Singles Night

Aggravating. Annoying. Bilious. Discouraging. Disheartening. Dispiriting. Exasperating. Frustrating. Infuriating. Irritating.

But enough about me, let’s talk about the game. [rim shot]

I finally saw the team that everyone else seems to think the Padres are, the one that should be grateful to the Giants for granting them a spot in fourth place. The Padres have more talent than they get credit for, but not so much that they can play stupid baseball and still expect to win games:

  • Two homers to Bengie Molina? Granted, the first got a good push from the 30-mph wind, but c’mon, there’s a reason we chide the Giants for batting Molina cleanup.
  • Thirteen singles, no extra-base hits? I don’t know a nice way to say this, but the Padres may have the slowest team in baseball. When you’re playing station-to-station with a team that can’t run, those stations had better be more than 90 feet apart. Don’t think about that too hard because it doesn’t really make sense, but you get the point.
  • Can we please learn how to run the bases? Yeah, Kevin Kouzmanoff may not have picked up on the fact that Dan Ortmeier couldn’t haul in Khalil Greene‘s drive, but we’ve seen this how many times now in the first couple weeks of the season? It happened twice on April 6 against the Dodgers. The bullpen got saddled with the loss in that one, too, but the game was given away earlier on the basepaths. That’s twice in the first nine games that sloppy baserunning has turned probable victory into certain defeat. Some teams can afford to pull that kind of garbage; the Padres aren’t one of them.
  • Scott Hairston and the 12-man pitching staff. It was a questionable check-swing call, and plate umpire Tim Timmons appeared to be having a tough night. Should Timmons have tossed Hairston so quickly? Probably not. Should Hairston have tested the theory? Probably not.

    The larger problem, and one that we’ve seen before, is this: When a team insists on carrying seven relievers, it needs all the position players it can get. Otherwise you end up with comical situations like the one we saw in the ninth, where Colt Morton and Jake Peavy were on base as pinch runners. That should never happen in the first nine innings of a big-league ballgame. Heck, if the contest had continued, who would’ve batted in the pitchers spot? I’m thinking Greg Maddux, but I don’t know.

    Justin Huber was the last man off the bench, and he arrived to the party in the 10th. Do you know how many games the Padres played in 2007 went beyond 10 innings? Fifteen. If you’ve burned through your entire bench by the time you reach the 11th inning (not unlikely given the way this team plays and the way its roster is constructed), you’re in a tough spot.

    We saw a similar fiasco against Arizona Los Angeles last April where reserve catcher Pete LaForest was forced to play first base and committed an error that cost the Padres the game. Everyone points to Tony Gwynn Jr.’s triple and the Coors Field meltdown because those are more recent events and we knew by then what, exactly, was at stake, but if the Padres beat the Snakes Dodgers in April, Game 163 never happens.

    Geez, how did we get here? We were talking about Hariston’s ejection and it morphed into a rant against the 12-man pitching staff. How did that happen? Oh, I know: It’s because I hate the 12-man pitching staff.

Anyway. I think that’s all out of my system now. Maybe tonight will be better…

Padres Farm Report (9 Apr 08)

Triple-ASacramento 7, Portland 1

Edgar Gonzalez (2B): 2-for-5
Craig Stansberry (3B): 0-for-3, BB
Chase Headley: 2-for-4
Brian Myrow: 0-for-3, BB
Jody Gerut (RF): 0-for-4
Will Venable: 0-for-4
Mauro Zarate: 1 IP, 2 H, 3 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 2 SO
Kevin Cameron: 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 1 SO

Double-ASan Antonio 4, Tulsa 3

Drew Macias: 1-for-4, HR
Chad Huffman: 2-for-3, 2 2B, BB
Kyle Blanks: 3-for-4, 2B
Jose Lobaton: 0-for-3
Mike Ekstrom: 5 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 HR, 2 BB, 4 SO
Jonathan Ellis: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 1 SO

High-ALake Elsinore 12, Visalia 3

Cedric Hunter: 2-for-6
Eric Sogard: 1-for-4, 2B, BB
Mitch Canham: 2-for-3, 2 BB, E

Low-ADayton 5, Fort Wayne 4

Luis Durango: 2-for-4, SB
Yefri Carvajal: 1-for-1 (didn’t start)
Andrew Cumberland (2B): 1-for-5
Kellen Kulbacki (RF): 1-for-5
Justin Baum: 1-for-5, E
Bradley Chalk: 1-for-2, 2B, 2 BB
Felix Carrasco: 1-for-3, BB

Apparently Cumberland will be splitting time between second base and shortstop at Fort Wayne. Seems like a waste to me, but what do I know?

IGD: Padres @ Giants (8 Apr 08)

Randy WolfPadres (5-3) @ Giants (1-6)
Randy Wolf vs Tim Lincecum
7:15 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 184
MLB, B-R

The Padres have outscored opponents, 17-6, over the first three innings of games this year. They’ve beeen outscored by the exact same number over the final three. The club also is hitting .313/.351/.406 with RISP, while the opposition is hitting .182/.262/.273 in those situations.

That Strange Feeling We Sometimes Get

Two quick observations about Jim Edmonds and Tadahito Iguchi:

  1. Mike Cameron looked lost in center field last April.
  2. Marcus Giles hit .327/.376/.459 that same month.

What we’re seeing from Edmonds and Iguchi right now may not mean much in August in September. In other words, we still don’t know what we’ve got…

Padres Farm Report (8 Apr 08)

Tom Krasovic at the U-T reports that Michael Barrett has been placed on the 15-day disabled list (h/t Baseball in Fort Wayne) due to a “strained throwing elbow” suffered during Monday afternoon’s 8-4 win over the Giants. Much is unknown at this point, but it doesn’t sound good. Meanwhile, Colt Morton will come up from Double-A San Antonio to replace Barrett on the big-league roster. Josh Bard is expected to see most of the playing time at catcher in Barrett’s absence.

Triple-APortland 9, Sacramento 1

Matt Antonelli: 0-for-3, 2 BB
Craig Stansberry (3B): 2-for-4, 2 2B, BB
Chase Headley (LF): 1-for-4, 2B, BB
Brian Myrow: 2-for 5, HR (he’s old, but he can hit)
Nick Hundley: 2-for-5
Jody Gerut (DH): 1-for-4, BB
Will Venable (CF): 3-for-5
Wade LeBlanc: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 11 SO

LeBlanc’s Triple-A debut went a little better than Cesar Ramos’ a day earlier. That’s the difference between a legit prospect and a guy who was drafted too early. LeBlanc threw 88 pitches, 61 (69%) for strikes.

Headley appears to be playing left field every day, with Venable in center. From here on out, just assume that’s where they are unless I indicate otherwise.

Left-handed reliever Will Startup is a finalist in something called Minors Moniker Madness. Vote for him if the spirit (or some other force) moves you.

More coverage at the Portland Oregonian.

Double-ATulsa 1, San Antonio 0

One run in 12 innings? My kind of game. Jose Lobaton had one of the Missions’ four hits. He figures to see more action with Morton headed to San Diego. Marshall McDougall, just down from Portland, collected two of the other hits.

More coverage at OurSports Central.

High-ALake Elsinore 8, Visalia 6

Cedric Hunter: 2-for-5
Eric Sogard: 3-for-5, 2B, BB
Mitch Canham: 2-for-5, HR

Second straight eight-run outburst for the Storm… Marcia Smith at the Orange County Register pens a fun piece on spending a day with RHP Dylan Axelrod and his teammates. Smith got to take batting practice against ex-Padre Wally Whitehurst. How cool is that?

Low-ADayton 3, Fort Wayne 2

Bradley Chalk: 3-for-4, 2B, SB
Andrew Cumberland (2B): 1-for-4, SB
Kellen Kulbacki (RF): 0-for-4
Justin Baum: 0-for-3, BB
Yefri Carvajal: 0-for-4, E
Felix Carrasco (1B): 0-for-3

Not sure why Cumberland shifted over to second base… Kullbacki batted cleanup in his 2008 debut; he replaces USD alum Shane Buschini, who landed on the DL after tumbling over a wall while making a catch (and what a strange play that was!)… First base seems to be Carrasco’s position for now, so this is the last time I’ll note when he’s playing there… Two different Wizards pitchers (starter Allen Harrington, reliever Jeremy Hefner) fanned seven batters in the game.

IGD: Padres @ Giants (7 Apr 08)

Greg MadduxPadres (4-3) @ Giants (1-5)
Greg Maddux vs Matt Cain
1:35 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 184
MLB, B-R

The Padres were outscored, 23-22, over their opening homestand despite outhitting the opposition by a wide margin:

Offense at Petco Park, Early 2008
  BA OBP SLG
Statistics are courtesy of ESPN and are through games of April 6, 2008.
Padres .284 .331 .401
Opponents .193 .275 .320

Maybe on the road they can convert some of that offense into actual runs.

Series Preview: El Lefty Malo Talks Giants

The Padres embark on their inaugural road trip of 2008. First stop is San Francisco, where long-time Padres skipper Bruce Bochy calls the shots but long-time Padres nemesis Barry Bonds no longer calls home. We caught up with veteran Giants blogger El Lefty Malo to chat about the upcoming series between these two NL West rivals.

Ducksnorts: Let’s start with the elephant in the room: What does Barry Bonds’ departure mean to the Giants franchise and the city of San Francisco?

El Lefty Malo: In the context of everything else that’s happened this winter, it means the Giants should have the worst offense in the major leagues this year. They were just about there with Bonds, and adding Aaron Rowand isn’t going to make up the difference. I’m not sorry to see Bonds go. I grew up in the Bill Walsh 49ers glory years, and I heartily subscribe to Walsh’s dictum that it’s better to let an aging vet go one year early than one year late. Time to move on.

A lot of fans are agitating to re-sign him, just so the team has some illusion of offense this year. That’s a terrible, horrible, no good very bad idea.

Question for you: What do you think of the Giants’ Jedi mind-trick this spring: trying to erase all traces of Bonds. How’s that one playing down south?

Ducksnorts: I find it fascinating that MLB’s hit leader and home run leader have managed to become persona non grata. As for Bonds specifically, this was a strange off-season because national media types kept insinuating that San Diego would be a great fit for him. And I suppose if he enjoyed getting hit by large fake syringes every now and then, it just might be. And it goes without saying that nobody’s sorry our pitchers don’t have to face him anymore.

El Lefty Malo: I want to see Bonds sign elsewhere just to see if my “he’s our jerk” theory holds true. In other words, no matter how big a jerk, fans (except, perhaps in Philly) will cheer a player who helps their team. If he were hitting homers down the stretch run for the Padres, would you cheer for him?

Ducksnorts: No, and there’s a good chance I’d stop attending games altogether. I’ve had discussions with very smart people about this, and they don’t understand my stance. They tell me it’s irrational, and I’m inclined to agree, but there it is.

Shifting gears, how would you assess the job Bruce Bochy has done thus far in his brief tenure as manager? What do you like, and what could he be doing differently?

El Lefty Malo: Hard to say. Last year was a circus. This year is the real barometer. Does he put together a good bullpen? Does he preserve the arms of the young aces? Does he play the young guys over the vets? Does he keep things positive when the wheels are falling off?

I noticed comments in the press recently from Trevor Hoffman and Jake Peavy singing Bochy’s praises. Padres players seem to really respect him. Do you think he deserves it?

Ducksnorts: Bochy’s greatest strength as a manager during his time in San Diego clearly was his ability to work with veteran players. I have no doubt that Hoffman and Peavy loved playing for the guy, as did many others. Players here seemed extremely loyal to Bochy. As for playing kids over vets, the good news is that he’s been willing to do that with pitchers, which aligns well with the Giants’ organizational strength. Position players have been a different story. I don’t know if being forced to pencil the likes of Ruben Rivera and George Arias into his lineup every day on the heels of a World Series appearance jaded him or what, but Bochy had an aversion to playing his young hitters, perhaps most notably Xavier Nady. Not that Nady is great, mind you, but it might have been nice to give the guy a look.

Speaking of the young pitchers, Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum are studs. Beyond those two guys, what are some reasons to get excited about the Giants in 2008 and beyond?

El Lefty Malo: ….oh, sorry, I must have fallen asleep. Did you ask a question?

Ducksnorts: Apparently not… What do you think of the Barry Zito signing, and how might his contract affect the Giants’ ability to make other moves?

El Lefty Malo: Terrible contract. He’s not even a league-average pitcher. I hoped against hope he would be when the contract was announced, but all the signs pointed to the bad. And the signs so far have been right. Maybe he’ll figure out how to return to form, but this is looking like the worst free-agent contract since Mike Hampton. How will it affect other moves? Hopefully it will keep the Giants from making other stupid free-agent moves. The next year or two, they should stay out of the market completely.

Ducksnorts: Given what you’ve seen from Brian Sabean in the past, how likely do you think it is that the Giants will stay out of the market?

El Lefty Malo: Not likely. Case in point: Aaron Rowand. It wasn’t a bad contract, in my opinion, especially in light of the Torii Hunter deal. But he’s a band-aid on an amputated limb at this point, and by the time the Giants could contend again, he’ll likely be in decline.

If they spend free-agent money in the next couple years, I hope it’s for short-term deals. It’ll be tough. To come to SF these days, free agents need to be overpaid or get extra years. Apparently the Giants wanted Andruw Jones with the type of deal LA gave him, but he wanted to play for a contender.

Ducksnorts: Yeah, the Rowand signing was a head-scratcher. As you say, it’s not a bad contract, but the fit is unusual. I also find it interesting that three California teams signed free-agent center fielders to long-term deals just a year after they’d — wait for it — signed free-agent center fielders to long-term deals (Torii Hunter, Gary Matthews Jr. in Anaheim; Jones, Juan Pierre in LA; Rowand, Dave Roberts in San Francisco).

Overall, how happy are fans in San Francisco with the job Sabean has done?

El Lefty Malo: It’s all “what have you done for me lately.” Until 2003 he was a local hero. Now he’s a goat. He’ll need to show serious progress with this rebuild before opinion turns again.

A few questions for you:

What’s your biggest worry about the Padres this year?

Ducksnorts: The outfield, the back end of the rotation, and the strength of the NL West, in that order. Scott Hairston looks legit to me, but I’ll be surprised if both Jim Edmonds and Brian Giles survive the season unscathed. Even if they do, it’s not clear how much they’ve got left. If they can get on base, great; otherwise… As for the pitching, it’s good but not nearly as good as many people seem to think, and beyond the front three in the rotation, there’s a lot of uncertainty.

Incidentally, Tom Verducci at SI.com recently called Edmonds the most overrated player in the National League. I’m not expecting much out of him — above-average defense and the ability to draw walks — but do people seriously think this is the same guy who dominated in St. Louis a few years ago?

El Lefty Malo: I haven’t seen Verducci’s article, but such a statement seems like strawman bashing. I don’t think anyone expects Edmonds to do much — or play much — this year…

The Padres are starting to show age. Should Kevin Towers tear down and rebuild if this season doesn’t go well? If so, who are the keepers? (I assume Peavy is one.)

Ducksnorts: Towers sort of has been tearing down every year since the Padres moved into Petco Park. Aside from a few core players, they really haven’t doled out a lot of long-term contracts. The few guys who have those deals are the keepers: Peavy, Chris Young, and Adrian Gonzalez for sure, maybe Khalil Greene (he recently signed a two-year extension but has been reluctant to go longer). Kevin Kouzmanoff may be pushing himself into that territory as well.

El Lefty Malo: It seemed at the time Petco was built to keep Bonds in the yard. Now that he’s out of the picture, should the Pads bring the fences in a bit? I’ve suggested the same thing with Mays Field, especially that dreaded 421-foot fence in right-center, but my readers shouted me down.

Ducksnorts: They actually did move the fence in right-center in about 10 feet before the 2006 season. Based on how well the Padres used Petco Park to their advantage last year, I’d be reluctant to change the configuration. The Padres accounted for 61.5% of all home runs hit in their own park in 2007, which was the highest mark in the big leagues. They’d never done anything like that before, but assuming they can keep it up, I’m happy with the dimensions.

There you have it. Thanks again to El Lefty Malo for stopping by, and here’s hoping for a great series.

Padres Farm Report (7 Apr 08)

Before we get to the minor leagues, a few ruminations on the weekend’s activities at Petco:

  • Jake Peavy spun a masterpiece on Saturday. Bugs and Cranks thinks he may be doctoring the baseball. With any luck, word will get back to opposing hitters, and they can have one more thing on their minds when they step in against Peavy.
  • In that same game, Josh Bard made a terrific sliding catch on a pop foul near the Dodgers dugout. Unfortunately the slide took him partially into the dugout, invoking the horribly misguided Rule 7.04(c):

    If a fielder, after having made a legal catch, should fall into a stand or among spectators or into the dugout or any other out-of-play area while in possession of the ball after making a legal catch, or fall while in the dugout after making a legal catch, the ball is dead and each runner shall advance one base, without liability to be put out, from his last legally touched base at the time the fielder fell into, or in, such out-of-play area.

    So, yeah, Bard’s catch allowed Rafael Furcal to trot home from third base and score the Dodgers’ only run of the afternoon. It also resulted in Bard’s being charged with an error (because you have to justify Furcal’s advancement somehow). In other words, Bard’s mistake was in catching the baseball. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe fielders typically are encouraged to catch the baseball.

    The rule makers need to go back and fix this one. Now would be good.

  • Did you see Chris Young pick off James Loney in the sixth inning on Sunday? Young did a great job of varying his move to first and caught Loney wandering off a little too far. Young was working on his move in spring training and it appears to be paying dividends. Still, he’s not going to shift his focus from the hitter to the baserunners. Quoth Young in a snippet aired during Sunday’s telecast:

    I’m just trying to be a little bit quicker to the plate without sacrificing the quality of my pitches. It’s obviously an area of my game [where] there’s room for improvement, but at no point will you ever see me sacrificing the quality of my pitch to the hitter for that runner on first base… Guys are going to steal, it’s just part of the game. I’ll take my chances getting the hitter out and leaving that runner out there on second base.

  • Finally, a 4-3 homestand isn’t bad, but the Padres easily could have finished 6-1. Some sloppy work on the bases early came back to haunt the Padres in Sunday’s finale against the Dodgers. Also, Scott Hairston smoked a ball right at Furcal to end a threat in the eighth; if Hairston hits the ball 6 inches higher, the Padres take a 3-2 lead. But again, it never should have come to that.

Okay, that took a little longer than I’d expected it would. To the minor leagues…

Triple-AFresno 9, Portland 1

Matt Antonelli: 0-for-2, BB, HBP, E
Chase Headley (LF): 0-for-4
Nick Hundley: 1-for-3, BB, E
Will Venable (CF): 1-for-4
Cesar Ramos: 2.2 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 1 HR, 4 BB, 4 SO (85 pitches)
Kevin Cameron: 2.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO

The homer Ramos served up was to ex-Padre Justin Leone.

Rain Delay was at the game and offers these bullet points:

  • Cesar Ramos started for the Beavers. Horrible command, long at-bats were his undoing. Oh and throw in a 30-minute rain delay… he just looked lost out there at times. Not to mention he doesn’t have anything you’d call an out pitch… Not sure what he’s doing at the AAA level.
  • Now, Mr. Antonelli. He’s a stud, no doubt about it, may not show in the box score, but he had solid contact on a number of pitches — just wasn’t able to do much with them. In the field is another story; he looks like he’s trying too hard. One play he was ranging to his right toward the bag, backhanded the ball — it really was a nice stop. But he should’ve put it in his pocket; instead he tried to get the runner at first (he had no chance as by the time he had released the ball, the runner was at the bag), which led to an error (he totally air mailed it). Then Nick Hundley went after the ball and tried to nail the runner advancing from first on the throwing error — Hundley air mailed it to center field. All in all it looked like a Little League game where you want to yell at the top of your lungs “JUST HOLD THE DAMN BALL!”
  • Luis Rodriguez looked good at shortstop and had a good day at the plate, going 2-for-3. He didn’t look nearly as lost at the plate as some of the other Beavers did.

Thanks, bud! More coverage at the Portland Oregonian.

Double-ATulsa 7, San Antonio 2

Chad Huffman: 3-for-4, 2 2B
Craig Cooper (RF): 1-for-3, BB
Kyle Blanks (1B): 0-for-4
Colt Morton: 1-for-3, BB, E
Steve Garrison: 5 IP, 7 H, 3 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, SO 4

Garrison threw 73 pitches, 51 (70%) for strikes. He cruised through the first four innings before running into trouble. One of the culprits was Eric Young Jr. In other news, infielder Marshall McDougall has been reassigned from Portland to accommodate Jody Gerut. McDougall takes the place of infielder Brett Dowdy, who was placed on the disabled list due to a strained oblique.

More coverage at the San Antonio Express-News.

High-ALake Elsinore 8, Rancho Cucamonga 7

Cedric Hunter: 0-for-5, BB, SB
Mitch Canham: 3-for-4, BB
Drew Miller: 4 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 2 SO

A day after starting at DH, Hunter returned to his more familiar spot in center field.

Low-ALansing 6, Fort Wayne 4

Luis Durango (DH): 0-for-4, BB
Bradley Chalk: 2-for-5
Justin Baum: 1-for-5
Yefri Carvajal: 3-for-4
Felix Carrasco (1B): 3-for-3, 2B

The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has started a Wizards blog. Great to see some of the minor-league affiliates getting their own blogs. I’ve added this one to the sidebar as well as to PadreBlogs.com.

IGD: Padres vs Dodgers (6 Apr 08)

Chris YoungPadres (4-2) vs Dodgers (3-2)
Chris Young vs Derek Lowe
1:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 189
MLB, B-R

So, I’m thinking Jake Peavy should have his number retired more often. ;-)

Padres Farm Report (6 Apr 08)

Triple-A — Fresno @ Portland, postponed

According to the Portland Beavers Blog, the game will be made up as part of a doubleheader on August 13. Also, LHP Cesar Ramos is scheduled to make his Triple-A debut on Sunday. Meanwhile, RHP Dirk Hayhurst is pulling double duty working out of the bullpen and writing for the Beavers web site (h/t Rain Delay).

Double-ASan Antonio 8, Northwest Arkansas 2

Drew Macias: 1-for-3, 2B
Peter Ciofrone: 3-for-5, 2B
Chad Huffman (DH): 2-for-4, 2B
Craig Cooper (RF): 1-for-5
Kyle Blanks (1B): 0-for-4, E
Jose Lobaton: 3-for-3, BB
Matthew Buschmann: 5 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 6 SO
Jonathan Ellis: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 4 SO

Interesting that Lobaton and Colt Morton both were assigned to Double-A; when did catching become an organizational strength? Southpaw Steve Garrison (part of the haul for Scott Linebrink) starts for the Missions on Sunday.

More coverage at San Antonio Express-News.

High-ARancho Cucamonga 7, Lake Elsinore 5

Eric Sogard: 0-for-5, 2B, BB
Cedric Hunter (DH): 2-for-5
Cory Luebke: 4 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 1 HR, 3 BB, 5 SO

Low-ALansing 11, Fort Wayne 1

Luis Durango: 0-for-4
Andrew Cumberland: 0-for-4
Yefri Carvajal: 0-for-4
Justin Baum: 1-for-4
Bradley Chalk: 1-for-3, 2B
Felix Carrasco (1B): 1-for-2, BB, E
Robert Woodard: 3 IP, 4 H, 3, R, 0 HR 2 BB, 2 SO

Carrasco had played 68 of his 74 pro games at third base coming into the season, but he’s been used exclusively at first base so far in 2008.

More coverage at OurSportsCentral. There’s also a nice article on Wizards manager (and ex-Padre) Doug Dascenzo at the Uniontown (Pa.) Herald-Standard (h/t Baseball in Fort Wayne).