Thursday, April 26, 2007
Hank Blalock: Everyday Player?
First, Blalock can’t hit lefties at all. For his career, Blalock has hit .223/.274/.347 vs. lefties with 19 HR and 180 K’s in 796 plate appearances. In 2004, it looked as if Blalock had figured it out, hitting .282/.344/.436 with 5 bombs in 218 plate appearances. However in 2005, Blalock fell to just .196/.228/.356 in 202 plate appearances with 53 K’s and only 7 BB. Then in 2006, Blalock “rebounded” to hit .216/.281/.351 in 178 plate appearances. He did cut his strikeouts in half in 2006 with just 27 versus lefties. In 2007, Blalock does not have enough plate appearances (17) for a proper sample size but in last night’s game versus Cleveland and C.C. Sabathia, Blalock struck out in his first two at bats bailing early and flailing wildly at Sabathia’s off speed pitches. It is safe to say that Blalock wasn’t very comfortable. Finishing the night with four strikeouts, it could have just been a bad night, but watching Blalock face Sabathia, he just looked overmatched.
The perplexing thing is that even if you were considering platooning Blalock at 3B, he doesn’t even really hit right-handers all that well. The last three seasons, Blalock has hit .283/.352/.475 against righties which, at 3B, most teams would like something better than that. However, in 2006, Blalock fell to .284/.342/.434 against righties which are very average numbers, especially by someone who is so routinely hailed as a power hitting third baseman.
Also considering that most of his damage is done at home (.296/.363/.498 the last 3 seasons) and that he is atrocious on the road (.241/.303/.391 the last 3 seasons), Blalock should not be getting regular duty.
Blalock is an average defender at 3B not providing the sort of defense that makes up for any offensive shortcomings that you might have. The Rangers had the opportunity to trade him the last couple of seasons and should have done so. Now that will be much harder to do, as Blalock looks like he will play everyday showing other teams around the league that he has nothing to offer.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Brewers at a Glance
I saw Dave Bush throw last Tuesday night (April 17th) in Cincinnati, and the results weren’t very pretty. Bush maintained good arm action from his fastball to change-up, but appeared to be slowing considerably on his curve. The end result of this (along with an aborted follow-through) was his leaving the breaking pitch up for most of the night. He did flash a sharp curve with good break during Alex Gonzalez’s first inning AB on the 2-1 pitch, but that was more of an anomaly on this evening. Having said that, I don’t want to crucify the guy after seeing just one 5 inning start. During 2006, both his K/9IP and K/BB rates took jumps in the right direction, and they’ve continued on those paths during his first 25 innings of 2007. With Bush, Sheets, and Capuano, the Brewers should at least have a serviceable rotation (especially if Capuano can reign in is HR/9IP rate a little).
Offensively, Milwaukee has been off to a good start, with 6 of their 7 players that have at least 50 ABs slugging over .500. In particular, the Kevin Mench/Geoff Jenkins platoon have been hitting well, posting OPSs of .875 and 1.008, respectively. Although these starts are encouraging, digging a little deeper into their stats give a cause for concern. After reading Marc Normandin’s profiles (registration required) on both Jenkins and Mench, and noting Jenkins’ low walk rate thus far (I’m aware, it’s a small sample size) and the fact that ~63% of Mench’s ABs have come against right handed pitchers, a red flag has to go up. The Brewers have over $10 million total committed to these two this year, which should provide plenty of incentive to use them as efficiently as possible.
The Brewers will likely experience issues with outfield defense as well. Throughout the course of the game in Cincinnati, Bill Hall did not look comfortable in CF. He played a Brandon Phillips double awkwardly and took several false steps on otherwise routine plays. Combine this with the limited range of Jenkins and Mench (especially if they continue to play both at the same time), and you have a suspect outfield. This is evidenced by the fact that, through today, Milwaukee pitching has given up 48 doubles, the most in the NL. Not to exonerate the pitching staff from this stat, but the limited range and inexperience in the outfield certainly doesn’t help. In fairness to Hall, it should be noted that he has played only 23 games in the outfield and final judgment should be withheld until given time to adapt.
Rounding out a high level review of the current NL Central leader, let’s take a quick look at their bullpen. Left handed specialist Brian Shouse looked good against the Reds’ lefty sluggers, allowing only a single to Josh Hamilton before striking out Dunn and Griffey. Throughout his career, Shouse has held lefties to a .219/.278/.344 line, and while his use is definitely limited, the $975k the Brewers are paying him isn’t a bad deal. Additionally, late inning relievers Francisco Cordero and Derrick Turnbow are both strikeout pitchers that will serve Milwaukee well, even if they are misused. Ignore Cordero’s high ERA with Texas in ’06, as he had a BABIP significantly higher than his norm that should regress back towards the mean this season.
Prior to the start of this season, I thought that the Brewers would come away with the NL Central title and, as of right now, I haven’t see anything to sway me away from that opinion. This isn’t so much due to them being particularly good as it is to my perception of them being the least flawed team in a weak division.
Monday, April 16, 2007
The Freel Deal
Freel, has played all over the diamond for the Reds, filling in at third, second or in the outfield and has now won a starting job. While the money given to Freel is a nice reward for a guy that has sacrificed his body over the years, diving and playing all out, it is money that could have probably been used somewhere where it is needed more.
The Reds are a team functioning on one of the smaller budgets in baseball standing 20th out of 30 teams in payroll at just under 70 million. Not that this is an obscene amount of money that Freel will be getting compared to what other players of lesser talent got this past offseason.
However, considering that Freel is 31 and an older 31 considering the pounding he puts on his body, this could end up being wasted money that could have been spent on the draft or evaluating players or scouting.
The last three seasons, Freel has put up very respectable numbers, (.278/.370/.380) but those are the apex of Freel's talent. They won't improve any more than that and if the Reds are lucky, they won't fall from that.
With that said, skipper Jerry Narron has said that he will try and play Freel a little bit at third to give Encarnacion and break and to give rookie Josh Hamilton some AB's in CF. Hopefully, this will cut into some of Freel's at bats.
With Freel being a fighter is whole life, you hope this new security won't cause him to relax, because when he does, his effectiveness will falter mightily.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Remember This?
After searching for a while, I finally found video of it on the "Baseball is Heaven's Gift to the Mortals" blog. The link is about halfway through the article. If you don't know what I'm referencing, you're in for some serious comedy. Enjoy:
http://reid.mlblogs.com/scoreboard_26_6/2006/02/the_greatest_pl.html
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Rangers Will Benefit from Patience
A couple of days ago, Rangers’ GM Jon Daniels was on a local Dallas station (AM 1310, The Ticket) saying that, although they haven’t scored many runs (this was before the Devil Rays games, mind you), he was pleased at the number of pitches that his team had seen. I decided to take a look at the team by team splits this morning, and if I were Daniels, I’d like what I saw too.
As of today, the Rangers have seen 1,223 pitches this season, which is good for 3rd in all of baseball. However, this can be misleading due to different number of games, extra innings, etc. Indexing this to the number of plate appearances (PA) yields 4.03 pitches/PA. The only other team to average more that 4 pitches/PA is the Cleveland Indians (4.08 pitches/PA). Keep in mind that, due to the snow last weekend, the Indians have played about half as many games as Texas.
Of course, both of these are very small sample sizes, but that’s exactly what makes this statistic important. This stat reveals the process over the end result. These 8 games of the 2007 season have told us relatively little about what the Rangers will be, but do shed light on their approach. A good example of this can be found in last night’s Braves-Nats game; specifically 2 of Jeff Francoeur’s ABs (I mentioned these in last night’s post). Francoeur came to the plate twice last night immediately following a walk in cases where pitchers were clearly having control issues and had worked themselves into jams while putting multiple men on base. In these two ABs he went 1 for 2 with a three run homerun. The issue here, though, is that his ABs were over both times after the first pitch. The result was nice, but the process makes me want to throw something through my TV. This is what I mean about sample size: Francoeur isn’t going to SLG 2.000 in these situations, but you can bet that he’ll be hacking and making far more outs than a more efficient mindset would yield. These ABs reveal something about his approach at the plate.
This same thinking carries over to the Rangers. Blalock hasn’t been a very useful player since the 2004 season (except for at home in 2005, but he was even terrible there last year), Young’s reliance on AVG scares me, and watching Sosa swing at a breaking pitch is funny/sad; but they have guys to wear pitchers down and the more you see of a bullpen, the better off you are. Wilkerson particularly catches a lot of criticism but is a pitch siphon at the plate (4.29 pitches/PA career), still gets on base, and can even slug a little if healthy.
The Rangers probably aren’t going to the World Series…no shock there. But they do play in what I think is the second weakest division in baseball (NL Central being the first) and have a decent shot at taking the AL West. Their offense isn't going to lead the league in runs (obviously), but don’t look for them to slide to the 2.17 runs per game they averaged against the Angels and Red Sox either.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Padres' Towers Making the Right Moves
Due to his 6’ 10” stature, Young’s fastball reaches the plate quicker than radar guns would suggest. His K/9 IP rate has been going in the right direction, as it reached over 8 per 9 innings in 2006.
What was surprising, however, was that upon leaving Texas, his HR/9 IP actually increased. In 2005, Young gave up 1.04 HR/9 in Texas, but upped this to 1.41 HR/9 after his move to pitcher-friendly PETCO (he actually gave up 18 at home vs. 10 on the road). His .49 GB/FB rate is telling and although he has always been a fly ball pitcher, this was about a 28% drop from his 2005 campaign. It stands to reason, though, that this could very possibly be due to his injured back. I honestly don’t recall watching any of his starts last season, but it seems that if his back was giving him problems, he could have issues with his follow through (it wouldn't take much, due to his height and already elevated release point) which would result in him leaving pitches up. But, as I said, if back problems are behind him and he can learn to keep the ball lower in the zone, this is a very good signing.
Even better, Young’s signing comes on the heels of the Adrian Gonzalez extension earlier in the month. With those two signed through 2011 (if options are exercised), Peavy inked through ’08 (option), Brian Giles under control with an option through ’09 (his power is gone, but at least he gets on), and an above average bullpen, the Padres are in good shape. I really like the way that GM Kevin Towers is building this club and, if they can find a little power, San Diego should be in contention in the coming years with Arizona for the NL West title.
Other things from Tuesday…
- The Nationals are just as bad as advertised, if not worse. It’s like watching a AA team with dropped throws, misjudged flies, and no approach at the plate. You have to feel bad for manager Manny Acta , managing the worst team in baseball, he looked completely defeated (and a lot like Kevin Malone from “The Office) in the dugout:
- Hudson looked very good against the Nats, but since he was throwing against…well, the Nats, I was looking at the way he pitched over his line (both were good). Keeping the ball down all night, Hudson showed good action on his fastball and worked well on both sides of the plate. It’s only been two starts, but from a scouting standpoint, you have to be pleased with what Hudson’s shown this year.
- Francoeur had a horrible AB in the first, swinging at the first pitch he saw with one out and grounding into a double play with the bases loaded after Andruw Jones had just walked on four straight pitches. In the 5th, however, Francoeur worked a 5 pitch AB and eventually took a breaking ball over the outer half of the plate into right center. He is a maddening player. Even his homerun in the 8th was on the first pitch after a walk. Good result, but look at the process…I’m not a fan of that AB.
- Alex Gordon hit the first bomb of his career. KC fans need to be patient with him…he’s going to be worth the wait.
- Alex Rodriguez hit a homerun in his 4th consecutive game and added two walks to tonight’s line. However, he’s going 4 ½ ABs between homeruns this year, and as any New Yorker will tell you, that’s just unacceptable.
- Mariners and Cubs fans have to be pretty worried after the debuts of Jeff Weaver and Jason Marquis…pretty terrible. You think every player becoming a free agent after this season is just praying that Bill Bavasi and Jim Hendry can hold their jobs through next offseason?
Monday, April 9, 2007
Lidgeastrophe
As you can see, even last year he still maintained fantastic strike out rates which means he still has his good stuff. Two alarming stats however. The first one is that he is walking more batters dropping nearly two strikeouts per walk in 2006 than the 4.48 he averaged in 2005. Second, he doubled his home runs allowed which is problematic for a closer. 5 of 10 homers came with 2 outs already in the inning. What that says is that it seems as though Lidge gets lazy when he thinks the game is in the bag and leaves a pitch over the plate for a guy to mash. The walks point to his lack of a consistent delivery which is not allowing him to throw his slider as much because his slider isn't designed to get called strikes. It is a pitch designed for the swing and miss. And with his inability to put his fastball where he wants it, the batter can now sit on pitches a great deal easier. Because he is always behind in the count he isn't throwing his slider as much which makes him less effective because his slider was one of the best in the game. Last year was the first year that batters got on base at a +.300 clip and slugged at a +.400 clip. Time will tell if we have seen the last of Brad Lidge.
Friday, April 6, 2007
The Win/Loss Fallacy
I briefly mentioned the error of using Win/Loss (W-L) records to judge a pitcher in an early post by referencing Horacio Ramirez’s 2003 campaign (to recap, he went 12-4 with over 9 runs of support per win). I thought that it may be of use to look at the significance of these records over a larger sample size and not just one player in one season, since we are constantly bombarded (by announcers, writers, co-workers, roommates, etc.) with how much a pitcher won in order to determine his worth.
Before looking at it mathematically, the reasons for a W-L record being irrelevant really should be fairly obvious. No matter how well a pitcher throws, he is completely reliant upon his offense for help in getting the win. Even in the case of a shutout, the pitcher requires at least one run for the W (that is, of course, assuming that this isn’t taking place in the NL and the pitcher could potentially hit a homerun to provide his own offense as well).
To test the validity of the W-L records, I ran regressions of several pitching metrics against Winning Percentage (W%) to try and gauge the affect that pitchers have directly on their own records. A few notes on the model:
- The pitching metrics used in the models are Stikeouts per 9 innings pitched (K/9), Homeruns allowed per 9 innings pitched (HR/9), Walks per 9 innings pitched (BB/9), and Earned Run Average (ERA).
- The ERA metric is used as more of an “anti-metric” to the first three, as it is not near as good of an indicator of actual pitcher performance. Explaining/proving this would make this way too long, so I would suggest reading JC Bradbury’s paper “Does the Baseball Labor Market Properly Value Pitchers?”, as it does a great job of breaking down the deceptions of ERAs.
- I used the performance records of every pitcher that has thrown over 160 innings in each of the past 7 years (yielding 628 samples). I omitted relievers because the rules for getting a win are ridiculous enough as they are, without taking into account that relievers can actually give up the lead and still obtain the win under the right conditions.
- I ran regressions of these metrics against Winning Percentage instead of number of wins to account for the bias that would occur among pitchers with a different number of innings pitched. If two pitchers of the same caliber (and with the same teams and luck) pitch different amounts of innings (assuming that this is due to one having more starts), then the pitcher with more innings has the likelihood of having more wins.
After attempting several different models, the one that most explained Winning Percentage with pitcher-controlled performances was:
W% = βº + β¹(HR/9) + β²(K/9) + β³(BB/9) + ε
(I know that these should be subscript by the Betas, but I can’t figure out how to do that in Word, so I’m using superscript instead)
Per the t-stats, all of these variables are significant given a 5% significance level and the degrees of freedom for this model. Additionally, the signs of the coefficients are as predicted; HR/9 and BB/9 have a negative affect on W%, while K/9 has a positive affect. Having said that, the model doesn’t explain all that much.
The R² of .2289 shows that only ~23% of the variance in W% is explained by outcomes that pitchers directly have control over. Individually, K/9 has the closest correlation with W% (.346). Coincidentally, this is probably the best single stat to measure a pitcher by, as it reflects an ability to get batters out, and is the least volatile (from year to year) of the metrics. BB/9 has the smallest correlation (negative, of course), at -.174…maybe this is why Russ Ortiz still has a job.
With coefficients in place, this is how the model looks:
W% = .587 - .104(HR/9) + .023(K/9) – .028(BB/9) + ε
Again, the low correlation and R² results illustrate just how little the pitcher-only influenced metrics have to do with W-L records. This is not an argument against these metrics, but rather against the notion of judging a player by W%.
To contrast, we can run regressions to determine how much of W% is explained by a pitchers ERA. Referring back to JC Bradbury’s paper, remember that ERA his highly based on luck and the quality of defense behind you. At any rate, the model (much like the first) looks like this:
W% = β¹ + β²(ERA) + ε
(In fairness, it should be noted that I didn’t adjust for park factor or league in this model. I’m assuming that it would make a negligible difference.)
As expected, since ERA takes some luck and defense into account as well, it provides more explanation for the variance of W%. The t-stat is significant under the same conditions as above (save for a slight change in degrees of freedom), the sign of the coefficient is as expected (negative), and the R² of .351 explains ~35% of the variance in W%. While this is an improvement, it still does not serve as a particularly accurate model. However, it does prove a point further: even when taking some luck and team defensive skill into account with ERA, ~65% of the variance in W% is left unexplained.
The model with coefficients:
W% = .915 - .089(ERA)
(Note that this is saying that even if a pitcher never gives up an earned run, he will still lose ~8% of the time. This could be explained by errors and unearned runs…those are flawed for different reasons, though.)
Summing up, pitchers actually have a small part in influencing their W-L record. Defense, offensive run support, and dumb, blind luck play a much larger role in deciding what record is fixed to their name than they actually can. As simplistic as it may sound, the best thing a pitcher can do is to strike an opposing hitter out. Not only does this project out well from year to year, but if a pitcher strikes out enough hitters consistently; eventually the Yankees will sign him, and he’ll have all the run support he needs.
Kind of interesting from the models run using the data over the past 7 seasons:
- Zach Greinke had the most unlucky year of all in 2005. In that season, he had metrics of 5.61 K/9, 1.13 HR/9, and a walk rate of 2.61 BB/9. Not great, but certainly warranting more than the 5-17 record he was saddled with.
- On the opposite end of the spectrum, Paul Abbott enjoyed the luckiest year out of everyone in 2001. Abbott posted rates of 6.5 K/9, 1.16 HR/9, and 4.80 BB/9. Except for the walk rates (which were actually almost twice a bad), these aren't all that different from Greinke, and Abbott was rewarded with a 17-4 record.
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Random Musings
2. Matt Garza did not start the year up with the Twins but down at AAA as well. This move is understandable if Garza was going to be the 5th starter instead of Carlos Silva but the Twins wanted him to get consistent work at AAA because their 5th starter is going to be skipped the first month, which is what usually happens on most clubs. So they let Silva stay up, because he won't pitch much anyways. However, Garza isn't just better than Silva, he is also better than the Twins 4th starter, Sidney Ponson as well. What from the .316/.371/.466 the last three seasons against, do teams see as a good thing? Ponson is terrible. If Dave Duncan couldn't help him out, then no one can. Last year, in stops in A, AA, and AAA Garza struck out 154 in 135 innings pitched, only gave up 6 homers, and only walked 32. If they are worried about his innings, they can still limit his workload early in the season so he doesn't overwork his arm. Either way, the Fresno State product needs to be up pitching on the big club instead of Silva, Ponson, or Ramon Ortiz for that matter.
3. Against the Astros last night, righthander Ian Snell of the Pittsburgh Pirates pretty much had his way with Houston. In 6 innings of work, Snell recorded 11 strikeouts, allowed one walk and one home run to RF Jason Lane in the 5th inning on the first pitch of the at bat. Other than that blip, Snell controlled the game. His fastball was showing good life hitting 95 several times with movement. He had both his slider and his curve ball working for strikes keeping batters off balance. Don't let the 11 K's fool you either as Snell struck out 8.18/9 last season in 186 innings. He also gave up 29 long balls with 9 coming on the first pitch of the at bat showing that Snell wants to challenge hitters early and try and get ahead in the count. That is not surprising considering his youth and inexperience. So if Snell can keep the ball in the yard and improve against lefties (.305/.380/.526 in 2006) the Pirates have something to build on this season.
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Opening Day
- Kelly Johnson’s opening day wasn’t as bad as it looked. The Braves leadoff hitter did strike out twice, but hit the ball hard in the top of the 8th and managed to see 24 pitches in his 5 plate appearances (4.8 pitches/PA). In the field, he showed good range by chasing down a ball in shallow right and handling a slow grounder. The dropped ball in short center clearly should have been an error but, as I’m sure you all know, errors mean little if anything. A side note: Keith Law does a good job of mentioning these botched error calls in his blog (which is consistently outstanding) and lobbying for the abolition of this stat.
- By contrast, Jeff Francoeur’s first game of '07 was just as bad – if not worse – than it looked. The Braves RF swung at 11 of the 16 pitches that were offered to him, and was a good foot away from making contact with a Tom Gordon curve in the 9th.
- Speaking of Gordon, both he and Braves LH reliever Mike Gonzalez illustrated just how valuable it is to be able to come out of the bullpen and get a strike out. Gordon fanned PH Brayan Pena to get out of a bases loaded jam in the ninth, while Gonzalez sat down both Shane Victorino and Ryan Howard on strikes with runners on second and third and no outs in the top of the 7th.
- Phillies starter Brett Meyers threw very well, but did have some issues. His 9 strikeouts (and only 2 walks) in 7 2/3 innings was very encouraging, but he couldn’t reign in his curveball most of the day. There was good break on the pitch, but he kept it up in the zone, as is evidenced by his 9 flyball outs (to 5 groundouts) and 2 HR allowed. Attribute this to opening day, since he is usually has groundball tendencies (although his GB/FB has declined somewhat the past few seasons).
- Ryan Howard had a good game as well, going 2 for 4 with a walk. Nothing spectacular yesterday, I just wanted to say a quick word about his power. His stats obviously tell the story, but it is something totally different to see him live. While living in Richmond, VA in 2005, I got the chance to see him come through and play the Braves AAA team on quite a few occasions, and it was incredible. The power that he has to the opposite field is absolutely unreal. If you haven’t seen him live, I would highly recommend it.
Elsewhere in the majors...
- Despite not throwing particularly well, and looking like he went on the Odalis Perez workout program of eating hotdogs and taking naps, Angels starter John Lackey was able to hold the Rangers to 1 run (unearned) over 5 innings. It’s probably good that he only went 5, though, since it gave manager Mike Scioscia plenty of time to start breaking down Scot Shields. Shields has thrown either the most or second most innings of any AL reliever in the past three seasons…check out his ERA splits by month to see the effects.
- It was good to see Yankee fans boo Alex Rodriguez for a bad first inning of 2007. In the 7th, A-rod singled, stole second, and scored what would prove to be the game winning run (not to mention adding a two run shot in the 8th)…there’s no way he can win.
- I haven’t seen Astros closer Brad Lidge throw yet this year, but reports are that his mechanics are out of whack and he’s having trouble locating. I’m hoping he can recover, because that fastball/slider combo of his circa 2005 is too good to be wasted.
Monday, April 2, 2007
Glavine Impressive, but...
Real quick: we were going to post previews for each of the 6 divisions, but got lazy. Now that the season has started, it seems stupid to post previews, and we’ve abandoned that. So, on to last night’s game…
41 year old Tom Glavine looked good last night in the first game of this 2007 season. The lefty ace threw an efficient 6 innings, averaging only 14.8 pitches per inning and inducing two double play balls among the Cardinals many ground/pop outs throughout the evening. The real story here wasn’t Glavine, though, it was the Cardinals.
First off, let me acknowledge that I am very much aware that this game one of a 162 game season. Nevertheless, Sunday night had to make you uneasy if you’re a Cardinals fan.
The most puzzling event of the evening was the decision to hit Preston Wilson second in the order behind David Eckstein. Now people have different theories regarding how much difference a batting order can make, but I feel safe in saying that placing a guy in the two hole that strikes out ~25% of his trips to the plate and possesses a GB/FB ratio that is reaching towards 2 the past couple of seasons is not a good idea. In fact, in his first AB of the season, Wilson swung at the first pitch he saw, took the second, and then grounded into a double play on the third. He ended the night going 1 for 4 while grounding into the aforementioned double play and striking out twice. Again, I know that this was the first game of the season (and I’m not implying that Wilson will strike out 50% of the time), but it’s probably not going to get much better.
The rest of the Cardinals lineup featured Adam Kennedy (ranked 21st out of 23 second basemen in OPS last season at .718), Yadier Molina (20th out of 21 catchers with over 400 ABs at a .595 OPS), So Taguchi (I hate to pile on after his night in the field, but he has a career SLG. of only .398), Jim Edmonds (the 36 year old won’t be able to bounce back from injuries like he used to), Scott Rolen, David Eckstein, and Albert Pujols. Returning back to Wilson, his OPS of .730 ranked 69th out of 82 outfielders.
I’ll admit, the problems for the Cards were exasperated by the fact that there was a lefty on the mound, as Chris Duncan has obliterated right-handed pitching to the tune of .307/.379/.622. Even so, that’s in only 241 career ABs, and he opens the lineup to problems for late in games when bullpens will bring in lefty specialists to neutralize him in key situations (he may as well not bring a bat to the plate when facing a lefty).
On the plus side, the Cardinals still have Pujols, Rolen (as long as he’s healthy), Edmonds (again, if healthy), and Eckstein (at least he gets on base), and it does help that they play in what is probably the weakest division in baseball. However, it’s pretty tough to score runs when the bottom third of your lineup is made up of automatic outs (just ask the Astros).
A few notes from the game…
- Rolen’s force out of Tom Glavine at second base on Lo Duca’s slow roller in the top of the 3rd further demonstrates his defensive prowess (not that he needed to). Not only in the accurate throw made while charging towards home, but in the fact that he knew a 41 year old pitcher was on the base paths.
- Carlos Delgado’s double, also in the top of the 3rd, was a good show of the big first baseman’s power. Delgado’s weight had shifted over his front half, instead of remaining back, and the left-hander was still able to drive it to the wall in the opposite field.
- Carpenter’s night wasn’t as bad as it looked. The Cardinals ace only allowed 3 flyball outs to his 11 groundouts and used his curve effectively at times to get up 0-1 on hitters. He wasn’t helped by Taguchi running head-long into the left field fence for the Delgado double that he should have probably caught.
- A potential Cardinal rally was killed in the bottom of the third when Carpenter attempted to squeeze Adam Kennedy home and ended up getting the second basemen tagged out. This move was quite confusing to me, since Carpenter strikes out less than 30% of his plate appearances (not to mention Glavine is not a strike out pitcher), and there was no one on first to force a potential double play. LaRussa likely ran his team out of a run there.