Tag Archives: brewers

The Morning Edition (July 4, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Felix and Holland hold both clubs to 2 runs, but the bullpens settle it in 10 on a Seager bomb
  • Gomes walks off on the Padres
  • Nolasco does well in front of the scouts, beats the Braves
  • Norris pitches well in trade audition to beat the Rays
  • CC goes 7 to beat the Twins
  • Grilli gives up 2 runs, gets a save anyway because the save rule is silly
  • Lohse twirls a gem to top the Nats

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Cain and Leake in Cinci (1p Eastern)
  • Gerrit Cole Hamles matchup! (1p Eastern)
  • Shields continues to get no help from his team (2p Eastern)
  • Wainwright takes on the Angels (9p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • What’s your take on the no-hitter war?

Brian Kenny, who we’re quite fond of at New English D, took to the airwaves and Twitter on Wednesday to mock the attention give to no-hitters because walks and hit batters are part of the game and that separating it into hits and other ways to get on base is misguided. While I understand the sentiment and am I big believing in walks as offensive weapons, there is a different argument that Kenny hasn’t responded to at this point. No hitters are not always great performances, I fully agree. A one hit shutout is better than a 5 walk no hitter, but no hitters in all their forms are much rarer that no walk games. Since 1916, there have been more than 9,000 CG with no BB or HBP, but less than 300 CG with no hits. Less than 30 with no baserunners, period. The point here is that one baserunner is one baserunner no matter how he gets on, but it is much rarer to allow no hits than no walks and that is something worth celebrating. Kenny is right that the mainstream press doesn’t cover one hitters appropriately compared to no hitters with several walks, but I think the problem is in the other direction. Kenny thinks no-hitters are no big deal when the pitcher walks a couple guys, but I think we just don’t give enough credit to 1 and 2 hitters. Here at New English D, we make an attempt to highlight all great pitching performances, but do value the no hitter because the no hitter is rare and it’s quirky. After all, baseball is fun. I don’t usually disagree with Kenny, but on this issue I do.

The Morning Edition (July 2, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Harper homers in his return from the DL, Nats beat the Crew
  • Fernandez goes 8 scoreless with 10 K to lead the Marlins over the Friars
  • Matt Moore strikes out many Astros

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Strasburg takes on the Brewers (7p Eastern)
  • NERD darling Kluber looks to bounce back (8p Eastern)
  • Price returns from the DL to face the Astros (8p Eastern)
  • Kershaw battles Oswalt at Coors (830p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • What about the young pitchers?

So much attention is paid to the Trout, Harper, Machado…Puig(?) talk, but the game’s young starters are having some fun too. Obviously Harvey is getting the bulk of the attention because he’s ripping off a Cy Young season, but Shelby Miller and Jose Fernandez are now 17th and 18th in park adjusted FIP- in all of baseball and both have ERA’s below 3.00. These guys are having great seasons, and that doesn’t even include Patrick Corbin, all the way down at 21st.

The Morning Edition (July 1, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Cuddyer extends the streak to 27 in a loss to the Giants
  • Martin walks off in the 14th to beat the Crew
  • Jeff Mathis walk off grand slam
  • Puig’s big day lifts the Dodgers
  • Darvish beats Latos
  • The Royals take a wild one from the Twins 9-8
  • Masterson shuts out the White Sox, Sale takes ANOTHER 8+IP, 10 K loss
  • Wheeler gets shelled, loses to Gio and the Nats
  • Sox walk off on the Jays

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Zimmermann tries to quiet the Brewers (7p Eastern)
  • Jose Fernandez versus the Padres (7p Eastern)
  • Matt Moore faces Houston, strikeout watch in effect (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • What’s a realistic season for Puig?

The legend of Puig grows by the day as he had a 4 hit day on Sunday to lift the Dodgers. He’s currently 43rd among position players in WAR, which doesn’t sound impressive until you realize that he has just 107 PA and most of the people around him have 300+. Puig gets some flack for his plate discipline (3.8 BB%) but he did walk more in the minor leagues and you can’t really fault a guy for hacking when he seemingly can’t miss. In 107 PA he’s hitting .436/.467/.713 with 234 wRC+ and 2.1 WAR. That’s ridiculous. He’ll come back to Earth, but he’s on pace for something like a 12.6 WAR season extrapolated out to a full season. One shouldn’t project out like that, but just for reference, that would be the 5th best season in baseball history behind four of Babe Ruth’s best seasons. That’s pretty cool. I have no idea where he’ll settle in, but the skills are there for him to sustain himself as an impact player.

The Morning Edition (June 28, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Holland pitches a 2 hit shutout against the Yanks
  • Boston unloads on the Jays, hang on to win 7-4
  • Byrd’s 8th inning HR lifts the Mets
  • Strasburg and Corbin pitch well, but an 11th inning hit from Gregorious beats the Nats
  • Garza dominates the Brewers
  • Kluber gets shelled

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Cole looks to keep the Pirates hot (7p Eastern)
  • Matt Harvey faces the Nationals, strikeouts in the forecast (7p Eastern)
  • James Shields attempts to further discredit “wins” as a statistics (8p Eastern)
  • Miller heads to Oakland to matchup with Colon (10p Eastern)
  • Iwakuma welcomes the Cubs to Safeco (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is this finally the year for the Pirates?

As I write this, the Pirates are tied for the best record in baseball and could play pretty terrible baseball the rest of the way and still finish above .500. They’ve had great first halves the last two seasons and faded during the dog days, but they probably have what it takes to hang in this. On this day last season, they were 39-35, this year they are 48-30. That’s a lot better. But the offense is 19th in baseball in wRC+ and the starting pitching is 20th in WAR with the bullpen at 19th. They have the 5th best defense by UZR, which helps suppress the ERA and win games. I’m not sure I’m buying them as a playoff team just yet, but I’m pretty confident they are good enough not to lose more than half their games.

The Morning Edition (June 21, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Wright homers twice, but the Mets lose Niese in win against the Braves
  • Longoria’s 2 HR lift the Rays over the Yanks
  • Zimmermann dominates the Rockies, but Oswalt gets 11 K of his own as Nats win 5-1
  • Pena walks off on the Crew in 10
  • Another Puig HR

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Strasburg looks to build on a solid first start back (7p Eastern)
  • Cole goes to LA to face Weaver (10p Eastern)
  • Clayton Kershaw faces similarly named Clayton Richard (10p Eastern)
  • Colon and Iwakuma (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Who would you honor with the NL All-Star start?

There are a number of good candidates depending on what statistics you value:

WAR: 

Wainwright, Harvey, Lee, and Kershaw

FIP:

Harvey, Wainwright, Miller, Kershaw, Lee

ERA:

Kershaw, Locke (!), Miller, Harvey, Corbin, Wainwright, Zimmermann

K/9:

Miller, Burnett, Samardjiza, Harvey, Lynn

Wins (LOL!):

Wainwright, Lee, Corbin, Zimmermann, Lynn, and Marquis

Wainwright is probably having the best season, but I’d be completely happy with Harvey given that the game is at Citi Field and he’s one of the game’s brightest young stars. Kershaw, Lee, and Miller are all very deserving as well. Right now, I’d go with Waino or Harvey. You?

The Morning Edition (June 10, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Felix out duels Phelps, but the Yanks score on the M’s pen to win 2-1
  • Puig has 3 hits, but the Braves pound the Dodgers 8-1
  • EJax is strong as the Cubs beat the Bucs
  • Lohse goes 8 strong as the Brewers beat the Phils
  • The O’s gets 6 HR to outslug the Rays
  • Zimmermann goes 7 as the Nats blank the Twins

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Silent ace Alex Cobb faces the Red Sox (7p Eastern)
  • Kershaw goes against the Dbacks (10p Eastern)
  • Iwakuma gets the Astros at Safeco (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How’s everyone enjoying Yasiel Puig?

I haven’t written much about Puig because he’s been playing on the coast and I usually write this post before games end out west. So far, he’s hitting .464/.483/.964, good for 307 wRC+. That’s pretty good by any measure, even if it is just 29 PA. Puig certainly won’t hit like this for the whole season, but he’s impressing early and fans are loving him. It’s almost as if the Dodgers shouldn’t have traded for Crawford and/or extended Andre Ethier into their declines. It will be interesting to see what they do once everyone gets healthy, but such a scenario doesn’t look good for Ethier who has been worth 0.1 WAR in 228 PA. For perspective, that’s less than Zach Greinke has in 16 PA. Zach Greinke, the pitcher.

The Morning Edition (June 7, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • The first night of the MLB Draft features some surprises, Appel, Bryant, Gray go 1-2-3
  • Rosales’ 10th inning HR beats the White Sox
  • Four run 8th gets the Royals past the Twins
  • Miller, after being named to my Appointment TV list, Ks 9 in 6 innings and homers as the Cards beat the Dbacks
  • Ortiz walks off as Holland and Lester both meander through 6

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Middle rounds of the MLB Draft (1p Eastern)
  • Harvey and Hernandez face off in New York (7p Eastern)
  • Wainwright faces the Reds (7p Eastern)
  • Lee heads to Milwaukee (8p Eastern)
  • Cain versus Corbin in Arizona (930p Eastern)
  • Kuroda gets Bonderman’s 2nd start (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Which clubs will look back on last night as a building block en route to a title?

I’m not the world’s best guy for draft analysis, but I’ll give you my brief thoughts. First of all, if you’re looking for who went where, I can direct you here, among other places. The reason I’m not the best guy for draft analysis is not because I don’t know anything about amateur baseball, but rather because I don’t like to give analysis that isn’t based on my own observation. Almost everyone who was and will be drafted this weekend are guys I haven’t seen myself, so I’d rather direct you to guys like Keith Law or Jonathan Mayo or Baseball America. I could give you reports about guys based on things I’ve read, but you can read. I’m much more useful to you as someone who analyzes baseball players I’ve seen in person and on TV and in the box score. I have, however, seen Colin Moran, who went 6th overall to the Marlins. He’s a 3B with a great approach and a very good hit tool. Some question if the power will come and if he can stick at third, but I’m bullish there. I don’t think he’ll be a star, but a good approach can play for me. Here are some picks I liked from the first day:

Plenty of teams got good players, but those stand out to me as teams who made good choices when presented with a lot of options.

The Morning Edition (June 3, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Jeremy Bonderman’s return doesn’t go well, gives up 7 ER in 4.2 to the Twins
  • The Angels lose their 3rd straight to the Astros fall to 25-32
  • Darvish narrowly outduels Santana, but has to sweat as his bullpen nearly costs them
  • The Dbacks back Corbin’s 9th W
  • Lee Ks 11 in 7.2 innings to beat the Crew
  • Dusty waits to use his closer and it costs him a win against the Pirates
  • The Fish hit Harvey and sweep the Mets
  • The Rays rough up the Indians

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Masterson vs Pettitte in NY (7p Eastern)
  • Burnett and Medlen face off in Atlanta (7p Eastern)
  • Under the radar Cahill and Lynn draw each other at Busch (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How will Puig do in his MLB debut?

If you follow me on Twitter or were an early regular at New English D, you know I was very invested in Jeremy Bonderman’s comeback today. It didn’t go well. Because the Tigers were in Baltimore I had to have the Tigers on the radio, which gave me a chance to watch Bonderman on television. He had a fastball from 89-92 and a good slider at times, and he struck out the first batter he faced and delivered a 1-2-3 first inning. If you followed his career as a Tiger, you know the first inning gave him nightmares. But from there it unraveled as he allowed 3 runs in the 2nd and 2 runs in each of the 4th and 5th innings before being removed from the game. He struck out just one batter. He actually kept the ball down and had decent movement on his pitches, but without a good offspeed pitch, it’s hard to be successful as a starter if you don’t have a big fastball. It sounds like he’ll get another shot in five days, but if nothing else, he made it back to the big leagues. I’ll always be rooting for him even if he doesn’t have much left. He has something left.

The Morning Edition (June 2, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Ubaldo goes 8 scoreless to beat the Rays
  • The Twins walk off on the Mariners
  • Miller throws 7 scoreless, Wainwright goes the distance and allows one run as the Cards sweep the Giants in a DH
  • Oakland literally walks off against the Sox
  • Rockies walk off on the Dodgers

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Matt Harvey faces the Marlins, expect strikeouts (1p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee goes against the Crew (130p Eastern)
  • Jeremy Bonderman is back on an MLB mound against the Twins (2p Eastern)
  • Corbin gets the Cubs (2p Eastern)
  • Darvish toes the slab against the Royals (3p Eastern)
  • Buchholz and Kuroda in NY (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Does playing a different position really affect you at the plate?

You may have heard recently that Mike Trout is crushing at the plate again after his early season slump because he’s back in CF while Bourjos is on the DL. I’ve got to say, this is silly. Very. I could buy the argument if he was struggling when playing a more difficult position. For example, if you move from 1B to 3B and struggle at the plate because you have to work on your defense, that could make sense. But Trout was moving to an easier spot, why would that affect him? It wouldn’t. He’s a world class 21 year old athlete coming off a crazy good season. It’s nonsense to think he was affected at the plate by a position change that put him in a spot that was too easy. Ken Rosenthal has led the way on this topic and points to this split:

Trout 2013 as LF:.247/.327/.412

Trout 2013 as CF: .324/.400/.632

But that’s normal variation. Rosenthal and others just saw it and went for it as something to write about to gin up controversy. Here’s how I know:

Trout 2012 as LF: .326/.395/.645

Trout 2012 as CF: .329/.404/.542

If Trout was affected psychologically by playing out of position, why didn’t affect him last season? This is random noise in his production over the course of the season that happened to correlate with a teammates injury. Want better evidence?

Trout 2013 in Odd Numbered Games: .401 OBP

Trout 2013 in Even Numbered Games: .339 OBP

Look, Mike Trout is better during odd numbered games. The Angels should sit him today. Give me a break.

The Morning Edition (June 1, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Holland and the Rangers pile on the Royals
  • Strasburg leaves with an oblique injury, but the Nats manage to win 3-2
  • Jacob Turner goes 7 strong to beat the Mets
  • Another rough outing for Hamels as the Phils fall to the Crew
  • Cueto throws 8 scoreless to beat the Bucs
  • Sabathia gets 10 K to beat the Sox
  • Another good start by Garza beats the Dbacks
  • Bartolo Colon CGSO
  • Rays and Indians start late in Cleveland

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Cain and Miller try again in St. Louis (1p Eastern)
  • Greinke travels to Coors 4p Eastern)
  • Bumgarner and Wainwright in game two (7p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Chris Davis, are you buying or selling?

I’ve remained cautiously skeptical of the Davis breakout, as one should. Entering 2013, he was a career .258/.310/.466 hitter, which is perfectly league average 100 wRC+. Career 6.5 BB%, 31.0 K%. Barely above replacement level. This year, he’s .356/.442/.749, good for 209 wRC+. Everyone wants to believe, but I can’t. He’s never done anything like this and I just don’t think he’s changed his approach enough to sustain star level performance. The power is real, but I don’t buy the average and walk rate. I don’t usually like to be the negative guy, but here we are. Valverde nights will do that to you.