Sunday NL Summary

A quick rundown of games from today’s NL action involving the leading teams.

Nats 4, Cardinals 3Stephen Strasburg went 6 scoreless against the Redbirds, who mounted a comeback immediately Strasburg made his departure. But, the Nats restored their lead for good with back-to-back 2-out RBI singles in the 8th off loser Lance Lynn, making his 3rd relief appearance since his removal from the starting rotation. Strasburg is now at 156.1 IP with two more starts promised before the much anticipated season shutdown, or rather the anticipation of whether that shutdown will actually happen.

  • The Nats  have been in first place since May 22nd and are currently enjoying almost their largest lead of the season (it was a half-game more after play on Aug 21). What do you think – can they hang on after Strasburg takes a seat about the time the NFL kicks off?
  • The Cardinals went 3-7 on a tough road swing through Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and D.C. They need to turn it around quick, and the Mets and Brewers on the home menu this week may be just the ticket.

Braves 8, Phillies 7 – The Braves kept pace with the Nats and put a stop to their 3 game skid. But, it took a miracle finish to make it happen. With the Braves trailing by 4 starting the home 9th, Jonathan Papelbon entered the game with Pavlovian predictability with 1 out, 2 on and, therefore, the tying run in the on deck circle and thus a save opportunity. His appearance led Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez to call on journeyman Lyle Overbay to pinch-hit for his just announced pinch-hitter, Dan Uggla. If you aren’t a close follower of the Braves and are wondering about that move, Uggla has been in one ugly slump, now approaching 3 months, going .157/.295/.271 in 275 PA since June 11th. If that makes the move to Overbay more understandable, it also begs the question of why use Uggla to pinch-hit in the first place. But, I digress. After the over-matched Overbay predictably whiffed in his Braves debut, Papelbon imploded, yielding a walk to load the bases and then surrendering a 2-run double to Martin Prado followed by a walk-off 3 run HR by the ageless Chipper Jones.

  • This was only the second time in Papelbon’s career (the first was in 2007) to enter a game with 2 or more inherited runners and leave with both a blown save and a loss. And, it’s his first game ever allowing a total of 5 runs (his own plus inherited runners) scoring.

Dodgers 5, Diamondbacks 4 – Speaking of walk-off wins, Adrian Gonzalez did the honors for LA, with a 2-run double to make a winner of Ronald Belisario. Since returning to the NL, Gonzalez is only 8 for 38, but he’s made them count with 8 RBI.

  • Since they were last in first place (Aug 19), the Dodgers have gone only 5-8 and are in danger of losing contact with the front-running Giants. They’ll need to ratchet it up soon to avoid a possible wild card crapshoot (if they make it that far). But, the schedule maker isn’t cooperating – the Padres and Giants, both on 10-3 runs, are up next.

Giants 7, Cubs 5Matt Cain was uncharacteristically ordinary, allowing all the Cub runs in 5 innings of work. But, his teammates picked him up, capping their comeback with back-to-back RBI singles in the 9th, cashing two earlier walks, as Carlos Marmol took the loss, his first since June 4th, also against the Giants.

  • This was Cain’s first game of the year allowing 5 or more runs in 5 innings or less, and only his 6th such game since 2009, compared to 13 like outings up to 2008.
  • The Giants have the opportunity to “make hay while the sun shines”, with 9 more against Arizona and 7 against Colorado the rest of the way.

Brewers 12, Pirates 8 – After 25 hits and 20 runs through the first 6 innings, there was only one more hit combined the rest of the way as the bullpens settled things down for both clubs. John Axford logged the save for the Brewers after being “set up” by teammate Manny Parra, who converted a 4-run lead into a save opportunity starting the 9th inning.

  • Pittsburgh, still hanging on in the wild card race, continued their summer swoon, now 10-19 since Aug 3rd. Pirate pitching has allowed 5 or more runs in 17 of those games (including 10 games in a row Aug 7-16), but also has 4 team shutouts in that span. The offense has been similarly Jekyll and Hyde, being shut out 4 times and scoring 5 or more on 11 occasions.
  • Relative to their wild card rivals, the Pirates may catch a break with 13 more games against the Cubs and Astros, plus 4 against the Mets.

Reds 5, Astros 3 – Bud Norris had a 6 inning, 6 strikeout performance allowing no runs, just 3 hits and only one walk. And, the Astro offense added 2 runs in the 7th to extend the lead to 3-0.  But, it wasn’t enough as the Reds scored all their runs in an 8th inning rally highlighted by a Jay Bruce 3-run homer off loser Xavier Cedeno. Aroldis Chapman dismissed the Astros in order, fanning two for his 34th save.

  • In a dismal season, Norris has been something off a bright spot, with 8 quality starts in his last 11 outings since July 5th. But, Norris is 0-6 and the team 1-10 in those games.
  • Under the heading “Why I’ll never like the Hold statistic”, Hector Ambriz notched one for this effort: 3 batters faced, 1 retired, 1 hit and 1 walk, with both of those runners scoring on Bruce’s homer. Nothing against Ambriz, but can’t there be some minimum hold requirement like maybe retiring at least as many batters as you allow to reach base.

 

 

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Howard
Howard
11 years ago

Since they have a pretty comfortable lead why have the Nats not shut Strasburg down already so they can use him in the playoffs?

K&J
K&J
11 years ago
Reply to  Howard

The Nationals have said that they do not want to stop and restart him. Whatever studies they are following that recommend a shutdown at 160 do not cover a stop and start scenario.

Voomo Zanzibar
Voomo Zanzibar
11 years ago
Reply to  K&J

The franchise has made the playoffs exactly twice
(once in a weird strike year in which they actually finished in 2nd place…. and once in a nightmare strike year in which the playoffs were not played).

The franchise in its current city has never finished above .500 (that changes with their next victory)

It is September.
They have a 6.5 game lead.

They do, in fact, have 4 other reliable starters.
Check this out – the WHIPs of their rotation:

1.119 Strasburg
1.147
1.160
1.165
1.165

I have no conclusions.
Strange situation.
Not sure what I would do.

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Interesting. One would think that having a staff with 5 starting pitchers under 1.2 WHIP would be very good teams, but these are their records for those seasons: 1959 O’s (74-80) 1964 Sox (98-64) 1966 Sox (83-79) 1972 Twins (77-77) 1981 Astros (61-49) Despite winning 9 in a row to finish the season, the 1964 White Sox lost the Pennant to the Yankees, who finished 1 game ahead in the standings. What strikes me about that Sox team is the fact that, while Buzhardt, Herbert, Horlen, Peters, and Pizarro all had WHIP’s under 1.2, they also had a couple of… Read more »

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Good stuff Doug. I just glanced at the 1982 Padres and see that of the 5 pitchers with 100+ innings and -1.2 WHIP, 3 of them were bullpen guys. Of the 3, Eric Show and Dave Dravecky functioned as swingmen that year. Now that the classic swingman is becoming a rare breed, and relievers logging 100+ innings a statistical oddity, what the Nats are doing this year is pretty special.

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Voomo Zanzibar

I’m really reaching to try and make connections, and, I KNOW that he’s retiring and all(?), but I do find it ironic that Atlanta has not ‘shut down’ Chipper Jones……who is like 75 years old. The big strong young kid? Yeah, he needs a rest. I know that CJ’s and SS’s respective positions are very different, but Davey, when asked, said that even Strasburg’s bat (which has produced a 105 OPS+ this year, higher than three!! of their regular players, as listed by BB-Ref) will be off limits, with regards to pinch hitting, once he is shut down. I’m considered,… Read more »

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

*manager’s OFFICE, sorry…..

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

Nash, even Chipper himself has publicly stated that he thinks the Nats are Nuts for shutting down the kid. Of course, he’s looking at it through the lens of a player who won a World Series as a 23 year old rookie in 1995, only to go on and lose in the WS in 1996 and 1999, and never get another sniff of the Fall Classic. Do these Nats think it’s going to be easy, with or without Strasburg? If the arm is healed enough to throw 160 or 180 innings, or whatever the eggheads in white coats say, then… Read more »

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

Mick, considering how the ’81 playoffs ended for Montreal, and the absolute hosing that was the end of the ’94 season(backbreaker for sure), folowed by an attempt at contraction, and now this nuttiness, may I be the first to officially stamp the franchise as being saddled with “The Curse Of Steve Rodgers”?

He had given up one run in

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

*twenty seven innings before that HR to Monday.

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

Pitching at the MLB level is an incredibly stressful and unnatural act. The Nationals decision to shut Strasburg down on Sept. 12th is based on the belief that any young (23-and-under) pitcher’s arm, recovering from Tommy John surgery, should not be be exposed to a full season’s worth of work until it is fully mature. I don’t understand why this creates such a violently nagative reaction in so many players and fans. I don’t fully agree with it, but I understand the reasoning. Chipper Jones is not throwing a baseball 90-100 MPH, 75 to a 100+ times in a game.… Read more »

PP
PP
11 years ago

I thought Srasburg’s 11.2 SO per 9 would be higher up there but it only puts him 18th. Also, looks like Chipper’s going to end his career at 300, 400, 500.

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  PP

Chipper has definitely clinched the .300 BA and .500 SLG and right now is at .4014 OBP for his career. He could go 50 straight AB without reaching base and still be at .3995, so it looks like he’s pretty much got the .400 OBP clinched as well.

PP
PP
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

over 10,000+ at bats, that’s beast

topper009
topper009
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Big Ed Delahanty belongs at .346/.411/.505. He did start in 1888 so maybe you missed him or are disqualifying him for playing pre 1893? I would consider him more worthy for this group than Lefty O’Doul and his 3658 PAs. He is the tough answer to a great question, only players with 3 .400+ seasons? Some close calls Bonds .298/.444/.607 Mantle .298/.421/.557 Bagwell .297/.408/.540 Berkman .296/.409/.545 DiMaggio .325/.398/.579 Mize .312/.397/.562 Hack Wilson .307/.395/.545 Averill .318/.395/.534 Miguel Cabrera .318/.395/.559 A bit more rare, the player with BA > .300, OBP > .400 and closest to a .500 SLG is Charlie Gehringer… Read more »

Doug
Doug
11 years ago
Reply to  topper009

Delahanty was missed (not disqualified) because the query started in 1901. That’s all.

Howard
Howard
11 years ago
Reply to  topper009

Big Dan Brothers also: .342/.423/.519

MikeD
MikeD
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Combing the list, I see there are only six members of the .300/.400/.600 club, and yes one of them is currently active: Albert Pujols.

Yet unless there’s some Barry Bondsian magic elixir in Pujols’ future, or a sudden retirement, the list will be back to five as Pujols’ SLG will no doubt sink below .600 in coming seasons.

Yet for a few more seasons, Ruth, Foxx, Williams, Gehrig and Greenberg will have some company.

topper009
topper009
11 years ago

Ryan Braun has tied his career high in HRs at 37 with 29 games to play. Too bad he was taking those performance de-hancing drugs last season, imagine what could have been. Currently he leads the league in: HR 37 (29 Stanton, Bruce) TB 294 (275 McCutchen) SLG .607 (.590 Stanton) OPS .996 (.972 McCutchen) RBI 95 (92 Holliday) The Brewers are now 6.5 games out of a wild card spot, a strong finish and Braun could win back-to-back MVPs, maybe without the most 1st place votes. Also the Crew’s heart of the order have the most XBHs in the… Read more »

bstar
bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  topper009

Braun has definitely flown under the radar this year, no doubt. In my opinion, the recent suspensions of Melky Cabrera and Bartolo Colon have hurt the public perception of Braun even more, if that was even possible. And I’m on your side of that argument, topper. I think he would have to distance himself even more from the pack to have a good shot at the second MVP. People are appalled that Melky could win the batting title with the help of PEDs; I seriously question whether writers would vote for Braun after the assumption by most that Braun had… Read more »

Brooklyn Mick
Brooklyn Mick
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Will John Farrell pull a Bobby Valentine and call for a bunt?