The Hardball Times

THT Daily: Angelic

by THT Staff
July 30, 2008

Player News
Yesterday’s Results
Today’s Games
Standings
Game of the Day
Yesterday’s Home Runs

You can always find the most recent THT Daily at http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/content/thtdaily/ and an archive at http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/thtdaily_index/

Player News
Player Headlines are courtesy of Rotoworld

The Braves acquired Casey Kotchman and Stephen Marek from the Angels for Mark Teixeira. The Angels get a nice upgrade here, but they're giving up a 25-year-old with room to improve for just two months of an at least somewhat overrated first baseman. Marek was also one of their top prospects. A move to the pen this year has him looking like a potential closer.

John Lackey took a no-hitter into the ninth Tuesday against the Red Sox, but ended up allowing two runs in a complete-game victory. Dustin Pedroia broke up the bid with a one-out single, and Kevin Youkilis immediately followed with a long homer to left. Lackey was going for the Angels' first no-hitter since Mike Witt's perfect game in 1984. It would have been the first time Boston was no-hit since Seattle’s Chris Bosio completed one in 1993. Lackey walked just one and hit a batter. He improved to 3-6 with a 5.54 ERA in 13 starts against the Red Sox.

Alexi Casilla was diagnosed with a torn tendon in his right thumb and could be lost for the season. A tough blow for the Twins. Casilla had some frustrating lapses on defenses, but he was hitting awfully well. Now the Twins are going to activate Adam Everett instead of designating him for assingment. Brendan Harris should reemerge as a regular, apparently at shortstop, with Nick Punto moving to second. Everett will likely replace Harris for defense late in games.

Diamondbacks optioned RHP Micah Owings to Triple-A Tucson. A move that probably should have happened weeks ago. Owings might have to be written off for the rest of 2008. He's supposed to be healthy, but he hasn't pitched like it in a couple of months now. Yusmeiro Petit will take his place in the rotation and should be worth using in NL-only leagues.

Rangers placed third baseman Hank Blalock on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to July 28, with inflammation in his right shoulder. It's unclear if this is at all related to the surgery he underwent last year after being diagnosed with Thoracic Outlet Syndrome. Still, it wouldn't come as a shock if we've seen the last of him this season. Ramon Vazquez will again be used as the Rangers' starting third baseman.

Milton Bradley left Tuesday's game in the eighth inning with a strained left quad. Ryan Roberts took over at designated hitter. If this is a DL-type injury, the Rangers will probably call up Nelson Cruz to take over at DH.

Jose Guillen wants out of Kansas City and would be willing to defer money to make it happen, ESPN Deportes reports. Guillen signed on with the high bidder, and he had to know what he was getting into. Of course, the Royals had so much more money on the table than anyone else that it's hard to blame him for not passing it up. Guillen is mostly frustrated about his relationship with manager Trey Hillman, a source told ESPN. "Guillen and Hillman are not on speaking terms, they don't talk," said the source. "Guillen is definitely not happy, he's not comfortable and he would do anything he can in economic terms to ease his way out of Kansas City." There has been speculation that the Braves were interested, but that seems unlikely now. That Guillen is owed another $24 million after this year will make dealing him difficult.

Former major league reliever Julio Mateo was arrested on suspicion of forgery last weekend after police discovered counterfeit $100 bills in his hotel room. Mateo hasn't pitched in the majors since being arested on spousal abuse charges and skipping out on the Mariners last May. He was pitching for San Francisco's Triple-A team this year. According to the Albuquerque police reports, Mateo is accused of using a counterfeit $100 bill to pay a $26.80 cab fare for himself and Fresno teammate Victor Santos. After investigating officers received permission from Mateo to enter his hotel room, an officer saw "two stacks [of] money with $100 bills on top of the stacks," a police report said.

Yesterday’s Results
Game recaps provided by Craig Calcaterra of Shysterball.

Angels 6, Red Sox 2: Two outs away from a no-hitter and John Lackey doesn't even get the shutout, but a great performance it was all the same (CG, 2 H, 2 ER). And now, with the addition of Teixeira, the rest of the American League will witness the firepower of this fully ARMED and OPERATIONAL ballclub!

Cubs 7, Brewers 1: Ben Sheets was knocked around and Carlos Zambrano was dominant (8 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 9K). According to reader Chris H. who watched the game, there was a serious lack of hustle on the part of the Brewers:
The box score won't show it, but the Brewers outfielders really look demoralized out there. Several of the runs scored tonight have been gifts, and in particular I think Ryan Braun is going to need an extra couple hours of sleep tonight, because by the 7th inning he seems to be loping rather than running. Oh, and Corey Hart totally handed Theriot a triple by jogging after a fly ball and basically watching it roll past him. Seriously, I think they're drugged or something.
Anyone else feel that way? If that's the case, don't you pretty much have to blame Ned Yost for letting his team come out flat and loaf in what is the most important series of the year so far?

Astros 6, Reds 2: Fifth loss in a row for the Redlegs. That probably doesn't matter because their season is lost anyway. What does matter is that a couple of guys you know they'd like to shop -- Dunn and Arroyo -- each put up stink bombs, with one going 0-4 with no walks and the other giving up six runs on eight hits in six and a third. As for Houston, the buy-now Astros creep to within 12.5 games of the Cubs, biding their time . . . biding their time.

Rays 3, Jays 0: So much drama in Boston has obscured the fact that the Rays aren't giving up the division, especially to a bunch of dysfunctional babies like the Red Sox. Matt Garza threw a five hit shutout, beating Roy Halladay who, you may have noticed, is pretty good himself.

Mets 4, Marlins 1: The Mets are understandably upset that Teixeira was traded to an AL team on the west coast because now they'll have to buy more expensive plane tickets to get the guys they have scouting him for the inevitable free agent signing. Or at least that's the kind of thing I was reading on a couple of Mets' sites last night. Really, one commenter was saying something like "the worry is that Teixeira is gonna fall in love with the California lifestyle and not wanna come to New York," like it's a fait acompli or something.

Orioles 7, Yankees 6: Attention Yankees fans: Carl Pavano made a rehab appearance down at Class A last night. He struck out four and allowed one hit in two scoreless innings. And you know what? A couple more Sidney Ponson and Darrell Rasner starts, you won't even boo him when he finally pitches a game for the Bombers.

Twins 6, White Sox 5: Another Twins win, and just like that, this race is this race is hotter than a Times Square Rolex! It's as thin as turnip soup! But there's a long way to go, and if you try to read the tea leaves before the cup is done, you're gonna get yourself burned! OK, that had nothing to do with this game. I'm just starting to get a little excited about election season, and I wanted to whip out some Ratherisms.

Rangers 11, Mariners 10: There were 22 runs, 33 hits, and 8 pitching changes in this one. If it weren't for the fact that no one was taking a walk, it could have gone on all night. Bonus: Ichiro notched his 3000th career hit. I think that there's a decent chance that he'll hang around long enough to get 3,000 in the U.S. alone -- doesn't he remind you of Pete Rose on some vague level? -- but if he doesn't, I'll be curious to see how your average BBWAA member views the Japanese component of these 3,000 for Hall of Fame purposes.

Phillies 3, Nats 1: Before any Phillies fans get the idea that Brett Myers is all better now, remember that the team he shut down for seven innings last night has only scored three runs in its last five games.

Pirates 6, Rockies 4: There are some folks out there -- mostly in the Rockies' front office, I think -- who believe that this team has another run in them a la 2007. Worth noting that, 108 games in last year, Colorado was only 3.5 out and was playing above-.500 ball. Also worth noting is that as late as September 16th last year, their deficit in the NL West -- 6.5 games -- was about the same that it is now. I don't think anyone's ever going to get rich gambling on white-hot streaks, but given how bad everyone in this division is capable of playing, it's too late to close the books on the possibility.

Cardinals 8, Braves 3: As evidence of just how nightmarish a season this has become for the Braves, I give you Mark Kotsay, batting third. By the way, Jeff Francoeur was the only Braves player who got into the game last night who was on the team the last time they made the playoffs.

Tigers 8, Indians 3: The Casey Blake trade has created a tremendous opportunity for Andy Marte. After years of failing to live up to the potential with which he was once credited, he basically has 2/3 of a season with no pressure and no competition for the Indians' third base job. Even moderate production over that time will ensure his future employment in Cleveland, because quite frankly, they need him. Since the trade, Marte has gone something like 2-15 with a single extra-base hit. Marte will never be handed an opportunity like this again, yet here he is, blowing it.

Diamondbacks 3, Padres 0: Doug Davis -- who took a perfecto into the seventh -- was the story here, but Alex Romero's back-to-the-plate catch of a deep fly to right center in the bottom of the eighth was the play of the game. Fire up the video highlight mechanism of your choice to get a look at it.

Royals 5, A's 2: Remember back in the day when Kansas City used to send all of its good players to Oakland this time of year? I kinda miss that.

Dodgers 2, Giants 0: The Dodgers keep pace with the Dbacks via a surprising (at least to me) start from Jason Johnson of all people, who shut the Giants out and didn't walk anyone over six innings. I remember when Johnson came up, and have always had a vague awareness of his presence in the Major Leagues, but I don't think I could tell you when he played for who at basically any time over the course of his career. I love unexpected goodness from journeymen starters for some reason. Always have.

You can download a compact version of yesterday's boxscores from Heater Magazine.

First Inning's Major and Minor League Daily Reports:
{embed="pageblocks/FirstInning_Team_Lookup"}

Today’s Games
National League
 ---------------
 Colorado Rockies at Pittsburgh Pirates, 7:05 PM
  (R) Aaron Cook (13-6) vs. (L) Zach Duke (4-8)
 Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals, 7:10 PM
  (L) Jamie Moyer (9-6) vs. (R) Tim Redding (7-5)
 New York Mets at Florida Marlins, 7:10 PM
  (R) Mike Pelfrey (9-6) vs. (R) Josh Johnson (0-0)
 St. Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves, 7:10 PM
  (R) Chris Carpenter (0-0) vs. (R) Jair Jurrjens (10-5)
 Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee Brewers, 8:05 PM
  (R) Ryan Dempster (11-4) vs. (L) Manny Parra (9-3)
 Cincinnati Reds at Houston Astros, 8:05 PM
  (R) Edinson Volquez (12-4) vs. (L) Wandy Rodriguez (6-3)
 Arizona Diamondbacks at San Diego Padres, 10:05 PM
  (R) Dan Haren (10-5) vs. (R) Cha Seung Baek (3-4)
 San Francisco Giants at Los Angeles Dodgers, 10:10 PM
  (L) Jonathan Sanchez (8-6) vs. (R) Chad Billingsley (10-9)
 
 American League
 ---------------
 Tampa Bay Rays at Toronto Blue Jays, 12:37 PM
  (R) Edwin Jackson (6-7) vs. (R) Scott Richmond (0-0)
 Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees, 1:05 PM
  (R) Dennis Sarfate (4-1) vs. (R) Joba Chamberlain (3-3)
 Kansas City Royals at Oakland Athletics, 3:35 PM
  (R) Brian Bannister (7-9) vs. (R) Sean Gallagher (1-0)
 LA Angels of Anaheim at Boston Red Sox, 7:05 PM
  (L) Joe Saunders (13-5) vs. (R) Josh Beckett (9-7)
 Detroit Tigers at Cleveland Indians, 7:05 PM
  (L) Nate Robertson (6-8) vs. (L) Cliff Lee (14-2)
 Seattle Mariners at Texas Rangers, 8:05 PM
  (R) Miguel Batista (4-11) vs. (R) Vicente Padilla (12-5)
 Chicago White Sox at Minnesota Twins, 8:10 PM
  (R) Gavin Floyd (10-6) vs. (R) Livan Hernandez (10-7)

Standings
The graphics next to each team are called "sparklines.” They depict each team’s performance over the last month. Each "up" bar is a victory and a "down" bar is a loss. There are horizontal lines for home games and red bars represent games decided by two runs or less. "PWins" is short for Projected Wins, based on each team’s Run Differential, and is often a better measure of a team’s true strength. Other team graphs and stats can be found on our Team Page.
American League East        Pwins  Diff
TB      62  44 .585    0.0   57     5    sparkline graph
BOS     61  47 .565    2.0   63    -2    sparkline graph
NYA     58  48 .547    4.0   57     1    sparkline graph
TOR     54  53 .505    8.5   57    -3    sparkline graph
BAL     51  55 .481   11.0   52    -1    sparkline graph
American League Central     
CHA     59  46 .562    0.0   61    -2    sparkline graph
MIN     59  47 .557    0.5   56     3    sparkline graph
DET     54  52 .509    5.5   56    -2    sparkline graph
KC      49  59 .454   11.5   46     3    sparkline graph
CLE     46  59 .438   13.0   53    -7    sparkline graph
American League West        
LAA     66  40 .623    0.0   58     8    sparkline graph
TEX     55  52 .514   11.5   51     4    sparkline graph
OAK     53  53 .500   13.0   58    -5    sparkline graph
SEA     40  66 .377   26.0   45    -5    sparkline graph


National League East        Pwins  Diff
NYN     58  49 .542    0.0   58     0    sparkline graph
PHI     57  49 .538    0.5   60    -3    sparkline graph
FLA     56  51 .523    2.0   50     6    sparkline graph
ATL     49  57 .462    8.5   55    -6    sparkline graph
WAS     38  68 .358   19.5   40    -2    sparkline graph
National League Central     
CHN     63  44 .589    0.0   65    -2    sparkline graph
MIL     60  47 .561    3.0   56     4    sparkline graph
STL     60  49 .550    4.0   57     3    sparkline graph
HOU     50  56 .472   12.5   48     2    sparkline graph
PIT     50  57 .467   13.0   47     3    sparkline graph
CIN     50  58 .463   13.5   47     3    sparkline graph
National League West        
ARI     54  52 .509    0.0   55    -1    sparkline graph
LAN     53  53 .500    1.0   55    -2    sparkline graph
COL     48  60 .444    7.0   49    -1    sparkline graph
SF      44  62 .415   10.0   44     0    sparkline graph
SD      42  66 .389   13.0   43    -1    sparkline graph

Game of the Day
Rangers 11, Mariners 10 - FINAL

SEATTLE                ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
I Suzuki rf             5  0  2  1   0  1   2  .298
J Reed cf               4  0  1  1   0  0   2  .246
 va-W Bloomquist ph-cf  1  0  1  0   0  0   0  .275
R Ibanez lf             4  0  0  0   1  1   3  .279
A Beltre 3b             5  0  0  0   0  1   6  .257
J Lopez 2b              5  3  3  1   0  0   1  .305
B LaHair dh             4  3  3  1   0  0   0  .375
 vb-K Johjima ph        0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .209
 J Washburn pr-dh       0  1  0  0   0  0   0  .000
M Cairo 1b              4  2  2  0   0  1   0  .246
J Burke c               4  1  2  2   0  0   0  .284
Y Betancourt ss         5  0  1  1   0  0   3  .255

Totals                 41 10 15  7   1  4  17   ###

TEXAS                  ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
I Kinsler 2b            5  0  0  0   0  0   5  .327
M Young ss              4  1  0  0   1  3   2  .295
J Hamilton cf           5  2  3  0   0  0   0  .304
M Bradley dh            4  1  3  1   0  0   2  .320
 ha-R Roberts ph-dh     1  0  0  0   0  1   1  .000
D Murphy lf             5  1  0  1   0  0   3  .265
M Byrd rf               4  2  3  4   1  0   0  .258
C Davis 1b              5  2  2  0   0  0   2  .291
G Laird c               4  2  3  1   0  0   2  .320
R Vazquez 3b            5  0  4  4   0  1   1  .320

Totals                 42 11 18 11   2  5  18   ###

----------------------------------------------------
    SEATTLE         - 000 303 202   --  10 15 1
    TEXAS           - 025 110 002   --  11 18 5

One out when winning run scored.
----------------------------------------------------

va-singled to left for J Reed in the 8th;  ha-struck out swinging for M Bradley 
in the 8th;  vb-hit by pitch for B Lahair in the 9th.

BATTING: 2B - M Bradley 2 (26, C Silva, R Corcoran); M Byrd (12, C Silva); G 
Laird (13, R Corcoran); R Vazquez (15, J Putz). HR - M Byrd (6, 3rd inning off 
C Silva 2 on, 1 Out), J Lopez (8, 7th inning off J Wright 0 on, 0 Out), B 
Lahair (2, 7th inning off J Wright 0 on, 0 Out). S - M Cairo. RBI - J Burke 2 
(5), Y Betancourt (30), I Suzuki (26), J Reed (13), J Lopez (58), B LaHair (2), 
M Byrd 4 (22), G Laird (26), D Murphy (67), R Vazquez 4 (35), M Bradley (60). 
2-out RBI - J Burke, Y Betancourt, G Laird. Runners left in scoring position, 2 
out - A Beltre 1, I Suzuki 1, J Reed 1, M Bradley 2, I Kinsler 1, C Davis 1. 
GIDP - A Beltre, I Kinsler 2. Team LOB - SEATTLE 8, TEXAS 9. BASERUNNING: SB - 
Y Betancourt (2, 2nd base off L Mendoza/G Laird). CS - J Burke (1, Home by C 
Wilson/G Laird). FIELDING: E - Y Betancourt (15, ground ball); R Vazquez 3 (11, 
ground ball, throw 2); L Mendoza (2, ground ball); I Kinsler (17, throw). DP:  
(Y Betancourt-J Lopez-M Cairo, S Green-J Lopez-M Cairo, M Young-I Kinsler-C 
Davis). 

SEATTLE                      ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
C Silva                       2 1/3   7   6   6   1   1   1   5.95
R Corcoran                    3 2/3   6   3   3   1   2   0   3.52
S Green                       1 1/3   1   0   0   0   1   0   2.83
C Jimenez                       2/3   1   0   0   0   1   0   1.29
J Putz (L, 2-4; B, 5)           1/3   3   2   2   0   0   0   5.18

TEXAS                        ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
L Mendoza                     5 1/3   9   6   5   0   1   0   7.34
J Wright                        2/3   3   2   2   1   1   2   4.70
F Francisco (H, 11)           1       0   0   0   0   0   0   3.30
E Guardado (H, 23)            1       1   0   0   0   2   0   3.40
C Wilson (W, 1-2; B, 4)       1       2   2   1   0   0   0   5.11

J Wright pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.

WP - L Mendoza. HBP - J Burke (by L Mendoza); K Johjima (by C Wilson); G 
Laird (by R Corcoran). Pitches-strikes: C Silva 42-25; R Corcoran 63-41; S 
Green 13-9; C Jimenez 10-7; J Putz 14-8; L Mendoza 87-54; J Wright 26-13; F 
Francisco 10-5; E Guardado 9-8; C Wilson 14-9. Ground balls-fly balls: C Silva 
4-2; R Corcoran 8-2; S Green 3-0; C Jimenez 0-1; J Putz 1-0; L Mendoza 9-6; J 
Wright 1-0; F Francisco 0-3; E Guardado 1-0; C Wilson 1-1. Batters faced: C 
Silva 15; R Corcoran 19; S Green 4; C Jimenez 3; J Putz 4; L Mendoza 27; J 
Wright 6; F Francisco 3; E Guardado 4; C Wilson 5. IRS - J Wright 3. UMPIRES: 
HP--James Hoye. 1B--Paul Nauert. 2B--Jerry Crawford. 3B--Tom Hallion.   
T--3:11. Att--17,618. Weather: 98 degrees, clear. Wind: 14 mph, in from 
center.

The following graph tracks the game's Win Probability, courtesy of Fan Graphs. You can also view live WPA graphs at Fangraphs during any ballgame all season long.

image

Yesterday’s Home Runs
The following stats are provided by Hit Tracker, which logs the projected “true” distance of each home run (if it were to land uninterrupted at field level) and its "standard" distance, which is corrected for weather conditions. Each homer is also categorized into one of three types: Just Enough (JE) for homers that cleared the fence by ten feet or less, Plenty (PL) for those that were sure home runs but not “blasts,” and No Doubt (ND) for true “blasts”—homers that cleared the fence by at least 20 feet and landed at least 50 feet beyond the fence.
Hitter                Team    Pitcher              Team   True   Stnd.  # Type
Brian Anderson        CWS     Glen Perkins         MIN     387    382   6  PL
Mike Aviles           KC      Greg Smith           OAK     408    413   6  PL
John Buck             KC      Greg Smith           OAK     421    426   8  PL
Marlon Byrd           TEX     Carlos Silva         SEA     395    384   6  PL
Miguel Cabrera        DET     Matt Ginter          CLE     425    415  18  PL
Carlos Delgado        NYM     Renyel Pinto         FLA     412    410  23  JE
Eric Hinske           TB      Roy Halladay         TOR     409    398  15  JE/L
Aubrey Huff           BAL     Mariano Rivera       NYY     370    365  22  PL
Brandon Inge          DET     Rafael Betancourt    CLE     401    392   8  PL
Bryan LaHair          SEA     Jamey Wright         TEX     411    397   2  ND
Carlos Lee            HOU     Bronson Arroyo       CIN     414    413  24  ND
Jose Lopez            SEA     Jamey Wright         TEX     404    391   8  PL
Kevin Millar          BAL     Darrell Rasner       NYY     387    402  16  PL
Albert Pujols         STL     Jorge Campillo       ATL     414    406  21  PL
Alex Rodriguez        NYY     Daniel Cabrera       BAL     422    420  22  PL
Nick Swisher          CWS     Joe Nathan           MIN       0      0  15  0
Miguel Tejada         HOU     Bronson Arroyo       CIN       0      0  11  ND
Chase Utley           PHI     Collin Balester      WAS     409    393  26  PL

Access THT’s stats here…
{embed="content/2005stable"}




<< Return to Article