Archive for September, 2009
Tampa, SI fail to clinch titles
Posted by: | CommentsTriple-A Scranton (4-1 loss to Durham) Durham takes a 1-0 series lead in the International League Championship Series (best-of-five)
Kevin Russo & Colin Curtis: both 1 for 4, 1 K, 1 E – Russo got caught stealing & made a bad throw … Curtis missed a catch
Austin Jackson & Doug Bernier: both 0 for 2, 1 K – Jackson walked twice
Juan Miranda & Chris Stewart: both 0 for 3 – Miranda drew a walk & K’ed … Stewart committed a throwing error
Eduardo Nunez: 0 for 4, 3 K
John Rodriguez: 2 for 4, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 1 K
Reegie Corona: 1 for 3, 1 2B
Romulo Sanchez: 5 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 8 K, 4-3 GB/FB – 57 of 92 pitches were strikes (62%)
Zach Kroenke: 1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 1-0 GB/FB – just 11 of his 23 pitches were strikes (47.8%), but the walk was intentional
Jose Valdez: 2 IP, zeroes, 2 K, 3-1 GB/FB – 15 of 22 pitches were strikes (68.2%)
Game 146 Spillover Thread II
Posted by: | CommentsAt least we’ll get to see some Melancon and Dunn action.
Game 146: Serving steak on a Mitre
Posted by: | CommentsNo one would like to erase his last start more than Sergio Mitre. The right hander didn’t look all bad, but he didn’t get any breaks from his defense, and when his team needed him to bail them out, he didn’t deliver. His final line — 4.1 IP, 11 H, 11 R, 9 ER, 2 BB, 5 K — will destroy his line for the rest of the season. But he can still salvage it with a few quality starts down the stretch.
The hope today is that the defense plays up to its standard, and that Mitre can avoid some of the situations he faced last time. I’d like to imagine his line would have been a bit prettier had the Yanks not been playing on Toronto’s turf. Even so, Mitre has a lot to prove in his last few starts, and with Andy Pettitte missing some time, he should get another three or four starts in this season.
Taking the hill for the Jays is a man who needs no introduction. This will be Doc’s fifth start against the Yankees this season. In three of those four he’s pitched a complete game, and in the remaining one he lasted seven. The Yanks got to him twice, though, while Doc has dominated in the other two. The series is tied 2-2, and the Yankees aren’t putting any of their regulars on the bench for this one.
Lineup:
1. Derek Jeter, SS
2. Johnny Damon, LF
3. Mark Teixeira, 1B
4. Alex Rodriguez, 3B
5. Hideki Matsui, DH
6. Jorge Posada, C
7. Robinson Cano, 2B
8. Nick Swisher, RF
9. Brett Gardner, CF
And on the mound, number forty-five, Sergio Mitre.
Pettitte to miss start with shoulder fatigue
Posted by: | CommentsCue collective groan. We learned a bit earlier that Andy Pettitte will miss his scheduled start tomorrow with shoulder fatigue. The Yankees didn’t supply much elaboration beyond the expected line: they expect it to get better with rest. Andy last pitched on Friday, and is on track to start on Monday in Anaheim, giving him nine days’ rest. Joe Girardi hopes that this will “knock it out.” The Yanks have the luxury of being able to skip Pettitte whenever necessary in the season’s final month, so they should take advantage whenever possible.
Chad Gaudin starts tomorrow in his place.
Assessing Brackman’s Season, Part II
Posted by: | CommentsTwo years ago, the Yankees selected righthander Andrew Brackman with their first round pick, knowing full well that he might need elbow surgery at some point, perhaps as soon as that summer. Brackman showed tremendous raw stuff and considerable potential as an amateur, the reasons why he was ranked so high in pre-draft rankings (Keith Law had him as the third best prospect in the draft class). The Yankees were willing to gamble and wait on his talent, especially with a pick so late in first round.
As expected, Brackman underwent Tommy John surgery soon after signing a Major League deal worth $3.35 million guaranteed with incentives that could push the total value of the contract to $13 million. At the time, it was potentially the richest contract in draft history. Brackman spent all of 2008 rehabbing but returned to action in the now defunct Hawaii Winter Baseball League last fall where he was ranked the number two prospect by Baseball America (subs. req’d).
Brackman’s long awaited full season debut didn’t go as smoothly as planned this year. It featured a few ups but considerably more downs. His overall season line — 106.2 IP, 106 H, 79 R, 76 BB, 103 K — isn’t pretty, and his 26 wild pitches were second most in all of minor league baseball. The way I see it Brackman’s season can be broken down into three distinct periods, which I’ll arbitrarily call Good Brackman, Bad Brackman, and Reliever Brackman.
We already took a look at Good Brackman yesterday, and now we’re going to examine Bad Brackman.
* * *
After nine good starts with the River Dogs, Brackman’s season started the unravel at the end of May with the infamous ten walk game. The next nine starts following that one were better, relatively speaking, but still atrocious by any measure. Even though his strikeout rate remained strong at 8.49 K/9, the rest of his peripherals were downright ugly:
11.83 BB/9
0.72 K/BB
10.80 H/9
1.29 HR/9
.343 BABIP
7.11 FIP
He managed to throw just 35 innings in those ten starts, and as ugly as the numbers are, Brackman’s stuff may have been worse. Dave Cameron of USS Mariner and FanGraphs fame took in the big guy’s July 23rd start at Greensboro, and let’s just say he came away less than impressed:
In the first inning, he sat 90-92 with the fastball, going to the outside corner against RHBs. The pitch had some decent movement down and away, and profiled as the kind of pitch that could get groundballs. His command was poor, as expected, walking the leadoff batter, but even once he got ahead in the count, it became obvious he didn’t have anything else besides the fastball. On an 0-2 count, he threw a 73 MPH curve with no tilt that bounced about a foot in front of the plate. He came back with another weak 72 MPH curve that just hung in the strike zone begging to be hit. He went back to the fastball and got through the first inning, but wasn’t impressive.
Then came the second inning. The fastball dipped down to 88, but he still popped 92 occasionally, but the breaking ball was just awful, and the Greensboro hitters were sitting on his fastball. His command went in the toilet, and the movement on his fastball ran right into LHBs wheelhouse, giving them a chance to take batting practice. Kyle Skipworth, who isn’t exactly a good hitting prospect, launched one of Brackman’s fastballs deep into the night sky. Every left-hander just pounded the fastball, and the curve simply wasn’t good enough to keep hitters off balance.
I respect Cameron’s opinion, but he’s also the same guy that said he wouldn’t trade Jeremy Reed for Jonathan Papelbon or Jon Lester, so maybe we should take his report with a grain of salt. Regardless, the key point is that not only had Brackman shown no improvement with his stuff, but his command and control had completely deteriorated.
He walked four or more batters in a game seven times in that stretch, but amazingly went walk-free in one game. It was just a tease though, because Brackman issued eight free passes in his next 7.1 IP. As if the walks weren’t troubling enough, he also uncorked 16 (!) wild pitches and plunked five batters in those 35 innings. Control always takes some time to come back after Tommy John surgery, but that’s completely unacceptable at any level.
Developing comfortable and repeatable mechanics are always an issue with tall pitchers (Randy Johnson walked 222 batters in 259.2 IP between Single- and Double-A), but such extreme control problems indicate there was more than just inconsistent mechanics at work here. I have no idea what’s behind all this, but I imagine it’s a combination of things rather than just one big core problem. I’m sure his confidence is suffering a bit, which can’t be helping things.
If there’s one positive thing we can take from this horrible stretch of “pitching,” it’s that Brackman made every start. It’s not much, but it’s important because you can’t work on anything if you aren’t healthy enough to take the mound. Brackman had one start skipped by design during this stretch, but otherwise he took the ball every five days without incident. However, with little to no progress being made, the organization couldn’t just keep letting Brackman embarrass himself by running him out there every five days.
Tomorrow, in the final installment of this mini-series, we’ll take a look at Reliever Brackman.
Yanks to start, end 2010 in Boston
Posted by: | CommentsWhile the Yankees still have 17 games left to play this season, Major League Baseball has released the master schedule for 2010. Already, the news wires are abuzz with Yankee news as the Bombers begin and end their 2010 campaign in Boston. As the AP reports, it is just the fifth time in 50 years that the two clubs bookend the season in a rivalry face-off.
I have to question the wisdom of an Opening Day match-up between the two archrivals. While the game is currently set for Monday, April 5, ESPN is making noises of a switch. The Worldwide Leader wants their ratings bonanza for Opening Night, and the network could force a move of that game to Sunday night. At 8 p.m. on April 4, 2009, it was 44 degrees outside in Boston. Furthermore, from a business perspective, Opening Day doesn’t need the extra boost of a Yankees/Red Sox series, and burning a three-game set early on means reduced ratings in May or June.
After Boston, the Yanks head to Tampa for three games before hosting the Angels in the home opener on April 13. For the first month, the Yanks play just seven games in the Bronx and 15 on the road. With a West Coast swing to Anaheim and Oakland, it will be a tough month indeed.
In May, the Yanks again journey up to Boston for a weekend series in Fenway (May 7-9), and then Boston returns the favor with a two-game set on May 17 and 18. They play the Mets at Citi Field from May 21-23 before making their first trip to the new outdoor stadium in Minnesota on May 25. By then, it should be warm enough to play baseball without a roof in Minneapolis.
In June, Interleague Play again dominates. The Yanks play the Astros, Phillies and Mets at home while journeying to Arizona and Los Angeles. Joe Torre’s first trip to the new Yankee Stadium, if it doesn’t arrive next month, won’t come in 2010, but that June 25-27 series will make his first regular season games against his old team. The Sox meanwhile play the Rockies and Giants on the road. I’d rather play the Astros and D-backs.
In July, the Yanks suffer through their third West Coast swing of the season and second in the span of three weeks. Before the All Star Break, they play Oakland and Seattle. As a reward, though, the team gets a fourth day off for the All Star Break.
The dog days of August are highlighted by a four-game set with the Red Sox from August 6-9. The Yanks play 16 home games that month and another 16 in September. Considering how the Yanks have played this summer at home, I’ll take that benefit during a potential stretch drive. The Yankees end their home schedule with a weekend series against the Red Sox (Sept. 24-26) before a road trip to Toronto and Boston. There will be no mid-September cross-country journeys in 2010, and the Yanks wrap up the West Coast part of the season before the All Star Break. Sounds good to me.
Click here for the full 2010 preliminary schedule. The link opens in a new window. In the non-baseball realm, The Times reports that Yankee Stadium will host an NCAA bowl game in 2010. The Yankee Bowl would pit the 7th place Big 12 team against either the 3rd or 4th place Big East team.
The Kevin Long Appreciation Thread
Posted by: | CommentsThe plan was in place a few years ago. The beloved Don Mattingly was in pupil in the Joe Torre School of Managing while doubling as the team’s hitting coach. Once phase two of Mattingly’s apprenticeship was put in place – moving him from hitting coach to bench coach – the Yanks needed someone to come in and guide their group of big name hitters.
Enter Kevin Long.
An unheralded player, K-Long spent parts of eight season in the Royals’ organization after being a 31st round pick back in 1989, although he never made it to the big leagues. As a corner outfielder he hit just .273-.322-.365 in 2,599 minor league plate appearances, eventually calling it a career in 1996. Long gradually climbed the minor league coaching ranks after his playing days were over, and found himself replacing Mattingly as the Yankees’ hitting coach after spending three years with Triple-A Scranton.
While Mattingly didn’t take over for Torre, instead bolting with him to LA, Long has remained and transformed what used to be a great offense into a truly outstanding offense. Here’s where the 2009 Yankees rank among the 30 clubs in some of the key offense categories:
Runs: 829 (1st)
Hits: 1,432 (1st)
Doubles: 294 (3rd)
Homers: 221 (1st)
AVG: .283 (2nd)
OBP: .362 (1st)
SLG: .480 (1st)
OPS: .842 (1st)
Total Bases: 2,425 (1st)
Walks: 597 (1st)
And don’t even try the bandbox defense, because the Yanks are among the league leaders in road offense as well. “But Mike, the Yankees have some of the best hitters in the world, of course the team will have great offensive numbers.” Oh yeah, well check out these individual numbers:
Johnny Damon before K-Long: .289-.353-.436
Johnny Damon with K-Long: .286-.364-.452
A-Rod before K-Long: .305-.386-.573
A-Rod with K-Long: .302-.409-.587
Jorge Posada before K-Long: .270-.375-.472
Jorge Posada with K-Long: .307-.393-.515
Those are just three guys, but Long managed to make great hitters even greater. Among other things, he’s worked in the offseason with Robbie Cano, got Bobby Abreu to stop stepping in the bucket, helped A-Rod maximize his output following hip surgery, fixed Hideki Matsui’s shoulders, and turned Melky Cabrera into a league average hitter. He’s just that damn good.
So spill your guts here folks, and tell us how much you appreciate one of the best hitting coaches in the game.
Photo Credit: Reuters Pictures




