Tag: Felix Hernandez

AL Cy Young Award Rankings: Is Jered Weaver Catching Up to Justin Verlander?

Los Angeles Angels ace Jered Weaver is 15-2, and he leads the American League in ERA, WHIP, opponents’ batting average and various other categories.

In the minds of many, this makes him the automatic favorite to win the AL Cy Young award this season.

Those who have been keeping up with my weekly AL Cy Young rankings will know that I disagree.

Weaver’s been good, but assorted advanced stats suggest that Justin Verlander has been better. His Cy Young candidacy is further bolstered by the fact that he’s been a bigger workhorse than any pitcher in either league.

But the gap between Weaver and Verlander has never been huge. Truth be told, there are five leading candidates for the Cy Young at this moment in time, and any one of them could claim the top spot in the rankings in a given week.

To see where Weaver, Verlander and all the rest rank this week, just keep on reading.

Note: All stats are as of the start of play on Tuesday, August 14, and they come from Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

Begin Slideshow


AL Cy Young Award Rankings: Justin Verlander Reclaims No. 1 Spot over Deep Field

Last season, there was little question that Justin Verlander was going to win the AL Cy Young Award. He won the AL pitching Triple Crown, leading the league in wins, ERA and strikeouts. Pitchers who do that tend to walk away with the hardware.

Verlander is once again in the middle of a tremendous season, but the AL Cy Young race isn’t nearly as cut-and-dry as it was last year; Verlander has some serious competition.

Jered Weaver is right in the thick of things. He leads the AL in wins with 15, and he also has the league’s top ERA and top WHIP. The no-hitter he pitched in May looms large on his Cy Young resume.

Felix Hernandez, the 2010 AL Cy Young winner, is also right in the thick of things. He’s among the league leaders in virtually every pitching category, and he’s only getting better and better as the season moves along.

Also in the thick of the race are Chris Sale and David Price, two of the best lefties in baseball.

Make no mistake about it, the chase for the AL Cy Young Award features a crowded field. Figuring out who’s leading the chase on a week to week basis is an exercise in frustration.

Nonetheless, it must be done. For your reading pleasure, here are this week’s AL Cy Young rankings.

Note: All stats come from Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

Begin Slideshow


Fantasy Baseball: Breakdown of AccuScore’s Rest-of-Year Estimates for Strikeouts

With the fantasy-trade deadlines coming up this week or next (I have four red-letter dates this Friday), it’s time for owners to make one last pitch for baseball’s elite categorical contributors.

AccuScore, a company that specializes in thorough game simulations, has made a few on-the-fly revisions to its seasonal projections.

These 50 starting pitchers, based on AccuScore projections (not mine), will register at least 55 strikeouts from this point forward (Aug. 7-Sept. 30):

 

Part I

1. CC Sabathia, Yankees—77
2. Justin Verlander, Tigers—75
3. Yu Darvish, Rangers—75
4. Cole Hamels, Phillies—72
5. Gio Gonzalez, Nationals—68
6. Adam Wainwright, Cardinals—68
7. Clayton Kershaw, Dodgers—68
8. Lance Lynn, Cardinals—67
9. Roy Halladay, Phillies—67
10. James Shields, Rays—67
11. Felix Hernandez, Mariners—67
12. Cliff Lee, Phillies—67
13. Marco Estrada, Brewers—67
14. Yovani Gallardo, Brewers—67
15. Francisco Liriano, White Sox—66
16. Madison Bumgarner, Giants—65
17. Zack Greinke, Angels—65
18. Tim Lincecum, Giants—65
19. Matt Cain, Giants—65
20. Mat Latos, Reds—64
21. Jered Weaver, Angels—64
22. Jeff Samardzija, Cubs—63
23. David Price, Rays—63
24. Stephen Strasburg, Nationals—63
25. Erik Bedard, Pirates—63

 

Part II

26. Felix Doubront, Red Sox—63
27. Ian Kennedy, Diamondbacks—61
28. Max Scherzer, Tigers—61
29. Anibal Sanchez, Tigers—61
30. R.A. Dickey, Mets—60
31. Ryan Dempster, Rangers—60
32. Jake Peavy, White Sox—60
33. Josh Johnson, Marlins—60
34. Ubaldo Jimenez, Indians—60
35. Jon Lester, Red Sox—59
36. C.J. Wilson, Angels—59
37. Chris Capuano, Dodgers—58
38. Bud Norris, Astros—58
39. Matt Harvey, Mets—58
40. Michael Fiers, Brewers—58
41. Josh Beckett, Red Sox—58
42. J.A. Happ, Blue Jays—57
43. Chris Sale, White Sox—57
44. James McDonald, Pirates—57
45. Drew Pomeranz, Rockies—57
46. Ryan Vogelsong, Giants—56
47. Jon Niese, Mets—56
48. Matt Moore, Rays—56
49. Edwin Jackson, Nationals—55
50. Hiroki Kuroda, Yankees—55

 

Breakdown

  • I’ll buy the “under” for CC Sabathia and 77 strikeouts. Since May 26, Sabathia (11-3, 3.53 ERA, 1.20 ERA, 133/34 K-BB) has averaged 6.8 strikeouts over 10 starts. So, if he should squeeze in another 10 outings before Sept. 30, he’ll have to improve upon his current pace of the last 13 weeks. On the positive side, Sabathia has four double-digit strikeout efforts for the season.
  • Clayton Kershaw has 69 strikeouts since June 15, with six or more K’s in nine of the last 10 outings. And compared to Justin Verlander (who bedazzled the Yankees for 14 strikeouts on Monday night), Kershaw will likely enjoy one more start than the Tigers ace from this point forward. Bottom line: I’ll buy the “over” on Kershaw and 68 strikeouts.
  • Stephen Strasburg (11.31), Max Scherzer (11.28), Yu Darvish (10.34) and Gio Gonzalez (10.02) are the only regular MLB starters to post K/9 ratios above 10 this season, and from a 30-day perspective, Scherzer, Strasburg, Darvish, Francisco Liriano, James Shields, Madison Bumgarner and David Price boast that honor. So naturally, they’re all good candidates for 60-plus strikeouts.
  • Roy Halladay has posted respectable results in his last four games with Philly—1-1, a 4.13 ERA, 1.04 WHIP and 21/3 K-BB ratio. But the punch-outs aren’t necessarily coming at an accelerated rate, likely a consequence of his recent shoulder woes and subsequent absence from the Phillies rotation for June and half of July.
  • Noticeably absent from this list: A.J. Burnett, Dan Haren, Wandy Rodriguez, Vance Worley, Andrew Cashner, Johnny Cueto, Wei-Yin Chen, Jordan Zimmermann, Aaron Harang, Miguel Gonzalez, Zach McAllister, Chad Billingsley, Corey Kluber and Ricky Romero.
  • For what it’s worth, AccuScore projects Reds closer Aroldis Chapman for 48 more strikeouts in just 27.4 innings. For July, Chapman had a 0.00 ERA and 0.56 WHIP. He was also a perfect 13-for-13 in save opportunities. Chapman’s K/9 ratio for July was a mind-blowing 19.5, easily his best effort of the season.

 

Jay Clemons can be reached on Twitter, day or night, at @ATL_JayClemons.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


King Felix Quickly Becoming Cy Young Favorite

In yet another “Year of the Pitcher”, the Seattle Mariners‘ ace Felix Hernandez finds himself at the top of the class. 

King Felix, the 2010 Cy Young Award winner, has been lights out all season long and continues to become more dominant as the year progresses. 

On Saturday night, against Major League Baseball’s best offense, the Texas Rangers, the King tossed perhaps his most impressive game of the season. 

With some rare and very unusual first-inning run support mixed with the huge crowd in the “King’s Court“, it was a night fit for something miraculous. The 26-year-old righty did not disappoint. 

Hernandez cruised through the highly-potent offense en route to his second shutout of the season. On the way he also collected 12 strikeouts, one shy of his season high. Of the 12 k’s, three of them were handed to the AL MVP front runner Josh Hamilton, along with three more to slugger Nelson Cruz. All in all, Hernandez struck out seven of the nine Rangers’ starters. 

After this inspiring performance by Felix, his record has improved to 7-5 on the year. It’s his third win in his past five starts, and he has not pitched a loss in over a month; June 12th against the Padres, to be exact. 

For those still stuck in the past, thinking wins are all that matters, one must first realize that this is the same guy who won the Cy Young in 2010 with a record of 13-12, and then take a look at the fact that he has the third lowest run support in the entire MLB

This was also the 11th time, out of 19 starts, that Hernandez has given up one run or less with at least seven innings pitched. 

Along with improving his record, Hernandez also moved into the lead for overall strikeouts at 140 for the year. This moved him out of a three way tie with fire-ballers Justin Verlander and Stephen Strasburg. This was the third time he had reached the 12-strikeout plateau, including a 13 K’s against the Red Sox just four games ago. It was also his fourth double-digit strikeout game of the season. 

The complete game win also tied him for most innings pitched, also held by Verlander, at 132.2. For all the talk about how the Tigers‘ ace is a workhorse, people tend to forget that Hernandez has pitched more innings than him in the past three and a half seasons combined in the same amount of starts. 

If having a double-digit strikeout lead isn’t impressive enough, Hernandez also lowered his ERA to sub-3.00 after tonight. His 2.92 mark places him at sixth overall in the American League. It’s the firs time since his last start against Texas on May 21th that his ERA has been in the 2.00 range. His recent surge of excellence has seen his average drop from his season high 3.70 on June 12th, all the way down to where it sits now, in just six games. 

In those past six starts he’s gone 3-0 with a 1.40 ERA and recorded 56 punch outs. 

If Hernandez can continue to roll like this, only divine intervention can block him from hoisting up the Cy Young yet again. 

 

 

*Stats are from ESPN.com. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Seattle Mariners: Projecting the Starting Rotation for 2013

Quietly tucked away in the northwest region of the country, the Seattle Mariners are developing a homegrown starting rotation that could compete for years to come.

However, the secret is getting out.

The Mariners, despite playing below .500 in 2012, are growing and developing one of the better minor league systems in baseball. With a plethora of draft picks over the last few seasons, the franchise has re-dedicated itself to building a competitive, young pitching staff.

Seattle is putting itself in a position to compete as early as 2013, so let’s take a look at how the starting rotation could look by next season.

Enjoy the show!

Begin Slideshow


Seattle Mariners: Projecting the 2012 Rotation

You hate to see a young stud pitcher like Michael Pineda go, but even with this loss, the Mariners’ 2012 rotation isn’t exactly in shambles.

Anytime Felix Hernandez is your ace pitcher, your rotation is going to be better than 40% of the teams in the league. Even if your other four pitchers are just average, you’re still going to have an above-average rotation with King Felix at the top.

Several new pitchers have arrived, including Japanese sensation Hisashi Iwakuma. 

With the departure of pitchers like Doug Fister, Erik Bedard, and Michael Pineda this 2012 rotation will look completely revamped.

Begin Slideshow


How Does the Yankees Michael Pineda Deal Affect the Toronto Blue Jays?

Rome wasn’t built in a night, but Brian Cashman of the Yankees proved you could get pretty darn close. If the building of Rome is equivalent to winning a World Series, that is.

The New York Yankees have acquired Michael Pineda of the Seattle Mariners for Catcher Jesus Montero. They then signed Hiroki Kuroda formerly of the Los Angeles Dodgers

Pineda will be 23 years old this year. In his first year in the big leagues he put together a record of 9-10 with 3.74 ERA and 173 strikeouts in 171 innings pitched. Not bad for a 22-year-old.

Pineda will no doubt get better with age; I want to know what was going through the minds of the Seattle front office when they pulled the trigger on this move. I would not have given up Pineda after just one season.

This kid showed a tremendous amount of potential and behind King Felix (Hernandez), they would have formed one of the best one-two punches for years to come. I don’t know a whole lot about the Seattle organization, but just by looking at their depth chart, it seems like they do need some help in their batting order with an aging Ichiro Suzuki and a core of young hitters.

In this past year I really thought the Seattle pitching staff was going to be a force in the A.L. West in the next couple of years with Hernandez, Pineda and Doug Fister. Alas, two of those three are gone, and if I was a Mariners fan I would not be pleased at all.

Lucky for me I’m not.

Jesus Montero is a highly-touted prospect and is expected to do big things once he makes it to the majors for good. But I don’t think a power-hitting catcher is worth an arm like Pineda’s. To me the power-hitting catcher is a fad that doesn’t work out all the time, while a strikeout pitcher can always be useful.

I know they are both very young and it will be years before we can say who won this trade, but right now the Mariners just made the Yankees a favourite in the A.L. East.

I wrote an article here on why Blue Jays fans should still be excited for the upcoming year, but it’s looking more and more like we need to be more excited for 2013, when our young farm players make the jump. 

From a Blue Jays fan standpoint, it really puts a damper on what was looking like the beginning of the end of the Yankees empire. Their core roster was starting to get old and they weren’t making many moves in the offseason.

But now the Yankees have become re-energized and they will once again have that Yankee swagger every game with three All-Star-caliber pitchers in the rotation along with the young and very good Ivan Nova. They then have a handful of guys that can work out of the number five spot.

No series with the Yankees was ever a given, but if you only had to face Sabathia a few times every year, the Yankees looked ripe for the picking. The Blue Jays will have to deal with three superb rotations in their own division once again with the Yankees, Red Sox and Rays.

As a Jays fan, if the Mariners were asking for Travis d’Arnaud in exchange for Michael Pineda, I would do that deal. Pineda behind Romero or Morrow would be fantastic. D’Arnaud, like Montero is expected to be a great ballplayer, but he has yet to get a sniff of the major leagues, while Pineda has proven in one year that he can be a major leaguer.

There are actually a few of the Blue Jays prospects that I would have traded for Pineda. The deal seems like it was so simple: a catcher and a minor-league pitcher for a starter. It seems like the Jays wouldn’t even have had to give up one of their top pitching prospects to get the deal done.

The Mariners were in it more for the bat than the arm and the Blue Jays do have a few of those down in Las Vegas and New Hampshire.

I’m not upset that Alex Anthopoulos hasn’t made any big moves on the free-agent market, as stated in that previous article, but when it comes to the trade route it’s usually Anthopolus that is sneaking talent away from other GMs. This year we have only seen him manage that for Sergio Santos.

This Pineda-for-Montero move is something I would have expected AA to do had he known Pineda was on the market. 

Still, both Pineda and Montero are young and their careers could go in completely opposite directions and have Seattle as the winners in the deal. But based on their recent history and their scouting staff, I think the Yankees will make Pineda very comfortable in New York, as well as Kuroda. 

The competition in the A.L. East just got a lot tougher for this upcoming season. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


New York Yankees: How a $189 Million Payroll Could Work

The New York Yankees are reportedly seeking to lower their payroll to $189 million. To most teams that seems very easy but the Yankees have a bunch of aging stars with huge contracts that will make this seemingly-simple task very difficult.

Now, the Yankees will not have to permanently stay at $189 million to save money, as the luxury tax in the new CBA punishes repeat offenders, so the Yankees payroll will waver above and below $189 million. In order to save a large amount of money the Yankees will only have to drop to the $189 million payroll threshold once of out every three years.

I will be acting as the Yankees GM and my goal will be to field a competitive lineup while trying to eventually lower the payroll to $189 million. For this article I will ignore arbitration, bench players and players getting league minimum because those figures tend to stay pretty much stable year-to-year and they are tough to predict.

Lets see how this $189 million payroll is possible.

Begin Slideshow


5 Reasons Why the Red Sox Should Make a Deal for Felix Hernandez

The Boston Red Sox do not have a major league “ace” on their pitching staff.  At least that is how it would appear after a dreadful collapse during the 2011 season.  Josh Beckett gave up.  Jon Lester was just good, and Clay Buccholz was injured.

There are very few teams in baseball that actually do have an ace at the front end of their rotation.  The Yankees do in C.C. Sabathia.  The Giants do in Tim Lincecum.  The Seattle Mariners do in Felix Hernandez.

The Red Sox do not.

According to an interview he had on WEEI, Larry Lucchino is not ruling out any major trades this year, and I feel that the time may be right to do such a thing.

Having said that, here are five reasons why the Red Sox should make a deal for Felix Hernandez.

Begin Slideshow


Seattle Mariners: Your Bonafied Postgame Traffic-Planning Commission at Work!

At a Seattle Mariners professional baseball game last night, we were parked in the garage between the football and baseball stadiums in Seattle.  This was a perk for the front-row tickets given my wife by supervisors for all her good work of the past few months.  No nose-bleeders for this group on this warm late-spring night! 

And no hiking tens of miles to the car following the game.  This time we would be the snooty royalty that annoys the masses of peons, and like snooty royalty, we would be parking across the street from the baseball stadium free of charge with the BMWs, Mercedes and exotic sports cars of the world.

Walking only a few yards to the car was really cool. 

But after the game, not getting out of the same parking garage for over an hour, gridlocked in non-moving vehicles just outside the stadium, sort of ruined the thrill of parking in the garage where they charge mere mortals up to $50.  

More disturbing, it became apparent that the traffic planners in our city were either crazy, or deliberately making traffic as bad as they could following typical sporting events.  It was almost as if they were making traffic worse—far worse than had there been no helpful, friendly Seattle police officers supervising traffic flow after games.

How do I know this? 

Because after waiting an hour in toxic fumes that could melt steel, I finally managed to escape the confines of the concrete garage, but was immediately ushered to the east side of Safeco Field where all vehicles did not move.  Nor could they move, because helpful, friendly Seattle police traffic officers were routing all 45,000 vehicles into the same one-lane alley south of the stadium. 

Ironic, because I sort of wanted to go north, and catch the freeway on-ramp that would take me north, that I could see…ever so close.

But the friendly, helpful police traffic officers were having none of that!  Nope, they insisted all traffic go south, right into a big gridlocked mess where nobody could move out of because other helpful police traffic officers were routing everyone where they should not be.   

So there we sat.  For a very long time.  Nobody moving and everybody getting extremely agitated.

Finally, the two-hour mark after the game hit, and like magic all the police officers hopped on their little parked motorcycles and sped away into the night, suddenly leaving all the gridlocked intersections unregulated. 

And once they did, within five minutes the traffic had completely cleared out. 

No more helpful traffic cops equaled no more gridlock.  Who would have thought?

At that point many of us, as we drove home, asked the important and profound question most citizens in Washington State have asked after sporting events: 

“Hey, if traffic is better without the friendly, helpful police regulation following games, perhaps the city is wasting its money by having each and every intersection littered with these fine, uniformed folks?”

Maybe a prudent plan would be to not spend the money for all these lovely traffic heroes, and instead let things be like they are during the rest of the week? 

Why not let traffic do what traffic does, without the “help”?

Once, several years ago, following another game in which this exact same thing happened, I emailed the beloved traffic commission chairperson and suggested this wonderful and intellectual idea. 

And just like the friendly, helpful police traffic officers at every corner last night, he eventually emailed me back with suggestions of various physical activities that I could do to myself. 

He also mentioned that people as stupid as me don’t realize that this was actually a huge traffic improvement.  “You idiot!”

See this is because the Seattle Police Department, in co-operation with the City of Seattle and various inept mayors, has carefully crafted a set of hiring guidelines for every single traffic planner.  Here’s how it goes:

 

Clause No. 1

If the applicant shows college education or traffic planning experience, that person will immediately be disqualified for employment consideration by the PGSTPC (Postgame Seattle Traffic Planning Commission).

 

Clause No. 2

If said applicant shows any natural talent for common-sense thinking, that person too, will immediately be disqualified for employment consideration by the PGSTPC.

 

Clause No. 3

Preferred applicants will normally be found in chimpanzee cages at the Woodland Park Zoo, or found sleeping under bridges in frigid temperatures.

 

Clause No. 4

Habitual inebriation for each traffic planner is a plus.  In fact, if said applicant arrives at job interview immediately after consuming a fifth of Jack Daniels straight up, that applicant will vault to the top of the stack and may be immediately hired and assigned to supervise all traffic planning for the day, before sobering up.

 

Contrary to what you might think, the goal of the PGSTPC is not to clear traffic out.  Nope.  The goal is to keep traffic confined in unmoving gridlock for as long as possible. 

Speculation persists that the local business community is behind this reasoning, insisting that the longer you stay in their neighborhood, the more crap you may buy.  Oh sure, most of those businesses are closed by the time the Mariners games are over, but…well, please see Clauses No. 1 through No. 4 if you are confused about this policy.

Also, within the traffic code is the north/south directional concept.  If said vehicle prefers to travel north (because your house is north of the stadium), each and every regulated traffic corridor will insist you go south.  For many miles too.  Conversely, if your house is situated to the south, then the very same traffic corridors will route you north in the opposite direction you wish to go, usually into gridlock and parked contraptions that cannot move.

Years and millions of dollars were spent on little, unknown GPS chips that police officers read from your vehicle as you approach, like they do for the toll bridges.  Particular effort is put into stringent requirements insisting the direction of your vehicle goes in the opposite direction that it should.   

Why? 

Because it’s fun for intoxicated traffic planners to see all the cars not moving for hours after a sporting event.

And don’t bother screaming at localized traffic cops on corners about all of this, because that will merely make them cranky.  They didn’t do the traffic plan, they merely enforce it.  In fact, when frustrated motorists yell at cops, frustrated motorists may soon find themselves charged with heinous crimes and strip-searched in public. 

What frustrated motorists can do, however, is write sarcastic articles like this one when they get home several weeks later, and then send them to every public official they can find. 

That’ll teach those jerks.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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