Tag Archives: mets

The Morning Edition (June 3, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

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)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

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)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

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.

The Morning Edition (May 31, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Freddy Garcia dominates the Nats
  • Dillon Gee’s 12 K lead the Mets to a four game sweep of the Yankees
  • Kazmir goes 7 strong behind a 7 run inning to beat the Reds
  • Felix dominates the Padres as Ryan, Chavez, Franklin, and Morales all homer
  • Travis Wood hits a grand slam and gets the win over the White Sox
  • Wacha goes 7, gives up 2 hits in his MLB debut and gets a ND

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Lester and CC faces off in NY (7p Eastern)
  • Moore and Kluber go head to head in Cleveland (7p Eastern)
  • Jacob Turner makes his 2013 debut (7p Eastern)
  • Strasburg faces the Braves (7p Eastern)
  • Cain and Miller in St. Louis (8p Eastern)
  • Kershaw at Coors (830p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Are the Cardinals wizards?

Yesterday, I wrote about teams who do a good job scoring from 2B on a single and today I’m going to look at a nearly opposite concept. Which teams make the most outs on the bases? Specifically, which teams make the most outs at 3B and home on the bases? I isolate those two categories because I think it makes for a good third base coach ranking. Third base coaches signal if a runner should advance to third or home on a play, but runners usually make the choice about second. So here, without much more ado, are the teams that have made the most outs on the bases at 3B and home entering Thursday (listed by raw number, but also shown with percentage of their total outs on the bases):

Untitled

I haven’t spent enough time with these numbers to really know if it reflects the quality of the team’s third base coach, but I suspect it does. The coach can’t make his runners faster, but he can know which players are capable of taking the extra base and only telling them to advance. They don’t always listen, but a good third base coach should be able to make them. Seattle makes the highest percentage of their baserunning outs at 3B and home, so their coach could probably do more to help. Ideally, you would want to have all zeroes on this board, but the columns showing 3B and home are categories in which the coach plays a role and should therefore be judged. I’ll be thinking about this more and working on a way to further isolate this going forward. If you have suggestions, let me know.

The Morning Edition (May 30, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Baltimore’s 6 run 7th tops Zimmerman’s 3 HR night
  • The Mets beat the Yanks with 5 in the first, but Nova delivers an immaculate inning
  • Navarro homers 3 times as the Cubs beat the White Sox

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Felix goes at Petco (330p Eastern)
  • Moore faces the Marlins (7p Eastern)
  • Michael Wacha makes his MLB debut for the Cards

The Big Question:

  • Has the Cardinals draft team been tested for PEDs?

I spend some time checking into various baserunning numbers and threw several tweets out regarding those numbers (you can read them if you look to the right of this page) and I made this handy graph comparing how often a team scores from second base on a single:

second to home on a single

 

You can see 60% is about average and the Mets lead the way with 79%, but look at those Astros. My, my those Astros. 39%.

The Morning Edition (May 29, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Harvey and Kuroda deliver a classic duel in NY
  • Lee dominates the Red Sox, wins 3-1
  • Rays walk off against the Marlins
  • McCann homers in the 10th to lift the Braves over the Jays

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Zimmermann faces the Orioles in Baltimore (7p Eastern)
  • McCarthy looks to stay hot against the Rangers (8p Eastern)
  • Weaver returns to action against the Dodgers (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How do you like some of these home and home series in MLB?

Cliff Lee in 2013: 7.03 K/9, 1.45 BB/9, 0.56 HR/9, 39.1 GB%  2.34 ERA, 2.84 FIP, 3.63 xFIP, 2.0 WAR

Rick Porcello in 2013: 7.06 K/9, 1.76 BB/9, 1.24 HR/9, 55.7 GB%, 5.29 ERA, 3.93 ERA, 3.15 xFIP, 0.7 WAR

Once their HR/FB rates normalize (5.5% to 19.4%), they’re basically the same pitcher with Porcello getting the ball on the ground more often. I’m not saying Porcello is going to be Cliff Lee, but so far, it’s not such a crazy thought. (Innings aside)

The Morning Edition (May 28, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • The Mets rally late to back a strong outing by Niese against the Yanks
  • Samardzija drops a CGSO against the cross town Sox
  • Aaron Harang also provides a CGSO against San Diego
  • Skaggs is sharp at the front of a doubleheader
  • Wainwright goes 8 to beat Shields and the Royals 6-3
  • Gomez homers twice, but the Crew lose to the Twins
  • The Astros walk off in 12 versus the Rockies
  • Votto’s 8th inning homer leads the Reds over the Indians

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Gausman takes his second turn, gets the Nats (7p Eastern)
  • Matt Harvey faces the Yankees for the first time (7p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee comes to Boston (7p Eastern)
  • Chris Sale tries to take one from the Cubs (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is the new schedule dulling interleague play?

Danny Knobler at CBS wrote yesterday how little buzz there is for this week’s big interleague matchups and I’m in total agreement. Interleague play, which is the scorn of my father’s generation, used to feel special for me. It would be fun to spend a couple weeks watching players from the NL that I usually didn’t get to watch up close. Now, those teams are sprinkled into the normal schedule after nearly 20 years of being confined to a fortnight or so in June. The novelty has really lost its luster. It feels strange and awkward and forced. It’s either time to add two more teams and dump interleague play or get rid of the pretense all together and play all 29 clubs.

The Morning Edition (May 23, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Cliff Lee delivers the CGSO against the Marlins
  • Wilson strong as the Angels thump the Mariners
  • Granderson comes up a 3B short of the cycle, but Kuroda leaves early as the Yanks fall
  • Liriano out duels Sharky at PNC
  • Bautista homers twice and then hits a walk off extra inning single
  • Gio and Bumgarner duel but the bullpens decide it in favor of the Nats
  • The Reds make Harvey look human, win in the 9th

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Only four games on the schedule that don’t involve the Tigers, here are your matchups: Jackson/Gomez, Gausman/Morrow, McAllister/Dempster, Blanton/Santana
  • I’d tell you I was watching Gausman, but I can’t because I live in NC and we aren’t legally allowed to watch the Orioles or Nationals play under any circumstances

The Big Question:

  • How do you spend rain delays? (I stare off into space until there is something worth watching again.)

I’ve written a good deal about guys near the top of the WAR leaderboard, but I’m going for it again because I noticed something as of this moment: four of the top six players on the list are the guys I consider to be the four best in the game. Longoria (1), Cabrera (2), Votto (3), Trout (6). Trout and Longoria are elite two way players while Cabrera and Votto are the best hitters in their respective leagues. It’s not often that your expectations line up with reality so well, but here we are.

The Morning Edition (May 22, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Mike Trout hits for the cycle
  • Leake strong as the Reds beat the Mets 4-0
  • McClouth walks off against the Yanks
  • Garza sharp in his season debut, but Snider slams the Cubs pen to give the Bucs the W
  • Greinke gets roughed up over 4 innings in Milwaukee

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Harvey versus Latos at Citi (1p Eastern)
  • Gio and Bumgarner throw from the left side in SF (330p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee faces the Marlins (7p Eastern)
  • Buchholz gets the White Sox (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is a 4th AL 3B trying to get involved in this race?

Last week I talked about how Miguel Cabrera, Evan Longoria, and Manny Machado led the AL in WAR, but a new AL 3B has moved into the #4 spot: Josh Donaldson. As I write this, he’s hitting .315/.391/.530 with a 152 wRC+ an 2.1 WAR, which is 9th in MLB. He’s flashed solid potential before, but nothing quite like this. In 300+ previous big league at bats he was a below average walker and above average strikeout guy who didn’t hit for average of power. In the minors he had some reasonable success, but it wasn’t anything spectacular. Now in 2013, he’s crushing. His BABIP (.353) is elevated, but he’s shown a higher BABIP in various minor league stints so it’s not like it is guaranteed to regress dramatically. I left him out of my top 9 3B to start the year and I think I’m sticking with that, but for now, the best 3 players in the AL play 3B and one of them is Josh Donaldson.

The Morning Edition (May 20, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Chapman gives up 2 HR in the 9th to Katz and Galvis and blows it in Philly
  • Moore twirls 7 innings of 1 run ball, gets help from a Joyce homerun that was reviewed for 9 minutes to win 3-1
  • Locke and Harrell duel to a 1-0 Pirates victory
  • Ozuna backs Nolasco’s 11 Ks to take one from Arizona
  • The Indians rough up Felix, Masterson Ks 11 in 7 innings for a 6-0 win

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Under the radar Iwakuma tries to salvage one in Cleveland (12p Eastern)
  • Odorizzi makes his Rays debut against Dickey and the Jays (1p Eastern)
  • Cueto returns versus the Mets (7p Eastern)
  • Lester faces the White Sox (8p Eastern)
  • Kershaw comes to Milwaukee after dominating his last time out (8p Eastern)
  • Corbin on the mound in Colorado (830p Eastern)
  • Shelby Miller heads to Petco (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How will you divide up your MLB viewing today?

The Marlins are just above the Tigers 43-119 pace from 2003 and are currently tracking toward 44 wins. Their team slash line is an incredible .221/.284/.317. In 2012, four players hit between .220 and .230 and slugged between .310 and .320. Here’s the list: Peter Bourjos (195 PA), Anthony Gose (189 PA), Jose Lobaton (197 PA), and Carlos Triunfel (24 PA). Put it this way, the Marlins as a team are hitting like four players who couldn’t get 200 PA on another team. The average Miami Marlin couldn’t even platoon in the majors. The 2013 Marlins are worse than Don Kelly’s career line, who has made a career being a defense first 13th man who can play many positions. The Marlins are fielding a team that is below replacement level (-1.6 WAR). That’s happening.