Recently in Randy Flores Category
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 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 26, 2008 at 10:42 AM
Cardinals endure a 2 hour, 25 min rain delay and eventually lose 8-7 in the ninth to Detroit. It's tough to lose a close one, but I would think especially tough to lose after having to keep your focus during 145 minutes of downtime, and after having 3 leads (2-0, 6-5, and 7-6) in the game.
As an aside, it's been nice to read Rick Hummel's game summaries again. I'd forgotten how well-written they were.
Heroes and Goats: Hero tonight goes to Rick Ankiel. Two HR, 3 RBI, an outfield assist - yeah, he's the hero. Goat? On a rainy night? Although my instinct is to go with Mother Nature, I'll have to settle for Kyle McClellan; he had a tough outing, allowing the Tigers to tie in the eighth and win in the ninth. I also found it interesting that 3 of the 4 hitters he faced in the eighth swung at the first pitch. Scouting report? Tipping his pitches? I wonder.
Bernie's article on the bullpen is worth reading. We all knew the lefties down there were struggling, but I didn't realize Flores was toasted as badly as he seems to be. Yikes.
To end on a high note - AP should be activated today.
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 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 2, 2008 at 10:42 AM
The series isn't over, of course, but this weekend was a pretty solid weekend for the Cardinals. Assuming you ignore the ugliness that was Saturday evening.
I actually didn't get to see much of the games this weekend, having various things take me away from the TV, and the only extended time I did see was the first three or so innings on Saturday. Even with that bad taste, though, winning two of three and having Wainwright on the hill tonight has to give you a pretty good feeling.
Friday night, Albert Pujols did some great work again. Two hits, two RBI, a home run to support Todd Wellemeyer, whose seven innings of one-run ball puts him in Hero consideration as well. However, due to his amazing catch, his first hit driving in what turned into the game-winning run, all in his first game, you've got to give the kudos to
Joe Mather. Doing all that with the butterflies that had to be swimming in his stomach is pretty impressive.
That game got much closer than it needed to be as the bullpen had another ragged outing. Even though Randy Flores has the worse line in the box score, the Goat has to go to
Ryan Franklin. Coming in with two on and two out and giving up two hits and three runs (two charged to Flores)? That's not closer material. Will many more of this missteps lead to Chris Perez getting more ninth inning time?
Saturday....well, what do you say about Saturday? Not much.
Kelvim Jimenez probably won't get too many more calls to the big club after that performance. Giving up a grand slam to your first batter? Yuck. Giving up two more home runs was just icing. Not surprising he got sent down to Memphis for Mark Worrell. For a Hero, I'll go with
Troy Glaus, if only because of his timing. Right after Dan said that Glaus had commented pre-game that, as the weather warms up, so does his bat, he launched a home run. Timing is everything.
Sunday,
Braden Looper pitched fairly well, but when you couple that with his hitting prowness, he'll get the Hero nod. Glaus was right there, though, with his three hits. Goatily, I think I'll go with
Ryan Ludwick, being that he had an 0-4 with 4 left on, but Ryan Franklin was right there, allowing the tying run to get to the plate before retiring the Pirates in the ninth. Is there something about closing in St. Louis that brings out the daredevil in these pitchers?
Tonight, the Cardinals look to take the series before heading out on the road for nine games. They've got Wainwright on the mound, like I said, so that's got to give them some confidence. Friends of mine are going to be at the game and I told them everything is lined up for a Cardinal victory.
First, you have Wainwright, who can be a dominant pitcher, though he's had
some struggles against Pirate hitters in the past. He last faced Pittsburgh in his final 2007 start, allowing three runs in seven innings at PNC. The last time he faced them in Busch was May 22 of last year, when he gave up 2 in 5.1 innings. That was before his second half surge last year.
Then there is the Pittsburgh pitcher, Tom Gorzelanny. A 7.38 ERA is never something you want to see if you are a pitcher, but the hitters are excited. Gorzelanny had control issues the last time he faced the Cards,
walking seven Redbirds and two dogs for Tony LaRussa. The Cardinals have
had reasonable success against him, though only Rick Ankiel has a home run off of him.
Hopefully everything plays out and the Cards are able to get a win. The way the Cubs have been going at it, they'll need it!
In other news, it looks like Joel Pineiro will be on the disabled list
longer than expected. I would expect that Mike Parisi will make another start, but as rough as he looked on Saturday, I'm not sure that's the wisest idea, though it would be against Washington. There's passing talk that Anthony Reyes could come back up and take the start. Eventually, the club needs to get him back up here and effective if they plan on making any kind of trade with him. Showing that he can pitch in the majors only strengthens Mozeliak's hand.
Posted on May 19, 2008 at 11:29 AM
Let me get this out of the way: I'm no fan of interleague play. I think of it as a cheap promotional gimmick that causes more controversy and issues than it's worth. Listening and watching the games this weekend, it was hard to think of them as games that count. It was more like the team was back in spring training, playing some exhibitions.
Still it's always good to win a series, no matter who you are playing against. It wasn't easy, but the fact the Cards were able to take two of three from the then-first place Tampa Bay Rays should give them some confidence as they head on the yearly West Coast road trip.
There's not much point to recap--everyone's pretty familiar with the games by now, I'd figure--but we've got some hardware to hand out.
Friday, the only Rays win of the series, you'd have to go with
Chris Duncan as the Hero, since he was pretty much the only bit of offense out there, capped off by his fourth homer. Troy Glaus did have a couple of hits and Chris Perez was outstanding in his first outing.
For the Goat, you might choose a number of players, but with an 0-4 ending his 42-game on-base streak and an error to boot, it's one of those rare nights off for
Albert Pujols. I almost went with Skip Schumaker after his fourth-inning at bat resulted in a double play after two were on with none out, which was a big blow to the Cardinals' chances.
Saturday was a wild one, from what I can tell. I was at the zoo with the family and missed most of it, but obviously when you have a two home-run day (including a walkoff) like
Ryan Ludwick had, well, that's Hero material. The Goat is a little up in the air. Duncan had an 0-5 and left five men on base on a day where everyone was getting hits. Another shaky outing by Adam Wainwright almost gives him the tag. Thirteen baserunners in less than six innings is a recipe for disaster, though it's possible conditions affected him as well. If not, the Cardinals have problems, because if Wainwright starts struggling, this team is in a lot of trouble. But
Randy Flores allowing three runs in a third of an inning really takes the cake. The whole bullpen seemed to struggle on Saturday.
The last game was a pretty interesting one as well. I got to watch most of it and didn't think the Cards were ever going to mount the rally they needed. It would have been fitting if Pujols would have driven in a number of runs with the bases loaded in the sixth, being the closest thing to Stan Musial the team has, but that wasn't to be and I thought that'd be their last chance. This team plays the hard nine, though, and it was good to see.
Obviously, Skip Schumaker could have gotten the Hero tag for his walk-off hit and Aaron Miles could have gotten it for his game-tying double. But I want to go a different direction and give it to the newest Cardinal,
Chris Perez. In only his second game, he was given the ball after the team had tied it up in the eighth. Not only was he able to keep the game tied, he didn't even make it that agonizing, throwing five strikes and turning it over to the offense.
Our final Goat would be
Troy Glaus, who went 0-4 and had a big strikeout in the fifth, ending another potential rally. That said, Glaus has been coming on of late and it's very good to see.
So the Cardinals head out to San Diego trailing the Cubs by two games. And, as a gift, they miss Jake Peavy, who is out with an elbow issue. Instead, they'll face Will Ledezma. Ledezma has only started one game this year, usually working out of the pen, so it's not that likely he'll be around much past the fifth if the Cardinals are able to get the men on that they usually do. However, the Cardinals seem to struggle against pitchers like this, especially
when they've not seen them much before. They'll possibly have to continue their patient at-bats, because that ballpark in Petco isn't usually that conducive to hitting.
The Cardinals throw Todd Wellemeyer at the Pads. If you thought the Cardinals didn't know much about Ledezma, that's a wealth of first-hand knowledge
compared to the Padres and Wellemeyer. I don't think we'll be able to make many judgment calls there.
The Padres have definitely not had the season that people expected, as they have the worst record in baseball, but they still can be a dangerous team. Hopefully the Cardinals will be able to extend their misery for a few more games. And there's still time for the
Padre YNOT!
Posted on May 16, 2008 at 9:38 AM
If Wednesday's win was a step toward recovery, St. Louis fell off the wagon on Thursday and landed with a thud that might be felt for days to come. The same problems reared up on Thursday afternoon--a lack of the big hit, the inability to continue to pile on, and the shakiness of the bullpen.
This game was very similar to the one Ian Snell started against the Cardinals earlier. They got out to the big lead, couldn't add to it, and lost it late. It's possible the game turned in the first inning. If Adam Kennedy's bases-loaded, two-out hit gets down, there's a couple more runs right there and the game could have gone quite differently.
From what it sounds like, this could be the last time for a while that
Jason Isringhausen gets the goat. Some sort of decision apparently
will be made today, and it has to be. Odds are there will be a DL move, especially since you'll note in that story people are now saying he's still getting treatment for his hip, something that hadn't been mentioned before now. But Izzy did make that a little harder on them with his blunt honesty:
"I don't know what we're going to do," Isringhausen said. "I wish I
could say I was hurt, my arm was falling off, or I couldn't land. I
can't do that. People (hitters) standing at home plate tell you what
the end result should be. I'm not getting any swings and misses, so
that says something about my stuff. I feel healthy. But maybe my
'healthy' just isn't good enough."
While Izzy gets most of the brunt, most of the bullpen can come under the same indictment. I ran the numbers since the middle of the Colorado series, when Izzy blew the win late. Here's what the bullpen has done since then (again, apologies for formatting):
Randy Flores: 2.2 innings, two hits, one ER, three walks, two strikeouts, 3.37 ERA, 50% inherited runners scored (1-2)
Ryan Franklin: 3 innings, two hits, 0 ER, two walks, one strikeout, 0.00 ERA, no inherited runners
Jason Isringhausen: 3.1 innings, 8 hits, 6 ER, four walks, one strikeout, 16.22 ERA, 100% inherited runners scored (2-2)
Kyle McClellan: 3.1 innings, four hits, 2 ER, three walks, three strikeouts, 5.41 ERA, 67% inherited runners scored (3-2)
Mike Parisi: 5 innings, seven hits, three ER, two walks, three strikeouts, 5.40 ERA, no inherited runners
Russ Springer: 3.1 innings, one hit, 0 ER, two walks, 1 K, 0.00 ERA, 0% inherited runners scored (2-0)
Ron Villone: 2.2 innings, nine hits, eight ER, two walks, one strikeout, 26.97 ERA, 0% inherited runners scored (1-0)
Total Bullpen: 23.1 innings, 33 hits, 20 ER, 18 BB, 12 K, 7.72 ERA, 50% inherited runners scored (10-5)Save for Franklin and Springer (and, to a lesser extent, Flores), everyone is struggling out there. It doesn't seem to be overwork--that's an average of just over 2.1 innings per game over the nine game stretch--but something does need to be done.
I'd expect that the first thing that is going to happen is the promotion of Chris Perez when they do whatever they do with Izzy. That should give the bullpen another look and a good power arm to help in some situations. As you can see above, the relievers are only striking out one every two innings during that stretch. That many balls in play is going to lead to some problems.
Villone obviously needs some time off as well.
He had a 0.90 ERA in April, but in half as many innings in May his ERA is close to 9. The decision needs to be made soon whether he's going through a rough patch and needs to tinker or he's run out of gas and needs to be released. There are a
few other relievers in Memphis that might be worth taking a look at in St. Louis.
As for the offense, I don't know what you can do about that. It's not that people aren't hitting--the team racked up 14 hits yesterday and they hit .313 for the Pittsburgh series--but the team can't seem to get them when they are needed. 37 men were stranded in three games in this series. A couple of hits in the right spot and it's a sweep by the Cardinals, possibly rendering some of this bullpen angst moot.
We still need a Hero out of yesterday's game. It's a tough call, really. The pitching's out, either because of ineffectiveness or they didn't have a chance for a big moment play. Numerous batters had multiple hits yesterday, which makes it a bit hard to narrow down, but I think I'll continue to honor the resurgence of our third baseman and select
Troy Glaus for his 3-4, 1 RBI, 1 BB day. His bounceback is one of the reasons the offense is at least getting runners on. Though we may have to use
John's
excellent Photoshop more often than we'd like!
It promises to be an interesting day whenever the decision on Izzy comes down. But until then, there's also a ballgame to focus on for tonight.
The Cardinals and Rays were the last two of the current teams to meet, facing each other for the first time down in Tropicana in 2005. The Cards swept that series 3-0 and haven't seen the Rays since. Unfortunately for the Cardinals, this version of the Tampa Bay squad is much better than the previous incarnation.
Braden Looper is going for the Cards tonight. Not surprisingly,
there's not much history between him and the current Rays batters, being that most of them are homegrown ALers. Looper's pitched fairly well since his shelling by the Giants and hopefully can continue that. He's pitching a little better in Busch than on the road, so that may help out some as well.
Andy Sonnanstine goes for the Rays. You have to figure the team is going to lean on Troy Glaus a lot this weekend, since he's the
only player that's faced Sonnanstine and likely any of the hurlers that will be going for Tampa Bay. Sonnanstine hasn't had the best of seasons, but being that he's a fresh face to these guys, it could be a long night.
With the Rays coming to town, Troy Percival gets to return to St. Louis. We'll see what kind of reaction he gets when he comes into a game. The Rays have some young hitters that should be fun to watch as well.
Just as long as they don't go beating around the bullpen like everyone else.
Posted on May 8, 2008 at 9:22 AM
Just when you start thinking that
Jason Isringhausen is back on the horse, it bucks him again.
Granted, some of last night can't be blamed on Izzy. Kyle McClellan had a rough night in the nine pitches that he threw. Albert Pujols possibly, maybe even probably should have caught the foul ball that would have had them out of the inning. Randy Flores put the tying run on base.
But all that said, basically what the Cards asked from their closer was one out. Get out of the eighth with the lead and things are much better. You can start the ninth fresh and hopefully put up a nice Cardinal win.
He couldn't do that. A weak single--one of the few balls this year that you say, "Rolen would have had that"--then a triple that scored the go-ahead run. Tack on a walk after that and the Cards were lucky to go into the ninth just down one.
At least the Cardinals had a chance in the ninth. Skip Schumaker got on and Miles almost worked a walk before flying out. Don't know if it'd mattered, but it'd been nice to have two on and no outs. Pujols stung the ball--that was two balls he smashed right at the left side of the infield on the night--but nothing doing.
Even with his game-ending strikeout, though, I think the Hero tag goes to
Ryan Ludwick. I loved what Adam Wainwright did, don't get me wrong. It was a close one, but Ludwick pretty much was the offense last night, with his home run and two RBI.
So instead of Wainwright getting a deserved win, instead of the Cards pushing their winning streak to four and their NL Central lead to 3.5, they have to regroup and try to win the series today.
Today's an afternoon affair, with a 2:05 start here in the middle of the country. Kyle Lohse looks to put Saturday's atrocious outing behind him against Jorge de la Rosa, who can tell you
all about a disastrous outing.
Lohse pitched well against the Rockies in the make-up season opener, throwing five scoreless innings and striking out three. Again, Podsednik and Helton will be
the key batters for him to watch.
de la Rosa
has faced a few of the Cardinals before. He's been around as a reliever, facing most of the Cards when he was in either Milwaukee or Kansas City. Still, there's not much of a book on him, so it'll be interesting to see what the Cards do with him.
It'll be a test to see if the Cards can bounce back. So far this season, they've been able to do that. Can they do it on the road after such a tough loss? And if the game is close today, who gets the call for the save?
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