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And nothing is more wonderful than man. But Sophocles has been gone a long time. For example, Wilfredo Ledezma is tied for the major league lead in wins.


That Ledezma has won three games, while Daisuke Matsuzaka is scuffling along at 1-2, is pretty bizarre. Boston's new ace was extremely impressive against Toronto last night, striking out 10 Blue Jays in six innings. But he had an unexpected hiccup in the fourth inning. After walking just two batters in his first 17 AL innings, he suddenly bunched three of them (his only ones of this night) around an Overbay single. Matsuzaka righted the ship after that (striking out five of the next six hitters) but two runs had scored, and that was all Gustavo Chacin was going to need.

At least the single run the Red Sox scored was one more than they were able to push across the plate the last time Matsuzaka worked, when they were utterly overwhelmed by the Utterly Overwhelming (if not Downright Awesome) Felix Hernandez.

Now it wouldn't be a Gustavo Chacin start without a home run by the other team, but you have to like the way Gus took care of business last night. Instead of allowing three of them, he gave up one that was hit roughly as far as three of them put together. And with no one on base, which is also typical of the way Chacin manages these things...

The Braves still have the best record in the majors, although by the time this Goes to Virtual Press in the morning that distinction may (or may not) belong to the Dodgers. John Smoltz picked up career win 195 last night, and the outfielder they have playing second base chipped in with four hits. Kelly Johnson is also their leadoff hitter, and the Braves have been happy with his defense, and the nine walks he's drawn at the top of the order in the first dozen games. But you do want your leadoff batter to be above the Mendoza line, especially when your cleanup hitter is also hitting .180 something. This early, of course, four hits will get you there. Say, what happens when Andruw starts hitting?

Alex Rodriguez. Be afraid. Be very afraid. I don't think he's going to hit 70 home runs... at least not by the All Star Break. But this guy is on a mission.

I have some further praise for the new broadcast crew. For one thing, Ashby made me laugh out loud. Howarth was noting that not only was a sizeable press corps in town to watch Matsuzaka, but the game was on Japanese television where it was 10:00 in the morning, on the far side of the International Date Line. This meant, as Jerry observed, that Matsuzaka was throwing a pitch on Tuesday night, while his fans at home were watching on Wednesday morning? "Wednesday morning?" said Ashby. "So they already knew who won?"

Well, I laughed.

Anyway, I think Ashby's personality is a much better fit to share the booth with Howarth. We all know what Jerry's like - if you don't like him, you find him smarmy and smug; even if you like him, and I like him a lot, you recognize that he is just relentlessly upbeat and positive. Two of them in the booth at the same time, which is what we've had since Tom Cheek got sick, just doesn't work. This is so much better.

As I say, I like Howarth a lot, and not just because he's one of the nicer people you have a hope of meeting down at the ball park - I especially appreciate that he is always focused on what's happening on the field. And as someone who used to score games over the radio, this is a big deal for me. I was always very grateful that he made sure to give the official scoring on every play he called, and that he even generally managed to review the ones he wasn't doing the play-by-play on. Tom was always occasionally prone to telling stories, and leaving stuff out. So I'm glad to see Howarth working with someone whose approach and strengths are a much better fit with his own.

I'll be in the house tonight, and I'll be curious to see how much of Matsuzaka's press corps has hung around to watch Tomo Ohka tonight. Ohka, apparently, has always felt a bit overlooked in his own country - and he's had some pretty decent major league success himself. It was perhaps his misfortune to have his best years in Montreal, which is both on the wrong side of the continent and not exactly a team of enormous interest outside of Montreal itself. Or inside Montreal, for that matter.

At any rate, after a couple of disappointing starts to kick off his season, T.O. may feel he has something to prove tonight. Could be good.

18 April 2007: Wonders Are Many | 28 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Mike Green - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 07:29 AM EDT (#166071) #
A-Rod's 21 RBIs after 12 games is pretty impressive.  I can't remember anyone ending up April with 40 RBIs or more, and he might do it.
Chuck - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 08:06 AM EDT (#166072) #
An interesting essay on Manny Ramirez.
Maldoff - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 08:56 AM EDT (#166073) #
While Janssen has been pitching quite well, I wonder how long he can last if he keep going the way he is. Through 9 and 2/3 innings, he has only struck out 2 batters, for a KBF of 5.88%.  In addition, he has an insane BABIP of .179.  If that reverts to the mean, Janssen will need a whole bunch more K's to keep his ERA below 2 (as it is now).
robertdudek - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 09:32 AM EDT (#166074) #
<a href="http://coachkw.com/dudek/?p=15#more-15">Daisuke</a>

At the link is my take on what happened to Daisuke in the 4th inning and a few other things.


Joanna - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 09:50 AM EDT (#166075) #

Hats off to Gus last night.  The solo bomb is way less damaging than 2 walks, a bloop single and a solo bomb. He threw a lot of strikes.  I think he likes big crowds and pressure.

Dice K was very impressive, but he does have his weaknesses.  That inside pitch to Wells that he thought was strike 3 and wasn't called.  He pouted a bit and lost focus.  He lost command of his fastball and the Jays were just patiently letting him meltdown.  He regrouped very nicely.  It will be interesting to watch.  He true achilles heel is apparently Venezualans.

Jbar - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 10:03 AM EDT (#166076) #
It certainly was painful watching Clayton bail DiceK out in that 4th.  He's just walked two guys and Clayton goes up there hacking...and swinging at balls.  I would imagine that if a pitcher has just walked two in a row, it might not be a bad idea to MAKE him throw a strike before swinging.  We got away with it thanks to great pitching, but I thought that AB showed shockingly poor plate discipline from someone who's supposed to be a veteran hitter.
Maldoff - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 10:17 AM EDT (#166077) #

From Buster Only at ESPN.com:

" A rival talent evaluator on B.J. Ryan's injury: "You could see that there was something wrong with his arm action; it just wasn't right. But to be honest, that's what we're seeing in Roy Halladay lately, too. His arm action doesn't look right sometimes." "

RhyZa - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 10:24 AM EDT (#166078) #

-Well as veteran as he is, he is still very much a near auto-out.  To be fair, some of our bigger names have struggled just as mightily as Royce has, but the difference is no one would consider their performance thus far to be an overachievement based on their career standards.  Speaking of which, the Big Hurt's line for April last year:

2006

avg  obp slg ops

.190 .264 .405 .669

2007

avg  obp slg ops

.191 .321 .277 .598

From May on, he didn't duck under .950 OPS once.  Hopefully the trend continues.

-Dice was impressive indeed.  I have the feeling there will be some nights where he will be flat out unhittable.

-Gus doesn't seem to have that much support anymore from the BJ faithful, but somehow he keeps on stringing together these starts where he keeps his team in the game.

tstaddon - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 10:33 AM EDT (#166079) #
We should probably stop riding Gus so hard. He's a Sox killer, he's more than ten games over .500 lifetime and his career ERA is right around 4.00. He might not be the flashiest guy out there every fifth day, but if we believe his performance last year was hindered by arm trouble (as there is mounting evidence to support), he's basically been an inexpensive gem.
Maldoff - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 11:14 AM EDT (#166082) #

I think that most people around here are Gus supporters.....just not as a third starter.  I think he is a tremendous fourth starter, and that is his optimal spot in a rotation.

hugo - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 11:22 AM EDT (#166083) #
Chacin's career ERA+ is 112. Even in 2006 it was 93. Ted Lilly's career ERA+ is 99. Gil Meche's is 96. Josh Beckett's career ERA+ is 110. Lilly, Meche, and Beckett make $10, $11, and $13 million a year, respectfully. Would I rather have Beckett or Lilly or Meche, all things (like Salary!) being equal? Sure. I know his peripherals don't really indicate long-term success, but for as long as Chacin can keep it up, he provides excellent value to the ballclub. http://www.bluebirdbanter.com
Shama - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 11:53 AM EDT (#166085) #
Another thing I like about the addition of Ashby to the broadcast booth is that they've gone back to taking turns doing play-by-play/colour each inning (as it was with Tom). This definitely makes listening to an entire game more interesting. Of course, just about anybody would have been an improvement over Sawkiw...
Ryan Day - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 12:24 PM EDT (#166087) #
Has Gus been taking lessons from Doc and Towers? Only one walk in 17 innings is pretty spiffy. The home runs are still a bit excessive, but he looks to be making some significant improvements in his approach.
Seamus - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 12:44 PM EDT (#166090) #
What's up with these Halladay concerns?

Wasnt there another article the other day concerned that he was only hitting 89 on the radar?

Something being wrong with him too is terrifying...but he DID just throw 10 innings, 1 run, 0 walks...

John Northey - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 12:47 PM EDT (#166091) #
I think that is the key to Gus being successful long term, getting those walks down. 3.13 BB/9 IP career (as of right now..gotta love BR). With the dingers he gives up - 1.2 per 9 IP - you gotta keep those walks below 2.
John Northey - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 01:07 PM EDT (#166092) #
OK, I just about choked on my lunch when I checked some details on BaseballReference.com about the 07 Jays.

Did you know that the Jays, right now, are, in the AL...
#1 for Avg, Slg, 2B
#2 for OBP, H, 3B, Saves, Wins

The teams ERA is #4, Runs Scored #3, and has a team OPS of 121

This is with Thomas OPS of 68, Overbay at 94 and Zaun at 95. Everyone else (yes, even Clayton) is 100 or better with Glaus and McDonald at 200+.

#1 in the AL for BB/9 IP ratio is Chacin at 0.51 followed by Towers at 0.68. The SO-BB ratio is reversed with Towers at 10.0 and Chacin at 9.0 and no one else above 5. No one on the Jays makes the top 5 for ERA though as 5 guys are below 1.50 right now with Felix Hernandez at 0.00 over 17 IP (not even an unearned run yet).

Of course, to help prove it is early (if McDonald hasn't done that already) Tampa Bay is #2 in runs scored. To show the world hasn't gone totally crazy the Yankees are #1 for runs while Tampa is last in pitching (6.64 ERA - ERA+ of 67).

The funny stat of the day... the oldest player in the AL is Hernandez (Roberto) and the youngest is Hernandez (Felix). Roberto is double Felix's age - Felix was born in '86. And to make us older Jay fans feel, well, older...#2 in age? Mike Timlin (rookie for the '91 Jays, saved the final game of the '92 WS). I just hope Julio Franco keeps kicking in the majors as he is more than 10 years older than me.
Alex Obal - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 01:18 PM EDT (#166094) #
One thing Robert touches on is that Janssen, who's been really good and has certainly earned his Leverage-O's, looked pretty awful last night. He was uncharacteristically wild in the 8th and got bailed out big-time by Lugo's loud DP. He's now thrown 9.2 innings in 6 games over 16 days, which seems like a lot for a starter-turned-reliever especially once you factor in all the bullpen throwing. Maybe fatigue was a factor.

In any event, I'd make a conscious effort to rest CJ completely until Friday. Perhaps he can find the fountain of strikeouts while he's at it and improve that 5.88% K rate.
BaseballNorth - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 02:47 PM EDT (#166104) #

I think I originally posted this in the wrong thread...just want to give some credit for the strong defensive play last night

Some defensive kudos are much deserved for Rios and Smith last night - Smith for the timely double play everyone's been talking about and Rios for being all over RF last night.

Vernon bailed the Jays out a couple times vs Detroit on Sunday making Towers look great...and I think Rios did much of the same on Tuesday for Chacin.  I haven't checked the stats but I'm pretty sure Rios had around 7 put outs Tuesday night - maybe even more?  Nothing too spectacular but very solid, making a few catches ranging into foul territory.

I'm REALLY glad JP didn't deal Rios for a SP this offseason, not only is he finding his stroke with the bat - this guy is solid in the field.  He's got the range of a CF and the arm of Jesse Barfield.

Chuck - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 03:14 PM EDT (#166108) #

Smith for the timely double play everyone's been talking about

Didn't Smith just basically catch a ball that was hit right to him? Was the play any more spectacular than that? (I was watching the game but there were distractions.)

jjdynomite - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 03:22 PM EDT (#166110) #

Chuck, the ball was hit right to Smith but it was a hard shot, and it was the de facto game-saving play.  He did almost flub the relay, though.

Along the same lines, one could state that Overbay's RBI single was also a hard shot -- that Lugo should have handled.

(Note: I still wish Lugo was in a Jays uni.  I assume he would have done something better than striking out on three swings with the bases loaded and one out like a certain SS on the roster). 

Mike Green - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 03:57 PM EDT (#166114) #
Kudos to Gregg Zaun for support of a worthy and appropriate charity. Not that I needed another reason to like him.
Rickster - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 04:05 PM EDT (#166118) #

Janssen also got hit hard on Saturday against Detroit. He gave up a few hard hit balls that were right at defenders. I don't think he's fooling anybody up there and will get hammered soon unless he can get back on track.

MrElbertBuffin - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 04:19 PM EDT (#166122) #
I haven't checked the stats but I'm pretty sure Rios had around 7 put outs Tuesday night - maybe even more?

I happened to be scoring the game last night - Rios had six put outs, five of which were behind Chacin.  Two of those five were in foul territory.  Interestingly, all five of his put outs behind Chacin came in the fifth and sixth innings - and the only out that he didn't make during those innings (that is the second out of the sixth inning) was a 4-3 put out that came with the Ortiz shift on.  Lots of balls hit to right in that stretch. 
FanfromTheIsland - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 04:26 PM EDT (#166124) #
If we can outscore Boston by a large amount in tonight's game, maybe Jamie Vermilyea will throw his first big league pitch.
Newton - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 04:41 PM EDT (#166126) #

A few notes from last nights game:

-Manny Ramirez hit the ball hard each time he was at the dish, seems to be really locking in, Ohka will need to be careful tonight

-Wells beating out that infield single with 1 out in the 4th was the decisive moment in the game.  But for that play Matsuzaka probably would have gone 8 scoreless innings and struck out 14 or so.   In a 1 run game getting on base for the imposing Thomas rattled Daisuke.

-Frasor didn't allow for any drama upon entering a game where any baserunner would have made things interesting

-These Jays are scrappy

 

Petey Baseball - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 05:10 PM EDT (#166131) #

Nice to see the Jays catch a break last night on some close calls, and the hard hit DP by Lugo with runners on.  In order to put winning streaks together, you need these types of charms to come. I also thought Casey was really out of sorts last night and it looked like, to me at least, that his mechanics were off and the ball was flying all over the place as a result.

Jason Smith's aggressiveness at the plate is refreshing.  Its nice to see a guy who is not afraid to put a good swing on the first fastball he sees, especially when it is a short and compact swing like Jason's. I thought last nights ball he hit to the track was gone off the bat, but it appears he may not have quite centered it perfectly.  I have always refused to complain about Vernon Wells and his lack of patience, because his numbers at the end of the year will speak for themselves. 

Gustavo Chacin does nothing but win, and yet people are still questioning his major league ability.  To hell with strikeout totals and flyball ratios, this guy knows how to pitch and has done nothing but bring positive results to the Blue Jay pitching rotation. So what if he's not a prototypical top notch starter......he keeps his team in the game and any compotent offence will give this guy a good major league career wherever he goes.  His herky jerky style only adds to his deception,to go along with an excellent cut fastball that keeps right handers in check. Good on Gus, keep up the excellent work.

Should Towers and Chacin keep playing to ther strengths, we could be in for a fun season. I'll admit, it took Sunday's performance to prove that Towers can still pitch to convince me that we're gonna still be ok.  But consider me convinced. Put it this way, if the Jays were hitting the cover off the ball and not pitching a lick  (like say, last season with the injuries in the rotation) then I would still have doubts.  This season looks potentially different, as the rotation is healthy and pitching to expectations.

My last comment regards Aaron Hill.  The man quite frankly, is a gem. His power seems to be developing, his defence is rock solid, and his speed and hustle is vastly underated.  Beating out that tapper on Friday night against Brandon Inge and the Tigers convinced me that Aaron can dig it with the big boys (ie Rios, Reed).  This guy is developing into a damn good ball player in front of our very eyes and I for one, am loving every second of it. The re-emergence of the Blue Jays on a league wide scope, will have as much to do with this man's efforts than anyone else on the team.

 

 

 

Rob - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 05:51 PM EDT (#166132) #
Just in case anyone was wondering about Roberts' defensive positions at Syracuse this year (what, I was the only one?), he's played 9 innings at 2B, 25 at third, and seven at first. Compare this to last year, when he played 75 games at second and five at third base.

Useless side note: the first baseman Roberts is 3-4 with two homers, while the other Roberts had only 4 hits in 24 AB.

jeff mcl - Wednesday, April 18 2007 @ 06:51 PM EDT (#166137) #
Wow, in a move reeking of unneccesary early season desparation/lunacy, the Phillies have moved Brett Myers to the bullpen and brought Lieber into the rotation:

http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070418&content_id=1916795&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb

If it's a reliever they want, can we please trade them another one or two of ours for Myers?

18 April 2007: Wonders Are Many | 28 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.