Tuesday, May 29, 2007

The Trials of Sweet Lou...

Series Recap—Dodgers vs Chicago (NL)


5/25: Dodgers 9, Cubs 8
5/26: Cubs 4, Dodgers 2
5/27: Dodgers 2, Cubs 1 (11 innings)

All I can say is that I'm glad I'm not a Cubs fan. This must've been torture watching these games. In the first game, DeLo pitched great, left with four run lead, and then watched Beimel, Brazoban, and Broxton absolutely implode, giving up seven in in the seventh. But then the Cubs much less vaunted bullpen decided to follow suit in the eighth, and the Dodgers scored four, with no runner ever advancing more than one base. Station to station all the way. It was like the conga line in the old Bugs Bunny cartoon. Meanwhile Seanez steadied the ship, and Saito finished out for the save.

Hendrickson gave up two quick homers in his start, and a couple more runs later, while Carlos Zambrano demonstrated why he's a number one starter. The Dodgers did get a couple of runs towards the end, but too little, too late. I need to look at Hendrickson's numbers again. He was looking so good there for awhile, that while it was hard to expect it to last, it's equally hard to believe it might have all been luck. He's still not as bad as he was last year

The rubber game saw Wolf and Rich Hill dueling for six scoreless innings apiece (game scores of 69 and 67, respectively), then turning it over to the pen (Ruh, roh, Lou). The Cubs took a lead in the eighth on three consecutive singles off Seanez. Ethier got a PH homer off of Eyre in the bottom. There's a nice deconstruction of the inning focusing on Little's moves versus Pinella's here. The game went into the 11th, when the Dodgers won the game without an official at bat. Ramon Martinez, down 0-2, worked a walk. Betemit walked, too. Sweet Lou made a pitching change. Then Lucille basically got picked off second, but while Michael Barrett was throwing to second, Martinez lit out for third instead, and made it. The Cubs then walked Furcal intentionally to get to Juan Pierre, hoping for the weak groundball to the infield. It was all for naught, though, because Carlos Marmol then hit Pierre on the knee with a pitch. Martinez scores, ballgame over. Rob McMillin had this terrific commentary on the game over at 6-4-2.

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Saturday, May 26, 2007

Baseball in Connecticut

Trenton Thunder 1, Connecticut Defenders 0 (11 innings)

First of all, what moron thought Connecticut Defenders would be a better name than Norwich Navigators, which is what the franchise used to be called? I suppose it could be worse, that they could've called them the Foxwoods Firebirds or Mohegan Lasts or something. Their logo is a frelling submarine. I was very much surprised that they sing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" instead of "God Bless America" during the 7th inning stretch.

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I've been meaning to take in a game at Dodd Stadium for years, going back to the days when the Navigators were a Yankees farm club. God only knows how the current club wound up in the Giants system. Anyway, I finally remembered this notion whist at work yesterday, so I went up on their website to see about buying a ticket. They have a very good system, one I like better than either the PawSox or the Mets. It not only lets you select a general location in the ballpark, but also shows you all the available seats at that price level, so you can decide between being in the fifth row of Section 3 versus the first row of Section 2. Much better than letting some machine decide what it thinks is the "best available seat." Anyway, I took an aisle seat, second row, section 2, just behind first base. Good seats, eh buddy?

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Theoretically, Dodd is a little under an hour's drive from my house, so when I left my house at 5:40, I figured I'd be okay. What I didn't expect was getting stuck in a traffic backup at the park that compared favorably with a Shea Stadium playoff game. The problem is that Dodd is located in the most remote part of an enormous, wooded industrial park. There's only one way in, a winding single-lane road that effectively dead ends at the stadium, and the traffic just backs up for a couple of miles. There were only a few thousand people there (the box states 4815, but I don't believe that many actually showed), but the way in is just torturous. If I go again, I'm going to go way early.

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The stadium is still fairly new, and is a pleasant place to watch a game. The front row is at ground level, unlike McCoy Stadium, so fans are very close to the action. It's also designed to encourage wandering about the park to view the game from different angles, none of which are far from the action. It really is a nice place to watch a game. The jam made me miss the first inning, so I didn't bother keeping up a score sheet. I grabbed a beer and a couple of hot dogs, and headed for my seat. It was then I discovered the one problem with selecting a seat. No system will take into account who you'll be sitting next to. In my case, I discovered I'd picked a seat smack in the middle of a Pawcatuck Middle Schools' student outing. Oy!

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It turned out to be a pretty boring game. I suppose it was actually a pretty good pitchers duel, although I wonder if the pitchers were that good or the hitters that bad. But I had absolutely no rooting interest, the free scorecard only listed Defenders players, and even then not very accurately, so I had very little information about who was playing, and little investment in the game. CT only pitched relievers, so the "starter" was pulled in the fourth despite the fact that he was throwing a no-hitter at the time. Trenton's starter was almost equally effective, but only went five. I left after seven, mostly because I was worried about the potential traffic jam after the game. The game eventually ended with Trenton winning 1-0 in the eleventh.

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There were a few items of interest. Trenton's CF got picked off at first, resulting in a rhubarb and his ejection. Trenton's second pitcher, Paul Thorp, has the biggest beer belly I've ever seen on a minor leaguer. Connecticut's Justin Hedrick, the eventual losing pitcher, looks scarily like Matthew Fox, even down to the five o'clock shadow. Red Sox legend Bob Stanley is Connecticut's pitching coach. CT's hitting coach is Gary Daveport, who according to the program resides in Nettuno, Italy. Trenton's logo has Marvel's version of the mighty Thor wielding thunderbolts.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Ghame Over...

Series Recap—Dodgers vs Milwaukee


5/21: Brewers 9, Dodgers 5
5/22: Dodgers 3, Brewers 2
5/23: Dodgers 5, Brewers 1

I gotta admit I was worried, especially when the team dropped the first game, but two very well pitched games by Wolf and Penny ended the skid. I didn't listen to any of tha action after the first couple of innings of the first game. It seems like whenever I happen to listen in real time their chances of losing go up exponentially.

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Kuo was sent back to AAA Tuesday after appearing once in relief. To pretty much everybody's surprise, Colletti called up Tony Abreu to replace him. Now Abreu has a chance to be a good player, and he impressed both in the spring, and at Vegas, but does the team really need another infielder? Especially when the team could really use Matt Kemp's bat in the line up.

I just don't get Ned's fascination with middle infielders. There have been a couple of scenarios mentioned, but neither seem compelling to me. First, Abreu is a natural second baseman, so he can rest Kent, or have Kent play first to rest Nomar (who seems to need some). The other thing is that while Betemit has been tearing it up as a pinch hitter, he still isn't hitting a lick when he starts, so Abreu can (and already did) share some time with LaRoche at third. As I said, there are probably better ways to accomplish this.

It's just so awkward. And it does nothing to address the real elephant in the room, Juan Pierre. He's the guy who really needs to be sat down, even if only occasionally, but he's got the big contract, and he's got his consecutive games streak. Sorry, Juan, you are no Cal Ripken.

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Ned made another move Wednesday, putting Tsao on the DL (shoulder strain) and calling up Yhency Brazoban. Appropriately enough, Yhency finished up the game that night. Good to see him back.

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Monday, May 21, 2007

Wow, Did That Ever Suck...

Series Recap—Dodgers at Anaheim


5/18: Angels 9, Dodgers 1
5/19: Angels 6, Dodgers 2
5/20: Angels 4, Dodgers 1

Not much to say. Nobody could hit, nobody could field, and only Lowe could pitch. Next question...

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Fall of the Cards

Series Recap—Dodgers vs St. Louis


5/14: Cardinals 8, Dodgers 4
5/15: Dodgers 9, Cardinals 7
5/16: Dodgers 5, Cardinals 4

A wild and wooly series, but I only managed to listen to a couple of innings. Tomko got shelled, while Lowe and Wolf were mediocre. But hey, the Cards had won ten in a row against the Dodgers prior to Tuesday's win, and LA took the series. That's good.

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Wilson Valdez's run of good luck finally ran out. He hadn't really done much offensively since that wild trip around the bases versus the Pirates three weeks ago. Regression to the mean is a cruel mistress. Valdez was DFA'd, and his spot was taken by Hong-Chih Kuo, who was shelled in his first appearance out of the pen.

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Sunday, May 13, 2007

Stone Soup...

The Globe had the following piece in their Baseball Notes column today:

The Dodgers have had a good start, but if they could, they'd probably trade for a third baseman. Dodger scouts were watching the Red Sox and Blue Jays last week. There doesn't appear to be any chance the Sox would move Mike Lowell after the hot start he's had, but the Blue Jays, given their demise, might consider parting with Troy Glaus. If the Jays fade fast, there could be a fire sale in Toronto. Glaus, who hurt his heel in Friday's game and didn't play yesterday, would appear to be a candidate for trade.


This sparked all sorts of discussion amongst the fans, but if you read the piece carefully, you'll notice that the person who wrote it never actually talked to anyone. He just noticed Dodger scouts at a Sox-Jays game, and like all the Boston media who think the Sox are the very center of the baseball universe, he figured that the scouts must be there to watch the old town team. Now the only reason for doing that would be for a possible trade, and since he had two inches to fill, he made up a ridiculous rumor. I doubt it ever occurred to him that the scouts might not be there to watch the Sox at all, but rather were there to scout the Blue Jays, since the Dodgers have to play them next month. But that would mean the Sox weren't that important to the scouts, and that's just not possible.

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Nibbled to Death by Ducks...

Series Recap—Dodgers vs Cincinnati


5/11: Dodgers 2, Reds 0
5/12: Dodgers 7, Reds 3
5/13: Dodgers 10, Reds 5

I once coached a women's softball team that was the worst team in its league. We came by this result honestly. We couldn't hit, and we were slow. Even when one of the players did get a hit, it was almost invariably a single, and runners never took an extra base. We scored very few runs because each run required at least four hits or walks in the inning.

I remembered that season was I watched the Dodgers, er, pound out eighteen hits today, almost all of them singles. It was much the same yesterday, and the day before that. thirty-six hits in the series, only six for extra bases. There were also fifteen walks. Fortunately, the pitching held up. Wolf was outstanding (11 Ks), and Penny regrouped after a bad inning to put together an effective start. Hendrickson, though, had his second rough outing in a row. All the things he'd been doing well seem to have vanished. He's not striking people out, and he's throwing a lot of fly balls, some of which are leaving the park. Maybe he needs to have another chat with the psychologist.

Still, a sweep is a sweep, no matter how unimpressive. The Dodgers are three games up on the rest of the division.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Double Rats!

Series Recap—Dodgers at Florida


5/7: Dodgers 6, Marlins 1
5/8: Marlins 6, Dodgers 5
5/9: Dodgers 5, Marlins 3
5/11: Marlins 3, Dodgers 0

There was some terrific pitching in these games, but very little timely hitting. Penny had his best outing of the year, and so would've Lowe if he hadn't left one pitch out over the middle of the plate. Tomko had a good outing, too, and while Hendrickson had a tough time of it, but he wasn't 2006 awful, either. The Dodgers had lots of baserunners, except for that last game, but they couldn't get them across. The Lowe game was a killer. Sergio Mitre held them to three hits over eight innings. That's right, Sergio Mitre. THE Sergio Mitre. Bozhe moi!

Still, 3-4 on a road trip versus the Braves and the highest scoring team in the National League isn't awful. Andy LaRoche continues to do well, so that's good. And the rest of the division was getting boxed around, too, so no real change in the standings. What annoys, though, is that the Dodgers could've just as easily swept the series.

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Monday, May 07, 2007

Well, Rats...

Series Recap—Dodgers at Atlanta


5/4: Braves 4, Dodgers 0
5/5: Dodgers 6, Braves 3
5/6: Braves 6, Dodgers 4

This was the series that got away. Well, that was disappointing, although at least the team seems to have started to hit again. They did manage to beat Tim Hudson, no mean feat, with Lowe throwing his best game of the season against him. But then Chin-hui Tsao stopped being perfect, blowing the final game with a five-run inning, the first hits, runs, and walks he's given up all season. Bother.

Betemit was benched Saturday, and celebrated the fact by hitting pinch hit homers on consecutive days. Andy LaRoche was brought Sunday up to replace him in the lineup, and looked good in his MLB debut. Marlon Anderson was placed on the DL.

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Saturday, May 05, 2007

A Tale of Three Pitchers...

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. The Dodgers are currently in first place, but their offense has been positively anemic lately. Their success is largely due to their pitching, something that I had some doubts about about going in. I thought the bullpen would be very good, which they have, and I was confident in Jason Schmidt and (god help me) Derek Lowe at the top of the rotation. My doubts were about Brad Penny, Brett Tomko, and when Schmidt went on the DL, Mark Hendrickson. Going into last night's game, those three, especially Penny and Hendrickson, had pitched far better than I expected. All have mentioned reasons for their improvement, one mechanical, one psychological, and one a little of both, so I decided to take a look at some numbers to see if back up those claims. A small sample size disclaimer does apply, of course.

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Brad Penny - Pitching smarter instead of throwing harder?

yeariperawhipfipgb%k/9bb/9hr/9slga
2004143.03.151.223.3742.76.992.830.760.382
2005175.13.901.293.5746.66.262.100.870.417
2006189.04.331.383.8943.57.052.570.900.430
200738.11.641.303.5958.03.523.990.000.307

In 2006, if you looked up "loss of composure" in a dictionary, you might have seen Brad Penny's picture next to the definition. He was the angry man of the Dodgers staff last year, appearing to let every perceived slight bother him to the point of distraction. He railed at umpires, his manager, and his teammates. That he had a Jeckyl and Hyde season seems appropriate given the temperament he often displayed. He was very good in the first half, awful in the second. He has since said he had an injury in the second half that prevented him from throwing his splitter properly.

He looked pretty bad this spring, too, and although he said the usual things about spring training stats not meaning anything, I had serious doubts about him. All he's done since is pitch brilliantly (1.64 ERA). Looking at his numbers is a study in contrasts. His WHIP and FIP are about the same as they've ever been. His K/9 innings has plummeted to about half of what it's been in the past, while his BB/9 has gone way up, which are both usually signs that there's a bad moon arisin'. So how is he doing it?

Apparently he's replaced his misfiring splitter with a sinker. Look at the difference in his ground ball percentage this year. He's gone from somewhat of a fly ball pitcher to very much getting his outs on the ground. This has helped in two ways. First, it's very hard to hit a ground ball into the seats. Penny has yet to give up a home run. Second, with all the walks, he does get into trouble occasionally, but it seems like every time he does, he gets a double play to get out of it. Actually, there's a third way it's helped. Keeping the ball on the ground makes it less likely that the other team can take advantage of Pierre's and Gonzo's defensive deficiencies.

His demeanor on the mound has changed, as well. He seems cool, calm, and collected out there, very much in control of himself. Nary a loss of composure to been seen so far. So instead of losing it when things go bad, and trying to get out of bad situations by overthrowing, he's been buckling down and making good pitches. The low ERA is probably due to good luck, but if he keeps to what appears to be his plan, it may not get all that much higher.

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Brett Tomko - Same as he ever was?

yeariperawhipfipgb%k/9bb/9hr/9slga
2004194.04.041.344.0542.05.012.970.880.414
2005190.24.481.373.9839.85.382.690.940.444
2006112.14.731.354.6637.56.092.321.360.471
200728.24.401.673.7440.06.905.330.310.387

Tomko is here because he had a good spring and a couple of good early outings that gave a little bit of hope that perhaps the change in mechanics he's mentioned might improve his consistency. Since then he's had a couple of outings that weren't so good, so same ol' Tomko. There are a couple of things of note, though. First, he's striking more people out. He has balanced this by also walking more people. The other good thing is that he has only allowed one home run so far.

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Mark Hendrickson - Is it real, or is it Hendrickson?

yeariperawhipfipgb%k/9bb/9hr/9slga
2004183.14.811.404.4845.64.272.261.030.443
2005178.15.901.554.6346.24.492.471.210.503
2006164.24.211.434.7448.35.413.390.930.373
200727.21.300.692.3258.77.801.620.320.193

Last year, Hendrickson had some decent outings with Tampa Bay, although his peripherals weren't that great. Then he came to the Dodgers, and the wheels came off. The signature moment came late in July when he fell off the mound after a pitch. He wound up in the bullpen, where he had a pretty good September and October. He started this season in the pen, too, but then Jason Schmidt went down.

Hendrickson has been seeing a sports psychologist, and boy, does it seem to have worked. Look at his numbers this season. His ERA is way down, which by itself could be a fluke, but so are his WHIP, FIP, and slugging average against. Like Penny, he's gone from a fly ball pitcher to a strong ground ball pitcher, but unlike Penny, he's also striking a lot of guys out, while giving up neither homers nor walks. Every indicator shows marked improvement. This could very well be real. He needs to continue a little while longer before I'll believe it, but still. Meanwhile, let's have this psychologist have a quiet chat with Wilson Betemit.

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Phoning It In...

Courtesy of the Onion:

Manny Ramirez Asks Red Sox if He Can Work from Home.

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Thursday, May 03, 2007

Improbability Drives...

Series Recap—Dodgers vs Arizona


4/30: Diamondbacks 9, Dodgers 1
5/1: Dodgers 2, Diamondbacks 1
5/2: Dodgers 2, Diamondbacks 1

The Dodgers score only five runs in the series, and still take two out of three. That's some good pitchin' there, boys. I didn't follow either of the first two games, but the third was a terrific pitchers' duel between Doug Davis and Hendrickson. More on Hendy in a later post, I think.

The Dodgers spend the rest of the month playing teams from outside the division, which should make for a nice change.

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