@Padres 3, Pirates 2 — Everth Cabrera’s perfect push bunt was the lone safety for the winners. But it sparked a 2-run opening frame, thanks to Francisco Liriano’s wildness and two defensive gaffes behind him (one mental, one physical). Three more free passes (one to Ian Kennedy) forced in the third run, and the San Diego bullpen locked down late as usual.
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Tuesday game notes: Alvarez tickles the Ivories
(I kept hoping to get to the late games, but life intervened. These are games of Tuesday, June 3.)
@Marlins 1, Rays 0 — Henderson Alvarez went all the way on just 88 pitches for his third shutout this year, his only wins. Eight hits, seven singles and a 2-out triple, and no walks; three DPs (one by bunt) and two caught stealing. He even helped produce the run, his 2-out single in the 5th filling the bags for Christian Yelich, who worked a walk from 0-and-2 start.
Monday game notes: A Cycle Too Far
Mariners 10, @Yankees 2 — “Cycle-plus” alert! Kyle Seager tripled in his first two times up — one normal, one peculiar — then flied out, doubled, and capped the rout with a 3-run kaboom. We still haven’t seen a real cycle this year, but the cycle-plus is far more rare. A cycle-plus has no single, but at least four extra-base hits and one of each flavor. There have been 243 cycles since 1914 (four by Mariners), but this was just the 50th cycle-plus, and the 6th with two triples — the first of those since Montreal’s Hal Breeden in 1973.
King Felix: long may he reign?
Felix Hernandez is approaching the 2000 inning milestone. Barring injury, he should get there this season. If he does, he will be just the 21st pitcher of the live ball era to reach that milestone in his age 28 season or younger.
But, what does that portend for the remainder of his career? I’ll consider that question after the jump.
Game Notes from Shutout Sunday, June 1
Six team shutouts Sunday, 129 for the season. On a per-team basis, it’s the most shutouts at this stage of a season since 1989. But this year’s scoring average of 4.17 runs per game is no cause for hysteria. The post-WWII median is 4.34 R/G; the expansion-era median is 4.32. The median for the first 20 years of the DH era was 4.26. This year’s average is just 2%-4% below those marks, and it’s the same as last year’s average. It’s just normal fluctuation. (Oh, and if you’re feeling more historical than current, there’s a random box-score nugget at the bottom of the post.)
Games notes from May’s end: The Oscar goes to…
@Cardinals 2, Giants 0 — Welcome to the Show, Oscar Taveras. The highly anticipated prospect broke a scoreless tie with a no-doubt home run in his second time at bat, the first Cardinal debut HR since 2010. (Steven Hill?) Michael Wacha tamed the Jints for six innings before a rain delay, and Trevor Rosenthal whiffed the heart of San Francisco’s order for the save.
Game notes from Friday: Showdown in South Beach
Atlanta 3, @Miami 2 — The Marlins could have claimed first place on their home field, but the guests would not cooperate. Top of the 7th, Atlanta down 2-1, Julio Teheran due to lead off, about 90 pitches in and looking sharp since a 1st-inning homer. What’s your call?
Game notes from … er … where am I, now?
Game Notes savored every crawfish in the Crescent City. Now, let’s shake off that Abita Purple Haze, and get back to those hardball nines!
@Diamondbacks 4, Reds 0 — A 94-pitch shutout … by Josh Collmenter? A 3-hitter, facing the minimum? Pull the other one!
Circle of Greats: 1923 Balloting
This post is for voting and discussion in the 59th round of balloting for the Circle of Greats (COG). This round adds to the ballot those players born in 1923. Rules and lists are after the jump. Continue reading
COG 1924 Round Results: Started Great, Closed Great, Smoltz In
John Smoltz started here at the Circle of Greats voting by appearing on exactly 50% of the ballots in his very first round (which was also just the second round of COG voting as a whole). Then, for the next 57 (!) rounds, John never appeared on nearly that high a percentage of the ballots again. Until, that is, he received a stunning level of very late support in the 1924 round of voting to tie Duke Snider, and closed things out with a 50.8% showing in a runoff against the Duke, making Smoltz the 58th inductee into the High Heat Stats Circle of Greats. More on John and the voting after the jump Continue reading