Tag Archive | "Final Score"

Minor League Magic

Minor League baseball is truly a joy.  Seeing a combination of players that may or may not be the next best thing in your organization can carry a feeling of something special on any given night.

Last night in Omaha, the AAA affiliate of the Kansas City Royals, the stars aligned in a way that happens very seldom.  A combination of rehabbing major leaguers, top prospects, and an ace level starting pitcher just starting his 2012 conditioning converged on Werner Park to put on a show for a sell-out crowd.

Roy Oswalt would toe the mound for the visiting Round Rock Express, finding Royals prospect Jake Odorizzi opposing him in relief of another rehabbing major leaguer, Everett Teaford.  The Storm Chasers’ lineup would feature Chris Getz and Salvador Perez beginning their rehab assignments for the parent club as well as one of the top professional hitters at any level, Wil Myers.  The game would not disappoint in any way, especially for the home crowd.

After Teaford got his work in over two innings, Odorizzi would throw six and two-thirds innings of one run baseball to ensure a win for the home team.  Odorizzi would string together 10 strikeouts over only two walks on his way to a victory over the opposing ace.  Roy Oswalt?  He did not fare so well.

The third inning would be the downfall of Oswalt as he would give up a lead-off double to Anthony Seratelli he would get one out before surrendering three consecutive base hits loading the bases.  With bases juiced full of Storm Chasers, Wil Myers stepped to the plate.  In just 18 AAA games, he has already hit five home runs, adding to his 13 home runs in 35 AA games this season.  His 19th homer of the season would come on a 2-0 count as a grand slam off one of the most successful major league pitchers in recent memory.

The Storm Chasers would put a win on the board with a final score of 7-2 over the Round Rock Express.

Our favorite Royals photographer, Minda Haas, was on hand last night in Omaha to catch all the action and fun.  Below you will find a photo gallery of 50 pictures from Minda, with everyone from Teaford and Myers to Sal Perez and Roy Oswalt featured.  Enjoy the look at a truly special night through a very talented eye.

Feel free to use the buttons below to scroll through all the photos.

Anthony Seratelli Double Down The Line

Picture 1 of 49


All rights reserved by Minda Haas

Bill Ivie is the editor here at I-70 Baseball
He is the host of I-70 Radio, hosted every week on BlogTalkRadio.
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Posted in Minors, Photography, RoyalsComments (0)

Baseball Digest Report Card: Cardinals

The parent site of i70baseball, Baseball Digest, has recently been running their end of the year Report Cards for each franchise. The following is the post written by Daniel Shoptaw for the site about the St. Louis Cardinals.

You know how when you were in college, if the teacher was in a real good mood, you got a nice curve to some of your scores? It is hard not to do the same when you are handing out grades for the team that just finished as World Champions. I mean, those issues and foibles during the season look so cute now, like “look at how that team is so cute hitting into double plays.” The afterglow of a championship is a powerful thing.

That said, it is time to take a serious look at a team that showed its fair share of schizophrenia this season. A team that played just well enough to be tied for first a couple of weeks after the All-Star Break, but then famously found itself sitting 10.5 games behind the Atlanta Braves for the wild card just a month later. They righted the ship, put on a furious run (helped out, of course, by a Braves collapse for the ages) and got into the playoffs, where they used that “every game is your last” mentality to battle through two rounds of National League playoffs and a World Series that will go down in history as one of the most dramatic.

Grades are reflective of the whole season. The bullpen at the end of the year hardly resembled the pen that caused so much heartburn earlier, but all facets of the relief corp had to be taken into account for their final score. So gather around the bulletin board, everyone, it is time to see how the final grades came out.

Rotation: B
The Cardinals may have had some pitching problems during the season, but by and large it did not come out of the starting staff, something that seemed so improbable in spring training. When Adam Wainwright went down with season-ending surgery before he was able to throw a pitch that meant anything, it seemed certain that the Cards were going to have to outslug their opponents.

Instead, the Cardinals ranked eighth in ERA and quality starts and seventh in opponent OPS among National League starting staffs. In fact, just about any significant category, the Cards were in the middle of the pack, a fairly notable achievement without their ace. Chris Carpenter stepped up to fill in the gap and the rest of the staff showed just enough brilliance to offset what at times could be some ugly outings.

Bullpen: C
When you average an F and an A together, it has to come out to a C, right? There is no doubt that the bullpen was the weakest link in the Cardinal chain at the beginning of the season. It started on Opening Day, when Ryan Franklin allowed a solo home run to Cameron Maybin to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth. It became more evident the next week, when the relief corp belied its name in blowing back to back games against the Giants.

Eventually, the Cardinals cut Franklin and Miguel Batista and turned the duties over to a younger group of players. The Colby Rasmus trade made at the July trading deadline brought in two different arms and moved Kyle McClellan from the rotation to the bullpen. The group quickly became a dominant force, with live arms coming out of the pen in almost every situation. The strongest measure of how this facet of the team had come about was in the NLCS, when the relievers pitched more innings than the starters, and the Cards still won four games to two.

BD Report Cards brought to you by Seamheads

Catchers: A
Yadier Molina may have lost a little bit of his luster behind the plate to the serious observer, allowing more wild pitches and passed balls than in past years. That said, a dimmer gold is still gold, as proven by the Gold Glove he won after the season was over. Besides still superb defense, Molina chipped in what might have been his best offensive season ever, easily setting career highs in home runs and OPS. Gerald Laird and, for a time, Tony Cruz backed up Molina and did so with acceptable results, though with Molina playing in 139 games, there were not many opportunities.

Infield: B-
Any infield that has a NLCS and a World Series MVP on one side and Albert Pujols on the other can not be all bad, can it? Pujols missed out on some of his yearly benchmarks this year but still showed that he is one of the top players in baseball. David Freese stayed relatively healthy (though he did miss much of May and June) and posted career highs in a number of categories as well, though he saved his best hitting for the playoffs and will never buy a meal in St. Louis again after Game 6 of the World Series.

Where the grade comes down is in the middle infield. Ryan Theriot was brought in and Brendan Ryan was shipped out, a move the Cardinals felt all year long at Theriot made error after error and did not hit enough to make up for his stone hands. Eventually the club traded for Rafael Furcal, who did not hit much either in St. Louis but at least was able to play above-average defense.

At second base, Skip Schumaker started off very cold and then got hurt, returning in mid-May from injury and finally warming up his bat. Daniel Descalso got a lot of time at all the different infield positions, often being switched into games as a defensive replacement for Freese but also seeing time at second and short, and played with a great glove along with a knack for getting some timely hits.

Outfield: B
There was a lot of intrigue in the outfield this season, but the one constant was the new guy out there. The signing of Lance Berkman raised a lot of eyebrows in the offseason, as he had not played outfield in a long time. However, his offseason training regimen actually got him into the best shape in his life (or at least the past five years) and he played an above-average outfield. Any miscues he might have made were quickly eliminated by his bat, as he returned to the player Cardinal fans were used to seeing terrorizing them from an Astros uniform. His 31 home runs and 97 RBI carried the team when Pujols struggled earlier in the year and when Matt Holliday was out with, well, whatever ailment he was out with at the time.

Holliday’s year was like something out of House, M.D. After getting three hits, including a home run, on opening day, he had to have an emergency appendectomy. He then had a quadriceps injury in May that kept him out for about a week. He also had a finger issue that sidelined him in September and reoccurred in the playoffs. He was taken off the roster for Game 7 of the World Series after injuring his pinky and spraining his wrist in Game 6. It got so bad that when a moth landed in the ear of a player, well, you knew it had to be Holliday. Between all the injuries, Holliday was his productive self and none of the injuries look to affect him in the future.

Center field was the domain of Colby Rasmus, whose tumultuous time in St. Louis came to a halt in July when he was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays for Edwin Jackson, Marc Rzepczynski, Octavio Dotel and Corey Patterson. Rasmus was having another down year and there was friction again between him and Tony La Russa. John Mozeliak was blasted for that trade at the time, but there is no way the Cardinals are kings of the baseball world without it.

The Cards also got key contributions from Allen Craig, Jon Jay, and occasionally Schumaker out in the outfield, covering for when Holliday was hurt or when the matchups did not favor Rasmus.

Top Offensive Player
For once, this award would not go to Albert Pujols. Pujols did not hit .300 or drive in 100 runs for the first time in his career, though he did have one memorable October night deep in the heart of Texas. However, Lance Berkman put up better all around numbers and was more consistent throughout the year. With an offense that rated fifth in batting average, third in on-base percentage, and sixth in slugging throughout baseball, there were a number of players that had outstanding years at the plate, but Berkman topped them all.

Top Pitcher
You could consider players like Jason Motte and Fernando Salas, two parts of that overhauled bullpen, but there is really no doubt that this was Chris Carpenter’s team. Carpenter was not perfect, was not the consistently dominant force that Cardinal fans saw in 2004-2006, but he still was able to come through when it mattered and his dominant, bulldog personality brought to mind another warrior in red that toed a different Busch Stadium mound.

Daniel Shoptaw
C70 At The Bat
@C70

Posted in CardinalsComments (0)

Berkman, Booing, Bombs, & Bullpens

Last week, I was fortunate enough to be in Houston, and was able to attend each of the Cards/Astros games. A few weeks ago, when I learned that I’d be in town for that series, it dawned on me that I was going to be able to be there for Lance Berkman’s Minute Maid Park debut as a visitor. There are some fan bases that have earned reputations across the game–mostly on the coasts. But, I can’t say I’ve really heard much about the good folks in Houston–at least not to the point where I could infer any kind of behavior or mentality if a person said to me, “You know, just like an Astros fan would do/say”.

In fact, my only experience at Minute Maid Park prior to last week was Memorial Day last year. It was a wild one! That 14-4 final you see doesn’t tell the whole story…it wasn’t nearly as close as the final score makes it sound. I saw things that I’d not seen since little league. (catcher’s return throw to the pitcher gets away, shortstop picks it up in shallow left and throws it back to the pitcher…who misses THAT throw too) Saw two different fans run out on the field (4th, 8th) during the game. One young man climbed Taul’s hill & jumped the fence before being brought back (not quite the same way Jim Edmonds would) and escorted out by the authorities. Saw Roy Oswalt get ejected for only the 2nd time in his career, after going 2 ⅓ IP he’d take the loss.

So, I didn’t quite know what to expect when I headed to the game Tuesday night. All I knew is that I wanted to be there when Berkman was announced to the crowd. And I was. An impressive 40-second standing ovation for him was a pretty special thing to witness! Here, see for yourself. (Warning: Amatuer video skills)

An impressive reception, and a showing of true class by the 25,526 on hand that night. (Well, you know…paid, not turnstiles) What was NOT impressive that night was…(wait for it)…the Cardinals bullpen. I knew when Boggs misplayed a bunt in the bottom of the 9th, and Bourne reached, that the redbirds were in deep trouble. Later that inning, Hunter Pence would single sharply to CF, and the crowd would actually boo as Houston’s 3B coach held Bourne up for what would’ve been the winning run. Two batters later, Bourne would easily cross the plate, completing the Astros come-from-behind win in their last at-bat in the 9th. It’s hard to win ballgames when you take a 1-run lead into the bottom of the 9th, then give up four hits, add in a wild pitch and a passed ball.

Wednesday night, Kyle Lohse looked great. He didn’t give up a single run, scattering 4 hits over 7IP. After 97 pitches, he appeared to be in a comfortable position for his 4th win of the season, as the Cards were taking a “serious number” into the 8th. What made this game really interesting though, was…(wait for it)…the bullpen. Ryan Franklin came in to start the bottom of the 8th, and promptly gave up a double, then a single. TLR pulled Franklin & brought in Trever Miller, who is usually pretty effective. Miller walked the only batter he faced, and LaRussa headed back to the mound once again. So, here we are in the bottom of the 8th. The Cards had a comfortable 6-run lead mere moments ago, and now the bases are loaded with nobody out. Fernando Salas comes in on mop-up duty, and though 3 runs crossed the plate (2 courtesy of Franklin, and 1 via Miller), he put out the fire. In the bottom of the 9th, it was 6-3 Cardinals when Eduardo Sanchez came in to close it out. He gave up 3 hits, and surrendered 2 earned runs before finally striking out Hunter Pence (he K’ed 2 of the 6 batters he faced) to end the game. Final score, 6-5 Cardinals. Astros bats are quiet for the first 7 innings, then score 5 runs in the 8th & 9th. “Concerning” isn’t the word.

Berkman at the plate, holding his WMD from the left side

Thursday night was much better for the Cardinals, and those of us in that had supported them from the stands throughout this series. Let’s be honest, you really shouldn’t lose any game in which you score 9 runs in a single inning. But McClellan’s pitch count wasn’t going to allow him to throw a complete game, so we’d have to rely on…(wait for it)…the bullpen. As aforementioned, the redbirds exploded for 9 runs in the 6th inning, including a 3-run homerun by hometown favori….oh wait, they’re booing him now…by Lance Berkman. It would be his first of two hits that inning, and first of two homeruns that night. Fortunately, the committee of Motte, Batista, Miller, & Salas got the job done. No earned runs between them, and they nailed down a solid Cardinals victory, to win the series.
All in all, it’s hard to argue with winning a series, but the ulcers & heart palpitations along the way, I can do without. Granted, that’s what makes for exciting games sometimes, but I prefer a bullpen that can be trusted to get outs. 22 runs of offense is an encouraging sign, though, and presumably all those “end of the world” outcries from the first week of the season are distant memories. Berkman’s numbers from the series: 8-for-14 (.571 Avg) with 2 doubles, 3 runs scored, and 7 RBI. Think he’s comfortable at Minute Maid Park? All I know is that I’m really looking forward to June 7th, 8th, & 9th!

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