Archive for the ‘milwaukee brewers’ Category

Four Run 1st Downs The Nats; Hairston Heads To Milwaukee

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Chien-Ming Wang’s debut with the Nationals was marred by a four run first inning, as the New York Mets downed the Nationals, 8-5. Wang went on to allow six runs (four of them earned), in four innings. It was Wang’s first appearance in a major league game since he went down with shoulder problems in June of 2009.

Despite the loss, both Wang and the Nationals seemed positive about the outing. “I was excited and a little too happy to get back on the mound,” Wang said. “I was a little bit out of control, so the balls weren’t down in the zone. That’s what happened in the first inning. Overall, I felt fine.” Wang pitched well after the rocky first, getting eight of the next nine batters out. The Nationals’ loss, however, was their sixth in a row — and the team is now tumbling into their April funk.

Skipper Davey Johnson was frustrated by the losing streak: “It’s getting old hat,” he said after the loss. “We are looking at things we can do to help the ballclub. We are still in that building mode. We have a couple of guys who are knocking on the door — pitchers in particular. Depending on what happens the next couple of days, we’ll see a new young arm up here.”

The Metropolitans, on the other hand, are on the upswing. The victory at Nationals Park was their fifth in a row, and are they now four games over .500 — far better than they were expected to do at the beginning of the season. D.J Carrasco was the Mets’ hero, as he came in in the bottom of the eighth with the bases loaded to strike out Danny Espinosa and Ryan Zimmerman. Jason Isringhausen pitched the 9th for his 298th career save.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: The Nationals are starting to make some moves as the trade deadline nears. This morning the Nationals sent Jerry Hairston, Jr. to the Brewers, according to ESPN’s Chris Singleton. As of this writing, the Nationals have not yet made the trade official, but it’s now reported that the Nationals have acquired Double-A outfield prospect Erik Komatsu . . .

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How The West Was Won

Sunday, June 12th, 2011

Jordan Zimmermann pitched seven complete and Danny Espinosa came through in the 9th with a sacrifice fly (caught, miraculously, by right fielder Chris Denorfia) and the Washington Nationals fried the Friars 2-0 at the Dog Bowl in San Diego. The win brought an end to an eleven game swing through the West, in which the Nationals took six of eleven — a success by the only measure that counts.

The 2-0 victory in San Diego on Sunday symbolized what worked for the Nationals in Arizona, San Francisco and San Diego (and what didn’t): good pitching and tight defense — and hitting, albeit only when the Nationals desperately needed it. Nats’ fans have to think that if the teams’ bats would only come alive, the close ones against Arizona (a 2-0 loss on June 4) and San Francisco (a hard luck loss on June 6 and the 3-1 loss on June 8) might have resulted in a road record of 8-3, or even 9-2.

The problem for the Nationals is not just hitting — but hitting with runners in scoring position. That curse has been haunting the team throughout the western swing, but was particularly obvious on Sunday, when the Nationals were 0-12 through eight with runners waiting for a timely hit. The Nationals are headed back to D.C., finally, and will face the Cardinals on Tuesday. The Redbirds are likely to be hunting for vengeance against someone — as they were swept by the Brewers, the final game of that series coming today and featuring (ho hum) a blast from Prince Fielder.

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Lannan Spins Another Gem

Sunday, June 12th, 2011

It was yet another nail-biter in San Diego — with John Lannan and the Washington bullpen pulling out a second 2-1 win against the Friars on Saturday. The victory knotted the team’s long road trip at five wins and five losses, giving the Nationals a chance to claim success if they win on Sunday. The key on Saturday was Lannan, who mastered the Friars in just over six, before giving way to a bullpen triumverate of Todd Coffey, Tyler Clippard and Drew Storen.

The Lannan victory was yet another bit of evidence that last year’s troubled hurler has made it all the way back to the bigs. Since May 21, when he struggled against the O’s in Baltimore, Lannan has lowered his ERA by nearly a run-and-a-half. In a span of four games he has held the opposition to 2, 4, 4, and six hits (respectively), while — in the same span — giving up just four earned runs. Lannan attributes his success to maturity: “I think, over time, you change, you adapt and you learn more every day,” he said after the victory. “I’ve grown up. A lot of things that used to get to me, don’t any more. I handle myself on the mound a little better. It’s just growing up.”

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Are The Nats Feuding?

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

This movie is about to become “A Nightmare On Half Street.” The Nationals are now 21-28, and have won only one game in their last seven. It’s getting old (hell, it’s been old), particularly for the team’s veterans — who expect more. After the Nationals dropped their latest in Milwaukee (by a score of 6-4, and at the hands of might-have-been-a-Nat Zack Greinke), Jayson Werth showed his frustration. “Things need to change,” he said, but then refused to say exactly what those things were. “I’m not really going to get into it right now,” he told a crowd of reporters. “It is what it is. It’s unfortunate. We’re a way better ball club.”

Well, yes. And no. The Nationals’ latest run (or spiral), might have been predicted. Pitching carried the anemic line-up through all of April and most of May — but without more consistent at-bats, it was bound to reach its natural level: it’s just average, and maybe not even. Which is to say: sooner or later the starters and bullpen were going to have problems, it’s the way things are in baseball, and even for the best teams. That’s happened to the Nationals, and the frustration is showing: Jason Marquis blew up at Jim Riggleman in Baltimore, Jayson Werth spouted off yesterday and reliever Cole Kimball threw an on-the-bench tantrum on Wednesday.

Are the Nationals feuding? Tom Boswell takes on the question in the Washington Post this morning — under the print edition headline “In danger of falling apart.” Boswell’s conclusion is that the recent spate of clubhouse eruptions is the predictable result of losing, and actually a good sign: “Maybe they are sick and damn tired of it.” Agreed. If the signing of Werth, the return to health of Marquis and the addition of veterans Adam LaRoche, Rick Ankiel, Alex Cora, Todd Coffey, Jerry Hairston and Matt Stairs means that the team expects a lot more than they’re getting that’s just great. But . . .

But Ankiel, Cora, Hairston and Stairs are not the heart of this team, and they’re not the future. Ramos, Zimmermann, Espinosa, Desmond, Morse and Bernadina (and Storen, Burnett, Clippard and Coleman — and others) are the heart of this team, and they’ve been losing. After calming down, Werth got it right. “A lot of these guys are younger,” he said following yesterday’s loss. “We have to make sure they continue to develop regardless of whether we are winning or losing. I think that’s important for the future of this club. But you know, things need to change.” Yeah right. Things need to change: the Nationals need to stop all the fussing and just start winning. If they do, the feuding will go away.

Nats’ Pen Can’t Corral Brewers

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

The Washington Nationals’ bullpen couldn’t hold onto a hard fought Washington lead, and the Nats were downed by a modest but effective late-inning rally in Milwaukee, 7-6 on Tuesday. The loss came at the expense of Nationals’ reliever Henry Rodriguez, who gave up a two out, two strike bleeder down the left field line to Brewers’ catcher Jonathan Lucroy in the 8th inning. “That’s baseball,” Rodriguez said after the game. “You guys saw what happened. It’s part of the game. It was a jam shot, and it fell in.” The hit was just enough for the Brewers to notch their eighth straight victory at home.

The bullpen, which has been stellar for the Nationals this year, looks like it’s starting to fade. Tyler Clippard was ineffective in the 7th, Rodriguez (who came in for Sean Burnett) was ineffective in the eighth — but nearly the entire crew has been struggling of late. Nationals skipper Jim Riggleman noted that the Washington pen has been the team’s highlight reel, but that it was almost fated that it would go through a rough time: “Our bullpen’s done a great job holding leads, and it just didn’t happen tonight.”

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: It doesn’t look good for Adam LaRoche. Bill Ladson writes that the first baseman has major shoulder issues and could face surgery — but first he’ll rest his arm, which includes at least two weeks of not touching a baseball . . . Michael Morse is swinging the bat. After a great Spring Training, Morse had trouble out of the gates. His grand slam home run last night is evidence that his power swing is back, but he’s also hitting for average. In mid-May he was hitting .235, he exited last night’s game at .282. He’s hitting over .400 in his last ten games . . .

It’s funny the way things happen. Over the winter, some Nationals fans were urging Rizzo, Riggleman & Company to forego a free agent contract for a first base replacement for the departed Adam Dunn (who’s hitting all of .192 in the Windy City) and put Morse at first base. Part of the argument was that the Nationals could spend their money more wisely on an outfielder with a good bat: to replace the departed Josh Willingham (who’s hitting .233 for the White Elephants). Now they have their wish. It looks like the Nationals are about to go with a set line-up of Rick Ankiel in center, Roger Bernadina in left — and Morse at first. That’s not bad, except that Morse will not only have to keep hitting, but step up his defensive game. Adam LaRoche was a wizard at first, and his glove will be missed . . .

One of our more regular readers and a CFG fan (here he is), sent along a piece from Wired magazine (that’s a first, because most of our readers read Maxim) noting the May 24 anniversary of the first baseball game played under the lights. It’s a pretty good read, and notes that erecting lights at Crosley Field was part of a desperate measure to keep the Reds in the Queen City (that would be Cincinnati of all places). Lights caught on around the rest of the league, the article noted, except in Chicago, where lights (and winning) were a late addition . . .

And speaking of firsts, if you haven’t read the article on the New York Mets ownership (and the Fred Wilpon-Bernie Madoff fiasco) in the New Yorker you should. The article is long, but you can do it (and you’re all grown up now, and it’s time), and it gives a fair and even sympathetic picture of the Mets’ owner and his struggles to keep his team. We were all set to dislike the guy (as with everything else blue and orange), but ended up thinking that, despite all of his problems with financing, Wilpon not only seems like a good sort, but (surprise, surprise) knows his baseball . . .

The Brewers Have Hart . . .

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

You can’t mention the words Milwaukee Brewers without adding “surging” — as in, the “surging” Milwaukee Brewers. After taking three from the Colorado Rockies that left the Helton’s reeling, the Brewers decided that they’d had enough of Corey Hart’s 0 for 11 start of the season, and the big bopping right fielder victimized the Nationals with three home runs and seven RBIs.

But even without Hart’s heroics, the Nationals would have fallen to the Brewers’ bats: the Anacostia Nine accounted for eight hits (which included a Michael Morse dinger) and just three runs — but the game was not as close as the final 11-3 score indicated. Without pitching the team is starting to look like road kill to the rest of the National League. Washington starter Tom Gorzelanny looked particularly ineffective on Monday, giving up eight hits and six runs over five innings. The Brewers, meanwhile, are just three games behind the Cardinals in the N.L. Central, as the Reds have dropped six in a row.

Those Are The Details, Now For The Headlines: Adam LaRoche was put on the 15-day DL with a sore shoulder. But it might be worse than fifteen days. Isn’t there a pattern here somewhere? Last year, Jason Marquis had much the same problem, tried to play through it — and couldn’t. It took a second year for the free agent signing to work out. With Ryan Zimmerman out until June, LaRoche sidelined and Rick Ankiel rehabbing, the Nationals are playing with one-third of the starting line-up they started with in April . . . Stephen Strasburg is now throwing off a mound, which means that he’s playing catch off a mound, not pitching off of one. Hey great. See you in 2012 . . .

Book ‘Em Danno: Joe Torre, MLB’s head of baseball operations has fined Nats’ G.M. Mike Rizzo an undisclosed amount of cash for confronting umpires after Thursday’s 1-0 loss to the Mets in New York. Rizzo and Nats’ catcher Ivan Rodriguez were upset with a call on Jayson Werth that snuffed out a late inning Nationals rally, and confronted the umpiring crew in a stadium tunnel after the game. Rizzo had no comment on the fine, except to say that he would always stick up for his team and organization. “I’ve always got the manager’s, the coaches’ and the players’ back,” Rizzo told a reporter. “Whenever I need to put myself on the line to do so, that’s my job, so I’m willing to do it.”

Ya just gotta love Mikey (and we sure do), but maybe he’s gotta bigger problems than umpires. Yardbarker has put together stats on Jayson Werth and Adam LaRoche’s slumps and concluded that the first two months of the season are actually “among the worst months these guys have ever had.” A quick scan of the stats shows this is probably so; and leads us to the conclusion that as statistics are only terrific when predicting past performances, they show what we’ve been saying all along: Adam LaRoche needs shoulder surgery, and Jayson Werth needs Ryan Zimmerman . . .

The Brew Crew’s “Other” Arm

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

There might have been parades in Milwaukee when the Brewers’ front office traded for Royals’ ace Zack Greinke in the off-season. The righty was going to be the team’s top pitcher in the 2011 season, overawing the trade for Toronto arm Shaun Marcum and taking pressure off a sometimes hard pressed and puzzlingly slump-vulnerable line-up. But the price was heavy: the Brewers gave up good-glove, faster-than-a-speeding-bullet shortstop Alcides Escobar, outfielder Lorenzo Cain, and two pitching prospects for Greinke and shortstop Yuniesky Betancourt.

And then the bottom fell out.

In mid-March, the Brewers ace-to-be suffered an injury while playing basketball — cracking a rib on his left side and bruising another. Greinke’s steep overhand delivery was painfully impaired, and it was clear that the new Brewer wasn’t going to make the Opening Day line-up. In early April, Greinke was throwing off a mound, but was still several weeks away from a start. And when Greinke finally appeared on May 4, at the back end of a make-up doubleheader, he looked less than average, giving up five runs and four hits in five innings to the Bravos. No one panicked, of course, though it was clear that Greinke wasn’t all the way back.

Yesterday, Greinke started his second game of the season, and it looked like he was his old self. He threw six innings of five hit ball in notching his first win for his new team. Everyone breathed a sigh of relief. But what’s interesting about the Greinke opera is that it’s served to mask the real story for the Brewers this season, and the trade that everyone has overlooked. The real ace of the Brewers’ staff isn’t Greinke, or even uber thrower Yovani Gallardo, it’s Shaun Marcum, the guy that Milwaukee got in that other trade. At least someone noticed: back in December, Brew Crew Ball predicted that the impact of the trade “is going to be tremendous.” They got it right.

The Brewers’ rotation makes other N.L. Central teams take a quick breath (Zack Greinke, Yovani Gallardo, Chris Narveson and Marcum), but the real powerhouse has been Marcum — the pitcher that the Blue Jays (they had a thing for Brewers prospect Brett Lawrie — perhaps justifiably) allowed to get away. Still, trading a top-of-the-rotation pitcher for a prospect isn’t exactly good team planning, unless you aren’t willing to pony-up the bucks it takes to keep him. Marcum is pitching lights-out in Milwaukee: he’s 3-1 with a 2.06 ERA. Marcum has thrown two shutouts and gone less than six complete only once. He had a rough outing in his debut, but pitched beautifully last Thursday, when he shut down the bat heavy Bravos, wracking up seven innings and eight strikeouts (he got a no-decision).

The rap on Marcum — who features a low-90s fastball, to go along with a solid change and hook — is that he’s not durable. He battled shoulder tightness during Spring Training and had a tweaky elbow with Toronto, but he’s a better than quality starter when he’s healthy. And he’s carried the Brewers, who have unaccountably struggled in the early going (they’re now a puzzling 15-20) and have battled injuries: Nyjer Morgan has a broken finger, Jonathan LuCroy has been on and off the DL and reliever Zach Braddock is fighting “a sleep disorder.” Even more worrisome, right fielder Corey Hart (rehabbing a strained oblique) can’t seem to get unwound: the team spark plug is hitting a fumbling .178.

Even so, Shaun Marcum’s early dominance (now coupled with the return of Greinke) might well propel the Brewers into the top spot in the N.L. Central, if only because the opposition (but particularly the Astros and Cubs), seem so average. None of them can match-up against the likes of Greinke, let alone Marcum, and none of them (with the possible exception of the Reds) have the explosive power of a line-up that features an untracked Hart, Ryan Braun, Casey McGehee, Prince Fielder, Rickie Weeks, and the suddenly sharp Carlos Gomez. But when, not if, the Brewers start to turn it on, it’ll likely be Marcum that everyone notices.