Friday game nibbles

Rays 6, @Yankees 4: Three runs in the 5th (aided by 2 wild pitches) and a typical Price-is-right performance against the Bombers helped Tampa close their gap to 3 games in the division and WC2 races. Curtis Granderson homered in the 5th (just out of his counterpart’s reach) and Alex Rodriguez went deep in the 8th, but each one also made the last out of the other’s home-run inning, with the tying run on 2nd and lead run on 1st.

  • Since 2009, when the southpaw aces joined their current rotations, Price is 7-3 against the Yankees (team 11-6), while Sabathia is 3-8 vs. the Rays (team 6-12). Price is 5-1 in their head-to-head meetings.
  • Sabathia had just 3 wild pitches in his previous 57 starts over 2011-12.
  • Fernando Rodney got 5 outs for his 43rd save, coming on with the tying run aboard in the 8th.
  • More Jeter milestones: Passing Mays on the hits list; 100th game-ending out.

@Athletics 3, Orioles 2: After Chris Davis tied the game with his 26th HR in the 5th, the A’s came right back with 3 quick hits in the home half, with Jonny Gomes cashing in Adam Rosales‘s leadoff double. Tommy Milone earned his 13th win (and 4th in his last 5 outings) with 6.1 steady innings, collecting 3 GDPs and profiting from a 4th (induced by Pat Neshek) that quelled an Oriole uprising in the 7th. Baltimore got the tying run aboard to start the 9th, but with Davis at bat, pinch-runner Xavier Avery was thrown out by Derek Norris to end the game (with a nice tag by Stephen Drew).

  • Besides keying the go-ahead rally, Rosales was the pivot on all 4 DPs (none of them easy), giving him 46 DPs and no errors in 536 career innings at 2B.
  • Since being called up in August, Neshek has allowed just 6 hits and 1 run in 14.1 IP, holding righties to 3 for 39. Ironically, Oakland purchased his contract from Baltimore on August 3 after he’d piled up some tasty stats at AAA, including 7.0 SO/BB.
  • Oakland is 46-19 since July 1. Their season record is .500 or better against all 7 AL playoff contenders.
  • The O’s missed a chance to take sole possession of 1st place. Their remaining schedule: 2 @OAK, 3 @SEA, 3 @BOS, 4 TOR, 3 BOS, 3 @TBR.

Tigers 4, @Indians 0: In the 5th inning and again in the 6th, Justin Verlander escaped from 3rd-and-2nd jams (no outs and one out, respectively). With 2 on and 2 out in the 7th, he fanned Shin-Soo Choo on 3 pitches, ending his night with 7 scoreless innings (77 strikes, 33 balls). Detroit’s 2-out, 4-single rally in the 1st proved decisive, and Miguel Cabrera added a 2-out RBI hit in the 2nd, getting pitched to with 1st base open.

  • Detroit’s remaining schedule: 2 @CLE, 1 @CHW, 3 OAK, 3 MIN, 4 KCR, 3 @MIN, 3 @KCR.
  • If he stays on a 5-day schedule, Verlander has 3 starts left: 9/19 vs OAK, 9/24 vs. KCR and 9/29 @MIN in game #158.

White Sox 6, @Twins 0: Like shooting lutefisk in a barrel, Chris Sale beat the Twins for the 3rd time in as many tries this year, allowing a total of 2 runs on 11 hits in 20 IP. Chicago is 12-4 against the Twins

  • Against losing teams, Sale is 11-2, 1.99; against teams at .500 or better, 6-4, 3.63.
  • If both stay on a 5-day rotation, the Sale-Verlander matchup that was rained out on Thursday would be reprised in a potential division tiebreaking game. Sale is 0-3, 6.00 against the Tigers; Verlander is 2-0, 1.69 against the ChiSox.
  • Chicago’s remaining schedule: 2 @MIN, 1 DET, 3 @KCR, 3 @LAA (ooh!), 3 CLE, 4 TBR (oooh!!), 3 @CLE.

@Braves 2, Nationals 1Kris Medlen struck out 13 in 7 IP, one shy of this year’s NL high and one more than the career mark he’d set two starts before, but he did not win his 7th consecutive start. Bryce Harper tied it in the 6th with a leadoff HR on a high curve, his 19th this year and 7th in his last 16 games, so Atlanta had to go down to the wire to snap their 3-game losing streak and move 3.5 6 games up in the WC-home-field race.

  • They scored this an error, and I guess a good throw would have just nipped the runner, even with a tag needed. But it does show you the speed of the game. If you watch the slo-mo from about 0:50, you can see what a good jump Simmons got — moving forward as the pitch was delivered and smoothly shifting into full speed as soon as he saw the ball was grounded — and what a quick release Desmond made after charging the medium-speed roller; he just missed his target.
  • Craig Kimbrel was that close to a golden inning. He struck out each of the first two men on 3 pitches and had an 0-and-2 count, but Danny Espinosa fouled one off before accepting his fate and donning the golden sombrero. In the last 2 years, Kimbrel has faced 3+ plus batters and fanned them all on 12 occasions, more than the next two men combined. He’s on another hellacious run, striking out 36 of 56 batters over his last 15 games, to bring his SO% to an unprecedented 51% of all batters faced. The corollaries of that include a .120 batting average (22 for 184) and 0.663 WHIP; the latter would be an NL record, the former a MLB record (min. 50 IP).

@Dodgers 8, Cardinals 5: As September 4 dawned, LA trailed STL by a half-game for the final wild card. Incredibly, despite losing 7 of 9, they still control their fate: This comeback win, powered by Luis Cruz ‘s 2-out, 3-run blast in the 6th on the first pitch from Edward Mujica, left them 1 game behind the reeling Cards (3-7 since that date), and with 2 more chances to beat them this weekend.

  • Mujica had been brilliant since joining the Cards on August 1, letting in 1 run of his own and 1 of 7 inherited runners in 19 innings, with 12 holds in 13 chances.
  • Cruz’s 4 prior HRs all came on the road.
  • Remaining schedules: Cards — 2 @LAD, 3 HOU, 3 @CHC, 3 @HOU, 3 WSN, 3 CIN. Dodgers — 2 STL, 3 @WSN, 3 @CIN, 3 @SDP, 3 COL, 3 SFG.

Phillies 12, @Astros 6: After blowing a 4-0 lead Thursday when their offense shut down for the last 6 innings, the Phils came out firing — Jimmy Rollins‘s 20th HR opened a 4-run 1st — and they left little on the table, scoring in 4 more innings while going 7-15 with RISP. Philly returned to 3 games back in the WC race.

  • Rollins needs 24 Total Bases to pass Ed Delahanty for #2 on the Phils’ career list.
  • Just to stir up a little trouble … The Phillies are 34-21 in games started by Ryan Howard this year, 599-440 (.577) in his career. In Chase Utley‘s starts, they’re 629-484 (.565).
  • Say it five times fast: Chuckie Fick. (Yes, he’s a nephew of Robert.)
  • For the 2nd straight year, the Astros will have only one player qualified for the batting title; this time, Jose Altuve. Every other team in club history had at least 3. There have been 10 other teams since 1901 with just one qualified hitter. (The Play Index returns no “zeroes” in this search, but I’m not sure if that’s meaningful — there are some searches where it just doesn’t identify zeroes.)
  • Phils’ remaining schedule: 2 @HOU, 3 @NYM, 3 ATL, 3 WSN, 3 @MIA, 3 @WSN.

Mets 7, @Brewers 3: After being swept in a homestand against two teams already locked into the postseason (yes, Braves fans, I am trying to jinx you), while scoring 9 runs total with just one crooked-number inning, the Mets tallied twice in each of their first two tries against Milwaukee and added 3 in the 6th, slowing the sausage race for at least one day. The Crew remained 3 behind STL in the [compulsory compound adjective deleted] loss column, but with no games left against the teams they’re chasing.

  • Jonathon Niese‘s full-count walk to Carlos Gomez in his final inning of work ended his 17-game streak of 2 BB or less and 6+ IP, the longest in franchise history and the longest by 4 in MLB this year. In 28 starts, Niese has 20 QS (7th in the NL) and a 71% QS rate (8th) — the same as Stephen Strasburg, FWIW. Niese also went 2 for 3 with a run; he’s 11-51 this year, with 7 runs (2nd among all pitchers), 6 walks (3rd) and a .298 OBP (T-2nd).
  • Milwaukee, the NL HR leader with 180, had hit 36 HRs while winning 18 of their last 23 games and 107 HRs in 72 home games, but on this night the park contained them, and instead the Mets connected twice.

Angels 9, @Royals 7: Trailing 7-5 after 7, the Halos tied it on Kendrys Morales‘s pinch-HR (he elevated a high fastball on the first pitch from the vertically limited Tim Collins), then went ahead on a bags-full walk to Torii Hunter, the first batter faced by Jeremy Jeffress. A gift run in the 9th made for a low-tension save for the unusually well-rested Ernesto Frieri, and the Angels moved within 2.5 games of the wild card.

  • Angels PHs had been 8 for 56 this year.
  • Anaheim’s remaining schedule: 2 @KCR, 3 TEX, 3 CHI, 3 SEA, 3 @TEX, 3 @SEA.

 

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Ed
Ed
11 years ago

When the Indians beat the Tigers and Verlander back on July 26th, it moved them to within 3.5 games of the White Sox and put their record 50-49. Unfortunately that was their last hurrah as followed that victory with an 11 game losing streak. They have gone 10-36 overall since that victory, including last night’s loss to the Tigers. I’m sure it’s happened before but I don’t think I’ve ever seen a team fall apart so quickly. It’s not like anyone got hurt or they traded anyone away. Sure they released Johnny Damon, Jose Lopez and Shelley Duncan but none… Read more »

Ed
Ed
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Oh I’m sure there are plenty of similar collapses. It’s just excruciating when it happens to your own team. How does the song go??? Ah yes, “Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen”.

Anyway, it’s just really hard being an Indian’s fan right now when I can’t even say “Wait till next year.” Granted anything’s possible but I feel quite pessimistic for the Indian’s chances over the next 3-5 years, possibly longer. And meanwhile I’m a Browns and Cavs fans as well. So you know….

Ed
Ed
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

More on the Indians’ historic collapse. But first, let’s took a look at a Wall Street Journal article in the Mets 2nd half collapse this season. According to the article, the Mets were on pace to have the worst second half ever for a team that was 5 games above .500 or better at the All Star Break. They’ve since righted things a bit and now “only” have the second worst record. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444506004577613520305111502.html?KEYWORDS=Mets The Indians didn’t qualify for this article because they were only 3 games above .500 at the all-star break. Through the difference between being 3 games and… Read more »

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Ed: It may be possible to find teams first and second half records. If I remember I will try later today after the movies and my dinner out.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Ed: If I have done my work correctly no team from 1961 to 2011 has had a season with a second half percentage lower than one-half of their first half percentage. Hope you can follow that. 1981, 1994 and 1995 are excluded.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Ed: Here’s what I found from 1920-1960.

1943 A’s:
First half: 34-43 for .442
Second half: 15-62 for .195

1949 Senators:
First half: 34-43 for .442
Second half: 16-61 for .208

Ed
Ed
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Thanks Richard! So two teams have had a 2nd half winning percentage less than half of their first half winning percentage. But neither of them had a winning record in the first half, like the Indians did this year.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

I realize you were looking for teams that were above .500 for the first half but after all the work I did I wanted to at least report whatever results I found.

Luis Gomez
Luis Gomez
11 years ago

I am no Dodger fan by any stretch of the imagination, but it was great to see Luis Cruz getting a courtain call by his home crowd, after putting the blue ones ahead with a 3-run homerun.

bstar
bstar
11 years ago

JA, thanks for the Craig Kimbrel love. It avoids me from sounding like a broken record.

BTW, The Braves actually have a 6-game lead for home-field in the Wild Card over St. Louis, not 3.5 (as of last night).

Ed
Ed
11 years ago

Jumping the gun here a bit but in tonight’s Angels-Royals game, Angels’ closer Ernesto Frieri pulled off a quite rare blown save involving facing only two batters and giving up homeruns to both of them. Only 17 other instances of blown saves meet those criteria. Not all of those, however, included a walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth the way Frieri’s did.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Here’s one I remember. On 8/8/2000 with the A’s leading the Yankees 3-2 at the Stadium Jason Isringhausen was called upon to save the game. Bernie Williams hit the first pitch into the right-field stands to tie the game. David Justice hit the first pitch to the same spot to win the game. Two batters, two pitches.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago

I forgot to mention it was the bottom of the 9th.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Well,it could have been extra-innings. Actually I was referring to Ed’s statement in post 6.

Brent
Brent
11 years ago
Reply to  Ed

Egad, Mike S. really had to question pulling Greinke, who had just given up a single to Gordon, but there was no reason to think he was that tired (109 pitches). All 5 hits he had given up were singles. Then pitching change and boom, boom.

Just a thought for ML pitchers. Having watched the Royals pretty closely all year, do not throw a fastball up in the zone to Butler in a situation where he is looking to hit a deep fly. He sits on those pitches.

Hartvig
Hartvig
11 years ago

“Like shooting lutefisk in a barrel”

As an all-grandparents-off-the-boat of Norwegian descent allow me to point out that this could be extremely dangerous. There’s always the risk of lutefisk exploding just of it’s own accord with the equivalent force of an equal weight of gunpowder.

Of course, that’s still less risky than actually eating the stuff.

It now appears that my pre-season prediction of Verlander winning 30 games may not happen.

But I really hope that he does end up going again Sale and the White Sox again.

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

oh man, I’d copied and was just about to paste……thanks Hartvig:) And, thanks, JA, for introducing a little levity into what has been not such a nice season for “Minnie-soh-ta” 😉

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

and, again, I love Game Notes…..thanks so much, Mr. Autin for coming back from hiatus. My first stop online when I get home from work! (or…….whatever, lol)

Jim Bouldin
11 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

“But I really hope that he does end up going again Sale and the White Sox again.

Hartvig, I really hope it doesn’t go to a 163rd game, which is the only way I realistically see that happening.

PP
PP
11 years ago

“The Phillies are 34-21 in games started by Ryan Howard this year”

But what does he have to do with that? -1 WAR, .717 OPS, 91 OPS+. 4 years left on his contract and 10 mil buyout on the 5th. Ouch…

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  PP

Is it fair to say he makes hay while the sun shines?

OBP SLG OPS BAbip

RISP: .455/.610/1.065 .390
Man on 2nd: .565/.667/1.232 .444
Man on 3rd: .625/.600/1.225 .750
Men on 2nd & 3rd: .700/.667/1.376 .750
Bases loaded: .571/.1.000/1.571 .600

PP
PP
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

right, it appears he does make a bale or two with RISP, but otherwise, 21 runs scored in 248 plate appearances, 82 strikeouts…

Voomo Zanzibar
11 years ago
Reply to  PP

Might there ACTUALLY be such a thing as “an RBI guy” ?

PP
PP
11 years ago
Reply to  Voomo Zanzibar

There is, but as I’ve learned, not necessarily in the world of sabermetrics…

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

Mick, for some odd reason Ryan H has always been good throughout his career with RISP and what not. Which of course means he’s terrible with no one on base, but still. Isn’t that what you want your “RBI guy” to be?

PP
PP
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

I did notice this year Howard is driving in runners on base at the same rate as Pujols replacement in St. Louis, Craig, about 25%, of course with a much lower BA.

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

Voomo and bstar, that’s exactly my point. And if someone mentioned Howard’s -1.0 WAR to Charlie Manuel, they’d get a nice tabacca loogy on their shoe top.

Ed
Ed
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

I’ll take the loogy. During the Phillies recent 7 game winning streak, Howard went 4-27 with 1 double, and one walk (which was intentional). He drove in 4 runs during that streak and only scored one. How exactly did his presence help the Phillies win those 7 in a row? Seems like they won despite Howard.

Howard’s generally been a decent offensive player over his career but his defense and baserunning erode much of his value. And as his hitting skills have declined, his poor fielding and baserunning really weigh down his value.

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

Charlie ALWAYS looks like he’s going to punch you if you say something wrong to him.

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

Mick, if you were suggesting that Ryan H might have been a little better than most saberists thought back in his prime, I agree with you. He sort of became the whipping boy for anti-RBI guys. He was so overrated by the general public, writers, and analysts that he actually was underrated for awhile (similar to the same thing that happened with Jeter).

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Has Ryan Howard been reading this? In the last 4 games he had 4 HR, 9 RBI, and a .944 SLG. Philly won 3 of the 4.

Jim Bouldin
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Well, followed up with:

“Anybody who thought that to be anything other than a statement of what it was, stand corrected on that”

you do get a fairly strong Yogi Berra quality to the whole thing.

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

What the heck is Bobby V doing anywhere near a local radio station? Step AWAY from the phone for your sake, Bobby, and for our sake, ‘cos we get the maunfactured melodrama shoved down our throats and Boston is 14 games under .500. I disagree that anyone outside the Redsox nation gives a shite.

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago

While the zealots of *Red Sox Nation* have a fine appreciation for frustration, they have little appreciation for sarcasm, and zero appreciation for truth.

Bobby fits with Boston about as much as 10 pounds of crap in a 5 pound bag.

He doesn’t get them, and they don’t get him.

MikeD
MikeD
11 years ago
Reply to  Brooklyn Mick

I agree.

I still hope they keep Valentine. He was brought into a highly toxic situation and charged with ripping it apart. It’s been ripped. Players were actively working against him behind his back. I’d give him another shot next year, but I wonder if even Valentine wants to return.

MikeD
MikeD
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

It’s possible, although one team counting on another team to be out there to take on all of its high-priced contracts is difficult. The Dodger situation is unique. A wealthy team, with wealthy backing, new owners coming in taking over a team on the fringe of the pennant race (can we actually still call them pennant races with all with Wild Cards?) looking to make a statement. I do find it interesting that Valentine walked in and immediately served notice by calling out Youkilis on a radio program. It seemed crazy, yet I think he did it on purpose. I… Read more »