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Sat, July 05, 2008

A Southpaw’s Story

by James Farris

Ryan Ludwick’s dim chance at All-Star game history

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Fri, October 19, 2007

Out of Left Field: Three Cheers for Joe Torre

by Mike Lynch

I never thought I’d say this about a Yankee, but I love Joe Torre. That’s right, I have a major man crush on the former Yankee skipper after he told George Steinbrenner and his sons, Uday and Qusay, where they could stick their ridiculous contract offer. It wasn’t the amount that was ridiculous—if you’ve been paying attention Torre was making twice as much as the next highest paid manager and you could hardly call $5 million with another alleged $3 million in incentives “ridiculous”—it was the length (one year) and the way it was presented that pissed Torre off and had him opining that the offer was “insulting.”It was clear that the Steinbrenner faction was low-balling Torre on purpose, hoping that he’d reject their offer, so they could replace him, which is what George has wanted to do for at least a couple years now. And if Torre had accepted their offer, they would have had one of the best managers in baseball at $2.5 million less than he’d made in 2006.

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Sun, October 14, 2007

Out of Left Field: ALCS Game 2

by Mike Lynch

While watching last night’s ALCS game between the Red Sox and Indians, I decided to take notes and write down my thoughts as they occurred. Here they are.

  • At the start of the game Joe Buck asserted that Curt Schilling was a Hall of Famer. Schilling doesn’t feel like a Hall of Famer to me, so I thought I’d do a little research before dismissing Buck as a Schilling apologist. Schilling’s raw numbers are very good. He’s 216-146 with an ERA 3.46, he’s fanned 3,116 batters, boasts a K/BB ratio of 4.38, and has an ERA+ of 126. He ranks 79th in career wins (tied with Wilbur Cooper and Charlie Hough); he’s 14th in strikeouts and needs only two more to pass Bob Gibson on the all-time list; he has the second best K/BB ratio of all-time, sitting behind only Tommy Bond; and he’s 52nd in ERA+, tied with seven other guys, including Tommy Bridges and Bret Saberhagen. He has two more “Black Ink” points and 20 more “Gray Ink” points than an average Hall of Famer and has 65 more “Hall of Fame Monitor” points than an average Hall of Famer.
  • Below are the average numbers for pitchers in the HOF:

    W L Pct. IP H BB K ERA
    AVG 248 174 .588 3735 3456 1022 1999 2.99
    BBWAA 268 187 .589 4022 3629 1154 2494 3.03
    VET 228 160 .587 3431 3272 882 1473 2.94
    Schilling 216 146 .597 3261 2998 711 3116 3.46
    Schilling’s numbers look pretty good compared to the average Hall of Famer and when you throw in his postseason accomplishments, they look even better. I’m still not convinced that Schilling is a Hall of Famer, though. Neither is Dr. Michael Hoban, who in 2006 wrote in his book, Baseball’s Best: The TRUE Hall of Famers: “Curt Schilling has pitched for nineteen seasons. With a CV of 191, he would need 367 win shares to reach a NEWS score of 235 - and that’s not going to happen. But what about 300 win shares? He needs 58 more win shares to reach 300. Over the past four seasons, he has earned 55 win shares. At the age of 40, can he earn 58 more win shares? It’s possible, but very unlikely.” (Editor’s note: Schilling earned 10.3 win shares in 2007).
  • It sounded like Tim McCarver is losing his voice. Maybe we can lock him in a room with Joe Morgan so Morgan will catch what McCarver has.
  • Memo to Fox: If you’re going to use a celebrity to announce a team’s lineup make sure he knows what the hell he’s talking about. When James Taylor called Kevin Youkilis the “first base player” I almost spit my beer into my lap. Are you shitting me? Couldn’t they have used Matt Damon? Michael Chiklis? Denis Leary? Couldn’t they have pried Stephen King away from his book long enough to announce the damn lineup? Fox clearly loves putting him on camera, they might as well let him speak into it.
  • Reason #267 to love Dustin Pedroia: He came to the plate hacking in the first and struck out on pitches that were in the dirt, but he adjusted his approach (probably after watching the rest of Boston’s lineup) and walked on four pitches in his next at-bat. His swing-from-the-ass-on-every-pitch attitude is fun to watch from someone who stands about 4′ 9″, but it was good to see him tone it down a bit and take that free pass.
  • Last night’s trivia question asked which player had appeared in the postseason for the most teams (they used the phrase “most different postseason teams”) and I figured it was Kenny Lofton, but I also thought Lonnie Smith and Don Baylor may have been the right answer. As it turned out Lofton has played for six different teams in the postseason (as has David Wells) , while Baylor played for five (Baltimore in ‘73 and ‘74, California in ‘79 and ‘82, Boston in ‘86, Minnesota in ‘87, and Oakland in ‘88) and Smith played for four (Philadelphia in ‘80 and ‘81, St. Louis in ‘82, Kansas City in ‘85, and Atlanta in ‘91 and ‘92).
  • Is it just me or do Fox’s microphones make every hit ball sound like it’s going 600 feet and every fastball sound like it’s going 110 MPH?
  • When a pitch just above the belt is called “up and away” (Schilling to Blake in the fifth), you know the strike zone is completely screwed. If you ever get a chance to watch a late 60s game on ESPN Classic, pay attention to the strike zone. Pitches at the letters were called strikes, just as they’re supposed to be. We can blame steroids, small parks, juiced balls, expansion, and the designated hitter for baseball’s offensive explosion, but until the umpires start calling the high strike again, batters will continue to have an advantage over pitchers.
  • If Ryan Garko wasn’t a baseball player one gets the impression he’d make a great enforcer for the mob. It must be the nose (and the physique).
  • Reports that George Mitchell’s investigation of baseball players’ use of performance-enhancing drugs has dug up some big-name players has me speculating about who might be on that list. I’m not about to accuse anyone at this point, but am I the only one who thinks Melvin Mora’s 2004 season looks fishy as hell? HGH usage seems to have been prevalent in 2004 before MLB pulled its head out of its ass and started paying attention to what its players were doing behind closed doors. And now that Orioles outfielder Jay Gibbons has been implicated, it’s not hard to imagine other Orioles taking performance enhancers. Of course I’m not naming names; I’m only speculating.
  • Casey Blake made a nice pivot on a potential double play, then started a beautiful DP to end the fifth, but he still looks like he should be teaching chemistry somewhere (or playing the part of Alex P. Keaton’s father on “Family Ties”).
  • Am I the only one who’s worried that Hideki Okajima is going to get drilled in the head by a line drive someday? Every pitcher risks getting hit by a batted ball, but Okajima’s going to get hit in the ear and he won’t even see it coming.
  • Speaking of Okajima, the Red Sox should renegotiate his contract and give him the money they’re paying Daisuke Matsuzaka and give Matsuzaka what they’re paying Okajima.
  • Indians reliever Rafael Betancourt is listed at 200 pounds. If Betancourt weighs only 200 pounds, I’m the pope.
  • There was a time when I thought Coco Crisp might not be a very good center fielder because of the way he played the position prior to coming to Boston. What the heck was I thinking?
  • J.D. Drew went 2-for-5 in Game 2 and made a difficult catch along the right field line in Game 1, but I’d still take a battered, aging Trot Nixon over Drew any day. Nixon plays like he gives a shit; Drew plays like he’d rather be home doing his taxes.
  • Eric Gagne has been so bad since coming to Boston (6.75 ERA, two losses, and three blown saves) that when he was brought into last night’s game, I immediately turned to ESPN College GameDay. I’d rather watch highlights of William and Mary vs. Maine than experience the inevitable meltdown of “The Goon.”
  • All this talk about Joe Torre and Tony LaRussa has me wondering why the Yankees and Cardinals don’t consummate a trade that sends Torre to St. Louis and LaRussa to New York. You scoff but on August 3, 1960 the Tigers sent manager Jimmy Dykes to Cleveland for manager Joe Gordon. The trade did nothing for either team. Under Dykes, the Tigers went 44-52 (.458) before going 26-31 (.456) under Gordon. The Indians were actually decent under Gordon, going 49-46 (.516) before winning only 26 of 58 (.448) under Dykes. The trade wasn’t made because either team thought it would actually improve their chances of winning; it was made because Gordon and Indians G.M. Frank Lane despised each other.
  • Torre and Yankees G.M. Brian Cashman get along well and LaRussa got along well with former Cards G.M. Walt Jocketty, so that’s not the issue. But how cool would it be to see Torre in a Cardinals uniform again and how fitting would it be for the arrogant LaRussa to end up managing in a city that has as many newspapers as citizens?

Mon, October 08, 2007

Dice-K and the Vanishing Strike Zone

by Mike Lynch

Now that the Red Sox have easily dispatched the Angels and we’re all waiting breathlessly for the outcome of the Indians/Yankees series, it’s time to vent my frustration on Daisuke “Dice-K” Matsuzaka and his performance, or lack thereof, in Game 2 of the ALDS (I’ll vent on Eric Gagne another day). Going into the game I was nervous because of Matsuzaka’s recent record of futility—he had a 5.19 ERA after the All-Star break, his K/BB ratio went from 3.24 in the first half to 1.86 in the second half, and he sported a 7.62 ERA in September. Needless to say I had reason to be on edge as he allowed Los Angeles (or is it Anaheim? Can’t they just go back to being the California Angels, for Christ’s sake?) three runs on seven hits and three walks in only 4 2/3 innings. Anyone who knows me knows that I was yelling at my big screen T.V. most of the game and probably scaring the hell out of my neighbors as I’m wont to do during big games (or inconsequential games or days that end in “y”).

Things got so bad that I left the house to go to the store with my wife (something I typically don’t do during big games) to keep my head from exploding. As it turns out, going to the store was the best thing I could have done. I bought a cheap bottle of red wine hoping it would soothe my pain, but instead it made a joyous celebration even merrier (and a bit foggier) when Manny Ramirez launched a Francisco Rodriguez “cripple” into space in the bottom of the ninth inning to win the tightly contested game. Had I had my wits about me (and a blood/alcohol level below the legal limit), I would have gone out for another bottle. Hell I should have bought two in the first place.

Part of Matsuzaka’s problem is that he followed Josh Beckett’s brilliant Game 1 performance in which he shut out the Angels on four hits, struck out eight batters while walking none, and was nearly perfect with his pitches over the final seven innings. Most of Matsuzaka’s problem is that he’s afraid to throw strikes (or so it appears). Beckett threw first pitch strikes to 25 of the 31 batters he faced (81%), and only twice over the last seven innings did he start a batter off with a ball. Overall he threw 77% of his pitches for strikes. Matsuzaka threw first pitch strikes to 62% of the batters he faced and 65% of his total pitches were strikes, which is a hair above his season average. Beckett’s performance was masterful and a joy to watch. Watching Matsuzaka pitch borders on torture at worst (yes that’s too strong a word, but I’m using it anyway) and is maddeningly frustrating at best.

To make matters worse (for Matsuzaka, not Red Sox fans), Curt Schilling threw a workman-like and efficient seven innings in Game 3, shutting out the Angels for seven innings on six hits and walk. Schilling threw first pitch strikes 63% of the time, which is only a percentage point better than Dice-K, but what made Schilling’s performance almost as impressive as Beckett’s and much better than Matsuzaka’s is what he did with the rest of his pitches. Of the three, Schilling threw a higher percentage of strikes (71%) with his remaining pitches than either of the other two. Beckett threw 70% of his remaining pitches for strikes. You can guess who finished third (his name rhymes with Schmatsuzaka). That’s right Dice-K tossed only 58% of his remaining pitches for strikes. So while Schilling and Beckett kept coming after hitters, Matsuzaka was doing what he’s been doing for most of the second half of the season—being what former A.L. Cy Young Award winner and current broadcaster, Steve Stone, called a “power nibbler.”

To be fair to Matsuzaka, Beckett’s numbers were well above his norms this season. The guy’s been lights out all year and as far as I’m concerned he’s this year’s A.L. Cy Young Award winner, despite what ESPN’s Cy Young predictor says. But he’s not normally that dominant. Heck, last Wednesday’s performance was by far his best outing of the year. Schilling was also better than normal, although he threw fewer first pitch strikes than he typically does. But he made up for that by throwing more second, third, fourth (and so on) pitch strikes than normal.

Matsuzaka had the nearly impossible task of following Beckett and preceding Schilling, two of the best postseason pitchers of this generation. He was damned from the start. And he looked it. But he was actually slightly better in Game 2 than he’s been throughout the season, at least in terms of strike percentage and first strike percentage. But he couldn’t find the strike zone with a lot of the rest of his pitches and the perception remains that he’s afraid to throw strikes. In fact, his strike percentage dropped almost every month this season, before rebounding in September:

Month Pitches Strikes Strike%
April 541 351 64.8
May 623 410 65.8
June 601 380 63.2
July 642 404 62.9
August 548 339 61.8
September 524 327 62.4

And his second half strike percentage is decidedly lower than it was before the All-Star break:

Splits Pitches Strikes Strike%
1st Half 1971 1289 65.3
2nd Half 1502 920 61.2

Now he has the unenviable task of facing either the Indians or Yankees in the ALCS (Cleveland is ahead 4-0 in the second inning as of this writing), both of whom are much more patient at the plate than the Angels, who ranked ninth in the league in free passes (the Yankees ranked third in the A.L. in walks while Cleveland ranked fourth). Meanwhile both Colorado and Arizona ranked among the upper half of the N.L. in walks drawn, with the Rockies finishing second only to the Phillies. In other words it’s not going to get any easier for Matsuzaka as the post season moves along.

Ironically what Dice-K needs less of is the same thing he needs more of—BALLS. And if he doesn’t get a pair soon, I have a feeling I’ll need more wine.