Tag Archives: Chris Sale

Welcome Back Notes for 3/31/14

Opening Day, few things are so important in sports.  Huge hype for the first of 162 games of an incredibly long 6-month season.  Immense pressure for starting pitchers that rivals late September playoff run only to be immediately followed by a game that means next to nothing in the big picture of a .60th of a percent of the season.  But that is the beauty of baseball, the season is made up of tiny almost insignificant numbers that mean very little alone, similar to one hit, one strikeout or one blown call but when to compound them day after day, month after month they make or break a team.

Today, saw the first use of instant replay by the Cubs that was upheld and the first overturned call by the Brewers.

Grady SIzemore went 2 for 4 with a home run the Red Sox in his first game in 2 years.  Always a great player with the Cleveland Indians it is nice to see him play at this level after being plagued by numerous injuries.

Johnny Cueto spent all last year up and down with injury problems, today pitched brilliantly striking out 8 against the NL-Champ Cards.

And speaking of birds:

  • Nelson Cruz of the Orioles hit a homerun
  • Kolten Wong of the Cards went 1-3
  • Jose Reyes left the Jays game with injury

Billy Hamilton started the season 0-4 with 4 strikeouts in a still close 1-0 game in the 9th.

MVP Andrew McCutchen was mortal at only 1-3 in a 10th inning nail-biter.

Stephen Strasburg was knocked around (6 ER) but Anthony Rendon and Adam LaRoche saved his hide.  With Rendon hitting a 10th inning 3-run shot.

The Phillies and Rangers pitchers missed the bus and the hitters hit off the tee for the game scoring 24 combined runs.  Ryan Sanberg and Jimmy Rollins have no problems right now after a grand slam… but that greatly overshadowed a 1-6 night, ouch.  Only one player did not safely get on base, Mitch Moreland, who felt left out and might have faked an injury in the 9th out of shame.

Jose Abreu is hitting .500 with a double after his first pro game with the ChiSox.  You have to root for this kid, he comes to America and chooses to play for one of the worst records in baseball.  That is love of the game.  (I hope this club contends because of this kid some day.)

And another Sox was not too shabby, Chris Sale went 7 innings striking out 8.

Still to play tonight are Mike Trout and Jose Fernandez two of baseballs best players and both players were in diapers when Derek Jeter won his first World Series.

I never thought I would utter these words:  Off to watch the Marlins and Rockies.

SEASON PREVIEW: AL Central

There is not a lot of surprise in a division filled with perennial wiping posts, maybe surprise is not the right word, how about intrigue.  Detroit should easily be the best of the bunch with Chicago, KC, and Cleveland all competing for second best by a mere margin.  Don’t be surprised to see all three teams take each other out of the Wild Card race simply because they could split their series and finish .500.  The Tigers are also one injury away from being in this pack.

Detroit Tigers – Repeating last years success is going to be incredibly difficult for the Boy of Motor City.  

First and foremost is the loss of Prince Fielder.  While I am very critical of how valuable he is as a player and what he offers for 23 million dollars, what he does very well is hit the ball far which drives in runs and offer protection for number three hitter, Miguel Cabrera.  The most feared hitter in baseball will now see a lot less quality pitches come his way with Victor Martinez hitting in the 4-spot instead of Fielder.  

  • Martinez  (AGE 35) 14 HR 83 RBI .301 BA
  • Fielder (Age 29) 25 HR 106 RBI .279 BA

I don’t think there is any possible way for Miggy to chase a Triple Crown with the amount of junk they will throw him with a declining bat in the wings.  If he can’t swing he can not drive in runs, look for him to double his walks this year.  His numbers will always be impressive and he will probably still hit .340 plus and hit 35 home runs but the hits will be in less significant situations really hog-tying the sluggers abilities.

Ian Kinsler is a great player and will still turn two but now with a different partner in Jose Iglesias who handles shortstop like a veteran.  Defensively this will not improve the team as Omar infante was every bit the two sacker as Kinsler and the hitting balances out with a little less control and a bit more power from Kinsler but we may see those numbers swap dip with the move to Detroit from the hitter friendly confines of Texas.

The move of Kinsler for Fielder was the right play for Detroit, but their mistake was not chasing a free agent like Curtis Granderson or even Cory Hart to protect their best offensive weapon.

I am not sure what GM David Dombrowski was thinking, not only did he let Cabrera fall victim to increased walks, he also let one of their best pitchers walk.  Possessing one of the deepest pitching staffs in all of baseball they let an ace pitcher for many teams go for what would be the equivalent of the Manhattan deal with the American Indians.   While they are still deeper than possibly 25 teams, and Drew Smyly could turn out just as valuable they seemed like they were dumping him out of spite, poor business decision for the Tigers and gift of a lifetime for Washington.

The remainder of the staff in Justin Verlander, Rick Porcello, Matt Scherzer and Anibal Sanchez really need no words to describe their success.  Verlander, Scherzer and Sanchez should all hit 17 or so wins and their pitiful fifth starter Porcello will have to get by on a measly 15 wins.   The rotation will keep the ball in the park as always, the difficult part will be the offense getting the ball out of the park.

Joe Nathan is again the closer and at 39 the years are really building up, but with only one inning required of him.  Nathan has the stamina to keep it going for a few more years, but even at 45 he could probably still close the deal with the security this rotation provides.

On paper looking at the Tiger’s pitching staff numbers it makes you wonder how a staff that can average 18-5 win-loss records and win 93 total games and not play in the World Series.   The teams that follow Detroit are more of the reason for their success than a testament to their greatness.  The AL Central teams may deserve thank you notes every time one of Detroit’s pitchers signs a massive new deal.

Kansas City Royals – Kansas put on a bit of a show down the stretch and looked like they may almost contend for a shot at the Wild Card.  This season they will have one less really bad team to steal wins from and will find themselves more in the pack with Cleveland and Chicago and not pulling away from it.

Every player in KC’s infield is solid star material, with the exception of Omar Infante who is already there.  Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas man the corners and could easily combine for 50-60 home runs this year and knock in 150 runs between the two of them and what makes that a bigger feet is that both are 25 years old and have a long career to grow.

Alcides Escobar and Infante are not going to hit long balls but the two will keep all kinds of balls from leaving the infield giving KC their first solid double team in a decade.

Salvador Perez is only 23 and if not for his limited innings due to the wear and tear of being a catcher, could actually be their best hitter.  Along with Billy Butler they could add another 40 home runs together to add to the cornersmen’s total.

The outfield is pretty average in bat strength, but with Aoki, Cain and Gordon’s speed they should man that outfield like it is 100 square feet to cover.  If the team gives them the green light the core could swipe 100 bases this year giving the big infielders plenty of chances to drive them in with a deep shot into Kauffman’s vast outfield.

Sporting the weakest rotation of the AL Central will keep the Royals out of any serious playoff talks.  Even with a lucky strike and a shot at the Wild Card, Jake Shields could not stand up against the leagues other WC starters.

Chicago White Sox – Chicago may have one team with a chance to catch a good streak and surprise the city and they don’t play in Wrigley. This year look for the ChiSox to bounce back from obscurity thanks to a very soft division.

Chicago will be seeing a lot of Baseball Tonight highlight time (they hope) thanks to Cuba import Jose Abreu.  If Cuba would just work out a similar deal to the Japanese posting system and earn some money for their economy and not watching young prospect after young prospect defect they could end their financial struggles in one off season with all the amazing talent found on the small island.

Abreu it touted to be the next Yasiel Puig, amazing to be not even a full season into your career and you are the player being compared against already.  His bat carries a bit more consistency on the power and could make the South Side a very exciting place even if they are playing for mediocrity and not a playoff spot.

Avisail Garcia proved he could play after moving to Chicago in the Iglesias deal, and his production in the half a season has earned him a starting spot in right where he will continue to progress and could easily be Chicago’s high average bat in the new young core with Abreu once this team finds its way.

How good do you have to be to pitch on a 63-win team, have a losing record and have an ERA just north of 3 and still have serious consideration for the AL Cy Young?  Try 226Ks and only 46BBs and the strongest strike out to walk ratio of any CY Young candidate. Chris Sale is one of the best lefties in all of baseball and if he was a free agent now, every big market team would offer this kid 15million and then just keep bidding.  Fortunately for Chicago they have 2 more seasons before teams come calling to give him a reason to stay with the White Sox.

Jose Quintana is probably the only other name most fans outside of Chicago will know from their rotation.  Along with Sale both pitchers could push for 18 wins if the season was going Chicago’s way making them as potent as Scherzer and Verlander as a one-two punch.

Most of Chicago’s rotation and bullpen is untested, but if they win 80 plus games this year a few guys like Danks, Paulino and Johnson could become some household names alsong with closer Lindstrom.

Cleveland Indians – Last year the Indians had a streak where things were looking up, and they kept looking up and eventually the season ended with 92-wins and a one game playoff loss to the Tampa Bay Rays.

One reason for the continuous surge and inability to just come back to Earth is that 76 of their 162 games happen to be against sub .500 talent teams, even though KC and Cleveland finished with winning records, had they been in any other division I feel they would have seen 60-70 win seasons at best.

Cleveland looks to take a step back this season and probably fall more into reality with a closer to .500 record with the improvement of Chicago and KC.  None of the 3 middle running teams are better than the other this year and they may spend more time splitting series and negating each other out.

Cleveland has some great talent in Jason Kipnis and Asdrubal Cabrera who man the middle infield.  The corners are manned by two very aging veterans in Nick Swisher and Mike Aviles both who will likely see an offensive decline, Swisher more so that Aviles who will benefit in longevity due to the move to third and still plays above average defense.  Jason Giambi has half a shot to win the DH spot with 20 or so homers left in his tank and about a .230 BA left in his knees.

The outfield is more problematic that the dirt with a trio that could each be a fourth outfielder on most teams all holding down court on in Cleveland.  Jeff Francoeur may have found just the right mix of players declining in age and young and lacking experience to catch on and actually make the team for the power he can offer alone.

 When 14-10 Justin Masterson with a 3.45 ERA is your ace-in-the-hole you are in trouble.  That sounds like more of an insult than a compliment, but really it is an insult to the rotation in general that they could win 93 games and the best pitcher they have to show for it is a marginally good year.  Materson is decent and a lot of teams would jump at the 27-year-old for their rotation if the Indians put him on the block, but every team that would be looking at him would probably consider him a 4th or 5th at best and in some scenarios just a short-term injury replacement that could not hold on come full strength.  Simple test, would you put Masterson anywhere in a rotation like the Cardinals, Pirates, Detroit, Red Sox, Atlanta, Dodgers or even the Yankees?  I think at best he makes long relief on any of those teams.  Lets not even mention the closer situation.

Minnesota Twins – Even in a weak division the Twins have little hope.  Maybe they will bring up Byron Buxton early and not waste that whole May 1 call up to save his full season foolishness and give us a reason to care what the Twinsees are doing.