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Yesterday both New Hampshire and Vancouver had walk-off wins. On Friday both were rained out. That left Buffalo and Dunedin who both lost to a walk-off in the ninth. Buffalo had to face Stephen Strasburg while bad pitching and defense cost Dunedin.

Buffalo 1 Rochester 2

Portland at New Hampshire - postponed

Spokane at Vancouver - postponed

Dunedin 4 Clearwater 5


This is what I noted from yesterday's games.


All the Buffalo major league hopefuls got to prove themselves against a major league pitcher on Friday, one Stephen Strasburg. None of them passed the test, Nate Lukes got the only hit off Strasburg with a sixth inning single.


Meanwhile Maximo Castillo nearly matched Strasburg. Maximo went 6.1 innings with two hits allowed. One was a home run, the other was erased on a double play. Maximo also walked the first hitter of the game but Gabriel Moreno threw him out attempting to steal. He had five strikeouts and now has a 0.50 ERA in AAA.


The Bisons got their run in the eighth, Chavez Young singled and scored on a double play. That led to the ninth with Matt Gage on the mound. Gage has been reliable this season but a lead off single started the trouble. With one out a high hopper to third was ruled a single and Eric Stamets throw bounced in front of Zach Collins for an error to put runners at second and third. A walk then loaded the bases. Joe Biagini was summoned but another high hopper to third was enough to get the runner home.


One of the Rochester pitchers was Patrick Murphy who has a 2.31 ERA in 12 games.


Dahian Santos was on the mound for the Jays and when Damiano Palmegiani hit a three run home run in the fifth inning, it looked like a win for the Jays. The Jays added another run in the seventh to make it 4-0. But the Phillies got back in the game when the Jays third baseman, Francisco Fajardo, made two errors in the bottom of the seventh. The second error came with runners on second and third with two outs. It would turn out to be critical as the Phillies now trailed by two runs.


Geison Urbaez came in to get the final out of the eighth. But in the ninth he waled the second hitter and hit the third. The next hitter singled to load the bases. Urbaez then induced a ground out that scored a run but made it a 4-3 game. Another single made it a 4-4 game and another hit batter re-loaded the bases. A final single provided the final blow.


That relief appearance ruined a good start from Dahian Santos. Santos pitched just four innings, allowing one hit while striking out seven. However he did need 77 pitches, 46 strikes and 31 balls. Estiven Machado was the top hitter going 3-4. After a slow start Machado hit .299 in May, a good month for the 19 year old.





Three Stars

Third Star - Estiven Machado

Second Star - Damiano Palmegiani

First Star - Maximo Castillo


Boxes

Walk-Off Troubles | 7 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Dr B - Saturday, June 04 2022 @ 07:35 PM EDT (#414875) #
Throughout his minor league career Castillo has been a model of...adequacy. He seems to keep the ball int he park, he doesn't walk too many, and has kept a quite respectable strike out to walk ratio of 3.15. He never crops up in the conversation of prospects -- at least not in positive way -- and adequacy is not a portent of success as a major league starter. However, decent minor league starters, are a source of major league relievers, (c.f. Romano, J and others), so he may get his chance as a bullpen arm one day.
John Northey - Saturday, June 04 2022 @ 07:57 PM EDT (#414876) #
Maximo Castillo is an interesting one - signed as an IFA way back on Sept. 25, 2015, he has steadily climbed the ladder - forgein rookie ball at first, then NA rookie, then A, then A+, then AA, and now AAA. He was a 7K/9 guy for a long time, then this year he jumped to 10.1 K/9. His BB/9 climbed too, up to 3.6 vs a 2.6 career figure before. His biggest shift though was in H/9 down to 5.0 from a career of 8.6.

Steady growth of a level a year pretty much (started in AA this year but unless he regresses he ain't going back down). Hopefully he keeps this up and earns a promotion in 2023. One never can have too much starting pitching. Ryu might be toast (read that his injury could easily require Tommy John which would knock him out for 2022 and most of 2023, at which point his contract ends so if that is the case the Jays might just release him after the season is over and eat his contract). If that happens then Castillo has a slot to fight for along with Pearson, Hayden Juenger, Trent Palmer, and whoever else is around (most of the others in AA/AAA have had a lot of troubles this year). At age 23 he certainly has potential still despite being around since 2016 in the system.
uglyone - Saturday, June 04 2022 @ 08:17 PM EDT (#414878) #
I would say Castillo has been more good than adequate....especially since he's mostly been a year young for his levels.

Except for last year when he was at AA at age appropriate 22 and just wasn't very good. Not even really adequate.

This year he might be back on track tho.
Nigel - Saturday, June 04 2022 @ 09:49 PM EDT (#414883) #
At the Nat tonight. Unfortunately, I have rough seats for really looking at Tiedmann. I will say this, if there are 97 better prospects than him then minor league ball has never been in better shape.
greenfrog - Saturday, June 04 2022 @ 10:21 PM EDT (#414885) #
I’m sure he’s being scouted a fair bit, too. A rebuilding club would love to add him to their farm system.
Mike Green - Sunday, June 05 2022 @ 05:57 AM EDT (#414887) #
Presumably, one question with Tiedemann is whether his arm will stand up to a starter's workload. They took him out last night after 5 innings and 68 pitches, which is absolutely fine. But for prospect purposes, you might rank him behind a 21 year old in double A with somewhat less impressive stuff and performance who has shown the ability to throw 150 innings in a season without blowing out his arm.
bpoz - Sunday, June 05 2022 @ 10:14 AM EDT (#414892) #
There are a few top prospect lists. Andrew Painter is ranked #72, Tiedemann #99 and Dahian Santos is not ranked. Tiedemann is about 1 year older than Painter and Santos is the same age. Tiedemann's results over 2 levels is is more dominating than the other 2. Painter and Santos are basically identical age and stats wise.

Painter and Tiedemann should climb the list by the end of the season. Santos may still not make the top 100. It is very likely that all 3 will be promoted this year at some point. If so then Tiedemann has to deal with/dominate AA and the other 2 A+. It should be interesting.
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