6-12 NL East Recap

Filed Under (Daily Recap, NL East Chatter) by ccomando on 13-06-2010

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Phillies vs. Red Sox

The Phillies hoped for a better outcome as they took on the Red Sox in game two of their series at Fenway.  Instead, Philadelphia’s starter gave up nine runs for the second game in a row, and the Red Sox cruised to a 10-2 victory.

phils-612Boston starter Daisuke Matsuzaka was scratched just before game time due to a strained forearm, and the Phillies took a 2-0 lead in the top of the second off of emergency starter Scott Atchinson thanks to a Brian Schneider two-run double.   However, the Red Sox jumped on pitcher Joe Blanton in the bottom of the inning.  JD Drew started off the scoring with a solo home run, and Daniel Nava hit a grand slam in his first major league at bat to give Boston a 5-2 lead. 

The Sox added three runs in the third and one more in the fourth off of Blanton (1-5), who gave up 13 hits in addition to nine runs in his four innings of work.  Boston reliever Manny Delcarmen (2-2) pitched two scoreless innings in relief and earned the victory.

 

Mets vs. Orioles

The Mets won back-to-back games on the road for the first time since last July as they defeated the last place Orioles 3-1 Saturday night in Baltimore.

mets-612Jose Reyes led off the game with a home run off of Baltimore starter Brian Matusz.  The Orioles tied the game at 1 in the bottom of the first off of Hisanori Takahashi on a Nick Markakis RBI double.   The game remained 1-1 until the top of the sixth, when the Mets took the lead.  The Orioles failed to turn a double play on a David Wright comebacker, allowing the Mets to score the go-ahead run.  Jeff Francoeur added a solo home run in the eighth inning to cap the scoring. 

Takahashi (5-2) gave up just one run and six hits over seven innings to earn the victory, while Matusz (2-7) took the loss.  Francisco Rodriguez pitched a scoreless ninth for his 13th save.

 

Nationals vs. Indians

Cleveland rookie catcher Carlos Santana hit his first career home run, and the Indians jumped on Washington starter JD Martin for four runs in the second inning as they defeated the Nationals 7-1 in Cleveland.

nats-612Playing in his second major league game, the highly touted Santana drove in three runs to lead the Indians offense.  Indians starter Fausto Carmona (5-5) went nine strong innings, allowing just one run on three hits while striking out seven.  Ryan Zimmerman‘s eighth inning home run spoiled Carmona’s shutout bid.  Martin (0-2) pitched into the eighth inning, but allowed seven runs and took the loss.

The Nationals hope to avoid a sweep when they send phenom Stephen Strasburg to the mound on Sunday.

 

Braves vs. Twins

For the second straight night, two first place teams played a one run game.  After falling in the series opener, the Braves rebounded to defeat the Twins by a score of 3-2 at Target Field in Minnesota.

braves-612Braves starter Derek Lowe and Twins starter Nick Blackburn each allowed only two runs, but neither factored in the decision.  After the Twins took a 1-0 lead in the second, the Braves answered with two in the fifth thanks to a Melky Cabrera solo homer and an RBI double from Brooks Conrad.  A Joe Mauer double tied the game in the sixth, and the score remained even at 2 until the top of the ninth.  With runners on the corners, Conrad successfully executed a squeeze bunt, scoring Gregor Blanco with the go-ahead run. 

Atlanta’s Jonny Venters (2-0) struck out Jason Kubel with the bases loaded in the bottom of the eighth to earn the victory, while Minnesota’s Matt Guerrier (1-2) took the loss.  Billy Wagner worked around a one out single to nail down his 11th save for the Braves.

 

Marlins vs. Devil Rays

After winning on Friday in Tampa, the Marlins fell 6-5 on Saturday night as the Rays evened the Battle of Florida at one game apiece.

marlins-612The Rays jumped out to an early 5-1 lead, thanks to home runs by Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, and Sean Rodrgiuez off of Florida starer Ricky Nolasco (5-5).   However, the Marlins battled back against Tampa starter Matt Garza.  Wes Helms hit a two run homer in the fourth and the Fish scored another in the fifth to cut the lead to 5-4.  After the Rays added a run in the seventh, the Marlins answered back in the eighth with one of their own, but couldn’t bring home the tying run. 

Closer Rafael Soriano pitched a perfect ninth for Tampa to earn save number 16 and preserve the victory for Garza (7-4) and the Rays.

Chatter Up! Braves @ Nationals 8-11-09 to 8-13-09

Filed Under (Chatter Up) by mrose on 11-08-2009

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Braves Logo chatterup Nats Logo
Welcome to Chatter Up! here at NLEC. This edition will be the first between the Braves and the Red hot Nationals.  Matt Fournier of The Braves Baseball Blog will join us for the second time and so will Mark Perry of CenterfieldGate.  This time though, we have a lot more interaction from other members of NLEC or its affiliate blogs.  Enjoy!
Wally L(FishGuts): Did Balco open up a D.C. branch over the past ten days? What’s gotten into the Nats?
Mark P(CFG): Good pitching has gotten into the Nats; but even better hitting. Even when the Nats’ pitching hasn’t been that good (like the last game of the Marlins’ series and the first game of the Arizona series) the Nats’ bats have been the salvation of the team. And as I noted yesterday on centerfieldgate, I think Nats’ fans have to give a lot of credit to Jim Riggleman. The hitting has been great, Riggleman has been better.Yesterday, for example, Riggleman brought Tyler Clippard in in relief of starter J.D. Martin. Clippard has been exceptional, one of the really great untold stories of this team. But he walked the first two batters in the sixth. Riggleman didn’t hesitate: he pulled him and brought in Jason Bergman, who pitched them out of ajam. Clippard just didn’t have it, and Riggleman recognized that. I think under Manny Acta that wouldn’t have happened: Manny would have stayed with Clippard, believing that the kid needed to learn how to pitch the team out of a jam. Manny was a manager interested in teaching, Riggleman is a manager interested in winning.

Okay, I’ll admit it: the Nats are hitting like they’re the ’27 Yankees, so your Balco reference is justified. The hitting has been extraordinary. Nats’ fans now expect at least one long bomb every game – from either Zim, or Dunn, of Willingham. We’re getting spoiled. But this won’t last: and we know it. One of these days we’re going to run into a buzzsaw of a pitcher who will freeze us. I thought that guy would be Dan Heren. I was shocked that it wasn’t. Maybe it’ll happen in Atlanta, but I doubt it.

Wally L.(FishGuts):Do you getting tired of constantly being referred to as the ‘Natinals’?
Mark P(CFG): You have no idea.In one sense, I suppose, we deserve it. The misprint seems to represent all that a lot of D.C. fans believe is wrong with the team: lack of attention to detail. What’s really unfortunate is that the owners – the Lerner family – are not that way. They aren’t absentee landlords. They know how to run a business. The team owners wrote a letter to the fans at the All Star break apologizing to the fans for the record and taking responsibility for it. I thought that was a classy thing to do.

There are a lot of fans (me included) who think that the team is being unfairly criticized. Earlier this year Tim Kurkjian at Baseball Tonight questioned whether the game belonged in this city. Kurkjian is a crackerjack reporter, but he’s dead wrong. More people come to see our team than go to games in Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Florida or Oakland. At the beginning of the year Baseball Prospectus called Nationals Park a “boondoggle.” Where did that come from? If you come to Washington come to Nationals Park – it’s not Camden Yards, it’s not Yankee Stadium, but there’s not a bad seat in the house. Nats’ fans know the truth: the owners and city got the ballpark right. Watching a game in Washington is a great experience.

Wally L(FishGuts): Strasburg watch: you gonna show him the money?
Mark P(CFG): Yeah, sure. We’re going to show him the money. The question is, will he take it? I think the Nats are committed to making a bank busting offer to Strasburg – topping any amount paid to any draftee ever. But that might not matter. It may be that the Scott Boras agenda is to use Strasburg to transform the dollars paid to draftees. So any offer might be dead on arrival. Which is too bad: because the owners will get blamed. But I think I would break ranks on this and defend them. Strasburg questioned the way the team was run and said he might play in Japan. Here’s a kid who’s never thrown a pitch in the majors, and he’s in the position to judge how a team is run? To turn down a payday that will make him rich? I don’t like threats. Bust the bank. Fine. And I hope he takes it and turns into a star. But if he doesn’t take it, he can play for the Hanshin Tigers.
Matt R(NLEC): Since being recalled from the minors when Johnson was traded, Elijah Dukes is on fire. Do you feel this is the player you traded for? And do you think the Nationals will be able to control his temper on and off the field going forward?
Mark P(CFG): Ten RBIs in three games. Unbelievable; it shows just what kind of talent this guy has. But I’m still skeptical. Prior to being sent down to Syracuse, the rumors that Dukes was a problem in the clubhouse were just too persistent to ignore. And the Nats have a short attention span just now. Look at what happened to Anderson Hernandez – he pouted, just once, and that was it. He was shipped off to the Mets. The days of experimentation are over; there will be no more trades made for guys with attitude problems in the belief that the front office can teach maturity. That’s not their job. The team will expect players to come to Washington as adults – or they won’t come at all. Elijah Dukes is on a short string. But if he can control his temper, if he can adjust to being in the majors and if he can be a plus in the clubhouse then the upside here is just tremedous. But that’s a lot of “ifs.”
Matt R(NLEC): What Braves hitter and pitcher strike fear into you and Nats fans the most?
Mark P(CFG): I was going to say Chipper Jones, because Chipper Jones seems to play well against the Nats. I can remember specific Chipper late-in-the-game at bats where I thought: well, time to go home. But Chipper might get some rest against the Nats in this upcoming series. So I’ll say Tommy Hanson. We’ve always done well against the Braves, for some reason, but I think Hanson could end our streak. He’s that pitching buzzsaw I talked abut earlier. He’s young, fast and deceptive. He was great against us the last time he faced us – on July 4. I was there. He pitched like a veteran. The Hanson-Lannon match-up is, I think, something that will happen again and again over the next years. The beginning of a great player and team rivalry. It’ll be fun to watch.
Thanks again Mark, now for the Nats opponent, Matt Fournier of The Braves Baseball Blog.
Wally L(FishGuts): Would you have liked to have seen the team do more before the deadline?any waiver moves on the horizon?
Matt F(BB): The answer would be similar to the one below a player that provides speed and average for a team that is last in stolen bases. They added McLouth, but I don’t think that is enough. They need speed !
Mr North Jersey(NLEC): With the Marlins having just swept the Phillies to pull within 4 games and the Braves 4.5 games back with six games coming up this month vs the Phillies, three this coming weekend. Which player on the Mets would you want to rent (at no cost to you) to help get you past those pesky Phillies?
Matt F(BBB): If I could rent one player from the Mets who was healthy it would be Angel Pagan. He could provide the Braves the speed and consistent average that they have been lacking for many years now.
Matt R(NLEC): I saw you posted on the forum about this, but did anyone actually think Martin Prado was this good? Is this a one year wonder or can this possibly continue?
Matt F(BBB): I had heard of him before this year, but never saw him play consistently enough to see what he was truly capable off. I honestly don’t think he is a one year wonder, he has shown signs of being a a reliable fielder and consistent hitter. I think he could be the teams second baseman for a good amount of years.
Matt R(NLEC): Better offseason aquisition: Javier Vazquez or Derek Lowe?
Matt F(BBB): If you asked me before the season I would have said D. Lowe as he has had a more consistent career than Vazquez, but as the season has progressed the answer is definately Javier Vazquez. He has been solid all season with a 2.70 ERA 10 wins and has 170 + strikeouts. He should have more wins, but the stagnent offense for Atlanta hasn’t helped his cause. But I still love the D. Lowe acquistion.
Matt R(NLEC): Which pitcher AND hitter on the Nats scares you the most?
Matt F(BBB): The pitcher that scares me the most has to be John Lannan, he has been very good lately and last time he faced us he tossed 8 solid innings. For hitters it has to be Ryan Zimmerman, easily one of the hottest hitters in baseball, watch out for him, but don’t fall asleep on anyonne in the top portion of this Nats lineup.

Please feel free to email any recommend questions or comments about the segment to mrose@nleastchatter.com or go to this forum topic and post a reply.

NL East Series Preview 7-30-09 to 8-2-09 Phillies only Edition

Filed Under (Series Preview) by mrose on 30-07-2009

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The Philadelphia Phillies are the only team starting a new series on Thursday night, so we will have a scaled down version just for them today, with a full version tomorrow afternoon. Enjoy!

Phillies Logo VS Giants Logo
The Philadelphia Phillies(58-41, 1st in NL East) made a big splash before the trade deadling, obtaining Cliff Lee and Ben Francisco from the Indians prior to the deadline. Both should be meeting up with the team in San Francisco this weekend with Lee expected to debut on either Friday or Saturday night, which will shape the rest of the rotation. The Phillies continue to win and took two of three from the Diamondbacks this week and now will face the wild card leading San Francisco Giants for four. Check out Phillies Phandom for more Philadelphia insight.

The San Francisco Giants(55-46, 2nd in NL West 7GB, 1st in WildCardl) were also players before the trade deadline. The Giants acquired infielder Freddy Sanchez from the Pirates for a minor league player, and he didn’t have to travel far as the Pirates were just swept out of San Francisco, Sanchez will simply extend his stay. They also got the news this week that Randy Johnson has a rotator cuff tear and will be out for an extended period of time. They hope that they can extend their wild card lead, and take some games from the leagues hottest team at the same time.

Probable pitching matchups are below:

NOTE: Cliff Lee WILL make his Phillies debut in the series, it just has not been announced whether he will slot in on Friday or Saturday.

Thursday @ 10:15PM EST – Lopez,PHI(3-0,3.09 ERA) vs. Sanchez,SF(3-9,4.92 ERA)
Friday @ 10:15PM EST – Blanton,PHI(7-4,4.11 ERA) vs. Sadowski,SF(2-3,4.81 ERA)
Saturday @9:05PM EST-Moyer,PHI(10-7,5.32 ERA) vs. Lincecum,SF(11-3,2.30 ERA)
Sunday @ 4:05PM EST – Hamels,PHI(7-5,4.42 ERA) vs. Zito,SF(6-10,4.54 ERA)