Blog Challenge

I am contractually obligated to give this to you:

Game 19: 4/20/03

Colorado 8, San Diego 0 (ESPN)

I don’t have anything to say about this except that I’m glad the Padres are out of Coors Field. Next up, Wrigley Field, a much more reasonable place to play baseball. Which reminds me…

Okay, that’s a lame title but I’m tired and this is free, so deal already. Last week, Christian Ruzich over at The Cub Reporter threw down the glove and issued a challenge. If the Padres win the series against the Cubs, I get to write about it on his blog. If the Cubs win, he gets to write about it here.

This is the part where I’m supposed to lay down the smack, but (a) I’m not real good at it and (b) the Pads just got shut out at Coors Field. So instead I’ll ask Christian to be gentle when he takes over Ducksnorts come the end of the week.

Interesting matchups in the series. Brian Lawrence goes up against Carlos Zambrano today, in a classic finesse versus power battle. Wednesday it’s Adam Eaton and Kerry Wood. And Thursday it’ll be Oliver Perez against Matt Clement, in a showdown between wild Padre pitching prospect of the present and wild Padre pitching prospect of the past.

The Cubs are putting up some serious offensive numbers so far, and everyone is contributing. Yes, that includes Mark Grudzewhatever (.347/.380/.467) and Alex Gonzalez (.325/.373/.442). Object of endless fascination™ Corey Patterson is hacking away to the tune of .284/.308/.446. Rookie first baseman Hee Seop Choi is hitting a cool .300/.500/.675. Even Mark Bellhorn, whose overall numbers aren’t that great (.214/.370/.339), has picked it up over the past week (.391/.516/.609). Perhaps most troublesome is the fact that these guys are drawing 4.8 walks per game. Perez on Thursday is going to have his work cut out for him against this group.

Bottom line: The Cubs are playing real good baseball right now. They’re hitting well, they’re pitching well, they have Sammy Sosa. The Pads are going to have to execute to perfection if they’re to take this series, or even a single game.

Oh, and the Cubbies are going down in flames, baby! Yeah, well I tried…

Soul-Crushing Defeat

Ain’t karma a bitch.

We’ll talk about Sunday’s game tomorrow, since today is an off-day. But right now there are more important (and agonizing) things to discuss.

Game 18: 4/19/03

Colorado 10, San Diego 9 (ESPN)

As it turns out, Thursday’s game in Los Angeles was just a prelude for bigger things to come. Let’s begin by defining some terms (all from Merriam-Webster):

soul the immaterial essence, animating principle, or actuating cause of an individual life

crush to squeeze or force by pressure so as to alter or destroy structure

defeat frustration by nullification or by prevention of success

In each case, I’ve chosen the definition that best suits our discussion. We’ll come back to these in a bit, but first we must dip into something more concrete (actually, dipping into concrete might be an appropriate reaction to this game, but that’s another story).

After the Rockies jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first off Clay Condrey, rain and then hail arrived. Naturally, being the optimist that I am, I found myself pulling for more bad weather. Which is what I got. For nearly two hours, the game was delayed.

But alas, it was not postponed and when play resumed, the Rockies scored three more runs. By the third inning, they had extended their lead to 7-0, and it was looking like a repeat of Friday.

Then in the fourth, Mark Kotsay and Ryan Klesko launched back-to-back homers off Nelson Cruz. This at least was an indication that the Padres’ "immaterial essence" was still intact. Not to mention their chances of winning the game. As we all know, a four-run lead in Denver is like a one-run lead anywhere else.

And the bullpen, led by Matt Herges, Jaret Wright, and Jesse Orosco, held the home team at bay for the next four innings. With a one-run lead (more on that in a moment), Orosco came into the game with one out in the eighth to face Todd Helton and Larry Walker. Old Man River proceeded to retire (the sentence doesn’t end here; keep reading) Helton on a routine fly to center and Walker on a nasty slider down and away that the latter couldn’t check his swing on.

In the top of the eighth, against nemesis Todd Jones, the Pads had exploded for five runs. The first three came on a "homer" to right by Klesko, the other two on a shot by Sean Burroughs.

For those of you keeping score at home, this is where karma joins the story.

Klesko’s blast to right hit the yellow facade just above the scoreboard in right and caromed back onto the field. By rights the ball should have been in play and not ruled, as it was, a home run.

This is why, when Burroughs stepped to the plate after a walk to Rondell White, I should have known that the homer he was about to hit to give the Pads the lead would ultimately be meaningless. Which is a shame, because it was a heckuva shot by Burroughs. Good to see him turn on a ball and drive it out of the park (here’s hoping he can do that on days other than April 19).

But I didn’t think it through, and so I still had hope for the visitors. The Padres scored an insurance run in the ninth, and had runners at the corners with one out and what would have been White’s spot in the order coming to the plate. But White had been pulled in favor of Shane Victorino the previous inning, so now it was up to the rookie, who has exactly zero big-league hits to his credit [Ed.: he notched his first hit Sunday] and who is still learning how to swing the bat from the left side, to drive in the run. Because, as we know, a two-run lead in Coors Field means nothing.

But there’s only one out and a guy at third, so chances are if Victorino can just make contact, the Pads score a run. It’s not as threatening as if White had been at the plate, but at least there’s a chance that something good will happen.

Something good did not happen.

After jumping ahead in the count, Colorado reliever Steve Reed faked a throw to third and fired to first. That’s right, he did the pickoff move that nobody this side of Ruben Rivera buys.

Klesko bought it. Karma. Gave him a homer, took an out from him.

He was tagged out without so much as a rundown. Kotsay had to stay put at third. Victorino proceeded to fly to right, to end the inning.

Bottom of the ninth. Enter Brandon Villafuerte. What is the one thing you don’t do with a two-run lead in Coors Field in the nith inning? Walk the leadoff hitter.

Preston Wilson walked.

Jose Hernandez followed with a single, bringing up catcher Bobby Estalella. If Villafuerte can get him to hit the ball on the ground, there’s a chance that something good will happen.

Estalella hit the ball on the ground, but again, something good did not happen.

Lou Merloni, who had entered the game an inning earlier, snagged the roller and threw the ball just under the glove of Ramon Vazquez, allowing one run to score and keeping two men on base with none out.

Brent Butler then came up and laid down a bunt. Villafuerte came off the mound and made a terrific play to nail Hernandez at third on a bang-bang play, which brought up Chris Stynes, pinch-hitting for Reed.

Stynes, as I have mentioned, is a guy I thought the Padres should have made an attempt to sign this off-season. He does everything Keith Lockhart does, only he does them well.

But they didn’t, and the Rockies did. And against Villafuerte this night, he worked the count full and whacked a single to right. Tie ballgame.

Uh-oh.

Now we have a situation. One out, runners at the corners, back to the top of the order.

Ronnie Belliard bunted the first pitch from Villafuerte hard toward Klesko at first. Klesko charged, picked up the ball, and threw wildly to the plate, game over.

So many things went wrong in those final two innings, it’s hard to pinpoint any one of them as the culprit. Personally, I’m sticking with the umpire’s botched call on Klesko’s drive to right. It’s like my brother-in-law, who is putting money on the Lakers in Vegas so they’ll lose. The fact that Klesko’s hit was ruled a home run pretty much ensured a bad outcome for the Padres. The fact that his poor baserunning and wild throw contributed to the outcome were just icing on the metaphysical cake.

Back, then, to definitions.

soul-crushing defeat the prevention of success and accompanying frustration that results from the squeezing (or, in our case, the squeeze play) or forcing by pressure and subsequent alteration or destruction of the immaterial essence, animating principle, or actuating cause of a group of individuals.*

*Here I take a small liberty by extending from the one to the many.

A concrete example: Enduring a two-hour rain delay, coming back from a 7-0 defecit, and then giving it away.

The good news, if one chooses to view it as such, is that karma doesn’t play favorites. The Padres aren’t a great team right now, not by any stretch. But they’re capable of better than this.

The other good news is that soul-crushing defeats can lead to better things. In our definition, we talked about "alteration or destruction" of the team’s spirit. Phoenix from the flame? Maybe this is the game that gets the club fired up (sorry, couldn’t resist) and moving in the right direction. (Or judging from Sunday’s outcome, maybe not; but it might be a necessary step in the growing process.)

If all this sounds like so much justification, well, there’s probably truth in that. This is a young, inexperienced team and there are going to be days when they break your heart. The best we can hope for is that they learn something from these mistakes and apply what they learn to future situations. And that when they do, it will be someone else’s turn to say, "Ain’t karma a bitch."

Game 17

I usually take the weekends off, but it’s 3:26 AM and sleep isn’t happening, so here I am. Lucky you.

Game 17: 4/18/03

Colorado 12, San Diego 1 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Two more walks for Ramon Vazquez. That’s 16 now in 16 games, for a .417 OBP.
  • Although he had only a single to show for it, Xavier Nady made solid contact all three times he batted. He’s now hitting .277/.347/.446, which might not be too far off his true level at this stage in his career. Actually, if he ends up with numbers like that this year, I’ll be happy. Especially if he keeps walking every 11 at-bats.
  • Shane Victorino notched his first big-league RBI in the ninth to break up the shutout. We’re reaching here folks, but it’s worth noting that he made (reasonably) solid contact from the left side for the sac fly.

The Bad

  • Sean Burroughs continues to struggle. He’s down to .175/.283/.250 and generally not having good at-bats right now.
  • Wiki Gonzalez. It doesn’t show up in the box score, but I sure would feel better if he wouldn’t drop so many pitches. I’m not talking about passed balls, just simply receiving the pitch. It doesn’t inspire confidence.

The Ugly

  • Can we panic now? Something needs to be done with Oliver Perez, be it send him to the minors or the bullpen. We are now experiencing the downside of promoting a guy too quickly. He came up last year with just four starts above Class A under his belt and had some success at the big-league level. Expectations were raised and, predictably, Perez hasn’t been able to live up to them. He’s a work in progress, and he’d probably be better served honing his craft at Mobile or Portland, where he can concentrate more on mechanics and pitch selection than on outcomes.

    The problem with Perez’ early promotion last year is that now if you send him to, say, Portland, it’s a demotion. The kid’s confidence is already shot–the expression on his face after the homer to center by Chris Stynes is not something you want to see from your pitcher. It’s not Perez’ fault; he simply isn’t ready for this level. In hindsight, there probably isn’t much worse that could’ve happened than for him to have success against big-league hitters last year. It gave a false sense that Perez was further along in his development than he actually was.

    I don’t mean to sound overly negative. I saw Perez pitch several times at Elsinore when he was there and he impressed the heck out of me before anyone was really talking about him. I think he’s got a real promising future as a mid-rotation type starter if he’s handled right. But I feel bad for him because he’s a 21-year-old kid who is in way over his head. He deserves a chance to succeed, and I’m not sure if the best way for him to do that is by remaining in San Diego right now.

    Coors Field is partially to blame for last night’s effort, to be sure. But this is getting ugly:

    Date   IP   H  ER  HR  BB  SO  PIT
    ----------------------------------
    4/2   4.0   4   5   0   6   4   88
    4/7   5.0   5   4   3   2   4   90
    4/13  4.1   4   1   1   7   5  100
    4/18  4.2  11   8   2   3   5  108
    

    Here’s a startling comparison for you:

               IP   H  ER  HR BB  SO
    --------------------------------
    Perez    18.0  24  18  6  18  18
    bullpen  15.0  13   8  3   7  13
    

    Top is Perez’ YTD totals. Bottom is numbers put up by the bullpen in games he’s started. That seems like more work than you want out of your relievers to me. I wonder how effective those guys are in days following a Perez start?

    Date   IP   H  ER  HR  BB  SO
    -----------------------------
    4/3   4.0   1   0   0   2   5
    4/8   3.0   1   1   1   0   1
    4/14  ** off day **
    4/19  ???
    

    Okay, so my theory doesn’t look so good there. But I still think that kind of bullpen usage will take it’s toll over the course of a season. We’ll see.

    Meantime, it’s time to move on to other things. Here’s hoping Perez can get back on track.

Other Things

As promised, here we are. It’s 4:18 and I’m starting to get tired. You think you have trouble staying awake through my blog!

The other day on my way to work, I stop by my usual place for coffee. It’s nothing exceptional, but the coffee is good and the people are friendly. And it’s a kind of comfort before I go off to spend the day doing less comforting things.

So I stop at this coffee shop and on the way out, a car pulls into the parking lot. One of those wannabe sports cars that makes middle-aged men who can’t afford or handle a real sports car feel a little better about themselves. Anyway, this car pulls into the lot and what is blaring out the windows? That’s right, Lobo’s "I’d Love You to Want Me."

There is so much wrong with this, I hardly know where to begin. First off, get a real sports car. Or, do like the rest of us and get something more practical. There’s no shame in owning a Saturn.

Seriously, just get over it already.

Second, who likes that song? I like to think of myself as having a pretty open mind when it comes to music, but what value did Lobo bring to the world when they created that song? Granted, it’s not "Seasons in the Sun" or anything by Air Supply but that’s hardly something about which to brag.

Finally, even if for some reason you do like that song, why in the heck are you blasting it in your wannabe sports car stereo at 7:30 in the morning? It doesn’t help anything. No, really. I can understand blasting music in the morning. I don’t do it much these days but there was a time when I needed a little Metallica or some such to get me going. But Lobo? What, do you need to get pumped up for that big stroll through the flowers? Do you feel the urge to shout out to the world, "I need a nap!" What gives?

The worst part is he had a kid who was old enough to know that what he was experiencing wasn’t right. That’s gonna be some expensive therapy. Dude, go buy a minivan and listen to some Jethro Tull.

It’s 4:41, and this blog is starting to go places it probably ought not go. Back to bed for me. Catch ya later…

Chicken Pie Shop, Pinback, and Nady

It’s been a long week at work and the Padres lost a game last night they had no business losing. I’m bored, tired, and in a lousy mood. I’ll work my way back over to baseball before too long, but first I have to talk about some other stuff or it’s all gonna be one big Jaret Wright hatefest. And none of us wants that, right?

Chicken Pie Shop

You know it, you love it. Get over there and have a pie dinner already!

Pinback

Before I get started, understand that Heavy Vegetable is one of my all-time favorite bands. So I’m approaching this CD in much the way a Beatles fan might listen to a Wings album. Which is to say I may not be the best person to ask.

I’ve listened to Pinback’s debut CD about 15-20 times now, and I have mixed feelings about it. On the one hand, I love Rob Crowe’s guitar tones and idiosyncratic playing style. And melody in a pop song is a novel (and welcome) concept these days. But some of it plods a bit for my taste. Maybe it’s just that I’m used to his work with Heavy Vegetable and Thingy, which were more chaotic and energized. Youthful exuberance and all that.

The first two tracks could be Thingy songs. Real nice acoustic guitar work, plus those warm, clean arpeggios that mirror the vocal melody. I love that. And they’re always really messed-up chords, which keeps things interesting.

The third song isn’t bad but it doesn’t move enough. The next three tunes are cool, but not up to the standard set by the first two. Then there’s a track that swings, followed by three that don’t.

I like the CD well enough to keep listening. The songs are mostly engaging, the arrangements tight. And I give them extra credit for putting this together in a home studio. Tripoli, Hurley, and Crutch are all fine pop tunes, and there are flashes of brilliance elsewhere. But the CD is uneven and generally makes me wish Heavy Vegetable were still together.

Other Music

Coltrane, Mingus. Can’t go wrong there. Audioslave, Pete Yorn. I’ll probably talk about those after I’ve had a chance to absorb them. Apparently Sonny Rollins is quite the baseball fan. Likes the pace of the game. I’m going to have to listen to more of his stuff.

Fantasy Baseball

This is more for me than you, but you’re welcome to take a look if you’d like. These are my fantasy leagues this year:

The Scoresheet leagues are perpetual, the Yahoo is a one-year.

Real Baseball

I don’t feel like going into great detail about the past three games. Here are links to the ESPN game logs for each. General commentary follows.

The starting pitching has been solid. Jake Peavy worked six strong innings Tuesday night and picked up his third win in as many decisions. Two encouraging signs from that game were that Peavy came out after 102 pitches and that Bruce Bochy was willing to pull a struggling Brandon Villafuerte in the ninth. Jaret Wright recorded the last two outs for his first big-league save.

Xavier Nady is struggling. He didn’t have a hit against the Dodgers in LA. Here’s what he did in the series:

  #
pit. result
-----------------
  5  SO (looking)
  1  F9
  4  BB
  5  F9

  1  G5 (DP)
  6  SO (looking)
  1  L3
  2  HBP

  6  BB (after falling behind 0-2)
  5  SO (swinging)
  7  G6
  1  F3 (end game)

Nady is having some decent at-bats, but that’s way too many one-pitch outs. He’s young, he’s inexperienced, he’s overanxious at times. It will be interesting to see how long it takes him to make the necessary counteradjustments.

Brian Lawrence dominated for five innings on Wednesday before getting beat on a couple of seeing-eye hits and a hard double by Fred McGriff. The latter brought home Brian Jordan, who collided with catcher Gary Bennett on the play. Bennett tried to keep playing but his right knee wouldn’t let him. Was it a cheap shot? I don’t believe so. Jordan appeared to lower his shoulder, but guys do that all the time. It’s easy to look at the outcome and then look back at the replay and conclude that Jordan came after him. But if Bennett escapes injury, maybe we’re not even thinking about this. It’s a shame he got hurt, but I don’t think there was anything dirty about the play.

Not that this is how you want to see it happen, but the bright side is that Wiki Gonzalez has been playing well since emerging from the doghouse and we’ll also get our first look at Michael Rivera.

Adam Eaton was tough to hit last night but had trouble finding the strike zone. In what is becoming a recurring theme for this year’s rotation, he was not nearly as efficient as he needs to be to succeed. Eaton threw 111 pitches in just six innings. Contrast with Greg Maddux (never a fair comparison, I realize), who used just 59 to get the same number of outs in his most recent start. These guys need to get outs earlier in the count. It will help the bullpen, it will help themselves.

And now I’ve settled down to the point where I can talk about Jaret Wright without going completely ballistic. But that pitch he threw to Todd Hundley was terrible. And is it just me, or did Wright have a play on the ball Daryle Ward hit back through the box? Damn Jordan, fouling off all those pitches from Old Man River. Okay, maybe I can’t talk about this yet. That was really a terrible pitch. Wright had Hundley 1-2, and hung a breaking ball. Then he gave up a single to reliever Troy Brohawn, which allowed Eric Gagne to warm up and come in to close the game.

And what’s up with Gagne’s strike zone? Do all umpires turn into Eric Gregg when he pitches? Not to take anything away from Gagne, who is a fine pitcher, but if he gets calls like he did last night, nobody’s ever going to hit him. Ever.

It’s starting to fall apart. Think I’ll stop now.

Places to Go

While you’re waiting for the next exciting installment (aka, Geoff loses it entirely), why not check these out:

  • Eddie Kranepool Society — Stephen discusses the Mets and, like the rest of us, is baffled by Rey Ordonez’ offensive outburst in Tampa.
  • Syntax of Things — Jeff ponders the nature of blogging and, well, he’s just getting started so you’ll have to go check it out for yourself.

Go. You’ll be glad you did…

Padres Take Two Out of Three from Rockies

Monday, April 14, 2003

Man, there’s nothing I’d rather do on a Sunday than fill out a tax return. Talk about fun.

On the bright side, the Padres took two out of three from the Rockies. Gotta like that! Here’s a real quick recap of the series.

Game 11: 4/11/03

San Diego 6, Colorado 4 (ESPN)

The Good

  • More good hitting. Mark Kotsay and Rondell White had two hits each, and Gary Bennett (!) had three.
  • Brian Lawrence worked six strong innings, allowing two runs on five hits and an uncharacteristically high three walks. He fanned eight, had a nice 4:1 GB:FB ratio, and even knocked his first big-league homer.
  • Brandon Villafuerte nailed down his second save, striking out three of the six batters he faced.

The Bad

  • Ramon Vazquez didn’t get on base. Hey, it had to happen.
  • The bullpen coughed up a couple runs in the eighth.

The Ugly

  • Lawrence taking Darren Oliver yard on an 0-2 pitch. That’s unforgivable. Including the homer, Lawrence is now hitting .113/.155/.186 in 97 at-bats over his career.

Game 12: 4/12/03

Didn’t get to see this one, so not much analysis here.

Colorado 3, San Diego 2 (ESPN)

The Good

  • A hit and two walks from Vazquez.
  • Three knocks for White.
  • Another strong outing by Adam Eaton.

The Bad

  • Xavier Nady struck out twice and grounded it into a double play in four trips to the plate.
  • Villafuerte surrendered a solo blast to Preston Wilson in the top of the ninth that turned out to be the game winner.

Game 13: 4/13/03

San Diego 6, Colorado 2 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Two hits and a walk (against a lefty!) from Vazquez. That’s 12 walks in 13 games and a .429 OBP for those of you keeping score at home.
  • Two hits each from Kotsay and the suddenly resurgent Wiki Gonzalez.
  • Rondell White launched a towering two-run homer in the seventh off a hanging breaking ball from Todd Jones to give the Pads some breathing room. After a slow start, White has started to pick up the pace of late. Here’s to his health.
  • Nice work by Jaret Wright. He worked two scoreless frames, retiring six of the seven batters he faced and knocking a full-count double to the right-center gap against Jones in the seventh. Surprisingly good stroke for someone who hasn’t batted much.

The Bad

  • This is nitpicking but I don’t know where else to put it. Nady struck out on a full-count breaking ball from Jones in the seventh. It was a terrible pitch, well out of the zone. Nady never should have swung at it and, judging from his response, he knows it. So in that respect, this isn’t all bad. Nady is going to make some mistakes. But I’m betting come July, if he sees a similar pitch in a similar situation, he’ll do a better job of recognizing it and taking the walk.
  • Sean Burroughs is back but struggling. There are concerns that his throwing motion is contributing to his shoulder woes.

The Ugly

  • It will be interesting to see how patient the Padres are with Oliver Perez. He’s going to have to get more than 4 1/3 innings out of 100 pitches (only 48 strikes) if he’s to stick in the big leagues. Here’s a breakdown on Perez’ at-bats yesterday:
    Pitches  No. of
     thrown  batters
    ----------------
       8        2
       6        4
       5        6
       4        5
       3        1
       2        2
       1        2

    And a quick glance at the bigger picture isn’t much more encouraging. Here are some numbers from each of his first three starts this year:

    Pit Str Inn
    -----------
     87  45 4.0
     90  57 5.0
    100  48 4.1

    Perez is averaging 20.8 pitches per inning, and only 54% of his offerings have been strikes. That’s not going to get it done.

All in all, it was a good weekend for the Pads. They took a series from a division rival, and now they get a day off before taking on the Dodgers in LA on Tuesday.

Today: Off.

Game 10

Yuck. That was terrible.

San Francisco 15, San Diego 11 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Everybody but Mark Kotsay had at least one hit, and even he drew a walk. Six guys had two or more hits.
  • Fifth multi-hit game for Xavier Nady this year.
  • Homers from Ryan Klesko and Rondell White.

The Bad

  • The bullpen allowed eight runs. In their defense, they did have to pitch nine innings. If ever a team needed an off-day, it’s the Padres right now.
  • Pretty much anything else related to pitching.

The Ugly

  • Dennis Tankersley. Seven batters, seven runs, no outs. He threw 21 balls and just 12 strikes. I feel bad for the kid: "For some stupid reason, I just keep making the same stupid mistakes, which I can’t keep doing." This guy needs a healthy dose of confidence, which means he needs to be put in a position to succeed, i.e., stuck at Triple-A and left there for a while.
  • The fact that Clay Condrey, scratched from the start due to injury, was allowed to work in relief after Tankersley imploded. Either the kid is hurt or he isn’t. What the heck is going on here?

More on the game:

Today: Off, thank goodness.

Game 9

Just a thought, but with a runner on first, why not pitch to Barry Bonds out of a full windup? Seriously, most starters are more comfortable working out of a windup. And if the guy on first takes second, you walk Bonds, which was a likely outcome anyway.

San Diego 9, San Francisco 4 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Rondell White showed signs of life, leading off the seventh with a bomb to deep left that gave the Pads the lead. Here’s hoping this is the start of something for him.
  • Xavier Nady doubled, singled twice, and a walked in five at-bats. The one time up he didn’t get on base, he worked a 3-1 count and took Damian Moss to the wall in dead center. The scary thing is, it almost looked like Nady hit it off the end of his bat.
  • Ramon Vazquez had two knocks against southpaws. Not much, but you have to start somewhere.
  • Jake Peavy, despite pedestrian stuff and spotty location, battled to pick up the victory. He made pitches when he had to, and that changeup looked real good. He also swings the bat real well. Wouldn’t surprise me to see Bochy use him as a pinch-hitter at some point.
  • Luther Hackman was awesome. I never thought I’d write that about him, but he was. Retired all six batters he faced. And his sequence to Bonds in the seventh was a thing of beauty. With one on and one out, Bonds stepped up to the plate representing the tying run. Everybody expected Jesse Orosco to come trotting in; after all, Bonds was the reason the Pads signed him to guaranteed money, right? Well, not last night. Hackman proceeds to fall behind Bonds, 3-0, prompting a chorus of boos. Then he throws a fastball at the knees, outer half. Strike one. Gets Bonds to foul off a slider down and in. Then goes back outside and induces Bonds to hit a lazy fly ball to left. Impressive. Heck, stunning might be a better word for it.

The Bad

  • Eleven runners left on base. I’m nitpicking. When you score nine runs, you can live with this.
  • I can’t think of anything else. Everyone contributed. Eleven Padres had hits. The bullpen pitched well. What’s not to like?

The Ugly

  • Bruce Bochy trots Peavy out to start the seventh after the kid has already thrown 107 pitches. Weren’t we supposed to learn something from the Adam Eaton experience?
  • A run-scoring balk call reversed? It was the right thing to do, but man that looks bad.

More on the game:

And check this out: John Sickels talks about Padres outfielder Xavier Nady (ESPN.com). He’s not going to hit like this all year, but he sure will be fun to watch.

Today: Dennis Tankersley makes his 2003 Padre debut vs Ryan Jensen at PacBell. Game time, 12:30 PM. Television: none.

Game 8

Tuesday, April 8, 2003

Back to the teal color scheme. I had to change it, because I was growing disturbingly fond of the mustard and hamburger motif. Not good.

I didn’t catch yesterday’s game. Doesn’t seem like I missed much other than more abuse at the hands of the Giants, so we’ll be brief this morning.

San Francisco 7, San Diego 4 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Sean Burroughs: two plate appearances, two walks.
  • Lou Merloni: three hits; we love this guy.
  • Xavier Nady draws another walk.
  • Wiki Gonzalez pokes his head out of the doghouse and knocks in three runs.

The Bad

  • Burroughs: leaves the game with a strained right shoulder; uh-oh, here we go again.
  • Ryan Klesko and Rondell White: not much production from the heart of the lineup.
  • Oliver Perez went from missing the plate to catching too much of it: three bombs in five innings. We keep telling ourselves it’s early, but his lack of experience keeps nagging at us.

The Ugly

  • Second straight game, 12 runners left on base. Can’t get away with that against good teams.

Tonight: Jake Peavy vs Damian Moss at PacBell. Game time, 7 PM. Television: Channel 4.

Addenda, Corrigenda, and Other Latin Words

  • In yesterday’s column, I mistakenly noted that Monday’s game would be a 7 PM. It was, in fact, at 1 PM. Regardless of the fact that I may have saved you some grief in the process, I apologize for the error.
  • I forgot to mention probably the oddest thing that happened at Saturday night’s Storm game. At one point, a bunch of alarms sounded and lights flashed, causing the game to be delayed for a minute or two while everyone tried to figure out what the heck was going on. Turns out the ribs were on overdrive at Randy Jones barbecue and had set off the stadium smoke alarm.
  • I also neglected to mention one of the coolest things about Sunday’s Padre game. Somewhere around the sixth or seventh inning, an image of a bunch of Marines sitting just above us in left field was displayed on the giant scoreboard. Standing ovation. I’m not the most overtly patriotic guy in the world, but it was awesome. Regardless of one’s opinion of the current situation in Iraq, these kids deserve ultimate respect for putting their lives on the line to get the job done.

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

Padres Take Two Out of Three from Dodgers

Monday, April 7, 2003

Okay, this just rocks:

What a cool gig that would be. Anyway, here’s a real quick look at the games over the weekend.

Game 5

San Diego 4, Los Angeles 2 (ESPN)

  • Clay Condrey’s line looked better than he did. With his stuff, he has to have pinpoint control. Otherwise things could get ugly.
  • Xavier Nady hit a laser shot to left to lead off the sixth. Haven’t seen a ball leave the yard that fast since Eric Davis in his prime.
  • More very good work from the bullpen, including Brandon Villafuerte’s first save of the season.
  • Condrey got his first big-league hit and scored the Pads’ first run. Unfortunately, he suffered a hip flexor/groin strain in the process.

More coverage:

Game 6

San Diego 3, Los Angeles 0 (ESPN)

I was in Elsinore Saturday night and didn’t catch any of the Padre game, so I’ll leave this to others. Gotta like six walks in six games from Ramon Vazquez, though. And how about a save from Old Man River?

Game 7

Well, it wasn’t a sweep but it was a heckuva series against the Dodgers. I was at the Sunday game, so I’ll give a little commentary on this one.

Los Angeles 4, San Diego 3 (ESPN)

The Good

  • Three singles and a walk from Xavier Nady. All of the hits were grounders through the infield. The one to lead off the second was my favorite; it was a solid shot to past second base on an 0-2 count.
  • Adam Eaton. Very efficient (97 pitches, 64 strikes over 7 innings). Except for the second inning, when he threw 27 pitches and allowed three runs, he worked ahead in the count most of the game. I’m not sure he’s all the way back yet; he’s still having trouble putting guys away. But he looked good yesterday. And, man, can he play some defense.
  • Mike Matthews. How did he end up on the waiver wire? This guy has a live arm and throws strikes.
  • Lou Merloni. He hustles, he plays defense. Everybody screams "Lou" whenever he does anything. Gotta love him.

The Bad

  • Rondell White is seriously pressing. The Padres had a chance to break the game open in the seventh. White came up with the bases loaded and one out against Paul Shuey. Struck out on a 2-2 slider that bounced. Couldn’t Bubba Trammell have done that?
  • Ryan Klesko isn’t right. His walk in the seventh after White’s strikeout ensured that the Padres scored a run, but otherwise he had trouble making solid contact. It’s got to be frustrating for him right now.

The Ugly

  • More wasted opportunities. Can’t leave 12 men on base. Bases loaded with one out and the 3-4-5 hitters due has to net more than one run.

All in all, a good series. Now here’s hoping for some payback in San Francisco.

Tonight: Oliver Perez vs Jason Schmidt at PacBell. Game time, 7 PM. Television: Channel 4.

Minor Leagues

Made it to my first Storm game Saturday night, against the High Desert Mavericks. Their one big name is Brad Nelson, rated by BA as the Brewers’ top prospect, which is kind of like being the hottest chick in the trailer park.

At any rate, it was cold at the Diamond, at least by my thin-blooded SoCal standards. Japanese left-hander Nobuaki Yoshida, who had trouble putting the ball past Midwest League hitters last year, got the start for the Storm and it wasn’t pretty.

But before we go any further, check out this line score and see if you notice anything odd:

       R  H  E
Mavs   7  7  2
Storm  4  2  2

Not really? Okay, here’s a hint: This is what it looked like when High Desert came to bat in the second inning. What’s really amazing is that the game ended up going 11 innings, with a total of 18 runs being scored. Yep, 11 runs in the first, 7 in the final 10. Very strange game.

A few observations:

  • Nelson looks legit. I heard a couple scouts question his ability to pull the ball, but it’s tough to argue with four hits and a walk in six trips to the plate.
  • Freddy Guzman is still unbelievably fast. I don’t know that he’ll ever amount to much, but it is a genuine pleasure to watch him go from first to third.
  • Jackpot, the giant rabbit mascot who comes out from behind the right field fence and dances when the Storm score a run, was MIA.
  • Josh Barfield doesn’t impress me with the glove at all. He committed two costly errors, appeared to get bad breaks on the ball, and on more than one occasion double clutched on routine throws to first. He did an okay job turning the double play. It’s only one game, but he didn’t look real comfortable out there.
  • Joseph Hastings can put a charge into the ball. He’s not on any prospect lists because of his age and his, um, limited defensive utility. But the dude can hit. He knocked a bomb to dead center and got under another one that was hit every bit as hard.
  • Yoshida didn’t have much. Of the 19 batters he faced, 10 reached base. He uncorked a wild pitch and balked in a run. Everything that could’ve gone wrong for him pretty much did.
  • Teddy, the black pot-belly pig who brings out new baseballs to the plate umpire between innings, apparently has been replaced by Casper, a pink pot-belly pig. Casper showed enthusiasm, but sometimes appeared confused and on at least one occasion relieved himself on the field. He’s new; give him time.
  • Southpaw Geoffrey Jones, despite the big strikeout numbers at Ft. Wayne last season, is a junkballer. He comes low three-quarters with a mid-80s fastball and a breaking pitch that he uses to backdoor right-handed hitters.
  • Mike Wodnicki, acquired in the Brett Tomko deal, is being used out of the bullpen. He worked two perfect innings. Someone mentioned that he’s inconsistent with his arm slot. I wouldn’t have noticed that on my own, but once it was pointed out to me, it was pretty obvious that sometimes he comes three-quarters and sometimes straight over the top.
  • Jon Benick ended the game with a two-out, two-strike, two-run homer to right-center. Benick is not a prospect, but he can hit a little.

This Storm team is not as loaded with prospects as the 2001 and 2002 versions were, but there are some guys to watch. And the Diamond is such a great place to spend an evening. I highly recommend it to anyone within 90 minutes of the park.

In other minor-league news:

Game 4

I don’t know about y’all, but I’m real glad it’s Friday. It’s been a week. But hey, the Pads finally won a game. Woo-hoo!

Before we get into that, I thought I’d point those of you who haven’t yet read this to an excellent Q and A by San Diego’s own Craig Elsten of Padre Director of Scouting Bill Gayton. This is an outstanding read.

Only caught a little of yesterday’s game, so I’ll let others do most of the talking.

San Diego 6, Los Angeles 1 (ESPN)

The Good

  • First win of the season.
  • Jake Peavy: 11 strikeouts.
  • Mark Loretta: three hits; Mark Kotsay, Xavier Nady, and Gary Bennett: two apiece; Mike Bynum’s first big-league hit.
  • Four shutout innings from the bullpen.

The Bad

  • Second straight game the Padres’ starter has averaged 22 pitches an inning.
  • Nine innings from the bullpen in less than 24 hours.
  • Four errors.

The Ugly

  • Camouflage uniforms. I hate to say this, because I think it’s great that the Pads honor the military, but I just wish they could find a different way to do it.
  • Peavy’s tumble off the mound following a pitch to Todd Hundley in the fourth. That was scary.

More on the game:

Tonight: Darren Dreifort vs Clay Condrey at the Q. Game time, 7 PM. Television: Channel 4.