Author Archive

Ryan Hanigan Is Badly Missed By the Cincinnati Reds

When Ryan Hanigan went on the disabled list with a broken hand on May 29th, it wasn’t something that people in many circles discussed.  

The team was playing so well, so what was there to discuss?

I knew the moment it occurred that the pitching staff would greatly suffer.  

Hanigan is THAT good behind the plate with his handling of the pitching staff, skill in blocking errant pitches, and ability to throw out would-be base stealers.

With Hanigan behind the dish, the Reds team ERA is 3.77.  

With Ramon Hernandez, that figure jumps up to 5.25.  

I like Hernandez, as he has brought over none of the supposed attitude problems he had in Baltimore, but the numbers don’t lie.

Hanigan is also an incredibly patient hitter.  

He makes pitchers work.  

He’s not the .351 hitter that his average indicates, but he’s a high on-base-percentage guy and will make pitchers sweat it out.

Another statistic that is vastly important: the Reds with Hanigan are 30-20.  

Without him? Try 7-10.

I liken him to a Jason Kendall.  

I think Hanigan, in the right situation, can carve himself out an incredibly long career.

The Reds miss him terribly.

 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Three Cheers for Arthur Rhodes and the Cincinnati Reds

In the collective trash heap that thus far is the 2010 Cincinnati Reds bullpen, one man stands tall and proud.

Seeing big number 53 jog in from the bullpen, the rare bird in Major League Baseball who was born in the 1960s and is still playing, is a comforting sign for Reds fans.  

Some men bust out of that bullpen gate and get to the pitchers mound like their pants are on fire. Rhodes has a slow, methodical gait, and with his age, one might think he is blazing the trail of a tired man, perhaps too worn out to do the job.

However, make no mistake about it.  This man knows EXACTLY what he’s doing.  He’s all business.  He’ll leave the theatrics and fist pumping to the younger generation.  He’s oblivious to the hype, to the pressure and to the outside temperature—he wears long sleeves every game, no matter how hot it is outside.

As he warms up, there are usually a bevy of things going on at a Major League Baseball stadium at any given time.  I’ll let the other fans try to get on “kiss cam,” or catch the t-shirts they like to launch into the stands.  Me?  When I’m at Great American Ballpark, I’m staring at one of the LED boards that flashes Rhodes’ microscopic ERA, which currently stands at 0.32 in 28 innings pitched.

It really is quite amazing to see the numbers he posts, and to see them drop, drop, drop…..at the passing of each outing.

One man has touched him up this year.  Jeff Baker of the Chicago Cubs handed Rhodes a loss on April 10th when he homered off the southpaw.  That’s it, nothing else.

Is there an element of luck involved in it?  Sure there is—he has escaped bases loaded situations, and he has had to rely on his defense to make great plays to save disaster.

I’d like to think that the great ones create their own luck, however.

With all this said, I think there is a fair chance that all of this ends poorly for Rhodes.  He can’t continue to hold the opposition scoreless forever.  Maybe his age catches up eventually, his little bit of great luck runs dry, his current minor injuries worsen, or his high usage patterns leave him fatigued for the stretch run.

As baseball fans, we can often times be “prisoners of the moment,” and when someone falters, forget all the wonderful things they have done.  Rhodes doesn’t deserve that fate, on the day where his probable struggles occur.  

Until the unfairness begins, he’s a freak of nature old guy who will simply just go out there and methodically kick your butt.  

And even when he allows a run and/or falls into a slump?  I’ll always remember him for pitching his absolute heart our for us, and remain confidence that his guts and guile will get him back on the right path again.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Johnny Be Good: Cueto Shows a Lot of Heart

Baseball can be a cruel game. The numbers are the numbers, and they never lie. If you look at the boxscore from Saturday night’s 11-5 Reds victory over the Royals, it will show you that Johnny Cueto pitched six innings, allowed five earned runs, and had four walks.

Under no circumstances is that ever good, or something that should be acceptable on a per game basis, but after completely unraveling in the second inning, which saw him allow five earned runs, Johnny Cueto composed himself, kept his team in the ballgame, and gave that bullpen some needed relief with those six innings of work.

Rightfully so, he was booed off the mound in that second inning, and booed for not running hard down the line in his at bat in bottom half of that inning. It started to look like the end of the road for the enigmatic Cueto. With Edinson Volquez rehabbing, and Aroldis Chapman not too far from making his Major League debut, someone in that rotation is going to lose his job.

For one night, Cueto fought like hell to make sure that it’s not going to be him. His success after that inning came when he stopped trying to aim his pitches, and started relying more on his God-given abilities.

Cueto’s physical gifts are up there when you assess the young pitchers in the game. However, for every young pitcher who combines great stuff with the right mental approach, there are many others who are solely hard throwers and nothing more.

Which guy will Cueto become? Will he become just another failed prospect with a cannon for an arm, or will he do more with his career? I hope his gutsy performance Saturday night is a sign of good things to come.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress