Tag Archives: rangers

The Morning Edition (May 11, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Jon Lester delivers a 1 hit CGSO as the Sox beat the Jays 5-0
  • Alex Cobb strikes out 13 Padres in 4.2 inning, including 4 in one inning…an inning in which he allowed a run on 2 SB and a balk…and fails to pitch deep enough to win
  • Miller is brilliant again against the Rockies, retiring 27 straight after allowing a leadoff hit (CG, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 13K)

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Buchholz welcomes the Blue Jays to Fenway (130p Eastern)
  • Wainwright gets a challenge from the Rockies (2p Eastern)
  • Strasburg gets the Cubs offense (4p Eastern)
  • Darvish faces the Astros (7p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee starts in the desert (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

Often in this space, I highlight a player who is performing well. Today, who is performing poorly? On the pitching side of things, the winner is Mark Buehrle who owns a -0.5 WAR and 7.02 ERA and 6.34 FIP. His strikeout and walk rates are about on par with career norms, but he’s getting fewer groundballs and allowing an insane amount of homeruns. The homerun rate will regress, but a low strikeout control type guy like Buehrle has a pretty small margin for error and his number can balloon quickly. The league’s worst position player, just barely, is Jeff Keppinger who is worth -1.0 WAR and boasts and impressive .195/.191/.212 line in 27 games, good for a -3 wRC+. This means a couple things. First, he’s taken zero walks, so his sacrifice flies make his OBP lower than his batting average and he is 103% worse at the plate right now than league average. Just to give you an entire of what that indicates, the worst offensive season since WWII belongs to Billy Hunter and his 29 wRC+ for the St. Louis Browns. Not that he won’t pick up a little, but if Keppinger keeps this up, (he’ll get benched) he’ll have the worst season relative to league average by 32% since 1946. Impressive.

The Morning Edition (May 6, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Darvish K’s 14 Red Sox as the Rangers win in the bottom of the 9th
  • The Marlins shell Halladay and get a clean outing from Slowey in a 14-2 win
  • Garcia goes 8 and allows 1 run in front of a huge offensive outburst for the Cards
  • Gordon’s walk-off single leads the Royals over the White Sox

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Sale and Shields duel in KC (2p Eastern)
  • Buchholz welcomes the Twins to town in search of his 7th win (7p Eastern)
  • Lefties Lee and Bumgarner face off on the left coast (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is this the end for Doc?

When the season began, I left Roy Halladay off my list of The Nine best NL starters for 2013, but did so with great reservations. Sure Halladay was coming of a rough, injury plagued 2012, but the guy was easily the best and most consistent pitcher of the previous ten seasons, so I didn’t want to write him off too quickly. He opened the season with two rough outings against the Braves and Mets, but then got back on track for three against the Marlins, Cardinals, and Pirates before blowing a gasket against the Indians and Marlins. After the most recent start, he finally admitted to shoulder pain and will see Dr. Yocum this week. He’s likely headed for the DL and will likely never be the brilliant ace he once was. From 2002-2011, Halladay was the best pitcher in the sport and it wasn’t close. Not even a little bit. His 60.9 WAR during the time frame was first ahead of Sabathia by 9.6 WAR despite making 19 fewer starts. Only one starter with more than 1000 IP in the same time frame had a lower ERA: Johan Santana and he threw 400 fewer innings. As of now, he’s 33rd all time in pitcher WAR. He doesn’t have some of the counting stats one likes to see to make the Hall of Fame, but his peak is extremely solid. He has my vote if he never throws another pitch, and it’s not entirely certain that he ever will.

The Morning Edition (May 5, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Lorenzo Cain drives in 2 in the first to back Guthrie’s CGSO against the White Sox
  • Jose Fernandez allows 1 hit in 7 innings while striking out 9 Phillies in his first ML win
  • Strasburg gives up 2 homeruns in 7 innings, but the Nats score 1 in the top of the 9th to outlast the Bucs
  • Wainwright struggles for the first time (5 ER in 5.1 IP), but the Cards deliver in the 9th to win
  • Dickey gets lit up by the Mariners, Blue Jays fall 8-1
  • Hughes throws 8 scoreless as the Yanks top the A’s

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Hudson tries to an encore to his 200th win against Niese and the Mets (1p Eastern)
  • Halladay looks to straighten out again against the Marlins (230p Eastern)
  • Jon Lester. Yu Darvish. Arlington, Texas. (3p Eastern)
  • Alex Cobb takes his hot start to Coors Field (4p Eastern)
  • Strikeout happy Ryu gets struggling ace Matt Cain at AT&T (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • On a day in which Strasburg and Wainwright were on the mound, how did Guthrie, Fernandez, and Hughes headline the night? (Well, Scherzer did his part!)

R.A. Dickey…what’s going on? I certainly expected some regression from the 2012 peak in moving to the AL and a hitter friendly park, but this is pretty serious so far. We’re not deep enough into the season to totally dismiss a small sample size issue, but it’s getting to the point where it just doesn’t look like he’s going to pitch at or around ace levels for the foreseeable future. He’s 2-5 in 7 starts over 42 IP with a 7.07 K/9 and 3.64 BB/9 to go with a 5.36 ERA and 5.19 FIP. Granted, FIP isn’t a great judge of knuckleballers, but the other numbers don’t exactly hearten Blue Jays fans or Dickey fantasy owners (the present author included). If you go back to the much more reasonable 2010-2011 seasons, Dickey’s numbers this year don’t match those either. His strikeouts are up, but his walks are too. His ERA is way up, but his groundball rate is down considerably. That’s the item on the list that catches my attention the most. I haven’t watch Dickey enough to know, but I’m curious if this is the league figuring him out. Maybe he’s not much different and hitters are just getting smarter. I’m not sure, and I know there is some injury talk, but either way, the Mets are starting to look like even better for the offseason deal. The Jays can still turn it around if Dickey finds his groove, but I’m starting to wonder if he will.

The Morning Edition (April 30, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • The Reds and Latos edge the Cards and Wainwright 2-1
  • Ryan Raburn’s 4 hits and 2 HR power a strong Ubaldo past the Royals 9-0
  • Braves slip past the Nats 3-2 thanks to a Simmons sac fly
  • Marlins and Mets play deep into the night as Harvey goes 5.1 and allows 1 run and Stanton leaves with an injury

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Halladay looks to stay hot against the Tribe (7p Eastern)
  • Lester and Morrow face off in Toronto (7p Eastern)
  • Gio and Hudson duel in Atlanta (7p Eastern)
  • Yu Darvish gets the White Sox (8p Eastern)
  • Shields faces Cobb and his old team in KC (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How do you choose what to watch tomorrow? (Verlander at 7p too!)

Matt Harvey limited the Marlins to 1 run in 5.1 innings with 7 K’s on Monday, but it took him 121 pitches in his least efficient outing to date. Yes, we’re disappointed in a 1 run performance. Thanks for setting that bar, Harvey. Carl Crawford is also having a solid start to his first season with the Dodgers after I said he’d be a platoon player by the Dog Days. He’s got 4 homers and 4 steals in 102 PA (at 12:07am on April 30) to go with his .311/.392/.522 line and 1.4 WAR. I’m not ready to say he’s back to being the Crawford who reigned in Tampa, but he’s certainly better than I expected him to be this year. And don’t look now, but even after tonight’s loss to the Reds, Adam Wainwright has vaulted above 2 WAR in April (2.1) and guys who provide that kind of value in April, usually have big years. I predicted he’d be a top 5 NL starter this year, but if I could do it all over again, he’d be in my top 3.

 

The Morning Edition (April 26, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Valbuena homers in the 9th to lift the Cubs over the Marlins 4-3
  • Buehrle continues to struggle, allows 3 HR to the Yankees in 5-3 loss
  • Harper and Espinosa power Gio to a win over the Reds
  • Buchholz K’s 10 Astros enroute to a 7-2 victory

What I’m Watching Today:

  • After a terrible first start, Scott Kazmir takes another shot on the comeback trail against the Royals (8p Eastern)
  • Chen and Milone face off as last year’s Cinderella’s meet in Oakland (10p Eastern)
  • Lincecum looks to stay on track against hard throwing Cashner and the Padres (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

As I often do in the space below the Morning Edition, I’d like to highlight a weird early season set of statistics. Most would tend to consider wRC+ the best catch-all offensive metric, and as I sort the 2013 leaderboard by said metric a variety of names expected and unexpected rise to the top. The player who ranks 11th as I write this (11:21pm April 25) is Braves 3rd basemen Chris Johnson with 176 wRC+. I’m not going to make the case that this makes Johnson an MVP candidate or anything silly like that, but I would like to point out that he is, by out best single number, one of the best dozen hitters in baseball over the first four weeks. What makes that so interesting is that he is doing so while walking a preposterously small amount, just 3% of the time. Usually when someone is near the top of the leaderboards this early, we talk about negative regression to the mean, but Johnson’s walk rate is so low it can only regress upward. Don’t get me wrong, the dude doesn’t walk, but he’s never walked less than 4% of the time in the major leagues, so that should get marginally better, or at least not worse. The next player on the list who walks less than Johnson is JP Arencibia, who is 44th ranked. Johnson’s line looks like this: .397/.424/.556. He has the same wRC+ as Prince Fielder who has walked 17% of the time while hitting for more power! How is this so? Well Johnson is hitting .397, which is very high and very BABIP driven (.460). He is a high BABIP guy (career .353), but that should come down to some degree and he’ll settle in closer to his career mark of 104 wRC+, which is nothing at which to sneeze. Now if only he could play defense (career UZR -34.9 in 365 games).

Yu Darvish and the Most Incredible .GIF

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

This site is devoted primarily to the Detroit Tigers and secondarily to baseball as a whole, and this post will concern the latter. It will be very short and direct.

A gentleman in the comments section of  the Rangers blog Lone Star Ball created this masterpiece that features Yu Darvish throwing each of his pitches at one time. The creator is Drew Shepherd and he has done superb work. Go watch it.

The Morning Edition (April 12, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Zach Greinke breaks his collarbone after a Carlos Quentin charges the mound after being hit by a pitch
  • The Giants come back from being down 5-0 to beat the Cubs at Wrigley 7-6
  • Felix gives up 10 hits enroute to a loss against the Rangers

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Jon Niese and the Mets meet old division foe Vance Worley at Target Field (8p Eastern)
  • The Blue Jays face the Royals in a battle of AL makeovers (8p Eastern)
  • Clayton Kershaw takes the hill for appointment viewing against the Dbacks (940p Eastern)
  • Yu Darvish faces the struggling Mariners (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is Clayton Kershaw making a bid to unseat Verlander as baseball’s best starter?

Thursday brought us an abbreviated MLB schedule with just eight games (one of which was rained out) and resulted in MLB Network filling unaccounted for air time with a rerun of Intentional Talk hosted by Chris Rose and Kevin Millar. This leads me to my only idle musing for the day: how good does a network have to be for IT to be its worst program? That’s insane. It’s a solid show, but it’s their worst show. MLB Now, MLB Tonight, Quick Pitch, Clubhouse Confidential, The Rundown, etc are all the best in their class as far as sports programming goes. It’s no wonder they win so many Emmys.

I haven’t heard the timeline on the Greinke injury, but it’s a blow to the Dodgers who were counting on him to pitch at ace levels this season. It will probably only cost them a couple games in the standings in total due to the time he misses, but I would be concerned about how the injury might affect his delivery when he returns give its location. We should know more later today that will help clear up those questions.

Finally, 42 opens today nationwide. I’m looking forward to seeing Jackie Robinson immortalized further on the silver screen and am excited for young and casual fans to get a glimpse into one of the great baseball players of all time, who just happens to double as one of the most pivotal figures of the 20th century. But no pressure on the actors. I plan to review the film sometime in the next week or two.

The Morning Edition (April 11, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Rain delays games and washes out NYY/CLE and MIL/CHC
  • Harper and Desmond back Zimmerman in a 5-2 win over the White Sox
  • Giants put up a 10 spot on the Rockies as Zito puts up a zero
  • Matt Moore keeps the Rangers off the board despite 6 walks in a 2-0 win

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Dan Haren looks to bounce back from a rocky first outing against the White Sox (7p Eastern)
  • Greinke looks to build on his superb first effort against the Friars (10p Eastern)
  • Felix Hernandez is pitching. That’s all you need. (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is Barry Zito a thing again? (I mean, probably not, but he’s trying!)

I’ve been trying to decide if bullpens are worse this year or not. I’m the king of lecturing on small sample sizes, but it seems like several times a night we’re watching bullpens in full on meltdown mode. Naturally, I went digging to see if my perception is well-founded or not. Here’s what I found (league-wide reliever numbers).

  • 2013: 8.57 K/9, 3.39 BB/9, 1.15 HR/9, 4.27 ERA, 4.11 FIP
  • 2012: 8.37 K/9, 3.46 BB/9, 0.89 HR/9, 3.67 ERA, 3.79 FIP
  • March/April 2012: 8.09 K/9, 3.62 BB/9, 0.91 HR/9, 3.74 ERA, 3.95 FIP

That’s a lot of numbers, but let me summarize. Relievers are striking out more batters in 2013 than they did last year and they’re walking fewer too regardless of whether we look at the whole season or just the first month. But when we look to the far right we see a much higher set of ERA and FIP in 2013, pointing us to the culprit: homeruns. Relievers are giving up more homeruns in 2013 than they did last April or last year. This is a small sample, so it may not be predictive of what we will see the rest of the way, but I am right in my suspicion that bullpens are performing worse so far. They’re giving up bombs at a higher rate and it’s translating into worse run prevention by bullpens league-wide.

So it’s not just the Tigers, guys.

The Morning Edition (April 10, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Kris Medlen cruises past the Fish in Miami
  • Cliff Lee gets help from his offense, but comes up one out shy of a complete game in aa 8-3 win over the Mets
  • Pettitte needs little help, but gets a lot in 14-1 win over the Indians
  • The Nationals hang on for dear life in an 8-7 win over the White Sox

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Matt Moore faces the Rangers in a redux of his 2011 ALDS Game 1 start (2p Eastern)
  • Barry Zito looks to build on his strong first start against the Rockies (345p Eastern)
  • Kyle Lohse will try to follow his strong first start against the Cubs (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

It happened after we went to press on Monday night, but I can’t help but comment on what happened in the final at bat of Monday’s game between the Rangers and Rays. Down one, with one on and two out, Ben Zobrist stepped to the plate to face Joe Nathan. Marty Foster gave us this beauty of a strikezone.

numlocation

Jump over to Jeff Sullivan’s article at Fangraphs for .gifs of the pitch and how awful it looked it real time. Foster admitted after the game that he missed the call. We’re speaking specifically about #6 above (but #1 was bad too!). It’s hard to be too critical of MLB umpires give the state of officiating in high profile events in other sports like the NCAA title game, but this is just one of the many reasons why we need expanded replay in baseball. There are a lot of calls that we could get right if we let the umpires take another look. Not only would it help us get calls right, but it would take pressure off the umpires and remove a lot of tension that comes after blown calls. Heck, there were two clear ones on Opening Night in Houston and another really bad one (that the crew chief overturned) in Detroit this weekend. A lot of this is avoidable, so let’s avoid it!

Booing Josh Hamilton: Hard Feelings in Arlington

Texas Rangers v Oakland Athletics

You know the story. Josh Hamilton is drafted #1 by the Rays. Josh Hamilton goes to a dark place of personal demons dealing with drugs and alcohol addiction. Josh Hamilton returns to baseball and has a successful year with the Reds, gets traded to Texas and becomes a bona fide star. He wins an MVP, makes two World Series, and despite struggles, produces at a very high level.

And then there were relapses, a terrible accident involving a fan, and awful plate discipline. There was a really bad final few weeks that coincided with the Rangers missing the real playoffs on the final day.

There were boos. And contract talks. And a former hero moving to LA to go where he felt like he was wanted. I’ve written a lot about Josh Hamilton as a player. His amazing skills and terrible plate discipline. His flawed past.

And then there was this, that Hamilton said after leaving town:

“Texas, especially Dallas, has always been a football town. The good with the bad is they’re supportive, but they also got a little spoiled at the same time, pretty quickly. You can understand a really true, true baseball town. There’s true baseball fans in Texas but it’s not a true baseball town.”

All of this stacked on top of itself makes it pretty unsurprising that the Rangers faithful greeted him with Bronx cheers on Friday. They booed. They read the paper. There were hard feelings all around.

I have complicated feelings about Hamilton. I’ll lay them out.

  1. Hamilton is very talented and can do really exciting things on the field
  2. Hamilton has terrible plate discipline, a skill I value greatly
  3. Hamilton wasted a great deal of his God-given talent when he buried himself in drugs and alcohol
  4. Hamilton’s story is one of redemption, which is very emotionally powerful
  5. Hamilton seemed to phone in his final month in Texas

On balance, Josh Hamilton has enough personal demons to deal with without me getting on his case. But he’s frustrating to watch. He could have been an all-time great and he wasted so much potential. He doesn’t seem to like baseball very much, but he’s a great comeback story.

But the fans in Texas have some reason to be angry. I think he did quit on them last year. He looked awful in the biggest games of the year. A little more from Hamilton during the final weeks might have helped the Rangers secure a playoff berth. But then again, they don’t know what was going on with him. The right thing to do from the fan perspective would have been unconditional support. He was theirs, they should defend him.

And then he left. They parted ways. It was a breakup that both sides needed. Fine, good, it was time. But then the quote posted above. Hamilton insulted the Rangers’ fans. He challenged their love of the game. He made it about them and not about him. He all of people should know about his flaws. But there he was, blaming them. Pouring salt in the wound.

Classy it was not. If Hamilton hadn’t said it, I think I’d take his side on the booing issue. But after the way he left, to make a public statement like that, Hamilton was asking for it.

He deserved it. But the fans didn’t come away smelling like roses. It was just kind of ugly. It was a divorce. They couldn’t live together anymore and it was time to go their separate ways. But then there was a snarky comment to a mutual friend that resulted in an arms race of animosity.

It’s sad really. There’s so much about their relationship that was good. And it ended so poorly.

I want to blame Josh Hamilton for who he is, but that’s probably not right. I want to blame the fans for bailing on him too early. I want to blame Hamilton for disparaging his old fan base. I wish the fans had taken the high road rather than show him up.

It wasn’t pretty, but not everything is. Josh Hamilton is baseball’s flawed giant and he always will be. He was wrong. The fans were wrong. Time is the only thing that will heal this wound. Hopefully, the day will come when they can reconcile. And the kids who grew up wearing Hamilton jerseys can stand and cheer for star they used to love.