IGD: Padres vs Cardinals (20 May 08)

Greg MadduxPadres (16-30) vs Cards (27-20)
Greg Maddux vs Joel Pineiro
7:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 187
MLB, B-R

If the Padres win tonight, and the Rockies can beat San Francisco, we’ll be tied for fourth place in the NL West. Woo-hoo!

Shadow Puppets

For those of you who might have “missed” Monday night’s game, here is a quick recap:

  • The Cardinals scored their first runs of the game on a fly ball to deep left that Scott Hairston dropped into the stands for a two-run homer.
  • They scored their next run on a bases-loaded HBP to Yadier Molina — yes, that Yadier Molina.
  • They scored their next run on a homer by Cesar Izturis — yes, that Cesar Izturis.
  • Then Albert Pujols homered, which is fine because, well, he’s Albert Pujols and that’s what he does.
  • Then Todd Wellemeyer drove in a run — yes, that Todd — wait, who the heck is Todd Wellemeyer?
  • The game ended.

I see the white flag. I’m not prepared to acknowledge it just yet, but I see it. My faith in the Padres despite all available evidence pointing me elsewhere has been contingent upon the team suddenly reversing course and not sucking. Well, I’m still waiting for them to hold up their end of the deal.

The reality is that very soon I’ll have to re-read some posts from 2002 or 2003 and figure out what we used to talk about back when the actual games weren’t worth discussing. Maybe I’ll break out some shadow puppets. I do a mean dove…

* * *
In other news, Jake Peavy has been placed on the 15-day disabled list with a troublesome right elbow. An MRI on Monday revealed no ligament damage, which is good news. As I said in yesterday’s IGD, any on-field outcome against the Cardinals on Monday was secondary to Peavy’s health.

There is no timetable for Peavy’s return, although Tom Krasovic speculates that the 2007 NL Cy Young Award winner could miss up to six weeks. As far as I’m concerned, with the way this season is going, Peavy should take his sweet time and make sure everything is okay before returning. There’s no call for misplaced heroism here.

Left-hander Joe Thatcher takes Peavy’s spot on the roster. Thatcher, who started the season in San Diego, was optioned to Triple-A Portland just nine days ago due to extreme lack of effectiveness. Great, he’ll fit right in here.

* * *
I’ve got more thoughts on the Padres over at Viva El Birdos. Read ‘em if you’re so inclined…

Padres Farm Report (20 May 08)

Triple-ATucson 5, Portland 2

Craig Stansberry (SS): 1-for-3, BB, E
Chase Headley: 1-for-4
Brian Myrow: 0-for-4
Michael Barrett: 1-for-2
Chip Ambres (CF): 1-for-4, HR
Matt Antonelli: 0-for-3, E
Nick Hundley: 0-for-2 (didn’t start)
Josh Banks: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 8 SO
Clay Hensley: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 1 SO
Jared Wells: 1 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 0 SO

Good to see Barrett and Hensley back in action… The Beavers led, 2-1, after seven but fell apart at the end.

Double-AFrisco 4, San Antonio 1

Drew Macias: 0-for-4
Chad Huffman (DH): 2-for-4, HR
Kyle Blanks: 0-for-4
Seth Johnston (3B): 0-for-4, E (11)
Craig Cooper: 1-for-3, 2B
Colt Morton: 1-for-3
Steve Garrison: 5.2 IP, 6 H, 4 R, 2 HR, 2 BB, 5 SO
Neil Jamison: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 3 SO (17 pitches, 15 strikes)

High-ALake Elsinore 4, Inland Empire 1

Javis Diaz (DH): 1-for-4, BB, SB
Cedric Hunter: 2-for-5, HR
Eric Sogard: 0-for-5
Mitch Canham: 2-for-4, 2B
Kellen Kulbacki: 1-for-3, 2B
Rayner Contreras: 2-for-4, 2B
Nathan Culp: 6 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 7 SO, HBP
Justin Hampson: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO

Hunter goes yard for the second straight night — wind blowing 14 mph from left to right field, which is where the homer went… Sogard in a bit of a tailspin: he’s 8-for-41 in his last 10 games, with no extra-base hits… Strong outing from Culp… Hampson makes his 2008 debut.

Low-AFort Wayne 3, Great Lakes 2

Luis Durango (CF): 2-for-5
Andrew Cumberland (SS): 1-for-4, BB
Justin Baum: 1-for-5, 2B
Yefri Carvajal: 2-for-5
Shane Buschini (DH): 2-for-4, 2 2B
Wynn Pelzer: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 3 SO (10 GO)

Pelzer continues to impress. He’s becoming one of my favorites down at Fort Wayne.

IGD: Padres vs Cardinals (19 May 08)

Wil LedezmaPadres (16-29) vs Cards (26-20)
Wil Ledezma vs Todd Wellemeyer
7:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 187
MLB, B-R

It is difficult to remain optimistic when there is no obvious reason for hope. Even if I continue to believe that the Padres’ true level of ability is 85 wins, that gives them 61 wins the rest of the way, which puts them at 77-85 to end the season. Obviously that doesn’t fit anyone’s definition of a contender.

Assuming the Padres continue on their present course (or even improve some) and finish with their first sub-.500 record in the Petco Park era, management will have some difficult questions on its hands: Which kids are ready, and when do we give them a shot? Which veterans might have some value to teams that have an eye toward post-season play (hint: it’s a pretty short list)? And the most important, from a systemic standpoint: How did we so badly misjudge this team’s capabilities, and what lessons can we learn from the experience?

Some problems are obvious, especially in hindsight. But others are not so easy to answer. Here’s an excerpt from an interview I did with Larry Borowsky at Viva El Birdos:

I can’t accept that Josh Bard and Khalil Greene, who are (or should be) in their primes, are this bad. I don’t see any reason for Greene to hit like Jeff Blauser or Jay Bell at age 27 and Rey Ordonez at age 28. There’s just no room for that in my view of the way things work in this world.

As Bjork once said (when she was still with the Sugarcubes), “This wasn’t supposed to happen.”

So it’s the middle of May, and already I’m thinking about how challenging the coming winter will be. I shouldn’t be thinking about these things so early in the season, but the team is giving me precious little choice.

Meanwhile, tonight’s scheduled starter, Jake Peavy, is out with a sore elbow. Quoth The Franchise:

It’s not normal soreness, which is why we’re going to have it looked at. It’s been about for three or four starts now that I’ve felt a little something. It’s sore all the time.

Ledezma makes his second start of the season Monday night in Peavy’s place. I honestly am good with any on-field outcome so long as Peavy is healthy. The Padres could lose 20-0 tonight, and if Peavy’s MRI shows no structural damage, I’ll call it a victory. That’s how bad the season has gotten.

Series Preview: Larry Borowsky Talks Cardinals

After a long and miserable road trip, the Padres return home and try to remain relevant in 2008. Their first opponent is the St. Louis Cardinals, who visit Petco Park for three games starting Monday night. To learn a little more about the Cards, I chatted with Larry Borowsky of the excellent Viva El Birdos.

Ducksnorts: Last year was the Cardinals’ first losing season of the century; this year the team is off to a strong start. What has changed, and do you see them remaining in contention?

Borowsky: Aside from the obvious changes (no [Walt] Jocketty, no [Jim] Edmonds, no [Scott] Rolen, no [David] Eckstein, etc.), the big difference has been the performance of the starting rotation. This year’s group is as rag-tag as last year’s — it includes two guys ([Joel] Pineiro and [Todd] Wellemeyer) who were DFA’d last year, and a third ([Kyle] Lohse) who nobody wanted until mid-March — but this year’s group has pitched pretty well. The Cardinal rotation leads the league in innings per start and is fourth in ERA and in opponent OPS. Another key change, related to the first: the Cardinal defense is vastly improved. They’ve upgraded significantly in the outfield and at shortstop, and Troy Glaus has been quite good at third base (the one position where they figured to take a hit). Offensively, their biggest change since last year is a quantum leap in patience: the 2008 Cards lead the league in walks by a wide margin, while last year’s club finished 13th in the league in that category. Will they stay in contention? I think they’re capable of it; the odds are against them actually winning anything, but simply playing meaningful games in August and (may it be so) September would be a big achievement for this team. At the outset of the season, their best-case scenario was to hang in there for the first 100 games or so, avoid getting buried, and then try to make a run at the playoffs once Chris Carpenter rejoins the team in August or thereabouts. So far, so good — the team’s 2 games out of first, and Carpenter is still on schedule to return at or just after the All-Star break.

Ducksnorts: Albert Pujols is supposed to be hurt. Why isn’t he acting like it?

Borowsky: Because he’s not human? …Actually, the injury (to his right elbow, the same ailment that has bothered him since 2003) may be affecting his power stroke. Albert’s groundball rate went up sharply in 2007 and is up again in 2008, and his isolated power the last two years is down about 45 points off his career average. The elbow might have something to do with that, or it might simply be that El Hombre simply never sees a pitch to hit anymore; he’s on pace for about 160 walks. He only had 71 extra-base hits last year, a career low; he’s only on pace for about 65 this year. But he has traditionally been a second-half hitter, and in any given month he’s capable of slugging .750.

Ducksnorts: Rick Ankiel is one of the most fascinating stories in baseball I can recall. For those of us who haven’t seen him since he was uncorking wild pitches in the playoffs some years ago, talk a little about his game.

Borowsky: Well, as you’d expect he can make some eye-popping throws from the outfield. A couple weeks ago in Colorado he nailed Willy Taveras trying to take third on a sac fly; then later in the same game he chucked it 300 feet on the fly from the centerfield wall to third base to nail another runner trying to leg out a triple… ironically, the throw was a perfect strike. It still kind of breaks your heart when you see that arm and think about what might have been. As a hitter Ankiel is very much a work in progress — few people realize that he only had about 700 minor-league at-bats after converting full-time to the outfield, and only about 500 at-bats above Class A. He’s still just learning the strike zone. At Triple-A last year he walked 25 times in about 420 plate appearances; this year for St. Louis he already has 20 walks in about 175 plate appearances, including one that came at the end of a 17-pitch at-bat. Some of us Cardinal fans were worried he’d hack at everything and put up a .270 OBP; he’s currently at .370. I think we’d settle for .335.

Ducksnorts: Ryan Ludwick? Todd Wellemeyer? Seriously, how do you guys do that?

Borowsky: In Ludwick’s case, the Cards didn’t really do anything; they just gave him a chance to play, and his talent finally showed up. Ludwick has always been a quality player, but a couple of untimely injuries and poor play in very limited big-league trials got him unfairly labeled a failure. He’s always been a good hitter — not quite this good, but an .850 OPS season has always been within his range. In Wellemeyer’s case, I think Dave Duncan deserves a lot of credit. He got the guy to throw strikes, which he never could do before — his career BB/9 was well over 5.0 before this season. I don’t know if Duncan changed his mechanics, changed his repertoire, or simply changed his mind-set — maybe some combination thereof. You’ll see him pitch tonight — so far this season he has missed a lot of bats and induced a lot of weak contact.

Ducksnorts: One guy we kind of fantasized about for center field over the winter (before you dumped Jim Edmonds on us) was Brian Barton. I know he’s not out there every day, but how has he looked?

Borowsky: He hit a triple to right-center early this season, and watching him sail around the bases was a joy; the guy’s feet don’t touch the ground. He has a good eye at the plate, seems to pick up the ball well and can lay off a pitcher’s pitch, leading to a decent walks total. But lately teams have stopped trying to set the guy up and have simply been blowing fastballs by him. He has a weak throwing arm, and despite the great speed he hasn’t stolen a base. He’s got clear potential, but like most Rule Vs he’s not quite ready for the big leagues. The Cardinals like him; if they ultimately decide they can’t keep him on the MLB roster, I imagine they’ll try to work out a trade with the Indians so they can keep him in the organization.

Ducksnorts: What’s the deal with Anthony Reyes, and if the Cardinals can’t fix him, would they consider trading him to… oh, I don’t know, the Padres?

Borowsky: Fix him? The Cardinals broke him. They changed his mechanics and his repertoire (costing him 3-4 mph off his fastball), jerked him back and forth between the big leagues and the minors, and expressed very clearly (in word and deed) that they didn’t believe in him. He reinstalled his old mechanics this year, and his velocity is back, but his confidence isn’t; he’s now getting knocked around in Triple-A, which he dominated for the last three seasons. A new organization might be able to salvage him, but the repair at this point will need to be as much psychological as physical. The Cards are actively trying to trade him, but they haven’t come to grips with the fact that Reyes is ding-n-dent merchandise; they’re still asking full price for the guy, and they’re not going to get it.

Ducksnorts: T.S. Eliot or Vincent Price?

Borowsky: The Abominable Dr. Phibes rules.

There you have it. Thanks again to Larry for swinging by and chatting with us. Here’s hoping the series is entertaining and totally free of abominations…

Padres Farm Report (19 May 08)

For the draft hounds among you, Baseball America has released its first mock draft. It has the Padres taking Arizona State first baseman Ike Davis at #23… because if there’s one organizational weakness, it’s at first base.

Sigh. Nothing against Davis, but I hope this is very, very wrong.

Triple-APortland 11, Las Vegas 2

Craig Stansberry (SS): 1-for-6
Chase Headley: 3-for-4, 2B, HR, BB, HBP
Brian Myrow: 2-for-4, 2 2B, BB
Nick Hundley: 3-for-4, 2 2B, BB
Will Venable: 2-for-5
Matt Antonelli: 1-for-4, BB
Josh Geer: 6 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 HR, 4 BB, 2 SO, 1-for-4, 2B
Carlos Guevara: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 1 SO (8 pitches, 7 strikes)
Mauro Zarate: 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 1 SO

Every starter had at least one hit. Geer’s three RBI led the team… Rule V draftee Guevara made his season debut after starting 2008 on the disabled list.

More coverage at the Portland Oregonian.

Double-AFrisco 2, San Antonio 0 (1st game); San Antonio 8, Frisco 0 (2nd game)

Chad Huffman: 0-for-1, 2 BB
Kyle Blanks: 0-for-6, BB
Colt Morton: 0-for-3
Seth Johnston (3B): 1-for-6, BB
Craig Cooper (RF, LF): 2-for-7
Drew Macias: 1-for-4, 2B
Jose Lobaton: 2-for-3, HR, BB
Matt Buschmann: 6 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 2 SO
Manny Ayala: 4 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 5 SO

The first game was a seven-inning no-hitter. The second was a seven-inning one-hitter.

High-ALake Elsinore 8, Inland Empire 7

Javis Diaz: 1-for-5, SB
Cedric Hunter: 2-for-5, HR
Kellen Kulbacki (DH): 0-for-2, 2 BB
Rayner Contreras: 0-for-2, 2 BB
Mitch Canham: 2-for-4, BB
Drew Miller: 5 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 1 HR, 2 BB, 5 SO

Someone was asking about Hunter’s power the other day. Well, there’s his first homer of the season. Box score says the wind was blowing 8 mph out to left, but Hunter’s blast was to right, so you can forget about that.

Low-AFort Wayne 8, South Bend 5

Luis Durango (DH): 2-for-5, HR
Andrew Cumberland (SS): 1-for-4, BB, SB
Justin Baum: 3-for-4, BB, E
Yefri Carvajal: 3-for-4, 2 2B, BB
Felix Carrasco: 1-for-3, BB, E
Mat Latos: 5.2 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 3 HR, 0 BB, 5 SO
Geoff Vandel: 0.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 0 SO

Durango homered? That’s just weird. Dude is listed at 5’10″, 145 lbs. Actually he hit two last year at Eugene, so maybe it’s not so weird. Okay, the box score shows wind blowing 20 mph out to right, which is where Durango hit his… That’s also where all three bombs Latos served up went. In fact, five home runs were struck in this game, all to right field.

More coverage at OurSports Central.

IGD: Padres @ Mariners (18 May 08)

Padres (16-28) @ Mariners (17-27)
Shawn Estes vs Felix Hernandez
1:10 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 181
MLB, B-R

Seven useless facts about Estes:

  1. His first name is Aaron.
  2. He shares a birthday with Jerry Morales, a member of the 1969 Padres.
  3. The Mariners selected him with the 11th pick overall in 1991, three picks after the Padres took Joey Hamilton and two before the Cleveland Indians nabbed Manny Ramirez.
  4. Deion Sanders was the center fielder behind him in his first big-league start.
  5. He wore #36 on first arriving in the big leagues, but soon switched to #55, which he has donned since 1996.
  6. He once was traded for ex-Padre Desi Relaford.
  7. He later was traded for ex-Padre Brady Clark.

Padres Farm Report (18 May 08)

Triple-ALas Vegas 10, Portland 3

Craig Stansberry (SS): 1-for-3, SF
Chase Headley: 0-for-4
Brian Myrow: 2-for-4
Chip Ambres: 1-for-4, SB
Will Venable: 1-for-4
Matt Antonelli: 2-for-4
Wade LeBlanc: 2.1 IP, 6 H, 6 R, 1 HR, 2 BB, 1 SO
Dirk Hayhurst: 2.2 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 2 HR, 1 BB, 4 SO
Paul Abraham: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 3 SO, WP
Joe Thatcher: 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 2 SO, WP

LeBlanc’s last five starts have been disastrous. His totals over that stretch: 18.2 IP, 35 H, 12 BB, 9 SO, 13.50 ERA… Rare poor outing for Hayhurst… Remember when we projected 58 innings of 2.86 ERA for Thatcher this year? Yeah, those were good times.

Double-AFrisco 6, San Antonio 5

Drew Macias: 3-for-4, 2B, BB
Chad Huffman: 1-for-4, BB
Kyle Blanks (DH): 1-for-3, BB
Seth Johnston (3B): 2-for-4, 2B
Craig Cooper: 0-for-3, BB
Colt Morton: 1-for-4, 2B
Stephen Faris: 7 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 5 SO, 3 HBP

Got a request to track Faris. The dude will abide…

High-AInland Empire 8, Lake Elsinore 7

Javis Diaz: 3-for-5, SB
Eric Sogard: 1-for-4, BB
Mitch Canham: 2-for-4, BB
Kellen Kulbacki: 2-for-5
Cory Luebke: 5 IP, 8 H, 5 R, 1 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO

Why are these “polished” college kids getting smacked around in A-ball? I understand that not everyone develops at the same rate, but maybe Fort Wayne would have been a better destination for Luebke to start the season.

Low-ASouth Bend 5, Fort Wayne 2

Luis Durango (DH): 2-for-4, BB
Bradley Chalk: 0-for-3
Andrew Cumberland (SS): 1-for-5
Felix Carrasco: 0-for-4
Yefri Carvajal (LF-CF): 1-for-4, 2B
Shane Buschini: 2-for-3, BB
Jeremy McBryde: 4 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 4 SO
Geoff Vandel: 2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 1 SO

Cumberland batting third? That might not be the best way to score runs… After five straight games without a strikeout, Carrasco reverted to his usual ways, fanning three times on Saturday… Carvajal played the final three innings in center field.

IGD: Padres @ Mariners (17 May 08)

Randy WolfPadres (16-27) @ Mariners (16-27)
Randy Wolf vs Erik Bedard
7:10 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 181
MLB, B-R

Nice job by Trevor Hoffman on Friday night. For those who remain unclear on the dangers of judging a man based on an eight-game sample, here’s a clue:

Trevor Hoffman’s Last 24 Games
  G IP H HR BB SO ERA BA OBP SLG
Statistics are courtesy of Baseball-Reference and are through games of May 15, 2008.
8/28/07 – 9/25/07 8 8 6 0 1 6 1.13 .207 .233 .241
9/28/07 – 4/11/08 8 7 12 1 5 10 12.86 .375 .447 .688
4/13/08 – 5/16/08 8 8 5 1 1 10 1.13 .179 .207 .321

And, no, you don’t want to go reaching any conclusions based solely on this most recent stretch either.

Padres Farm Report (17 May 08)

Triple-APortland 3, Las Vegas 2

Craig Stansberry (SS): 0-for-4 (.221/.336/.369, 21 BB, 23 SO)
Chase Headley: 1-for-4, HR (.288/.355/.484, 15 BB, 42 SO)
Brian Myrow: 1-for-3, 2B, BB (.346/.473/.569, 31 BB, 31 SO)
Chip Ambres: 1-for-4, 3B (.273/.366/.515, 19 BB, 30 SO, 4 SB)
Will Venable: 0-for-3, BB (.286/.330/.495, 5 BB, 17 SO)
Nick Hundley: 0-for-3, E (.184/.257/.347, 10 BB, 19 SO)
Matt Antonelli: 1-for-3 (.186/.325/.333, 25 BB, 25 SO)
Enrique Gonzalez: 5 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 3 BB, 4 SO (5.19 ERA, 8.31 K/9, .288 BAA)
Mauro Zarate: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 3 SO (7.15 ERA, 9.53 K/9, .378 BAA)
Jared Wells: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 0 SO (5.00 ERA, 7.00 K/9, .242 BAA)

Double-ASan Antonio 8, Frisco 4

Drew Macias: 1-for-4, 2B, BB (.233/.335/.393, 22 BB, 31 SO)
Chad Huffman: 2-for-4, 2B, BB (.340/.431/.497, 24 BB, 28 SO)
Kyle Blanks: 2-for-4, HBP (.307/.401/.443, 22 BB, 15 SO)
Seth Johnston (3B): 1-for-3, 2B, HBP, SH (.286/.350/.521, 16 BB, 30 SO)
Craig Cooper: 2-for-5 (.301/.364/.434, 11 BB, 28 SO)
Jose Lobaton: 0-for-5 (.224/.273/.265, 8 BB, 22 SO)
Will Inman: 4 IP, 7 H, 4 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 6 SO (2.45 ERA, 9.44 K/9, .207 BAA)
Jonathan Ellis: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 4 SO, HBP (3.86 ERA, 9.47 K/9, .232 BAA)

High-AInland Empire 4, Lake Elsinore 3

Javis Diaz: 0-for-2, 3 BB, SB (.266/.324/.398, 11 BB, 37 SO, 10 SB)
Cedric Hunter: 1-for-5 (.315/.395/.364, 21 BB, 20 SO)
Eric Sogard: 2-for-5 (.361/.471/.477, 33 BB, 15 SO)
Mitch Canham: 2-for-2, 3 BB (.286/.441/.411, 32 BB, 21 SO)
Kellen Kulbacki: 0-for-3, 2 BB (.154/.313/.179, 9 BB, 8 SO)
Rayner Contreras: 1-for-5 (.237/.356/.263, 11 BB, 19 SO)
Corey Kluber: 5.2 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 3 SO (6.54 ERA, 7.80 K/9, .295 BAA)

Low-AFort Wayne 3, South Bend 0 (1st game), South Bend 1, Fort Wayne 0 (2nd game)

Luis Durango (LF): 3-for-5, 2B (.250/.348/.290, 15 BB, 18 SO, 7 SB)
Andrew Cumberland (SS): 2-for-3, 2B (.217/.271/.279, 9 BB, 16 SO, 9 SB)
Felix Carrasco: 0-for-6 (.246/.310/.465, 11 BB, 45 SO)
Justin Baum: 1-for-5, HBP (.250/.360/.405, 18 BB, 27 SO)
Shane Buschini: 1-for-2, 2B, HBP (.280/.327/.480, 3 BB, 15 SO)
Bradley Chalk: 0-for-5 (.260/.370/.317, 21 BB, 19 SO, 7 SB)
Yefri Carvajal: 0-for-2 (.235/.277/.324, 9 BB, 37 SO, 4 SB)
Allen Harrington: 6 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 5 SO (3.46 ERA, 8.42 K/9, .248 BAA)
Matt Teague: 5 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 2 SO, HBP (4.54 ERA, 4.54 K/9, .299 BAA)

I don’t know much about Harrington, a 13th-round pick in 2007, but he’s pitching very well.