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Some things that happened Friday 8/26

27th August 2011

-- Chris Capuano made the last pre-Irene game in this area memorable with a 2-hit, no-walk, 13-K shutout. His 96 Game Score was the highest by a Met since David Cone's 19-K masterpiece in 1991. Capuano faced the minimum through 7 IP (the lone hit erased on a DP), and let just one runner reach 2nd base, on an 8th-inning double. He threw 122 pitches, 3 short of his career high; it was the first time in 4 years that he topped 106 pitches.

  • Capuano's previous career bests: 83 Game Score; 12 Ks; 5 hits in a CG.
  • Lucas Duda went 4-2-3-2 with a 2-run double off lefty Jonny Venters, snapping a 23-IP scoreless streak; it was the 2nd XBH Venters allowed to a LHB this year. Since the Break, Duda has an OPS over 1.000, with 7 HRs and 26 RBI in 116 ABs. He has only recently started playing both ways and has yet to HR off a lefty, but is batting .316 against them.
  • All sporting events scheduled for this weekend in the greater NY/NJ area have been postponed due to the oncoming Hurricane Irene.
  • The Mets' 10 prior Game Scores of 96+ included 5 by Tom Seaver and 1 each by 5 other pitchers, but none by Dwight Gooden (high of 93). The only ones to reach 96 in 9 IP or less were Cone and Seaver (3 times). The 2 highest Game Scores in Mets history resulted in a tie and a loss.

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Locked in: Adrian Gonzalez homers on 3 consecutive pitches

26th August 2011

Thanks to Tony Massarotti for this tibdit--Adrian Gonzalez hit homers on 3 consecutive pitches over the Red Sox's last 2 games.

Those homers came on the 4th pitch of his 9th-inning at bat in Wednesday's game followed by homers on the next two pitches he saw in Thursday's game.

That brings back memories of the 1977 World Series, when Reggie Jackson actually homered in three consecutive single-pitch at-bats in the decisive Game 6.

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Paul Konerko is crushing it at age 35

26th August 2011

Paul Konerko is putting together yet another great season, following his career-best 2010 at age 34 with a season nearly every bit as good at age 35.

During the steroids era, we became accustomed to guys putting up huge numbers at age 35. However, one of the nice things about OPS+ is that it normalizes to league strength and scoring, so an OPS+ of 150 is impressive regardless of era.

Konerko has now put up 2 straight seasons (where he qualified for the batting title) with an OPS+ of at least 150. There are not so many players to have done that in their age 34 and 35 seasons:

Rk Yrs From To Age
1 Paul Konerko 2 2010 2011 34-35 Ind. Seasons
2 Larry Walker 2 2001 2002 34-35 Ind. Seasons
3 Mark McGwire 2 1998 1999 34-35 Ind. Seasons
4 Edgar Martinez 2 1997 1998 34-35 Ind. Seasons
5 Frank Robinson 2 1970 1971 34-35 Ind. Seasons
6 Hank Aaron 2 1968 1969 34-35 Ind. Seasons
7 Johnny Mize 2 1947 1948 34-35 Ind. Seasons
8 Babe Ruth 2 1929 1930 34-35 Ind. Seasons
9 Jack Fournier 2 1924 1925 34-35 Ind. Seasons
10 Tris Speaker 2 1922 1923 34-35 Ind. Seasons
11 Ty Cobb 2 1921 1922 34-35 Ind. Seasons
12 Nap Lajoie 2 1909 1910 34-35 Ind. Seasons
13 Honus Wagner 2 1908 1909 34-35 Ind. Seasons
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 8/26/2011.

That's a damn impressive group he joins including not only mostly Hall of Famers, but some inner-circle HOFers at that.

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Random recap for Thursday 8/25

26th August 2011

Light schedule today. Let's see how long we can ignore the White Elephant in the Stadium....

-- Pop quiz: For 2010-11 combined, name the 2 CFs with at least 9 Wins Above Replacement (B-R formula). You have 30 seconds after reading the hints: (a) One leads the other by more than 50 HRs; (b) both are in the same league; (c) one has changed teams at some point. Ready ... go! (Answer below.)

-- The surging D-backs dispatched the Nats, 8-1, behind HRs from Chris Young and Paul Goldschmidt and 6 shutout frames from Wade Miley, who earned his first big-league win in his 2nd game.

  • Goldschmidt has 5 HRs and 13 RBI in 70 PAs. An 8th-round pick just 2 years ago, he blasted his way to the majors with a 1.026 OPS in 3 minor-league seasons, at least .990 each year. He was leading the AA Southern League in OBP, SLG and OPS before getting the call this month. He singled in his first big-league AB, and the next day, August 2, he hit a go-ahead 2-run HR off Tim Lincecum, boosting the D-backs into 1st place for the first time since June.

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Mike Flanagan (1951-2011)

25th August 2011

Such sad news with the sudden passing of Mike Flanagan.

I'll leave the formal obituaries to others and just say that I'm sorry for his family, friends, and Orioles fans.

In 1979, Flanagan won the AL Cy Young in a landslide. Here is the voting:

Rank Tm Vote Pts 1st Place Share WAR W L ERA GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB SO WHIP ERA+
1 Mike Flanagan BAL 136.0 26.0 97% 3.6 23 9 3.08 38 16 5 0 265.2 245 107 91 23 70 190 1.186 131
2 Tommy John NYY 51.0 1.0 36% 5.2 21 9 2.96 36 17 3 0 276.1 268 109 91 9 65 111 1.205 137
3 Ron Guidry NYY 26.0 1.0 19% 6.0 18 8 2.78 30 15 2 2 236.1 203 83 73 20 71 201 1.159 146
4 Jim Kern TEX 25.0 0.0 18% 5.0 13 5 1.57 0 0 0 29 143.0 99 35 25 5 62 136 1.126 264
5 Mike Marshall MIN 7.0 0.0 5% 4.4 10 15 2.65 1 0 0 32 142.2 132 47 42 8 48 81 1.262 166
6 Jerry Koosman MIN 5.0 0.0 4% 6.5 20 13 3.38 36 10 2 0 263.2 268 108 99 19 83 157 1.331 130
7 Dennis Eckersley BOS 1.0 0.0 1% 6.8 17 10 2.99 33 17 2 0 246.2 234 89 82 29 59 150 1.188 150
7 Aurelio Lopez DET 1.0 0.0 1% 4.4 10 5 2.41 0 0 0 21 127.0 95 37 34 12 51 106 1.150 181
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 8/25/2011.

Flanagan finished first in wins in the AL with 23, followed by John with 21, Koosman with 20, and Guidry with 18. Interestingly, though, not only does he have the lowest WAR of the pitchers receiving votes, he wasn't even in the top 10 in the AL that year. Would you believe that, in fact, across MLB, Flanagan was just 29th in WAR among pitchers?

It's a strong indication of how voting has changed, especially considering recent AL winners Zack Greinke and Felix Hernandez, who both won with less-than-stellar W-L records.

That being said, I don't begrudge the voters from giving Flanagan the crown. The Orioles won 102 games and he was their best starting pitcher that season:

Rk Pos Age W L W-L% ERA G GS CG SHO IP
1 SP Dennis Martinez 24 15 16 .484 3.66 40 39 18 3 292.1
2 SP Mike Flanagan* 27 23 9 .719 3.08 39 38 16 5 265.2
3 SP Steve Stone 31 11 7 .611 3.77 32 32 3 0 186.0
4 SP Scott McGregor* 25 13 6 .684 3.35 27 23 7 2 174.2
5 SP Jim Palmer 33 10 6 .625 3.30 23 22 7 0 155.2
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 8/25/2011.

Anyway--it's an incredibly sad day. Flanagan completed the rare triple of being a player, front-office executive, and broadcaster all for the same team. He was a big part of the Orioles and I'm sure their entire organization and fan base is really hurting today.

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Wednesday game notes

25th August 2011

-- Mark Teixeira drilled a solo HR that tied the game in the 8th. It's the first of his 35 HRs this year that tied the game or put the Yankees ahead after the 6th inning; he has just 2 other tying or go-ahead HRs after the 3rd inning. In fairness, I haven't counted his opportunities.

  • Coco Crisp broke up a tie game in the 10th with a 3-run shot off Rafael Soriano, his 2nd HR of the game -- his first multi-HR game since 2007.
  • Derek Jeter went 2 for 5 and saw his August BA fall to .417. He's hitting .353 since the start of July. Pass me my hat and the ketchup, would you?

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Brandon Allen absolutely crushes a home run – or does he?

24th August 2011

Brandon Allen of the Athletics launched a home run deep into the third deck of Yankee Stadium last night.

If you didn't see it, check out the video first.

When I saw it land, I thought it was absolutely crushed. But then a few things about it seemed sort of weird. First, his teammates didn't actually have a very strong reaction. Second, on the replay, it doesn't really look like he got all of it.

Enter ESPN Home Run Tracker for the explanation. The home run went only 428 feet, just the fifth longest hit on August 23, 2011. The speed off the bat was 108.7 MPH, towards the higher end but nothing particularly special. How the hell did it appear to go so far, then? The answer is in the elevation angle which, at 34.8 degrees, was the second highest of yesterday's homers.

Simply--he golfed it. At its apex it reached 139 feet, the highest of all of yesterday's homers. Basically, he hit it hard and at just the right angle to land in the upper deck, even though many other lower-angle homers would ultimately go farther.

In the same game, Eric Sogard hit his first career homer and also golfed it. It was yesterday's only homer at a higher angle than Allen's, but it was slower off the bat, had a lower apex, and just got over the wall.

Thanks to everybody's favorite blog administrator, Neil, for some helpful discussions about this post topic.

Posted in Uncategorized | 93 Comments »

Bruce Chen – first time with 9 K’s in 10 years

24th August 2011

JA mentioned this briefly in his wrap-up, but here's a little more detail.

Bruce Chen struck out 9 batters last night, matching a career high. Here are his three 9K games:

Rk Date Tm Opp Rslt App,Dec IP H R ER BB SO HR Pit Str GSc
1 2011-08-23 KCR TOR W 6-4 GS-8 ,W 7.2 4 3 3 1 9 1 92 67 67
2 2001-06-13 PHI TBD L 3-5 GS-7 7.0 4 2 2 1 9 1 105 75 69
3 2000-09-29 PHI FLA L 1-7 GS-6 ,L 6.0 8 6 5 1 9 2 103 72 42
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 8/24/2011.

That was the first time Chen won a 9-strikeout game, and he did it throwing more innings but fewer pitches than the previous 2 occasions.

Here are Chen's last 3 seasons, all with KC. He's having a decent year in 2011 with a 96 ERA+, but it's not trending the right way.

However, given that he's "only" 34 and has had two seasons with more than 100 IP (woo hoo!) and an ERA+ around 100, I fully expect the Royals to give him a 3-year, $18 million contract this off-season.

Posted in Uncategorized | 27 Comments »

Recapping games of Tuesday 8/23

24th August 2011

-- Ian Kennedy and Clayton Kershaw each won his 16th and remained tied for the NL lead, one ahead of Roy Halladay. Kennedy (16-4, 3.09) threw 7 shutout innings as Arizona snapped their 6-game skid with a 2-0 win in Washington.

  • Sean Burroughs handled the D-backs' scoring with a 2-run HR in the 7th, his 1st big-league HR since 2005 and just the 12th of his career in almost 1,800 PAs. His dad hit 12 HRs in 29 games from July 29 to August 27, 1977.
  • AZ will lead by 2 games if the Giants don't rally late against the Padres.
  • As if the Snakes don't have enough offensive trouble, Justin Upton left the game in the 5th after being hit on the arm by a pitch.

-- Kershaw left after 6 scoreless IP, cracking 200 Ks again in a laugher in St. Louis. The Cards trailed 3-0 before the 1st out: Justin Sellers singled, James Loney walked on 4 pitches, and Matt Kemp slugged a 3-run HR, his career-high 29th roundtripper. LA added 4 in the 2nd, and the Cards never showed a pulse. They've lost 7 of 10, all to losing teams, falling from 4 to 10 games behind.

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D-backs swap Kelly Johnson for Aaron Hill

23rd August 2011

ESPN.com is reporting that Arizona has dealt Kelly Johnson to the Blue Jays for 2B Aaron Hill and UT John McDonald. No financial terms were reported.

Can you remember a 1st-place team trading a starting middle infielder at this stage of the season?

Johnson isn't having a good season, but neither are the players AZ got back. Hill slumped badly last year after hitting 36 HRs in '09; and although his absurd .196 BAbip last year suggested a rebound might be expected, he's actually been worse this year, losing virtually all his power.

Toronto GM Alex Anthopoulos seems to have been on a mission of picking off other teams' undervalued and/or younger assets lately. But Johnson and Hill will both be 30 next year, and Johnson has been down more than up in the last 3 years. He does have legitimate power -- more than half his career HRs have come in road games -- and he'll take a walk, unlike Hill. But Johnson's strikeouts have skyrocketed in the past 2 seasons, to more than 1 per game. Still, I guess Johnson is a marginal improvement over Hill, and gives the Jays a little more lefty/righty balance. So, pending financial disclosures, I like Toronto's end.

What do you think about this deal?

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