do or Die Groundball

I like this one because it functions exactly like the diving catch, except it happens even faster and you have the added element of the bang-bang play at first. Not only do we suddenly realize the fielder might make a play, but we also have to see if the runner can beat the throw. Take the diving catch, narrow the time frame, and given the batter some agency and you’ve got the do or die.

5. Suicide Squeeze

If you aren’t familiar with the terminology, this is when the runner on third takes off for home on the pitch and the batter lays down a bunt to ensure the catcher doesn’t receive the baseball and tag him out. It sounds exciting enough, but the great part is that first second when you see the runner take off and immediately think, “Oh my goodness, what the heck is he doing?” You’re prefrontal cortex takes over after a second, but at the beginning of it, your brain just can’t process what’s happening. It’s pretty cool.

4. Walk-Off Homerun

Everything is better in walk off fashion because it decides the game, but the walk-off homerun gets special mention due to its utter decisiveness. It’s just a great moment.

3. Robbing a Homerun

Take the excitement of the homerun and then add in the excitement of the diving catch. You think it’s going to be a homerun and then all of a sudden it’s taken away. It’s difficult and rare, but its key feature is it takes you from high to low or low to high reaction in a matter of seconds.

2. Stealing Home

This has all the excitement of the suicide squeeze, but with none of the wimpy “bunting.” The baserunner literally thinks he can get to home before the catcher can receive the ball and tag him. All of the “what the heck?” moments from the squeeze apply, but we also get to factor in the chutzpah this requires.

1. Play at the Plate

The play at the plate is the most exciting play in baseball because it has everything. It includes risk by the baserunner, defensive skill by the outfielder, usually a bang-bang call, and it is punctuated by the fact that it can only result in an out or a run. You can see it developing a mile away, but you also hold your breath because you have no idea how it’s going to turn out. A lot of moving parts have to work and then you have to wait that half beat to see what the umpire calls. Just think about how exciting this would be if it came with two outs in the 9th inning of a tie game.

The Morning Edition (April 20, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Halladay holds the Cardinals to 2 runs in 7 innings in a 8-2 win
  • Matt Harvey continues to dominate as he outduels Strasburg in a 7-1 win
  • Jean Segura somehow steals first base in a 5-4 win over the Cubs (that was not a typo)

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Buchholz and Shields face off as the Sox and Jays kick off their series after Friday’s cancellation (1p Eastern)
  • Paul Maholm tries to keep his scoreless streak alive against the Bucs (7p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee and Lance Lynn toe the slab in Philly (7p Eastern)

The Big Question:

While I’m repeatedly reminding you that small sample sizes can belie the truth, Matt Harvey is starting to look like one of the NL’s best starters. Certainly we can say he has been one of the best so far this season, but his success looks real and sustainable, even if it won’t be at this level. He looked very good in a handful of starts last season and the stuff is good. Let’s admire his numbers thus far. 4-0, 29IP, 9.93 K/9, 2.79 BB/9, 0.93 ERA, 2.25 FIP, and a 1.0 WAR. That’s pretty good. As I write this, only Wainwright, Darvish, and Lester have higher pitcher WAR. Fun fact, Verlander, Sanchez, and Scherzer are right behind him. I didn’t include Harvey as one of the best pitchers in the NL going into the season, but man, I’m pretty sure I should have. Every five days, The Morning Edition is just going to become the Matt Harvey How’d He Do? Get used to it.

How Was The Game? (April 19, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

Full of missed opportunities.

Angels 8, Tigers 1

I’m not entirely sure how to describe the game in which the Tigers fell to 9-7 on the season, but it goes something like this. Pitchers allowed runners to reach base, but didn’t allow many of them to score. Anibal Sanchez went 6.2 innings, allowed 11 hits, and allowed 3 runs (2 earned). Hanson went 6 innings, allowed 6 hits, and 4 walks, but allowed no runs. The Tigers had a ton of opportunities to score but ended up leaving 20 men on base over the course of the evening. In the 8th inning, the game got away from the Tigers when with the bases loaded, Jackson and Tuiasosopo misplayed a catchable fly ball with two outs. I wouldn’t consider this one a well played game as far as these things go, as both offenses failed to capitalize on chances and both pitching staffs got into a lot of trouble. The Tigers will send Rick Porcello to the hill Saturday on big Fox (read: where I can’t watch them because of stupid blackout rules that end after this season) and will look for their 10th win of the season at 3pm eastern after not scoring over the last 18 innings.

The Moment: Anibal Sanchez avoids being struck in the head by a Pujols line drive and quite literally gets his hat knocked off. In the next inning, he would actually be hit in the arm with a batted ball.

The Morning Edition (April 19, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

 

From Last Night:

  • Dickey finally delivers a strong start as the Jays beat the White Sox
  • Wainwright keeps his walk-less streak alive in a 4-3 win over the Phillies
  • Derek Jeter suffers a setback, will be out until at least the All Star Break

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Halladay looks to stay on track against the Cards (7p Eastern)
  • Buchholz faces Shields in the first game at Fenway since the marathon bombings, pending the current manhunt’s resolution (7p Eastern)
  • Stephen Strasburg faces Matt Harvey at Citi Field (7p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How will Halladay fare against a tough lineup after handling the Marlins last week?

We had some close finishes on Thursday that didn’t make the headlines above like the Rays/O’s and Yankees/Dbacks, but the only thing I can talk about here is Strasburg versus Harvey tonight. Easily the most exciting two right handers in the NL right now square off in the same game, which makes for super-appointment television. The problem for me is that I live in North Carolina, so I can’t watch the game. What are you talking about, you ask? Well, NC is in Nationals territory so it’s blacked out on MLB.TV and local cable companies do not carry MASN, so it’s literally impossible to watch the Nats or O’s while remaining within the confines of the law. Someone please call me and describe this game in great detail! I’m pretty sure not letting me watch this game is a violation of my civil liberties.

How Was The Game? (April 18, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

The appropriate length!

Mariners 2, Tigers 0

Just 13 hours after taking the second game of the series in 14 innings, the Tigers and Mariners hooked up for the final game of the three game set and runs were just as hard to come by in this one, but they played the standard 9 innings. The only scoring came in the bottom of the 7th as the Mariners worked two runs across against Verlander who was otherwise brilliant over 7 innings, striking out 12 while walking just one. The bats made some hard contact from time to time but never got anything going against the Mariners. At any rate, the Tigers won the series and head to LA 9-6 after winning four straight series. They will send Anibal Sanchez to the hill tomorrow against Mike Trout and the Angels.

The Moment: Endy Chavez makes a diving catch to keep Prince Fielder off the bases in the 9th

The Morning Edition (April 18, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Three games were washed out due to inclement weather
  • AJ Burnett flirts with a no-hitter enroute to a 5-0 win over the Cardinals at PNC
  • Bryce Harper delivers four hits as the Nationals roll the Fish
  • Wade Davis leads the Royals to a 1-0 win over the Braves, who lost for the first time in 11 tries

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Matt Cain faces recent criminal Gallardo at Miller Park (1p Eastern)
  • Jon Lester looks to stay hot in Cleveland (7p Eastern)
  • Wainwright tries to keeps his walk-less streak going against Hamels and the Phillies (7p Eastern)
  • Fernandez and Cingrani match up at GABP in a prospect-off (7p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Did Kershaw actually give up homeruns to Everth Cabrera and Chris Denorfia or did I make that up?

AJ Burnett probably had the most interesting night for anyone that didn’t play in the Tigers game (see How Was The Game?) by nearly no-hitting a very good Cardinals lineup. It’s often easy to dismiss Burnett as some sort of headcase due to certain struggles he’s had over the years, but his stuff is really good and he’s had a pretty sneaky good career that is starting to really come full circle in the NL. Harper continues to look great in the early goings with another big game, but the power hitter I have my eye on is Giancarlo Stanton who should be back from his recent injury tomorrow.

 

How Was The Game? (April 17, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

A thing of beauty.

Tigers 2, Mariners 1 (14 innings)

For my birthday, baseball got me a Max Scherzer, Felix Hernandez pitching duel. It was exactly what I wanted. Both were dazzling  on Wednesday in Seattle. They each allowed single runs, Felix in the 5th, Scherzer in the 7th, and dominated the rest of the evening. Scherzer went 8, allowed 6 hits, 1 run, 1 walk, and struck out 12. Felix, not to be outdone, went 8, allowed 4 hits, 1 run, no walks, and struck out 12. It was a thing of beauty in every way. One of the better pitched games on both sides that you’ll see this season. I said yesterday they could combine for 25 strikeouts, they nearly did, topping out at 24. It was so much fun. Eight innings of magic, and then they handed it off to the children who allowed more baserunners, but no runs until Brayan Pena delivered an RBI groundout in the 14th inning to give the Tigers a 2-1 lead. Benoit handled the bottom half of the inning and a game that featured 40 strikeouts came to a glorious end at 237am in the east as Torii Hunter gunned down Justin Smoak at the plate via Prince Fielder’s relay to Brayan Pena, who had to withstand a serious collision.  There are probably a great many subtle storylines worthy of discussion from this game that is an early contender for Game of the Year, but I’m simply too exhausted to analyze them. I left it all on the couch tonight. Tigers improve to 9-5 and go for the sweep behind Verlander later today.

The Moment: All of it. Just all of it.