Scheduled Event
Week In Review: March 31 - April 6
|
|
|
The series: Hosted the White Sox (win, win, loss) and visited the Athletics (loss, loss, win).
The news: Victor injured himself on the basepaths on Opening Day for the second straight year and was replaced in the lineup by Shoppach for the rest of the week, although he has pinch-hit. The Tigers, expected to compete in a tight division race with the Indians, opened the season with six straight losses, put new star Miguel Cabrera on the shelf, and got outscored 39-15. And in the biggest news of the week, manager Eric Wedge did not start Gutierrez on Sunday, sparking explosive bursts of existential angst as Indians fans everywhere try to make sense of a mysterious and inexplicable universe.
Post of the week: Now taking nominations.
Who fed it: Sizemore and Garko got off to superfine starts, posting near-identical lines right around .341/.442/.568. Carmona, Westbrook and Lee rattled off easy quality starts, collectively allowing just 3 ER over 21 IP. Perez blew a late-inning lead on his second batter of the new season but looked dominant in the next two games. Marte went 1-for-3. Absolute Best: Sizemore. Relative Best: Lee.
Who ate it: Sabathia tanked his first two starts – you might say he was 0-for-4 in quality start criteria – so that'll be the last time I write 800 words about whether he will or won't or should or shouldn't leave after 2008. Okay, probably not, but that's how it feels at the moment, anyway. Betancourt gave up seven hits in his first two innings, and he allowed more than one run in a game for the first time since September 2006. Dellichaels posted perhaps the worst week in the history of LF platoons, batting .050, which even a .20 walk rate can't redeem. Shoppach looked strangely uncomfortable behind the plate and allowed three passed balls. Finally, Gutierrez and Blake, after electrifying the faithful on Opening Day, combined for exactly one base hit, a single, in their next 28 at bats. Absolute Worst: Sabathia. Relative Worst: Blake.
UPDATE: JulioBernazard helpfully points out that Dellichaels' lone hit of the week actually came while Michaels was playing RF, not LF, and to make matters worse, Dellucci was technically a pinch-hitter when he was HBP. Taking these key facts into account, the LF platoon's production for the week was actually .000/.238/.000, and not .050/.269/.100 as previously implied. LGT-WIR deeply regrets this rare understatement. [Jay]
The other guys: We rocked Buerhle, Vazquez, MacDougal and Dotel but were baffled by Danks, Duchscherer and Eveland, three guys who collectively had 37 career starts coming into the week. Dye, Pierzynski, Bobby Crosby and Daric Barton all had big series; Thome hit two Opening Day home runs improbably off our lefty ace but forgot how to hit after that. Oakland had both Ryan Sweeney and Mike Sweeney in their lineup at one point, like some kind of very weird dream, Alan Embree and Keith Foulke in their bullpen.
False alarms:
- Royals and White Sox in first place.
- Tigers in last place.
- Sabathia and Betancourt being terrible.
- Shoppach fumbling.
Open questions:
- Pronk, or just Travis?
- New Jake or Good Old Jake?
- Why must C.C. be such a disappointment?
- Too soon for a Dellichaels death watch?
- Too soon for a Tigers 2008 season death watch?
- How healthy will Victor be this season?
- Can Cliff Lee really bounce back to be a pretty good pitcher?
- Can Carmona just continue being awesome without interruption?
129 comments | 3 recs
Game 2: Indians 7, White Sox 2
| Highest WPA | Lowest WPA | ||
| Fausto Carmona | .239 | Jhonny Peralta | -.073 |
| Grady Sizemore | .233 | Casey Blake | -.044 |
| Franklin Gutierrez | .075 | Travis Hafner | -.028 |
Beyond the cringeworthy last two innings, a nice all-around effort. Fausto Carmona, beyond a bit of wildness, was indistinguishable from last season. The White Sox pounded his pitches into the ground all night, which can't have been pleasant consider how cold this night was. Fausto had a few pitches get away from him, but he never let those four walks hurt him. You often wonder if a pitcher like Carmona benefits from letting a four-seamer get away from him once in a while, especially if it appears he's not trying to do it. Fear of the unknown, especially if that unknown is a mid-90s fastball, is a powerful resource to tap.
I don't really get sending Carmona out for the seventh. Even the horses aren't conditioned to go more than 100 pitches to start the season, and it should be a priority for the Indians to limit Fausto's unnecessary innings. The whole bullpen was rested, and some guys had a coating of rust on their arms, so why not let him go with an easy six-inning outing?
The offense was very workmanlike, squeezing Javier Vazquez's outing into five innings. After Asdrubal Cabrera singled in Grady Sizemore for the team's third run, a single and two walks made Ozzie Guillen go to the bullpen early. And going to the bullpen to insert your fifth or sixth best reliever is almost always a good thing for the opposing team. Even if the game's close, it means that three or four relievers have to be just about perfect to keep the game within reach. Or that close game can quickly turn into extended garbage time, which in this case it did.
My first impression of Masa Kobayashi was that of a pitcher who absolutely needs to have control of his pitches, for his stuff doesn't look that impressive. White Sox hitters didn't have too much trouble making contact, and it doesn't appear that his windup is that unorthodox. But a first impression is still only one impression, and the cold weather may have affected him.
Likewise, Jorge Julio labored to finish his inning of work, allowing the only home run of the game and allowing two other baserunners. Stuff has never been an issue for Jorge (the major reason why each new club sees the potential of a quality setup man in him), but as we've seen with guys like Jason Davis and Fernando Cabrera, stuff can't cover for bad location or inconsistency. The Indians aren't risking that much, especially with how they're using him, though.
But overall, there's a lot that's gone right these first couple games, with Carmona's outing topping the list.
41 comments | 0 recs
Game Thread: April 2, 2008
Gametime: 7:05 (STO)
The gametime temperature is going to be in the low 40s, which means we'll probably be seeing a lot of pulled grounders from Chicago hitters. Last year, the White Sox gave Fausto a lot of trouble, posting the highest OPS (.790) against among AL Central teams.
The Indians haven't made a move regarding Victor Martinez, but I seriously doubt he's playing tonight, especially with it being this cold [Ryan].
591 comments | 0 recs







