Recently in Joel Pineiro Category
Posted on July 14, 2008 at 8:51 AM
So, like I said yesterday, a Cardinal win and a Cub loss and they go into the break 4 1/2 games out.
The Hero is pretty obvious.
Aaron Miles hits a three-run bomb and a two-run triple, even if he did have a boneheaded fielding play in the game as well, which cost the Cards early. I thought the Cards would tee off on Snell, since they kept fouling off his pitches, but he survived longer and did better than I expected. The rest of the Pirates staff, well, not as much. Good to see Glaus go yard again and Molina to keep hitting. I'm really impressed with Yadi's .300+ average. He's become a force at the plate as well as behind it.
The Goat would go to
Joel Pineiro. There's really nothing about that pitching line that looks good. 10 hits, six runs, three walks in less than six innings? Yuck. The staff is going to have to have someone step up (or have Wainwright come back strong and early) or things may start to get out of hand.
I meant to watch the Futures Game yesterday but it slipped my mind. There's a thread on the game
at the Clubhouse and a wrapup in the DFR at the new and improved
Future Redbirds.
It's a breather in Cardinal Nation today, as Ryan Ludwick and Albert Pujols will be sitting on the field tonight watching the big bombs going off. The rest of the team is home resting up and probably already thinking about Jake Peavy.
Posted on July 13, 2008 at 7:57 AM
Before we deal with last night's disaster, let's be positive and talk about Friday's game.
Friday night was one of those great games to watch, the ones that make you think this team is going someplace. Kyle Lohse threw a great game, the offense in general was rolling, and
Rick Ankiel in particular was hot, with three hits and a home run. Jaime Garcia (and, for all of those that come over from
Future Redbirds, how could you not tell me I'd been spelling his name wrong all this time!) even got in and had an effective debut. Looking for a goat in that game is tough, but
Skip Schumaker would get it for going 0-5.
All that good feeling evaporated late Saturday night, making me
feel like Fezzini.
Losing after being up 10-4 in the seventh? Inconceivable! Giving up four runs in the ninth? Inconceivable! Blowing a lead provided by
Troy Glaus? Inconceivable!
Yet, just as in Fezzini's case, it all happened. Perhaps the word doesn't mean what I think it means.
Where do you go for a goat on this one? I mean, Ryan Franklin got it all started with a two-run homer. Kyle McClellan allowed the tying run to score (though, granted, he did his job and got the double play ball, it just didn't happen) and put the winning run on base. Chris Perez allowed Jason Michaels' game winning home run (one I was afraid of when I saw him come up, due to his earlier
grand slam against Adam Wainwright)
But, as bad as all of that was, I think you have to go to someone who has gotten the label way too often in 2008.
Jason Isringhausen started the ninth with a four run lead and even struck out the first batter he faced. To allow three runs in that situation is inexcusable.
Inconceivable.
It's games like that which have me really concerned about this year's incarnation of the Cardinals. I don't know that this team has the ability to consistently win, to put together a long winning streak needed to get back into the race. Right now they are sitting at 5 1/2 games back. Obviously well within the realm of possibility to catch the Cubs, but not nearly as likely as when they were staying 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 back. The Cubs hopefully will cool off in the second half, especially at home, but can the Cardinals take advantage? I don't know.
Perhaps it is good that this is happening now, before Mozeliak gets pressured into doing something rash at the deadline. I'm sure that Jayson Stark will be coming out with one of his crazy number columns soon, saying something like no team out more than 5 games after the 90 game mark has won their division in 20 years or something like that.
And it could be that is just negative thinking. A Cards win today and a Cubs loss and they are sitting just 4 1/2 out at the All-Star Break, even if the break is a little later this year. Maybe it's reading too much into an admittedly atypical game, both from the offense side and the pitching side. I guess we'll have to just wait and see.
In other news, the Cards have put Garcia into the rotation,
penciling him in for next Sunday. Hopefully that will give the team a little boost to start off the second half.
Today the Cardinals try to bounce back, win the series, and finish the first half on a high note. If they'd gone into the break on last night's game, having to think about it for four days or so, it might have been more of a problem. Redemption is usually just a day away in baseball.
The matchup is Joel Pineiro against Ian Snell. Wow, the Cards have seen Snell a lot this season, haven't they? This will be the fourth time he's gone against the Redbirds, with an 0-1 personal record but a 2-1 team record to show for it. The Cardinals have been able to get to him early at times, but not been able to put him away. He has a 9.64 ERA against St. Louis this year and
here's what the hitters have done against him in his career. As always, Pujols is looking forward to it.
Pineiro has faced the Pirates twice, the first time giving up a run in seven and getting the win, the second allowing four in five in a Cardinal loss. At least the first one was in PNC Park, site of today's matchup. For the most part, the Pirates
haven't done much damage against him, but I'd keep an eye out on Jason Bay. He's on a roll, especially after yesterday, and he's got good numbers against Pineiro.
If he's auditioning, he's definitely making an impression.
BTW, CardsClubhouse folks. There is supposed to be some downtime at the site today. If it happens at the game, feel free to use this as a game thread/discussion platform.
Posted on July 9, 2008 at 7:47 AM
The Cardinals showed last night that the road doesn't intimidate them this year. They've struggled away from Busch the last couple of years, but this year they can beat people anywhere. In fact, they have the best road record in the National League, one of only two NL teams (Philadelphia is the other) with a winning record on the road.
You can't say enough about the job
Joel Pineiro did last night. He had a tough draw, going up against Cole Hamels in a launching pad, but he kept the powerful Phils off the board. The Cards really needed a win after the weekend and all the trading activity in the division and he provided.
Tough to give anyone a Goat tag when they go up against someone like Hamels, but
Troy Glaus gets it not only for his 0-4 but his double play he hit into in the ninth against Lidge. An insurance run there would have made me feel a lot better about Ryan Franklin facing Utley, Howard and Burrell in the ninth, though it turns out it wasn't necessary.
The Cubs called the Brewers' raise in the pitching department, getting Rich Harden to add to their stable. We all know the caveats on Harden, but if he is healthy, that gives the Cubs the 1-2 punch they've been lacking. I've always thought that Zambrano was basically the only pitcher on that staff and they were getting by with the rest of them. Adding Harden makes me a lot more concerned about their postseason life--they may have enough to go deeper in October, if they get there.
So what do the Cardinals do now? Both of the top competitors have added aces. I know Mozeliak is going to say things like "no need to do anything," "nothing on the burners", "the calvery will be like a trade," but is that really true? I know that Wainwright will be back sometime in August, which does give a boost, but that's just getting the team back to health. If Carpenter does make it back this year, he's not going to be able to provide significant innings, so as nice as it'll be to see him on the mound, will he really be the difference maker if he's going two times a week out of the pen?
I'd like to see the Cards make a run at Erik Bedard, if they can get him at a reasonable price. These last couple of trades may make that unlikely, since both the Brewers and the Cubs gave up some good talent and, more notably, a good number of bodies, but the flip side of that is that two of the teams most likely to be in any Bedard derby are now out. I'm not sure any AL team will be that excited to get him after his Seattle showing, which may mean the Cards just need to compete with Philadelphia, the Mets, or teams like that to get him if Seattle puts him on the market (and they'd probably be crazy not to.)
If a package that didn't really damage the farm system (i.e., no Colby Rasmus, Jamie Garcia, Jess Todd) was put together, I'd be in favor of it. A couple of days ago Larry at VEB
mentioned moving Mitchell Boggs or Clayton Mortenson would not be a bad thing if they could get value. If Anthony Reyes or Chris Duncan had value, I'd suggest some sort of modification on the
Santana deal I proposed last winter, but that's wishful thinking. If the price is dropped because of the reduction of teams, I'd think the Cardinals might be able to be in contention for someone like Bedard. If it hasn't, though, then they should go ahead and pass. Anything that happens this year is gravy, since this team is really designed for 2009 and beyond.
Of course, tonight's game might go a long way toward showing whether any kind of deal is really necessary. Mark Mulder
takes the mound against rookie J.A. Happ. If Mulder can be somewhat effective, it might lead to hope that he can be a part of a second half surge. I don't expect he'll get past the fifth, just because he's not thrown that much lately, but if he could give five innings and just a couple of runs, there'd be a lot more optimism in Cardinal Nation. Whether that'll happen or not is a different story.
And, before I forget, it's XM Radio ad time! XM will be all over the All-Star stuff. Shows will be hosted from New York, the Futures Game (featuring four Cardinals, don't forget!) will be on XM 175 on Sunday, then the Home Run Derby and the All-Star Game itself will be on XM 176 on their respective days. If you want to stay up on what's going on with the All-Stars, tune in to your XM!
Speaking of the All-Stars, I see where AP is saying
he'll do the Home Run Derby if asked. Last time it didn't affect his swing (I think he hit more homers after the break!) so I'm all for that. I love seeing Cardinals do anything during the All-Star festivities. Seeing all the different jerseys (well, that's only in the game now, so they can make more money on All-Star sales) on the same field is really neat.
Just keep an eye on Philadelphia tonight. A big part of the rest of the season could be riding on it.
Posted on July 2, 2008 at 7:57 AM
Another one of those "get a lead, but don't add to it" games for the Cards, as they get ahead 3-1 but lose 7-4. Not really the way to start off a month.
You have to wonder what that stellar, Pitcher of the Month May did to
Todd Wellemeyer. Since the end of May, Wellemeyer has a 6.60 ERA and a 1.83 WHIP. His strikeout rate has stayed fairly strong--his K/9 rate is 6.12--but last night his inability to finish off batters killed him.
Heroishly, even though Rick Ankiel had a nice two-run HR, for his work saving the bullpen (and doing it very effectively), I'll award it to
Brad Thompson. Four innings and only two hits, though one was a David Wright long ball. Thompson may be increasing his trade value as well.
Speaking of trade, I got to hear some of the FSN interview with John Mozeliak last night. Mozeliak is probably playing cards close to the vest, but it doesn't sound to me like he feels there's much reason to do any dealing, which is understandable. Hopefully he keeps that mentality and doesn't overpay to make a run this year. Of course, he also says he's not been in touch with the Rockies, reports about the Cards asking about Brian Fuentes and Matt Holliday to the contrary. If he's going to bring someone in, a guy like Holliday (who won't be a free agent until the end of '09) wouldn't be a bad choice.
For a farm system that's lately been considered fallow, the Cardinals look to have a stranglehold on the Futures game this year. Colby Rasmus has been added to the roster, which already includes Jamie Garcia, Bryan Anderson and Jess Todd. Cardinal fans may have more reason to watch that game than the All-Star Game this year! For more, of course, head to
Future Redbirds.
Joel Pineiro goes for the Cardinals tonight and they could use a strong start out of him to get the taste of last night's game out of their collective mouths. The Mets
haven't seen him all that often, though Delgado has done a pretty good job against him in the past, something St. Louis doesn't want to see after not being able to retire him last night.
Pineiro goes against Pedro. Not surprisingly, the
Redbirds haven't done much against him. Even Pujols is just 2 for 10. Still, Martinez isn't the Pedro of old, sporting a 7.12 ERA this season in just over 30 innings. He's only had one really decent outing (1 ER in 6 IP against Texas) and in his last two starts he's allowed a total of 12 earned runs.
Still, knowing the Cardinal luck, he'll find his old form tonight. Hopefully Pineiro can match him.
Posted on June 27, 2008 at 9:25 AM
For the second day in a row the bullpen couldn't protect a lead. Albert Pujols capped a superior effort in his first game off the DL with an RBI single in the ninth to give the Cardinals a 2-1 lead; but Ryan Franklin allowed a game-tying HR to Gary Sheffield in the home half of the inning, and Mike Parisi walked in the winning run in the tenth. 3-2 Tigers.
Lots of things to be frustrated about. Can't hold a late lead. 2-11 with runners in scoring position. Our #4 and #5 hitters, Glaus and Ludwick, went 0 for 6 and stranded 13 runners (I recognize that's a little misleading; some of those runners are double-counted). Not to mention that they led the last 2 games in the eighth or later and lost them both. So, instead of potentially being 5-1 on the road trip headed to KC, they're 3-3. At least Chicago got blown off the field by Baltimore; the Cardinals remain 4.5 games out of first in the Central.
Heroes and Goats? Pretty simple for this game. Hero is Albert Pujols. Welcome back, AP, we missed you. 4-4 with a walk; did he really sit for 2 weeks? I couldn't tell based on how he hit the ball. He missed a HR in his third at bat by about 15 feet, lining the ball off the wall in left. Goats are Ron Villone and Mike Parisi, for each walking in a run. Dishonorable mention goes to the Cardinal offense other than AP, for that 2 for 11 RISP stinker.
So on to KC. Cardinals announced yesterday that Mitchell Boggs will start Saturday, not Mark Mulder. This is a good thing, as I mentioned earlier in the week. Your complete match-ups: Piniero vs Gil Meche tonight. Boggs vs Kyle Davies tomorrow. Looper vs Brian Bannister Sunday, in a rematch of the 18 June game in St Louis; Braden outpitched Bannister, but the Royals won 3-2. The good news is we miss the Royals best pitcher, in Zach Greinke; however Meche won 15 games last year, and Davies is unbeaten in 3 starts this, so the series won't be a picnic. Not to mention the Royals are tied with Minnesota for the best interleague record in the Majors (12-3). Should be fun.
Two closing notes: Cardinals put Randy Flores on the 15-day DL when they activated AP. Tendinitis in the right ankle was cited as the reason. Finally, Dan should be back posting starting on Monday. I may have one more post this weekend, but that will be it for me. It's been fun; hopefully you've enjoyed reading what I've written, and will consider stopping by the old homestead in the future.
Cheers, God Bless, and Go Cardinals.
Posted on June 24, 2008 at 9:59 AM
Before we get to the upcoming series with Detroit, lets pause for a moment and remember Sunday's game. From all accounts, it was a doozy. Piniero pitched great; Lester was slightly better. Paplebon was proven human. There were clutch hits (Kennedy in the ninth off the Sox closer), timely pitching (see McClellan in the 10th and Izzy in the eleventh), and off your seat drama (Duncan cut down at home). I only wish I could have seen it.
Congrats to Nick Stavinoha, who got his first ML hit on Sunday in the sixth.
I'll award the Hero for this game to 2 folks: Joel Piniero, who shook off my dire predictions of doom to throw 7+ innings and allow only 2 runs, and Aaron Miles, for his 5-hit effort. Anytime your name is linked to Don Mattingly's (the last visiting player to have 5 hits in a game at Fenway) that's good. Goat? Mike Parisi. Sorry, Mike.
Although the sting of losing that 2004 world series will always remain (granted, the sting will eventually fade to almost nothing as time passes), the Cardinals have won both regular season series from Boston since (in 2005 and this past weekend). We haven't been so lucky with the Tigers, getting swept in Detroit last year. Looper, Reyes, and Thompson were the victims during that May Series at Comerica. Looper gets another crack at them today, facing Kenny Rogers. The best pitching matchup of the series, however, is tomorrow, as Kyle Lohse meets rookie wunderkind Armando (don't call me Andres) Galarraga. Wellemeyer's balky elbow will face hit or miss Nate Robertson in the finale Thursday.
The Cardinals, a team that has not shown much plate discipline lately, would be well served to be deliberate at the plate and run up the pitch counts early. That would get the starter out and get us to their bullpen; other than Zumaya (who's just back off the DL), it is one of the worst in the AL.
One other item worth discussing today: Mark Mulder's name has been bandied about for a possible start in Kansas City this weekend. He was scratched from his rehab tune-up last night. Despite two surgeries and countless hours rehabbing his shoulder, Mark's never gotten his arm back to the form he displayed as one of the Oakland A's anchors in the first part of this decade; whether it's a loss of velocity due to diminished strength in the arm following the surgeries, or his elusive arm slot issues, he isn't the same pitcher he was in 2004. Also, as he progresses higher in the minors he's gotten slapped around pretty good by AA/AAA hitters. I don't see how he's even an option at this point for a spot start with the big club. Mark deserves all the credit in the world for his determination to get back on the field and resurrect his career. I just don't think it's going to happen.
Frankly if Mulder's name appears as a better option for a spot start than Anthony Reyes from here on out (once Reyes returns from the DL), there's something seriously wrong with the thinking in the front office.
(PS - There was no Mitchell Boggs on the 1970s A's teams; the guy I was thinking of is Mitchell Page.)
Posted on June 22, 2008 at 12:48 AM
Man it's hot. It's like Africa hot. Tarzan couldn't take this kind of hot. Little bit of a heat wave on the west coast. So naturally I spent my Friday playing in a work softball tournament; 4 games in 6 hours, during the hottest part of the day. The good news: We won. The bad news: I've spent the last 24 hours re-hydrating (beer is not an adequate hydrant, by the way) and taking 600 mg of Advil every 6 hours.
That, coupled with my belief (reinforced by my wife, a life-long Red Sox fan) that the Cardinals' offensive outage would make for a long weekend, meant I've paid very little attention to the last 2 games.
So what do my wondering eyes discover tonight? They've won the first two in Fenway.
5-4 Friday,
9-3 today. Not a bad recovery from that lead balloon they left over Busch after the KC series, eh? I was wrong, and I'm glad to have been.
Heroes and Goats from these 2 games:
Friday, the hero will be a 2 for 1 special:
Kyle Lohse for winning his ninth game, and
Skip Schumaker for his 2 run HR that provided the lead St Louis wouldn't surrender. Goat:
Randy Flores. You really don't want to load the bases by walking 2 of the first 3 hitters in this lineup. No seriously.
Saturday, I'm giving the hero nod to
Aaron Miles. Yes, Troy Glaus and Mitchell Boggs (and wasn't there an Oakland A in the 70s with the same name?) are both deserving, but anytime you hit a completely unexpected 2-R HR to quiet the Fenway Faithful, you get hero status from me. Goat? Hard to find one; I'll have to reach and award it to
Schumaker for being the only starter without a hit today. It also means Skip becomes a winner of the highly sought 'Hero today, Goat tomorrow' award; it's like a Golden Sombrero, only cooler.
Tomorrow they will try for the sweep. John Lester (6-3) has been tough this year, especially at home; he's already no-hit the Royals at Fenway. Joel Piniero (2-3) has pitched well, better than his record indicates. He's been especially good since returning from the DL (12 innings pitched, 10K, 2.25 ERA). Either we'll have a good one, or Piniero's due for a clunker. Hopefully the former.
Posted on June 18, 2008 at 9:14 AM
Cards lost to the Royals 2-1 last night. No big deal. They'll just win the next two. They've only done that eight times this year. Why not nine?
With Davies being so unfamiliar to the Cards (and with no Pujols or Molina) it's not terribly surprising the offense struggled. Great pitching performance, though, by Hero
Joel Pineiro. Too bad the Goat
Ron Villone lost it for him. Granted, the Cards should have put up more runs, but giving up a HR in a situation like that is unacceptable.
VEB
runs down the problems with the left side of the bullpen today. There's no doubt that something that was such a strength for the Cards just a couple of years ago is now there most glaring weakness. I mean, does anyone want to see Villone or Randy Flores in a game anytime soon, especially a close one? I don't think so. Not sure what the team will do about it, but with an offense that's likely to sputter, the Cards can't afford to give away games with a weak bullpen.
Good to see Jason Isringhausen back, though. The sooner he is healthy and ready to go mentally and can take the closer slot away from Ryan Franklin, the better in my book.
Todd Wellemeyer is going to miss his next start, meaning Anthony Reyes will take the mound. First, does anyone not think Wellemeyer is going to wind up on the DL? A missed start, a terrible outing, and then another missed start. Second, I'm excited to see what Reyes can do. I'd like to see him make the decisions coming up tough. Third, it is very interesting that Mulder is pitching on the same day at AAA Memphis. If Reyes flops, Wellemeyer is still hurt and Mulder dominates, I'd expect Mulder to be pitching in Detroit when that rotation spot next comes up.
Chris Carpenter's pain problem
isn't really a problem, which is great news. They may take it a little easier on him for a while, but it's one of the few times where this situation comes out positive instead of more surgery being required. I personally feel much better about it when Dr. Andrews says it's fine. Not that we don't trust the Cardinal staff, it's that we don't trust the Cardinal staff.
Mulder on Thursday and Clement on Friday. Memphis is the place to be at the end of this week! Plus Carpenter, rematches of the last two Cardinal World Series and another skirmish with the Royals. I'm sure
Mike will have plenty to talk about
when he fills in. (Though you are stuck with me for another day!)
Posted on June 17, 2008 at 7:50 AM
I've already indicated that I'm not a fan of interleague play. It seems to me like exhibition games that shouldn't impact on the regular season. And, as most Cardinal fans, I'm a little weary of facing the Royals six times a year.
I'm sure that the New York and Chicago intercity rivalries are still fresh and exciting after ten plus years of seeing each other six times. Though I will say that I scanned both
Loge13 and
Depressed Fan on the network and didn't see much about the Yankee/Mets series from a month back. Sure, it was talked about, but not in depth and with passion. (Quick skim, though, so don't take my word for it.) I don't know how much excitement still is in Reds/Indians. But, at least for me, Cardinals/Royals is, well, eh.
Maybe it'd be different if the Royals were a powerhouse in the AL. Maybe then we could get excited to see them come into Busch. But as it stands now, it's just another series. Sure, the Royals bring in Alex Gordon and Zach Greinke, but every team has a couple of players to watch. This is what we messed up baseball for?
That said, it's still baseball, which is better than any off day (and Cardinals/Royals beats any football game or NBA finals any day of the week). The Cardinals send out Joel Pineiro to take on Kansas City tonight. He's done tolerably well
against the Royals in the past, with no one of any sample size really dominating him.
He's up against Kyle Davies. Davies has only had three starts this year, but they were against some strong offensive teams in Cleveland, the Yankees, and Texas. He has thrived, posting a 1.53 ERA during that stretch. He will be basically a fresh slate for the Cardinals, as they've had a whopping
four plate appearances against him.
Word is Yadier Molina is
out of the hospital and doing well. It also sounds like they hope to get him back in a couple of days, since they aren't making a roster move right now.
Posted on June 12, 2008 at 12:10 AM
The Cards could have come out flat, wallowing in the one-two punch of their top players being taken from them for a time. Instead, they decided the best way to work through the adversity was to make someone else pay for it. A few more games like that and the loss of Wainwright and Pujols might not be quite as devastating.
Not much doubt that the Hero of the piece was
Braden Looper. A complete game shutout anywhere, especially for a converted reliever, would get you kudos, but to do it in the bandbox that is Great American Ballpark is even more impressive. It's not like the wind was blowing in--the Cards did smash three home runs--but he "made it look easy" as my Reds fan father in law said when he called for his weekly chat.
A number of players could have challenged Looper for the title. Ryan Ludwick hit another home run. Jason LaRue--yes, that Jason LaRue--broke out of his power outage with a home run in a two-hit night. Rick Ankiel went deep. Even Chris Duncan contributed, getting a hit in four trips and making a sparkling defensive play at first.
As hard as it was to narrow down the Hero, it is equally tough to name a Goat. It comes down to
Aaron Miles and Troy Glaus, both of whom were 0-3. Miles had two walks, but also a strikeout. Glaus walked once and didn't K. Both scored a run. Miles left two on, while Glaus only left one, so he gets the tag.
The Cards have already won the series, but they go for the sweep tomorrow evening. It could be a tough task, depending on what Joel Pineiro brings from the disabled list. Pineiro hasn't thrown since May 20, when he allowed three runs in 5.2 innings to San Diego. He faced the Reds earlier in the year, throwing seven scoreless innings. Corey Patterson has had
the most success against him in the past, so he'll probably get a start.
The Reds counter with Bronson Arroyo. Arroyo has struggled some this year, posting a 5.74 ERA. However, his ERA stood at 7.56 when he faced the Cardinals back in April and he was able to get a victory, allowing only three runs in six innings. He's done a pretty good job
against the Cardinals in the past, but Ludwick and Ankiel both have had success against him.
On paper, at least, the Cards should have the advantage. It could turn into a high scoring affair, though, if Pineiro has some rust on the arm.
After the jump, a couple of housekeeping items:
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