Manny Banuelos – Perseverance and a Passion for the Game

On May 1, in Baseball Roundtable’s April Update, I shared an upbeat story of perseverance – Giants’ OF Jason Krizan’s first major-league game (April 20), coming in his 12th professional season and after more than 1,000 minor-league appearances. (For the full April Wrap up of Players and Pitchers of the Month, plus stats and stories that caught Baseball Roundtable’s eye, click here.) I’m glad to report that on May 1, in his third MLB game, Krizan recorded his first MLB base hit.

In this post, I’d like to preview another feel-good story of perseverance – one that I hope will become reality during this MLB season. It’s the story of a one-time top MLB prospect who (in a professional career that began in 2008) has suffered a myriad of injuries (at least a dozen trips to the DL), pitched through perhaps the worst inning for an MLB hurler ever, took the mound for teams from the minor leagues to the major leagues and from the Mexican League to the Chinese Professional Baseball League – and is still pursuing the dream. The player’s name is Manny Banuelos. He’s a 31-year-old southpaw, who had a solid Spring Training and is currently pitching for the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders in the Yankees’ system.

Why focus on Banuelos today? Because it is the third anniversary of the day he set the MLB record for consecutive hits given up in a game by a single pitcher.

On May 2019, Manny Banuelos, pitching for the White Sox (versus the Red Sox) in Chicago – in a span of 32 pitches and ten batters – gave up four singles, three doubles and three home runs.   

We’ll look at that inning in detail in a bit, but first let’s look at how  Banuelos got there – and to where he is today.

In 2008, at age 17, Banuelos signed with the Yankees (out of Gomez, Palacio, Mexico). He showed solid potential (including a high-velocity, high-movement fastball) from the get-go: 4-1, 2.57 in Rookie-Level ball in 2008 and then 9-5, 2.64 at A- and High-A in 2009 – earning a sport in the 2009 All Star Futures game.

In 2010, Banuelos spent some time on the DL after an appendectomy, and ended up going 0-4, but with a promising 2.51 ERA and 85 strikeouts in 64 2/3 innings (at three levels in the Yankees’ system).  After the season, he was rated among the top five prospects in the Yankee system (Baseball America) and was among  the top prospects selected to play in the Arizona Fall League.

In 2011, the 20-year-old Banuelos was in Spring Training with the Yankees, and was recognized with the Jams P. Dawson Award as the best rookie in camp. He was considered one of the Yankees “Killer B’s” – Banuelos, Andrew Backman and Dellin Betances – a trio of young pitchers the Yankees felt had bright futures ahead.

Banuelos began the 2011 season as Double-A Trenton and was promoted to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in August.  He put up a 6-7, 3.75 record, fanning 125 batters in 129 2/3 innings. Then, in 2012, his season was shortened by arm issues ( 0-2, 4.50 ) – which led to Tommy John Surgery, forcing him to miss the entire 2013 season.   Banuelos came in back in 2014, pitching at High-A, Double-A and Triple-A , as he worked his way back from surgery (2-3, 4.11 in 26 games/25 starts).

In January 2015, Banuelos was traded to the Braves. He took the mound for the Triple-A  Gwinnett Braves, where a 6-2, 2.23 record earned him a July call up.  In his first two MLB starts, he went 1-0, 0.82 and fanned eight batters in 11 frames.  He pitched in five games that month (four starts), going 1-2, 2.49 before being benched by bone spurs i(elbow) that eventually required surgery.  He came back in September, but lasted just 4 2/3 innings in two starts (nine earned runs).

In 2016, still in the Braves’ system, Banuelos struggled to an 0-5, 5.33 record at three levels – and was released by the Braves. He signed a minor-league deal with the Angels and  pitched at Triple-A Salt Lake City in 2017 (5-6, 4.93), as well as in the Mexican Pacific Winter League.

In 2018, he seemed to bounce back. After signing a minor-league deal with the Dodgers, Banuelos went 9-7, 3.73  (with 127 strikeouts in 108 2/3 innings) for the Triple-A Oklahoma City Dodgers and was selected to the Pacific Coast League All Star Team.

Then, in  November 2018, the Dodgers traded him to the White Sox and Chicago kept him on the squad after Spring Training. In his first four appearances (March 30—April 15), all in relief, Banuelos went 1-0, 3.48, with nine strikeouts in 10 1/3 innings.  That earned him a starting shot and, in his first two starts, he picked up one win and gave up just two runs, fanning 10 in 9 2/3 frames.

That brought him to his, unfortunately, record-setting May 4, 2019 start against the Red Sox in Chicago.  It started out well enough, He retired the first eight batters he faced on 29 pitches (three strikeouts). His next 32 pitches produced the following results:

  • C Christian Vazquez – Single
  • CF Andrew Benintendi – Single, Vazquez to second
  • RF Mookie Betts – Two-run double
  • DH J.D. Martinez – RBI double
  • SS Xander Bogaerts – Two-run home run
  • 1B Michael Chavis – Solo Home run
  • 3B Rafael Devers – Double
  • LF Steve Pearce – RBI single, Devers to second
  • 2B Eduardo Nunez – Two-run home run
  • Vazquez –  Single

At this point, Carson Fulmer replaced Banuelos on the mound – and Banuelos left having given up nine earned runs in the inning – and having set the MLB record for most consecutive hits given up by a pitcher in a game. Notably, Banuelos pitched in five more games in May – going 1-3, 9,17, giving up 18 runs in 17 2/3 innings.  One wonders if there were some underlying issues since, by mid-June, Banuelos was on the DL (shoulder) and did not pitch for the White Sox  June 15-September 2.  He ended the season 3-4, 6.93.

Banuelos opted for free agency after the 2019 season, signed a minor-league deal with the Mariners, was released in May and ended up finishing 2020 with the Guardians – the Fubon Guardians of the Chinese Professional Baseball League – where he put up a 6-3, 2.60 record, fanning 62 in 52 innings.

In 2021, Banuelos again pitched for Fubon, as well as for Monterrey in the Mexican League  and Culiacan in the Mexican Pacific Winter League – before signing a minor-league deal for 2022 with the Yankees.

Banuelos, now 31-years-old,  had a solid 2022 Spring Training with the Yankees – pitching  9 1/3 innings to a 2.89 ERA, with nine strikeouts. While, he didn’t make the Yankees Opening Day Roster, he’s pitching  well at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, with (as this is being written) a 2.16 ERA and 16 strikeouts in 16 2/3 innings over four appearances.  I, for one, am hoping to see him on the Yankee mound sometime this season, especially when I see Banuelos’ quotes like this (from a March article in  the New York Daily News):

“I’m glad to be back. Honestly. It’s very special … I’m enjoying every day I come here to the ballpark. … It’s been like ten years since my first Spring Training and I’m enjoying everything I do here. I already said I’m grateful to the Yankees for giving me the opportunity to come back. That’s what I want. I want to take advantage, I want to show them I have something left.”

Now, how can you not root for that guy?

Primary Resources: Baseball-Refeence.com; NationalPastime.com; Baseball-Almanac.com; “White Sox’s Manny Banuelos leaves  loss to Indians with injury,”  Scot Gregor, Daily Herald Media Group, May 15, 2019;  “Ex-Killer B Manny Banuelos returns to the Yankees a decade later armed with experience, perspective,”  Kristie Ackert, New York Daily News, March 31,2022

 

BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE ON THE TOP 100 BASEBALL BLOG LIST

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); The Baseball Reliquary; The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.

Baseball Roundtable April Wrap – Stats and Stories from the 2022 Season’s First Month

It’s May  1, and that means it’s time for Baseball Roundtable’s April Wrap Up –  statistics and stories that caught BB Roundtable’s eye in April; leader boards for the month; BBRT’s Players and Pitchers of the Month; and the monthly Trot Index.

Here’s a hint at the kind of things you’ll read about – if you make it to the end of this post.

  • The season’s first no-hitter, first triple play and first Immaculate Inning;
  • A total of one complete game, and it wasn’t the no-hitter;
  • Miguel Cabrera’s 3,000th base hit;
  • A bases-loaded intentional walk;
  • A walk-off home run by a player named Beer on National Beer Day.
  • A pitcher pulled after 80 pitches, while seven innings into a perfect game.

For all this and more, read on.  If the stats don’t grab you, you can scroll to the Players/Pitchers of the Month and Highlights sections.

BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE PLAYERS AND PITCHERS

OF THE MONTH FOR APRIL

 

—–Players of the Month—–

National League – Nolan Arenado, 3B, Cardinals

Arenado hint .375-5-17, with nine walks for the month (second in the NL in RBI, fifth in home runs and third, among qualifiers, in batting average.) He led NL qualifiers in slugging percentage (.681) and was also in the top five in  in on-base parentage (.444), Arenado started the month with an eight-game hitting streak and, ultimately, hit in 16 of 19 games; with seven multi-hit contests.  And, let’s not forget, he also flashed some pretty good leather at the hot corner.

Starting  his tenth MLB season, the 31-year-old Nolan Arenado has won nine Gold Gloves at the hot corner.   

Honorable Mentions:  Eric Hosmer, 1B, Padres, led all MLB qualifiers with a .389 average (three home runs, 14 RBI). His 28 hits (in 20 games) tied for third-highest in MLB this April.  Manny Machado, 3B, Padres hit 386 for the month, with four  home runs, 15 RBI and an MLB-best 20 runs scored. His 32 April hits led MLB; Rockies’ first-sacker C.J. Cron led the NL with seven home runs (.273 average and 19 RBI) – a 21-to-5 ratio of strikeouts-to-walks hurt his standing.  Really, for me, it was pretty much a toss up among Arenado, Machado and Hosmer.

American League …  Jose Ramirez, 3B, Guardians

Photo: Erik Drost, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Ramirez is a hitting machine. In April, he led MLB in RBI with 28, was second in MLB and led the AL in home runs with seven, led MLB qualifiers in slugging percentage at .722  and hit a robust .342. He also showed good plate discipline with nine walks and nine strikeouts. During the month, he had a six-RBI game and a pair of four-RBI  contests. He collected hits in 17 of 21 games played,with seven multi-hit games.

Honorable Mentions:  Yankees’ 1B Anthony Rizzo, whose nine April home runs led MLB (a .273 average and 21 RBI); Red Sox’ SS Xander Bogaerts, who hit .375-1-9  for the month, collecting 30 hits (second in MLB) and scoring 12 runs.

—–Pitchers of the Month—–

National League – Pablo Lopez, RHP, Marlins

Photo: All-Pro Reels from District of Columbia, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Wow! Pablo Lopez put up a 3-0 record, with an MLB-lowest (among qualifiers) 0.39 earned run average. He also fanned 23 hitters and walked just four in 23 1/3 innings and didn’t give p a single home run. In his one no-decision, he gave up one run in five innings against the Giants (his first start, April 9). It was the only run he gave up in four April starts.  His best game came against the tough Cardinals on April 21.  He went seven innings, giving up just three hits and no walks, while fanning nine. The 26-year-old, out of Venezuela, came into the season with an MLB record of 18-21, 4.04, but was 5-5, 3.07 in 2021.

On July 11, 2021, Lopez started against the Braves (in Miami) and set an MLB record by fanning the first nine batters in a game – using just 35 pitches (30 strikes, including foul balls)  to record the nine whiffs. He got the win, as the Marlins topped Atlanta 7-4. Lopez gave up three runs over six innings (five hits, two walks, nine strikeouts).

Honorable Mentions: Carlos Rodon went 3-0 in four starts (pitching 23 innings).  His 1.17 ERA was third in the NL (among qualifiers). Rodon, however, impressed by leading the NL with 38 April strikeouts; Josh Hader, Mets, was 10-for 10 in save opportunities, fanned 15 batters in 9 1/3 innings and did not allow an earned run; Kyle Wright, Braves, went 3-0. 1.13 in four starts, fanning 34 and walking just six in 24 innings; the Met’s Tylor Megill gets a nod as the NL’s only four-game winner (4-0. 1.93 … 27 whiffs and only six walks); finally, there is tough-luck Corbin Burnes. He pitched 25 2/3 innings, walked only six and posted a 1.75 ERA – yet had only one win (no losses) to show for it. In his final three starts in April, Burnes threw 20 2/3 innings and gave up just two runs (29 whiffs) -and got a win and two no-decision for his efforts.

American League – Logan Gilbert RHP, Mariners

Photo: Erik Drost, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Okay, maybe I’m a sucker for ERA (see Pablo Lopez above), but 24-year-old righty Logan Gilbert went 3-0 with an AL-best 0.40 earned run average in four April starts.  In 22 1/3 innings, he fanned 22 and walked just four. He  gave up a homer run to the second batter he faced this season – the Twins’ Luis Arreaz – and then didn’t surrender another earned run  for the rest of the month (22 innings). (He did give up one unearned run). Gilbert, by the way, was a first-round draft choice in the 2018 MLB draft (out of Stetson University, where he went 23-3, 2.48 over three seasons). He went 11-5, 2.12 in two minor-league seasons, before being called up to the Mariners  last May. In 2021, he went 6-5, 4.68 in 24 starts for Settle.,

Honorable Mentions: Alek Manoah, RHP, Blue Jays was one of just three MLB four-game winners in April – going 4-0, 1.44 in four starts (25 innings pitched), fanning 25 and walking seven; Joe Ryan, RHP, Twins, who went 3-1, with a 1.17 ERA (second in the AL), 0.70 WHIP (second) and fanned 25 batters in 23 innings; and you have to give a shout out to Astros’ 39-year-old veteran Justin Verlander, who went 2-1. 1.73 in four starts (26 innings) and recorded the lowest WHIP among MLB qualifiers at 0.69.

—–Surprise Player of the Month—-

Ty France , 1B, Mariners

Mariners’ 27-year-old 1B Ty France closed out April with a .337-5-21 line – which placed him fifth in the AL (among qualifiers) in average, eighth in home runs and second in RBI. He was also second in the AL in hits. In  April, he recorded seven multi-it games – including a five-for-six performance, with one home run and five RBI, as the Mariners topped the Royals 13-7 on April 23.  He was especially tough in Seattle, hitting .474 at home – and even tougher with runners in scoring positions (11-for-19, .550).  France’s emergence rates as a Baseball Roundtable surprise, but not for the reasons you might think. After all, in 2021, his first full MLB season, he put up a .291-18-73 line.   What surprises The Roundtable is: 1) How was he available in the 34th round of the 2015 MLB Draft – the 1,017th overall pick (Padres), especially after putting up a .337 average in three seasons (189 games) at San Diego State? and 2) Why were the Padres were willing to trade him to the Mariners during the 2020 season? The Padres traded France, P Andres Munoz, C Luis Torrens and OF Taylor Trammell to the Mariners for P Austin Adams, P C/INF Dan Altavilla and 1B Austin Nola.

When Ty France was called up to the Padres in August of  2019, he was hitting a robust .399 in 76 games for the Triple-A El Paso Chihuahuas (118-for-296, one hit shy of .400+), with 27 home runs and 89 RBI.

Honorable Mention: Angels’ outfielder Taylor Ward came into the season as a .230 career MLB hitter (four seasons/159 games), but put up a .392-5-13 line in 14 April contests. (He started the season on the IL with a groin strain). On April 27, Ward nearly hit for the cycle – ironically missing just the single – as he went three-for-four with a walk, double, triple, home run and four RBI versus the Guardians. This may be the Taylor Ward the Angels were expecting when they made him a first-round pick (out of California State University in Fresno) in the 2015 MLB draft. (Ward did  put up a .299 average in six minor-league seasons … 490 games). In 2021, Taylor hit .250-8-33 in 65 games with the Angels.

________________

TROT INDEX … A REGULAR BBRT FEATURE

Through April, 35.5 percent of the MLB season’s 23,462 plate appearances ended in a trot (back to the dugout, around the bases, to first base). We’re talking about strikeouts, home runs, walks, hit by pitch and catcher’s interference – all outcomes that are, basically, devoid of action on the base paths or in the field. Here’s the breakout: strikeouts (23.0%); walks (8.9%); home runs (2.4%); HBP (1.1%); catcher’s interference (less than 1%). 

Now, to provide a little context (a more detailed post on this topic coming soon). Here are a few selected annual Trot Index scores since I began watching baseball in earnest:  1950  – 22.8 %; 1960 – 25.1%; 1970 – 27.0%; 1980 – 23.1%; 1990 – 26.1%; 2000 – 29.9%; 2010 – 30.3%; 2021 – 36.3%.

______________


It’s a bit early to to make any judgments about how this season is going, but here are a few observations, as well as a trio of charts that may shed some light on April.

  • It’s no surprise that Mets’ starters racked up 11 April wins; but it’s a little surprising that they did it without Jacob deGrom.
  • It’s surprising that the Pirates did not have a single victory from a starter in April.
  • It’s surprising (only just a little) that April saw only one complete-game in MLB; but not surprising that a Dodger threw it.
  • It’s a little surprising to see the Angels leading the NL West and a lot surprising to see the Marlins in second place in the NL East.
  • It’s not surprising to see four NL West teams playing .570+ ball, but it is surprising to see all bu tone  AL Central team below .450.
  • It’s surprising that the Reds have won only three games, but still have more saves (3) than the Rangers (2).

\

——-Team  Statistical Leaders for April  ———-

RUNS SCORED (average 85)

National League – Padres (104); Giants(104); Phillies (100)

American League – Angels (104); Yankees (100); Mariners (95)

The fewest April runs were scored by Royals at 59.  The Red were at the bottom of the NL with 66. 

AVERAGE (average .231)

National League –  Rockies (.261); Mets (.255); Cubs (.250)

American League –Angels (.255); Guardians (.251); Yankees (.250)

The lowest team average for April belonged to the Diamondbacks at .181 – the only team under.200.

HOME RUNS (average 19)

National League – Braves (28); Giants (24); Brewers (24)

American League –  Blue Jays (30); Yankees (29); Angels (27)

The Tigers had the fewest home runs in April, just 8. Lowest in the NL were the Nationals and Pirates as 12 each. 

STOLEN BASES (average 10)

National League – Cardinals (22); Dodgers (16);

American League – Angels (16); Rays (16); Mariners (14); Royals (14)

The Tigers stole the fewest April bases – two (in five attempts).  The Cardinals were safe on 22 of 23 attempts. 

WALKS DRAWN (average 69)

National League –   Padres (92); Diamondbacks (82); Dodgers (82)

American League – Mariners (86); Angels (77); Twins (76)

The Mets led MLB  in on-base percentage for April at .341. The Angels led the AL  at .338. In slugging percentage, the Rockies  on top at .426, while the Guardians  led the AL at .330.

BATTER’S STRIKEOUTS (average 180)

National League – Diamondbacks (198); Brewers (198); raves (198)

American League – Orioles (208); A’s (197); Angels (193)

Royals’ batters went down on strikes the fewest times in April   (138).

EARNED RUN AVERAGE

National League – Dodgers (2.29); Mets (2.85); Giants (2.87)

American League – Yankees (2.70); Twins (3.16); Rays (3.18)

Four  teams had April ERAs of 5.00  or higher– Reds (5.97); Pirates (5.09); Nationals (5.08). Those three teams went a combined (19-46).  Conversely, the three teams with the lowest April ERAs went a combined 43-20. 

STRIKEOUTS (average 180)

National League – Brewers (222); Mets (219); Braves (207)

American League – Yankees (199); Rays (196); Red Sox (196)

The Brewers averaged an MLB-best 10.3 strikeouts per nine innings in April. The White Sox  averaged an AL-best 9.7.

FEWEST WALKS SURRENDERED (average 69)

National League – Dodgers (46); Giants (52); Cardinals (59)

American League –  Guardians (53); Tigers (55); Rays (57)

The Dodgers walked a stringiest 2.3 batters per nine frames. The Reds  walked an MLB’s highest 5.0 per nine innings for the month.

SAVES (average 6)

National League – Brewers (11); Rockies (10); Marlins (9)

American League – Blue Jays (11); Yankees (8); A’s (7); Angels (7)

Bonus Stats – In the Field

The  White Sox and Orioles made the most April errors (21 each); while  the Yankees were guilty of just five April Miscues.

 

—-APRIL HIGHLIGHTS—-

Climbing the Ladder

On April 30,  Blue Jays’ DH and leadoff hitter George Springer led off the bottom of the first inning with a solo home run off the Astros’ Luis Garcia. He added a second long ball with one out in the third inning, but it was the first-inning shot that drew Baseball Roundtable’s attention.  It was 46th leadoff home run of Springer’ career – moving him into a tie for sixth all-time in leadoff dingers.  Of course, atop that leaderboard is Rickey Henderson with 81.  (Side note: Springer made his lead-off home run more Henderson-like by adding a stolen base after being hit by a pitch in the fifth frame.) Springer is now in position to move further up the ladder this season.  Here is the list of players with the most career leadoff home runs:

 

 

  • Rickey Henderson … 81
  • Alfonso Soriano … 54
  • Craig Biggio … 53
  • Ian Kinsler …48
  • Curtis Granderson … 47
  • Jimmy Rollins and George Springer …46

Welcome To The Show

On April 29, 32-year-old Jason Krizan started in LF for the Giants – and his appearance was a tribute to perseverance in following a dream.  It came in his twelfth professional season, after 1,132 minor-league games.  Krizan was drafted in the eighth round of the 2011 MLB Draft (Tigers) – out of Dallas Baptist University, where, in 2011,  he hit .413-10-81 in 62 games. Over his 1,000+ minor league games, he hit .275-83-541.  On his lengthy journey to the “show,” Krizan had several solid seasons – including  .293-7-56 at Double-A in 2014; .294-10-65 at Double- and Triple-A in 2016; and .316-16-73 at Triple-A in 2021. In his first MLB game, Krizan went 0-for-3 with a walk.

First No-Hitter of 2022 A Team Effort

On April 29, the Mets recorded the first no-hitter of 2022, as they topped the Phillies 3-0. It was a true team effort, as five Mets’ pitchers combined to in a no-hit/no-run performance,  giving up six walks and fanning 12.  Starter Tylor Megill got the win and Edwin Diaz the save. For more on this contest, click here.

Sacrifice Hit (Bunt) Still A Weapon

We hear a lot these days about how hitters have lost the art of the bunt. Apparently, fielders have seen a decline in a related skill set. On April 29, with the Twins facing the Tigers in Minnesota, the Twins executed two sacrifice bunts in a game for the first time since August 31, 2018. It came in the fifth inning of a 2-1 game (Twins ahead). DH Trevor Larnach led off with a groundball single (off Tarik Skubal). The next hitter, CF Gilberto Celestino dropped a sacrifice bunt down the third base line. Detroit third sacker Harold Castro fielded the bunt, but his throw hit Celestino (safe on an error) putting runners on first and second with no out. Next up was 2B Jorge Polanco, who also dropped down a bunt.  This time, Detroit C Tucker Barnhardt made the play – and his throw hit Polanco (safe on an error) – loading the bases (on a single and a pair of “sacrifices”).  The next batter, SS Carlos Correa doubled home all three runners.  The Twins eventually won 7-1.

350 – a Round and Crooked Number

More of #InBaseballWeCountEverything. On April 27, in a Yankees’ 5-2 win over the Orioles in New York, Yankee DH Giancarlo Stanton his his 350th MLB home run. I remember a time when we only saw reports on round numbers  (300th, 400th, 500th home runs). Now, we’re getting updates on round-and-crooked numbers – like 350. We even learned that Stanton was the seventh fastest major leaguer (in terms of games played) to reach 350 long balls.  For those who like to know such things, Mark McGwire was the fastest, reaching 350 dingers in his 1,280th contest. Stanton is in his 13th MLB season. He has topped 30 home runs in six seasons – a high of 59 in 2017, when he was National League Most Valuable Player for the 77-85 Marlins; edging Reds 1B Joey Votto by a 302-to-300 tally. Side note:  The Reds were 68-94 that season.

Leave Me In Coach

On April 25, Dodgers’ righty Walker Buehler started against the Diamondbacks (in Arizona).  Walker pitched well and got the win (which, in itself, is not big news.) But, in a reflection of how the game has changed, he pitched a complete-game, shutout – the only MLB complete-game outing in April.  It was also Buehler’s first career shutout (six seasons, 98 starts) and third complete game. (Side note: Again, on how the game has changed. In 2019, Buehler tied for the NL  lead in complete games with two.) In the April 25 game, Buehler threw 108 pitches (75 strikes). giving up three hit and no walks, and fanning ten. He ended April at 2-1, 2.55 in four starts.

Gotta Love Trivia

You can build a host of trivia questions off this situation (plus it’s more of #HowThe GameHasChanged).  In 2008, CC Sabathia led all of MLB in complete games with ten. He also led the NL with seven complete outings.  In addition, he led MLB in shutouts with five and tied for both the NL lead in shutouts with three and AL lead with two.  More trivia, C.C.’s given name is Carsten Charles Sabathia, Jr.  He was a six-time All Star, the 2007 AL Cy Young Award winner and twice led the AL in wins. He finished with a career line of 251-161, 3.74.  

Cabrera Continues to Constructs First Ballot Resume

Photo by Kevin.Ward

On April 23. the Tigers’ Miguel Cabrera added another line to his Hall of Fame resume.  In the bottom of the first inning of Detroit’s 13-0 home win over Colorado, Cabrera singled off Antonio Senzetal for his 3,000th major-league hit.  That made the 39-year-old Cabrera, in his 20th MLB season:

  • The 33rd player in MLB history to reach 3,000 safeties; and
  • The seventh player to reach 3,000 hits and 500 home runs;

He also set himself up to (eventually) become one of one of just three players to retire with 3,000 hits, 500 home runs and a .300+ batting average (joining the lite company of Hank Aaron and Willie Mays).

Cabrera is also:

  • One of just 14 players with four or more batting titles;
  • One of 22 players to win the hitter’s Triple Crown (Avg.-HR-RBI); and
  • One of just 32 players with multiple MVP Awards.

Technology Changes the Game – in Many Ways

A first for me at the ballpark.  In the top of the eighth inning of the Twins’ April 23 game against the White Sox (in Minnesota), the game was delayed briefly (and the players pulled from the field) due to “a drone in the area.”

Also in the category of how the game has changed, I miss real pasteboard tickets, vendors in the aisles and using cash at the ballpark. 

A Nice Three-for-One Deal

On  April 20,the Mariners (at home) were looking to jump on the Rangers early.   2B Adam Frazier opened the bottom of the first inning by drawing a four-pitch walk from Rangers’ starter Dane Dunning. 1B Ty France followed with a single to left, with Frazier moving up to second base. LF Jesse Winker was up next and, on  a 3-2 pitch, hit a hard liner that seemed headed for right field – putting both base runners on the move. Rangers’ first baseman Nathaniel Lowe snagged the liner for the first out, stepped on the first base bag to retire France and fired to SS Corey Seager, covering second, to retire Frazier – completing 2022’s first triple play. Seattle, however, did go on to win the game by a 4-2 score

He Didn’t Bobble That One

Alvarez Photo: Flickr user thatlostdog–, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

April 18th was the Astros’ home opener and Yordan Alvarez Bobblehead Night at Minute Maid Park.  Alvarez was in the lineup for the first time in more than a week (illness/fever), but he gave the fans what they were looking for.

Alvarez, who came into the game hitting .143 (two-for-14, with one home run and two RBI), celebrated his bobblehead in style – going three-for-five with two home runs, three runs scored and four RBI, as the Astros topped the Angels 8-3. The Astros’ DH hit a two-run homer in the first inning; singled (and scored) in the fourth; struck out in the fifth; hit a two-run homer in the seventh; and struck out again in the eighth.

 

A Feel-Good Story

On April 25, Tyler Zombro took the mound for the Durham Bulls (against the Norfolk Tides) in Norfolk,Virginia – and it was a big moment.  Early last June, also against the Tides, Zombro was struck above his right ear by a 100+ m.p.h. line drive – an injury that resulted in emergency surgery and the placement of 16 plates and 36 screws to stabilize his skull.  On April 25, He came on in the second inning and pitched a scoreless frame (one double). 

An Immaculate Inning in a Good Outing

On April 17, Yankees southpaw Nestor Cortes had quite an outing against the Orioles (in Baltimore). While he only went five innings, he held the O’s scoreless (three hits, one walk) and fanned a dozen.  He threw 88 pitches (62 strikes).  In the bottom of the fourth, he became the first pitcher of 2022 and the 94th  pitcher overall, to throw an Immaculate Inning – nine pitches, nine strikes, three strikeouts. Note: Sandy Koufax, Chris Sale and ax Scherzer have thrown three Immaculate Innings each, Lefty Grove, Nolan Ryan, Randy Johnson, Kevin Gausman, two each. Cortes’ victims were DH and cleanup hitter Anthony Santander, CF Ryan McKenna and C Robinson Chirinos.

Walk Don’t Run

On April 15th, in the bottom of the fourth inning, with one out and  the bases loaded, in a close game (Angels down 3-2), Angels’ manager Joe Maddon elected to call for an intentional walk to Rangers’ left-handed swinging SS Corey Seager – forcing in a run and bringing up righty C Mitch Garver to face righty Austin Warren.  (Note: after the unorthodox move, the Rangers scored two more runs on a sacrifice fly and a balk. The Angels, however, came back to win the game 9-6.)

The most recent bases-loaded intentional walk? Also called by Maddon, who was managing the Rays at the time.  On August 17, 2008, the Rays were leading the Rangers 7-3 with two outs in the bottom of the ninth (with Rangers on all three bases), when Maddon called on Grant Balfour (appropriate name for this situation) to give an intentional run-producing pass to hot-hitting Rangers’ ‘CF Josh Hamilton. He then brought in Dan Wheeler to face Rangers’ RF Marlon Byrd – and Wheeler struck out Byrd on five pitches to end the game.,

Swing and a Miss, Now that’s Rare

On April 13, Guardians’ rookie outfielder Steven Kwan did something her hadn’t done in his entire MLB career (to that point), he swung and missed a pitch. It came in his sixth MLB game, in his 25th MLB plate appearance and his sixteenth at bat, 117th pitch and 40th swing.  (And actually, he did make some contact, foul tipping the pitch into the catcher’s glove – which counts and a swing and miss.) For those who like to know such things, the first MLB pitcher to get a ball past Kwan was Nick Lodolo of the Reds, the pitch was a low-80s curveball and Kwan ended up striking out in a six-pitch at bat.  As April came to a close, Kwan was hitting .354-0-7, with ten runs scored.

More “In Baseball We Count Everything””

In his first four MLB games, Steven Kwan collected nine hits (two doubles, one triple), five walks and one hit-by-pitch  (a .692 batting average and  .790 on-base percentage). He is the only player in the modern era (since 1900) to get on base 15 times in his first four MLB games.

Kwan was a fifth round draft choice (2018) out of Oregon State University, where he hit .329 over three seasons (156 games). In three minor-league seasons (217 games), he stroked the ball at a .301 pace – including .328-12-44 in 77 games at Double- and Triple-A last season.

Fan Disappointment Up Close and Personal

On April 13, I braved Minnesota’s uber-chilly spring to take in the Twins-Dodgers at Target Field.  Despite the fact that the Twins were down 3-0, there was plenty of drama on the field and plenty of excitement in the crowd – as many of us anticipated a chance to see Dodgers’starter Clayton Kershaw try for MLB’s 24th-ever Perfect Game.  At the time, Kershaw had thrown just 80 pitches (53 strikes) and had fanned 13 batters – and only three balls had been hit out of the infield. He was cruising and it was a masterful performance to watch.

Kershaw, however, did not come out to pitch the eighth. Dave Roberts instead put in Alex Vesia. I might add the change was met with a chorus of boos, from Twins fans and a large contingent of Dodger Faithful seated behind the third base dugout.

Now, there’s never been a combined Perfect Game, so I had a bit of hope. One out and five pitches after Vesia took the mound, Twins’ catcher Gary Sanchez lined a single to right and the Perfect Game and even the no-hitter were gone. (The Twins, ultimately, lost 7-0 and Sanchez’ single was their only safety.)

Later, I learned, via the Elias Sports Bureau, that only twice since 1900 has an MLB pitcher been pulled after the seventh inning with a Perfect Game intact.  Both times, Roberts was the manager.  (The first was on September 10, 2016, when he pulled Rich Hill – a reported finger issue –  after seven innings with Perfect Game intact against the Marlins (and the Dodgers up 5-0). Hill had thrown 89 pitches (62 strikes) and fanned nine. Hill was replaced by Joe Blanton and ten pitches and two outs later, Marlins’ LF Jeff Francoeur collected the first of two Miami hits in the game.

Now, I should make it clear that Kershaw agreed with Roberts’ decision. And, we’ve heard about the impact of the lockout (short Spring Training) and the arm issues that had Kershaw on the shelf for about two months last season. So,it was probably the right decision.  Still, I was disappointed when Kershaw didn’t take the mound in the eighth.  And, I found myself trying to imagine what would have happened in the same situation with the likes of  Jack Morris, Bob Gibson or Don Drysdale on the bump.

It’s a family affair

On April 11, as the Padres topped the Giants 4-2 in San Francisco, new Padres’ closer Taylor Rogers picked up his third save of the season.  It may have come with somewhat mixed emotions in the larger Taylor household, as – in the same game – Taylor’s twin brother Tyler was saddled with his first loss of the season. Tyler pitched a scoreless ninth (one hit, two strikeouts), while Taylor came on in relief in the seventh inning of a 2-2 game and gave up one run on two hits (with one strikeouts).

Hunter Greene Was Made for Statcast

Reds’ number-one prospect Hunter Greene picked up his first MLB victory in his first MLB appearance (and start) on April 10. While he gave up three earned runs on four hit and two walks over five innings – he made quite an impression. The 22-year-old right-hander  looks like a flame thrower at 6’5” and 230 pounds. And, he throws like on as well. Greene threw 20 of his 92 pitched at 100 MPH or more (a high of 101.6 MPH). His fastball averaged 99.7 mph. Perhaps just as important, he mixed in a slider and change up and threw first strike pitches to 15 of 21 hitters. In his first three MLB innings, Greene faced  just ten batters and fanned six. And, he was just getting started.

In his second outing, against the hard-hitting Dodgers in LA, Greene threw 39 of 80 pitches at 100 mph or better, setting a single-game MLB record (since tracking began in 2008) for triple-digit offerings. In that game, he went 5 1/3 innings, giving up three hits, no walks and two earned runs – taking the loss as the Reds fell 5-2.

Greene garnered plenty of attention as a high schooler, regularly hitting triple-digits with his fastball.  He was the number-two overall pick in the 2017 MLB draft )out of Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, California). In his first full minor-league season (Class A Dayton Dragons), he went 3-7, 4.48, but fanned 89 hitters in 68 1/3 innings (and he was just 18-years-old). He did give the Reds brass a scare – needing Tommy John Surgery in 2019. He came back in 2021 and went 10-8, 3.30 with 139 whiffs in 106 1/3 innings at Double- and Triple-A.

How Fast Is Hunter Greene?

Reds’ rookie Hunter Greene has shown major-league hitters a 91-mph change up.

Could He Be More Perfect?

Photo: 飯生琉久 at the Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

On April 10, 20-year-old righty Roki Sasaki, in just his second season in Japan’s top professional league, tossed a perfect game  – with 19 strikeouts – as his Chiba Lotte Marines topped the Orix Buffaloes 6-0. He fanned 13 straight at one point during the game, in which he used just 105 pitched to dispatch the Buffaloes. Sasaki now holds the Nippon Professional Baseball League record for total strikeouts in a game and consecutive strikeout within a game.

Just a week later, Sasaki (who reportedly can hit triple digits with his fastball and who’s splitter “drops ff the table” ) pitched eight perfect innings (fanning fourteen)  against the Nippon Ham Fighters before being pulled with the score knotted at 0-0. (Chiba Lotte lost the game 1-0 in ten frames.) In his next start, April 24 against the Buffaloes, the string of perfection was broken on as he gave up a single on his first pitch of the game. He went on to pitch five less-than-perfect innings (six hits, three walks, two hit batters and two earned runs) in getting the victory.   In his 2021 rookie season, Sasaki was 4-2, with a 1.84 ERA and 87 whiffs in 83 1/3 innings. Sasaki’s record at the end of April was  3-0, 1.50, with 60 whiffs. 13 hits, five walks ad three hit batters in 36 innings.

It’s About Time! Congratulations!

On April 8, Rachel Balkovec, managed her first game for the Yankees Single-A affiliate Tampa Tarpons – leading the team to a 9-6 win over the Lakeland Flying Tigers. –  winning her first game as the first full-time female manager in affiliated history.  The 34-year-old has been  a coach in professional baseball for a decade and, in 2019, was the first female full-time hitting coach in an MLB organization (coaching the Rookie-Level Yankees of Florida Complex League). Her selection as Tampa Tarpons manager was announced in mid-January.

In another first, on April 12, Alyssa Nakken became the first women to take to the field as a coach in an MLB game, as she took over for San Francisco Giants’ First Base Coach Anton Richardson (ejected in the third inning).  Nakken was hired as an assistance coach with the Giants in January of 2020.

A Big First Week For a Japanese Import

Seiya Suzuki was already a star when the Cubs signed him this March.  At age 27,  he had already played nine seasons in Japan and was a five-time All Star, carrying a .315 professional average.  Over his most recent three seasons in the Japan, his stat lines were : .317-38-88; .300-25-75; and .335-28-87.

In his first week with the Cubs (April 7-13),  Suzuki hit a nice round .400 (15-for-21, with five walks), had an on-base percentage of .524, with three home runs and nine RBI (all in five games).  Though April, he was .279-4-14,

Hi, Mom. Hi,Dad.

Astros’ rookie shortstop Jeremy Pena has some big cleats to fill – those of All Star and Gold Glover Carlos Correa. Fortunately, he’s got a good cheering section to wish him well.  As the  seventh inning of the Astros’ 13-6 win over the Angels opened on April 8, Jeremy’s parents – Cecilia and Geronimo Pena – were being interviewed on the AppleTV+  live broadcast of the game. At that moment, Pena, leading off the inning, hit the first pitch from the Angel Mike Mayers to deep left center for his first MLB home run – with his parents’ elated reaction captured for the audience.  Pena ended up three-for-five on the night.

Ouch!

Only one team went scoreless on Opening Day. On April 7, the Pirates failed to score as they opened in St.  Louis, losing by a 9-0 tally – despite only being outhit 8-6.  In the game, Pittsburgh pitchers gave up eight hits (three home runs) and seven walks and the Pirates added a pair of errors.  It was also the only shutout among this year’s openers.

Getting that First Free Pass Out of the Way

Last season, the Brewers’ Cy Young Award winner Corbin Burnes tallied 49 strikeouts before his first walk of the season – which came on May 13.  He pitched 34 innings and faced 126 batters before issuing that first free pass.  In this season’s  April 7 Brewers’ opener, he walked the first batter he faced – the Cubs’ Rafael Ortega. Burnes got a no-decision, pitching five innings and giving up three runs on four hits and three walks, while fanning four.  Last season, Burnes didn’t give up his third walk until his eighth start.

Old Guys Rule

Photo by bk1bennett

40-year-old Adam Wainwright started the Cardinals’ opener (April 7)  in Pittsburgh and pitched six scoreless frames as the Cardinal won 9-0.  Wainwright is the fifth oldest player on Opening Day rosters this season.  Here are the oldsters:

  • Albert Pujols, DH, Cardinals, turned 42 on January 16;
  • Rich Hill, LHP, Red Sox, turned 42 on March 11;
  • Nelson Cruz, DH, Nationals, will turn 42 July 1;
  • Oliver Perez, LHP, Diamondbacks, will turn 41 august 15;
  • Adam Wainwright, RHP Cardinals, will turn 41 on August 30.

A Bit More Old Guys Rule

In is second outing of the season, 39-year-old Justin Verlander – coming back from Tommy John surgery – pitched eight innings of three-hit ball, walking none and fanning eight as his Astros topped the Mariners 4-0 in Seattle. It was his just his second appearance and first win since July 24, 2020.  Verlander threw 87 pitched (64 strikes) and got first-pitch strikes on 19 of the 27 batters  he faced. In the seventh inning of the April 16 game, the two-time Cy Young Award winner reached 3.000 career innings pitched.

Finding Opening Day Very Special

On April 7, the Astros topped the Angels 3-1, becoming the second team in MLB history and the first since 1896, to win ten consecutive Opening Day games.  The NL Boston Beaneaters won ten straight from 1887-1896.  A few tidbits.  In their still-alive streak, the Astros:

  • Have won five openers at home, five on the road;
  • Have had the starting pitcher record each of the ten wins (Dallas Keuchel and Justin Verlander three each, Zack Greinke, Scott Feldman, Bud Norris and Framber Valdez);
  • Have outscored their opponents 44-13.
  • Scored five or more runs six times, while giving up as many as three runs just once.

A Fistful of Firsts

Photo by shinya

In the April 7 Angels’ game, Shohei Ohtani became the first MLB player to throw his team’s first pitch of the season and also be in the batter’s  box  to take his team’s first pitch of the season – as he started on the mound and lead off at DH.  He also recorded his team’s first strikeout of the season getting the first batter he faced  and made his team’s first out of the season, grounding our short-to-first on the first pitch he saw in the first inning (remember, he was batting first.)

On April 21, Ohtani added to his list of firsts, becoming the first starting pitcher in MLB history to bat twice in a game before throwing his first pitch pitch.  (More #InBasseballWeTrackEverything.) Ohtani started on the mound for the Angels and at DH, batting in the leadoff spot. He led off the game with a six-pitch walk. The Rangers batted around and, by the time Ohtani batted again in the first, were up 4-0.  Ohtani punched a two-run double in his second  plate appearance of the inning. The Angels went on to win the game 6-0, with Ohtani going two-for-four with a walk and two RBI – and pitching six innings, giving up one hit, one walk and fanning 12.

The Ohtani Rule

MLB  has recognized Shohei Ohtani ‘s unique skills with a new rule for 2022.  Basically, it says a team can start a player at pitcher and designated hitter and pull him from the game in one of those roles, while leaving him in the game in the other.  Basically, if Ohtani is pulled as a pitcher, he can stay in the game at DH. I assume – and this would be rare – the Angels could pinch hit for him (as DH) and leave him in a game at pitcher. Pretty nice to be talented and popular enough that they change the rules for you.

Seth Beer Lives Up to His Name

April 7 was National Beer Day – and guess  what? Diamondbacks’ DH Seth Beer (gotta love that baseball name) hit a walk-off home run to put the Diamondbacks past the Padres 4-1.  It was his second career homer and first career walk-off long ball.

A Beer and a Burger

I was at an April Twins game (versus the White Sox) in which Jake Burger started at the hot corner for Chicago. I’d like to see the Diamondback’s Seth Beer traded to the Sox (or the  ChiSox’ Jake Burger to Arizona), so we could have a Beer and a Burger in the lineup together.

——-Individual Statistical Leaders for April———

AVERAGE (50 April  at bats minimum)

National League – Eric Hosmer, Padres (.389); Manny Machado, Padres (.386); Nolan Arenado, Cardinals (.375)

American League –  Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox (.375); Andrew Benintendi, Royals (.373); J.P. Crawford, Mariners (.360)

The lowest April  average (among qualified players) belonged to the Twins’ Miguel Sano at 0.93 (5-for-54). 

HOME RUNS

National League – C.J. Cron, Rockies (7); Ozzie Albies, Braves (6); Joc Pederson, Giants (6); Austin Riley, Braves (6)

American League –  Anthony Rizzo, Yankees (9); Jose Ramirez, Guardians (7);  Yordan Alvarez, Astros (6); Vlad Guerrero, Blue Jays (6); Aaron Judge, Yankees (6); Byron Buxton, Twins (6); George Springer, Blue Jays (6)

The Indians’ Jose Ramirez  had the highest  April slugging percentage (among qualifiers)  at .722.  The NL leader was the Cardinals’ Nolan Arenado at .681.

RUNS BATTED IN

National League – C.J. Cron, Rockies (19); Pete Alonso, Mets (17); Nolan Arenado, Cardinals (17). Trea Turner, Dodgers (17)

American League – Jose Ramirez, Guardians (28); Ty France, Mariners (21); Anthony Rizzo, Yankees (21)

RUNS SCORED

National League –   Manny Machado, Padres (20); Mookie Betts, Dodgers (19); Bryce Harper Phillies (17)

American League – Shohei Ohtani, Angels (17); Miles Straw, Guardians (17); George Springer, Blue Jays (15)

HITS 

National League – Manny Machado, Padres (32); Eric Hosmer, Padres (28); Nolan Arenado, Cardinals (27)

American League – Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox (30); Ty Frances, Mariners (28); three with 27

The Nationals’ Josh Bell led MLB qualifying players in on-base percentage at .460. 

DOUBLES

National League –  Matt Olson, Braves (9); Eduardo Escobar, Mets (8); six with seven

American League –  Yuli Gurriel, Astros (9); Owen Miller, Guardians (9); Wander Franco, Rays (8); Enrique Hernandez, Red Sox (8); J.D. Martinez, Red Sox (8)

TRIPLES

National League – Jazz Chisholm, Marlins (3); Jake Cronenworth, Padres (2); Jesus Sanchez, Marlins (2); Kolten Wong, Brewers (2)

American League – Andres Gimenez, Guardians (2); Josh Lowe, Rays (2); Austin Meadows, Tigers (2)

STOLEN BASES

National League –  Harrison Bader, Cardinals (6);  Tommy Edman, Cardinals (5); six with four

American League – Julio Rodriguez, Mariners (9); Jorge Mateo, Orioles (7);  Aldaberto Mondesi, Royals (5) ; Luis Robert, White Sox (5)

The Mariners’ Julio Rodriguez was 9-for 9 in April  steal attempts. .

WALKS

National League – Juan Soto, Nationals (21); Max Muncy, Dodgers (16); Eduardo Escobar, Mets (15); Matt Olson, Braves (15)

American League – Jesse Winker, Mariners (17); Anthony Santander, Orioles (16); three with 14

BATTER’S STRIKEOUTS

National League – Dansby Swanson, Braves (30); Adam Duvall, Braves (29); Patrick Wisdom, Cubs (28)

American League – Franmil Reyes, Guardians (35); Julio Rodriguez, Mariners (30); Joey Gallo, Yankees (29)

PITCHING VICTORIES

National League – Tyler Megill, Mets (4-0); ten with three wins

American League – Adam Cimber, Blue Jays (4-0); Alek Manoah, Blue Jays (4-0); four with three wins.

Adam Cimber picked up four April wins, despite pitching just 11 innings (in ten games). He also had four holds and a save – and put up a 1.64 ERA.   On the reverse side of the coin, the Royals’ Jake Brentz was charged with three April losses (0-3), despite pitching just 5 1/3 innings.  In those innings, he gave up 11 hits and ten walks, 15 runs (14 earned) and fanned nine.  

EARNED RUN AVERAGE (qualifying pitchers)

National League – Pablo Lopez, Marlins (0.39); Kyle Wright, Braves (1.13); Madison Bumgarner, Diamondbacks (1.17)

American League – Logan Gilbert, Mariners (0.40);  Joe Ryan, Twins  (1.17); Alex Manoah, Blue Jays (1.44)

Among qualifying pitchers, the Senators’ Joe Adon had the highest April  ERA (1-4, 7.33  –19 earned runs, over 23 1/3 innings in five stats.

STRIKEOUTS

National League – Carlos Rodon, Giants (38); Eric Lauer, Brewers (34); Aaron Nola, Phillies (34)

American League – Shane McClanahan, Rays (42); Nathan Eovaldi, Red Sox (32); Kevin Grossman, Blue Jays (31); Frankie Montas, A’s (31)

Among qualifiers, Carlos Rodon of the Giants had the highest K/9 rate at 14.87. The Rays’ Shane McClanahan led the AL at 14.00. 

SAVES

National League – Josh Hader, Brewers (10); Taylor Rogers, Padres (8); Daniel Bard, Rockies (6); Anthony Bender, Marlins (6); Kenley Jansen,Braves (6)

American League – Jordan Romano, Blue Jays (10); Raisel Iglesias, Angels (6); Aroldis Chapman, Yankees (5)

WHIP (Walks +  Hits per Inning Pitched – among qualifiers)

National League – Clayton Kershaw, Dodgers (0.70); Pablo Lopez, Marlins (0.73); Corbin Burnes, Brewers (0.74)

American League – Justin Verlander, Astros (0.69); Joe Ryan,Twins (0.70); Brad Keller, Royals (0.77)

BONUS STAT

Among qualifying pitchers, the Mets’ Max Scherzer  held opponents to the lowest April batting average (.131 )

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com; ESPN.com; MB.com; Elias Sports Bureau

SPOILER ALERT — THE MAY WRAP UP WILL BE A LITTLE LATE.  IN LATE MAY AND EARLY JUNE, I WILL BE ON MY 32ND BALLPARK TOURS BASEBALL JOURNEY. 

 

BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE ON THE TOP 100 BASEBALL BLOG LIST

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); The Baseball Reliquary; The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.

 

2022 Baseball Roundtable John Paciorek Award …. Karl Spooner, A Blaze of Strikeouts

Early each season, since 2014, Baseball Roundtable has announced the John Paciorek Award (JPA). The JPA recognizes players who have had short, sometimes very short, major-league careers, but whose accomplishments, nonetheless, deserve recognition.  Past winners have included:  a player whose every MLB hit (three in nine career at bats) was a home run;  a player who had only one MLB at bat, but earned  a World Series ring and a Purple Heart; a player who had just two home runs in 61 MLB at bats (for the vaunted Yankees and Dodgers), but whose “body of work” made him one of just two players in MLB history to homer in their first and final official appearances in a major league batter’s box; a war hero who pitched in the majors on one leg; and more.  There are links to the bios of past honorees later in this post. (Note: Information on John Paciorek’s career – the inspiration for the JPA – can be found at the end of this post. Paciorek’s day in the sun constitutes arguably the best one-game MLB career ever.)

This year’s JPA honoree is one of the better known (if not the best known) players to appear on this list –  Southpaw Karl Spooner, who holds a share of the record for strikeouts in an MLB debut (15) and also threw complete-game shutouts in each of his first two starts.  Let’s look at how Spooner got to these pages.

Karl Spooner was born and raised in Oriskany Falls, New York, where – was a teenager – he played not only for his high school, but also for the local townball  team. He became known for a trio of high-velocity pitches (fastball, curve and sinker).  After his junior year in high school, Spooner was signed by the Dodgers (1950).  He quickly established himself as a hard thrower with good stuff – but command issues. In 1951, with the Class-D Hornell Dodgers the 20-year-old Spooner went 10-12 –  leading the league with 200 strikeouts in 170 innings, but also walking 163.  In 1952 (in Class-C & -B), he went 4-12, 5.42 – and continued to rack up strikeout and walks.  Things stared to come together in 1953, when he went 12-12, but with a 2.75 ERA at A-level. He fanned 233 batters in 203 innings, but still walked 164.

Then came that marvelous 1954 season. Spooner started the year with the Double-A Fort Worth Cats – and went 21-9, 3.14, with 262 strikeouts and 162 walks in 238 innings. That earned him a September call up to the Dodgers – and a place in MLB history.

The Dodgers threw the 23-year-old rookie right into the fire – starting him on September 26 against the first-place Giants (6 ½ games up on the Dodgers) and Johnny Antonelli, who was 21-6, 2.29 at the time. In the first frame, it looked like it might be a short game for Spooner – as his command issues were exposed. It took him 32 pitches to get out of the inning (17 strikes – 15 balls). He gave up a single and two walks and had to fan Giants’ 3B Bobby Hoffman with the bases loaded and two out (on a 3-2 pitch) to escape unscathed.

In the second inning, something seemed to “click.” Spooner needed just 13  pitches to retire the Giants (10 strikes), fanning two – and would have gotten back to the dugout sooner  if strikeout victim Antonelli hadn’t reached first on a third-strike passed ball.  From the second inning on, Spooner dominated the eventual World Series Champion Giants. In that span, he threw 111 pitches, 72 for strikes, fanning 14 batters – bringing his whiff  total to an MLB-debut record 15 for the game (a record which still stands, tied by the Astros’ J.R. Richard in 1971). Over those last eight frames, Spooner gave up just two singles and a walk, and no runner reached second base.  He finished his debut with a 3-0, complete-game, 15-strikeout  shutout victory.

Karl Spooner hit the very first MLB pitch he ever saw (from Johnny Antonelli) for a double to center.  He finished his inaugural game one for three with a walk and a run scored.

But the story gets better. Four days later (September 26), Spooner made second MLB appearance – a start against the Pirates (in Brooklyn). In this one, he threw another complete-game shutout – giving up four hits and fanning 12 in a 1-0 win.  His 27 strikeouts in his first two appearances remain an MLB record.   Those 27 whiffs in his first 18 MLB innings are even more notable when you consider that, in 1954, the MLB average for strikeouts per nine innings was 4.2.

That man had a fastball that was unbelievable, not for sheer speed, but for how much the ball moved. He was one of the toughest left-handers that I’ve ever seen.

Dodger Pitcher Clem Labine

Spooner clearly was off to a blazing start, but the fire was dimmed quickly – by a shoulder injury suffered in Spring Training the following year (1955). Long story short: Spooner didn’t get his first start of the 1955 season until May 15, but things were still apparently not right – as he gave up five hits and four tuns in 2 1/3 innings. He didn’t pitch again until June 5, when he lasted four innings (four hits, four runs, two walks, six strikeouts). He finished the season, his last in the major leagues, 8-6, 3.65 in 29 games (14 starts) – fanning 78 in 98 2/3 innings (41 walks). He also pitched in two games in the 1955 World Series, giving g\up five runs in 3 1/3 innings.  His last MLB appearance was on October 3, 1955, when he started Game Six of the World Series (against the Yankees in New York). He faced six batters, got just one out (appropriately a strikeout) and gave up five runs on two walks, two singles and a home run. His final major-league pitch was hit for a three-run home run by Moose Skowron. Spooner pitched for three more seasons in the minors, but never recaptured 1954 glory.  Still, he put on a show well worth recognizing – and still unmatched –  in his first two MLB appearances.

Nobody ever threw harder than that kid did in the first two games he pitched in the majors. He’s the greatest young pitcher I’ve ever seen.

                                                Hall of Fame Dodger Catcher Roy Campanella

_____________________________________

Now, here are links to the stories of past JPA honorees.

 

2014 – Brian Scott Dallimore

In his first start (not his first game) for the 2004 Giants, Dallimore had two singles, a Grand Slam (his first MLB hit and only MLB home run), a walk and a hit by pitch.  For the full JPA take on Dallimore’s 27- game MLB career, click here.

2015 – Roy Gleason

Gleason played in just eight MLB games, had a double in his only MLB at bat – but also earned a World Series ring (1963) and a Purple Heart. Ultimately, he was the only ballplayer with MLB experience to serve on the front lines in Vietnam. For the full JPA take on Gleason, click here. Note: Gleason’s life is detailed in the book “Lost in the Sun – Roy Gleason’s Odyssey from the Outfield to the Battlefield.”

2016 – John Allen Miller

Miller played just 32 MLB games (during the 1966 and 1969 seasons), taking the field (at 1B/LF/3B/2B) for the Yankees and Dodgers. Miller collected ten hits in 61 MLB at bats (.164 average) and hit just two home runs – but he made those long balls count – becoming one of just two players in MLB history to homer in their first and final official appearances in a major-league batter’s box. For more on Miller, click here.

2017 – Chris Saenz

RHP Chris Saenz’ big day came on April 24, 2004 – when he was called up from Double-A Huntsville (where he was 1-1, 3.86) to make a spot start against the Saint Louis Cardinals, whose powerful lineup included the likes of Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, Jim Edmonds and Reggie Sanders.   The rookie went six innings, giving up just two hits, three walks and no runs, while fanning seven. Two days after this debut, he was on his way back to Huntsville, where he suffered an elbow injury and never returned to the majors. Statistics before 1900 can be sketchy, but baseball-reference.com shows that Saenz is the only pitcher to complete a one-game MLB career of at least five innings pitched, without giving up a single run (earned or unearned). For more details on this JPA honoree, click here.

2018 – Keith McDonald

McDonald’s MLB career (Cardinals 2000-2001) covered just eight games and 11 plate appearances (nine at bats) and three hits – but he made them count.  All of McDonald’s safeties were home runs – making him the only MLB player with more than one career hit who can look back on major league career in which his every hit was a home run. .For the full story, click here.

2019 – Harley Hisner

Hisner’s MLB tenure encompassed the day of September 30, 1951. That’s when the 24-year-old righty faced the New York Yankees – and a lineup that included five future Hall of Famers: Mickey Mantle in RF; Joe DiMaggio in CF; Phil Rizzuto at SS; Johnny Mize at 1B; and Yogi Berra behind the plate. In is very first MLB inning, Hisner faced five batters, four of them future Hall of Famers, and gave up two singles and no runs.  His place in history? One of those singles was Joe DiMaggio’s last MLB safety. For more on Hisner and his ongoing involvement in and love of the game (he went on to earn the Northeast Indiana Baseball Association Colin Lister Award for “dedication to the game of baseball and its historic legacy,” click here.

2020 – Bert Shepard

Shepard set aside his baseball mound dreams in 1943 – after four minor-league seasons – to enlist in the U.S. Army, where he became a P-38 Lightning fighter pilot. Shepard was shot down on his 34th combat mission and, while a prisoner of war, his wounds resulted in the amputation of his right leg below the knee.  Upon his release (a prisoner exchange), Shepard did not surrender his dreams and fought his way back to the major leagues. He made one major-league appearance (for the Washington Senators), pitching 5 1/3 innings of three-hit, one-run ball.  While Shepard’s MLB career consisted of that sole appearance, he did continue to pitch, coach and manage in minor leagues – and his story proved an inspiration for disabled veterans.  For more of Bert Shepard story, click here.

2021 – Henry Schmidt

Henry Martin Schmidt didn’t make it to the big leagues until eight seasons after his professional (minor-league) debut.  In fact, he was just two months shy of his 30th birthday when he first took the major-league mound.   Why did it take so long?  Simple answer – location.  He had considerable difficulty “locating” his pitches.  While it took a long time for Schmidt to make it to the major leagues, it didn’t take him long to leave MLB. He lasted just one season – and is the only pitcher in MLB history who was a 20-game winner in his only major league season. Why was his MLB career so short? Simple answer – location.  He did not care for the geographic “location” of major league baseball. For more on Henry Schmidt’s unusual career, click here.

 

—–INSPIRATION FOR THE JPA—–

John Paciorek – signed out of Saint Ladislaus High School in Hamtramck, Michigan (where he had starred in football, basketball and baseball) – appeared in his first major-league game on the final day of the 1963 season (September 29) at the age of 18.  The 6’ 1”, 200-pound outfielder had spent the 1963 season with Class-A Modesto Colts. The Colts’ parent club, the Houston Colt .45s (that was the current Astros’ franchise name back then), was suffering through a difficult season. The team was 65-96 going into that final game.  Looking to the future, Houston had, in fact, fielded an all-rookie lineup (average age 19) on September 27. Youth was still being served two days later when John Paciorek started his first MLB game. The results were surprising – and worthy of recognition.

Playing right field and batting seventh in a 13-4 win over the NY Mets, Paciorek ended up with three hits and two walks in five plate appearances, with four runs scored and three runs batted in.  Perhaps equally surprising is that it was not only Paciorek’s first major-league appearance, it was to be his only MLB appearance.  Back pain the following spring, followed by surgery (he played 49 minor league games in 1964 and missed all of the 1965 season), put an end to his MLB playing days. (Paciorek did play in four more minor-league seasons.)  Still, you will find John Paciorek in the Baseball Encyclopedia and his is arguably the greatest one-game MLB career ever.  Among one-gamers, he holds the record for times on base and runs scored, and shares the record for batting average, on base percentage and RBIs.

Paciorek, by the way, went on to become a high school teacher and multi-sport coach and is the author of the books (Plato and Socrates – Baseball’s Wisest Fans;  The Principles of Baseball: And All There Is To Know About Hitting; and If I Knew Then What I Know Now. You also can enjoy Paciorek’s prose (and expertise) at his blog “Paciorek’s Principles of Perfect Practice” by clicking here. You can find out even more about Paciorek in Steven Wagner’s 2015 book Perfect: The Rise and Fall of John Paciorek, Baseball’s Greatest One-Game Wonder.

A final note. John Paciorek’s insight into the national pastime should come as no surprise. Paciorek comes from a true “baseball family.”  He was the first born of eight siblings and was followed to the big leagues by younger brothers Jim and Tom Paciorek.  (Like John, Jim’s MLB career was short – 48 games for the Brewers in 1987. Brother Tom, however, achieved a .282 average over an 18-season MLB career.

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com; The Third K, by Harold Uhlman, Think Blue LA, January 15, 2013; Karl Spooner SABR bio, by Richard S. Cohen.

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBasebalRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

A Quick Look at MLB’s Worst Shutout Losses

Yesterday (April 23, 2022), the Cubs crushed the Pirates 21-0 in Chicago. (Despite, I might add, hitting only one home run.)  The big bat in the game was rookie 1B Alfonso Rivas, who went three-for-five with a home run and five RBI. In the game, four other Cubs had at least three hits: RF Seiya Suzuki (three-for-for); C Wilson Contreras (three-for-five); LF Ian Happ (three-for-six); and SS Nico Hoerner (four-for-five).  In the contest, the score was 16-0 by the end of the fifth inning. Pirates’ starter Zach Thompson took the loss – giving up nine runs (four earned) on nine hits and two walks in two innings pitched.

Side note:  This post is going out a little later than I would have preferred, but I have a good excuse.  I was at this afternoon’s Twins’ extra-inning win. 

Surprisingly, it was not MLB’s worst-ever shutout loss. In fact, it was not even the worst-ever shutout loss in a Cubs-Pirates game.  On September 16, 1975 – with the Pirates and Cubs matched up at Wrigley Field – the Pirates dealt the Cubs the worst shutout loss in MLB history (at least since 1901) – 22-0 (a lopsided whitewashing later tied) … with the Cubs getting only three hits to the Pirates’ 24.  The Pirates got home runs from Richie Hebner and Dave Parker.

This game was 9-0 after just one frame – which went like this:

Rick Reuschel Pitching

  • 2B Rennie Stennett– double.
  • 3B Richie Hebner – RBI single.
  • CF Al Oliver – walk.
  • 1B Willie Stargell – RBI single, Oliver to third.
  • RF Dave Parker – sacrifice fly.
  • LF Richie Zisk- single, Stargell to third.
  • C Manny Sanguillen – walk.
  • SS Frank Taveras – RBI single, loading the bases.
  • P John Candelaria – two-run single. Taveras to third.

Tom Dettore Pitching

  • Stennett – RBI single, Candelaria to third.

Wild Pitch – Candelaria scores, Stennett to second.

  • Hebner – ground out to first.
  • Oliver – walk.
  • Stargell – RBI single, Oliver to third.
  • Parker – ground out to first.

Reuschel took the loss, surrendering eight runs (all earned) on six hits and two walks in one-third of an inning.

In this game Rennie Stennett of the Pirates tied the major-league record for base hits in a nine-inning game – going seven-for-seven: four singles, two doubles and a triple. Stennett  had two hits in both the first and fifth innings.

 

 

 

 

 

 

___________________________________

On August 31, 2004, the Cleveland Indians tied the 22-0 mark, topping the Yankees by that score in New York.  SS Omar Vizquel was six-for-seven (five singles, two doubles) in that one, with three runs scored and four RBI. Nine different Indians collected RBI in the game: Vizquel (4); C Victor Martinez (4); CF Coco Crisp (3); DH Travis Hafner (3); RF Jody Gerut (3); 1B Ben Broussard (2); LF Matt Lawton (1); 3B Casey Blake (1); and RF Ryan Ludwick, who didn’t start the game, (1). The Indian got  home runs from Crisp, Gerut and Martinez.

For those who might be wondering, the worst-ever run differential in an MLB game (at least since 1901)  is 27.  On August 22, 2007, the Rangers topped the Orioles 30-3 in Baltimore.  That, however, is a topic for another post.

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

Some Sparkling MLB Debuts From The Past

Yesterday, Baseball Roundtable took a look at a handful of MLB rookies who got their careers off to a bang over the past few days – Steven Kwan, Hunter Greene, Seiya Suzuki, Jeremy Pena and Jhoan Duran.  For that post, click here.  Well, as always in The Roundtable, one thing leads to another and this post will look at some past sparkling debuts.

Ted Cox, DH, Red Sox … 1977

On September 18, 1977, the Red Sox started rookie 22-year-old Ted Cox at DH, batting second. Cox, a 1973 first-round draft pick right out of high school, had hit .334-14-81 in in 95 games for the Triple-A Pawtucket Red Sox to earn his trip to “The Show.”  Cox’ first day at the plate, as Boston topped Baltimore 10-4, went like this:

  • First inning, single to left field , later scored;
  • Third inning, walk, later scored;
  • Fifth inning, single to left, later scored;
  • Sixth inning, single to center;
  • Ninth inning, double to right, later scored.

Not bad for Day One one in the big-leagues, but he wasn’t done yet.  The very next day, against the Yankees (in Boston), Cox rapped a single to right and a single to center in his first two at bats.  He finally grounded out to first base in the fifth inning to end his streak – but he had, in hand, the record for base hits in the most consecutive at bats (six) to start an MLB career.

Side note:  Unlike many of today’s players, Cox used the whole field. Of his six hits, two were to left, two to center and two to right.

Cox got in a total of 13 games for the Red Sox that season, hitting .362-1-6, with three doubles, one triple, one home run, and 11 runs scored. He played four MLB seasons (1977-81 … Red Sox, Indians, Mariners, Blue Jays) and hit .245-10-79 in 272 games.

So Close

Last season, White Sox rookie Yermin Mercedes started the season with base hits in his first eight at bats – five-for-five, with one double, one run scored and four RBI on April 2; followed by a solo home run, a single and an RBI double in his first three at bats the following day. The streak ended with a flyout to center on his ninth at bat of the season. Mercedes, however, had one at bat for the White Sox in 2020 (August 2), grounding out to second as a pinch hitter, so he missed a chance to break Cox’ record.

Karl Spooner, LHP, Dodgers … 1955

On September 22, 1954, Dodgers’ rookie southpaw Karl Spooner set the MLB record for the most strikeouts in a debut MLB appearance (15) – a mark tied by the Astros’ J.R. Richard on September 5, 1974.  In his record-setting game, the 23- year-old Spooner shutout the New York Giants (in Brooklyn) on three hits (three walks).  Four days later, he got his second career start, against the Pirates in Brooklyn, and twirled a four-hit shutout with 12 whiffs (three walks).  So, first 18 MLB innings – two complete-game shutouts and 27 strikeouts in 18 innings.  I should also note here in that in 1954, the average number of strikeouts per nine innings in MLB was 4.2.

Spooner truly looked like he was going to be a “pitching phenom” for the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1954, Spooner went 21-9, 3.14 at Fort Worth (Double-A Texas League), fanning 262 batters in 238 innings – despite missing a month of the season with a knee injury.  That performance earned him that  late-season call up to the “show.” Unfortunately, Spooner suffered a shoulder injury in Spring Training the following year – finishing his first (and last) full MLB season with an 8-6, 3.65 record in 29 appearances (14 starts). He made 28 minor-league appearances between 1956 and 1958, but never returned to the majors.

Note:  In J.R. Richard’s 15-whiff debut, he picked up a 5-3 win (Astros over Giants) giving up seven hits, and three runs (two earned), while walking three.  In his next appearance, a start against the Reds, he went five innings and gave up two-hits, and one run, with six walks and five strikeouts.

Pete Richert, LHP, Dodgers …. 1962

On April 12, 1962, Dodgers’ rookie Pete Richert  came to the mound in the top of the second inning (in relief of starter Stan Williams) with the Dodgers trailing 4-0 and the Reds’ SS Eddie Kasko on second base, CF Vada Pinson at the plate and two out.  He brought with him a reputation as a  left-hander who could bring some heat. In four full minor-league seasons, Richert had gone 44-40, 3.71, with 742 strikeouts in 721 innings.

Richert did not disappoint. He  proceeded to fan Pinson to end the inning. Richert came out for the third inning and fanned the next four MLB batters he faced. (Richert remains the only pitcher with a four-strikeout inning in his MLB debut.)  It went like this: Reds’ RF Frank Robinson goes down swinging; 1B Gordy Coleman fans swinging, but reaches first on a passed ball; CF Wally Post strikes out swinging; C Johnny Edwards ends the inning by swinging at strike three.  But, Richert wasn’t done yet.

In the top of the fourth, Richert got the sixth major leaguer to step in against him – Reds’ 3B Tommy Harper – on a called third strike. Ironically, it was Reds’ pitcher Joey Jay who ended Reichert’s career-opening, MLB-record six straight strikeouts by grounding out to first base. Richert got the final out of the inning on another grounder, 2B Don Blasingame retired second to first.  Reichert’s final line for his debut game was  – 3 1/3 innings pitched, no hits, no walks, no runs.

Reichert’s final line for his debut game was  – 3 1/3 innings pitched, no hits, no walks, no runs and seven strikeouts. He faced 12 batters, with two getting on via a passed ball and an error.  He threw 40 pitches – 33 strikes.

Richert finished the season 5-4, 3.87 (19 appearances, 12 starts), with 75 strikeouts in 81 1/3 innings. He went on to a 13-season MLB career (1962-74 … Dodgers,  Senators, Orioles, Cardinals, Phillies) – 80-73, 3.19, 51 saves and 925 whiffs in 1,165 2/3 innings.

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com; Baseball-Almanac.com

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

Opening Day … Always An Event … and Here’s a Few Predictions

“You always get a special kick on opening day, no matter how many you go through. You look forward to it like a birthday party when you’re a kid. You think something wonderful is going to happen.”

Joe DiMaggio

 

Twins Opening Day 2022

Opening Day is the most hopeful and optimistic day of each year.  At least for this one day (Well, actually two days this season, with varying teams opening on April 7 or 8) every team is a contender, every rookie a potential “phenom,”  every fading veteran  a potential “Comeback Player of the Year,” and every new face in the lineup or on the bench a welcome addition.  (Note: Sorry. I’m a day late posting this. Getting to Day One and Day Two games slowed my progress. Also, at the end of this Opening Days celebration, I’ve posted my predictions for the 2022 season – and a few players I’d think are worth watching.)

There are flyovers, team introductions, and ceremonial first pitches in ballparks adorned with red, white and blue bunting across the nation.  As the game time approaches, the sun seems a little brighter, the sky a little bluer, the grass a shade greener.  The scorecard is clean and fresh, awaiting the stroke your pen or pencil – depending on how confident you are in your observational and scorekeeping skills.

Once the game begins, the ball hops off the bat with an especially sharp crack, the pitches seem to have more zip and whir-r-r than ever and the fielders move with a unique combination of grace and energy.  In the stands, the beer is crisp and cold and the hot dogs steam in the cool of early spring. (And, these days, there are loads of new – sometimes even exotic – concession offering to debate over.)  The fans cheer on their old and new heroes and follow this opening contest with pennant-race intensity – the most intense among them logging each play in the new season’s first scorecard.   Baseball is back!

So, there I was, Opening Day 2022, with a couple of friends in the second deck of Target Field.  And, yes, the sun was shining – but it was cold (about forty degrees at game time, with a brisk wind that made it feel closer to thirty.  (Minnesota weather had already led to a one-day postponement of the opener). The sun was shining (we were in the shadows), however, and the festivities were  on spot.  The player introductions, the anthem with the giant American Flag unveiled  across centerfield and new Hall of Famers (to be inducted this summer) Twins Tony Oliva and Jim Kaat throwing out ceremonial first pitches. Then it was baseball, Twins rookie Joe Ryan versus 2021 Cy Young Award winner Robbie Ray.

To make a long story short, it was a nail-biter, as the Twins fell 2-1 to the Mariners.  But, as always, there was drama – even though the local (StarTrubune) headline read “Zero-for-big moments,” with the subheads adding “Not much worth cheering about for Twins fans” and “Last Shot in lackluster opener dies at fence.”  Ouch! I beg to disagree.

The Mariners scored first, as Ryan hit number-two hitter 1B Ty France with a pitch and one batter later gave up a two-run homer RF Mitch Haniger. So, what about big moment or things to cheer about?

  • In the bottom of the third inning, with the score 2-1 and Mariners’ runners on first and second and just one out, new Gold Glove SS Carlos Correa made a beautiful diving stop on a groundball of the bat of Haniger and secured a force out at second – saving at least one run. Ryan then fanned 3B Eugenio Suarez to get out of the inning unscathed.
  • In the fourth, new 3B Gio Urshela launched his first home run as a Twin, cutting the score to 2-1.
  • In the fifth inning, Twins’ 24-year-old rookie right-hander Jhoan Durn (who boasts a triple-digit sinker) made his MLB debut. A pair of singles (1B Ty France and LF Jesse Winker) and a wild pitch  put him in quick trouble – runners on first and third and no out (in a 2-1 game). The Mariners were threatening to break it open. Over his next ten pitches, the rookie (apparently with nerves as cold as ice) struck out Haniger, Suarez and RF Jarred Kalenic – earning a standing ovation as he walked off the mound. (Duran pitched another scoreless frame, adding a fourth strikeout and walking a batter.)
  • In the bottom of the ninth, still 2-1, fan favorite Luis Arreaz delivered pinch-hit single to loud applause. With two outs in the inning, new Twin Gary Sanchez came up and, with fans changing “Gary, Gary” drove what, off the bat, looked to be a game-winning two-run dinger to left. It was caught at the wall by Mariners’ LF Winker.  So close, but still an entertaining opener from this fan’s perspective.

Baseball Roundtable’s First Trot Index of 2022

Regular readers know about the Roundtable’s Trot index, which logs what percentage of MLB plate appearances end in a trot (to first base, around the bases or back to the dugout) – with no action on the basepaths or  by the defense. You know what I mean: walks, strikeouts, hit by pitch, home runs and catcher’s interference.  Well in the fifteen “openers” (a few teams have played two games, I deleted the second games), 37.5% of all plate appearances have met the Trot Index criteria: 23.7% as strikeouts; 9.6% as walks; 2.4% as home runs; and 1.8% hit by pitch.

A few other 2022 Opener observations:

  • There were six one-run games and only one blowout (a five or more run differential);
  • There were only two games that did not include at least on hit batsman;
  • The Phillies pitched the only game without a walk, as the Phillies topped Oakland 9-5, April 8, in Philadelphia. Aaron Nola, Jeurys Familia; Brad Hand; Seranthony Dominguez; and Corey Knebel did the pitching.
  • There were two extra-inning games – with the dreaded runners placed at second to start the inning – both on April 8. Yankees 6 – Red Sox 5 (11 innings) in New York and Giants 6 – Marlins 5 in San Francisco. (10 innings)
  • There was one game without a home run, Royals 3 – Guardians 1 in Kansas City – a total of 12 hits, eight singles and four doubles.

Ouch.

Only one team went scoreless on Opening Day. The Pirates failed to score as they opened in St. Louis and lost by a 9-0 score – despite only being outhit 8-6. In the game, Pittsburgh pitchers gave up eight hits (three home runs) and seven walks and the Pirates added a pair of errors.  It was also the only shutout among this year’s openers.

A few more Opening Day(s) Tidbits

Getting the First One Out of the Way

Last season, the Brewers’ Cy Young Award winner Corbin Burnes tallied 49 strikeouts before his first walk of the season – which came on May 13.  He pitched 34 innings and faced 126 batters before issuing his first free pass.  In this season’s  opener, he walked the fist batter he faced – the Cubs’ Rafael Ortego.

Old Guys Rule

40-year-old Adam Wainwright started the Cardinals’ opener in Pittsburgh and pitched six scoreless frames as the Cardinal won 9-0.

Double-Digits

On April 7 , The Astros topped the Angels 3-1, becoming the second team in MLB history and the first since 1896, to win ten consecutive Opening Day games.  The NL Boston Beaneaters won ten straight from 1887-1896.  A few tidbits.  In their still-alive streak, the Astros:

  • Have won five openers at home, five on the road.
  • Have had the starting pitcher record each of the ten wins (Dallas Keuchel and Justin Verlander three each, Zack Greinke, Scott Feldman, Bud Norris and Framber Valdez).
  • Have outscored their opponents 44-13.
  • Scored five or more runs six times, while giving up as many as three runs just once.

A Fistful of Firsts

In the April 7 Angels’ game, Shohei Ohtani became the first player to throw his team’s first pitch of the season and also be in the batter’s  box  to take his team’s first pitch of the season – as he started on the mound and lead off at DH.  He also recorded his team’s first strikeout of the season fanning the first batter he faced  and made his team’s first out of the season, grounding our short-to-first on the first pitch he saw in that first at bat.

Seth Beer Lives Up to His Name

April 7 was National Beer Day – and guess  what? Diamondbacks’ DH Seth Beer (gotta love that baseball name) hit a walk-off home run to put the Diamondbacks past the Padres 4-2.  It was his second career homer and first career walk-off long ball.

Now, Few Opening Day musings from the past.

Williams & Johnson – Not a law firm, but the kings of Opening Day

As much as Baseball Roundtable loves the return of the national pastime, perhaps no one looked forward to Opening Day more than Ted Williams.  “Teddy Ballgame,” a .344 lifetime hitter, outdid himself on Opening Day.  Williams played in fourteen “openers” and was NEVER held hitless.  He  finished his career with a .449 Opening Day average (22 hits in 49 at bats), with 3 home runs, 8 doubles, 1 triple, 9 runs scored,  14 RBI and 11 walks.  His Opening Day on-base percentage was .550 and his season-opener slugging percentage was .837.

Photo by pingnews.com

The Washington Senators’ right-hander Walter Johnson also was always ready for an Opening Day assignment.  On his first-ever Opening Day start (April 14, 1910), the 22-year-old Johnson tossed a 3-0 one-hit shutout against the Philadelphia Athletics.  Note:  President William Howard Taft, on that day, became the first President to toss out the season’s ceremonial first pitch – caught by Johnson.  Sixteen years (and 13 Opening Day starts) later, a 38-year-old Johnson fulfilled his last Opening Day assignment with a 15-inning, complete-game, 1-0 win (6 hits, 3 walks, 9 strikeouts) over the Athletics.  Johnson holds the record for Opening Day pitching victories with nine (against five losses) and also threw a record seven Opening Day shutouts.

Not All Opening Day Memories Are Pleasant

Circumstances were clearly working against Ron Karkovice on March 31, 1996, when he set an MLB Opening Day record by striking out five times.

First, future Hall of Famer Randy Johnson (who retired with the second most strikeouts in MLB history) started on the mound for the Mariners – and he was on his game, whiffing 14 batters in seven innings (including Karkovice in the second, fourth and seventh).

Second, the White Sox could muster only two runs on four hits over the first nine innings – taking a slim 2-1 lead into the bottom of the ninth (at that point in the game, Karkovice had only a mundane three strikeouts to his credit – or debit – for the day).

Third, the Mariners tied the contest in the ninth, and the game went to 12 innings before the Mariners prevailed 3-2.  In those three extra innings, Karkovice struck out against Norm Charlton (tenth inning) and Edwin Hurtado (twelfth inning) to set the Opening Day record.

Of note – at least to BBRT – is the fact that, despite five strikeouts in five plate appearances, Karkovice did not leave a single runner on base.

Another Unpleasant – or at least painful –  Opening Day Memory

On April 9, 1990, Astros’ first baseman and clean-up hitter Glenn Davis (a 1989 All Star) opened the season in a bruising manner – tying an Opening Day (and MLB regular season) record for getting hit by a pitch in a game (three times). Davis came to the plate six times and never put the ball in play – but still made only one out.  For the game, Davis was hit by a pitch three times, walked twice (once intentionally) and struck out once. The Astros lost to the Reds 8-4 on Davis’ historic and painful day. The Opening Day action did help Davis lead the league in one category in 1990 (Hit by Pitch – eight).

Of note to the Roundtable, Davis finished Opening Day 1990 with a batting average of .000, but an on-base percentage of .833.

BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE 2022 PREDICTIONS

Baseball Roundtable would like to celebrate Opening Day 2022 with some predictions for the season ahead … and a few comments on the teams likely to be contenders.

—–National League (or what, “back in the day,” we called the Senior Circuit)—–

NL East

Braves                  94-68

Mets                     90-72

Phillies                  87-75

Marlins                 72-90

Nationals             72-90

Even missing Ronald Acuna, Hr. (ACL), who hopes to return in early -to mid-May, and having lost free-agent Freddie Freeman, the Braves have more than enough offense to repeat as AL East Champions.  They added Matt Olson (trade) to replace Freeman. Olson brings Gold Glove fielding skills and last season hit .271-39-111. He joins a lineup that includes plenty of offensive firepower. The Braves scored the most runs in the NL East last season, with only about a half-season (82 games) from Acuna. Max Fried (14-7, 3.04 ) will again lee the rotation, followed by veteran Charlie Morton (14-6, 3.34).   Then, to top it all off, they added free-agent closer Kenley Jansen to add depth – at the front – of the bullpen.,

Then there’s the Mets, with  a rotation that starts with Cy Young Award  candidates  Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer.  Ouch!  deGrom likely to be out until late-May or early-June and Scherzer is starting the season with a tender hamstring. Fortunately, they Mets added free-agent Chris Bassitt (12-4, 3.15 with Oakland) – who will be in the number-two slot until deGrom is ready. The Mets bullpen is solid. Closer Edwin Diaz, while he may test your nerves at times, did convert 32 of 36 save opportunities a year ago; and Trevor May, Adam Ottavino, Seth Lugo and Joely Rodriguez can get the ball to him. The Mets  added some excitement on offense over the off-season and newcomer free-agent RF Starling Marte (.310-12-55, with 89 runs scored and 47 steals  for the Marlins and A’s) should get the fans up out of their seats. While the Mets offense does not have the “Names” you see in the Atlanta lineup, the sum of its parts is pretty good.  They will give the Braves a fight, but – surprisingly to me – it may be pitching that puts the Braves over the top.

The Phillies come  in poised to improve on 82 wins in 2021 – having upgraded  their bullpen and adding  a bit more lineup protection for Bryce Harper. The Phillies added a couple of solid bats in DH Kyle Schwarber and LF Nick Castellanos. Returning to the middle of the lineup are MVP candidates’  RF Bryce Harper (.309-35-84.,with 13 steals last season) – who could be even better with Castellanos batting behind him.  Ultimately, the offense is solid – with four potential 30+ home run bats (Harper, Schwarber, Castellanos and Rhys Hoskins) leading the charge. The defense may betray the Philllies at times, but the offense will be there. The rotation has notable potential. Zach Wheeler (14-10, 2.68) and Aaron Nola (9-9, 4.63 in an off year), followed by  Kyle Gibson; Zach Elfin; and Ranger Suarez.  Southpaw Suarez may be the emerging gem.  He was 8-5, 1.36 in 39 game last year (12 starts). The Philllies need help in the bullpen and they went out and got it. – signing free agents Corey Knebel  (2.45, with three saves, in 27 games for the Dodgers – and with a 39-save season on his resume); Jeurys Familia and Brad Hand.  It should be a scramble at the top of the East.

NL Central

Brewers               95-57

Cardinals              88-74

Cubs                      75-87

Reds                      73-92

Pirates                  61-101

The Brewers won 95 games last season – and that’s where they appear to be headed in 2022. Pitching – rotation and bullpen – will again be the driving force behind Milwaukee’s success. The Brewers’ staff led MLB in strikeouts last season  and put up MLB’s third-best ERA – and all the key arms are back. The rotation starts with three 2021 NL All Stars:  2021 Cy Young Award winner Corbin Burnes (11-5,  with a league-low 2.43 ERA and 12.6K/9); Brandon Woodruff (9-10, 2.58, 10.5K/9); and Freddy Peralta (10-5, 2.81, 12.2K/9). Adrian Houser and Eric Lauer round out what should again be a dominant rotation. The bullpen starts (or should I say ends) with one of the game’s elite closers – Josh Hader. Getting the ball to Hader are the likes of Devin Williams and Brad Boxberger.  As gaudy as the Brewers’ pitching number were, their other offensive stats were middling – sixth in the NL in runs scored; eighth in home runs and last in average.  I’m not seeing great improvement ahead.  RF Hunter Renfroe, SS Willy Adames and DH Andrew McCutchen are key  elements – and the Brew Crew could use a bounce back from 2018 MVP Christian Yelich. Ultimate, the Brewers pitching will carry them to a repeat at the top of the Central.  It wouldn’t surprise me to see the Brewers make a deal for another bat for the stretch run and post-season.

The Cardinals finished five games back of the Brewers in 2021, and they did not make any off-season moves that convince me they will close the gap. With the new universal DH, they brought back free-agent fan favorite (42-year-old) Albert Pujols, but this is not the Pujols of old (.236, with 17 home runs in 2021). The Redbirds added Corey Dickerson ( .271-6-29 in 109 games for the Blue Jays & Marlins).  The infield will give opponents fits in more ways than one.  Not only  does the Cardinals infield put up notable firepower, they have Gold Gloves at  1B, 2B and 3B. Third baseman Nolan Arenado hit .255-34-105; 1B  Paul Goldschmidt  hit .294-31-99; and 2B Tommy Edman hit 11 homers and stole 30 bases.  LF Tyler O’Neill brings a big bat to the plate, along with  Gold Glove defense.   CF Harrison Bader (another 2021 Gold Glover) and RF Dylan Carlson  round out the outfield – and can contribute double figure in home runs  each. Yadier Molina nine-time Gold Glover will handle the catching, but at 39-years-old may need more breaks. Now, when you read about the offensive prowess and all those Gold Gloves,  you may wonder why I didn’t pick the Cardinals for the top spot in the East.  The fact is, this lineup is pretty much a carbon copy of 2022’s second-place squad. Moving on to the rotation,  40-year-old Adam Wainwright will lead the rotation (17-7, 3.05) and he just keep chugging along – tossing quality starts.  Number-one in waiting, Jack Flaherty unfortunately will open the season on the IL (shoulder). That is a significant blow to the Redbirds   Miles Mikolas, Steven Matz, Dakota Hudson and Jordan Hicks should round out the starting five. In the pen. last season, Alex Reyes was 10-8, 3.24 with 29 saves in 69 games – but he was 5-4, with 24 saves and a 1.89 ERA through July and  pitched to a .5.84 ERA from Augustforward. Giovanny Gallegos has secured  the  closer role (with 11 saves in September) .

While the Cubs could make some noise, to me it looks like a two-team race in the NL Central.

NL West

Dodgers               102-60

Padres                  90-72

Giants                   88-74

Rockies                 70-92

Diamondbacks  61-101

The Dodgers, with four former MVPs in the lineup, should coast home in the NL West.  I say this despite the fact that the Giants  won 107 games (to the Dodgers 106) in 2021. The Dodgers can put forward a lineup you could reasonably expect to have eight of the nine hitters punch 25 or more home runs – led by RF newcomer 1B Freddie Freeman, DH Max Muncy, RF Mookie Betts, CF Cody Bellinger, SS Trea Turner and C Will Smith.  There are no weak spots. The rotation is headed by former MVP Clayton Kershaw, 2021 20-game winner Julio Urias and 16-game winner Walker Buehler. The Dodger lost free-agent closer Kenley Jansen to free agency, but went out and traded for Craig Kimbrel .  Then you also have to factor in the Dodgers proven willingness to go out and get more help if they need it.

Losing Fernando Tatis, Jr. (for two-to-three months, fractured wrist) is a major blow to the Padres’ chances to challenge the Dodgers. Still, they’ve got a solid lineup with 3B Manny Machado, incoming DH Like Voit and RF Wil Myers and 1B Jake Cronenworth providing power. CF Trent Grisham is another exciting player at the top of the lineup. He punched 15 home runs and stole 13 bases  in 132 games a year ago – and could be a 20-20 threat. The lineup just doesn’t have the depth or power of the Dodgers. The Padres may have the second-best rotation in the Division, particularly if Yu Darvish and Blake Snell return to form. Joe Musgrove and newcomer Sean Manaea can also put up quality starts. A last minute trade with the Twins brought proven closer Taylor Rogers to bolster the bullpen. Still, when you look at the rosters,  you have to give the Dodger the edge.  But Padres fans have plenty to be happy about – and think they will be celebrating into the post-season.

Okay, the Giants surprised me a year ago.  I don’t expect it to happen again. I expect them to be in the hunt for a post-season spot – perhaps even finishing ahead of the Padres – but I do not expect them to finish ahead of the Dodgers again. They are going to feel the loss of C Buster Posey (retired) and staff ace Kevin Gausman (14-6, 2.81 in 33 starts). The offense will be led by  free agent newcomer LF Joc Pederson; RF Mike Yastrzemski;  SS Brandon Crawford and 1B Brandon Belt. What is a bit concerning is that Pederson is the youngest of the group at 30-years-old. The Giants did bolster the rotation with the addition of Carlos Rodon (a 13-game winner for the White Sox last year) and Alex Cobb (8-3, 3.76 for the Angels).  They join Logan Webb, Anthony DeSclafani and  Alex Woods in a very solid one through-five. Thirty-five-year-old Jake McGee (31 saves a year ago) may face a challenge for the closer role from Camilo Duvall (a 24-year-old with a high-90s fastball and a swing-and-miss slider). Doval, Tyler Rogers and Zack Littell man a bullpen that should be an asset.

NL AWARD WINNERS

MVP

  1. Trea Turner, Dodgers
  2. Juan Soto, Nationals
  3. Bryce Harper, Phillies
  4. Fernando Tatis, Jr. Padres
  5. Ronald Acuna, Jr. Braves

Cy Young Award

  1. Corbin Burnes, Brewers
  2. Walker Buehler, Dodgers
  3. Max Scherzer, Mets

Rookie of the Year

  1. O’Neil Cruz, Pirates
  2. Hunter Greene, Reds
  3. Seiya Suzuki, Cubs

A Few NL Players to Watch

Taijuan Walker, Mets.  Which Taijuan Walker will the Mets see? Last season, Walker was 7-3, 2.66 in the first half and 0-8, 7.13 in the second half.

Ranger Saurez, Philllies.  Saurez was 8-5, 1.36 last season – 3-2, 1.51 as a starter (12 starts) and 5-3, 1.12 in 27 relief appearances. (He didn’t make his first  start until August.)  It will be fun to see what he can do in a full-year starting role.

Nelson Cruz, Nationals. The ageless wonder, who will turn 42 this season, hit 32 home runs this past season and that his lowest total since 2013 (excluding the Covid-shortened 2020 season). He’s a professional hitter, a team leader and a joy to watch.  What can he do as he turns 42?

Seiya Suzuki, Cubs.  The 27-year-old comes over from Japan with legitimate power potential. His Japan Central League stats for the last three seasons are: .335-28-87; .300-25-75; .317-38-88.  It will be interesting to see how those his skills transfer to MLB.

Trea Turner, Dodgers.  One of the most exciting players in the game – .328-28-77, with 32 steals a year ago.

Reiver Sanmartin, Reds. The 25-year-old southpaw was 10-2, 3.32 at Double- and Triple-A last season, fanning 112 in 100 2/3 innings. He looked good in a couple of late season starts with the Reds.

—–American League/Senior Circuit—–

 

Blue Jays              95-67

Yankees               90-72

Rays                       89-73

Red Sox 8              6-76

Orioles                  59-103

The Blue Jays  won 91 games a year ago – and played only 36 games truly at home (in Toronto). The Jays  lost staff ace Robbie Ray, but free-agent pickups Kevin Gausman (14-6, 2.81 for the Giants in 2022) and Yusei Kikuchi (Mariners), plus  a full year of Jose Berrios should more than make up for it. The bullpen, led by Jordan Roman (23 saves, 2.13), Yimi Garcia, Tim Mayza and Adam Cimber is ready to save wins for the rotation. The Blue Jays have also  put together an offense led by  MVP candidate Vlad Guerrero, Jr., with lots of firepower from the like of SS Bo Bichette, RF Teoscar Hernandez, LF Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. and newcomer 3B Matt Chapman. They are poised to take the Eat.

The Yankees should be in the fight, but I do have some concerns with the pitching.  You can’t go wrong when you start your rotation  with Gerrit Cole (a perennial Cy Young candidate).  Following Cole are Luis Severino Jordan Montgomery, who could both present some injury concerns, as could Jameson Taillon. Still, if Severino and Montgomery are back – and they do appear to be  healthy again – the rotation should keep the Yankees in the race (and hold off the Rays.)  As usual, the Bronx Bombers will have plenty of firepower in the offense (RF Aaron Judge, DH Giancarlo Stanton, new 3B Josh Donaldson, 1B Anthony Rizzo) and plenty of heat in the bullpen (Aroldis Chapman, Jonathan Loaisiga, Chad Green and more).  The addition of SS Isiah Kiner-Falefa should help steady the defense.

The Rays always seem to surprise me, but they will  miss staff ace Tyler Glasnow (August Tommy John surgery) and  22-year-old righty Shane Baz (elbow surgery), who may be out for the first few weeks of the season. Southpaw Shane McClanahan (10-6, 3.43 in 25 starts a year ago) should start the season at the top of the rotation. Still the Rays will do their mix-and-match magic (on the mound and in the lineup) and should be in the hunt.  If the Yankee stumble, the Rays could move into second place. Ultimately, the Blue Jays, Yankees and Rays should all be in the pot-season.

AL Central

White Sox            94-68

Twins                    84-78

Tigers                    82-80

Indians                 81-81

Royals                   75-87

The White Sox lost All-Star free-agent Carlos Rodon (and his 13 wins) to the Giants, but they still have plenty of solid arms in the rotation – with Lucas Giolito; Lance Lynn and Dylan Cease, with the back of the rotation drawn  from Dallas Keuchel, Reynaldo Lopez and Michael Kopech.  Behind the rotation, the bullpen should be a major plus with Liam Hendriks, Aaron Bummer, Reynaldo Lopez – and improved  (Kendall Graveman) from a year ago. The offense, potent last season,  also has the potential to be improved, with full (healthy) seasons from outfielders Eloy Jimenez (.249-10-37 in 55 games) and Luis Robert (.338-13-43 in 68 games). Key offensive cast members include SS Tim Anderson (a premier leadoff hitter), 1B Jose Abreu and newcomer RF A.J. Pollock. The White Sox  led the AL Central in runs scored last season and gave up the fewest runs in the Division. They could easily repeat that performance.

Before the lockout ended, I probably would have put my hometown Twins in fourth place. However, some (unexpected) moves improved their prospects. Picking up Sonny Gray to head the rotation and (perhaps the top free agent on the market) Carlos Correa to play SS were major moves. The Twins have the offense to go head-to-head with the ChiSox (CF Byron Buxton, SS Correa, 2B Jorge Polanco, RF Max Kepler , 1B Miguel Sano). Buxton and Correa are Platinum Glove Winners up the middle. Chicago has a measurable edge on the mound. (The Twins rotations beyond Gray (Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Dylan Bundy, Chris Archer, Chris Paddock) may surprise, but it does not measure up to the White Sox. Plus ,the Twins traded their established closer (Taylor Rogers) to get Paddock, so they may be sorting out bullpen roles to start the season.   Second place for the Twins.

The Tigers are a team on the rise and, if the Twins falter, I could see a second-place finish.  However, I’m not convinced they are quite ready to challenge the White Sox and Twins. The Tigers did take a hit when top-prospect Riley Greene (.301-24-84,with 16 steals) suffered a fractured foot in Spring Training. Penciled in as Detroit’s CF, Greene is expected to be out for several weeks.

AL West

Astros                   94-68

Mariners              91-71

Angels                   85-77

Rangers                75-87

A’s                          70-92

The Astros lost SS Carlos Correa, SP Zack Greinke and reliever Kendall Graveman to free agency.  On the pitching side, Justin Verlander should be back from Tommy John surgery and they picked up free-agent reliever Hector Neris.   They will miss Correa’s glove and bat, but there is still more than enough here to win the AL West.  The offense will go through 2B Jose Altuve (.278-31-83 a year ago), DH Yordan Alvarez (33 homers and 104 RBI), underrated 24-year-old RF Kyle Tucker (.294-30-92, with 14 steals). A bounce back from 3B Alex Bregman would also be a plus – and I haven’t even mentioned LF Michael Brantley (.311 in 121 games). The rotation has Verlander, Framber Valdez (11-6, 3.14 in 22 starts), Joe Urquidy (8-3, 3.62 in 20 starts), Luis Garcia and Jake Odorizzi.  Ryan Pressley, Ryne Stanek and Hector Neris head up a solid pen.

The Mariners won 90 games a year ago – and just missed the post-season. This year, 90 wins should get them in – and they appear positioned to deliver those victories.  The Mariners made some moves to strengthen the team for 2022, the most important of which may be the singing of strikeout artist Robbie Ray (13-7, 2.84 with the Blue Jays last season) to head their rotation, which has some solid arms in Logan Gilbert, Marco Gonzalez and Chris Flexen. The bullpen proved to be a strength last season.  The question is can they repeat.   It looks like Drew Steckenrider (14 saves, 2.00 ERA) has won the closer job, but Paul Sewald, Diego Castillo and newcomer veteran Sergio Romo are all used to pitching big innings. The retirement of 3B Kyle Seager triggered some changes on offense, with a couple of new faces (via trade) in the lineup:  power-hitting 3B Eugenio Suarez (31 homers for the Reds, but just a .198 average a year ago) and OF Jesse Winder (.305, with 77 runs scored for the Reds.) RF Mitch Haniger (39 home runs ) is still in the middle of the lineup and 1B Ty France, along with youngsters LF Jarred Kelenic and CF Julio Rodriguez will be in the mix. The Mariners seem well-positioned to  again put 90 wins up on the board.

Despite 2021 MP Shohei Ohtani and perennial MVP candidate Mike Trout, I don’t see the Angels finishing higher than third place.  Still, there is some talent to watch. On offense, both Trout and Ohtani are capable of 40 or more home runs, 1B Jarred Walsh has 30-homer power and 3B Anthony Rendon and SS David Fletcher are solid players. Raisel Iglesias saved 34 games in 2021 and has a dependable supporting cast.  Ohtani may be both the best hitter and best starting  pitcher on the squad. The remainder of the starting five will be drawn from Reid Detmers, Noah Syndergaard, Jose Suarez, Michael Lorenzen and Patrick Sandoval. As the season opens, there are still questions to be answered there.

AL AWARD WINNERS

MVP

  1. Vlad Guerrero, Jr., Blue Jays
  2. Shohei Ohtani, Angels
  3. Luis Robert, White Sox
  4. Mike Trout, Angels

Cy Young Award

  1. Gerrit Cole, Yankees
  2. Shane Bieber, Indians
  3. Robbie Ray, Mariners

Rookie of the Year

  1. Bobby Witt, Jr., Royals
  2. Spencer Torkelson, Tigers

A Few AL Players to Watch

Vlad Guerrero, Jr. Blue Jays.  Just 23, Guerrero a “must-watch” Most Valuable Player candidate. – .311-48-111 a year ago, he should put up similar numbers in 2022.

Bobby Witt, Jr.  Royals. Witt seems ready to join the likes of Vlad Guerrero, Jr. and Bo Bichette as second-generation MLB stars.  Last year’s Minor league Player of the Year (.290-33-97, with 99 runs and 29 SB at Double-A and Triple-A), the 22-year-old is a must-watch Rookie of the Year Candidate.

Byron Buxton, Twins. A full season of Byron Buxton would be a thing of beauty. He’s capable of .300, with 30 homers, 30 steals and Platinum-Glove defense if he avoids injury (he’s only played 100+ games in one of seven seasons). Keep an eye on Buxton, especially when he closes in on the outfield walls.

Spencer Torkelson, Tigers. The Detroit 1B is  is a legitimate power hitter and Rookie of the Year candidate.

Grayson Rodriguez, Orioles.  Just 22-years-old, the 6’5” righthander may not get to Baltimore this season – but Baseball Roundtable hopes he does. At High-A and Double-A last season, he went 9-1, 2.36 in 23 starts, fanning 161 batters (just 27 walks) in 103 innings.

Shohei Ohtani, Angels.  Nothing needs to be said here  … triple-digit heat, 40-homer power and dangerous on the basepaths.

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com; MLB.com

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

 

 

 

Baseball Roundtable 2022 American League Predictions (Guesses?)

Opening Day … A Gift Waiting to be Opened!

It’s getting close to Opening Day and it’s time for Baseball Roundtable to look ahead (and make predictions) for the 2022 season.  We’ll start with American League won-loss predictions,  move on to a look at some of the players (on each AL team) that BBRT will be watching in the coming months and wrap up with BBRT favorites for some key junior circuit awards.  A word of caution, these predictions are coming in late, due to the late movement of so many players (post-lockout). In fact, as I was editing this, I received notification on my smartphone that Sean Manaea had been traded from the A’s to the Padres. I did my best to keep up with all the movement, so here are my AL predictions (really informed guesses given my track record).

AL East

Blue Jays          95-67

Yankees           90-72

Rays                 89-73

Red Sox           86-76

Orioles            59-103

Blue Jays

The Blue Jays  won 91 games a year ago – and played only 36 games truly at home (in Toronto).  “Home Cooking” should help them be even better.

The Jays  lost staff ace (and strikeout artist) Robbie Ray, but free-agent pickups Kevin Gausman (14-6, 2.81 for the Giants in 2021) and Yusei Kikuchi, plus  a full year of Jose Berrios should more than make up for it. Add the emerging arm of Alek Manoah and you’ve got the basis of a solid rotation.

While the Blue Jays will miss Marcus Simeon’s 45 home runs and 102 RBI,  they still have plenty of firepower in  the likes of 1B Vlad Guerrero, Jr. (an MVP candidate); SS Bo Bichette; and outfielders Lourdes Gurriel Jr., Teoscar Hernandez and George Springer. Newcomer Matt Chapman adds plus defense at 3B and proven power (27 home runs last season).

Closer Jordan Romano, Tim Mayza, Adam Cimber. Julian Merryweather and Yimi Garcia lead a bullpen that could see some shifting roles as the season progresses.

Player To Watch

Vlad Guerrero, Jr., just 23, is a “must-watch” most valuable player candidate – .311-48-111 a year ago, he should put up similar numbers in 2022.

_______________________________________

Yankees

The Yankees should be in the fight, but I do have some concerns about the pitching.  You can’t go wrong when you start your rotation  with Gerrit Cole (a perennial Cy Young candidate).  Following Cole are Luis Severino and Jordan Montgomery, who could both present some injury concerns, as could Jameson Taillon. Still, if Severino and Montgomery are back – and they do appear to be  healthy again – the rotation should keep the Yankees in the race.  The Yankees’  bullpen will again be a plus, with the arms of Aroldis Chapman, Jonathan Loaisiga, Chad Green (and I could go on) shutting the door in the late  innings.  The addition of 3B Josh Donaldson and SS Isiah Kiner-Falefa brings solid offense and quality defense to the left side – and the move to 2B should help Gleyber Torres.  Then there are 1B Anthony Rizzo, outfielders Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton to bring plenty of power (not to mention Joey Gallo, who needs to make more contact, but still produced 38 home runs a year ago).  Lots to like here.

Player(s) to Watch

Luis Severino looked solid in his most recent Spring Training outing.  The Yankees need him back in form if they are to challenge the Blue Jays. Nestor Cortes, Jr.  could also be interesting. The 27-year-old altered his pitch mix last season ( replacing his slider with a cutter and developing a softer slider) – and it seemed to work. He put up a 2.29 EERA in 19 2/3 relief innings and, when moved into the rotation, a 3.07 ERA in 14 starts.

________________________________________

Rays

The Rays always seem to surprise me, but they will  miss staff ace Tyler Glasnow (August Tommy John surgery) and  22-year-old righty Shane Baz (elbow surgery), who may be out for the first few weeks of the season. The Rays did sign free-agent Corey Kluber (5-3, 3.83 in 16 games with the Yankees), but he hasn’t shown the stuff that made him a Cy Young Candidate in the past. Southpaw Shane McClanahan (10-6, 3.43 in 25 starts a year ago) should start the season at the top of the rotation. The Rays will also look to  Drew Rasmussen,  Luis Patino and, very likely, versatile veteran Ryan Yarbrough to start games.

The bullpen  is where the Rays do their magic.  They combine quantity and quality with a plan that focuses not on specific roles, but on specific pitchers delivering outs in game-dictated situations.  Andrew Kittredge may be the closest thing to a closer – he led the team with eight saves a year ago.  There will also be  plenty of work for the likes of Matt Wisler (2-3, 2.15 for the Rays in 27 appearances after coming over from the Giants); Pete Fairbanks (3-6, 3.59, with five saves in 47 appearances); JT Chargois (5-1. 1.90 after coming over from the Mariners last season); J.P. Feyereisen; and free-agent signee Brooks Raley – and the list goes on.  What you can expect is to see plenty of arms getting plenty of work out of the pen. And, if history repeats itself, they will be effective.

On offense,  there is plenty of firepower. Last season OFs Randy Arozarena and Austin Meadows combined for 47 home runs and 175 RBI and 28 Brandon Lowe chipped in 39 dingers and 99 RBI.  SS Wander Franco is a rising star and the supporting cast includes Manuel Margot, super-defender Kevin Kiermaier in the outfield, Ji -Man Choi at 1B and  Mike Zunino behind the plate. The Rays will still have plenty of platoon-style options with Yandy Diaz, Taylor Walls, Vidal Brujan (the latter two still have to prove themselves on offense).

Player(s) to Watch

The entire bullpen. In 2021, the Rays had an MLB-record 14 pitchers record  saves. As whole, they got an MLB-leading 703 innings of work out of the pen and an MLB-high 58 victories from relievers. Will the strategy repeat?  If so, will it be as effective?

______________________________________

Red Sox

The Red Sox lost starter Eduardo Rodriguez to free agency and Chris Sale (for at least part of the season) to a rib cage stress fracture. They still have Nathan Eovaldi, who had a fine season last year, and Nick Pivetta. Tanner Houck, who went 1-5, but with a 3.52 ERA in 2021, should also be in the mix.  The Sox also  brought in some veterans to shore up the rotation (Rich Hill, Michael Wacha, James Paxton), but the pitching losses may be too much for the Sox to move up in the tough AL East.

Closer Matt Barnes had an up and down year in 2022 – a 2.61 ERA with 19 saves before the All Star break; 6.48 with five saves after the break. Gary Whitlock, 8-4, 1.96 in 46 games as a rookie in 2021 may eventually move into that role. Ryan Brasier and Darwinzon Hernandez should also see important innings.

Expect solid offense from  DH JD Martinez (28 home runs, 99 RBI in 2021), new 2B Trevor Story, 3B Rafael Devers (.279-38-113) and SS Xander Bogaerts.  The Red Sox scored an AL fourth-best 829 runs a year ago. Unfortunately, two of the three teams that outscored them are in the AL East.

A lot depends on when Chris Sale comes back – and how he comes back.

Player to Watch

Closer Matt Barnes.  Will he bounce back from a tough second-half in 2021?  If he does, it sets up the bullpen roles nicely.

______________________________________

Orioles

The Orioles pushed the AL’s second-fewest runs across the plate a year ago (only the Rangers scored fewer in the AL) and allowed MLB’s most runs.

The Orioles lost 110 games in 2021 and went through a quiet off-season.  It looks like another tough year for Baltimore fans – as rebuilding continues. Plenty of young players should  get a chance to prove themselves. Here’s what they can look forward to in Baltimore.  The rotation will be led by John Means (6-9, 2.62 a year ago) and free-agent signee Jordan Lyles (10-13, 5.15 for the Rangers). In the competition for the rest of the rotation are Bruce Zimmerman, Keegan Akin, Zac Lowther, Dean Kremer and Jorge Lopez.  In the pen, 2021 closer Cole Sulser (5-4, 2.70 with eight saves in 60 appearances should retain that role. Other likely bullpen arms include Tanner Scott, Dillon Tate and Joey Krehbiel. Lots of “tryouts” for the rotation and pen – not a good sign in the tough AL East.

On offense, there are a few players to watch. 25-year-old 1B Ryan Mountcastle popped 33 home runs, the most among MLB rookies a year ago. DH Trey Mancini’s comeback (colon cancer) story included a .255-21-71 season. CF Cedric Mullins joined the 30-30 club in 2021.   Mullins  hit .291, with 30 homers and 30 steals. You can expect to see the Orioles do some mix and match around the infield with Rougned Odor, Ramon Urias, Jorge Mateo, Kelvin Gutierrez and, perhaps, Chris Owings.

Player to Watch

Grayson Rodriguez. Just 22-years-old, the 6’5” righthander may not get to Baltimore this season – but Baseball Roundtable hopes he does. At High-A and Double-A last season, he went 9-1, 2.36 in 23 starts, fanning 161 batters (just 27 walks) in 103 innings.

_______________________________________

AL Central

White Sox        92-70

Twins               85-77

Tigers              82-80

Indians             81-81

Royals              75-87

White Sox

The White Sox lost All-Star free-agent Carlos Rodon (and his 13 wins) to the Giants, but they still have plenty of solid arms in the rotation – with Lucas Giolito (11-9, 3.53 a year ago); Lance Lynn 11-6, 2.69); Dylan Cease (13-7, 3.91).  The back of the rotation likely will be drawn  from Dallas Keuchel, Reynaldo Lopez and Michael Kopech.  Behind the rotation, the bullpen should be a major plus – and improved from a year ago. Liam Hendriks (8-2, 2.54 with 38 saves ) is back to close. One key to the improvement should be free-agent signee Kendall Graveman (5-1, 1.77 with ten saves for the Astros and Mariners).  Returnees Aaron Bummer and Reynaldo Lopez should also get some high-leverage appearances.

The offense, potent last season,  also has the potential to be improved, with full (healthy) seasons from outfielders Eloy Jimenez (.249-10-37 in 55 games) and Luis Robert (.338-13-43 in 68 games). SS Tim Anderson is a quality leadoff hitter and  1B Jose Abreu is also an offensive force. They also added RF AJ Pollock (.297, with 21 home runs in 117 games for the Dodgers) in a late trade. The White Sox  led the AL Central in runs scored last season and gave up the fewest runs in the Division. They could easily repeat that performance.,

Player(s) to Watch

A full season of Luis Robert and Eloy Jimenez would bring joy to the hearts of White Sox fans – think a combined  70 home runs and 200 RBI.

——————————————-

Twins

Before the lockout ended, I probably would have put my hometown Twins in fourth place. However, some (unexpected) moves improved their prospects. Picking up Sonny Gray to head the rotation and (perhaps the top free agent on the market) Carlos Correa to play SS were major moves.  Still the rotation of Gray, free-agent newcomer Dylan Bundy, Bailey Ober, Joe Ryan and late-signee Chris Archer does not seem ready to challenge the White Sox. They could really used Jose Berrios (traded last season) and Kent Maeda (lost to Tommy John surgery.).

The bullpen should be competitive with a healthy closer Taylor Rogers, along with  Tyler Duffy, Caleb Thielbar and Jorge Alcala, The Twins added some depth with veteran free-agent Joe Smith, who should be a positive influence on the bullpen staff.

A bright spot for that pitching staff will be the defense behind them.  Correa brings Gold Glove defense to shortstop, as does Byron Buxton (when healthy) to CF. Newcomer Geo Urshela has a plus glove at 3B, as does Max Kepler in right field.  Jorge Polanco should benefit full-time work at 2B.  There will be plenty of pop (as usual) in the lineup (even without Josh Donaldson, traded to the Yankees). 1B/DH Miguel Sano hit 30 homers in 135 games a year ago (but does need to cut down on the strikeouts); 2B Polanco hit .269-33-98; Byron Buxton has the potential to be a 30-30 player in a full season; and RF Max Kepler and SS Carlo Correa should each put 25 out of the park.  Overall, the Twin looks to be contenders on offense and defense.  I look for a trade to add another solid middle-of-the-rotation starting pitcher as the season progresses.

Player(s) to Watch

Byron Buxton and Joe Ryan.  A full season of Byron Buxton would be a thing of beauty. He’s capable of .300, with 30 homers, 30 steals and Platinum-Glove defense if he avoids injury (he’s only played 100+ games in one of seven seasons). Keep an eye on Buxton, especially when he closes in on the outfield walls.  I’ll also be watching right-hander Joe Ryan. He was 2-1, 4.05 in five starts for the Twins in 2022 and will get the Opening Day nod. In three minor-league seasons, Ryan was 15-8, 2.67.  A dozen wins from Ryan would give the Twins rotations a boost.

___________________________________

Detroit Tigers

The Tigers are a team on the rise.  They have added SS Javier Baez (.265-31-87 a year ago) to a lineup that includes LF Akil Baddoo and RF  Robbie Grossman at the top and Baez, 3B Jeimer Candelario (.271-16-67) and veteran DH Miguel Cabrera (.256-15-75) in the middle. 2B  Jonathan Schoop should also continue to provide 20-homer power in the middle infield. The Tigers did take a hit when top-prospect Riley Greene (.301-24-84,with 16 steals at Double- and Triple -A last season)  suffered a fractured foot in Spring Training. Penciled in as Detroit’s CF, Greene is expected to be out for several weeks.

On the mound, The Tigers added  Eduardo Rodriguez (13-8, 4.74 for Boston) and Michael Pineda (9-8, 3.62 for the Twins) to the rotation.  (Although Pineda, a late signee, will get a few starts at Triple-A early in the season.) The presence of these two veterans  should aid in the development of Casey Mize (7-9,  3.71) , Tarik Skubal (who set a Tigers’ rookie record with 164 whiffs lasts year) and Tyler Alexander.  All Star Closer Gregory Soto (18 saves a year ago) is back to anchor a bullpen that still needs some work.

Player to  Watch

1B Spencer Torkelson is a legitimate Rookie of the Year candidate. Torkelson worked his way up from High-A to Triple-A last season – and popped 30 home runs in 121 games.

_________________________________________

Guardians

With the Guardians is starts with the pitching. The Guardians boast a solid rotation headed by Shane Bieber who went 7-4, 3.17 in 16 starts a year ago (shoulder issues).  Bieber looks healthy going into the 2022 season and should give the Guardians an ace (and a Cy Young Award contender).  He could be the last Indians’ and first Guardians’ CYA honoree. Cal Quantrill, who stepped into the breach when Bieber went down, is a number-one in the making.  In 40 appearances (22 starts) a year ago, he went 8-3 2.89. There is quality down the rotation as well in Aaron Civale, Zach Plesac and Triston McKenzie.

In the bullpen Emmanuel Clase (24 saves and a 1.29 ERA) will close and the supporting cast can bring some heat. The issue is on offense, which appears a bit thin after 3B Jose Ramirez (.266-36-103) and DH Franmil Reyes (.254-30-85). Bats to watch are CF Myles Straw (.271, with 86 runs scored and 30 steals) and SS Amed Rosario (.285, with 77 runs scored and 13 steals) at the top of the lineup and 1B Bobby Bradley (16 home runs and 41 RBI in 74 games – but a .208 average).

Player to Watch

Cal Quantrill stepped up for Cleveland in 2022, 8-2, 3. 12 in 22 starts. (He didn’t make his first start util May 31).  He also went 0-1, 1.98 in 18 relief appearances. It will be fun to see what he can do with a full year in the rotation.

______________________________________

Royals

The Royals may not be quite ready to contend, but they are building for the future and have the resources to cause some consternation among the division leader. RF Whit Merrifield will give you all you want from a leadoff hitter (.277, ten home runs and 40 steals in 2022 – and a career .291 hitter).  In the middle of the lineup, you’ll find C Salvador Perez (.273-48-1211), LF Andrew Benintendi (.296-17-73) and  1B/DH Carlos Santana, who needs to rebound (at age 36) from an off year in 2021. Top prospect Bobby Witt Jr. (the 2021 Minor League Player of the Year) should be ready to contribute. Witt hit .290-33-97, with 29 steals in 124 games at Double- and Triple-A in 2021. The Royals can also expect some punch and speed from SS Aldaberto Mondesi and CF Michael Taylor. The return of veteran Zack Greinke (11-6, 4.16 for the Astros last year) should help in the development of the young arms that will round out the rotation – Brad Keller, Brady Singer, Kris Bubic, Carlos Hernandez. How these arm progress will determine how high the Royals can go and how quickly they can contend. Scott Barlow (16 saves, 2.42 in 2002), Josh Staumont and Domingo Tapia will be key arms in the pen.

Player to Watch

Bobby Witt, Jr. seems ready to join the likes of Vlad Guerrero, Jr. and Bo Bichette as second-generation MLB stars.  Last year’s Minor league Player of the Year (.290-33-97, with 99 runs and 29 SB at Double-A and Triple A), the 22-year-old is a must-watch Rookie of the Year Candidate.

AL West

Astros              94-68

Mariners         91-71

Angels             85-77

Rangers           75-87

A’s                   70-92

Astros

The Astros lost SS Carlos Correa, SP Zack Greinke and reliever Kendall Graveman to free agency.  On the pitching side, Justin Verlander should be back from Tommy John surgery and they picked up free-agent reliever Hector Neris.   They will miss Correa’s glove and bat, but there is still more than enough here to win the AL West.

The middle of the lineup will feature 3B Alex Bregman, DH Yordan Alvarez (.277-33-104 in 2021) and 1B Yuli Gurriel (.319 with 81 RBI) – plenty of punch there. At the top of the order are 2B Jose Altuve (271-31-83 a year ago) and LF Michael Brantley (.311 in 2021).  There’s also under-rated  RF Kyle Tucker, .294-30-92, and still improving.

Verlander is back to  bolster the  rotation, but he is 39, so time will tell. Framer Valdez may be the number-one starter (11-6, 3.14 in 22 starts in 2021).  Jose Urquidy (8-3, 3.62 in 20 starts), Jake Odorizzi and Luis Garcia will round out the rotation. Closer Ryan Pressley converted 26 of 28 save opportunities last season and Ryan Stanek, Hector Neris are reliable setup men.  Astros should finish atop the West.

Player to Watch

SS Jeremy Pena, son of former big leaguer Geronimo Pena, has been a solid hitter and a plus-defender wherever he has played. In 30 games at Triple-A Sugar Land last season, the 24-year-old hit .287-10-19, with five steals. In three minor-league seasons (182 games), he has a  .291-19-85 line, with 29 steals. He has some big shoes (Correa’s) to fill. It’ll be interesting to see how he develops.

____________________________________________

Mariners

The Mariners won 90 games a year ago – and just missed the post-season. This year, 90 wins should get them in – and they appear positioned to deliver those victories.

The Mariners made some moves to strengthen the team for 2022, the most important of which may be the signing of strikeout artist Robbie Ray (13-7, 2.84 with the Blue Jays last season) to head their rotation. Following Ray likely will be Marco Gonzales (10-6, 3.96); Chris Flexen (14-6, 3.61); Logan Gilbert and Matt Brash.

The bullpen proved to be a strength last season.  The question is can they repeat. Saves may again be split  Paul Sewalk (10 wins, 11 saves and a 3.06 ERA last season) and Drew Steckenrider (five wins, 14 saves, 2.00). If one of these emerges as the full-time ninth-inning guy, the other will get plenty of high leverage, late innings. Diego Castillo and veteran (39-year-old)  free-agent signees Sergio Romo are also in the set-up mix. Ken Giles, slated to e an important part of the pen, will start the season on the IL.

The retirement of 3B Kyle Seager triggered some changes on offense, with a couple of new faces (via trade) in the lineup:  power-hitting 3B Eugenio Suarez (31 homers for the Reds, but just a .198 average a year ago) and OF Jesse Winker (.305, with 77 runs scored for the Reds.). At the top of the order are returnees 2B Adam Frazier (.305, with 83 runs) and either Winker or 1B Ty France (.291-18-73). RF Mitch Haniger will be right in the middle of things, after his .253-39-100 season.  The offense could get a boost from prospect Jarred Kelenic. The 22-year-old struggled as a rookie (.181, with 14 home runs and 43 RBI in 93 games), but is 294-38-138 over 203 games in  three minor-league seasons. We can expect more from this 2018 first-round draft pick (Mets).  The Mariners seem well-positioned to  again put 90 wins up on the board.

Player(s) to Watch

Mitch Haniger is at the heart of the Seattle offense – .253-39-100. The Mariners  need him to keep on hitting. They could also use a return to health from 2020 Rookie of the Year Kyle Lewis, probably at DH, who hit .246-5-11 in just 36 games a year ago.  Finally, the energy of Sergio Romo is just fun to watch. 

——————————————————

Angels

Despite 2021 MVP Shohei Ohtani and perennial MVP candidate Mike Trout, I don’t see the Angels finishing higher than third place. As a hitter, Ohtani brings solid power and speed (46 home runs and 26 steals a year ago) to the lineup and Mike Trout is, well , Mike Trout – having him for a full-season means , .300-30-100. The middle of the lineup looks like 1B Jarred Walsh (,277-29-98), 3B  Anthony Rendon (who got  in only 58 games last season– but has 30-homer power if healthy); and C Max Stassi (.241, with 13 home runs.) The Angels are also hoping to see offensive progress from OFs Brandon Marsh (who can bring plus defense to CF) and Jo Adell.

The Angels lost a couple of veteran arms to Free agency (Alex Cobb and Dylan Bundy) and added free agents Mike Lorenzen (moving back to a starting role) and Noah Syndergaard (coming back from Tommy John Surgery). Shohei Ohtani and Pablo Sandoval (who may be ready for a breakout season)  seemed poised to deliver solid innings, but there are question marks in the rotation.  The bullpen looks set with returning closer Raisel Iglesias (34 saves, 2.57 in 2022), Mike Mayers and a handful of newcomers (free agents Ryan Tepera, Aaron Loop and Archie Bradley).  Just too many questions on offense and in the rotation.

Player to Watch

This is an easy one.  What better to watch then the “Shohei Ohtani Show.”  Triple-digit fastballs, 400-foot home runs and 25+ steals?

—————————————————–

Rangers

Hard to judge the Rangers this year. Consider the new faces in the lineup: 2B Marcus Semien (free agent); SS Corey Seager (FA); C Mitch Garver (trade); RF Kole Calhoun (FA); LF Brad Miller (FA). Notably, you can expect 20+ home runs from each of these newcomers. You can also expect considerable power from incumbent  1B Nathaniel Lowe (.264-18-72) and CF Adolis Garcia (.243-31-90).  The middle of the infield will deliver plenty of punch with 2B Semien (.265-45-115) and SS Seager (.306-16-57 in 95 games).  This team will score a lot of runs.

On the mound, the rotations will be led by free-agent signees Jon Gray (8-12, 4.59 with the Rockies.) and Martin Perez (7-8,  4.74 with the Red Sox). Both have shown better in the past. Gray, in particular, should benefit from getting away from Coors Field. There should be plenty of competitions for the remaining rotations spots, with the leaders appearing to be Dane Dunnings, Taylor Hearn and A.J. Alexy.  Joe Barlow, 11  saves and a 1.55 ERA in 2022,  should be the closer in a bullpen that will get plenty of work. They will miss Jonathan Hernandez and Jose LeClerc, both recovering from Tommy John surgery and not expected before late May or early June. Free agents Garrett Richards and Greg Holland will join Spencer Patton, Brett Martin and Josh Sborz in a busy bullpen.

The Rangers won’t lose 102 games again in 2022.  They may not have improved enough to make the post-season, but they will give their fans more to cheer about.

Player to Watch

Adolis Garcia had a great rookie season in 2021 –  .243, with 31 home runs and 16 steals.  He’s only 29-years-old, so it would be nice to watch him improve on those numbers.

_________________________________________

A’s

The fact that the A’s traded away a pair of Matts (Olson and Chapman)  who  gave the team Gold Glove defense and solid power at the comers for eight prospects (four each from the Blue Jays and Braves) is solid evidence the A’s are in a rebuilding mode. Two of those prospects, Cristian Pache and Kevin Smith seem likely to make the A’s lineup  at CF and 3B, respectively. In mid-March the A’s also traded away Chris Bassitt, the late blooming 32-year-old) righty who went 12-4, 3.15 in 27 starts.  The main piece in return was 27-year-old righty Adam Oller (9-4, 3.45 at double-A and Triple A in 2021.) Oller has yet to throw an inning in the majors, but is likely to start 2022 in the A’s rotation. Side note: As I finished up on this, it was announced that the A’s had traded number-two starter Sean Manaea (11-10, 3.91) to the Padres for a pair of prospects.

Frank Montas will head the rotation  (13-9, 3.37) – if he’s still around.  Among the competitors for other rotation spots are Cole Irvin, Daulton Jefferies  and Paul Blackburn.   The bullpen will be led by closer Lou Trevino, who notched 22 saves with a 3.18 ERA a year ago). A.J. Puk and Domingo Acevedo  should also get key innings.

Looking at the A’s offense, the middle of the lineup should include C Sean Murphy (17 home runs, but a .216 average in 2021);  LF Seth Brown (20 home runs, but a .214 average); and DH Jed Lowrie.245, with 14 home runs). 2B Tony Kemp and SS Elvis Andrus should be at the top of the lineup. The versatile Chad Pinder getting some playing time. It could be a long season, as Oakland rebuilds for the future.

Player to Watch

The trade of Sean Manaea seems to pave the way for Adam Oller to take a rotation spot, although he has been knocked around a bit in Spring Training. Last season, Oller was 9-4, 3.45 at Double-A and Triple-A.   Later in the season, you might also want to watch for another newcomer to the A’s system – J.T. Ginn. The 22-year-old was 5-5, 3.03 at A and High-A in 2021.  He may need a bit more seasoning, but the A’s look to be a team of opportunity for young pitchers.

 

—-American League Awards Predictions—–

MVP

  1. Vlad Guerrero, Jr. Blue Jays
  2. Shohei Ohtani, Angels
  3. Luis Robert, White Sox
  4. Mike Trout, Angels

Cy Young Award

  1. Gerrit Cole, Yankees
  2. Shane Bieber, Indians
  3. Robbie Ray, Mariners

Rookie of the Year

  1. Bobby Witt, Jr., Royals
  2. Spencer Torkelson, Tigers

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com; MLB.com

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

 

 

 

 

Pre-Season Musings – “No-Out Wonders”

As Baseball Roundtable waits for the MLB  season to start in earnest, my mind tends to wander to all sorts of big-league achievement and oddities – iconic, ironic or just plain unusual baseball events. In my recent (March 18), Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary post, I described ten of my favorites such MLB occurrences. (Click here for that post.) Today, I’d like to continue those off-beat musings – looking at 39 pitchers who took the MLB mound at least once in their career – and never retired a batter.  I ask that readers keep in mind that, despite their lack of success, all these hurlers belong to that elite group of athletes that actually made it to the major-league mound.

N0t Sure If This One Counts

This list can be expanded to a fabulous forty if you include Larry Yount, brother of Hall of Famer Robin Yount, who had arguably the shortest MLB career ever.  On September 15, 1971, Yount (with the Astros) was called to  the mound in the top of the ninth with Houston  trailing the Braves 4-1. He was slated to face LF Ralph Garr, 1B Hank Aaron and C Earl Williams. He faced none of them. Young had experienced a bit of an elbow twinge in the bullpen and, while warming up on the mound, it got worse.  The trainer came to bump and Yount was pulled from the game – officially registering an MLB pitching appearance, but without tossing a single pitch. Yount pitched two more minor-league seasons, but never made it to the MLB mound again.  (In seven minor-league seasons, Yount went 40-69, 4.56.)

So, let’s look at some of the 39 “No-Out Wondes.”

Twenty-nine of the 39 gave up at least one earned run, giving them an earned run average of infinity. 

Bill Childers of the 1895 Louisville Colonels and Elmer “Doc” Hamann of the 1922 Cleveland Indians gave up the most earned runs in their no-out MLB mound careers – six each.

Childers sole MLB appearance came on July 27, 1895. He was called on with one out in the top of the ninth, with his Louisville Colonels trailing the Baltimore Orioles 12-6.  Childers proceeded to face seven batters – giving up two hits and five walks (and tossing three wild pitches) before being relieved in a 22-6 Louisville loss.

One September 21, 1922, Hamann (with the Indians) was brought in to open the top of the ninth (versus the Red Sox), with the Indians trailing 9-5. In his six-earned-run outing, Hamann, like Childers, faced seven batters,Hamann gave up three hits, three walks and one hit-by-pitch. The final score of this one was Red Sox 15 – Indians five. (For Baseball Roundtable’s Minnesota readers, Hamann (a New Ulm native), played baseball and basketball for  St. Thomas College. Side note: This no-out outing proved to be not only Hamann’s only MLB appearance, but his only professional pitching appearance.

_________________________________________________

Five  of the 39 were position players called in to pitch.

The most famous of the position players who took the mound during their career without ever retiring a batter was Stan Musial. On September 28, 1952, Musial, already a five-time batting champion, was called in –  not from the bullpen, but from CF – with one out and one on  in the top of the first inning in a Cardinals/Cubs tilt in St. Louis. Cardinals’ starting pitcher Harvey Haddix  went from the mound to RF, with RF Hal Rice moving to center. Musial faced Cubs’ RF Fran Baumholtz (hitting .325 at the time – second only to Musial in the NL batting race). Stan the Man  almost pitched his way off this list.  Baumholtz put Musial’s first (and only) MLB pitch into play and “The Man” would have recorded an out, except for an error (on a groundball) by Cardinals’ 3B Solly Hemus.  After facing Baumholtz, Musial went back to CF, Haddix returned to the mound and Hal Rice went back to right.

If you’re wondering why Musial was called to the mound, it was kind of a “courtesy” call. Musial started his professional career as a pitcher – and , in fact, appeared only as a pitcher in his first two minor-league campaigns. (Shoulder issues eventually led him to give up moundwork – which turned out to not be a bad deal at all.) In three minor-league seasons, Musial went 33-13, 3.52.

Other MLB position players to make at least one mound appearance without retiring a batter include: OF Vic Davalillo; OF Gerardo Parra; OF Jose Roque, OF Billy Sunday and C/OF Dave Pierson.

_______________________________________________

Only one player has made two career mound appearances without recording a single out.

Vic Davalillo, who enjoyed a 16-season MLB career as an outfielder (1963-74, 1977-80), took the mound for the Cardinals twice in 1969, without retiring a batter – both times against the Mets. On June 30, he opened the top of the ninth with the Cardinals trailing the Mets 10-2. He gave up a walk to CF Tommie Agee and a single to 3B Bobby Pfeil, before being relieved by Chuck Taylor, who got out of the inning without a run scoring. Just three days later, Davalillo pinch hit for pitcher Ray Washburn in the top of eighth, with the Cardinals down to the Mets by a 7-0 score.  Davalillo lined out the end the frame and stayed in to pitch in the eighth. He again started with a walk to CF Tommie Agee and then gave up a run-scoring double to 2B Ken Boswell before being pulled.  Over his career, Davalillo was a one-time All  Star and a one-time Gold Glover. He had a career line of .279-36-329, with 12t stolen bases in 1,458 MLB games.

__________________________________________________

 

Fourteen of the 39 no-out wonders achieved this “goal” as starting pitchers.

Harry Heitmann’s (1918 Brooklyn Robins) only MLB appearance came in the second game of a double header on July 27, with his Brooklyn Robins facing the Cardinals in Brooklyn. Heitmann faced four batters and gave up four runs on four hits – without recording an out. It was the only MLB appearance for Heitmann, who was called up to Brooklyn after compiling a 17-6 record at Double A Rochester. He went on to pitch eight more minor-league seasons, winning 17 games for Rochester again in 1921, but never made it back to the big leagues.

________________________________________________

Only two of the no-out wonders surrendered a home run in their appearance.

Zack Weiss is the only pitcher on this list to give up two home runs in his no-out MLB pitching career. On April 12, 2018 – as his Reds faced the Cardinals in Cincinnati – Weiss came on in relief in the top of the seventh, with the Reds down by just one run (5-4).  Weiss gave up a home run on a 2-0 pitch to Cards’ 1B Jose Martinez.  Then, C Yadier Molina took a 2-0 pitch out 0f the park. Next, Weiss walked SS Paul DeJong on four pitcher and 2B Kolten Wong on five pitches before leaving the game.  Weiss is still active, so he can pitch his way off this list, but for now, he has thrown 15 MLB pitches – 12 balls and three strikes, with two of his three strikes going yard.

The only other no-out career pitcher to surrender a home run in his appearance is Dave Pierson, a catcher/outfielder pitched in one game for the 1876 Cincinnati Reds. It came in the bottom of the first inning (Pierson started the game), as his Reds faced the Louisville Colonels (May 18, 1876). Pierson faced two batters and gave up two hits – the second of which was an inside-the-park home run to Louisville 3B Bill Hague. The Reds lost that one 9-3 – and Pierson was tagged with the defeat.

______________________________________________________

Baseball Roundtable Extra – Relieved by a One-Legged Pitcher

Lots of players discussed here can boast of an earned run average of infinity, but what about measurable ERA? Well, the highest measurable ERA – which would be by a pitcher who recorded at least one MLB out – is 189.00, It belongs to the 1945 Washington Senators’ righty Joe Cleary – and he gets extra credit since, in his one and only MLB appearance, he was relieved by MLB’s only one-legged pitcher.  More on that in a minute.

Cleary was in his fifth pro season (1939, 1941-42, 1944-45, when he was called up to the Senators (in the pitching lean war years). On August 4, in the second game of a double header between the Senators and the Red Sox, Cleary made his MLB debut in the top of  fourth inning, with the Senators trailing 6-2, a runner on third base and one out. Clearly made his way once through the Red Sox lineup and it went like this:

  • RBI single by CF George Metkovich;
  • Walk to 1B Dolph Camilli;
  • RBI single by RF Pete Fox;
  • Walk to 2B Skeeter Newsome;
  • Two-run single by C Bob Garbark;
  • Strikeout by P Dave Ferris;
  • RBI single by SS Eddie Lake;
  • Walk to 3B Ty LaForest;
  • Three-run double by LF Tom McBride.

That brought Metkovich for the second time in the frame and brought Bert Shepard – the one-legged pitcher I mentioned earlier – to the mound. Shepard stuck out  Metkovich to end the inning.

Although Cleary pitched in five more minor-league seasons, he never made it back to the big leagues. As for Shepard, he pitched five more innings that day, giving up just one run on three hits. (Washington lost 15-4.)  Side note: Shepard lost part of his right leg (below the knew) when his P-38 fighter was shot down near Hamburg Germany in May of 1944.  He received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal and a Purple Heart.  For the story of how he made it to the big leagues on one leg, click  here.

Primary Resources:  Baseball-Reference.com; Retrosheet.org

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

Baseball Roundtable Celebrates Tenth Anniversary

In this tenth anniversary post, Baseball Roundtable will present some highlights from past posts, as well as the listings of The Roundtable’s ten favorite fiction and non-fiction baseball books.

Today (March 18), marks the tenth anniversary of  Baseball Roundtable.  Over that span, Baseball Roundtable has published 887 posts – covering baseball past, present and, occasionally, future – with a combination stats and stories,  observation and opinion (mine and the readers’).   On these pages, The Roundtable has launched:

  • The Annual John Paciorek Award – honoring players with brief, but in some way notable, baseball careers. For the latest JPA post – with a link to all the JPA offerings, click here.
  • The “Who’s Your Daddy?” Series – presenting position-by-position lineups of players who performed exceptionally well against some of the best pitchers of all time. For the latest “Who’s You Daddy?” post, which includes links to the entire series, click here.
  • The Baseball Roundtable Trot Index – tracking the percentage of plate appearances that result in a “trot” – around the bases (home run); back to the dugout (strikeout); or to first base (walk, hit by pitch, catcher’s interference.)
  • The annual Baseball Roundtable Unofficial Fan Hall of Famed Ballot, as well as fan surveys on the baseball experiences (time of game, concessions, etc.), proposed rule changes and the general state of the game.
  • Lists covering topics from Baseball Roundtables’ favorite baseball quotes, nicknames and baseball cards.

Baseball Roundtable has also offered month-by-month MLB season summaries – with team and individual stats, stories (highlights) and Baseball Roundtable’s Players, Pitchers and Surprise of the Month.  There have also been a host of predictions, trivia questions, book reviews – (and interviews with authors).  And, of course, there’s been plenty of musings about the national pastime  (that, as regular readers know, provide proof of Baseball Roundtable’s assertion that when I research a hardball topic “one thing always leads to another.”  Baseball Roundtable has also featured guest posts by former players; coaches; sportswriters; writers from such websites as LiftYourGame.net, CatcherHome.com; The BaseballReviews.com; OldSportCards.com; I70Baseball.com; and even an Emmy Award Winner.

So, to get this tenth anniversary post rolling, here are my ten favorite hardball tidbits (with a few “extras”) from past posts (not necessarily the ten best, just those that seem to have stuck with me over time.

NUMBER ONE. This story has been told often, but it remains The Roundtable’s favorite baseball coincidence. On May 2, 1954,  Stan “The Man” Musial had one of the greatest days at the plate in major-league history.  That day, the New York Giants faced Musial’s Cardinals in a double header before 26,662 fans at Busch Stadium (I). Game One, a 10-6 Cardinal win, saw Musial go four-for-four with three home runs (his first-ever three-homer game) and six RBI. In Game Two, a 9-7 Cardinals’ loss, Musial went two-for-four, with two home runs and three RBI – becoming the first player ever to hit five home runs in a doubleheader. 

Why is this event at the top of this list?  Well. among the 26,662 fans witnessing Musial’s feat was eight-year-old Nate Colbert – who, on August 1, 1972, would become the second player in MLB history (and there are still only two) to hit five round trippers in a double header. In Game One of that doubleheader (Padres at Braves), Colbert went four-for-five, with two home runs and five RBI, as the Padres won 9-0.   In Game Two, an 11-7 Padres’ win, Colbert went three-for-four with three home runs and eight RBI.  Stan Musial, however, was not in the crowd.  (Now, that would really have been a coincidence.)

NUMBER TWO. This one falls into Baseball Roundtable’s “iconic and ironic” list.  I’ve always been impressed by the fact that the first National League (any position) to hit two Grand Slams in a game was a pitcher Tony Cloninger, who did it in a Braves 17-3 win over the Giants  on July 3, 1966.  Cloninger collected a pitchers’ record nine RBI in the game – and also threw a complete-game seven-hitter. This tidbit gets “extra credit”  when you add the fact that, after retiring from MLB, Cloninger became a world-class slow-pitch softball player. In 1978 (six years after his MLB retirement), playing  for the United States Slow-Pitch Softball Association’s Slow-Pitch World Series Champion Howard & Carroll team, Cloninger was selected as the third baseman on the Series All-World Team.  For trivia buffs, Cloninger used Denis Menke’s bat to hit that pair of Grand Slams.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

On August 15, 1962, as the Philllies topped the Mets 9-3 in the first game of a twin bill, Phillies’ starting left fielder Don Demeter touched up starting pitcher right-hander Bob Miller (Robert Lane Miller) for a third-inning, solo home run. In the ninth frame, Demeter (who had now moved to CF) hit a three-run home run, this time off  left-handed reliever Bob Miller (Robert Gerald Miller). So, two home runs in one game off two Bob Millers, one southpaw and one righty, one starter and one reliever, while in the lineup at two different positions.

NUMBER THREE.  In 1961, the Orioles’ Jim Gentile  tied the MLB record and set a new AL mark (both since broken) for Grand Slams in a season with five bases-loaded long balls.  Every one of Gentile’s five four-run blasts was hit in a game started by  Orioles’ righty Chuck Estrada (who, as you would expect, picked up a victory in all four contests).  Added credit for the fact that Gentile hit only one other Grand Slam in his career (June 26, 1960) and – you guessed it – the starting and winning pitcher in that contest was Chuck Estrada – and for the fact that this was the first trivia question I ever posed on a Ballpark Tours trip.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

In 1987, Yankees’ first baseman Don Mattingly set an MLB single-season record (since tied) with six Grand Slams. Despite a 14-season career that included 163 bases-loaded plate appearances, Mattingly did not hit another Grand Slam before or after those record-setting six.

NUMBER FOUR. On July 27, 1998, Tyrone Horne (Double-A Arkansas Travelers) became the first (and still only) professional ballplayer to hit for the “Home Run Cycle” – popping a solo, two-run, three-run and Grand Slam home run in one game (a 13-4 road win over the San Antonio Mission). Horne never made it to the major leagues, completing a 13-season minor-league career with a .288 average and 143 home runs.

NUMBER FIVE. On August 14, 1958, the Indians’ Vic Power tied an MLB record by stealing home an MLB record-tying  twice in one game – the second of which came in the bottom of the tenth inning, giving the Indians a “run-off” 10-9 win over the Tigers.  Why does this feat rank so high on my list?  Power stole only three bases during the entire 1958 season.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

Babe Ruth had more inside -the-park home runs and more steals of home than Ricky Henderson.

NUMBER SIX.  Ron Wright played professional baseball from 1994-2004, but got only one game in the big leagues. As his Mariners took on the Rangers (in Texas) on April 14, 2002, Wright started at DH. That day he would see nine pitches in three plate appearance and be responsible for six outs. In his first plate appearance, he struck out on three pitchers, with two runners on base (second inning). He came up with two on again in the fourth and hit into a triple play on a 2-2 pitch (although there were some baserunning miscues that contributed …  the play went 1-6-2-5-1-4). Wright came up again in the sixth, again with two on, and hit the first pitch he saw into a traditional 6-4-3 double play. The Mariners pinch hit for Wright in the seventh – and he never appeared in a major league game again.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

John Miller hit just two home runs in his MLB career – one for the Yankees in 1966 and one for the Dodgers in 1969.  Those blasts mad him one of just two MLB players to homer in their first and last MLB plate appearance. 

NUMBER SEVEN. Only five times in MLB history has a pitcher fanned 20 batters in nine innings  – Roger Clemens (twice); Kerry Woods; Max Scherzer; and Randy Johnson. (Johnson was the only non-complete game. He fanned twenty in nine innings, but was relieved by Byung-Hyun Kim in the top of the tenth with the score tied 1-1.) The tidbit that attracted me here is that is that in those five 20-strikeouts outings, these dominating pitchers did not walk a single batter. That’s right, 100 whiffs and not a single walk.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

In 2021, Padre’s reliever Austin Adams led MLB in batters  hit-by-pitch with 24. The curveball here? He only pitched 52 2/3 innings – the fewest innings ever pitched in a season of 20 or more HBP.  To find the second-fewest, you have to go all the way back to Ed Doheny, who hit 22 batters in 1900 – in 133 2/3 innings pitched. Further, Adams’ 24 plunkings are the most since Jack Warhop’s 26 in 1909 (and he pitched 243 1/3 innings that season).

NUMBER EIGHT. The final score of the Yankees/Red Sox game on October 1, 1961 – when Roger Maris hit his historic 61st home run (breaking Babe Ruth’s long-standing single-season record) was 1-0.  Despite the chance to witness history, only 23,154 fans were in attendance –  just 34 percent of Yankee Stadium’s listed capacity at the time (67,337). That means, of course, about two of every three seats were empty.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

Casey Stengel, while a member of the New York Giants, hit the first-ever inside-the-park and over-the-fence post-season home runs in Yankee Stadium, (Games One and Three of the 1923 World Series.)

NUMBER NINE.  On July 17, 1990, facing the Red Sox in Boston, the Minnesota Twins became the first (and still only) team to turn two triple plays in a single game. They came in the fourth and eighth and both were the purist triple killings possible – grounder to third (Gary Gaetti) for a force and then a relay to second (Al Newman), then on to first (Kent Hrbek).  What adds to this remembrance is that the very next day, the Twins turned six double plays, which gave them share of the AL record for double plays turned in single game –  and, add the four double plays turned by the Red Sox, and the Twins and Red Sox set the record for combined double plays in  a single game.

NUMBER TEN. In August of 1903, the Giants’ Joe McGinnity started both games of a double header three times (August 1, 8 and 31), pitched six complete games and won them all, giving up just ten runs.  What puts this on this list is, that same month, McGinnity pitched just one game on six other occasions – going 1-5 and giving up 28 runs. Apparently, he liked a full day’s work.

Baseball Roundtable Tenth Anniversary Extra

In 1946, the Boston Braves played a record 46 doubleheaders – including a record nine consecutive twin bills between September 4 and September 15.  In those doubleheaders, they recorded 42 wins, 48 losses and two ties.

___________________________________________________________

Baseball Roundtable’s  Big Surprise

Ten years ago, when I was searching for a domain name for this blog, I was surprised to find my first choice – baseballroundtable.com – was available. 

___________________________________________________________

Now, let move on to Baseball Roundtable’s list of favorite baseball books (baseball is, after all, the most literary of sports). Two things to keep in mind: 1) This is a subjective list. I do not maintain that thee are the “best” baseball books, but just (for various reasons) my favorites; 2) To qualify for this list, these books had to be on may “fan cave” bookshelves.

Non-Fiction

  1. The Baseball Encyclopedia (Macmillan) and ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia … A treasure trove of statistical information. I’ve spent (and still spend) more hours than I’d like to admit, pouring over these pages and pages of numbers. Open to any page and you’re likely to find something “new.” Sadly, the “newest” edition on my bookshelf is from 2008.
  2. The Glory of Their Times, by Lawrence S. Ritter … A look at the early day of bases through the eyes (and words) of those who played the game.
  3. Only the Ball was White, by Robert Peterson … A must read look at the Negro Leagues.
  4. The Summer of Bear and Whiskey, by Edward Achorn … A wild and wooly – and true – tale of baseball in the 1880s.
  5. Eddie Mathews and the National Pastime, by Eddie Mathews and Bob Buege … This book gets a spot in the top five since Ed Mathews is my all-time favorite player – and this read will tell you he was a pretty colorful bruiser and basher, with a great love of the game.
  6. The Baseball Maniac’s Almanac,  by Bert Sugar … Page upon page of all-time baseball trivia and tidbits.  Want to know which brothers played together as MLB double play combinations, which players hit World Series home runs for three different teams or see a list of MLB pitchers who have stolen home (there are more than you’d think)? It’s all here (and more).
  7. The Baseball 100, by Joe Posnanski … An entertaining and informative look at Posnanski’s 10o greatest players – full of fun stories, fascinating facts and a feel for the game and those who played it.  Sure to move up my list as I spend more time with this recent edition to my library.
  8. Ball Four,  by Jim Bouton … A first glimpse into the MLB club house that really needs no explanation.
  9. Baseball Nicknames – A Dictionary of Origins and Meanings, by Jakes K. Skipper, Jr. … A fun look at what’s behind more than 4,000 baseball nicknames. Where else can you learn why Lou Gehrig was once known as “Biscuit Pants” or how “Sparky” Anderson got his nickname. Indexed by player’s last name, as well as by nicknames, for easy reference.
  10. Catcher in the Wry, by Bob Uecker … Great entertainment from a truly funny former major leaguer.

There are, of course, dozens upon dozens of worthwhile baseball reads like: 24, Life and Stories from the Say Hey Kid; Satchel, the Life and Times of a Legend; Why Time Begins on Opening Day; Veeck as in Wreck; and I could go on and on (but I had to pick just ten).  Also, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention another go to book for Baseball Roundtable, The Elias Book of Baseball Records.

Fiction

  1. The Great American Novel, by Philip Roth … The story of the Ruppert Mundys … a 1940’s team of shallow skills and deep neurosis, that (due to wartime circumstances) played the an entire season on the road. Hard to describe … Fun to read.
  2. If I Never Get Back, by Darryl Brock … A modern player steps off a train and into 1869, where he joins up with the Cincinnati Red Stockings.
  3. Bang the Drum Slowly, by Mark Harris … A heart-tugging baseball story (and a pretty good movie, too).
  4. The Natural, by Bernard Malamud … Darker than the movie, but the story of Roy Hobbs is compelling.
  5. Shoeless Joe, by W.P. Kinsella … “If you build it, he will come.” Nothing more needs to be said.
  6. Home Game, by Paul Quarrington … A combination of humor and compassion, Home Game is the story of a down-on-his-luck former major leaguer who is drawn into a conflict between a group of circus sideshow performers  and a conservative religious sect … that ends in a high-stakes baseball game between the two factions.
  7. The Iowa baseball Confederacy, by W.P. Kinsella … In 1908, the Chicago Cubs traveled to Onamata, Iowa to play a game against an amateur quad (made of of players from Iowa Baseball Confederacy) – a game that turned into a 2,000 inning contest. Or so the tale goes. Unfortunately,  no one believes the story and there is no real evidence to support it. Decades later – in attempt to document the event  – two friends travel back in time.
  8. The Universal Baseball Association, Inc. J. Henry Waugh, Proprietor, by Robert Coover … When fantasy baseball runs amok.
  9. The Art of Fielding, by Chad Harbach … A novel  about ambition, commitment, friendship, love and baseball- centered round how an errant throw changes the life of star college shortstop Henry Skrimshander.
  10. Brittle Innings,  by Michael Bishop … A strange, but enjoyable, tale that finds the Frankenstein monster playing  minor-league baseball in the 1940s

Hope you enjoyed this Tenth Anniversary post.

Primary Resources:  Baseball-Reference.com; Baseball-Almanac.com; MLB.com, The Elias Book of Baseball Records.

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary. 

 

Baseball’s Worst – Fiction Follows Fact

When the Cleveland Indians (now Guardians) were considering a new name, the legendary Cleveland Spiders  were on the tip of more than a few tongues.  Best remembered for their 1899 all-time worst 20-134 record, the Spiders of that season were an unusual band of characters forced to play more than 70 percent of their games on the road.  Now, in this post, I will look at how this misfortune  fell upon the Spiders (who, by the way, were Cy Young’s first MLB team), but first a bit of Baseball Roundtable’s “one thing leads to another” musings.

Digging into the plight of the Spiders, reminded me of my favorite work of baseball fiction –  The Great American Novel , by Pulitzer Prize-winner Philip Roth. The book, set in the 1940s, recounts the very-comic  sufferings of the (Port) Ruppert Mundys – a baseball team of limited skill and unlimited neurosis that (due to losing its stadium to the war effort) must play an entire season on the road.

Written from the perspective of retired sport journalist “Word” Smith,” The Great American Novel takes you into the hearts and (often dark) souls of a team made up of  ex-cons, alcoholics,  amputees, veteran players well  beyond their primes, 90-pound adolescents not ready for the big-time, and even extremely vindictive Lilliputians – and into Patriot League (the third major league) ballparks in places like Asylum, Ohio; Terra Incognita, Wyoming; and Kakoola, Wisconsin.  It also takes you from the dugout to an asylum (for an exhibition game) to the House Un-American Activities Committee.   The prologue includes Word Smith’s encounter with Earnest Hemingway and the book wraps up with a letter written by Smith to China’s Chairman Mao.

BBRT considers this a must-read for fans of baseball fiction. Readers should be forewarned, however, that – like the movie “The Loved One,” the Great American Novel can promise something to offend everyone.  Yet, it is this across-the-board irreverence that makes the offense tolerable and even comic.

Oddly enough, in this case, fiction (at least somewhat) follows fact and, as noted earlier,  this post will focus on the 1899 Cleveland Spiders, who played 112 games of its 154-Game National League schedule “on the road” – finishing in last place, 84 games off the pace and earning snickering nicknames around the league like the “Exiles,” “Wanderers,” “Forsakens” and “Misfits.”

The Spiders, however, were not always so woeful. They were, in fact, the first MLB team to put Cy Young on the mound and, in 1898, Young went 23-15, 3.00  in a Spiders’ uniform.  The year before their dismal 1899 season, the Spiders boasted a winning record (81-68-7) and finished fifth in the National League. In ten NL seasons (1889-98), the Spiders had a winning record seven times and finished among the league’s top three four times. In fact, from 1892 through 1898, the Spiders had the third-best winning percentage in the league.  The 1898 team also included three future Hall of Famers – Cy Young, Jesse Burkett and Bobby Wallace (all three of whom ended up in St. Louis in 1899, bit I’m getting ahead of myself).

So, what happened?  As in Roth’s tale of the Mundys, there were some shenanigans involved.  Spiders’ owners Frank and Stanley Robison were  disappointed in the level of fan support (attendance) in Cleveland (despite a respectable won-lost history), as well as with Cleveland’s Sunday Blue (liquor) Laws. At the same time, the Saint Louis Browns were suffering on the field and at the gate – and went bankrupt after the 1898 season. Still, Saint  Louis was the nation’s fourth-largest city and the Robisons saw an opportunity. The Robisons purchased the Saint Louis team, renamed it (optimistically the “Perfectos” and came up with a plan to draw Saint Louis fans into the park with a super team.

You see, the Robisons still owned the Spiders and quickly set about strengthening the Saint Louis squad with the best players from the Spiders (and replacing them on the Spiders with lessor players – a number of whom had been on the last-place Browns –  as well as minor-league and semipro players).   It was indeed the Robison’s’ series of lopsided trades and misguided (perhaps intentionally) signings that opened the door to the basement for the Spiders.

More than a dozen  Spiders from 1898 found themselves in Perfectos’ uniforms in 1899 – and former Spiders made up eight of the most used positions players – including the teams top three in RBI, top two home run hitters and top four in runs scored. In addition, former Spiders started  on the mound in 124 of the Perfecto’s games and got the win in 69 of the team’s 84 victories. (The Perfectos were far from perfect,  they finished 84-67-5, fifth place in the NL).

With their woeful team, 1899 attendance dropped even lower – averaging less than 150 fans per contest. Other teams began to refuse to play in Cleveland (since their share of the gate would not even cover expenses) and that’s how the Spiders came to play 112 games on the road.

The Best of the Spiders

The two best players to open the 1899 season as Spiders were veteran infielders Lafayette Napoleon “Lave” Cross (3B and manager) and Joe Quinn (2B). Cross managed the team to an 8-30 record, while fielding well at third base and hitting at a .286-1-20 clip. The “Perfectos” were having some infield issues, however, and (true to form) Cross found himself at the hot corner in St, Louis by early June (where he hit .303-4-64 in 103 games). When Cross departed, the 36-year-old Quinn became manager and led the team in RBI (.286-0-72 in 147 games) – as well as leading them 12 wins and 104 losses.

A few other tidbits from the Spiders’ 1899 season:

  • The team’s longest winning streak was two games – achieved just once.
  • The team’s longest losing streak was 24 games, they also had two 11-game losing streaks and individual losing streaks of 13, 14 and 16 games.
  • They lost 40 of their last 41 games.
  • Eight of the Spiders 20 wins were by one run; as were 18 of their losses.
  • They lost 69 games by five or more runs (24 of those by ten or more).

In 1899, the Cleveland Spiders played just 42 home games, averaging 145 fans per game.  They were 9-33 at home and 11-101 on the road. (The Saint Louis Perfectos average 4,298 fans per game, second-highest in the National League.

  • The Spiders scored the league’s fewest runs (529) and gave up the most (1,252) – a minus-723 run differential.
  • The team finished last in the league in batting average, hits, runs, doubles, triples, home runs, RBI and steals
  • The pitching staff had the league’s highest ERA and hits allowed; the fewest strikeouts; and the second-most home runs and walks allowed
  • The ‘ace” of the pitching staff, Jim Hughey went 4-30, 5.41. He had the staff’s most wins (tied); most starts (34); most complete games (32); most strikeouts 54); and lowest ERA (among qualifiers).

Jim Hughey might have been the poster-boy for the Spiders’ situation. He was sent from St. Louis (where he had gone 7-24, 3.93 in 1898) to the Spiders for the 1899 season (where, as noted, he went 4-30, 5.41. He had a seven-season MLB career (1891, 1893, 1896-1900) in which he went 29-80 4.87.

  • The Spiders hit 12 home runs (no one with more than two). Former Spider Bobby Wallace, who went to the Perfectos in 1899, hit 12 homers on his own. that season.
  • Cy Young and Jack Powell (also former Spiders) each won more games for the Perfectos in 1899 than the Spiders won as a team; 26 and 23, respectively.
  • The Spiders used 15 pitchers in 1899 and only two had earned run averages south of 5.00 – Jack Harper, who went 1-4, 3.89 in five starts and Harry Lochhead, who went 0-0, 0.00 in one 3 2/3-inning relief appearance. It was the only career mound appearance for Lochhead, who also appeared in 146 games at SS and one at 2B for the 1899 Spiders.
  • Against their former teammates (on the Perfectos), the Spiders went 1-13.

A Name to Remember

Harry Colliflower made his MLB debut with the Spiders on July 21, 1899, and picked up a win (by a 5-3 score)  as the Spiders topped the Senators. It would be the 30-year-old rookie’s only win in his only MLB season. He finished the campaign (and his MLB career) with a 1-11, 8.17 record. Notably, Colliflower also appeared in four games at 1B, four in CF and two in RF. In 23 games for the Spiders, he put up a .303 average (23-for-76) and drove in nine runs.

________________________________________

What a Way to End the Franchise

On the final day of the 1899 season (October 15), the Cleveland Spiders played a doubleheader against the Reds (in Cincinnati, of course) – and were outscored 35-4 in the two games. It turned out to be the final two games for the franchise, which was disbanded after the seasons as the NL contracted from 12 to eight teams.  Also disbanded were the Louisville Colonels, Baltimore Orioles and Washington Senators.

___________________________________________

 

Primary Resources: Baseball-Reference.com;  Baseball-Almanac.com; It’s Time to Bring Back the Cleveland Spiders (who really weren’t that bad, you know) … By Bradley Doolittle, ESPN.

 

100Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs.  To see the full list, click here.

I tweet baseball @DavidBBRT

Follow/Like Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  More baseball commentary; blog post notifications; PRIZES.

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary.