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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Eovaldi and his cutter move to Miami


One of the big pieces the Marlins acquired in the trade that sent Hanley Ramirez to the Dodgers was 22-year-old starter Nathan Eovaldi, who had been up and down with the Dodgers this year and last. Throughout his minor league career, which spanned parts of five seasons, Eovaldi established himself as a solid—not elite&mdashy;prospect, reaching No. 96 on Baseball America's post-2011 top prospects list. Probably his biggest weapon is his velocity; his fastball (four- and two-seamers) sits in the mid-90s, which is impressive for a starting pitcher.

In his 10th start of the 2012 season (and his final one for the Dodgers), he did something that a lot of pitchers have been doing recently: He started throwing a cutter. Dodgers beat reporter Dylan Hernandez reported it on his Twitter account, and you can see it in the PITCHf/x data when you compare it to his previous start.




I estimate that Eovaldi threw 19 cutters on July 22. Of them, eight were thrown for balls, one was hit for a groundball single, one was a flyout, five were fouled off, one was taken for a strike, and three were swung on and missed.

Posted by Lucas Apostoleris at 9:49am (0) Comments

And That Happened


Holy moley, an awful lot of big news happened overnight. Ramirez a Dodger? Cole Hamels almost remaining with Philly? There were even some games!

Athletics 7, Blue Jays 2: The A's are streaking. That's six in a row. Derek Norris hit a two-run homer and Yoenis Cespedes drove in three with a single. The A's success at this juncture of the season is almost as surprising as me learning that the late Sherman Hemsley was into 1970s prog rock and LSD and was all kinds of crazy and different than you'd imagine. Seriously. I have no idea how to process this information. It was bad enough when I realized yesterday that he was younger than I am now when "The Jeffersons" premiered.

Phillies 7, Brewers 6: The second straight day the Phillies rip the Brewers' hearts out. Or the Brewers choked their guts out. Depends on your point of view. Zack Greinke was fantastic for seven innings, allowing one run and even hitting a homer of his own.  But then the bullpen came in, giving the Phillies a six-run eight inning. Milwaukee: trade Zack Greinke because you're out of it and you need to get something for him. But also trade him out of basic human compassion.

Cardinals 8, Dodgers 2: The Dodgers stopped streaking as Clayton Kershaw was rocked for eight runs in five and two-thirds. Adam Wainwright [all together now] helped his own cause with an RBI double and taking a walk with the bases loaded.

White Sox 11, Twins 4: Adam Dunn went 3 for 5 with a double a homer and drove in four. Josh Willingham hit two bombs but that's all the Twins could muster.

Reds 4, Astros 2: What a depressing night for the Astros. First they trade away one of their last bona fide major leaguers in Wandy Rodriguez and then they go and blow a one-run lead in the ninth. Will the last person remaining in Minute Maid Park turn out the lights?

Braves 4, Marlins 3: Jason Heyward hit a sac fly and later singled home Martin Prado to break a 3-3 tie in the seventh. After a shaky start Tim Hudson was solid, retiring the last 16 batters he faced. I suppose now that they're selling off players that it's worth watching to see when the Marlins have officially given up on the field.

Red Sox 2, Rangers 1: Clay Buchholz gave the Red Sox a much needed solid start, allowing one run over seven. He didn't get the win -- Vicente Padilla got that when Mike Aviles broke a 1-1 tie with an RBI single in the ninth -- but the Sox needed that kind of outing from a starter.

Nationals 5, Mets 2: R.A. Dickey's 11-game winning streak is over, though he did strike out Bryce Harper three times, which was fun. Gio Gonzalez notched his 13th win to match Dickey, pitching his longest game in two months.

Indians 3, Tigers 2:  The Indians are 6-1 against the Tigers this year. Too bad they can't play 'em all season long.

Cubs 5, Pirates 1: Paul Maholm is en fuego. He won his fifth straight start, beating his old team which had been rumored to maybe want to trade for him again before snagging Wandy Rodriguez. Maholm has allowed just four earned runs in 38 and a third innings in that winning streak.

Rays 4, Orioles 1: In contrast to good streaks like Maholm's and good streaks ending like Dickey's, Jeremy Hellickson has had a bad streak: he had't gotten a win in nine straight starts.  Well, that changed last night. He gave up one run and three hits in six and a third and didn't walk anyone.

Mariners 4, Yankees 2: Bad night for A-Rod. His 2000th career strikeout followed by a broken hand. Oh, and since he was in Seattle, he was booed mercilessly. Splendid.

Giants 3, Padres 2: Angel Pagan may have made the play of the year to end the eighth and then Brandon Crawford delivered the game-winning hit in the ninth. Pablo Sandoval left the game after three innings with a left hamstring strain while stretching for a ball at first base.

Diamondbacks 6, Rockies 2: Five straight wins for Arizona. Joe Saunders allowed only three hits and a walk over seven innings while striking out nine.

Royals 4, Angels 1: Will Smith shut down the Angels. Later today several hack headline writers and highlight show anchors will be fined $100 each for saying he "got jiggy with it."

Posted by Craig Calcaterra at 6:11am (0) Comments