The good folks at Baseball Digest Daily have asked me to appear on the BDD Talk Radio show this afternoon. I’ll be on at 12:40 p.m. ET. and you can listen live here. I’ll be talking trade deadline deals and the Yanks’ sheer inability to score runs on a night when Sidney Ponson pitches seven shutout innings.
September return unlikely for Wang
After originally expected to return to the rotation in early September, Chien-Ming Wang will now be out until at least October. Joe Girardi has been incredibly optimistic with regards to injuries so far (“Jorge will just need a couple of days”), but he broke the news yesterday. While we all dispise Wang’s replacement, Sid Ponson, don’t forget that CMW had been getting pounded for more than a month prior to the injury.
Meh
For the first time this year, Zach McAllister finally makes it onto BA’s Hot Sheet. But “a fairly pedestrian” season? That’s bush, bush league.
Triple-A Scranton (11-5 win over Syracuse) Phil Coke is on his way up to work out of the pen
Brett Gardner: 2 for 6, 2 R
Bernie Castro: 0 for 5, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 K
Matt Carson: 1 for 5, 1 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB – threw a runner out at home from RF on one of the best throws Chad Jennings has ever seen
Juan Miranda: 3 for 4, 3 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 2 BB – 13 for his last 32 (.406)
Cody Ransom: 1 for 6, 2 RBI, 3 K
Ben Broussard & Chris Basak: both 3 for 5, 1 R – Broussard doubled & drove in 2 … Basak drove in a run
Chris Stewart: 2 for 4, 1 R, 2 2B, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 1 PB – 17 for his last 34 (.500) with 7 doubles … schnikees
Nick Green: 0 for 4, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K
Al Aceves: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 2 K, 6-8 GB/FB – 59 of 90 pitches were strikes (65.6%)
JB Cox: 2.1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, 5-2 GB/FB – gave up a homer, a rare occurance for the groundball machine
Scott Patterson: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K – back after missing just over a month because of a bout with pneumonia
Game 109: It’s spelled S-H-A-W-N, stupid!
The Angels are the best team in baseball. No doubt about it. A few weeks ago I mentioned to Joe that I thought the Halos should make a run at Teixeira because this was their year, and booya (of course I suggested a Kotchman + Adenhart package, but that’s neither here nor there). They’ve got excellent starting pitching, a strong bullpen with all sorts of different looks, a defense that makes every play, and an offense capable of beating you on the bases or now by hitting the ball over the wall. They might as well start lining up their postseason rotation now.
I know the Yanks have a shiny new future HOF catcher, but wouldn’t it make more sense to start Jose Molina behind the plate today? He’s been much better at gunning down would-be basestealers than Pudge, which is going to be worth something all those baserunners Sidney Ponson will inevitably allow. I guess it doesn’t really matter if the Halos keep hitting all those 3-run homers.
Speaking of, where did all the pitching go? Just a week ago we were talking about how unbelievable the Yanks pitching staff had been lately, but now? They’ve got a 6.39 ERA & 1.60 WHIP over the last seven days, and opposing batters have an .884 OPS in that span. They’ve basically turned everyone into Carlos frickin’ Lee. You can bitch about Ponson & Rasner all you want, but Moose and Pettitte haven’t been getting it done lately either. Thank Mariano for Joba.
1. Damon, LF
2. Jeter, SS
3. Abreu, RF
4. A-Rod, 3B
5. Giambi, DH
6. Cano, 2B
7. Betemit, 1B
8. Pudge, C
9. Melky, CF
And on the mound, Sidney “will pitch for food” Ponson.
Note: Chris Britton was shipped back to Triple-A after his 53 pitch outing last night, Brian Bruney rejoins the team sans lisfranc fracture … X(BH) Nady has a sore quad and is day-to-day … the last batter to get a hit off Edwar Ramirez was Brian Schneider in the second game of the split-stadium doubleheader against the Mets, he’s faced 45 batters since then … Bobby Abreu has a 1.105 OPS since July 8th … this could be Ponson’s last start for the Yanks, IPK has been pitching pretty well in Triple-A … Jeff Karstens won his first start with the Buccos earlier today … the game is on MY9 tonight, not YES
Bemoaning the save rule
I hadn’t heard this until today, but apparently Jerome Holtzman, the sportswriter credited with inventing the save, passed away last weekend. Today, Colby Cash of the National Post takes a look at the rule’s origins — Holtzman wanted to prove that a reliever’s 18-1 record was highly deceptive, so he created an equally deceptive statistic.
There’s not a whole ton to the article, as Cash goes on to make an analogy to public policy. Yippee! But there is this one takeaway quote:
By 1980 the idea of the “closer,” a role that gives a team’s best reliever the narrowly defined job of protecting a lead at the end of the game, had taken over. As countless researchers have demonstrated, and as elementary logic indicates, this is a suboptimal use of talent. Teams are no less likely to blow late leads in the “closer” era than they were before, and a team’s most effective reliever should almost certainly be allowed to come into tied games, in which an extra run saved by good pitching has the highest possible value.
Instead, a team like the Yankees uses a Rivera to protect relatively safe two- or three-run leads, but lets ties be decided by guys who can’t hoist Rivera’s jock. Why? Because the “save” has come to define what it was originally meant only to describe: Since we measure relievers by saves, saves must be what they do. Q.E.D.
Q.E.D. Indeed.
Problems
We know. We’re working on it.
Fewer problems. Still working on it. I think everything is fixed. Thanks for your patience.
Deadline recaps
Tim over at the indispensable MLBTR grabs all the deadline reactions from around the internets. Jayson Stark & Jon Heyman both have the Yanks listed as winners, and it’s hard to argue with that, Yankee fan or not. RAB homey Keith Law broke down all the deals over at the Worldwide Leader (he’s also going to chatting at 2pm EST today), while Baseball America did the same at their Trade Central. Did you know that Jason Bay is hitting .216-.333-.318 with RISP? Yikes.