Sunday Game Notes: Homer Bids, but Buster Trumps

Reds 4, @Giants 0 — It had to be “Buster,” right? With two out in the 8th seventh, Buster Posey’s clean line-drive to right broke up Homer Bailey’s bid for a third no-hitter, and second against the Giants. Now, Homer had to focus on his 1-0 lead.

 

The Panda followed with a hit that pushed Posey to third, but Bailey brushed aside Mike Morse on three straight strikes, and went on to polish off a 3-hitter. The shutout trimmed his ERA to 4.39, a season low.

Tim Hudson yielded just 5 hits into the 9th, and no walks, but he left trailing, 1-0, on Billy Hamilton’s 2-out double. Jeremy Affeldt tried to clean up the runner Hudson left behind, but made an utter mess instead — balk, single, wild pitch, hit by pitch, two infield hits. Santiago Casilla came in a booted a ground ball, before the nightmare finally ended on a replay overturn. When you’re going bad, you’re going baaaaad. The Jints are in a 4-15 spin, and fell into a first-place tie with LA. The Reds’ 14-4 spree has pulled them to a tie for second, and level with idle(?) Washington for the second wild card.

  • One full turn through the Reds’ rotation: 5 runs in 39.1 IP, 1.14 RA/9. They’ve gotten 18 starts of 8+ innings, six more than any other team, and lead the majors with 6.5 IP per start.
  • Last time the Reds swept four in San Francisco was 1972, when SF went 69-86 and Cincy went to the Series.
  • Affeldt’s outing was the 4th ever to pack a balk, wild pitch and HBP into a stint of 5 batters or less.
  • Posey was 1 for 16 off Bailey up to that fateful moment, with 6 Ks.
  • It’s just about a year since Homer’s second no-no; Posey was one of two starters Bailey didn’t whiff that day.
  • It’s been 40 years since someone tossed a third no-hitter. Nolan Ryan’s career record was 91-86 after that one, his final start of 1974 and 193rd of his career. Sandy Koufax was 99-69 after his third (start #215), and Bob Feller 219-125 (start #377). Bailey is now 57-49 after 160 starts.

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@Dodgers 6, Cardinals 0 — Some know-it-all said recently that Clayton Kershaw had never strung three scoreless outings in a row. The shaggy ace checked off that box on Sunday, punching the clock with seven rather routine stanzas. Matt Carpenter had the best swings off Kershaw, and collected three of the five hits, but his first swing-and-miss was Clayton’s final pitch and 13th whiff — the most since 2001 against St. Louis. Andre Ethier’s first homer in a month capped a 4-run 5th off Shelby Miller that ended all speculation on the outcome.

  • By my count, Carpenter is the first lefthanded batter ever to get 3 hits in a game off Kershaw.
  • No other pitcher in the last two years has topped 10 Ks against the Cards.
  • Kershaw’s rolled out 28 straight bagels, and won his last six starts, with 4 total runs, 61 Ks and 4 walks in 44 innings. His ERA is 2.19 … in the last four seasons.

Best 4-year ERA in the live-ball era (600+ IP, limit one listing per contiguous period):

  • 1.86, Sandy Koufax (1963-66) — 172 ERA+
  • 1.98, Greg Maddux* (1992-95) — 202 ERA+
  • 2.08, Bob Gibson (1966-69) — 161 ERA+
  • 2.16, Pedro Martinez* (1997-2000) — 219 ERA+
  • 2.17, Hal Newhouser (1943-46) — 164 ERA+
  • 2.19, Clayton Kershaw (2011-14, in progress) — 167 ERA+
  • 2.23, Wilbur Wood** (1968-71) — 161 ERA+
  • 2.25, Tom Seaver (1968-71) — 157 ERA+
    2.25, Mort Cooper (1942-45) — 155 ERA+
    2.25, Carl Hubbell (1931-34) — 160 ERA+

* Maddux had a 7-year run of 2.15 ERA, 190 ERA+ (1992-98). Pedro had a 7-year run of 2.20 ERA, 213 ERA+ (1997-2003).
** Wood’s 4-year run included three in relief, but still a healthy 734 total innings.

Best 4-year ERA+ in the live-ball era (same rules):

  • 233, Pedro Martinez* (1999-2002)
  • 206, Greg Maddux* (1994-97)
  • 187, Randy Johnson* (1999-2002)
  • 175, Lefty Grove (1929-32)
  • 174, Randy Johnson (1994-97)
  • 173, Lefty Grove (1936-39)
  • 172, Sandy Koufax (1963-66)
  • 167, Clayton Kershaw (2011-14, in progress)

* Only Pedro, Maddux and Big Unit had live-ball 10-year runs of at least 170 ERA+ and 1,500+ IP.

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@Seattle 3, Cleveland 0 — Felix Hernandez put the clamps on Cleveland, yielding one hit through eight before Fernando Rodney sealed it airtight. Robinson Cano’s 2-run homer off T.J. House broke the scoreless duel in the 6th, and he scored the other run.

  • King Felix has 26 scoreless starts of 8+ innings, second to Tim Hudson (28) among active pitchers.
  • After three not-quite-prime-Felix seasons, he now sports career-bests in ERA (2.10), FIP, WHIP, K/9 and W/9.
  • Approaching 2,000 IP by age 28; he’d be the first since Gooden. Among the 15 to cross that threshold in the expansion era, Felix’s 129 ERA+ would trail only Bert Blyleven (130).

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Athletics 4, @Marlins 3 — 6′ 8″ Nate Freiman made his season debut at 1B for Oakland, and slugged a 3-run homer. Well, sure: That lineup needs another masher. Freiman broke in last year, and tied Tony Clark as the tallest position player in MLB history.

  • A 4-game skid ended Miami’s month at 11-16, and they fell four games below .500 for the first time.

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Atlanta 3, @Philadelphia 2 — Philly got the winning runs to scoring position with two out against Craig Kimbrel, but he got Chase Utley to fly out. The other turning point was Atlanta’s 2nd, when Aaron Harang (career .090 BA) singled with two outs, and B.J. Upton banged the next pitch for a 2-run triple; B.J. was 3 for 25 with RISP and 2 outs.

  • Marlon Byrd hit two solo shots off Harang, but Philly’s other 13 baserunners amounted to nothing.
  • Tommy La Stella had 3 extra-base hits in his first 26 starts, now 5 XBH in his last 3 games.

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@Royals 5, Angels 4 — “Whether Jason Grilli returns to the ninth inning will have to be determined by Jason Grilli,” said Angels GM Jerry Dipoto after the trade. Pitches like this won’t help his case.

Dubious IBB of the Day: Trying to end a long 4th inning where the Royals had scored three to tie the game — including a walk, a HBP on 3-1 and a lineout on 3-0, making 31 pitches in the frame by C.J. Wilson — he intentionally walked Billy Butler to fill the sacks for Alex Gordon … and then walked him on four pitches, scoring the lead run. Butler’s a decent hitter, but he has 2 home runs this year. You’re so fearful of a 2-run hit that you put a wearied pitcher into such a pressure spot?

  • Oh, Albert; it hurts to see you so.

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@Astros 6, Tigers 4 — Slumping Jon Singleton twice drove in a run after George Springer was IBB’d with two out — once by a walk, then with a single on a 2-0 count. Three Ks today made 36 in Singleton’s first 100 PAs, but he was patient in those last two trips. Detroit mounted a rally in the 8th, but Tony Sipp fanned pinch-hitting Ian Kinsler on three pitches to strand the tying run on third, then put them down in order for the save, and Houston’s first series win in their last five.

  • Jose Altuve is 26 for his last 51, with 12 SB in 12 games, raising his season average to .347. Only Moises Alou (.355) ever hit higher for the Astros in a full schedule.
  • Miguel Cabrera went 0-13 in the series: First time this year with back-to-back 0-4’s; first time in the last two years with three straight, and just the fourth time in his 12-year career. He’s never had four straight 0-4’s.

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@Pirates 5, Mets 2 — Space and time were New York’s enemies: Too little space between Pittsburgh’s 8 hits, and no well-timed knocks to make more of their own 13 safeties. The first big hit came in the 1st from Ike Davis (his first against his former team), a 2-run single on a 1-2 count — one of six straight rockets off Bartolo Colon that made a 3-run escape seem lucky. Pedro Alvarez doubled home a run in that frame, and smoked a 2-run shot his next time up. Three Mets chances with a man on third and one out all ended with a whiff, and Curtis Granderson’s last flyout (as the tying run) put a sour cherry on their 2-15 RISP performance. Grandy came into Steeltown swinging well in June, but he went 0-17 as the Bucs took three of four.

  • When Colon has nothing, that’s a whole lotta nothing.
  • 2.60 ERA, 197 Ks in 198 innings — The relief stats of the eight Mets relievers currently on the roster (including Dice-K). The team’s relief ERA is under 2.90 in the last two months. It’s been a long time coming, but the Mets might finally have a decent bullpen.

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White Sox 4, @Blue Jays 0 — Jose Quintana’s first scoreless start this year. Mark Buehrle’s 5th failed bid for win #11, without a truly bad game among them — this one, 2 runs in 8 IP.

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Rockies 10, @Brewers 4 —Little League home run!

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Rays 12, @Orioles 7 — Matt Joyce’s big day — 2 HRs, 2 singles and a double — tied the Tampa records of 5 hits and 12 total bases. They’ve had four 3-HR games (two by Evan Longoria), but no other hits in any of them. Joyce hadn’t homered in 39 games since May 11. He got a 6th at-bat, needing a triple for the cycle, but grounded out. B.J. Upton owns the Rays’ only cycle.

  • Tired of the see-saw: Kevin Kiermaier’s homer in the 6th made the fourth straight half-inning that the lead was altered. Then Tampa tacked on six more with two out, for their biggest inning of the year. Brian Matusz came in and yielded three straight extra-base hits, capped by Logan Forsythe’s second homer in two days.
  • Kiermaier’s also homered in two straight, raising his slugging mark to .583 in 118 PAs. The only Rays first- or second-year player to slug .500+ in 250+ PAs was Evan Longoria, who did it both years.

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@Padres 2, Diamondbacks 1 — The second start by Odrisamer Despaigne saw his first run allowed and his first walks, but plenty more to like. Despaigne worked free of a one-out, third-and-first jam after that run scored in the 1st inning, then picked up three double plays to clear off most of the other Snakes that crossed his paths before giving way with two out in the 7th. Cameron Maybin keyed the Friars’ 2-run 4th with a double (the game’s lone extra-base hit), and once the lead found “Benoit Street,” it knew the way home.

  • Despaigne is the second player this year to start and win his first two games, and the first Padre to do so allowing one run or less in each.
  • Looking ahead … Only three pitchers since 1914 have started and won their first three games yielding one run or less: Andy Rincon (1980 Cardinals), Wayne Simpson (’70 Reds) and Stu Miller (’52 Cards). Career wins: 8, 31, 105.
  • Joaquin Benoit and Huston Street still have yet to blow a lead, and the Pads are 24-0 leading after seven, 28-0 after eight. Street has 10 straight scoreless outings, Benoit 16. Of course, the duo’s in no danger of being overused….

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Red Sox 8, @Yankees 5 — Big Papi’s 450th home run left him one extra-base hit shy of 1,000. Ortiz has 41 HRs in 202 career games against the Yanks, a rate of 33 HRs per 162 games. Only five players have more HRs and a better rate — Jimmie Foxx, Manny Ramirez, Hank Greenberg, Rafael Palmeiro and Rocky Colavito. (Ted Williams trails only Foxx with 62 HRs against the Yanks, but “only” 32 HRs per 162 G.)

Moooo-kieeee!Mookie Betts — second baseman, center fielder and shortstop — made his MLB debut in right, the 8th to start out there for Boston this year. The speedy fireplug rapped into a DP in his first trip, then singled and was caught stealing. Betts went 88-13 in steals down on the farm, averaging about 50 thefts per 150 games. He’s had at least a .414 OBP in his last four stops, with way more walks than strikeouts.

  • Boston might not turn things around in the second half, but with the versatile Betts and Brock Holt, they’ll field some entertaining lineups.
  • Joe Girardi’s comments about Masahiro Tanaka’s workload, made before Saturday’s game, add mystery to how he managed that 9th inning.
  • 160 OPS+, 16 HRs, 59 RBI: That’s a grade-A first half, for one player. Not so much when it’s the sum of Yankee imports Carlos Beltran and Brian McCann, through Saturday. Despite the reinvestments, the Yankee offense is farther below average this year (-0.24 R/G) than last year (-0.15).

Here’s an odd Yankee batting split that covers 381 PAs, a bit more than one spot in the order: .301 BA, .371 OBP, .814 OPS. All three numbers are the best, by far, of any team with at least 210 such PAs. So, what is it? It’s Yankees batting left-handed against lefty pitching. And measured by the ratio of that split to the team’s overall numbers, each number would rank in the top 11 of all searchable teams. Three players comprise the bulk of those PAs: McCann’s been awful against RHPs, but .292/.888 vs. southpaws. Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner are also hitting better on the “off” side.

 

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BryanM
BryanM
9 years ago

Just looking at the Bref all time leaders through age 26 season in ERA+ ( not updated for tonights game) .. Kershaw is 5th , just ahead of Pedro Martinez , behind Walter Johnson, ed Reulbach, Smoky Joe Wood , Tom Seaver — Kid could have a pretty good career in fromt of him.

Doug
Doug
9 years ago

The Indians and Mariners are the first teams to trade team one-hitters in consecutive games since the Mets and Marlins on Jun 16-17, 2003. Dontrelle Willis took the honors with a shutout in the first game, allowing only a 4th inning single by Ty Wigginton. In the second game, Jae Weong Seo allowed a 5th inning single to Juan Encarnacion who got no further. After retiring the first two batters in the 7th, Seo was inexplicably pulled, despite throwing just 71 pitches (was he injured?). Whatever the case, David Weathers and Armando Benitez finished things up with clean slates. http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/FLO/FLO200306160.shtml… Read more »

Darien
9 years ago

I find it hilarious that the Reds have “gotten 18 starts of 8+ innings, six more than any other team, and lead the majors with 6.5 IP per start” the year after they fired Dusty Baker.

David P
David P
9 years ago

Here’s a challenge for the PI experts. The Rays currently have 43 double plays, a shockingly low total. For comparisons sake, the Orioles lead the AL with 94 DPs turned, the average is 73, and the Royals are next to last in the AL with 57.

I can’t seem to find a way to search team defensive stats on BR. So here’s what I’m wondering: Has there ever been a team with less than 100 DPs in the AL (particularly post DH)?

David P
David P
9 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Thanks John, I appreciate the quick reply! I’m realizing now though that the numbers I was looking at included all DPs, not just GIDP. So the Rays have actually turned fewer than 43 DPs this year! Which means they could end up with fewer GIDPs than that ’85 Blue Jays team.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
9 years ago
Reply to  David P

Here are a few from the NL:
75– 1989 Mets
81– 1990 Mets
83– 1982 Cubs
84– 1975 Dodgers

birtelcom
Editor
9 years ago

I used the PI Team Pitching Split Finder to get team season totals, ordered by fewest GIDP. Moving the result into Excel, I could calculate the lowest GIDP per game rates for AL teams since 1973:
.44 TBR 2014
.52 TOR 1992
.55 TOR 1991 and CHW 1977
.56 OAK 1980
.57 OAK 1986, MIN 2001 and MIN 2003
.58 OAK 1981
.59 NYY 2014, BOS 2009, LAA 2010 and OAK 2013

Brendan Bingham
Brendan Bingham
9 years ago
Reply to  David P

I heard recently (sorry I do not remember where) that someone had done an analysis of infield ground balls and concluded that playing at “double-play depth” was a net loss, the increase in base hits more than offsetting the benefit from double plays. Could it be that TB is pursuing the strategy of playing their infielders back when other teams would be at DP depth?

bstar
bstar
9 years ago

That’s interesting. Tampa Bay seemed to *maybe* be the first team to employ extreme shifting and such based upon batters’ individual spray charts. It wouldn’t surprise me if they were the first team to try this.

Or maybe it’s just SS Yunel Escobar’s -16 fielding runs this year causing the low DP number. UZR from Fangraphs has him at -9.6 runs also.

David P
David P
9 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Tampa Bay pitchers also lead the AL in strikeouts and have a below average ground ball rate. So those certainly factor in.

mosc
mosc
9 years ago

And maybe I’m just a Yankees homer but I wanted to be the first to mention the name second basemen Rob Refsnyder on here. Yesterday he had another multi-hit game bringing his AAA average up to .371 on the season: http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.jsp?gid=2014_06_29_swbaaa_lhvaaa_1&t=g_box&sid=milb Not thought of as much of a prospect this spring after finishing 2013 with an .812 OPS in high A ball at the ‘old-for-single-A’ age of 22, his numbers this year are scary. Starting the year with his first taste of AA is pressure for most but he managed a .933 OPS in 60 games leading to a June… Read more »

MikeD
MikeD
9 years ago
Reply to  mosc

Mosc, I wouldn’t say Refsynder wasn’t much of a prospect, although he was a bit under the radar unless you’re a real prospect hound. (Guilty.) When signed he was recognized to have a good bat, quick hands, short to the ball, with good plate disciple. He’s shown that with wRC+s of 172, 140, 156 and 217 at his last four MiLB stops over the past two seasons. What’s kept him from getting more notice is he also was viewed as a bit of a tweener. He was signed as an OFer but the belief was his bat, while good, wouldn’t… Read more »

donburgh
donburgh
9 years ago

Granderson went hitless when the Pirates visited Citi Field earlier this year also. Now 0-26 vs Bucs in 2014.

Pirates set a PNC record for highest attendance for a four game set at 150,819.

RJ
RJ
9 years ago
Reply to  donburgh

And 3-47 for his career.

Hartvig
Hartvig
9 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Ho hum. There weren’t even 2 outs…

Almost as exciting was that Phil Coke got 3 people out not only without giving up a run but even a hit or walk.

And the Class of 84 got to watch.

I hope no one went home early.

Luis Gomez
Luis Gomez
9 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

El Buitre! What a nice feeling is to know that people in Detroit still have good memories about him.

Daniel Longmire
Daniel Longmire
9 years ago

Jose Altuve became the first player since at least 1914 to have two or more hits and stolen bases in four consecutive games. Only eight players have done that in three straight contests, and just two others managed to swipe multiple bags four games in a row, the last being Ray Chapman in 1917.