Tag Archive | "Grounder"

“How did this happen?”

FOX Sports broadcaster Tim McCarver uttered those words after David Freese won Game 6 of the 2011 World Series with a walk-off home run in the 12th inning. Here’s another one: “One Last Strike.” It’s the name of Tony La Russa’s book, referencing the Cards being down with two outs and two strikes on the batter in the 9th and 10th innings of that game before tying it up with hits. Those events seemed impossible both before and after they happened, yet they were real and the St. Louis Cardinals prevailed.

Friday night’s NLDS Game 5 win was not quite as dramatic for the Cards, but it really couldn’t get much closer.

They were down 6-0 early, and starter Adam Wainwright was knocked out of the game. He couldn’t even get through three full innings; things looked bleaker than bleak. And then the Cardinals started chipping away. But bad at-bats killed each rally before it really got churning. A run here, a run there…but the game was getting late and the stout Washington Nationals bullpen was looming. And then…

What? Daniel Descalso hits a home run to lead off the 8th inning, and the Cards are suddenly within a run of the Nats. Then Jason Motte comes in and allows Washington to get an insurance run in the bottom of the frame. Drew Storen is coming in for the 9th and the Cardinals are almost certainly doomed. It was a valiant effort; a noble battle fought this night. And then…

What? The usually steady Storen gives up a double to Carlos Beltran, gets two outs, and suddenly falters. The Cardinals are—wait for it—down to their last strike, twice…but both runners get on base via walk. And then…

WHAT? Daniel Descalso rips a grounder to short. The play should have been made by Ian Desmond, but it wasn’t. The ball skipped off his glove and bounded towards center field, and the game was tied as Beltran and pinch runner Adron Chambers scampered home. That’s how fast it happens. Sure, it was a four hour game and the final two innings seemed to take up an hour of that time. But the 2012 Cardinals seemed to carry over some of the moxie of the 2011 Cardinals, and the never-say-die attitude produced new life late in Game 5 of the NLDS. The Nationals then allowed Descalso to take second base without a throw, and Pete Kozma’s hit to right field plated two more. Another comeback was complete. An uneventful bottom of the 9th sent the Cards to the next round, and sent the Nationals home to wonder how it all came to this.

Truth be told, the Cards may not have deserved to win Game 5 at all—especially after falling behind 6-0 after three innings. The questions were being asked before the 4th inning even started: Should the Cardinals have swept this series? Did Mike Matheny cost them Game 1 by bringing in Marc Rzepczynski? Should he have gone with Motte or Trevor Rosenthal in the 9th inning of Game 4? Where are the holes in the Cards’ lineup that keep them from scoring more than one and two runs in two of these games? Was the bullpen used correctly in Game 5? Is bringing Motte in for the 8th inning waving a white flag? What if Kozma was intentionally walked, and Motte’s spot came up with the bases loaded and the game tied in the top of the 9th inning of an elimination game?

All of those questions were rendered moot with Kozma’s hit and Motte’s slamming of the door in the bottom of the 9th inning. The Nationals and their fans were too stunned to put up much of a protest. Everyone in the stadium knew this was the St. Louis Cardinals, and everyone knew what happened in 2011. But lighting is not supposed to strike twice. And then…it did.

What took place Friday night cannot be explained with anything more profound than “well…it is the Cardinals.” Somehow, this team has found something that allows it to never say die. They simply never quit. Last year was not a fluke—not anymore; it was who these guys are. Now maybe some more magical things happen in this postseason and postseasons to come, and maybe they don’t. Maybe their remaining wins and losses are completely pedestrian. But the bar has been set, and this team can never be taken for granted again. They are always dangerous; they are always one pitch away from completely ruining other teams’ nights, series, seasons, lives.

One last strike? No problem. How did this happen? This is Cardinals baseball, and this is exactly how it happens. The Cardinals will lose more playoff games, and they will lose playoff series. But until that 27th out is secured, they will always have a chance. And apparently a chance is all they need.

Chris Reed also writes for InsideSTL Mondays and Bird Brained whenever he feels like it. Follow him on Twitter @birdbrained.

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Not what you expect

Since you follow the St Louis Cardinals, you know they are hosting the San Diego Padres this week.  If you read this site with any regularity you know I blog about the San Diego Padres in my spare time.  So naturally this post will be about last night’s 4-3 win over those Padres, right?

Nope.  Today’s post is about Albert Pujols.  Why?  Because I had the opportunity to watch him hit in person last Sunday.

Petco Park has a well deserved reputation as a pitcher’s park.  Even Pujols has trouble driving the ball there.  Petco is one of only 4 NL ballparks in which Pujols has a career OPS of less than .900, and of the other three only AT&T Park is still in use.  Even so, Pujols has 7 career home runs against the Padres and has homered at least once in every series since 2008.  Yeah, he’s struggled mightily this season, but I knew – KNEW – he was hitting one out this weekend.

He came close on Saturday night, but didn’t homer against these Padres.  Pujols went 2-for-12 in the series, with 3 walks, and two measly singles.  On Sunday, he didn’t hit the ball out of the infield.  Yes you read that correctly.

For the heck of it, I tracked the pitch sequence to him for all his at-bats.

  • AB 1 – top 1st, runner on third, 1 out:  Fastball (ball), slider (swinging strike), slider (ball), slider (hit into play) – weak grounder onto the dirt in front of home, 2-3 on the putout.
  • AB 2 – top 3rd, 0 on, 2 out:  slider (ball), fastball (ball), slider (ball), fastball (ball) – walk.  The Padres placed their second baseman on the shortstop side of second for Pujols’ at bats with no one on.
  • AB 3 – top 5, 0 on, 2 out:  fastball (ball), fastball (ball), slider (swinging strike), fastball (ball), slider (hit into play) -  line out to third.  Padres 3B Chase Headley fell to his left to catch it.
  • AB 4 – top 8, leadoff:  fastball (swinging strike), fastball (foul tip), slider (ball), fastball (hit into play) – broken bat ground out to short, 6-3 on putout.
  • AB 5 – top 10, runner on second, 1 out:  slider (ball), fastball (called strike), fastball (foul), slider (ball), slider (ball), fastball (ball) – walk
  • AB 6 – top 12, leadoff:  fastball (ball) … hey look! a Butterfly! – ground out to third, 5-3 on the putout.  I, uh, kind of lost focus 4 hours in.

What can we glean from this?  A couple of things.  First, the Padres worked Pujols exclusively with fastballs and sliders away; rarely did they come in to him.  Which makes sense, since he is trying to pull everything.  A recent Fangraphs article stated he’s pulled 71% of the balls he’s put into play this season, and Sunday’s effort backs that up as he pulled 3 of the 4 balls he put into play.

Second, of the 9 strikes he saw, he swung at an astonishing 8 of them.  That’s incredible to me.  It didn’t matter if he was ahead, even, or behind in the count, Albert was hacking.  His swing percentage this season is the highest of his career, and I begin to understand why.  It’s also entirely possible the sliders he swung at were borderline strikes, and if so he really is expanding his zone at the plate.  Obviously I have no idea why he would do that, but it really looks like he’s trying too hard to justify his contract.

One other thing leapt out at me and that is his stance.  In years past I remember Pujols getting set in the box and keeping everything quiet, even his hands.  This year he’s got a front foot tap that appears to be a timing mechanism.  It looks a lot like what Scott Rolen does when he hits, but unlike Rolen he doesn’t do it all the time.  I may be wildly off base, but it really seemed to me he would do that if he thought a fastball was coming.  He definitely did it in fastball counts.

Like most of the baseball-watching world I have no doubt Pujols will snap out of it and return to the form he had his first 11 years in the league.  None of us are used to watching him struggle at the plate like he is.  It is not pleasant to watch, and in all seriousness I hope he snaps out of it sooner rather than later.

Mike Metzger is a freelance writer based in San Diego.  He blogs about the Padres in his spare time.

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Chasers Take Game 1 of Championship Series

Chasers Take Game 1 of Championship Series
Omaha pitching holds River Cats attack to three hits in series opener

Mike Feigen / Omaha Storm Chasers

OMAHA, Neb. — Storm Chasers left-fielder David Lough scampered around third and crossed the plate uncontested, scoring the most improbable of go-ahead runs in the Chasers’ 3-2 victory over Sacramento Tuesday night. The win gave Omaha a 1-0 lead in the best-of-five Pacific Coast League Championship Series, the second-straight series in which they have grabbed a Game 1 victory.

The decisive bottom of the seventh inning began innocently enough, as Kurt Mertins and Jarrod Dyson were retired to start the frame with the Chasers and River Cats tied 2-2. Lough then lashed a hard grounder toward the right-field corner, but as he charged toward second he tumbled and fell to the ground, finding himself on his hands and knees on the infield dirt. Somehow he managed to return safely to first ahead of the throw, keeping the inning alive.

Lorenzo Cain then stepped into the box, already 2-for-3 on the day to raise his batting average to .500 (11-for-22) for the postseason. Cain took a big cut at the first offering from Vinnie Chulk (0-1), popping it high in the air toward shallow right field. Grant Green raced in from his position in deep right-center while second baseman Wes Timmons turned and ran toward the line, but neither player found himself in position and the ball kicked off Timmons’ glove and rolled away. Lough sprinted home all the way from first on the Cain single, giving Omaha the lead for good.

By scoring in the seventh, Omaha starter Luis Mendoza (2-0) was given an opportunity to win for the second time in the playoffs and the 14th time this season. He closed the year with victories in his final four starts and has run that streak to six-straight counting the postseason. Mendoza is 14-5 with a 2.10 ERA overall this year, including 13-2 with a 1.33 ERA in 128.2 innings since May 26.

Mendoza got some help not only from Cain’s blooper but from Kelvin Herrera, who earned the save with two dominant innings. Following up on his excellent performance in Game 1 vs. Round Rock, Herrera fired two perfect innings, striking out two. In his two postseason outings totaling four innings, Herrera has retired all 12 batters he has faced – striking out six – throwing 43 pitches, 34 for strikes.

The Chasers got Mendoza an early lead, thanks to a nice piece of two-out hitting by shortstop Irving Falu. With the bases loaded and two out in the bottom of the first, Falu chopped an offering from Sacramento right-hander Graham Godfrey over the mound for an infield hit, scoring Jarrod Dyson to give Omaha an early 1-0 advantage.

The lead would hold up until two were down in the fourth, when Josh Donaldson drilled an opposite-field home run to knot the game at 1-1. The hit was the first of the game for Sacramento, one of just three they would wind up with on the night. The River Cats added to their lead in the top of the sixth inning, when a Carter RBI double brought home Jermaine Mitchell from first base to make it a 2-1 advantage for the visitors.

In the bottom of the sixth, the Chasers rallied to tie the score. Manny Pina looped a two-out single down the right-field line to get aboard safely, and last-minute starter Lance Zawadzki brought him in with an RBI double off the wall in right to tie the game and put the Chasers in a position to win. The double was Zawadzki’s first hit since the sixth inning of the Chasers’ 11-10 win at New Orleans on August 28, snapping a personal 0-for-24 skid at the plate.

With the victory, the Chasers are now 4-1 in the playoffs, with just one more game remaining at Werner Park during the magical 2011 season. Right-hander Vin Mazzaro (8-2, 4.22 including postseason) will get the ball to face his former team, while Tyson Ross (3-3, 7.38 including postseason) will pitch for the River Cats. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m., with gates at 5:45. Tickets are available at the Werner Park ticket office, by phone at (402) 738-5100 and online at www.omahastormchasers.com.

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Dwyer Ties Franchise K Mark In Naturals Win

The Northwest Arkansas Naturals closed out a win over the Arkansas Travelers on Friday night and pitcher Chris Dwyer tied a franchise record with his performance.

Chris Dwyer

The following is a press release provided to i70baseball by the Northwest Arkansas Naturals and is reprinted in its entirety.

Dwyer Ties Franchise K Mark In Naturals Win
Myers’ three-run HR provides the margin

SPRINGDALE, AR – Afforded a couple of extra outs by critical Travelers mistakes, the Naturals took full advantage and Wil Myers capitalized with a three-run bomb in the third, providing the necessary margin in a 6-2 win Friday night at Arvest Ballpark.

Travelers’ shortstop Darwin Perez booted a hot grounder off the bat of Jamie Romak for what would have been the final out of the third inning, the first of two errors they made leading to four unearned runs.

Given new life and holding a 1-0 lead they built on an RBI single by Ryan Eigsti in the second inning, Romak reached and Travelers’ starter Orangel Arenas (8-6) issued a walk to Anthony Seratelli before Wil Myers took a 1-0 fastball and lasered it over the wall where it ricocheted off a wall next to the Travs’ bullpen for his fifth homer on the season and a 4-0 Naturals’ lead.

Meanwhile, suddenly spectacular Naturals’ starter Chris Dwyer (6-9) mowed down Travs hitters with aplomb. Dwyer racked up ten strikeouts over six innings of work, tying a franchise single game record. Two Naturals’ hurlers in the club’s four year existence have accomplished the feat, most recently on June 18th, 2008 when Dan Cortes fanned ten in a loss to Tulsa. Dwyer allowed four hits and two runs, one unearned, while issuing just two walks.

Those two runs for North Little Rock (18-23, 54-54) came in the fourth. Gabe Jacobo doubled down the left field line and moved to third on a double by Roberto Lopez. After Angel Castillo popped out for the second out, Alberto Rosario hit a hard grounder that Naturals’ second baseman Christian Colon was able to field at the outer edge of the infield. Colon’s throw to first was slightly offline and both runners scored as Colon was charged with a throwing error.

That was the end of the scoring for the Travs as Northwest Arkansas (22-19, 57-51) tacked on another in the sixth and one more in the eighth. Nick Francis reached with one out in the sixth when Travs’ third baseman Luis Jimenez allowed his three-hop hit to roll through his legs. Later in the frame Paulo Orlando, who was one of four Naturals to have a two-hit effort, drove him in with an RBI single.

Francis plated Wil Myers with an RBI single in the eighth to cap the scoring as Edgar Garcia took care of the rest on the mound for the Naturals, limiting the Travs to just a pair of baserunners as he allowed a single and a walk, both in the seventh. But Darwin Perez, unable to atone for his earlier miscue, grounded into the twin-killing to get the Naturals out of that threat. North Little Rock then went down in order in both the eighth and ninth as Garcia notched his second save with the Naturals.

The second game of the series on Saturday features Jake Odorizzi (3-1, 4.46), the Royals’ top right-handed pitching prospect as he looks to rebound from his first Double-A loss. He’ll match up with Traveler righty Eddie McKiernan (5-10, 5.72). Game time is 7 P.M, and the broadcast can be heard on ESPN 92.1 The Ticket. Tomorrow’s broadcast will also be available on MILB.TV (subscription required) and also broadcast on Jones TV (Channel 22 on Cox Cable in Northwest Arkansas) as well as on Time Warner Cable Metro Sports throughout the Kansas City metro as well as portions of Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa.

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June 1, 1967 – A Wild Wild Wild Game

The St. Louis Cardinals were coming home from a disappointing east coast road trip. They went 7-5 over the twelve games, but had dropped two of three in the final series to the first place Cincinnati Reds. It was more than losing two games to the Reds, it was how the last game ended that could have sent the team into a prolonged slump.

Rookie sensation, Dick Hughes, had taken a perfect game through a rain delay and into the eighth inning. A couple of bloop hits later, the Reds had a lead. The Cardinals didn’t give up and did mount a rally in the ninth inning, getting the tying run on third base with nobody out. Then came the play nobody expected – a game ending triple play. I can still hear Harry Caray grasping for words to describe what he had just witnessed.

This game on the following day was just what the Cardinals needed – one so strange that they could forget all about the base running blunder in Cincinnati.

Denny Lemaster

For this one game series against the Atlanta Braves, the visitors would go with one of their left handed veterans, Denny Lemaster. Lemaster was an innings eater, but was susceptible to the long ball and that kept him from stringing together a significant number of wins. He would generally keep his team in the game, but not dominate.

For the Cardinals, a home town favorite would be on the mound: Ray Washburn. For trivia buffs, it was Ray Washburn that threw out the first pitch in the new Busch Stadium a year earlier. Washburn was a tremendous talent, but a series of injuries had kept him from putting together that season we all knew he had in him. In just a few days, another freak injury will cost him a month on the disabled list, but he had a game to pitch tonight first.

Don’t Mess with Hank

The game started off like many others against the Braves in the 60s: two quick infield groundouts and then one mistake to Henry Aaron for very loud 1-0 Braves lead. That didn’t bother the Cardinals veteran starter. Washburn responds by striking out Mack Jones to end the inning.

Lemaster would also have a typical first inning with Julian Javier reaching base on an error by Clete Boyer and a walk to Orlando Cepeda, but the inconsistent Alex Johnson fails to extend the inning.

A case against the Designated Hitter

It looked as if Washburn would have a quick second inning, striking out Joe Torre strikeout and getting Felipe Alou to ground out. Clete Boyer would atone for his error in the first inning by pulling a double into left field. The Cardinals would play the odds by walking eighth place hitter Dennis Menke to get to the Braves pitcher. Denny Lemaster would only get 7 hits in 1967 and should have been over-matched by Washburn, but he would hit a bloop single to center, driving in Boyer for a 2-0 lead.

As he did in the first inning, Washburn would bear down after limit the damage to just the single run. Not just this inning, the next five. Once in a groove, Washburn was nearly unhittable. Ask the San Francisco Giants whom he would no-hit in 1968.

Lemaster would continue to struggle, retiring the Cardinals in order only once – the 7-9 hitters in the fourth. With all of these base runners, the Cardinals had to break through, eventually.

They did in the fifth inning. After two quick outs, a walk to Curt Flood would come back to haunt the Atlanta hurler. 1967′s NL MVP, Orlando Cepeda, would rip a double into the left field corner putting the tying runs in scoring position. The light hitting platoon outfielder Alex Johnson would get another chance, and this time he would deliver, lining a single to center scoring both Flood and Cepeda for a 2-2 tie.

Both pitchers would put up zeros in the sixth inning with the Cardinals pulling off a nifty double play started by Cepeda and a strong relay throw by Maxvill to Washburn covering first to complete the twin killing. The Cardinals infield defense was the best in baseball – Maxvill and Javier being one the best middle infield combinations in team history.

Late Inning Trouble

The Braves would regain the lead in the top of the seventh inning.

Against a tiring Ray Washburn, Felipe Alou would hit a one out double in the right field gap. Clete Boyer again would hurt the Cardinals with a single up the middle. Javier was able to get to the ball but unable to throw Boyer out. Alou held at third and things momentarily looked good for the Cardinals. Washburn had already induced three double plays and he would try for his fourth. And he almost did. Charlie Lau hit the ball slowly to Maxvill who made the force throw to Javier but Lau beat the play at first and Alou scored the go ahead run.

The Braves would extend their lead in the next inning. Woody Woodward would lead off with a single to left field. The Braves would play for the single run and sacrifice Woodward to second base. Up to the plate steps Henry Aaron, and not wanting to repeat the first inning, Aaron is intentionally walked to set up another double play chance.

Cardinals manager, Red Schoendienst, would play this conventionally going to his bullpen with the hard throwing young left-hander, Larry Jaster, to face the left handed hitting Mack Jones. The Braves would counter by pinch hitting with Rico Carty – one of the best pure hitters of the era. Carty would miss the entire 1968 season fighting tuberculosis and would put up huge numbers in 1969 and Pujols like in 1970. But this was 1967 and Larry Jaster would win this battle, for now. Carty hit the ball back to Jaster and the Cards would turn a nifty 1-6-3 double play – their fourth of the evening.

A Wild Wild Wild Ending

This brings us to the ninth inning, and not even Barnum and Bailey could dream about what happened next.

Larry Jaster was brilliant in the eighth but quite the opposite in the ninth. Joe Torre would lead off with an infield single. I’m not sure what was moving slower, the ball off the bat or the future Cardinal star running down the first base line, but when the dust cleared Torre was standing on first.

After an Alou fly out to Lou Brock in left field, Jaster would lose his control. He would walk Clete Boyer and Marty Martinez, loading the bases. Red would again go to his bullpen for his big right hander Ron Willis. Willis would get the Braves pitcher to pop out to second, but Woody Woodward would battle Willis eventually drawing a walk, giving the Braves a 4-2 lead. Frustrated and not wanting to see the heart of the Atlanta order, Schoendienst went back to the bullpen for his closer, Joe Hoerner. Hoerner would only face one batter as he struck out Gary Geiger to end the inning.

For most other teams, the game was essentially over. But these were the 1967 Go Go El Birdos and they weren’t going down without a fight. And some serious entertainment along the way.

Journeyman and backup catcher Johnny Romano would lead off the ninth inning by reaching base on Clete Boyer’s second error of the game. His wild throw allows Romano to advance to second base. Lemaster had gone about as far as he could and the Braves went to their bullpen.

You cannot believe what would happen over the next five minutes.

The first strange move goes to Red Schoendienst. He pinch runs for Johnny Romano with Dick Hughes. Yes, Dick Hughes, the pitcher. The pitcher who took the hard luck loss the day before. Hughes was one heck of an athlete, and could run as well as any of the hitters left on the bench, so why not ?

Phil Niekro

Strange move number two goes to the Braves for bringing in knuckleballer Phil Niekro to close out this game, or at least try. The Cardinals had great success with a knuckleball closer earlier in the decade, but this was an unusual move to say the least. There was one player on the field that hated the knucklball more than all of the Cardinals hitters – poor Joe Torre. He hated to catch a knuckleballer. And would hate it even more before this inning was over.

Niekro immediately threw a wild pitch allowing Dick Hughes to advance to third base. Lou Brock actually hit one of Niekro’s floaters, far enough out to center field to score Hughes and cut the Braves lead to 4-3.

Julian Javier just stood in the batters box while Niekro threw floater after floater. Javier knew he wasn’t going to hit Niekro’s knuckleball, so he took his chances that Niekro would walk him, and Javier won that battle.

This is when Cardinals radio announcer Harry Caray asked “He wouldn’t throw a wild pitch would he?” As if Niekro was listening to Harry, a pitch scooted past a frustrated Torre with Javier taking second base.

Again Caray asks, “He wouldn’t do it again, would he ?” And yes he would. Another floater that evades the glove of Joe Torre and the tying run in now standing on third.

The patient Curt Flood then delivers with a line drive single to left field and the game is now tied 4-4.

Beginning to worry about running out of players, Red Schoendient pulls another switch that not even Tony LaRussa would consider. He pinch runs for Curt Flood using Al Jackson, who had been warming up the Cardinals bullpen.

Future Cardinal pitcher Clay Carrol would strike out Orlando Cepeda and get pinch hitter Roger Maris to fly out to end the inning, but the never say die Cardinals had tied the game and into extra innings we would go. But not for long.

A Walkoff …… Triple ?

Al Jackson would take the mound and Roger Maris would go into right field. This is exactly the opposite of how you would do this. Jackson was a starter and Maris would be taken out of games late for defensive replacements. But this was the carnival of June 1, 1967 and the normal rules do not apply.

In the previous five seasons the little left hander would lose 20, 17, 16, 20 and 15 games. Not too many pitchers lose 20 games in a season, Jackson did it twice. On this evening, and for the duration of a single inning, Jackson pitched like Sandy Koufax making quick work of the heart of the Braves order with the ball never leaving the infield.

The bottom of the tenth inning would go even more quickly.

Bobby Tolan

After an infield ground out by Tim McCarver, the light hitting utility infielder Phil Gagliano would hit a weak grounder to third and beat the throw for an infield single. Gagliano barely hit his weight, but his hits always seemed to be in key situations.

After an infield pop out, Clay Carroll would face Bobby Tolan. And the game would come to an end. One of the most loved players of the era, and one that we let get away, Tolan splits the outfielders with a line drive that goes all the way to the center field wall, scoring the speedy Gagliano from first. Bobby Tolan ends the game with a walk off triple and the Cardinals would have the most improbable 5-4 win.

The Cardinals would sputter a bit over the next few days, but this win ignited a run to the pennant that would have them survive losing both Bob Gibson and Ray Washburn to broken bones. And another World Championship for the Gateway City. More important, the unusual ending of the game gave fans and sports writers something to talk about other than running into a triple play to lose a game.

Bob Netherton covers Cardinals history for i70baseball.com and writes at On the Outside Corner. You may follow Bob on Twitter here or on Facebook here.

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Mile High Royals Fan

Aside from Royals/Kauffman Stadium, I had seen the Royals play in Seattle’s Kingdome, the Chicago White Sox’s current stadium and Minnesota’s Metrodome before last weekend. As soon as the 2011 schedule was released, I had the July 1—3 series in Denver circled. My brother, sister-in-law and nephew are Denverites, so I figured this would be the perfect time for a visit. As it turned out, the series became a great excuse for a family-wide vacation with my wife, son, parents, other brother, other sister-in-law and nieces in tow. I made it to the Friday and Sunday games (skipping the Kyle Davies Experience on Saturday).

Friday

My wife, dad and brother headed to the field plenty early for the series opener. My first impression of the stadium was a good one. The brick exterior looks great, and I do enjoy the very un-Kauffman-like atmosphere of a downtown park. Doug Glanville, in his recent book The Game From Where I Stand, mentions Denver had his favorite walk to the ballpark: “Considering Denver is one of the sunniest cities in the country, it was a nice stroll down an outdoor mall, with pedestrian-friendly car-free zones. Immaculate, too.” We did a lap around the concourse before taking our seats. The fir trees in the bullpens and batter’s eye are a nice touch. Once in our seats, our usher talked to us for quite some time, setting the tone of friendliness that we enjoyed from Rockies employees and fans throughout both games. It was as perfect a night for baseball as you could ask for, but unfortunately the Royals never did show up. Rookie hurler Juan Nicasio made the Royals look silly as they hit weak grounder after weak grounder. Not a single Royal reached second base during his eight innings of work. Danny Duffy did what he has done every start so far—mixed flashes of why he is a touted prospect along with plenty of mistakes. He worked six strikeouts into his five innings, but he also served up a self-described “BP fastball” to Troy Tulowitzki. The lopsided play and final score (0-9) was only a minor disappointment that could not spoil an otherwise great night at the park.

Sunday

After the Royals were blown out again Saturday night, I was a little more invested in hoping for a win on Sunday. The weather had turned from gorgeous on Friday evening to scorching hot on Sunday afternoon. My dad, mom and other brother had some nice seats 11 rows up from third base, but after baking for a couple of innings, we decided the shade nipping the last few rows in the upper deck looked pretty good. We hiked up, and though the action seemed a mile away from up there, we were much more comfortable. We also gained a nice view of the Rocky Mountains. We were treated to a crazy game. Melky Cabrera got things going in the first with a solo shot, spurring high fives from fellow Royals fans seated nearby, and the rout was on. KC put up 12 extra base hits for just the second time in franchise history en route to a 16-8 win. It was not a pure laugher though. Luke Hochevar was his usual self, cruising through four innings before falling apart in the fifth and letting the Rockies get back to within a run. As beleaguered Royals fans, my family and I were prepared for a full-on meltdown and loss, but the Royals bats came right back to put up six runs in the top of the sixth. From the bottom of the fifth through the top of the seventh, the teams put up run totals of 5, 6, 3 and 4. I do not have the official time, but I am pretty sure it took about five hours to play that stretch. We trekked back down to the lower level to enjoy the ninth inning from behind the Royals dugout and cheered our team with quite a few other Royals fans as the game came to a merciful end. Cabrera capped off a career day (2 HR, 1B, 2B, HBP, 5 RBI) by tossing one of his bats to a young Royals fan.

The 10 hour drives each way were killers, but well worth it for a family vacation featuring a couple of Royals games in a new-to-me park. I would rather see the Royals play in Kauffman with a stadium full of Royals fans than anywhere else, but it was a treat to get a glimpse at the road half of the schedule in person.


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Five Minutes

Remember that sick feeling you got when you heard the Cards’ top starter Adam Wainwright would be out for the season after injuring himself in Spring Training warm-ups? We all felt that same feeling again yesterday afternoon.

Only moments before, he was taking a long look at his 17th bomb of the season after Louis Coleman threw a pitch way up and in at him. Five minutes later, he was writhing in pain next to Barry Weinberg and Yadier Molina.

It happened in an instant: If you looked away, you missed what was potentially the biggest play all year. Royals third baseman Wilson Betemit split the infield in half with a grounder right past Jaime Garcia. Rookie second baseman Pete Kozma ran for and actually reached a ball hit a fair ways away from where he was standing. It might have been better had he just let it trickle through to the outfield.

Kozma made it to the ball, but had to make a rapid through to get Betemit at first. The ball made it there in time, but it was too far to Albert Pujols’ left. The first baseman stabbed his glove out to reach the ball, but Betemit’s shoulder hit it as he charged down the line. The collision sent the ball down the foul line, Pujols’ glove towards the stands, and Pujols to the ground grasping his left hand.

After minutes of nothing but agonizing anticipation, Lance Berkman passed the injured Pujols (who was limping away while leaning on the trainer Weinberg) as he ran to replace him at first. The game continued as the lead Albert’s homer had given them was blown up with a backdrop made up of silent fans and the sirens of an ambulance headed toward the ballpark.

Personally, I didn’t care about the rest of the game. It just didn’t seem important anymore. Heck, even Skip Schumaker’s walk-off solo shot wasn’t enough to soften the mood up a whole lot knowing the team’s best player was getting x-rayed at the time. Was it even possible that the same team would lose yet another of its All-Stars to the disabled list?

This team has gone through far more than its fair share of injuries. Matt Holliday, David Freese, Skip Schumaker, Kyle McClellan, Allen Craig, Eddie Sanchez, Gerald Laird, Nick Punto, Brian Tallet, Bryan Augenstein (Remember him?), and Wainwright have all spent time or are still spending time rehabbing from injuries. Now the game’s greatest hitter can be added to that All-Star team.

I’m writing this before Pujols’ MRI today, when we will discover the severity of his injury. But whether he’s out for two weeks or two months, it’s obvious that the team he leaves behind needs the 14% of their offense they just lost. After all, they are just coming off of a seven-game losing streak and are tied for first with series against the Phillies, Rays and Reds looming in the near future. In the meantime, Cards fans can only hope that the injury doesn’t have any severe repercussions; be they short- or long-term.

God bless, Albert.

UPDATE: The MRI revealed that Pujols will be gone four to six weeks.

Postscript: You can hit me up at my Cards site or Twitter. Also, vote on the participating teams for the end-of-the-year Best Cardinals Team Ever Tournament.

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Cards Droppings Previews Cardinals In Houston

Joe over at Cards Droppings does a great job breaking down the series as they come up. We are glad to share that information with you here on I-70 and ask you to click the link at the bottom of the article to read the rest of the material on the home site.

The rain-soaked Cardinals travel south to face their one-time arch-rivals, the Houston Astros. Luckily for everyone who stayed up late watching the Redbirds over the past several nights, it will be dry under Minute Maid Park’s roof. Houston has hit a bit of a rough patch over the past several years, so the rivalry between the two teams has definitely taken a back seat to the newly formed rivalries between the Cardinals and the Reds as well as that of the one between the Cardinals and the Cubs. It’s still fun to go into Houston, and it’s really a lot more fun now that Houston’s lineup has lost a lot of the pop from the early 2000′s, when they featured Bagwell, Biggio, Berkman and many others. I’m sure the homecoming will be very bittersweet for Lance Berkman on many levels. The Astros basically told him they didn’t want him back, so I would be shocked to see Berkman treated with anything but the highest respect. If he gets booed or otherwise treated poorly, it’s a mistake on the part of Astro fans–Berkman wasn’t the one who wanted to leave.

Besides the Berkman reunion, there are many other intriguing storylines that will come into play for this series. The first, and biggest, is Albert Pujols. He was pulled from Sunday night’s game after coming up lame trying to beat out an infield grounder. The team said that it was a mild strain, but it’s not an encouraging sign to see him out of the lineup tonight. He’ll be replaced at 1B by the aforementioned Berkman. Hopefully, TLR is just trying to buy him an extra day with the off day yesterday. Against Bud “Cy Young” Norris, it never hurts to have more lefties in the lineup. Tonight, we see Theriot 6, Jay 9, Holliday 7, Berkman 3, Rasmus 8, Molina 2, Punto 4, Descalso 5 and Garcia 1. It’s a bit of a scary thought that this could actually be a lineup we see next year at this time, albeit on a much more permanent basis. Let’s hope for the sake of Cardinal fans everwhere that we’re able to get Albert signed in short order. Our lineup looks much less intimidating without #5 in the middle of it. We face a lefty tomorrow night, so hopefully Albert will be back in there soon.

Read the rest of Joe’s breakdown of this series by clicking here.


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Royals Fantasy Report

Scott Yerbic is still out on vacation, but Matt Wilson has graciously stepped in again from BaseballDigest.com to bring you this week’s Fantasy Report.

The Royals had a tough week getting swept in Minnesota and only winning Saturday against the White Sox. Here is what to look for this week:

Billy Butler has been battling a bruised right hand for about two months. He aggravated that injury on a hard grounder hit by Dernard Span in the Minnesota series. He missed the game Wednesday and had an off day Thursday but was back in there against the White Sox over the weekend. He appears to be playing through it, so he should be fine going forward this week.

After a shellacking by the Twins this week, Ned Yost has decided to move Brian Bannister to the bullpen. Bruce Chen will retain his spot in the rotation.

Who’s Hot and Who’s Not:

Hot:

In his last 10 games Alex Gordon has hit .294 with 2 HR and 7 RBI. Patience may really start to pay off with Gordon even though it appears his 15 SB a year potential is now gone. He has progressed in cutting down his strikeouts as his career has continued. He is swinging at fewer pitches outside the zone and making better contact on those pitches he does swing at that are outside the zone. The indicators are that Gordon is still learning. He is now 26, which puts him in his prime for a possible breakout next season.

Technically, we should call Kila Ka’aihue almost hot. But when a guy’s season average sits at .211, it’s good to look at his last 10 to see that he has hit .290, scored 6 runs with a HR and 5 RBI. He is horrible hitting against lefties (.103) and continues to sit against them. Oakland will be throwing back-to-back left-handers but Yost has stated that he will start Ka’ aihue this next week. The rest of the week should be a lock for Kila to get some AB’s going against righties.

Kyle Davies has had two nice starts in a row while working 6 IP and giving up 1 ER in each start. He will look to continue that while facing Cleveland. He is a much better pitcher at home than on the road by more than a full run. In his two starts versus the Indians this season he’s thrown 12 IP with an ERA of 3.65. Davies struggle continues to be his control. He may be worth a flyer if you are in need of a spot starter as the Indians coming into town with a .246-team batting average.

Brayan Pena had a great week on the road and is hitting .412 in his last 10 raising his average from .195 to .252. His zone command has been great as he strikes out only 15% of the time (league average is 20%). Do not expect a lot of power, but he appears to be a bat that w ill not hurt your average going forward.

Not:

Mike Aviles has 12 hits in his last 51 at bats (.235) and is sharing time at 2B with Chris Getz. At this point, unless you are scrapping to find some speed, neither is worth owning as they are taking away the other’s contribution to your fantasy roster.

Wilson Betemit had a nice game Saturday in Chicago going 3-4. However, he has been stuck in a worse slump than Aviles going 12-61 (.196). He started out hot this season but has been a steady decline. If you rode him while he was hot, do not be afraid to cut bait (career .265 hitter) and look at someone who is swinging the stick better than him.

The Royals are committed to a long-term look at Sean O’Sullivan. I am not sure why, as he has not shown any real evidence of putting things together since pitching in A ball back in 2007. O’Sullivan is young (23) and it looks like the Royals want to make use of him at the Major League level while he is young. He may sharpen out to be a reliable #4 in his career, but you will want to stay away while he figures out how to pitch at this level.

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