Recently in Kyle Lohse Category
Posted on July 17, 2008 at 7:41 AM
Before we get to tonight's game, let's take a look at a few of the stories floating around about the Cards.
First off, there's the rumor that the Cardinals
might part with Colby Rasmus. Here's the relevant part of that link (took me a minute to actually find it):
Overheard at the pre-All-Star Game bash out on Randall's Island. The
contending Cardinals might even consider parting with top outfield
prospect Colby Rasmus, a major surprise. If so, it may put them in line to land Pittsburgh's Xavier Nady, or even Jason Bay.
OK, one, I don't believe the Cards would move Rasmus, that this is more of someone's either wishful or uninformed thinking. Second, if they did move Rasmus, they darn well better do it for someone better than Nady and probably for someone better than Bay as well.
Speaking of rumors, apparently
there was one on XM that had Rasmus, Bryan Anderson and Mitchell Boggs going to Colorado for Matt Holliday and Brian Fuentes. I'm not fond of this one either. With Holliday not completely proving he's not a Coors Field creation and the fact that Rasmus should be able to do what he does soon and for much cheaper, it just doesn't make sense to trade two top prospects for that package.
I really don't think Mozeliak will trade off Rasmus. It just doesn't make any sense from the Cardinal perspective.
In fact, that was emphaised in an
interview with Bill DeWitt on the
Post-Dispatch site. To quote:
P-D: Back to the club. Much speculation has sprouted about how
far the organization will go to acquire help for this year's team if it
remains in contention. What does that say about the availability of
premium prospects such as Colby Rasmus?
BDJ: They're must-haves for any organization. I don't think you
can trade potential premium prospects unless you get premium players
back. I think what a lot of clubs have done historically is trade
premium prospects for less-than-premium return. I don't agree with a
short-term fix. A lot of quick fixes don't work. Time goes on, you're
down the road, and your former prospect is out there putting up
All-Star numbers for someone else.
P-D: Is there a chance that Rasmus could play his first major-league game in another uniform?
BDJ: I don't anticipate that. No.
The rest of the interview is pretty good as well. I think DeWitt has taken a lot of unnecessary criticism over the years, so it is good to see him out in the press taking on some of the questions.
Closer to the field, it looks like the
injured pitchers are getting better. Adam Wainwright is looking to return in the next three weeks or so, it appears, and Chris Carpenter really liked how his simulated game went. I would expect a solid return from Wainwright, maybe in time for the Cubs series August 8-10, but I still don't think we'll see Carpenter on the mound until the end of August and even then, I'm not sure how effective he will be. But it's good to know things are getting better.
The Cards are the wild-card leader at the moment and they try to stay that way when they take on the Padres in Busch tonight. It's a matchup of current aces, as Kyle Lohse and Jake Peavy take to the hill. Not many of the Padres
have seen a lot of Lohse, though outfielder Jody Gerut seems to have his number. The Cardinals have actually been able to
put up some good numbers on Peavy, which really surprised me knowing the kind of pitcher he is. Both Albert Pujols and Troy Glaus have two home runs against him.
Even so, I'd expect this to be a low-scoring game. It's a good thing the Padres offense has been so weak--the Cards may not have to score much to win.
Series preview is up at the Clubhouse and
the YNOT is active as well. Ready to get it started!
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 11, 2008 at 8:52 AM
In the old days, before the draft, Ryan Howard probably would have wound up in the Cardinal organization. Local guy, good talent, the bird dog would have gotten the scout and he'd have signed a deal with the Redbirds.
Nowadays, of course, it doesn't work that way, but Howard apparently thinks it should have. He holds some sort of grudge against the Cardinals, at least. With two more home runs yesterday, he has 11 against his old hometown team. With his low batting average and propensity for striking out, pitchers are tempted to pitch to him. From now on, though, it may be wise to consider walking him.
As noted in the
PD game story, July has been a terrible month for the Cardinals. They are averaging 2.7 runs a game and sporting a 3-6 record that could have easily been worse. (It's sad that the Cardinals have scored 25 runs in nine games when the Phillies earlier in the year just needed one game to get to 20 against the Redbird staff.)
The UCB roundtable is going on via e-mail and one of the questions is what is the biggest need, the bullpen or the offense. I said the bullpen when I made my answers, but with these kind of numbers, I very well may have been wrong. You have to figure that things will turn around somewhat--Glaus will get hot again, Ludwick will make some adjustments--so maybe that offense is there hidden. But it may need a boost from an outside source.
Anyway, let's lay out the labels. Hero would probably go to
Albert Pujols, who was 2 for 4. If anyone had been on in front of him, maybe he could have done some damage. Which leads us to our Goat,
Adam Kennedy. 0-4 in the leadoff spot is not what the team needed.
So the Cards fall into third, a half-game behind Milwaukee and 4.5 behind the Cubs. It'll take a good series against the Pirates to get second back, I believe.
The series starts with Kyle Lohse going against Zach Duke. Lohse
has done pretty well against the Pirate hitters, which may be a very good thing if the offense doesn't start clicking. Keeping the score down would be a very good thing. Duke has quietly started to pitch pretty well. The Cardinals hung a loss on him May 30, but after that he had a 3.13 ERA in June and continued to drop his ERA until his last outing against the Brewers. St. Louis has
had success against him, especially Pujols.
In other news, the
Cardinals put Rasmus on the DL. It doesn't seem to be a torn groin, but they are going to do an MRI on it. That doesn't really sound good. Hopefully it's something that a couple of weeks of rest will take care of, because I want Mozeliak to have that option of Rasmus coming up when he's talking trade for the rest of the month. Putting Rasmus in the lineup could be the spark the offense needs.
Brian Burwell
writes a good column on the end of Mark Mulder's career. It really is a sad thing when someone can't do what they love anymore.
That's probably it for the weekend for me. I'll be back on Monday to catch up.
Posted on July 1, 2008 at 8:03 AM
It's always nice to beat the Mets. Whether it's because you remember the '80s (where's the sports version of VH1's show? Imagine talking about Mets/Cardinals, Hershiser's scoreless streak, the split season strike stuff. Maybe when MLB gets their own channel off the ground we'll see things like this), because there's always something good about beating the "big city", or because you are friends with Met fans, taking down the team from New York puts a spring in your step. (Sorry,
Loge13!)
Last night's game (and, as a side note, it was good to finally see the Redbirds on TV again!) reminded me of that old quote about the owner whose idea of a good season was when his team was up 10 games at Memorial Day and slowly pulled away. The Cards scored early and then, in a reversal of basically their whole season, continued to add on.
I wanted to give the Hero to Chris Duncan for finally showing some pop. You could also give it to Mark Mulder for a scoreless inning (more on him later). But seven innings, 0 ER against a potent offense that has given you fits before? How do you go against
Kyle Lohse? A great performance and hopefully one that sets the tone for the rest of the series.
The Goat is between two 0-4 batters (the only two position players not to get a hit), but since Schumaker did get a walk and score a run,
Brendan Ryan takes the title again.
So Mulder
finally got into a game and showed that, perhaps, the new arm slot hype has some basis. Sure, it was about as low-leverage as innings come, but he didn't give up a run, threw strikes, had good velocity. It'll be interesting to see how he's used in the days and weeks to come and how long his success holds up. If he continues to get people out, do they start to stretch him out some to take over a starting role later in the season?
Looks like Wainwright is
aiming for a mid-July return. Hard to get too excited, though, with the way injuries work with the Cardinals.
And apparently the Cards are looking at Holliday and Fuentes from the Rockies. I wouldn't mind them, especially Holliday. I can't imagine St. Louis will be able to pull it off, though, without damaging the minors, something they need to be careful about doing.
Today's starters: Todd Wellemeyer (
vs. Mets here) against Tony Armas Jr. (
vs. Cardinals here).
Posted on June 30, 2008 at 10:07 AM
Before I do anything, I've got to give major thanks/props/kudos/whatever the kids are saying these days to
Mike for filling in for me. I really appreciate him filling in and keeping things running while I was up in Reds country. It was great yesterday to get into Arkansas and be able to easily find Mike and John on the radio. I listened to the last couple of innings and knew I was home again.
I'll catch up the Hero/Goat leaderboard soon with Mike's selections, but let's take a look at the last two wins by the Cardinals, insuring a winning homestand.
Saturday, looks like the hero was
Rick Ankiel with a two-run homer. Mitchell Boggs was in the discussion, though four walks was a little on the high side. Good to see him get a solid game in, though, especially with the state of the pitching staff. Goatishly, you'd probably look at
Brendon Ryan, who went 0-4 and left four on base.
Sunday, it's a surprise hero in
Jason LaRue. A home run, a triple, and four RBI, plus getting the best of a collision at the plate? Gotta give him the award (wind-aided), even with an AP two-for-five, HR day. (Sounds like he would have had two homers on a different day, with the wind holding one up at the track.) In my mind, the goat has to go to
Braden Looper, because when you know the bullpen needs some rest, to go out there and not get through the fourth is a terrible thing.
Last year it was
a little busy during my Ohio trip. Sorting through, it looks like there were a few things that happened the last 10 days as well:
- Jason Isringhausen looks like he's going on the DL, then doesn't. Pretty decent outing yesterday against the Royals, save the back-to-back doubles.
- Yadier Molina returned from his concussion.
- Cesar Izturis goes on the DL, exposing the weakness of the middle infield.
- Mark Mulder gets activated and put in the bullpen, but doesn't pitch. And, apparently, there's not a lot of confidence in him since apparently Brad Thompson is returning because "we need innings."
- To make room for Thompson, Nick Stavinoha goes back down after being promoted during the week. Wish I could have seen him play.
- And, last but not least, El Hombre returns, with Randy Flores going on the DL. And obviously Pujols didn't forget how to hit in his time off.
The Cards return to Busch today (their road trip just perfectly coincided with mine) and take on the so-far disappointing New York Mets for the first time this year. The Mets sit a game under .500 and in third place in the NL East, though that's only 3 games out of the top spot. The Cards continue their run of missing ace pitchers as they won't see Santana in this four game series.
Kyle Lohse goes for the Redbirds, looking for his tenth win of the season. There are a couple of Mets that are
excited about renewing acquaintances. Walk Beltran every time up, Kyle. And as hot as Delgado has been, think about it with him as well.
John Maine goes for the Metropolitians. The Cards
haven't seen a lot of him, though Pujols has liked what he has seen. (Both of those home runs were in a game in 2006, though.) Maine's most famous game against St. Louis was probably
Game 6 of the 2006 NLCS, where he kept the Mets alive and set the stage for a classic.
This is a big series for the Cards. Winning this one against a quality (if scuffling) opponent would give them a lot of momentum for the weekend series against the Cubs.
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 16, 2008 at 7:37 AM
Our office just went to doing 40 hours in four days, so as to have Friday off, which meant I've been away from the computer for most of the weekend. Let's recap, then discuss:
Thursday (vs. Cincy)
Hero:
Troy Glaus. 1-4, but drove in both runs with a homer.
Goat:
Randy Flores. Both he and Mark Worrell were credited with two runs in the box score, but Flores let them all score. A bases-loaded walk and then a bases-clearing triple? Ouch.
FridayHero:
Skip Schumaker. As much as anyone can be in a 20-2 game. Three hits, including a home run.
Goat: Pick a pitcher. I guess I'd have to go with
Todd Wellemeyer, since his eight runs in three and 1/3 innings really put the game out of reach. Ron Villone's six in an inning and two thirds was pretty ghastly as well, and Worrell, Russ Springer and Ryan Franklin didn't cover themselves with glory either. When the best pitcher of the night is Aaron Miles, that's a bad night.
SaturdayHero:
Kyle Lohse. To come out the afternoon after that shelling and to shut down the same offense is pretty impressive. Runner up to Ryan Ludwick for his acting job.
Goat:
Rick Ankiel. 0-4 with two left on.
SundayHero: Can we say Tom Gordon? No, the rules say just Cardinal players. So it comes down to Schumaker and Glaus again, both with two hits and a home run. We'll go with
Skip this time, since he left one fewer man on base and his home run came in a tighter game. (Granted, Glaus's was just a couple of batters later, but you have to drawn the line somewhere.)
Goat:
Randy Flores. You come in with two on and two out. Then you walk two guys, forcing in a run? Springer wasn't much better, walking in another one, but at least he got an out.
Wonderful thing about baseball. The Cards scored less in the series than the Phillies did in the first game, yet they won two of three. It really proved that momentum is tomorrow's starting pitcher. The Cards still couldn't gain any game on the Cubs, but it could have been much worse. Sitting 3.5 out at this time of year is pretty much beyond anyone's wildest expectations.
And best wishes to Yadier Molina. That was a nasty collision in the ninth inning. All reports seem to indicate that it wasn't as severe as it appeared on the field (I thought it was great to hear "Yadi! Yadi! Yadi!" as he was being taken off) and it should "just" be a concussion. Hopefully he'll rejoin the team quickly--with Pujols and Wainwright already being down, you'd hate to see Molina be out as well.
Lot of activity this weekend, with Joe Mather and Mark Worrell going back to Memphis in exchange for Jason Isringhausen and Anthony Reyes. Izzy's definitely saying all the right things, so hopefully he's got his mindset right and he'll be able to restore order to the ninth inning soon. Reyes already got a win in his first game back and apparently will be used out of the pen as a long relief guy, though he could start for Wellemeyer Thursday if there are medical questions. In other words, we may not see him again for a week.
Speaking of medical questions, Chris Carpenter is getting a second opinion after being shut down last week. I don't think a lot of people are surprised. Carpenter was being talked about as being back in the next couple of weeks, but that seemed like a stretch for the surgery he had. Besides, it's the Cardinals and pitching. Everyone has at least one setback that extends the return timetable. It'd be nice to hear that it's not needing more surgery or that it isn't anything serious, but that may be too much to ask.
The rehab calvary
might actually be close to arriving, though. Mark Mulder had a very impressive outing in Springfield Saturday, getting up into the 90s on the gun and throwing five shutout innings. Granted, he's been good before in the minors, but he never was throwing that hard. Matt Clement was a little less impressive, but he had a decent outing. We'll see if the innings continue to take a toll on him, however. Personally, I'm a little more excited about Mulder now. I don't know if it'll hold up, but as excited as people that should know are about this new arm slot and seeing the first results, it's very encouraging.
Day off today for the Redbirds (Yadi needs it, for sure) before the Royals series starts Tuesday. I'll take a look at the pitching matchup, etc. then.
Posted on June 4, 2008 at 9:13 AM
That was a heck of a game, huh?
Not that it was anything dramatic. After Yadier Molina's home run, it was unlikely that the weakest hitting team in the National League was going to make much of a run. But two rain delays really ruined whatever rhythm you could get in the game (not to mention my watching, which had to give up during the first one).
I don't do it very often, but I think you've got to give
Cesar Izturis Hero of the Game honors. A steal of home (on the front end of a double steal, but still)? Plus three hits? And no errors on a sloppy field? Sounds like a pretty good all around game to me.
I hate to give
Albert Pujols the Goat tag, because there's really no telling how much that calf was bothering him while he was in there, but he definitely tried to do too much in his first at-bat. After all the stats about him crushing Odalis Perez, he reached for ball 4 and hit a weak grounder that would have been two if Felipe Lopez hadn't bobbled it. A walk would have been fine there instead of going after that pitch.
All that aside, hopefully the calf won't be a problem and he can be back out there today. The lineup loses so much without him and, since the Cubs apparently will never lose again, the Cards need to keep winning if they are going to stay close. Though if he had to miss a game, the ones against Washington probably would be the least damaging.
It's almost mind-boggling that Kyle Lohse came back out after both rain delays. After throwing four innings and having an almost two hour stoppage, you rarely see the starter continue. But to add another one on top of that was just asking for trouble, I'd think. I know TLR wanted to get him a win if at all possible, but was it worth risking him hurting himself? It panned out, though, so I guess we'll defer to the skipper on this one.
Matt Clement had a strong rehab outing yesterday. It's tough to get worked up about these--even Mark Mulder had some good starts--but it definitely is better than the alternative. And
Derrick Goold gives reasons why even though the numbers are similar, Clement had a better outing than Mulder.
Pitch time: I occasionally get a message from XM's marketing agency asking for a plug in the blog. Since I'm a big XM fan, I try to oblige. This time, it has to do with the First-Year Player Draft coming up tomorrow. You'll be able to hear the whole thing on XM 188. That's the official feed, with no comments or anything. If you want a little analysis with your draft, try XM 186. And there's a special XM/ESPN special on XM 141 today starting at 6 pm.
I know
Future Redbirds is all over the draft and they've gotten me interested to see what direction the Cardinals take. It'd be nice to get a high-ceiling guy for once and have him pan out!
Today's game features the NL Pitcher of the Month against John Lannan. Lannan's first start this year was against the Cardinals and he allowed two runs in 6.2 innings. Unfortunately for him, that was enough to get the loss tacked on to his record as Loshe shut out the Nationals. That was his
only career outing against the Cards, so he's still somewhat of a blank slate.
Wellemeyer hasn't faced the Nationals this year. He's going to be even fresher to the Washington hitters, as they have only a
combined 16 plate appearances against him. Hopefully his May success will carry over and give the Cardinals a series win with a game to play.
Posted on June 3, 2008 at 9:48 AM
My father used to tell me, "That's why they play the game." You don't play it on paper (unless it's fantasy baseball, but that's a totally different topic), you have to actually go out there and try to win a game that everything says should be yours.
The Cardinals would have liked to have it stay in the realm of the theoretical last night, though until the seventh everything was panning out just like you'd expect. I didn't get to see much of the game, having a meeting to go to last night, but when I turned off the radio the Cards had just scored their third run and were looking for more. I figured it was their night, since Pujols smashed a 3-0 pitch right to the third baseman and everyone was safe.
I turn the game back on after my meeting and Pittsburgh is up 5-4. It wasn't until later when I read about the pinch-hit grand slam, which turned the game completely around.
I think
Adam Wainwright said it the best:
"You just can't give up a grand slam right there. It's the worst I've ever felt after a game."
Again, the Cards showed that they have trouble finishing off a struggling pitcher early and adding on to early leads. There is no way that Gorzelanny should have gone six innings with the way he started off the game. This offense tends to sputter sometimes, catching early then dying off.
Heroically,
Albert Pujols was at it again, with a 2-4, 2 RBI night. Pujols said that not having the postseason to worry about would probably help him be rested and ready for the season. I think we've seen that theory has some merit. Joe Mather also had a very nice game as the rookie gets adjusted to major league life.
That wasn't the best way to send the team off on a long road trip, but you deal with what you have. Tonight the Cardinals will be playing in our nation's capital, with Kyle Lohse taking on Odalis Perez. Lohse has been
OK against the current National hitters, giving up a home run only to Dmitri Young. Lohse also has faced the Nationals this year and threw seven scoreless innings against them in April.
And, though he doesn't have the greatest numbers against Lohse at least, the Cards will probably dodge a bit of a bullet this series as Ryan Zimmerman continues to sit out nursing an injury and could be placed on the DL soon.
Perez has always been Pujols's favorite whipping boy.
The rest of the Cardinals aren't anything special against him, but AP has 5 HR and 14 hits in 21 ABs. That's dominance and it'll probably get him four wide ones in any situation with runners on tonight. Perez gave up five runs in four innings against the Redbirds in the earlier meeting between the two teams.
The
Washington YNOT is up and the series preview will be up later this morning.
Oh, there's been a Matt Clement sighting! Apparently
today will start his 30-day rehab stint in the minors. Hopefully it has a better ending that Mark Mulder's did. It's not obvious who he'd replace in the rotation, really, but a fresh arm around the All-Star Break could be a nice addition to the team.
And congratulations to Todd Wellemeyer for being
NL Pitcher of the Month,
an award that puts him in good company. (Hat tip:
VEB)
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