Posts Tagged ‘Chase Utley’
Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

The Nats must have one of the toughest early schedules in the major leagues: Phillies, Mets, Phillies (that’s six games against the Phillies in the first month), then the Brewers, Rockies, Dodgers and Cubs. With the exception of the Mets — and a single end-of-month game against the Marlins — the Nats will face-off against a top team every single day until May. Of course (as some fans will note), when you finish with 103 losses, every team looks tough. Even so. There’s two ways to look at this: Nats fans can say it’s “not fair” (a phrase popularized by four-year-olds), or we can look at these games as tests of just how good the Nats are against the league’s best. In the case of the Phillies, at least, the results seem clear. It’s not simply that the Nats are not as good as the Phillies (that’s obvious), to complete with them the Nats will need more pitching — and lots of it.
The Nats fell to the Ponies in Philadelphia yesterday and played them even, until “the killer P’s” unloosed their hitters. For Jason Marquis, who must have come up short when the staff drew straws before heading north, the second outing against the Phillies was only marginally better than his first. Frankly, it’s doubtful that Livan, who dominated the Mets on Sunday, could have done much better. The line-up of Polanco, Utley, Howard, Werth and Ibanez constitutes a latter-day murders’ row of lumber that would be daunting for an elite team — let alone the Nats. Even so, as a guy like Jim Riggleman will tell you, a competitive squad should be expected to play the Phillies tough. But so far that hasn’t happened. The lesson seems to be that once you have your boot on their neck, you don’t dare give in. “They are a balanced lineup,” Nats reliever Walker said. “They have some free swingers and have guys that will grind it out. The balance is what gets you, because they are going to be consistent every day. You give them an inch, they are going to take a mile. You give them an extra out, that’s when they really gear up. They know they can break your back.”

Andy MacPhail’s renovation project in Baltimore is making progress, though the pieces he’s added over the winter (signing Garrett Atkins was a great idea) aren’t likely to make a difference for the Orioles in the standings. At least not this year. It doesn’t help that steady-as-she-goes second sacker Brian Roberts pulled an abdominal muscle last night — and will be out for the next fifteen days. But the Orioles are coming back, if slowly, in part because MacPhail has cobbled together one of the best outfields in baseball: Adam Jones might be the best centerfielder in the game, Nolan Reimold is a surprise addition in left and Nick Markakis is becoming an established star. Even Felix Pie (above), the Cubs cast-off (you could say the same about MacPhail, come to think of it), is starting to hit, though his dinger last night against the Tampa Bay Whatevers didn’t keep the Orioles from losing — or falling to1-6 on the season.
“Overall, our pitching is doing a great job,” Markakis said after last night’s tilt. Really? You could have fooled me.The starting four of Kevin Millwood, Jeremy Guthrie, Brad Bergesen and Brian Matusz are just so-so, and closer Michael Gonzalez (brought in from the Braves as the real deal) looks terrified on the mound. The Orioles’ front office is hoping that semi-rookie Brian Matusz is the answer to the Orioles’ annual pitching woes, but he’s inexperienced. Matusz was an elite college pitcher (at the University of San Diego) with good velocity, and his trip through the minors was impressive. Signed by the Orioles in the same year that Washington failed to land Aaron Crow, Matusz is Baltimore’s hope for the future, even if the future has yet to arrive. If there’s any good news at all, it’s not only that Matusz is unlikely to fail, but that rotation-mate Brad Bergesen has been a surprise. Drafted in the fourth round in 2004, Bergesen was 7-5 last year with a stellar 3.43 ERA. That’s two solid pitchers for the future. That’s the good news. The bad news is that the future will come only after Baltimore gets past a season with the savvy, but aging Millwood, and a bound-to-be-average Jeremy Guthrie.
None of this is cause to despair. While the future might take several years to arrive, Markakis, Jones, Reimold and Pie are fun to watch. If only they could pitch.
Tags: Baltimore Orioles, Brad Bergesen, Brian Matusz, Chase Utley, Felix Pie, Jason Marquis, Kevin Millwood, Nick Markakis, Nolan Reimold, Philadephia Phillies, Ryan Howard, Washington Nationals Posted in Baltimore Orioles, Washington Nationals, american league east, national league east, philadelphia phillies, pitching | 1 Comment »
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Wednesday, September 9th, 2009
John Lannen looked nearly unhittable for six complete innings tonight, but Philadelphia hitters got to him in the seventh, hitting back-to-back home runs and powering the first place Phillies to a 5-3 win at Nationals Park.  The damage was done in the top of the 7th, when Jayson Werth and Raul Ibanez hit back-to-back homers. The Werth-Ibanez dingers were enough to chase Lannan, who was relieved by the usually effective Tyler Clippard. But Clippard gave up a homer to Chase Utley that sealed the game. The Nats threatened in the ninth against shaky Phillies’ closer Brad Lidge, but with runners packing the bases Ryan Zimmerman (the hero of Monday’s contest) and Adam Dunn (already the proud papa of 35 round trippers this year) could not bring them home. Zimmerman struck out to Ryan Madson and Adam Dunn hit a crippled duck to second base.
 A dejected John Lannan gave up 4 round trippers on Tuesday (AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
Down On Half Street: Bob Carpenter and Rob Dibble were making a strong case for benching Alberto Gonzalez during the MASN broadcast on Tuesday. (Actually, they were thinking about benching him for a lot longer than just the MASN broadcast.) They plead a good cause: Mike Morse (who has already shown he can hit in the bigs) deserves a shot at more than the bench and Gonzalez (five for his last 29) has proved what he can’t do . . . But, I’m not ready to give up on Gonzalez (or allow Dibs to replace Riggleman, for that matter). Alberto hit the hide off the ball the month before the All Star break. Then too, Bob and Dibs sat around praising Ronnie Belliard when he was hitting below the Mendoza line, like he was the second coming of Ted Williams. At least Alberto has some kind of future . . . Here’s an idea, if you really want to prove what the kids can do, put Alberto at short and Morse at second and sit Guzman on the bench. Here’s the worst that can happen: we’ll end up in last place . . . Bill Ladson reported (yesterday, I think it was) that the Nats are considering moving Cristian Guzman to second base next year. What a great idea. Hardly anybody hits the ball to second base . . .
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Shortstop hopeful Ian Desmond has been called up to the big club with a number of others as a part of the roster expansion. He had a pretty good year, playing in Harrisburg and Syracuse. He hit .354 for the Chiefs with a .428 OBP and .328 overall with seven home runs in AAA and Harrisburg. Desmond was a third rounder back in 2004. He’s tall and lanky and about ready, though the powers that be are apparently worried about rushing him to the bigs before his time – unlike Mock, Balester, Detwiler, Martin and Martis . . . speaking of which, Mike Henderson over at Nationals Pride gives a breakdown (ah, I mean an analysis) of the call-ups and their impact on the bullpen and starting rotation and answers that most central of all questions: where is Shairon Martis (you remember him?) and why isn’t he up here with this ballclub? . . .  Centerfield Gate is now a part of a new baseball blog network — the MLBlog Network. The network includes ten (and counting) other baseball blogs . . . Â
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Sh – - – tty Field: A regular and loyal reader writes to tell us of a report of just how bad it’s getting for the Mets. “Bad year for the Wilpons. First Madoff, then the injuries . . . now this,” he writes. He’s referring to an NBC.com report on how Citi Field, the new high-falutin stadium for Mets fans (total cost: $850 million) is starting to fall apart. Among the problems: water damage to luxury suites, faulty electrical wiring, flooding in the outfield seating area and concrete falling off the facades. Which is not to mention the signage — this must be the most sign-filled ballpark in the majors. Every single space that can be filled is: with advertisements for sausages, real estate, hospitals, fizzy drinks. You name it. Someone must be hard up for money. Like, say, the Wilpons. A new book (and an absolute must read) called Too Good To Be True reports that the Wilpons lost hundreds of millions of dollars to Bernie Madoff. The author, Erin Arvedlund, was interviewed last week on MLB satellite radio and would not speculate on whether the Wilpons will be forced to sell the team, but the New York Times has been speculating on the possibility for a number of months . . . Â
Tags: Adam Dunn, Alberto Gonzalez, Bernie Madoff, Bob Carpenter, Chase Utley, Citi Field, Fred Wilpon, Ian Desmond, Jason Werth, Jim Riggleman, John Lannan, Mike Morse, new york mets, philadelphia phillies, Rob Dibble, ryan zimmerman, Shairon Martis, Washington Nationals Posted in Adam Dunn, Fielding, Jim Riggleman, John Lannan, Washington Nationals, hitting, national league east, new york mets, pitching, ryan zimmerman | No Comments »
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