The Hardball Times

THT Daily: Back in the races

by Dave Studeman
June 16, 2008

Player News
Yesterday’s Results
Today’s Games
Standings
Game of the Day
Yesterday’s Home Runs
Top Minor League Performances

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/
On this day at THT: Four years ago, Steve Treder wrote one of his classics: Bobo at Dusk.

Player News
Player Headlines are courtesy of Rotoworld
image
Matt Capps watches as Brian Roberts rounds the bases after his two-out game-tying home run in the ninth. (Icon/SMI)

The Yankees are calling Chien-Ming Wang's right leg injury a sprained foot. That doesn't tell us anything. Wang will return to New York and undergo an MRI on Monday. The Yankees will hold out hope that there's no Achilles' tendon damage, but a DL stint seems likely regardless. "It hurts a lot," said Wang before leaving the clubhouse on a golf cart today.

Yadier Molina sustained a mild concussion in Sunday's collision at home plate and will be kept overnight in the hospital as a precaution. Molina complained of neck soreness following his collision with Eric Bruntlett, but the Cardinals haven't said anything about any damage there. A DL stint remains a real possibility here, but it doesn't look like Molina suffered any long-term damage. Jason LaRue will fill in behind the plate. Mark Johnson could be called up to serve as a backup.

Paul Konerko said he actually has an intercostal strain that caused him to miss Sunday's game. He's not sure whether he'll need to go on the DL. The White Sox originally said it was an oblique strain. It doesn't make a big difference. The White Sox will decide Tuesday whether to place Konerko on the DL. Since Jim Thome doesn't appear to be an option at first base, the team would probably go with Nick Swisher there until Konerko returns. Jerry Owens could be called up to help in the outfield.

Yesterday’s Results

Game recaps courtesy of Craig Calcaterra.

Rangers 8, Mets 7; Mets 4, Rangers 2: The Mets take two of three from the Rangers after reports that the weekend could make or break Willie Randolph. Which is silly of course. Based on those reports it seems like he's a dead man walking regardless of what happened in the Texas series, and Minaya's quotes after the second game bear that out: "These are our coaches today. They are our coaches. As the GM I leave myself room to evaluate things. I think we're not playing to our potential. I always leave room to evaluate things." Does that sound to you like a guy who was waiting for the weekend's results to make up his mind? The only question is what, exactly, is Omar waiting for?

Cardinals 7, Phillies 6
: Scary moment as Yadier Molina is taken off the field on a back board. Mitigating the situation: (a) later reports seem to indicate that he's OK; and (b) even if he wasn't, the Molina home world is standing by to replicate additional Molinas as needed. On a more serious note: Everyone is lauding Molina for being tough, but I've watched the reply several times, and it seems clear that if the throw from Chris Duncan had been online, Bruntlett would have likely gotten to Molina before the ball did. In other words, Molina was blocking the plate without the ball. It happens all the time, but a catcher shouldn't be allowed to do that, and if he wasn't doing that, he wouldn't have had his back turned to the runner when the ball came in, and probably wouldn't be in a hospital bed as you're reading this. Just sayin'.

Indians 7, Padres 3: C.C. Sabathia continues his Yankees' audition (8 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 10K) and bests Greg Maddux in the process. Actually, since all the stuff came out about the Yankees' rumors the other day, I'm way less inclined to believe that a trade will actually happen. Partially because those of you out there who know the Yankees' system have convinced me that the available parts don't match up, but mostly because I'm not convinced that Cleveland has any intention of giving up on the playoffs unless and until they go on some nasty skid. Right now, they basically have Grady Sizemore and no one else performing consistently, yet they've gained a game on Chicago in the last week and stand 5.5 games out. If I'm Shapiro, I probably don't think about unloading Sabathia until the All Star break, and then not at all if the margin is around the same or smaller. Why? I know my team is better than it has shown, and I have no faith in the While Sox keeping it up all year. Someone has to win this division, and I think Cleveland is as good a bet as Chicago, even with the 5.5 game deficit.

Tigers 5, Dodgers 4: The Dodgers have lost 15 of 20. By all rights they should be buried, but since Arizona has played pretty poorly too, they're still theoretically in the race. The Dodgers lost their designated hitter by moving Russell Martin to catcher in the eighth inning. How does Joe Torre make that mistake after managing in the AL for the past 12 years?

Red Sox 9, Reds 0: Homer Bailey is as lost as George Bailey was just before jumping off the bridge to save Clarence.

Cubs 7, Blue Jays 4: The Cubs lineup is obviously in flux now that Soriano is out for a while. I like the move of Fukudome up to the two-hole, which seems like a natural place for him. On the other hand, the only basis I can think for batting Jim Edmonds ahead of Geovany Soto is that Soto has an RBI incentive clause the Cubs are trying to avoid reaching maturity.

Brewers 4, Twins 3: Some controversy in the eighth inning as Brendan Harris called for time, didn't get it, and wasn't looking when strike three came over the plate from Guillermo Mota. Harris complained. Gardenhire was ejected for arguing it. Silly me. I thought you were supposed to pay attention unless and until the ump actually calls time. While we're talking about this, I'll note that this is one area in which I'd like to see umps become more aggressive in an effort to shorten games. It's not the umpire's job to ensure that the batter has optimized everything prior to taking a pitch. He only has to be sure that the guy is generally ready to go. My view would be that unless the batter has crap in his eye or unless the pitcher is really pushing the envelope with respect to Rule 8.04, the batter is committed once he digs in, and the next thing that should happen is either a pitch or a called ball in the event the pitcher takes more than 12 seconds.

Pirates 5, Orioles 4: Matt Capps blows his third save opportunity in four games, but manages to hang around through the 10th to pick up the win. His quote after the game: "Obviously it would have been a whole lot better to have the game end in the ninth inning, but I am what I am. I am who I am." What's that, a vulture?

Yankees 13, Astros 0: The Yankees have won four in a row and 9 of 12, but a 13-0 win that ends with Wang leaving on crutches can't feel like much of a victory. As for the Astros, whose reign as the NL's Team-Frisky is officially over now that the Pirates, of all teams, have passed them in the standings, Cecil Cooper said it best: "Today, we didn't even show up, didn't even compete. A total embarrassment."

Marlins 9, Rays 3: Congratulations Ricky Nolasco! You have now taken the lead for most pitches thrown by a starter in a game this season with 132. Even better, there was no competitive reason for it! Your team was up by seven as you entered the ninth, and your manager has admitted that sending you out again was for purely trivial purposes: "It would have been my first [complete game] as a manager as well. I've never had one, so I guess we were both cheering hard for it." To repeat: no shutout or milestone of any type was on the line, and the game was not in doubt. Fredi Gonzalez just thought it would be kind of cool to shred your arm.

A's 5, Giants 3: Oakland has swept the Giants twice in a row now. The Giants still have the questionable legal right to keep the A's off the peninsula and out of San Jose, imperiling the future of the franchise. Let's call it a wash.

Rockies 5, White Sox 3: After getting right against Detroit and Minnesota, the White Sox have hit the offensive skids again. How many reporters do you think were hanging around Ozzie Guillen at the end of this one, waiting for red meat?

Royals 8, Diamondbacks 3: After losing Friday's game 1-0 on a 10th inning walkoff homer, and after getting blown out on Saturday, I was at a loss to predict just how the Royals would lose this one. They showed me, though, actually winning it. One wonders what Arizona's intensity level is these days, what with knowing that no one in the NL west really appears able or willing to challenge them no matter how bad they play.

Angels 2, Braves 0: The Angels salvage one behind seven and a third scoreless innings from Joe Saunders. Chipper goes 0-4, and is one more bad game away from dipping below .400. In other news, I'm not going to say that I'm losing touch with my favorite team, but until yesterday I had no idea that the "exciting new Braves starter" Jorge Campillo turns 30 in August. Still, a 2.17 ERA after six starts is nothing to sneeze at, even when he takes a hard luck loss like this one.

Nats 6, Mariners 2: The lowly Nats sweep the lowlier Mariners and now Seattle has lost approximately a gajillion straight home games. I scrolled down to the paid attendance, figuring it would be pretty pathetic. I was mistaken: 38,548, which is an 81% capacity crowd. This on a cloudy, cool day too. My first thought: promotion day. Second thought: not even free bats or balls could draw this many people to watch this crap team lose this crap matchup on what looked like a crap day. It must have been "free money day" or some promotion where every 10th customer gets a chance to play an inning at first base for the home team. I mean, at least that would explain Miguel Cairo's place in the lineup. What? Really? The MAJOR league roster? Wow.

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
 ---------------
 Atlanta Braves at Colorado Rockies, 8:05 PM
  (R) Jair Jurrjens (6-3) vs. (R) Ubaldo Jimenez (1-6)
 
 Inter-League
 ------------
 Boston Red Sox at Philadelphia Phillies, 7:05 PM
  (R) Bartolo Colon (4-1) vs. (L) Cole Hamels (6-4)
 New York Mets at LA Angels of Anaheim, 10:05 PM
  (R) Mike Pelfrey (2-6) vs. (R) Jered Weaver (6-6)
 Florida Marlins at Seattle Mariners, 10:10 PM
  (L) Andrew Miller (4-5) vs. (R) Carlos Silva (3-7)
 Detroit Tigers at San Francisco Giants, 10:15 PM
  (R) Justin Verlander (3-9) vs. (R) Tim Lincecum (8-1)

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
BOS     44  28 .611    0.0   43     1    sparkline graph
TB      40  29 .580    2.5   37     3    sparkline graph
NYA     37  33 .529    6.0   36     1    sparkline graph
BAL     34  34 .500    8.0   33     1    sparkline graph
TOR     35  36 .493    8.5   38    -3    sparkline graph
American League Central     
CHA     38  31 .551    0.0   42    -4    sparkline graph
MIN     34  36 .486    4.5   32     2    sparkline graph
CLE     33  37 .471    5.5   37    -4    sparkline graph
DET     32  37 .464    6.0   34    -2    sparkline graph
KC      28  42 .400   10.5   29    -1    sparkline graph
American League West        
LAA     42  28 .600    0.0   35     7    sparkline graph
OAK     38  31 .551    3.5   41    -3    sparkline graph
TEX     35  36 .493    7.5   34     1    sparkline graph
SEA     24  45 .348   17.5   27    -3    sparkline graph


National League East        Pwins  Diff
PHI     41  30 .577    0.0   44    -3    sparkline graph
FLA     37  32 .536    3.0   34     3    sparkline graph
ATL     34  36 .486    6.5   39    -5    sparkline graph
NYN     33  35 .485    6.5   35    -2    sparkline graph
WAS     29  42 .408   12.0   27     2    sparkline graph
National League Central     
CHN     45  25 .643    0.0   46    -1    sparkline graph
STL     42  29 .592    3.5   38     4    sparkline graph
MIL     36  33 .522    8.5   33     3    sparkline graph
PIT     34  36 .486   11.0   33     1    sparkline graph
HOU     33  37 .471   12.0   32     1    sparkline graph
CIN     33  38 .465   12.5   32     1    sparkline graph
National League West        
ARI     37  33 .529    0.0   38    -1    sparkline graph
LAN     31  38 .449    5.5   34    -3    sparkline graph
SD      31  40 .437    6.5   30     1    sparkline graph
SF      30  40 .429    7.0   31    -1    sparkline graph
COL     28  41 .406    8.5   28     0    sparkline graph

Game of the Day
Pirates 5, Orioles 4 - FINAL

PITTSBURGH             ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
N McLouth cf            4  1  2  1   1  0   0  .296
F Sanchez 2b            4  0  0  0   1  1   3  .232
J Bay lf                3  3  2  0   2  0   0  .288
R Doumit dh-c           4  1  1  0   0  0   3  .346
J Michaels rf           5  0  1  2   0  2   5  .300
A LaRoche 1b            2  0  1  1   2  0   0  .221
J Bautista 3b           5  0  1  1   0  1   4  .251
Ja Wilson ss            4  0  0  0   1  0   0  .291
R Chavez c              4  0  0  0   0  0   1  .250
 va-D Mientkiewicz ph   1  0  0  0   0  0   3  .232

Totals                 36  5  8  5   7  4  19   ###

BALTIMORE              ab  r  h rbi bb so lob   avg
B Roberts 2b            5  1  1  2   0  2   2  .285
J Payton lf             5  0  2  0   0  0   2  .258
 G Sherrill p           0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
 L Cormier p            0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .000
N Markakis rf           5  0  1  0   0  1   2  .285
K Millar dh-1b          4  0  0  0   1  2   1  .248
A Huff 3b               4  1  2  1   1  0   2  .258
A Jones cf              5  0  0  0   0  3   3  .252
O Salazar 1b-ss         3  1  0  0   1  1   2  .250
G Quiroz c              2  1  1  1   1  0   0  .213
 hb-L Scott ph-lf       1  0  0  0   0  0   1  .281
F Bynum ss              2  0  0  0   0  1   0  .202
 ha-M Mora ph           1  0  0  0   0  0   2  .243
 A Cintron ss           0  0  0  0   0  0   0  .313
 hc-R Hernandez ph-c    1  0  0  0   0  1   1  .229

Totals                 38  4  7  4   4 11  18   ###

----------------------------------------------------
    PITTSBURGH      - 003 010 000 1  --   5  8 1
    BALTIMORE       - 000 011 002 0  --   4  7 1
----------------------------------------------------

ha-flied out to center for F Bynum in the 7th;  hb-flied out to right for G 
Quiroz in the 9th;  hc-struck out swinging for A Cintron in the 9th;  
va-grounded to second for R Chavez in the 10th.

BATTING: 2B - J Bay (15, D Cabrera). HR - N Mclouth (15, 3rd inning off D 
Cabrera 0 on, 1 Out), G Quiroz (2, 5th inning off P Maholm 0 on, 0 Out), A Huff 
(10, 6th inning off P Maholm 0 on, 2 Out), B Roberts (5, 9th inning off M Capps 
1 on, 2 Out). RBI - N McLouth (47), J Michaels 2 (20), J Bautista (27), A 
LaRoche (28), G Quiroz (6), A Huff (36), B Roberts 2 (29). 2-out RBI - J 
Michaels 2, J Bautista, A Huff, B Roberts 2. Runners left in scoring position, 
2 out - J Michaels 2, D Mientkiewicz 2, J Bautista 1, O Salazar 1, J Payton 2, 
A Huff 1. GIDP - J Bautista, F Sanchez. Team LOB - PITTSBURGH 10, BALTIMORE 8. 
BASERUNNING: SB - J Bay (6, 2nd base off D Cabrera/G Quiroz). FIELDING: E - J 
Bautista (7, ground ball); A Huff (2, ground ball). DP:  (B Roberts-O Salazar, 
F Bynum-O Salazar). 

PITTSBURGH                   ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
P Maholm                      6       4   2   2   3   4   2   4.45
J Grabow (H, 5)               1       0   0   0   1   1   0   2.36
D Marte (H, 14)               1       1   0   0   0   3   0   3.51
M Capps (W, 1-2; B, 3)        2       2   2   0   0   3   1   2.88

BALTIMORE                    ip       h   r  er  bb  so  hr    era
D Cabrera                     6       6   4   4   5   2   1   4.45
J Walker                      1       0   0   0   0   0   0   5.12
J Johnson                     2       0   0   0   0   1   0   1.17
G Sherrill (L, 2-2)             1/3   2   1   1   1   1   0   3.48
L Cormier                       2/3   0   0   0   1   0   0   2.33

P Maholm pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.

WP - J Grabow, D Cabrera. HBP - R Doumit (by D Cabrera); A LaRoche (by D 
Cabrera). Pitches-strikes: P Maholm 94-56; J Grabow 16-9; D Marte 17-13; M 
Capps 30-22; D Cabrera 109-59; J Walker 11-6; J Johnson 18-12; G Sherrill 16-8; 
L Cormier 10-4. Ground balls-fly balls: P Maholm 8-6; J Grabow 0-2; D Marte 
0-0; M Capps 1-2; D Cabrera 9-6; J Walker 2-1; J Johnson 4-1; G Sherrill 0-0; L 
Cormier 2-0. Batters faced: P Maholm 25; J Grabow 4; D Marte 4; M Capps 9; D 
Cabrera 29; J Walker 3; J Johnson 6; G Sherrill 4; L Cormier 3. UMPIRES: 
HP--Fieldin Culbreth. 1B--Jim Reynolds. 2B--Tim Timmons. 3B--Gary Cederstrom.   
T--3:03. Att--31,107. Weather: 88 degrees, partly cloudy. Wind: 7 mph, out to 
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
Mike Cameron          MIL     Scott Baker          MIN     408    384  10  PL/L
Kory Casto            WAS     Mark Lowe            SEA     349    311   1  PL/L
Coco Crisp            BOS     Homer Bailey         CIN     385    392   4  PL
David DeJesus         KC      Micah Owings         ARI     404    395   7  PL
J.D. Drew             BOS     Homer Bailey         CIN     371    372  11  JE
Jermaine Dye          CWS     Aaron Cook           COL     412    378  11  PL/L
Jacoby Ellsbury       BOS     Homer Bailey         CIN     405    407   5  PL
Ben Francisco         CLE     Greg Maddux          SD      365    358   4  JE
Troy Glaus            STL     Brett Myers          PHI     415    370   9  PL/L
Brad Hawpe            COL     Jose Contreras       CWS     397    350   7  PL/L
Chris Iannetta        COL     Boone Logan          CWS     414    370   7  PL
Casey Kotchman        LAA     Jorge Campillo       ATL     351    342   7  JE/L
Jason Kubel           MIN     Seth McClung         MIL     422    402  10  JE/L
Dustin Pedroia        BOS     Gary Majewski        CIN     377    373   5  PL
Jorge Posada          NYY     Wesley Wright        HOU     401    400   3  JE
Alex Rodriguez        NYY     Wesley Wright        HOU     369    368  12  PL
Skip Schumaker        STL     Brett Myers          PHI     406    355   4  PL/L
Grady Sizemore        CLE     Cla Meredith         SD        0      0  17  0

Top Minor League Games
The following list, provided by First Inning, includes the top minor league batting (based on Runs Created) and pitching (based on Game Score) performances from yesterday, with a focus on each team’s top prospects.
ORG LVL PLAYER            AB  H 2B 3B HR BB SO  Notes
ATL A+  Brandon Hicks..... 4  3  1  1  1  0  1  
LA  A   Jaime Ortiz....... 4  3  1  1  1  0  0  
HOU A+  Collin DeLome..... 5  3  1  1  0  1  0  4 R
TEX A+  Julio Borbon...... 4  4  0  0  1  0  0  2 SB
ARI AAA James D'Antona.... 5  3  2  0  0  1  0  
MIN AAA Jason Pridie...... 4  3  2  0  0  0  0  3 R
COL AAA Jayson Nix........ 6  2  1  0  1  0  1  4 RBI
TEX AAA Taylor Teagarden.. 4  2  0  1  1  0  0  
STL AAA David Freese...... 4  2  1  0  1  0  1  
DET AAA Matthew Joyce..... 3  2  2  0  0  1  1  
HOU A+  Jordan Parraz..... 4  2  0  0  1  2  1  
COL A+  Troy Tulowitzki... 2  1  1  0  0  4  1  

ORG LVL PLAYER            IP  H  R ER SO BB HR  Notes
LAA AA  Anthony Ortega.... 9  3  0  0 10  2  0  
ATL AAA Chuck James....... 7  3  0  0  8  0  0  
OAK A+  Brett Anderson.... 7  3  1  1  7  0  0  
MIN AAA F. Liriano........ 7  5  2  2  5  0  0  
BAL A+  Jake Arrieta...... 6  8  2  2  8  1  0  
CLE A+  Hector Rondon..... 5  5  0  0  7  1  0  
TEX AAA Luis Mendoza...... 7  7  2  1  5  0  0  12 GB
SF  A+  Tim Alderson...... 7  4  0  0  4  1  0  
TOR A   Bradley Mills..... 6  6  4  4  7  0  1  
FLA AAA E. De La Cruz..... 6  5  1  1  9  3  1  
BOS AA  Kris Johnson...... 6  5  2  2  7  3  0  
LAA A   Jordan Walden..... 6  3  0  0  4  2  0  

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


Dave was called a "national treasure" by Rob Neyer. Seriously. Comments about this article can be sent to him through the miracle of e-mail.

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