Jump to content

at. WHITE SOX, 8/06


Sessh

Recommended Posts

<center><b><FONT SIZE="+3"><FONT COLOR="#ff9900">B</FONT><FONT COLOR="#c07400">a</FONT><FONT COLOR="#804d00">l</FONT><FONT COLOR="#402700">t</FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000">i</FONT><FONT COLOR="#402700">m</FONT><FONT COLOR="#804d00">o</FONT><FONT COLOR="#c07400">r</FONT><FONT COLOR="#ff9900">e</FONT><FONT COLOR="#c07400"> </FONT><FONT COLOR="#804d00">O</FONT><FONT COLOR="#402700">r</FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000">i</FONT><FONT COLOR="#402700">o</FONT><FONT COLOR="#804d00">l</FONT><FONT COLOR="#c07400">e</FONT><FONT COLOR="#ff9900">s</FONT></FONT>

@

<FONT SIZE="+3"><FONT COLOR="#ffffff">C</FONT><FONT COLOR="#f7f7f8">h</FONT><FONT COLOR="#eeeff0">i</FONT><FONT COLOR="#e5e6e7">c</FONT><FONT COLOR="#dcdddf">a</FONT><FONT COLOR="#a6a7a8">g</FONT><FONT COLOR="#6f6f70">o</FONT><FONT COLOR="#373838"> </FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000">W</FONT><FONT COLOR="#373838">h</FONT><FONT COLOR="#6f6f70">i</FONT><FONT COLOR="#a6a7a8">t</FONT><FONT COLOR="#dcdddf">e</FONT><FONT COLOR="#e5e6e7"> </FONT><FONT COLOR="#eeeff0">S</FONT><FONT COLOR="#f7f7f8">o</FONT><FONT COLOR="#ffffff">x</FONT></FONT>

Game 2 (7:10)

<IMG SRC="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-4evt_yR1gMU/UzTdlP6fzzI/AAAAAAAAA-c/aQl2QKl01Gk/s1600/Orioles3.gif" HEIGHT="80" WIDTH="80" BORDER="0"> |=======| <IMG SRC="http://chicago.whitesox.mlb.com/mlb/images/team_logos/social_media/og/cws.jpg" HEIGHT="80" WIDTH="80" BORDER="0">

Team Records

62-46 |=======| 52-57

T-1st, +2.0 |=======| 3rd, -10.0

Streaks / L10

+1, Won 4 of 5 / 4-6 |=======| -1, Lost 5 of 8 / 4-6

Team Offensive Rankings (AL)

BA: .262 (6th) |=======| BA: .249 (11th)

OPS: .770 (2nd) |=======| OPS: .709 (13th)

Runs: 500 (6th) |=======| Runs: 425 (13th)

HR: 158 (1st) |=======| HR: 106 (13th)

Last 7 Days

BA: .217 (10th) |=======| BA: .229 (8th)

OPS: .651 10th) |=======| OPS: .652 (9th)

Runs: 23 (10th) |=======| Runs: 19 (14th)

HR: 9 (9th) |=======| HR: 7 (11th)

Team Pitching Rankings (AL)

ERA: 4.20 (6th) |=======| ERA: 4.05 (5th)

WHIP: 1.38 (12th) |=======| WHIP: 1.36 (10th)

BAA: .258 (10th) |=======| BAA: .257 (8th)

TB: 1524 (6th) |=======| TB: 1510 (5th)

Last 7 Days

ERA: 4.14 (6th) |=======| ERA: 5.14 (11th)

WHIP: 1.27 (8th) |=======| WHIP: 1.42 (11th)

BAA: .220 (5th) |=======| BAA: .247 (9th)

TB: 94 (6th) |=======| TB: 107 (10th)

Starters

ERA: 4.91 (12th) |=======| ERA: 4.17 (6th)

WHIP: 1.44 (13th) |=======| WHIP: 1.31 (4th)

BAA: .272 (12th) |=======| BAA: .257 (5th)

TB: 1025 (6th) |=======| TB: 1050 (10th)

Relievers

ERA: 3.06 (1st) |=======| ERA: 3.89 (8th)

WHIP: 1.28 (6th) |=======| WHIP: 1.48 (15th)

BAA: .236 (5th) |=======| BAA: .256 (11th)

TB: 499 (8th) |=======| TB: 460 (3rd)

NEW: Quality Start minimum requirements

* - Game ERA must be 4.00 or less with at least six innings pitched

30285.png&w=350&h=254

Chris Tillman

(14-3)

3.46 (1.22/.234)

118K / 51BB, 15HR

QS: 12

</b>

After throwing four straight of seven innings and one run allowed, he has fallen off again struggling in his last two starts though he was able to hold Toronto to two runs in the last one, but was unable to complete the sixth inning. He still finished July with a 2.79 ERA after the 5.19 he put up in June and one can only hope that he isn't starting to tire a bit as we head into August. With 51 walks, he is well on his way to a career high there and will shatter his previous high of 68 in 206.1 innings in 2013. Actually, the walk issue started last season (64 in 173 IP) and has certainly carried over into this season. Fortunately for him, he is also on his way to a career low H/9 which has, so far, offset the walk problem and is also reflected in his .234 BAA. His previous career low in a full season was .238 in 2014 where he allowed 189 hits in 207.1 innings to 66 walks. In 138 2016 innings, Tillman has allowed 118 hits and 51 walks. So long as he can keep the hits down, the walks shouldn't hurt him. If that slips however, it is not likely to turn out well. I won't lie, it makes me a little uneasy. In the six starts this season where he has given up more hits than innings pitched, he has been clobbered in five of them with the sixth being against the inept KC offense which was a rare zero-walks game. Four of those five have come in the last two months and three in the last eight starts. So, it all comes down to whether he can maintain the ability to keep hits off the board for the rest of the season. He has good numbers against the White Sox at Cell Phone Carrier Field. The WHIP is on the high side as is the BAA, but he has been able to keep the runs off the board and will look to continue that here.

Splits & Sits

272 vs. left: .236/.316/.371, 8HR

291 vs. right: .233/.301/.340, 7HR

Bases Empty: .243

RISP: .234

RISP w/2 outs: .273

Men on w/2 outs: .218

Man on 3rd, < 2 outs: .417

2016 Away (10 starts)

(6-2) 3.13 (1.12/.208), 7HR, 24BB in 63.1 IP

Career @ U.S. Cellular Field (3 starts)

(2-0) 2.04 (1.30/.279), HR

Career vs. CWS (5 starts)

(3-1) 3.29 (1.43/.264), 2HR

vs. Batter

Melky Cabrera (24 AB) .375, 2 2B, HR, 6RBI

Dioner Navarro (21 AB) .286, 2B, 2RBI

Alex Avila 1/9, S-HR

Avisail Garcia 1/6, RBI

Jose Abreu 3/5, 2B, 3B, S-HR, BB

Justin Morneau 3/4, 2B, 2BB

Adam Eaton 0/3

J.B. Shuck 0/3

Todd Frazier 0/2, RBI, BB

Carlos Sanchez 0/2

VS

33696.png&w=350&h=254

Carlos Rodon

(2-8)

4.67 (1.54/.297)

98K / 34BB, 17HR

QS: 7

Last 3 starts (17 IP): (0-2) 7.41 (1.76), 6HR

Rodon has really struggled over the last three starts mostly due to allowing a pair of home runs in each start and giving up 25 hits in 17 innings. He is also getting pounded by righties and has yet to find an answer for that. He was pretty good last year for Chicago and has cut back quite a bit on the walks, but he's giving up more hits and way more home runs. Rodon was having an OK season with a 4.24 ERA through June, but hit the DL in July with a sprained wrist after apparently slipping on some steps. Both starts he did make in July, one before and one after the DL, were both bad. He allowed five runs and two homers in both starts.

Splits & Sits

86 vs. left: .210/.247/.256, HR

351 vs. right: .319/.381/.464, 16HR

Bases Empty: .281

RISP: .311

RISP w/2 outs: .250

Men on w/2 outs: .288

Man on 3rd, < 2 outs: .429

2016 Home (9 starts)

(1-4) 5.06 (1.56/.297), 8HR

Career vs Baltimore (2 starts, 1 relief)

(0-2) 4.85 (1.31/.235), 2HR

vs. Batter

Chris Davis 1/6

Nolan Reimold 2/6, HR, 3RBI

J.J. Hardy 1/5

Adam Jones 1/5, 2B, RBI

Manny Machado 2/5, 2B

Jonathan Schoop 2/5, HR, 3RBI

Mark Trumbo 0/5

Matt Wieters 1/3

Steve Pearce 1/2, BB

Caleb Joseph 0/2, BB

Gallardo tosses the rare quality start to continue his success against the White Sox outpitching Gonzalez who was let down by his defense a little bit, but wasn't terrible. The Orioles come up with the big win to kick off the road trip as Alvarez stays hot with the two homers and they get to the Chicago bullpen in the eighth, but then give three right back in the bottom of the eighth and got out of it with a double play that the umpires got the call wrong on even with the replay which is pathetic. Still, a clear and stupid base running error by Navarro, but he was clearly safe. Be that as it may, the Orioles barely hold on to win the game and have now won four of five heading into game two of the series. The Sox may be fired up tomorrow after getting shafted tonight in that inning. They may not have won or tied the game, but they were robbed of the chance.

It would be crazy to take Rodon over Tillman here. Rodon has been going through some heavy struggles lately after being pretty consistent prior to this rough stretch. Tillman has struggled over the last two though came out of his last one in good shape. He also has good numbers against the White Sox at Cell Phone Carrier Field.

Boston and the Dodgers are playing their game out west currently leading 4-0 and Toronto beats KC 4-3 with Devon Travis hitting a lead off homer and a two out homer in the ninth to untie the game to get the Jays the win as they stay tied for first with the Orioles. Cleveland loses as they continue to falter and Detroit starts another winning streak beating the Mets and have won nine of 10 and are tied with Boston for the second WC temporarily until the Boston game ends. Houston and Texas began their three game series tonight with Houston winning 5-0 behind a masterpiece three hit complete game shutout thrown by Dallas Keuchel. The Astros have been cold and will need to show up for this series against the scuffling Rangers who have never really heated back up again, but still have a 5.5 game lead over Houston in the division. The Astros trail in the WC race by three games and will have to get hot again to make one more strong push and they will have to do it, at least for awhile, without Lance McCullers. The M's are up 6-3 in the third inning against the Angels and are five games back in the WC race. Also, the Twins have won seven of 10 and while I know they're out of it, I am quite surprised at how well they have been playing since the start of July. Where was this for the first three months? The Twins may be a contender next season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 445
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Finally get to watch the game on TV again after a week of having to listen to the radio broadcasts. I don't mind the radio but after 3 games in a row it gets a little annoying.

Dog, I love baseball on WJZ. Joe is the man. I fact I'm in my man cave tore up and chillin waiting to talk Orioles baseball with my peeps at OH. We shall win big tonight and all have a nice evening.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dog, I love baseball on WJZ. Joe is the man. I fact I'm in my man cave tore up and chillin waiting to talk Orioles baseball with my peeps at OH. We shall win big tonight and all have a nice evening.

I got back just in time to get tore up myself. :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Posts

    • 2. The Other Baby Birds We get it, Orioles: You’ve got talent. Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson, and Jackson Holliday are consensus top prospects from three consecutive years, which is ridiculous when you stop and think about it. They’re slam dunk great hitters, all of them. They even have the same flowing golden locks and questionable facial hair choices. (In Henderson’s defense, his mustache is allegedly only still around because he broke out when shaving it off.) The future of the Orioles is a great baseball club that looks like a prep school lacrosse team. Plot twist: Those guys have been a mixed bag so far this year. Henderson is mashing, to the tune of a 171 wRC+, but Rutschman hasn’t found his power stroke yet; he checks in at a disappointing 106 wRC+. Holliday got a late start, and he’s still searching for his first extra-base hit. In aggregate, the three have put up a 110 wRC+, not what you’d hope for from a trio of franchise saviors. Not to worry, though. The other prospects the Orioles have amassed in recent years are more than picking up the slack. Michael Baumann — our Michael Baumann, not Baltimore’s — already covered Colton Cowser’s hot start, with the 250 wRC+ and homers to parts of the stadium that no one was even sure existed. But that might undersell how outrageously fun his start has been. The nicknames are coming in hot and heavy. Fans are already calling him “The Milkman.” The Camden Yards faithful moo every time he comes to the plate. “They’re not booing, they’re saying (word)” is a pretty common sports trope, but “They’re not booing, they’re mooing” is definitely a new one for me. Cow masks at the stadium are just par for the course now: Cowser might be turning fans into cow people, but another O’s youngster is breaking out just as much at the same time. Jordan Westburg isn’t a rookie – he played half a season last year and looked like a steady contributor. He’s off to nearly as hot of a start as Cowser, though, and he’s doing it in huge spots. He keeps coming up with runners on base, and he keeps racking up extra bases and RBI. Is his start sustainable? Probably not. It’s hard to run a .349 BABIP, hard to have as many extra-base hits as singles, hard to barrel 12.5% of your batted balls and make hard contact 62.5% of the time without huge raw power. But his approach looks legit, and it’s not like he’s hitting those doubles and home runs by accident. He has a solid approach and a fly ball swing. The stadium isn’t a plus for him given the bite out of the left field fence, but he looks like a nice everyday contributor at worst, and I’m willing to dream on a little more than that. He can also handle second and third defensively, which suits Baltimore’s roster quite well. That doesn’t even mention Coby Mayo and Heston Kjerstad, who are absolutely annihilating Triple-A at the moment. Connor Norby and Kyle Stowers have started hot. Yes, the O’s are headlined by their flaxen-haired top trio, but there are more reinforcements waiting in the wings, and the other birds are helping to drive the offense right now. https://blogs.fangraphs.com/five-things-i-liked-or-didnt-like-this-week-april-19/
    • Kremer pitched well. Not super dominant or anything but well enough to win the game. If Akin gets the third out, he leaves with 5.2 IP and 1 ER and nobody would complain. He was in the zone all night and did well to get a huge out on Perez after the blown call on the Witt walk.
    • Also, the 3-2 pitch to Witt that was called ball four for the first walk had been called a strike all night.  In fact, far worse pitches had been called strikes, especially for the Royals’ pitchers.   And were called strikes afterwards.   
    • I don’t think they need to be only for homegrown guys. Just the right guys! I think Burnes is a right guy. Now if we can’t extend him before he hits free agency and he gets 10 year 30 million per from someone you have to walk away. Id try an extension that has a higher AAV but a shorter term. Say you expect him to get $30 per for 10 in free agency. Then give him 7 years and perhaps an opt out after 4. 
    • You have to find a way to get him on the ML team. 
    • Yeah I was hopeful for him but after seeing last night (where it all caught up to him) I just don't think he has the stuff any more. He used to have an excellent 2 seamer with good velocity and arm side run but that doesn't seem to exist anymore with the velocity drop.
    • Well I was just a peon when I worked there, so it’s not like that experience mattered in my decision. And my view on extensions isn’t you are paying for past years. Hell, I would sign Holliday today and Gunnar is only a year into things. The issue with the extensions is that you are already have the player(s) locked up for most of the years anyway. So, when you sign them to an extension, you are guaranteeing 7-9 years but really all you are gaining is 2-3 years.  It’s a lot of money and guarantees for only a few years. Now, the one thing that I have talked about that is important here is if you don’t extend them, do you look to trade them 1-2 years away from free agency because you don’t want to lose a talent like Gunnar, for example, for nothing.  So, maybe the extension buys you a few additional years on top of what are already getting.  OTOH, you may just decide to go for it with the player and lose them for nothing. I guess you always have the option of going the Tatis route and go 14-15 years but I’m not sure of anyone who is advocating for that or would be ok with that.  As for your business decision point here..I think that’s probably the biggest reason you do it…because players like the commitment and the fans like the commitment and there is value to that.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...