Tag: AL West

Are Hot Streaks by Josh Hamilton and Los Angeles Angels Sustainable?

Don’t look now, but Josh Hamilton and the Los Angeles Angels are kind of hot at the moment.

Actually, my bad. Please do look now, because this is something that we have to talk about.

The Angels have played 25 games since June 12. They’ve won 17 of those, which is a .680 winning percentage. And that’s a nice number for them to look at, because their winning percentage in their previous 65 games was .415.

Hamilton, meanwhile, has been a primary contributor to the more recent hotness of the Angels’ overall hotness. In 14 games since June 25, he’s hitting .346/.426/.654 with four home runs. Numbers like those call to mind the numbers he was putting up early last year, which is another good thing for the Angels to feel all good about.

But can Hamilton sustain it? For that matter, can the Angels?

Good questions. Put on your discussion hats and follow me this way.

 

Can Hamilton Sustain It?

You might be skeptical of the little run Hamilton is on. 

After all, this is a guy who hit .251/.325/.492 from the middle of May on last year, and who was hitting .207/.262/.378 in his first 72 games this year before warmth-breathing fairies breathed some warmth into his bat.

And the fact is that, no, Hamilton is very unlikely to have a 1.080 OPS for the rest of the season. We have to be fair here, and expecting him to keep that up is unfair.

We know that in part because his hot stretch has been built on the back of a .400 BABIP. Hamilton did have a .390 BABIP a couple of years ago in 2010 when he was hitting everything on the screws, but he had a .320 BABIP last year and has a .328 BABIP for his career.

Based on these numbers, the hits presumably won’t keep falling at the rate they’ve been falling for him over the last couple of weeks.

Hamilton’s hot stretch, however, is not a total mirage. He’s not hot by accident. He’s hot because he’s figured things out.

Hamilton has found his lost power, for one. He had a .171 ISO before he got hot, and he has a .306 ISO during his hot stretch. An ISO of .300 is elite territory, but it’s hardly beyond the realm of possibility that Hamilton could maintain a seat in this realm for the rest of the year. He’s always had pop, and he’s coming off a year in which he had a career-high .292 ISO despite all of the issues. 

Also, the fact that Hamilton is hitting balls hard now looks like the product of a much-improved approach at the plate. It shows up just from looking at his strikeout and walk rates.

Before June 25, Hamilton struck out 25.2 percent of the time and walked only 6.29 percent of the time. Since June 25, he’s struck out 23.0 percent of the time and walked 11.5 percent of the time.

How do you get numbers like those?

Well, it helps to stop hacking at everything in sight, and Hamilton has been doing that. FanGraphs has his swing rate in the past 30 days at 52.9 percent. That’s lower than his season mark of 55.8 percent and much lower than his 2012 mark of 58.9 percent.

Even more significant are the types of pitches Hamilton is laying off.

If you watched Hamilton earlier this season, you probably saw what I saw: a guy who could neither lay off nor hit off-speed stuff. All pitchers had to do was throwing something with some spin at him, and he would be rendered as dangerous as a dormouse.

But recently? Not so much.

Using data from TexasLeaguers.com, we can see that Hamilton is laying off the stuff he couldn’t lay off before:

Span Slider Swing% Curveball Swing% Changeup Swing%
 4/1-6/23  62.6  59.7  60.0
 6/23-7/11  51.6  48.8  51.5

What this tells me is that Hamilton has reestablished the connection between his brain and his bat-swinging gears and rotors. He had to know all along that pitchers were trying to and, indeed, actually beating him with off-speed stuff. He just couldn’t adjust, but he has since adjusted.

We can also see here that Hamilton has generally done a good job of staying in the zone when he has chosen to swing at off-speed stuff:

So there’s that, and here’s a video in which Hamilton illustrates the point by crushing an off-speed offering from Edward Mujica.

Hamilton was struggling earlier in the season because his approach was about as out of whack as an approach can be. Now his approach is very much in whack, and he’s reaping the benefits by whacking the ball.

Hamilton sustaining his hot streak, or some kind of hot streak, for the rest of the season hinges on him sustaining this approach. If he can, then he’s going to be the productive hitter that Arte Moreno thought he was buying over the winter.

Now then, how about the rest of the team? 

 

Can the Angels Sustain It?

The secret to winning one game is scoring more runs than you allow. The key to winning a bunch of games is to score a lot more runs than you allow.

Simple stuff, really, and the Angels can tell you all about it.

Before June 12, the Angels scored 4.35 runs per game and allowed 4.72 runs per game. That qualifies as “not very good” by most standards, so it’s no surprise that the Angels had a “not very good” record.

But since June 12: 5.64 runs scored per game and 4.36 runs allowed per game. More like it, don’t you think?

Now, 5.64 runs per game is too high to sustain for very long. That number doesn’t scream “fluke!” as much as, say, six or seven runs per game, but nobody in baseball is averaging as many as 5.5 runs per gameand the American League average is only 4.43 runs per game. 

However, the one thing we were all saying about the Angels offense before the season was that it was going to be a good one because it had Hamilton, Albert Pujols and Mike Trout. If the three of them hit, the Angels were going to score a lot of runs.

Well, Trout has been awesome all year, Hamilton is finally hitting and Pujols has a respectable .840 OPS over the last month. In other words, the Angels offense is finally what it was supposed to be.

Pujols’ health makes it hard to count on him maintaining all season long. But we know Trout is legit, and we’re operating under the assumption that Hamilton has solved his approach issues.

If the two of them keep it up and the Angels get varying degrees of production from Pujols, Howie Kendrick and Mark Trumbo the rest of the year, it’s really not hard to imagine their offense adhering to the five runs per game margin the rest of the season. 

The Angels should be good on that end of the equation. It’s the other end that represents the tricky part.

According to FanGraphs, Angels pitchers have a 3.85 ERA over the past month. That’s not great, as it only ranks 15th in baseball in that span, but it certainly looks good next to the 4.24 ERA Angels pitchers have racked up for the whole year.

The bullpen deserves much of the credit. Angels relievers have a 3.12 ERA over the past month and have blown only one save. 

That’s largely Ernesto Frieri‘s doing, as he’s been downright absurd over that span with a 15.80 K/9 and a 1.98 BB/9. That walk rate reeks of unsustainability given that Frieri‘s career BB/9 is 4.58, but he’s also pounding the zone better than ever with a Zone% of 53.4 over the past month. His career mark is 47.4, so it’s fair to wonder if something’s clicked for him.

If something has, that’s good news for the Angels.

They can’t have Frieri doing what he did last August, when he suddenly lost his stuff and contributed to a bullpen nightmare that put a huge dent in the Angels’ postseason chances. Frieri‘s pitching right now like a guy who’s going to avoid another spell like that, and that’s a good thing because having that rock at the end of the bullpen is always, well, good.

But really, it’s the starters who make for the key here.

Over the past month, Angels starters have a merely decent 4.27 ERA. But that’s misleading, as it’s inflated by horrid work from Jerome Williams and a couple of bad starts from Tommy Hanson. The rest of the guys have been solid, particularly Jered Weaver and C.J. Wilson.

Weaver has a 3.03 ERA in his past five starts and has allowed only two earned runs in his last 20.2 innings. Wilson has a 2.60 ERA since the beginning of June. Basically, he and Weaver have been the effective one-two punch the Angels were hoping they would be.

Weaver has been helped by extra velocity. According to Brooks Baseball, he was averaging 87.19 miles per hour with his heater before June 27. In three starts since then, he’s been at 88.01 miles per hour. That’s not a small gain, and it’s encouraging seeing as how Weaver’s fastball was more like a moderately quick ball earlier in the season.

By the way, the past three teams Weaver has faced are Detroit, St. Louis and Boston, three of the best in the business at putting runs on the scoreboard. Point being: He looks like he’s back.

As for Wilson, however, don’t be fooled.

The key to Wilson’s success in his past eight starts is his walk rate. He had a 4.23 BB/9 before June, and has a 2.60 BB/9 since June. Be wary of that, as he’s traditionally been a 4.00ish BB/9 guy as a starter, and his walk rate hasn’t declined because he’s done a better job of putting pitches in the strike zone.

For the season, Wilson’s Zone% is 44.1. In the past 30 days, it’s 43.2. That gives his lower walk rate a mirage-ish quality, which tells me he’s probably going to revert back to being himself very soon. And when Wilson is himself, he can be infuriating to watch.

Speaking of infuriating to watch, there’s Joe Blanton.

He’s been getting knocked around all season, and at this point I’ve given up believing the lies his FIP and xFIP have been telling about him being owed some good luck. The guy has mediocre stuff, and it speaks volumes that he hasn’t posted a BABIP under .300 since 2009. He’s hittable, plain and simple.

Tommy Hanson, meanwhile, was hard at work being something of a Blanton clone before he went on the disabled list with a forearm issue.

As expected, his velocity was on its way down for a third straight season, and his strikeout rate also took another turn for the worse. He’s a fly-ball pitcher who can’t miss bats at this point, and that’s not the kind of guy any team wants to put too much faith in.

With Wilson likely a ticking time bomb, Blanton all Blanton-y and Hanson all Hanson-y, what the Angels really need is for Jason Vargas to come back strong and pick up where he left off before he went on the disabled list with a blood clot. He was having a very strong season with a 3.65 ERA, and a 3.05 ERA in 11 starts since the third week of April.

If the Angels can get Weaver and Vargas making consistent starts together for what will feel like the first time all season, then they’re going to be able to rely on at least two guys. Wilson will be a wild card, but he’s certainly a better No. 3 starter than Blanton and Hanson.

If it all comes together, the Angels’ rotation could be…decent.

So, let’s add up all the pieces: an offense that should be pretty good in large part because of a pricey star player who should be pretty good, a bullpen with a ninth-inning rock and a decent rotation.

Not a recipe for a world-beater, that, but that does sound like the recipe all of us had in mind for the Angels before the season. Point being that they should be a good team from here to the end, if not necessarily a great team.

The bad news? That’s that “good” baseball likely won’t be enough to catch up to the Oakland A’s and Texas Rangers if they continue to play as well as they’ve played in the second half.

The good news? That’s that one or both of those teams could be overcome with injuries and/or other nasty things and make life much easier for the Angels.

The Angels won’t stay scorching hot forever, but they have a shot to save their season so long as they stay warm.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted. 

 

If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter.

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Jarred Cosart’s Spectacular MLB Debut Gives Astros Plenty of Hope for Future

Top prospect Jarred Cosart made his MLB debut for the Houston Astros on Friday night, giving hope that the worst team in baseball has a bright future ahead of it.

Cosart was nearly flawless against the Tampa Bay Rays, throwing eight shutout innings and allowing just two hits and three walks while striking out two en route to his first big league win.

Cosart’s debut was nearly historic as well, as he took a no-hit bid into the seventh inning.

Cosart got a bit of help along the way from center fielder Brandon Barnes, who made an incredible catch in the sixth inning. Right fielder J.D. Martinez couldn’t come up with the ball in right-center field, but Barnes never took his eye off the play and made a diving catch during which he adjusted in midair to preserve the no-no.

Cosart eventually surrendered his first hit to Ben Zobrist in the seventh inning on a hard line drive.

Cosart is the first Astros pitcher to last more than seven innings without surrendering a run in his MLB debut.

Cosart pitched eight strong innings before being pulled. He had thrown 96 pitches up to that point, and Astros manager Bo Porter decided against taxing his young arm for the final three outs.

Cosart didn’t exactly ease into big leagues with his first start. He had to face the Rays, who are contenders for the playoffs. What’s more, Cosart was pit in a pitching duel against Rays ace and 2012 AL Cy Young winner David Price, and he still came out on top.

The Astros acquired Cosart from the Philadelphia Phillies at the 2011 trade deadline in exchange for Hunter Pence.

Cosart looks like a solid building block for the starting rotation, joining 2013 No. 1 pick Mark Appel and several other top quality pitching prospects as reasons for optimism in Houston over the future of the franchise. 

Sure, the Astros are just 33-59 after the win on Friday, but the team has one of the best farm systems in baseball, and Cosart is just the first of many they hope will help boost the team out of the doldrums.

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Astros vs. Rays Video: Watch Brandon Barnes Make Fabulous Grab to Save No-Hitter

Houston Astros center fielder Brandon Barnes made what could possibly be the best catch of his career on Friday night against the Tampa Bay Rays.

Jarred Cosart was making his MLB debut and pitching a no-hitter at the time, and Barnes kept his no-no alive.

Right fielder J.D. Martinez couldn’t come up with the ball, but Barnes kept his concentration and adjusted in midair to make the incredible diving catch.

 

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen Barnes make a slick play with his glove.

Barnes flashed the leather against the Baltimore Orioles, laying out for another great diving catch.

He also robbed the Chicago Cubs of an extra-base hit, falling down as he made the grab on the warning track.

Barnes doesn’t just have a great glove, though. He’s a fantastic defender all around, showing off his arm as he made the catch and gunned down Nelson Cruz at second base against the Texas Rangers.

Barnes has only played in 117 MLB games, but he already has four legitimate Web Gems, and people are starting to take notice.

Barnes’ best play was definitely the one on Friday night. Preserving a no-hitter while making a catch that 99 percent of the MLB wouldn’t have been able to make is truly sensational.

Twitter couldn’t help but have something to say about Barnes’ catch, and he set off a chain of tweets.

Cosart would go on to lose his no-hitter after 6.1 innings, as Ben Zobrist hit a liner to end it. However, Barnes’ catch is sure to make a few highlight reels over the next week or so.

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Can a Hot Start By Manny Ramirez Accelerate His Return to the Majors?

When Manny Ramirez signed a minor league contract with the Texas Rangers earlier this week it didn’t seem as though he could offer much help to the team as a 41-year-old.

That might not be the case.

Ramirez looks good in Triple-A, hitting the first pitch he saw for a line drive single and hitting his first home run on Tuesday night.

 

 

Manny went 2-for-2 with a home run, a single and a bases loaded walk in his first three at-bats with three RBI.

Ramirez has been looking good after returning from Taiwan, where he hit .353 with eight dingers and 43 RBI in 49 games, helping the EDA Rhinos win the first half championship a year after finishing 31 games back.

Talk about production.

While the pitching Manny was facing in Taiwan wasn’t exactly MLB-caliber, it was still good to watch his bat come back to life and start belting home runs like this one:

Ramirez has come back a changed man. Not only has he appeared to become wiser with age, but he is now content to help others learn, as seen by him helping Mike Olt correct his swing.

Ramirez sounds completely different than the sideshow we came to know and love, instead sounding much more mature when talking to USA Today.

We all do a lot of things when we are young, but if you can make it through the fire, you are changed, made better and ready for anything else.

I am just happy, my wife is happy. I am working very hard and we’ll see where it goes. But it is a fun ride.

The future is greater than the past.

We’re dealing with a different Manny Ramirez than we’ve known in the past, and the transformation can be seen on the field as well, where he’s playing much better than he did with the Tampa Bay Rays the last time he was in the MLB.

But can he really help the Rangers this season?

With Lance Berkman hitting the DL and the team in desperate need of runs, why not?

After losing Josh Hamilton and his .285 batting average with 43 home runs and 128 RBI, the Rangers offense isn’t the same group that led the MLB in runs last year with 808. The team is down from 5.0 runs per game last year to just 4.4 this year, and that spells trouble.

The Rangers are currently a half game back of the Oakland Athletics and are in a dogfight for the AL West crown. However, without some help on offense it might not happen for Texas.

This is where Ramirez comes in. The team needs a DH, and he might be their best option at this point.

Ramirez batted .315 with seven home runs and 41 RBI in 62 games in Texas, finding more success at the Rangers’ home park than most others. He has also gotten off to a fast start in the minors, showing that he could be MLB-ready soon.

If the Rangers drop a few games without Berkman and are desperate for some offense, it shouldn’t come as a surprise if Man-Ram gets called up earlier than expected. Even if he’s not called up soon, he should put up good numbers once he makes it to the MLB.

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Grading Mark Appel’s Professional Debut

The No. 1 overall pick of the 2013 draft, Mark Appel, made his professional debut on Friday for the Single-A Tri-City Valley Cats in the New York-Penn League. I attended the game and have several observations of the long-awaited arrival for the most highly touted pitcher in this year’s draft.

Appel‘s first professional pitch was smacked by Tzu-Wei Lin for a leadoff triple far into deep center. Lin was then knocked in the next at-bat on a ground-out.

Appel continued to pitch poorly by giving up two consecutive hits, both of which were hit hard into the outfield. He was in a difficult situation with runners on the corners with only one out. Then he used his first successful off-speed pitch, causing the hitter to roll over the pitch and ground out but also knocking in a run that was only originally saved at third because of a pinpoint throw from left fielder D’Andre Toney to hold Kevin Mager from scoring.

The next at-bat started to show why Appel was selected with the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s draft.

After quickly falling behind in the count 3-0 to hitter Celuluis Rondon, Appel wouldn’t give up. He battled back with several assaulting fastballs and off-speed pitches, attacking the zone and causing Rondon to foul off three straight pitches, filling the count. On the next pitch, Appel fired a fastball on the corner to catch Rondon looking, striking out his first professional batter.

In his first inning, Appel didn’t have great command on his pitches; either they were right down the middle or were way outside of the strike zone. That, along with his lack of using his curveball, or ineffectiveness thereof, caused a rough first inning. After getting hit around, he looked nervous, pacing around the mound and fidgeting with his cap.

The at-bat to end the first inning was the coming of age for Appel, who took only nine pitches to lay down the seventh, eighth and ninth hitters of the Lowell Spinners lineup.

Warming up for the second inning, he practiced his changeup and curveball more, indicating his changing approach toward his game and the batters he would face. While still not commanding the zone like he did throughout his college career, Appel forced three quick ground-outs, keeping the ball down and causing quick outs. Near the end of the inning, Appel looked calm and relaxed—a far cry from his first-inning self.  

While his start was shaky, it was to be expected. Appel hadn’t pitched in almost two months since the end of his college baseball season with Stanford, and Friday’s start was only a tune-up for what is to come.

His curveball didn’t break very much, which led to him getting smacked around, and a post-game interview said he was predictable with the use of his fastball. He didn’t touch his true velocity potential, peaking only once at 95 MPH, when in reality he can consistently hit that number and higher deep into starts.

However, the most memorable moment of the day was him finally starting. It was the long-heralded arrival of another key piece in the Houston Astros rebuilding project.

While it was only a 26-pitch dose of the future, seeing a potential superstar pitcher begin his journey to the show is exciting nonetheless. He shook off the rust that two months of absence will bring, and he should continue to improve throughout the year as he gets warmed up again. He put his work in and began his learning curve, discovering how to maneuver through professional lineups.

Overall, it was a great day for Appel, who showed he could adapt to pitching needs and move on from a bad inning, which displayed immense maturity and can take years to teach. While he didn’t pitch well, he did what was expected of him, and I give him a final grade of an A.

Photos courtesy of: whattheheckbobby.blogspot.com

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Oakland Athletics Still Not Getting Respect with All-Star Snubs

The Oakland Athletics, which are currently tied for first with the Texas Rangers in the American League West and also have the fourth most wins in the majors, only have one All-Star representative: Bartolo Colon.

Colon is definitely having a great year and is deserving of this spot; however, excluding Josh Donaldson and Grant Balfour from their first All-Star Game is mind-boggling.

Let’s put up some stats:

.317 AVG, 15 HR, 57 RBI, .385 OBP

.315 AVG, 6 HR, 42 RBI, .344 OBP

One of the lines is for Donaldson, and the other is for an AL All-Star reserve. Which one do you think is Donaldson’s? Obviously the second one, right?

Wrong.

The second line is for AL reserve Manny Machado of the Baltimore Orioles. Donaldson has the top line and the better numbers. He leads Machado in every meaningful category.

David Schoenfield and Tristan Cockcroft of ESPN did a piece on Machado, asking if he has what it takes to be the AL MVP. The initial take on him is that he’s a defensive monster at third, and they are calling him an “all-time great.” They even compared Machado to Brooks Robinson.

I think it’s a little early to start throwing names around like that.

While not as defensively sound as Machado, Donaldson is certainly up there as a great defensive third baseman. Furthermore, he is a more consistent and clutch hitter than Machado. In multiple games this year, Donaldson has come through with a key hit or game-winning home run that propelled the A’s into the win column.

He’s also outperformed Machado in 59 less at-bats.

Now onto Balfour.

The Oakland closer has successfully converted his last 40 save opportunities, which ties him with Dennis Eckersley for the longest streak in A’s history. His line reads perfect: 22-of-22 in save tries with a 1.82 ERA.

If we were to compare his stats with those of Minnesota Twin Glen Perkins, we would see striking similarities with the case of Donaldson over Machado.

Grant Balfour: 1.82 ERA, 22 Saves, 35 K

Glen Perkins: 1.93 ERA, 20 Saves, 45 K

Ten more strikeouts do not make an All-Star. Joe Nathan of the Texas Rangers—another All-Star reserve—isn’t perfect in his save attempts like Balfour is, and AL reserve Jesse Crain doesn’t even have a single save, although he is more of a setup man.

Balfour told John Hickey on IBABuzz.com:

It’s not always good enough to be perfect. It’s a little frustrating playing for a long time and putting up good numbers. But I guess if it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be.

I thought that the All-Star Game was about getting the best players on the field to represent their leagues.

Oakland having only one All-Star is hardly a good representation of the American League. The last-place Chicago White Sox have two All-Stars, as do the fourth-place Seattle Mariners. Also, with Colon possibly pitching the day before the All-Star Game and thus not making him eligible to play the next day, the Athletics will be the only team not represented.

Let me echo that again: A first-place team in the league will have zero players in the Midsummer Classic.

Now the question is why? Why have the A’s been snubbed?

It could be the old standby that Oakland is a small-market team and won’t get as much publicity from the main stream media. Maybe it’s because the A’s don’t have the big name star that has the multi-billion dollar contract that has everyone in a frenzy.

What do you think? Drop a note in the comments and maybe we can figure this whole thing out.

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Rangers Sign 16-Year-Old Prospect Yeyson Yrizarri to Deal

The Texas Rangers made a splash in the pool of foreign players today, inking 16-year-old shortstop Yeyson Yrizarri to a $1.375 million deal.  At 16-years old, Yrizarri will have plenty of time to develop in the minors before getting sent to the majors.  So what exactly did Texas get in signing Yrizarri?

Yrizarri is the seventh ranked international prospect according to BaseballAmerica.com, but his raw tools will make him a work in progress.

He reportedly brings a nice, smooth swing to the table, but offers little to the opposite side of the field right now.  His tendencies are to hit in the middle of the field, while also powering balls deep into the gap, but that can easily change for a player as young as Yrizarri.  

Defensively he is reported to have just average speed, which could lead to a position change down the road, most likely at second or third base.  His strong arm could make him a great candidate to play the hot corner one day.  While he may change positions eventually, for now, the Rangers have added more depth to an already talented shorstop position.  

Yrizarri has baseball in his blood. His brother, Deibi Yrizarri is currently with the Washington Nationals, working in their minor league system with the Dominican Summer League. In addition to his brother being with Washington, his uncle is former major league shortstop Deivi Cruz.   

If there is one reason to get excited about the Rangers signing of Yrizarri, it could be due to their success in developing other top shortstops.  Texas has one of the best young shortstops in the game in Elvis Andrus who they signed to an 8-year, $120 million deal this offseason.  In addition to Andrus, they also have Jurickson Profar, who is already with the Rangers and is considered to be the top prospect in baseball this year.

It hasn’t been announced where Yrizarri will begin his career with the Rangers.  He is a Venezuelan born player who spent most of his life living and playing in the Dominican Republic, so it would make sense for him to also join Texas’ Dominican Summer League team.  It will be a long time before we see Yrizarri in the majors, but any time a team can bring in a top 10 prospect, there is reason for optimism.  

 

All stats and info courtesy of BaseballAmerica.com, MLBTradeRumors.com and ESPN.com.

 

Follow Zachary on Twitter at @ZacharyKrueger

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Predictions, Things to Watch in No. 1 Pick Mark Appel’s Professional Debut

Mark Appel will make his professional debut Friday for the Houston Astros Class-A short-season affiliate the Tri-City ValleyCats, according to Ken Schott of The Daily Gazette.

Appel was the No. 1 overall pick of the Astros in the 2013 MLB Draft and went 10-4 with a 2.12 ERA in his senior season at Stanford.

He will start against the Lowell Spinners, an affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.

So, what can we expect and what should we watch for in Appel‘s first start?

 

Not a Heavy Load

After having pitched 106.1 innings during the college season, don’t expect Appel to be throwing any complete games any time soon.

At most, expect him to throw four or five innings in his first start as he gets used to professional hitting. More likely is three innings or once through the lineup.

Among those players Appel could face are two 2013 draft picks, outfielder Forrest Allday (eighth round) and shortstop Carlos Asuaje (11th).

The Astros don’t want to overload Appel in his first start, especially considering the number of innings he’s already pitched this year.

 

Things to Watch

If you’re an Astros fan, the main thing you want to watch is how Appel reacts to his first bit of adversity. It may not come in the first start, but it will come eventually.

I’ll also be curious to see what his velocity is like and if he’s still averaging between 93-97 mph on his fastball.

Appel also hasn’t taken the mound in a game since May 24, so it will be interesting to see if there is any sort of drop off.

His slider and changeup will be something to watch as well. How does he handle those pitches? How does he mix them in with his fastball, knowing he has to use them more in college?


Predictions

Appel is going to give up at least a run or two as he adjusts to his new surroundings.

But he’ll also get a few strikeouts and show flashes of brilliance.

He’ll make another start or two for Tri-City and then move up to Class-A to end the season.

Other than that, don’t expect too much out of Appel for the rest of the year, as he still has a long career ahead of him. The Astros don’t need to rush things and can really get him going to start 2013.

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Seattle Mariners: 2nd-Half Predictions for Every Player

It’s not even July and already we’ve seen some prominent players sent down in the Seattle Mariners system. A season that was supposed be one of contention and progress has, thus far, been yet another year of rebuilding and disappointment.

The Mariners are currently 35-45, 12 games back in the American League West. Barring a drastic turnaround, they’ll be sellers at the trade deadline, allowing for some young prospects to get a taste of major league action, a process all too familiar among the club and its fans by now.

We’re halfway through the marathon that is an MLB season, and here are predictions for every Mariners player for the second half.

All statistics via ESPN.com and MLB.com.

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Second-Half Predictions for Every Texas Rangers Player

No, it’s not quite the second half of the baseball season just yet, but it’s safe to say the first half is just about over.  Texas has had several players put up remarkable numbers this season, helping the team to a 47-33 record, good for first in the AL West.

With the All-Star break and second half of the season quickly approaching, what should be expected out of the Rangers heading down the stretch?  Here is a list of predictions for every player on the Rangers’ roster for the second half of the season.

 

All stats and info courtesy of MLB.com, BaseballReference.com and ESPN.com.

 

Follow Zachary on Twitter at @ZacharyKrueger

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