Archive for May, 2009

A short note on tonight’s game: When the first base umpire missed a call on Derek Jeter in the sixth inning, it potentially cost the Yankees a run. Johnny Damon singled, and Mark Teixeira hit what was a two-run home run but could have been a three-run home run. For that, we blame the umpire. But in the ninth, Phil Coke issued a lead off walk to the Indians’ number nine hitter Trevor Crowe who entered the game hitting .171/.237/.200. That Coke even got to three balls on a hitter with such low numbers speaks volumes about the lefty’s control today, and it certainly makes the fact that he tried to blame the umpire after the game even harder to stomach.

Sometimes, the umpires may impact the game, and sometimes, a pitcher just has to throw strikes. As The Star-Ledger’s Marc Carig notes, Phil Coke is doing himself no favors by blaming the umpire for his inability to attack the zone while facing a .171 hitter batting ninth for a depleted team.

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One year ago today on DotF, Zach McAllister made his High-A debut.

Triple-A Scranton (7-5 loss to Louisville)
Reegie Corona: 1 for 5
Austin Jackson: 1 for 4, 2 RBI, 2 K – 60 hits in 46 games
Todd Linden: 0 for 2, 1 R, 2 BB, 2 K, 1 SB
Shelley Duncan: 1 for 3, 2 RBI – leads the league with 49 RBI, the guy in second has 42
Juan Miranda: 0 for 4, 1 E (fielding)
John Rodriguez: 1 for 4, 1 R, 3 K – can you quitely OPS .934?
Justin Leone: 0 for 2, 2 BB, 1 K – picked off first
Eric Duncan: 1 for 4, 1 R, 1 E (throwing)
PJ Pilittere: 2 for 4, 2 R, 1 RBI
Josh Towers: 3.2 IP, 9 H, 7 R, 6 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 5-4 GB/FB – 52 of 81 pitches were strikes (64.2%) … 10 ER allowed in his last 8.2 IP after allowing just 4 in his first 17.1 IP
Paul Bush: 3.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K, 2-3 GB/FB – 29 of 39 pitches were strikes (74.4%) … just signed out of indy ball
Edwar Ramirez: 2 IP, zeroes, 3 K, 2-1 GB/FB – 19 of 28 pitches were strikes (67.9%) … that’s vintage Edwar right there

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Categories : Down on the Farm
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As Jhonny Peralta’s third hit of the game skipped under the glove of a diving Alex Rodriguez and as Trevor Crowe, a rookie with a .237 OBP prior to the game, touched home, I second-guessed Joe Girardi.

First, I wondered why Brett Gardner did not attempt to steal second when the Yanks had first and third and one out in the top of the 9th. Second, I wanted to know why Chien-Ming Wang was removed after three innings and 42 pitches with a no-hit number nine hitter coming up. Third, I was curious to hear why Mariano Rivera was not brought to pitch at all in the ninth.

Then I watched the post-game show, and two of my three concerns were answered.

We start with Gardner. The Yanks had tied the game in the 8th, and they were threatening to take the lead in the 9th. Gardner was on first as Jorge Posada came up. Gardner did not steal, and Posada grounded into an inning-ending double play. After the game, Girardi danced around the issue. “That’s been addressed. I’ll just leave it at that,” he said.

Gardner was more forthcoming. “They wanted me to steal,” he said. “Mentally, I didn’t get a good jump off the bat.”

Basically, Gardner just didn’t feel comfortable running off Kerry Wood, a righty who isn’t quick to the plate. That one is on Brett through and through, and if he steals, perhaps the Yanks plate that fifth run and perhaps Rivera is pitching the ninth with a lead. In related news, Melky Cabrera should be back in the lineup tomorrow or Tuesday.

The second second-guess involved Chien-Ming Wang. Let’s rewind: Today’s game started out with Phil Hughes on the hill. He threw over 20 pitches in the first inning but had good stuff. His fastball sat at 93 and he dialed it up to 94/95 for a few pitches. Clearly, Hughes is growing more comfortable with his stuff.

Hughes ran into trouble in the third when the Indians plated three runs on a hit batter and a few hits. Outside of a bad Brett Gardner play in the 5th that led a fourth Indian run, Hughes threw well but used too many pitches. After five innings, he was at 95 pitches. While he had struck out six, walked just one and had allowed five hits, the Yankees turned the ball over to Wang.

For the second straight outing, Wang looked solid. With his sinker sitting at 92.5 and peaking at 93.9, his velocity is nearly back, and he had a 4-1 ground ball-to-fly ball ratio. For three innings, Wang ran through the Indians’ lineup. He gave up no runs on three strike outs, three hits and a walk.

After 42 pitches and with the Indians’ nine hitter due up in the ninth, the Yankees pulled Wang. That move I did not originally understand. Wang is a starter who can throw more than 42 pitches, and he seemed to be finding his groove today after a rough start to the season. Unless Rivera were to pitch, the Yanks would be replacing a good starter with a worse reliever.

After the game, though, Girardi said that the Yanks did not want to overextend Wang because he is Wednesday’s emergency starter. It sounds as though Pettitte may not be able to make his next start, and the Yankees do not want to find themselves without options. Having Wang throw more pitches would have led to just that.

Our final second-guess though remains unanswered. With a runner on second and one out, the Yankees went with David Robertson and not Mariano Rivera. I know that baseball tradition says that you do not use your closer in the bottom of the ninth of a tie game on the road. But with the game on the line, the Yankees have to go with their best pitcher. The Yankees ended up saving Rivera for a save situation that never came. Twenty-nine other managers would have made the same decision, but I still don’t like it.

Anyway, the Yanks have won four out of six on the road. Now that I know what happened behind the scenes, I’m far less upset over the outcome on the field.

Categories : Game Stories
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May
31

Game 50 Spillover Thread II

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Eric Wedge just did the Yanks a big favor.

Categories : Game Threads
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May
31

Game 50 Spillover Thread

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A run or five would be nice.

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As mentioned in a post earlier this week, Phil Hughes has had an up and down season. He pitched well in his debut against Detroit, but had four bad or just decent outings before dominating Texas last Monday. A solid start from him today would mean a lot, since it would likely buy him some more time at the major league level.

Hughes’s time at the major league level could also be impacted by the performance of Chien-Ming Wang. Last time we saw the Wanger was in his perfect two innings last Wednesday. The Yankees should not hesitate to use him in relief of Hughes today. He needs the work, and it’s not like the rest of the bullpen is lighting the world on fire. Phil Coke also hasn’t pitched Tuesday, so just as Veras threw one inning before Wang pitched two on Wednesday, so we could see both Coke and Wang in relief.

(Which brings me to a question: Why did Veras pitch over Coke last night? Coke was warming in the bottom of the eighth. Why not let him pitch? He hadn’t tossed since Tuesday, and Veras got work Wednesday.)

Jay at Fack Youk asks a relevant question to kick off his game post: Who is Carl Pavano? Coincidentally, this was the title of my first ever post at RAB. The Yanks will face Pavano for the second time this season. They didn’t hit him too hard the first time, as they managed just four hits and one run through six innings. Thankfully the Rafaels blew that one, as Perez allowed two runs without recording an out and Betancourt allowed three runs in his 1.1 innings. Given Carl’s perpetual absence during his four-year Yankees tenure, I’d really like to see the Yankees sock it to him. Just once.

Game time’s at the odd hour of 12:40 p.m. today.

Lineup:

1. Derek Jeter, SS
2. Johnny Damon, LF
3. Mark Teixeira, 1B
4. Alex Rodriguez, 3B
5. Robinson Cano, 2B
6. Hideki Matsui, DH
7. Nick Swisher, RF
8. Brett Gardner, CF
9. Francisco Cervelli, C

And on the mound, number sixty-five, Phil Hughes.

Categories : Game Threads
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May
31

The Yanks’ 22-man roster

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With the Yanks up 10-3 in the ninth inning last night, Joe Girardi turned the ball over to Jose Veras for the final three outs of the game. Veras, as Mike said, pitched to the score, and it was ugly.

The first batter, Shin-Soo Choo, homered. Then, Jose Veras hit Mark DeRosa with a pitch. After a ground-out, Ben Francisco plated DeRosa with a double. All of a sudden, the Yankees were a Cleveland home run away from a save situation.

For Veras, his appearance capped off a May to forget. After beginning the season with a 5.73 ERA and a 1.09 WHIP in April, Veras has been utterly terrible. This month, he has thrown 8.2 innings and has allowed 11 hits and 8 walks. He has a 7.27 ERA to go with that 2.31 WHIP. Jose Veras is now so bad that the Yanks can’t even trust him in a seven-run game.

Meanwhile, also making an appearance last night was Angel Berroa. The Yanks’ 25th man pinch ran for Matsui and never made it past second base. In his last pinch-running cameo, Berroa was thrown out at the plate by about 15 feet on a foul ball down the line. He earned himself a whopping four at-bats this month and hasn’t done anything.

Finally we arrive at Brett Tomko. Since being called up by the Yanks during the first week of May, Tomko has made five appearances for the team. His last outing was a one-inning effort against the Phillies last Sunday when he gave up a hit and two walks in the 11th. He got the loss and threw just 14 of 30 pitches for strikes.

With these three players rarely used or underperforming to an extreme degree, the Yankees are playing at a peak level with a 22-man roster. At AAA, they have Shelley Duncan, the International League’s leading home run hitter who would give the bench far more pop than Berroa provides. They have Mark Melancon and George Kontos throwing well and throwing strikes for Scranton.

At this point, we don’t even need to offer up more analysis. The Yankees have three dead spots on their roster. They owe nothing to these players, and we’ve seen enough — sometimes by simply seeing nothing at all — to know that they don’t belong anymore. It’s time for the Yankees and Brian Cashman to pull the trigger on these three players. With a full 25-man roster, the first-place Yankees, 16-5 over their last 21 games, could be that much better.

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It’s Saturday night and we’ve all got other places we’d like to be, so let’s sum this one up bullet point style.

  • CC Sabathia … man is that guy awesome or what? He pitched better than his line (7-5-3-3-3-8) indicates, taking a no-hitter into the fifth and only laboring in that one inning when a couple of bloops dropped in. He gave up a solo homer to ex-teammate Grady Sizemore on a 3-1 challenge fastball later in the game. Grady won the battle, so tip your hat to him. Sabathia is now second in the AL with 78 IP (four behind Halladay), and every bit the horse the Yanks thought they were getting when they signed him for $161M.
  • David Robertson threw a flawless inning in relief, and should start seeing some more high-leverage innings. Since he was recalled, he’s faced eight batters, retiring all of them. Jose Veras entered the game with a seven run lead in the ninth and did what the great ones do, he pitched to the score.
  • The offense seemingly scored at will. Jorge Posada & Nick Swisher clubbed second inning solo homers, and Robbie Cano drove in three. Deter Jeter & Johnny Damon each drove in a pair of runs and Alex Rodriguez reached base three more times. Even Hideki Matsui went 3 for 5. Hugs and hand-pounds all around, the team is firing on all cylinders.
  • The Yanks have now gone 16 games without committing an error, and are one away from tying the 2006 Red Sox’s record of 17 consecutive errorless games. Kim Jones totally jinxed it on the postgame though.

With the win, the Yanks increase their lead in the AL East to 1.5 games, and their run differential is only four runs worse than second place Boston, amazing considering how bad Chien-Ming Wang was early in the year. Phil Hughes vs. Carl Pavano in an early game tomorrow, 12:40 start time.

Categories : Game Stories
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May
30

Jesus, Montero’s on fire

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Two years ago today on DotF, Mitch Hilligoss set a new South Atlantic League record by picking up a hit in his 36th consecutive games. At the time, it was the longest hitting streak in the minors in 17 years.

Jon Ortiz, struggling big time as High-A Tampa’s closer, has been demoted to Low-A Charleston. Alan Horne threw a simulated game today, and it went horribly.

Triple-A Scranton (3-1 win over Louisville)
Reegie Corona, Juan Miranda, John Rodriguez & Justin Leone: all 1 for 4 – Corona scored a run & swiped a bag … Miranda K’ed … J-Rod hit a solo jimmy jack
Austin Jackson: 2 for 3, 3 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 1 SB – hitting .353 in 45 games
Todd Linden: 1 for 3, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 2 K - homered off an old pal
Shelley Duncan: 2 for 4, 2 R, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 1 K – leads the league with 18 homers, the guy in second has 11
Eric Duncan: 0 for 4
Chris Stewart: 0 for 3, 1 K
Romulo Sanchez: 2.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, 4-1 GB/FB – 26 of 43 pitches were strikes (60.5%) … given all of the quality relievers that need innings on this roster, it’s not the worst thing in the world to have a bullpen game every five days
Zack Kroenke: 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 2 K, 2-1 GB/FB – 23 of 42 pitches were strikes (54.8%)
Jose Valdez: 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, 2-1 GB/FB – 18 of 29 pitches were strikes (62.1%)
Anthony Claggett: 3 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, 5-3 GB/FB – 22 of 39 pitches were strikes (56.4%)

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Categories : Down on the Farm
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May
30

Game 49 Spillover Thread

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Hey look, Tomo Ohka. Good for him.

Categories : Game Threads
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