Saturday, May 14, 2011
At the 40 Game Mark
Sparky Anderson passed away in November of last year. The boys of the Old English D are sporting crests on their sleeves to commemorate his passing.
One of the Sparky traditions that continues on is his concept that after 40 games you should have a good idea of what type of team you have.
Now’s a great time to do so – if you’re the Director of Marketing for the Tigers.
The boys are hot. The hottest team in baseball – enjoying a 7 game winning streak. They have won 10 of their last 11.
Justin Verlander pitched a no hitter against the Toronto Blue Jays – then followed it up by pitching his next game against the Kansas City Royals with no hits into the sixth inning.
The whole starting rotation has actually been great through all forty games to date - Max Scherzer leading the way with only having no losses to his credit. And now Phil Coke is also starting to get into the rythm of the new role of starting pitcher.
Victor Martinez is hot – and taking advantage of opposing pitchers fear to pitch to Miguel Cabrera.
Austin Jackson has rebounded and is backing his strong defense up with great hitting in these last 15 games.
Alex Avilla – a player I berated heartlessly at the beginning of this season as one of the worst decisions made to allow him catch every day despite poor hitting in the preseason and opening games of 2011 has proven me to be … well … dead smack wrong and clueless.
I say that proudly by the way.
But the first 25 games of this season – save one series with Chicago – stunk.
There was the kerfuffle deciding who would play second base – Tiger veteran Carlos Guillen injured (and still recovering) and Scott Sizmore not yet ready to come back up – second base was plattooned by Will Rhymes and Ramone Santiago.
Not a long term solution.
I remember when Will Rhymes was sent back down to Toledo to bring Scott Sizemore up. Pat Caputo – Sports writer and columnist for the Detroit area’s Oakland Press, and host of the blog Open Book, wrote a post titled “Change at second base could just be the start for slumping Tigers”.
The Book on Sports was right – that was indeed the when the turning of the tide began. After that the Tigers took on and won series against the Yankees, Twins, Blue Jays, and AL Central second place Royals.
But we still have 122 games left to play – almost two thirds of the season.
And we do have to expect this hot streak will slow after a bit – although I hope it’s not too soon.
But at this point of the season, with the bats hitting and the pitching strong, I think indeed the Tigers are the best team in the Central division.
I think Cleveland has already started to slow – and perhaps as early as next weekend our beloved Detroit baseballers will indeed be in first place.
And will remain there until the All Star break.
Sound familiar? We’ve danced to this song several times before in recent seasons.
It’s not the first 80 games you have to worry about. It’s the second eighty.
And if Jim Leyland and Dave Dombrowski want to keep their jobs – there can be no second half rapid decline of lethargic play and continual losing streaks busted up by the odd win here and there.
So I can’t tell you with any confidence today just what this means to the Tigers final standings in the opening days of October.
We all have our hopes and we all have our opinions.
What do you think?
Will the Tigers lead the pack until the All Star Break – then sputter in the second half?
Will there be a trade of significance? Will we get a left or right fielder? Will Brandon Inge be replaced – his average is below his career level – which is not a lofty bar to shoot for.
What do you think?
Leave a comment below and let’s talk this season out.
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Verlander Tosses His Second No Hitter
Justin Verlander faced 27 batters on his way to pitching a no hitter against the Toronto Blue Jays.
Verlander was perfect through seven and a third innings when he gave up a close outside call for ball four and walked Arencibia to wreck the perfect game.
Arencibia doesn't bite on ball 4 |
But you know – you might ask yourself – if you’re pitching a perfect game, and find yourself 5 outs away from being perfect – and you have a 3-2 full count, do you throw just off the plate to get the hitter to swing?
That was the pitch to make – and Justin had the guts to make it.
Arencibia didn’t bite. And he got first base.
And Verlander’s bid for perfection ended. But not the no hitter.
The last time we saw a 28 batter no hitter by a Tiger pitcher was of course Armando Gallaraga’s perfect game spoiled by Umpire Jim Joyce’s bad call.
But no such call came today.
Last week at this time, Brad Penny was working on a no hitter when a hard hit ball behind third snagged by Brandon Inge resulted in a not so perfect throw right of the first base bag and in the dirt that Miguel Cabrera could not hang onto to tag the runner. The dispute was that Inge was not given an error for the poor throw, and it stood as the hit the broke up Penny’s no-hit bid.
But Penny was noticeably getting weaker – and his control was getting away from him. Watching the game, you really didn’t think Penny was going to last the rest of the game.
But we never got a chance to find out.
But Justin Verlander left us no doubt – from the third inning through the ninth.
In fact he was breaching the 100 MPH threshold throughout all nine innings.
This was Verlander’s second no hitter – the first in 2007 against Milwaukee.
And the Toronto fans, the same fans that threw garbage at the Tigers in last year’s opening series, well, this time they all stood up and cheered Verlander on.
And they cheered when he beat their Blue Jays.
He stepped off the mound – subtly pumping a fist – and unless you knew what was happening - Verlander’s reaction might suggest he won the game. Nothing more.
Now that’s command.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
The Tigers Threaten But Don't Score
I am so sick of hearing Dan Dickerson say “and the Tiger’s threaten, but don’t score”.
Yesterday I threw a beer bottle at the radio.
Sorry Dan, I wasn’t aiming at you.
Luckily tonight I was out of beer.
This is the theme of the 2011 Detroit Tigers – who after 29 games now sit with 12 wins and 17 losses. 8 games back of Cleveland.
Yeah, Cleveland. What the hell’s going on in Cleveland?
And Kansas City? They sit 4½ games up on the Detroit baseballers.
The Tigers can get men on base. But at the end of most innings, those same base runners trot into the dugout from the base they were standing on to get their gloves.
As a fan, this is maddening.
But even more maddening are the errors that are plaguing this defensive squad.
Short hop grounders through Inge’s legs, and bad throws to first. Pitchers tossing the ball into the outfield or foul territory trying to pick off runners. Balls that bounce off the outfielders or over their heads – one bouncing off Ryan into the stands for a dinger. Passed pitches on Avila – pitches he should be catching – bouncing back to the wall as opposing base runners trot home from third.
On the topic of Avila, his bat has been incredibly hot hitting in the .340s. But I do not see the same quality defense that the announcers and sports talk radio seem to say. He looks to me to be hard to pitch to.
Our starting rotation, for the most part, has had quality starts, but the bullpen – supposedly hoped to be the strength of this club in the spring, has seen both Benoit and Valverde fail in Grande style.
This line up has some power – sporadic and dispersed throughout – with not enough hitters batting over .240 to string together a big inning.
You can count the number of big inning this season on one hand. And you can’t use your thumb.
In fact, the way this squad plays defense, you wonder if these boys have thumbs to put in these gloves.
But this news just in. Will Rhymes, the Cinderella second baseman who hasn’t hit over .200 has just been sent down to Toledo, and Scott Sizemore is coming back up to challenge once again for the two-bagger spot.
Will that help? I don’t really consider Scott Sizemore to be a sparkplug.
But Miguel Cabrera plays on. Solid defense and powerful consistent offense.
Cabrera has picked this team up and is carrying them all on his shoulders. But for the most part, the rest of this squad is just dead weight. Aside from Peralta and Avila, and Ramón Santiago (when they let him play) – this squad is just dragging every positive thing done by the starting rotation and Miggy down like an anchor in deep still seas.
So close. So far away.
These current wearers of the old English D aren’t bums. But it’s hard to defend the brand of baseball that they have played in these first 29 games.
But some - if not more than some – of this blame lies on the shoulders of Manager Jim Leyland – who insists all his ball players are professionals. Perhaps. But professionals earn their pay checks. This squad – save a few – are really just enjoying playing in the big league parks with big buildings in the back drop.
Some of Leyland’s decisions are hard to defend – leaving struggling pitchers in – pulling strong releiver’s too early – sending runners at the wrong times – and trying to play small ball to move runners into scoring position with the players not executing.
Good grief.
I love my Tigers. And I haven’t missed following a game somehow yet this season. And this is just frustrating. Exhausting. Humbling. And humiliating.
Because night after night it’s just the same old story.
The Tiger’s just threaten, but they just don’t score.
Yesterday I threw a beer bottle at the radio.
Sorry Dan, I wasn’t aiming at you.
Luckily tonight I was out of beer.
This is the theme of the 2011 Detroit Tigers – who after 29 games now sit with 12 wins and 17 losses. 8 games back of Cleveland.
Yeah, Cleveland. What the hell’s going on in Cleveland?
And Kansas City? They sit 4½ games up on the Detroit baseballers.
The Tigers can get men on base. But at the end of most innings, those same base runners trot into the dugout from the base they were standing on to get their gloves.
As a fan, this is maddening.
But even more maddening are the errors that are plaguing this defensive squad.
Short hop grounders through Inge’s legs, and bad throws to first. Pitchers tossing the ball into the outfield or foul territory trying to pick off runners. Balls that bounce off the outfielders or over their heads – one bouncing off Ryan into the stands for a dinger. Passed pitches on Avila – pitches he should be catching – bouncing back to the wall as opposing base runners trot home from third.
On the topic of Avila, his bat has been incredibly hot hitting in the .340s. But I do not see the same quality defense that the announcers and sports talk radio seem to say. He looks to me to be hard to pitch to.
Our starting rotation, for the most part, has had quality starts, but the bullpen – supposedly hoped to be the strength of this club in the spring, has seen both Benoit and Valverde fail in Grande style.
This line up has some power – sporadic and dispersed throughout – with not enough hitters batting over .240 to string together a big inning.
You can count the number of big inning this season on one hand. And you can’t use your thumb.
In fact, the way this squad plays defense, you wonder if these boys have thumbs to put in these gloves.
But this news just in. Will Rhymes, the Cinderella second baseman who hasn’t hit over .200 has just been sent down to Toledo, and Scott Sizemore is coming back up to challenge once again for the two-bagger spot.
Will that help? I don’t really consider Scott Sizemore to be a sparkplug.
But Miguel Cabrera plays on. Solid defense and powerful consistent offense.
Cabrera has picked this team up and is carrying them all on his shoulders. But for the most part, the rest of this squad is just dead weight. Aside from Peralta and Avila, and Ramón Santiago (when they let him play) – this squad is just dragging every positive thing done by the starting rotation and Miggy down like an anchor in deep still seas.
So close. So far away.
These current wearers of the old English D aren’t bums. But it’s hard to defend the brand of baseball that they have played in these first 29 games.
But some - if not more than some – of this blame lies on the shoulders of Manager Jim Leyland – who insists all his ball players are professionals. Perhaps. But professionals earn their pay checks. This squad – save a few – are really just enjoying playing in the big league parks with big buildings in the back drop.
Some of Leyland’s decisions are hard to defend – leaving struggling pitchers in – pulling strong releiver’s too early – sending runners at the wrong times – and trying to play small ball to move runners into scoring position with the players not executing.
Good grief.
I love my Tigers. And I haven’t missed following a game somehow yet this season. And this is just frustrating. Exhausting. Humbling. And humiliating.
Because night after night it’s just the same old story.
The Tiger’s just threaten, but they just don’t score.
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