With the MLB playoffs set to begin, there is a subtle difference in the air compared to start of any other postseason. In the NHL, fans can potentially look forward to a great Canadians/Bruins series that is not only exciting, but has a historical kick to it. Likewise basketball fans always have the chance to see if the Suns can finally get past the Spurs and football fans love seeing the rivalry of the Eagles Vs the City of Philadelphia when the Eagles so much as get tackled for a loss.
Cleveland Indians
30 September 2008
20 August 2008
The mystery of how Jerry Manuel will manage the bullpen was put on hold for a day, as Mike Pelfrey pitched his first career complete game Wednesday. Pelfrey didn't even seem to have his best stuff, but he worked economically throughout the game and kept his pitch count down. He only struck out three batters, mainly relying on aggressive Braves hitters putting the ball in play early in the count. The only blemish was the sixth inning, which still could have been much worse. Atlanta loaded the bases on a bunt single and two walks, but Pelfrey induced a double play grounder from Brian McCann, and he had a chance to escape with only one run allowed. But he bounced a wild pitch to the next batter and Yunel Escobar scored from third, before Mark Kotsay lined out to left to end the inning. Pelfrey settled down thereafter and cruised through the next three innings, retiring all nine batters on just 25 pitches.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | 1 comment
12 August 2008
Well, it's become quite obvious that the Mets desperately need to find someone else to close in Billy Wagner's absence. When Wagner had to miss a game against the Phillies three weeks ago with forearm stiffness, Duaner Sanchez dropped the ball. Since Wagner was placed on the DL last week, Heilman has been awful in two of his four ninth inning chances. In order to put an end to the bullpen's pattern of implosion, Jerry Manuel offered two other options after yesterday's game: Eddie Kunz and John Maine.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
11 August 2008
Since when is a four-run, seventh inning lead against a team 17.5 games out of first place not safe? Since the Mets' bullpen hit rock bottom.
The Mets' plan for Monday afternoon's makeup game against the Pirates was to get on top early and send Pittsburgh packing quickly. When David Wright knocked a three-run home run to right center in the first, and Pedro Martinez allowed only one run through six innings, the game seemed to be following how it was scripted. But then on came the New York bullpen.
Continue reading "Heilman Heads Up Another Bullpen Meltdown"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
5 August 2008
The Mets limped home from a disappointing 1-5 road trip with a slew of injuries. Marlon Anderson and John Maine were put on the DL over the weekend and Billy Wagner joined them today with a strained left forearm. Ramon Castro is still shaken up from the bizzare home plate collision on Saturday, and is listed as day-to-day with a sore ankle. Rather than make any external moves, the Mets have turned to their farm system for help. Although for the time being Jerry Manuel says he will use a bullpen by committee in the ninth inning, Eddie Kunz, the heir apparent to Billy Wagner, is on the major league squad and may get some looks in the closer role over the next two weeks while Wagner is out. Daniel Murphy, who was a third baseman in the minors but requested some work at second base and the outfield--a smart move, considering David Wright isn't going anywhere anytime soon--is getting the start in left field tonight agains the Padres. The Mets really love the way he hits, so he could be a fixture at the major league level for the remainder of the season and perhaps into the future. And rumor has it that the Mets are considering calling up Jon Niese to make a few starts in Maine's stead.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
4 August 2008
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
29 July 2008
The trade deadline is approaching and the Mets still have some needs to fill. It's still unknown whether Ryan Church will be able to come back and play everyday, so a corner outfielder is certainly a priority. On Monday Jerry Manuel named Fernando Tatis the everyday left fielder, but his red-hot month may not, and probably will not, last. Even if Tatis remains decent as a starter, the uncertainty surrounding Church's health calls for a stronger bench. Endy Chavez is an excellent defensive replacement outfielder, but when he plays everyday he eventually gets exposed offensively, so he is really more suited to a role as a fourth outfielder. Casey Blake would have been a good fit because he can play both corner outfield positions as well as first base, but he has already been traded to the Dodgers.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
Monday night in Miami was an all-around bad experience for the Mets. John Maine cruised into the fifth inning with a 2-0 lead, and looked just fine to the naked eye. But after Maine missed with a 1-0 fastball to John Baker, Jerry Manuel, Dan Warthen and Ray Ramirez, the trainer, jogged out to the mound to consult with Maine. He appeared to say he was fine, and stayed in the game for the time being. But after his next pitch to Baker left the yard for a solo home run, and his 1-2 pitch to Marlins pitcher Ricky Nolasco chased Endy Chavez to the warning track to make the catch, Manuel and Warthen decided they had seen enough, and pulled Maine in favor of Carlos Muniz. Maine is listed as day-to-day with shoulder stiffness, and Warthen said he was most concerned that Maine might develop further injuries if he tried to compensate in his delivery to protect his shoulder. In all likelihood Maine will miss a start in order to rest his shoulder, and hopefully pitch again next week. After the game Manuel was adamant that Maine will not pitch through any pain.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
26 July 2008
Neither the good nor the bad version of Oliver Perez showed up on Thursday at Shea--the spectacular version came to play against the Phillies. Perez struck out 12 batters over 7.2 innings, including six whiffs of Chase Utley and Ryan Howard, as he out-dueled Jamie Moyer, who pitched a gem of his own. Carlos Delgado came through with the big hit, a two-run double off the previously unhittable J.C. Romero, in the eighth, and Billy Wagner nailed down the win in the ninth with his 26th save. Fittingly, Jimmy Rollins, who did not start because he arrived an hour late to the ballpark, made the final out of the game. After Tuesday night's ninth inning meltdown, the bullpen tossed 4.1 scoreless innings, including back-to-back saves by Wagner, and the Mets took two of three from Philadelphia, despite losing the first game of the series. New York is now 9-4 against the Phillies this season.
Continue reading "Mets Continue to Roll Behind Delgado, ..."
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
23 July 2008
A day after the Mets' bullpen acted out a microcosm of the final 17 games of 2007, Billy Wagner was back on the mound with a three-run lead in the ninth inning on Wednesday, and Mets fans could not be happier. Wagner's save in the 6-3 victory not only sealed the win and moved the Mets back into a first place tie with the Phillies, but it also put the minds of many a Mets fan at ease, knowing that the true closer is once again available to pitch. After the game Wagner said he looked better than he felt, but hopefully he continues to feel well enough to pitch 1-2-3 ninth innings.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
22 July 2008
After splitting the four-game series in Cincinnati, the Mets are back in a first-place tie with the Phillies for the lead in the NL East. Lately it hasn't only been Jose Reyes, David Wright and Carlos Beltran leading the offense; Carlos Delgado has been on fire recently and came through with the clutch, game-tying hit in the seventh inning on Sunday, and the Mets' bench players have been carrying the torch as well. The "irregulars," (as Mets television broadcaster Gary Cohen puts it) such as Fernando Tatis, Endy Chavez, Damion Easley and Ramon Castro, have been igniting the Mets' offense for the past three weeks. But two new players with anything but household names were just as instrumental to the Mets' success in Cincy as anyone getting paid upwards of $12 million per year: Argenis Reyes and Robinson Cancel.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
18 July 2008
A few relatively minor items to cover with the moves made by a few teams recently. What might they mean in the second half? I’ll try and puzzle this out.
Tony Clark, who experienced a career resurgence the day he put on an Arizona Diamondbacks uniform back in 2005, hs returned to the cozy confines of Chase Field. Petco, where hitting a homer is as hard as hitting the lottery, wasn’t as kind to the aging Clark as Chase has been, so he’ll certainly improve on his 2008 line of .239/.374/.307. His 32:19 K:BB ratio, as well as hs 165-point difference between BA and OBP, will tell you his batting eye is fine, and some power should follow.
Posted by Street Reporter | 2 comments
15 July 2008
One of the All-Star Break traditions: Reassessing our predictions from the first half of the season. Some of mine have changed, some have stayed the same—and some were just damn wrong. Living in the West, I will take the contrarian position and roll from west to east in my choices.
Posted by Street Reporter | 3 comments
14 July 2008
Mike Pelfrey pitched another gem Sunday night, throwing eight shutout innings in the Mets' 7-0 victory over the Rockies, and won his sixth straight start. New York cruised through their six-game homestand, outscoring the Giants and Rockies 31-4 with four shutouts to boot. They now stand just a half game behind the Phillies for first place in the NL East.
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
12 July 2008
Still playing ketchup here, trying to make up for a four-day absence from the blog, so I want to start with the big trade of last week, the CC Sabathia swap. The usefulness of this deal to the Brewers is a little dubious, as CC is likely to be a half-season rental, but let’s break it down:
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9 July 2008
Well, my biggest gripe yesterday was that the Mets never win or lose a game that isn't in question until the final out. I guess they realized I'm almost out of Pepto and gave me the break I was looking for. Carlos Beltran belted a three-run home run off Giants ace Tim Lincecum in the first inning and Carlos Delagado and Fernando Tatis each homered later in the game to lead the Mets to their fourth straight win.
Continue reading "Pelfrey and the Mets Finally Make It Easy"
Posted by Matthew Deutschman | No comments yet
8 July 2008
"It's not a game, it's an arms race" - Kanye West and Fallout Boy belt this hook over and over again on a recent hit with that same title. In that context, Kanye and the Fallout Boy guys are referring to the battle of musical artists not only surviving in a competitive worldwide market, but one with hindrances around every music sharing online ripping program. While that's an issue for another day and another blogsite, it's relevance is crucial when talking about the current state of Major League baseball and the National Basketball Association.
Continue reading "From the NBA to MLB, the Arms Race Has Begun"
Posted by Anthony "The Moneyball" Moniello | No comments yet
7 July 2008
C.C Sabathia is officially the newest member of the Brew Crew! The Milwaukee Brewers have decided to put there foot down and compete immediately. With the addition of Sabathia the Brewers now have a formidable rotation led buy the lethal one-two punch of Sheets/Sabathia. But, just like a beautiful SL 500 from Hertz- don't get too attached...it's just a rental.
Posted by Anthony "The Moneyball" Moniello | No comments yet
1 July 2008
Since the calendar has turned to July, the MLB Trade deadline is quickly approaching. What teams will be buyers? What teams will be sellers? What big stars are on the block? Who will stay? Who will go? Those burning questions are running through minds of fans of all teams, including our beloved Chicago Cubs.
Posted by Michael Castillo | No comments yet
16 June 2008
OK, that title was irresistible, but in fact I'm going to say that Chien-Ming Wang's foot injury should force the Yanks hand in a trade, especially when combined with other injuries this season. Funny how little things can combine to lead to something even larger, accumulating momentum gradually until it becomes irresistible, as it has with the murmurs about a trade for C.C. Sabathia, which is really more the point of this blog.
Posted by Street Reporter | 1 comment
13 June 2008
Though they don't seem as devastating as the Soriano/Pujols loss I wrote about yesterday, two key players have gone down on two other teams today. Cleveland put Victor Martinez on the DL, while Seattle placed its once-reliable closer JJ Putz back on the DL, both with elbow injuries. And unlike Soriano's freak fracture, there were hints at undiagnosed problems with both Martinez and Putz.
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15 May 2008
Major League, one of the funniest baseball movies around, told the tale of the woeful Cleveland franchise, so mired in mediocrity that their owner sought to cash in on them finishing in the cellar. It seemed like a good bet. The hapless Cleveland franchise hadn't tasted the postseason since 1954, and hadn't won a world title since 1948, one of the longest pennantless streaks in baseball. But ever since that 1989 movie--wherein, of course, the built-to-fail Indians defied their owner's devious plans--their consistent failure hasn't been a good bet.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
13 May 2008
Much exuberant ink has been spilled over Asdrubal Cabrera's unassisted triple play in yesterday's Indians-Blue Jays game, only the fourteenth in MLB history. That rarity makes it memorable, but I'm not sure there's a ton of athleticism involved--the Unassisted Triple Play (or UTP for short) is more luck of circumstance than anything.
Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet
15 April 2008
Two weeks into the 2008 season and the Boston Red Sox must be pleased with how the season has gone thus far. Granted they are only two games over .500 at 8 and 6 and have split their last 10 games, but things could be much, much worse. When the Yankees went to Japan to open the season, they proceeded to go 11-19 in the first month of the season before finally snapping out of it and going on to win the division. Boston is only half a game out of first place in the tightly packed American League East which is currently lead by the surprising Baltimore Orioles who do not figure to hang around much longer.
Continue reading "Red Sox Should Feel Good About The Season So Far"
Posted by Joe Sauer | No comments yet
31 March 2008
Hard to know what to make of the flurry of predictions regarding the fortunes of the Boston Red Sox and all of the other teams which make up Major League Baseball. The predictions right here on this site are sort of mixed. You get a self-proclaimed Boston hater (all sports) predicting that the Sox won't even make the playoffs, which even on the face of it seems a little ridiculous. Even I wouldn't count the Yankees out. This guy figures the Yankees to win it all, beating the Indians, Mariners and then the D-Backs. Yeah, well good luck with that.
Posted by Skip Maloney | 1 comment
24 March 2008
Cleveland Indians
Can Fausto Carmona sustain his success from last season?
Cleveland came within one game of a trip to the World Series last season before Boston’s comeback from a 3-1 hole. The Indians made no major changes to last year’s squad and figure again to battle for the top spot in the Central. Pitching will play a key role, especially going head to head with Detroit who will boast the top lineup in the Majors.
Posted by Joe Sauer | No comments yet
29 February 2008
Continue reading "American League East is a Beast of a Division"
Posted by Joe Sauer | No comments yet