Better, but Still Room for Improvement

A win is a win is a win. And Wednesday night’s performance was better than Tuesday’s sluggish effort, which was too reminiscent of the 2003 squad for comfort. But some concerns linger.

  • Brian Lawrence had his second straight strong outing, but his final line looks better than he did. Although he issued just one walk, Lawrence didn’t work ahead in the count as much as a guy with his stuff should. He did go six innings, but it took 103 pitches. I know, it’s hard to argue with results, but last night’s performance didn’t do as much to alleviate my concerns as I’d hoped it would. I’d sure like to see him be a little more aggressive out there. I hope if he watches video of this game, he pays close attention to his counterpart, Cory Lidle. The Reds’ starter needed only 85 pitches over eight innings. All but 18 of his offerings were strikes.
  • The good news is, the Pads left only three runners on base last night. The bad news is, one of those was Jay Payton, whose leadoff triple in the second was followed by three very shallow fly balls. That is unacceptable.
  • What was up with the baserunning in the seventh? Phil Nevin leads off with a double to left and is promptly thrown out at third on a fairly routine grounder to short. Kerry Robinson doesn’t run on that ball; what the heck is Nevin thinking? No problem, Ryan Klesko is on first with one out. Payton battles to draw a walk. Two on for Ramon Hernandez. On an 0-1 pitch, the runners break. Hernandez watches strike two, Klesko is easily nailed at third. Hernandez proceeds to strike out, inning over. Again, none of this stuff came back to haunt the Pads last night, but they can’t afford to be giving away so many outs.
  • Lest we be entirely negative, I should point out that this bullpen (with the notable exception of Eddie "Free Pass" Oropesa) has been awesome. With the Padres nursing a one-run lead heading into the seventh, once Scott Linebrink came in, the game was over. Check out Linebrink’s numbers as a Padre:
     G   IP  H ER HR BB  K  ERA  H/9 BB/9  K/9
    60 80.0 69 22  5 24 66 2.48 7.76 2.70 7.43

    That’ll work. Linebrink, Aki Otsuka, and Trevor Hoffman have been dominant at the end of games. Even when he’s ready, Rod Beck is going to have a hard time getting into games at this point. A good problem to have.

Roster Moves

  • Jeff Cirillo comes off the DL, Jason Szuminski is returned to the Cubs. Rocket Man made history by becoming the first MIT grad in the big leagues. He was a great story, but he was not ready for a role that made his presence on the Padres necessary. Sorry to see him go. Glad the Pads cut their losses on their latest Rule V guy sooner rather than later. As with all the other Rule V’ers Kevin Towers has snatched up over the years, I hope Szuminski will be able to make up for lost time and eventually work his way back up to the Show.
  • Antonio Osuna strains his right groin, heads to DL. Right-hander Brandon Puffer is recalled from Portland. Puffer’s 2004 line:
      IP  H HR BB  K  ERA
    23.0 22  0  4 15 1.57

    He has big-league experience, so that’s a plus.

Other Stuff

We try not to stray too far from the topic at hand, but sometimes it happens. And when it does, aren’t you the lucky one?

Books

  • Bill Bryson, A Walk in the Woods
  • Eric Nisenson, Open Sky: Sonny Rollins and His World of Improvisation

Tunes

  • Grant Green, Green Street
  • Incubus, A Crow Left of the Murder
  • Loretta Lynn, Van Lear Rose
  • Sonny Rollins, Saxophone Colossus

Whatever

As soon as I figure out my own list, it’ll make it’s way here. Meantime, Jake Peavy and Jose Acevedo hook up tonight at the Animal House (yes, I’ve given in and started calling it that). Same time, same channel. A series win would be most welcome. Go get ‘em, boys…

Adam Eaton

The good news is the Padres managed to finish .500 on their six-game jaunt to Atlanta and Miami. And they didn’t go down without a fight in Sunday afternoon’s game against the Marlins. The bad news is Adam Eaton is scuffling. Some interesting splits:

by inning, 2004

Inn AB  R  H 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
1-3 82 15 27  2  0  4  5 16 329 360 500
4-6 61  6 13  1  0  0  2 14 213 250 230
7+  23  4  6  1  0  2  1  0 261 320 565

by pitches, 2004

Pitches AB  R  H 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
 1-30   48 14 18  2  0  2  3  8 375 404 542
31-75   50  7 10  0  0  1  3 11 200 241 260
76+     44  2 12  2  0  2  2  6 273 333 455

He struggles early, dominates in the middle, and falls off a bit late. This is interesting given that Eaton often doesn’t reach peak velocity until well into a start. But it’s also not consistent with last year’s performance:

by inning, 2003

Inn  AB  R  H 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
1-3 348 43 87 23  1 10 34 71 250 315 408
4-6 298 40 73 20  3 10 31 65 245 319 433
7+   58  8 13  1  0  0  3 10 228 297 246

by pitches, 2003

Pitches  AB  R  H 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
 1-30   204 33 53 14  1  6 15 38 260 313 426
31-75   292 37 70 19  0  9 35 66 240 323 397
76+     207 21 50 11  3  5 18 42 242 311 396*

*Numbers for 76+ pitches are approximate due to inconsistent source data. They’re pretty darned close, though.

And another interesting split:

by batting order

Batter  AB  H 2B 3B HR BB SO AVG OBP SLG
4-5     39 21  3  0  4  2  4 538 561 923
other  127 25  1  0  2  6 26 197 241 252

Two spots in the lineup are doing almost all the damage against Eaton so far. It isn’t surprising that opponents’ #4 and #5 hitters are doing better than other guys. What is alarming is the magnitude of the difference. I know that Richie Sexson has owned Eaton, and Miguel Cabrera did some serious damage against him the other day.

Last year it was the #3 (.330/.366/.693) and #4 (.321/.393/.564) hitters who racked up the big numbers against Eaton. Same idea.

How to fix these problems? Well, the early/middle/late splits look kinda fluky to me in light of historical patterns. So I’m going to assume that this will work itself out on its own. As for two guys in the lineup doing most of the damage, I’m thinking Eaton, Darren Balsley, and Ramon Hernandez need to do a better job of figuring out ahead of time which batters are most likely to do significant damage, and Eaton needs to pitch more carefully to those guys.

Eaton’s got good enough command (he’s walking 1.7 batters per 9 innings) that he can work around the occasional batter or two to get to a better matchup. I know you never want to put runners on base, and you want to be aggressive, but I can’t help but wonder if sometimes a walk isn’t so bad?

Down on the Farm

Real quick look at a few key names…

                      AB HR BB SO  BA OBP SLG
T. Bozied, 1B, Por    35  2  3  9 314 368 629*
B. Castro, 2B, Por   104  0  9 12 250 307 298
J. Cirillo, UT, Por   23  0  5  1 348 464 478**
Fernandez, OF, Por    99  2  6 15 283 321 404
J. Knott, OF, Por    105  7 12 22 305 378 590
X. Nady, OF, Por      42  1  4  5 381 447 524*
Petrick, 1B/OF, Por   57  1  6 13 263 344 439
B. Scales, UT, Por    51  1  8 12 392 483 686
H. Stanley, OF, Por   86  2 10 10 256 330 419
J. Barfield, 2B, Mob 109  3  6 30 239 271 385
T. Donovan, OF, Mob  113  1 11 28 319 389 416
J. Gautreau, 3B, Mob  99  5 15 24 263 357 485
F. Guzman, OF, Mob    80  0 11 20 300 391 338
B. Johnson, OF, Mob   86  3 10 32 186 271 349
G. Sain, C/IF, Mob    88  8 15 32 239 352 568
N. Trzesniak, C, Mob  70  3  4 20 229 316 414
L. Cruz, SS, LkE     116  2  7 14 276 323 405
M. Johnson, 1B, LkE   95  6 19 33 211 336 463
K. Jones, OF, LkE    120  0 18 22 317 406 442
P. McAnulty, 1B, LkE  97  5 20 19 299 424 515
G. Kottaras, C, FtW   44  0  9  9 295 415 409
C. Morton, C, FtW     69  3  8 27 159 275 348
Valenzuela, 1B, FtW   98  2 10  9 276 363 357

                   IP  H HR BB SO  ERA
M. Bynum, Por    20.0 21  0 11 15 3.15
J. Germano, Por   6.0  4  0  2  3 1.50
B. Neal, Por     19.0 17  0  7 24 3.32
C. Oxspring, Por 26.1 21  0 13 26 3.42*
B. Sweeney, Por  36.1 35  2  6 29 2.72
Tankersley, Por  45.0 39  2 19 37 2.20
B. Baker, Mob    14.0  6  0  3 15 0.00
J. Germano, Mob  32.1 31  3  7 20 2.51
B. Whitaker, Mob  6.0  4  0  0  4 3.00
E. Bonine, LkE    7.0  8  1  0  3 5.14
J. Huber, LkE    27.1 29  2 15 27 3.62
D. Pauley, LkE   31.2 29  4 11 30 5.12
G. Ribas, LkE    25.1 32  4  7 16 4.62
T. Stauffer, LkE 35.1 28  0  9 30 1.78
B. Whitaker, LkE 31.2 28  4  7 25 1.99
E. Bonine, FtW   27.1 25  2  3 31 1.98
Girardeau, FtW   26.1 21  3  9 29 3.42
D. Hayhurst, FtW 25.0 13  1  2 26 0.72
D. Moore, FtW    17.0 27  1 10 14 7.41*
S. Thompson, FtW 30.0 26  4 15 24 3.30
J. Wells, FtW    30.2 29  2  9 24 2.93

*, disabled list; **, rehab assignment.

Comments:

  • A lot of all-or-nothing hitters: Gautreau, Sain, M. Johnson, etc.
  • Knott is making quite the impression, Nady (ankle) is due back from the DL soon, Cirillo has been recalled from rehab: Knott provides runs in win over Trappers (Oregonian)
  • Barfield got off to a horrendous start but has been coming on of late
  • Guzman has cooled off after a torrid beginning to 2004
  • Sain has played two games each behind the plate and at the hot corner
  • Keep an eye on Cruz, who is putting up some good numbers as a 20-year-old middle infielder in High-A ball
  • Gotta like K. Jones’ approach at Elsinore: good on-base numbers; also learning to use speed (13-for-17 in stolen base attempts)
  • Germano just keeps on climbing, replacing the injured Oxspring in the Portland rotation: Padres’ pitcher of future set to take on Stingers (Oregonian)
  • Oxspring, who had been pitching well, is expected to be out another 6-8 weeks: Lights-out batting adds to deficit (Oregonian)
  • Neal, acquired from the Marlins for Ben Howard, has some pretty sweet strikeout totals
  • Sweeney and Tankersley are making strong cases for themselves if an extra starter is needed
  • Baker, acquired in June 2002 from the Red Sox as part of the Alan Embree deal, is attempting to re-establish his prospect status as a reliever

Finally, go check out Jonathan’s Conversation with Jeff Cirillo at PDX Beavers. As always, Jonathan asks excellent questions. Cirillo, for his part, provides thoughtful answers. A worthy read.

That’s all for now. More as it happens…

Odds and Ends

Pads took two out of three in Atlanta. Very nice. Only the Astros and Dodgers have higher winning percentages in the NL.

Brian Lawrence pitched seven strong innings, striking out eight against a depleted Braves lineup. Khalil Greene, batting leadoff, opened the game with a homer to right. Jay Payton homered. Another multihit game for Brian Giles. Ditto Mark Loretta.

Greene, for those scoring at home, now has 42 hits in the big leagues. Of those, 19 are for extra bases. That’s a little over 45%, about the same percentage as Richie Sexson had last year. Small sample, small sample, small sample. But nice anyway.

Hit Charts

Once again, my readers come through in the clutch. Turns out there are hit charts at MLB.com, although they’re kind of a pain to access. From the top navigation bar (the one in red, not the one in white; don’t get me started) go to Players > Stats > Hit Chart. Here is a direct link to Sean Burroughs’ hit chart (thanks to Jonny and Jeff for the info!).

I can’t get this thing to work for Petco, but a look at how Burroughs fared last year at the Q is interesting. His singles were pretty well distributed across all fields. His doubles and triples primarily went to left and right center, with a few down the lines or off the right field wall. Burroughs also hit very few fly ball outs to right or right center at home last year. Almost everything that made it out of the infield and landed in someone’s glove went to left or center.

Geez, I could spend hours looking at this stuff. Anyway, thanks again to Jonny and Jeff for passing that along, and to Anthony for asking the question that got the machine moving.

Fish

Pads in Miami tonight for the start of a three-game series against the Marlins. Jake Peavy vs Carl Pavano. Once again, no television.

Ismael Valdez vs Darren Oliver Saturday night (blecch). Adam Eaton and Josh Beckett lock up in the Sunday finale, which could be a fun one.

That’s all for now. More as it happens…

Odds and Ends

Pads took two out of three in Atlanta. Very nice. Only the Astros and Dodgers have higher winning percentages in the NL.

Brian Lawrence pitched seven strong innings, striking out eight against a depleted Braves lineup. Khalil Greene, batting leadoff, opened the game with a homer to right. Jay Payton homered. Another multihit game for Brian Giles. Ditto Mark Loretta.

Greene, for those scoring at home, now has 42 hits in the big leagues. Of those, 19 are for extra bases. That’s a little over 45%, about the same percentage as Richie Sexson had last year. Small sample, small sample, small sample. But nice anyway.

Hit Charts

Once again, my readers come through in the clutch. Turns out there are hit charts at MLB.com, although they’re kind of a pain to access. From the top navigation bar (the one in red, not the one in white; don’t get me started) go to Players > Stats > Hit Chart. Here is a direct link to Sean Burroughs’ hit chart (thanks to Jonny and Jeff for the info!).

I can’t get this thing to work for Petco, but a look at how Burroughs fared last year at the Q is interesting. His singles were pretty well distributed across all fields. His doubles and triples primarily went to left and right center, with a few down the lines or off the right field wall. Burroughs also hit very few fly ball outs to right or right center at home last year. Almost everything that made it out of the infield and landed in someone’s glove went to left or center.

Geez, I could spend hours looking at this stuff. Anyway, thanks again to Jonny and Jeff for passing that along, and to Anthony for asking the question that got the machine moving.

Fish

Pads in Miami tonight for the start of a three-game series against the Marlins. Jake Peavy vs Carl Pavano. Once again, no television.

Ismael Valdez vs Darren Oliver Saturday night (blecch). Adam Eaton and Josh Beckett lock up in the Sunday finale, which could be a fun one.

That’s all for now. More as it happens…

Mailbag

I get home just in time to catch the ninth inning of East Coast games, so I can’t offer much commentary on last night’s contest. But I can say that seven innings of shutout ball after two straight losses is exactly what a #1 pitcher should give. Like the six punchouts. Today is the first day I’m really happy the Padres signed David Wells.

Moving along, today’s letter comes from frequent contributor Anthony Trifiletti:

Nice summary of the Padres in April. [Khalil] Greene is becoming one of my favorite players to watch; he’s not flashy in an Ozzie Smith way but he gets to a lot of balls and like you say, he has a great approach at the plate. It’s not often that you can feel confident with a rookie at the plate and the game on the line but Greene is turning into that kind of player.

One thing I’ve noticed a lot this year is the Padres seem to put a lot of emphasis on hitting the ball the other way, I’ve especially noticed it with Sean Burroughs. It seems like he’s so focused on hitting the other way that he lays off hittable inside pitches and never drives the ball. Of his 33 hits only 5 are for extra bases, all doubles. I’m worried [hitting coach Dave] Magadan is turning Burroughs into a Wade Boggs clone, minus the Fenway doubles. Do you know of any sources that show where a player’s hits have been falling?

First off, thanks for writing and for the compliment. As for Greene, he does something to impress me almost every day. The kid is way more advanced than I thought he would be. It will be interesting to see what kinds of adjustments Greene makes in his second run through the league. Not to bring anybody down, but remember that Xavier Nady was last year’s NL Rookie of the Month in May.

As for Burroughs, I think his approach is less a result of anything Magadan is saying or doing and has more to do with his natural stroke. Burroughs is 23 years old. He’s gotten his feet wet in the bigs but he’s still learning. I’ve probably done the kid a disservice by comparing him to Hank Blalock over the years, but the fact is, Burroughs is progressing just fine. The power will come; the only question is to what extent. In the Montreal series, he started turning on some inside fastballs. Hit ‘em pretty hard, but not quite hard enough and not in quite the right place.

Just for grins, here are how a few other big-leaguers fared at age 23 in terms of power production:

               AB HR  ISO
Gonzalez, Lu  473 13 .179
Green, Sh     422 11 .168
Hidalgo, Ri   383 15 .193
Jeter, De     654 10 .114
Young, Dm     333  5 .105
Sosa, Sa      262  8 .133
Bagwell, Je   554 15 .143
Palmeiro, Ra  580  8 .129

I don’t point this out to suggest that Burroughs will necessarily follow in the footsteps of any of these players, but rather as a reminder that home run power doesn’t always develop right away. Sosa, Bagwell, and Palmeiro all were among league leaders in homers last year. I know, they’re all different types of hitters than when they first made it to the Show. But that’s also the point. We don’t know what kind of hitter Burroughs will be in 3 years, in 5 years, in 10 years. What we do know is this:

  1. Burroughs has a good understanding of the strike zone; he’s not drawing a lot of walks, but he knows how to work the count and he generally puts bat on ball.
  2. He can drive the ball to all parts of the field: 27 doubles and 6 triples last year.
  3. He is very young; Burroughs and Blalock (there I go again) were the only 22-year-olds with enough plate appearances to qualify for the batting title last year.

Again, none of this guarantees anything. Ask Ben Grieve. But right now, Burroughs is what I would call an excellent risk to be a solid contributor for many years. Whether he becomes a slugger along the lines of a Bagwell or Palmeiro (not likely, IMHO), or Boggs without Fenway (nothing wrong with that either; Boggs hit .307/.391/.400 in road games through 1992 [thanks, Retrosheet]), Burroughs is going to produce.

With regard to where a player’s hits are falling, I’m afraid I don’t know of any sources. This would be handy information to have. Anybody out there know of such a place? Drop me a line if you do.

Other Stuff

Odds and Ends

Looks like we’re not the only ones impressed with the Padres this April:

Three-game series in Atlanta starts tonight. Adam Eaton vs Russ Ortiz. Channel 4, 4:35 PM.

April Recap

So the Padres finished April with a 15-9 record. Granted, they played struggling clubs such as the Giants, the Expos, and the Mets. But unlike in some recent seasons, they dominated these struggling teams and in the end found themselves tied for the division lead.

As Bialystock and Bloom would say, "Where did we go right?"

Before the season began, I mentioned three keys to 2004: health of David Wells and the middle of the order, continued improvement by Adam Eaton and Jake Peavy, and production from the 6-7-8 hitters. It’s early, but so far the guys who’ve needed to stay healthy have done so (although Ryan Klesko had to be removed from a game due to back spasms in the month’s final game), Eaton and Peavy have shown signs of stepping up to the next level, and the bottom of the order has contributed (well, at least Khalil Greene has).

"Rookies" Greene and Aki Otsuka have been outstanding in key roles. Again, it’s only a month, but Greene’s bat has come along a lot further than I’d have expected. He’s working deep into counts and driving the ball to all fields. His approach is much more sophisticated than what I saw last September. For that matter, his approach to the entire game is remarkable for a kid with such little experience at this level. He may hit some bumps in the road, but I get the feeling he’s not the kind of guy who is going to compound his slumps by getting down on himself. That’s speculation on my part, of course, but when I hear Greene talk and when I watch the way he carries himself on the field, I don’t think "rookie" (which is why I put the word in quotes at the beginning of this paragraph). And if Wells and the other Padres are any indication, I’m not alone in my thinking. Greene has been nothing but positive. We haven’t even talked about his defense (but don’t worry, we will).

As for Otsuka, he gave up a run in his first North American appearance and was saddled with the loss. Since then: absolutely nothing, say it again. After three saves in three nights from Trevor Hoffman, Otsuka got the call in the ninth in April’s final game. He came in to close out a 7-6 lead and shut the Mets down in order to preserve the win. Said Otsuka, "It’s the same feeling, whether I pitch in the eighth inning or when I close." This is a rookie? Technically, yes. But this is a guy who set a Japanese Pacific League record for saves back in 1998. Hoffman not available to nail down the victory? Not a problem, let Otsuka do it.

Defense

Another key to the Padres’ success in April was the team’s defense, particularly on the infield. We saw some terrific glovework and now we can point at the available statistics to back up what we witnessed. Some examples:

  • Mark Loretta is third in the NL in range factor among second basemen (5.57), behind only Matt Kata and D’Angelo Jimenez. Loretta leads NL second basemen in double plays turned with 24. Not only that, but look at the improvement he has shown this year versus last year in terms of a couple key rate statistics:
           Inn. DP DP/Inn.   RF
    2003  1247  84   .067  4.95
    2004   211  24   .114  5.59
    

    Isn’t that interesting? Hard to know for sure, but two factors that are different in the equation this season are Loretta’s home park and his double play partner.

  • Over at third base, Sean Burroughs ranks sixth among NL third baseman in range factor at (2.98). Like Loretta, he has shown an improvement over last year’s 2.70 mark.
  • At shortstop, Greene has been nothing less than spectacular. Not in terms of flash, but in terms of results. Among NL shortstops, only Rafael Furcal sports a better range factor than Greene’s 5.06. Greene also leads the league in double plays turned by a shortstop, with 21. Check this out:
           Inn. DP DP/Inn.   RF
    2003*  905  57   .063  4.04 (last in NL)
    2004   192  21   .109  5.06
    
    *Ramon Vazquez
    

    I’m not trying to knock Vazquez, whom I think adds value to a club. But for whatever reason, his numbers when he was playing regularly were nowhere near as good as Greene’s are now. And neither were his double play partner’s. I’m not stating causality, just observing facts. And the facts are that to this point, the middle infield defense has been vastly improved over last year.

Bullpen

Another area that has shown marked improvement over the beginning of last season is the relief corps. After a somewhat shaky start, the bullpen has been solid throughout most of April. Take away a couple of guys who probably don’t belong in the big leagues and a few bad early outings from Antonio Osuna, and you’re looking at a solid bunch. And we haven’t even seen Rod Beck yet. Beck, who was being counted on to set up Hoffman this year, now finds himself looking up at the likes of Otsuka and Scott Linebrink. Think of how strong a bullpen is that it can bring in someone like Beck to work the sixth or seventh inning. I’m assuming, of course, that he will return to the Padres at some point.

Let’s move in for a closer look:

             IP  H ER HR BB SO   ERA  K/9 #P/IP OPS
Otsuka     13.0  6  1  0  3 12  0.69 8.31 13.08 339
Linebrink  14.0 10  3  0  2  9  1.93 5.79 13.14 506
Hoffman     9.0 10  2  0  1  7  2.00 7.00 13.44 717
Witasick    9.0  7  2  0  4  6  2.00 6.00 13.78 547
Osuna      13.1 16  7  2  4 13  4.73 8.78 17.93 835

subtotal   58.1 49 15  2 14 47  2.31 7.25

other*     14.0 15 16  4 15  6 10.29 3.86

total      72.1 65 31  6 29 53  3.86 6.59

*Szuminski, Oropesa, Valdez as reliever

Replace Szuminski and Oropesa with Beck and Jeff Cirillo (not that he’ll pitch, but you get the point), and that’s one heckuva bullpen.

Rotation

Overall, the starters have been solid. Peavy and Eaton have been terrific (although the latter’s numbers don’t show it as much), Valdez has pitched well above and beyond what anyone had a right to expect, and David Wells has gotten on track after a rough start.

The big concerns at this point are Brian Lawrence (recall his struggles when not working with Gary Bennett last year), the extremely low K/9 rates of Valdez and Wells, and Peavy’s inefficiency.

To the numbers:

            IP   H ER HR BB SO  ERA  K/9 #P/IP OPS
Valdez    19.2  15  4  2  3  4 1.83 1.83 14.59 662
Peavy     29.0  28  6  0 11 24 1.86 7.45 16.55 635
Eaton     33.2  34 14  4  5 22 3.74 5.88 14.82 674
Wells     30.0  28 14  3  5  7 4.20 2.10 14.27 752
Lawrence  30.1  46 19  4 14 19 5.64 5.64 16.42 977

Total    142.2 151 57 13 38 76 3.60 4.79

The anemic strikeout totals of Valdez and Wells are immediately obvious. And actually, the strikeout numbers of the starting staff as a whole are a little disconcerting. Peavy’s inefficiency, which is causing him the ability to work deeper into games, is hinted at here. Check out some trends:

      OPS #P/IP #P/PA
2002  762 16.66  3.78
2003  738 16.57  3.90
2004  635 16.55  4.10

What do we see? What I see is a pitcher who is becoming stingier (note the steadily declining opponent OPS) but who is not making much progress in the area of efficiency. Peavy is a tremendous young talent, there’s no disputing that, but the number of pitches he needs to get through an inning is the one area of his game that is holding him back from joining the ranks of the elite.

At this point I need to step back and remind the reader (as well as myself) that Peavy turns 23 at the end of this month. Relax, he’s getting there. He is already a darned good pitcher. But, and this is the scary part, he can become even better.

Offense

After a horrendous start, Brian Giles has gotten on track. He finished April hitting .238/.375/.464. Burroughs and Loretta have been incredibly consistent, and Greene has contributed more than I’d expected. Even the guys who are scuffling, like Ramon Hernandez, are having quality at-bats. Despite hitting just .217 with only two extra base hits, Hernandez has drawn 10 walks against just 5 strikeouts. This is a good sign. Beyond that, as a team, the Padres have drawn 92 walks in 24 games, against just 110 strikeouts. They are outwalking the opposition, 92-67, a differential of 25 walks. In other words, the Padres are drawing one more walk per game than the other team. Over the course of a season, that’s huge.

Terrence Long has been better than advertised. We were assured he’d be a drag on the offense and a general bad presence, but so far he’s contributed when given the chance. Honestly, the main complaint I have so far is that Brian Buchanan isn’t getting enough at-bats (just 15 in April; the next lowest total of any Padre hitter was 20, by Kerry Robinson).

Final Thoughts

Quick comparison of how the 2004 version stacks up against the great Padre teams of the past in terms of April performance:

             April             season
Year   W  L  Pct  RS  RA   W  L  Pct  RS  RA
1984  15  8 .658 107  94  92 70 .568 686 634
1996  17 10 .630 145 108  91 71 .562 771 682
1998  18  7 .720 121  98  98 64 .605 749 635
2004  15  9 .625 117 100  ??????????????????

Incidentally (and not to rain on anyone’s parade), of the three Padre teams that made the playoffs, only the 1996 edition had a strong May (17-10). The 1998 version went 16-14, while the 1984 squad finished the month at an underwhelming 10-13.

I keep telling anyone who asks that this team reminds me a lot of the 1996 squad. The pitching isn’t as strong as the 1998 version, but these guys battle every time they take the field. The upcoming road trip to the southeast will provide a pretty good test of where this club stands.

In Other News

  • Giles’ home run keys Padres’ win The Mets played Saturday night’s game under protest due to Aki Otsuka’s delivery. Manager Art Howe: “We want them to get him to pitch correctly.” Ostuka: “I’ll check with Major League Baseball, and if I have to change I will. It doesn’t really matter.” Can you tell which team is focused on winning games right now?
  • Howe Doth Protest (Flushing Local). A Mets blogger’s take on Akigate. Good blog. I’ve added it and Against the Grain, another solid entrant, to Hot Links.
  • San Diego Baseball Lore (Humbug Journal). Ted Williams Field in North Park. In all the times I’ve practiced softball there, I’ve never thought of it as historical, but it really is. It’s also a place where homeless people sleep, but that’s another story. Thanks to the Score Bard for providing a little perspective on a place I’ve long taken for granted.
  • California Wolf Center Speaking of cool places to visit in and around town. This is a little south of Julian. First time I’d been out that way since the fires.

That’s all for now. Next up: Braves and Marlins…

Tres Belles: The Sound of Sweeping

Maybe extending a pun across three languages isn’t the best idea, but these are the Expos and this was the third straight night Trevor Hoffman came in to close out the game, so what the heck. Let’s get a little crazy.

The Padres completed a four-game sweep of MLB’s problem child, the Montreal/San Juan Expos. MLB’s despicable treatment of the franchise notwithstanding, the Expos came in and battled for four straight nights. But each time they fell just shy of victory. Despite MLB’s best efforts, there is some talent on this club, especially in the pitching department. With even a few resources at their disposal (a home, some spending money), the Expos might not be that far from respectability. As it stands, they have to settle for merely being more respectable than the folks who would deny them such resources.

But I digress. As long as the Expos remain in the league and wield bats, they are a threat on any given night. And for a team without much hope, they sure played with a lot of fight this week. I feel horrible for the people of Montreal and for the players who have to work under those conditions. But if the guys who take the field feel any self-pity, they sure don’t show it. They get out there and play hard. They do what they can given their severe limitations. It’s a little sad to watch, but it’s also inspirational.

We often like to reduce professional athletes to the money they make. I’ve never been in their position, but it’s not hard to imagine that a great many of them take pride in the work they do. It must be difficult to take pride in one’s work when management isn’t providing any support and when the results are so consistently poor. But the Expos I saw this week were out there busting tail. They cannot realistically be expected to compete with what they’ve got but don’t tell them that. And don’t ask them to stop trying just because nobody seems to give a damn about ‘em.

I’m not sure how I got to this point, and I’m even less sure how to advance beyond it. My intention was to talk about the Padres, and I certainly am ecstatic about their winning four straight at home. But I’m pretty irritated at MLB for basically ruining the Expos. And if I had any sense, I’d change the title of this entry to reflect its content.

But I’m not going to, because I like my pun. Even if nobody else gets it (or does and thinks it isn’t particularly clever), I’m sticking with that title. You know why? Because I like it and because the Pads just swept a four-game series. And that is tres belles in any language.

Mets in town tonight. Brian Lawrence vs Tyler Yates. Blah, blah time; blah, blah channel. Go get ‘em, boys..

Another Day, Another Comeback

In what is becoming a theme of sorts, the Padres once again came back from a late inning defecit to win at home. I can tell it’s becoming a theme because with the Expos ahead 4-2 going to the bottom of the eighth, I just kind of expected the Pads to at least tie the game. That old helpless feeling I’ve grown used to over the past few years simply wasn’t there.

Sure enough, thanks to some timely hitting and hustle (not to mention a blown call by the first base umpire), the Pads surged ahead and hung onto win, 5-4. Trevor Hoffman worked a scoreless ninth for his fifth save and second in as many nights.

A few thoughts:

  • For the second straight start, Adam Eaton pitched better than his final line would indicate. Last time he was one Bruce Bochy decision and subsequent bad pitch away from a stellar night. This time Eaton was beaten by an Andy Fox homer combined with a slew of worm-beaters. Not to make excuses for Eaton, but if you haven’t been watching him pitch and are only looking at the numbers, you’re missing a lot. The combined line from those two games isn’t real pretty: 12.2 IP, 19 H, 8 ER, 2 HR, 1 BB, 8 SO, 5.68 ERA. But his stuff and location for the most part have been solid. He’s made bad pitches to Fox and Richie Sexson, and given up some well placed hits. No cause for alarm. It’ll even out over the season. It did seem that Bochy might have pulled Eaton a little early last night, but maybe his (relatively) high pitch counts in previous starts played a role.
  • Outstanding work from the bullpen. I still don’t know how Scott Linebrink was ever placed on waivers last year. Antonio Osuna looked as good as I’ve seen him in a Padre uniform. His velocity was solid, as always. But he was locating the fastball and slider. Very encouraging.
  • Sean Burroughs is in a mini-slump right now. Earlier in the season he was serving everything into left and left-center. Pitchers are starting to pound him inside with fastballs and he’s a little late turning on them. But he’s getting close. Burroughs drove a couple pretty decent flies to right off Claudio Vargas last night that on pitches that just got in on his hands. If Burroughs can get around on those just a shade quicker and pitchers continue to work him inside, we could see a power barrage. The ball he hit in the fifth took right fielder Val Pascucci to the track, and Burroughs was pretty much jammed by the pitch.
  • Brian Giles and Phil Nevin both went deep. Giles finally cracked .200 (he’s currently at .208/.347/.377). Why he ever sees a fastball inner half for a strike is beyond me, but we’ll take it. Nevin’s shot was a trademark job to right-center. Good to see that. One of my concerns about the dimensions of Petco was that it might take Nevin away from his natural stroke and encourage him to become more pull-conscious. Now that he’s seen that it’s possible to drive the ball out to right-center, maybe he’ll feel more comfortable continuing to hit the ball that way.
  • Even though he’s been scuffling at the plate, I am beginning to really like Jay Payton. We’ve talked about his defense. Last night his hustle on the basepaths played a key role.On a slow roller toward second, Payton ran hard all the way down the line and was called safe at first (replays showed that the throw actually beat him, but the fact that he made it so close certainly put pressure on first base umpire Marty Foster). This drove in the first run of the eighth, to pull the Pads to within one. The next batter, Ramon Hernandez, hits a chopper back to the pitcher. With Hernandez chugging down the line, I’m figuring it’s an inning-ending double play and the Pads will have to wait till the ninth to pull this one out. But Payton, hustling all the way, cleans out Orlando Cabrera, who gets absolutely nothing on the throw. Hernandez just beats the relay, scoring pinch-runner Kerry Robinson. Tie game. Khalil Greene follows with a triple to right-center to score Hernandez.
  • Hoffman worked some nice sequences in the ninth. Jose Vidro singled with one out, but otherwise Hoffman was in command. Brad Wilkerson looked silly chasing change-ups. Wilkerson is a good big-league hitter, but his whole front side was open before the ball even got to him. Even if he makes contact, the ball bounces harmlessly off his front foot. Vintage Hoffman.

Final game of the series tonight at Petco. David Wells vs Tomo Ohka. Usual time, usual channel. Enjoy…

Call Him Ismael

Yeah, it’s the Expos and they can’t score runs. Yeah, he’s doing it with smoke and mirrors. But Ismael Valdez threw eight scoreless last night and is now 3-0 on the year.

The 2.42 ERA is great, but don’t expect it to last. Of the 90 batters he’s faced so far, all but seven have put the ball in play. His 1.61 K/9 makes Nate Cornejo look like Kerry Wood. Well, not really, but that’s still an alarmingly low number. I’m thrilled that Valdez is having some early success, and I’m enjoying it while I can, but his stuff and stats suggest that there are darker times to come.

For now, however, call him a pleasant surprise. Call him 3-0. Call him Ismael Valdez.

Quasi-Random Observations

  • I am really liking the Pads’ infield defense. Sean Burroughs sometimes has trouble with the off-balance throw, and Khalil Greene committed a costly error the other night in Phoenix. But for the most part, those two have been rock solid. They make the routine plays and they are more aware of situations than a lot of guys their age. Very polished defenders. Greene and Mark Loretta look good turning the double play. Quick. And Phil Nevin is a huge improvement over Ryan Klesko at first base. Every now and then Nevin gets caught in no-man’s land but not as often as Klesko did.
  • Loretta leads the club with four homers. His slugging percentage is .576. I really thought Rick Sutcliffe was out of his mind for suggesting that Loretta had 20-homer power, and I’m still not convinced it will happen, but I’m beginning at least to warm to the possibility.
  • Two hits and a walk from Brian Giles. He’s still feeling his way around out there, but it’s starting to come.
  • What’s with Jay Payton swinging at all those fastballs up out of the zone? He’s off to an enigmatic start this year. I expected more offense and less defense. He’s been better than advertised in center but he isn’t contributing much at the plate.
  • Miguel Ojeda has improved over last year. He had a key hit in the home opener. Then he won Monday night’s game with a ninth-inning single. Last night he drove home an insurance run in the fourth to conclude an eight-pitch at-bat. Dude battles up there. And he looks more comfortable behind the plate.

What’s scary is that this team is 12-9 and not even playing up to its ability. Very little out of key guys like David Wells, Brian Lawrence, and Giles. Heck, Klesko has only one homer.

Imagining what this team could do. Reminding myself that it is April. Trying not to get too carried away. Yet.

Adam Eaton vs Claudio Vargas tonight. Usual time, usual channel…