Tag: Max Scherzer

Max Scherzer vs. Tigers: Stats, Highlights and Twitter Reaction

The Washington Nationals lost five of their last six games coming into Wednesday’s contest, but Max Scherzer wasn’t about to let them lose another. All the dominant right-hander did was tie a major league record with 20 strikeouts in one game as he led Washington to the 3-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers.

Here is a look at Scherzer’s final stat line:

Scherzer joined Roger Clemens, Kerry Wood and Randy Johnson as the only pitchers in baseball history to strike out 20 batters in a nine-inning start, as MLB highlighted:

Clemens did it twice for the Boston Red Sox (1986 and 1996), Wood did it in 1998 for the Chicago Cubs and Johnson did it for the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001, per Jay Jaffe of Sports Illustrated. Scherzer was particularly efficient during his outing Wednesday, as ESPN Stats & Info and Jayson Stark of ESPN.com pointed out:  

One of those record holders gave a shoutout to the newest member of the 20-strikeout club:

Ben Nicholson-Smith of Sportsnet noted making history is business as usual for the Nationals pitcher:

Will Brinson of CBS Sports said Scherzer’s latest feat is even more extraordinary than a no-no:

Scherzer was already making history through eight innings, as Mitch Goldich of Sports Illustrated realized, citing numbers from Baseball-Reference.com:

The Nationals were struggling to keep up with the math: 

Former U.S. Rep. John Dingell located the few guys in the stadium Scherzer didn’t retire on strikes:

While he was incredible against his former team at Nationals Park on Wednesday, Scherzer had struggled some in 2016 coming into the start. He was sporting a 4.60 ERA, 1.28 WHIP and 46 strikeouts in 43 innings before the 20-strikeout effort, and there was perhaps some concern about how the 31-year-old was responding after he threw a career-high 228.2 innings last season.

He was also coming off an abysmal performance against the Chicago Cubs on Friday, when he allowed seven earned runs and four home runs in five innings. However, on Wednesday he appeared to find his old stuff that had resulted in an ERA of 2.90, 3.15 and 2.79 in the last three years, respectively.

Tom Fornelli of CBS Sports implied the turnaround was bound to happen eventually:

Scherzer has been a dominant strikeout pitcher for most of his career, and he’s tallied more than 200 in each of the last four campaigns:

He received some help Wednesday from Danny Espinosa, who drilled a solo home run in the seventh inning. It proved to be the difference, as the Tigers scored in the top of the ninth to trim the deficit to a single run.

Despite their recent struggles, the Nationals were 20-13 coming into play Wednesday and only one game behind the New York Mets in the loss column in the National League East. If Scherzer continues to pitch like he did Wednesday, he could lead Washington back to the postseason after it missed out in 2015.

 

Postgame Reaction

While Wood offered his congratulations on Twitter, Clemens responded after the game, per Jose de Jesus Ortiz of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: “Haven’t seen it, but fantastic.”

Mark Zuckerman of MASNSports.com noted “Scherzer took particular pride in doing this [versus the] Tigers” and shared the pitcher’s takeaway: “Those are tremendous hitters. This is for real.”

Nationals manager Dusty Baker echoed that, per Chris Iott of MLive.com:“That was the best performance I’ve seen in person. … He wanted it. You could tell he was psyched before the game against his former teammates.”

Tigers slugger J.D. Martinez was asked what it is like being behind in the count against Scherzer, per Jason Beck of MLB.com: “It’s like a horror film. He’s got three pitches that can put you away.”

Scherzer summarized his outing, per Katie Strang of ESPN: “Strikeouts are sexy. To strike out 20, that’s sexy.”

It’s hard to argue with that.

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Max Scherzer Signing Nationals’ Only Brilliant Move in Lost Season

Hey, not sure if you’ve heard, but 2015 has been a pretty lousy season for the Washington Nationals.

OK, that’s an understatement. More like an “epically disappointing” season. Or “colossally horrendous.” Or, well, you get the idea.

This was a team that was supposed to run away with the National League East and streak through the postseason. Instead, it’s crumbled in a heap of injury, inconsistency and infighting, and the Nats will be watching the playoffs from their La-Z-Boys.

There has been one bright spot in Washington’s lost campaign, however—one move that has paid serious dividends. That would be the signing of Max Scherzer, who reminded the world Saturday why he’s one of the very best pitchers on the planet.

For nine brilliant innings at Citi Field, Scherzer befuddled and downright dominated the New York Mets, the club that streaked past Washington in the second half to claim the division flag.

The historically huge piece of Scherzer’s final line is obviously the hit total, as in the zero he surrendered. The 2-0 win makes two no-hitters this year for the 31-year-old right-hander. And it makes him the first pitcher since Nolan Ryan in 1973 to log a pair of no-nos in a single regular season, per B/R Insights

Equally impressive, though, were the career-high 17 strikeouts Scherzer recorded, including nine of the final 10 batters he faced. 

It was, by any measure, a transcendent appearance, the kind that separates very good pitchers from the truly great.

After the game, Scherzer described what it’s like to get locked into such an otherworldly zone.

“You’re in sync with your mechanics, and you’re in sync with the catcher and what you want to do,” he said, per Bill Ladson and Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. “You have a feeling what the out pitch is, and you’re reading swings, reading what they’re doing and just trying to execute pitches around that.”

With that exclamation point, Scherzer finished his first go-around in a Nationals uniform, with a 2.79 ERA and 276 strikeouts in 228.2 innings pitched. He won’t win the NL Cy Young Award—not with the numbers the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ Zack Greinke and Chicago Cubs‘ Jake Arrieta are putting up.

But if there were any doubt he’s an ace among aces, Scherzer laid them to rest.

So put the seven-year, $210 million deal the Nationals handed Scherzer this winter in the franchise win column. Even if Scherzer falters near the end of the contract, he’s shown he’s worth every penny.

Unfortunately, that doesn’t erase the sting of other moves that didn’t pan out, to put it kindly.

Take the sad saga surrounding manager Matt Williams, who lost control to the point where players were openly griping to reporters, with one unnamed Nat telling Barry Svrluga of the Washington Post the clubhouse was “a terrible environment.”

CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman reported Thursday that Washington will fire Williams, but it’s worth asking why the manager stuck around that long. In fact, with the benefit of hindsight, it would have behooved the Nats to go with a different skipper from the get-go.

“He’s a nice man, and he tried hard,” Heyman wrote, “but he probably was miscast as a first-time manager with a team toting huge expectations.”

Then there was a rash of terrible injury luck, which saw Denard Span, Stephen Strasburg, Anthony Rendon, Doug Fister, Jayson Werth and Ryan Zimmerman make trips to the disabled list. And others, including shortstop Ian Desmond, significantly underperformed.

Finally and most explosively, there was the trade-deadline move to bring in Jonathan Papelbon. The veteran closer was supposed to shore up the Nats’ bullpen, but instead he solidified his reputation as a classless malcontent with the Bryce Harper choking incident that will serve as the definitive symbol of Washington’s crash-and-burn season.

That’s too bad, because Scherzer’s pair of no-hit gems deserve the honor. Among all the dashed expectations and ugly incidents, here is a man at the top of his game doing incredible things with a baseball.

In a perfect world, that’s what we would focus on.

And even in the Nationals’ decidedly imperfect world, Scherzer represents hope. 

Really, there are other causes for optimism in the nation’s capital. There’s an enviable offensive nucleus of Harper, Rendon and young talent such as Trea Turner. And there’s Strasburg, who has finished his up-and-down, injury-riddled season on a strong note and joins Scherzer to form a potent top-of-the-rotation duo heading into 2016, with top prospect Lucas Giolito in the pipeline.

Nats fans will slog into the long, cold winter with a nasty taste in their mouths. But here’s a possible remedy: Re-watch Scherzer’s no-hitters, rinse and repeat—because, in a season where almost everything went wrong, Scherzer is one thing that went very, very right. 

 

All statistics current as of Oct. 3 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Max Scherzer Throws No-Hitter vs. Mets: Stats, Highlights and Reaction

The Washington Nationals have been mired in turmoil over the past week, but Max Scherzer made the pain of dugout brawls and clubhouse chaos disappear Saturday night as he twirled his second no-hitter of the season in a 2-0 win over the New York Mets at Citi Field. 

Scherzer’s the first pitcher to record two no-hitters in the regular season since 1973. The last, according to B/R Insights, is Nolan Ryan. 

Washington’s ace recorded 17 strikeouts in the win—seven more than he notched in his no-hit effort on June 20 against the Pittsburgh Pirates. The 17 strikeouts also tied Ryan for the most in a no-hitter since 1900, per ESPN Stats & Info, which also noted Scherzer is the only player in MLB history to throw two no-hitters without allowing a walk (a hit-by-pitch and an error kept the outings from being perfect games). 

Scherzer’s repertoire was simply devastating Saturday night, just as it has been all season. He mixed pitch speeds beautifully and sat down Mets batters with filthy changeups, fastballs and sliders. 

“To throw a no-hitter, sometimes it takes a little luck,” Scherzer said, per the Associated Press (via ESPN). “I was able to execute all four of my pitches whether I was behind in the count or ahead in the count.”

The timing of the historic outing, though, was a bit strange. Not only have the Nationals been in a full-blown tailspin thanks to a 37-44 record that spanned July through September, but Scherzer’s second half also hasn’t been nearly as prolific as his first half. 

Scherzer posted a 2.11 ERA and held opposing batters to a .185 average prior to the All-Star break, but a 6.43 ERA in a winless August coincided with Washington’s nosedive in the standings. 

ESPN’s David Schoenfield analyzed Scherzer’s second-half struggles and related them to the Nationals’ lost season: “Hitters hit a lot of home runs off Scherzer’s fastball, and his mediocre second half became a part of the Nationals’ meltdown, along with the injuries, the bullpen, the manager, the rest of the rotation, the clubhouse chemistry and maybe the Thomas Jefferson mascot.”

However, the National League Cy Young candidate has been dominant on the road all season. Entering Saturday night, Scherzer was 8-5 with a 2.38 ERA as a visitor. By comparison, the 31-year-old is 5-7 with a 3.44 ERA at Nationals Park. 

Washington’s 2015 campaign undeniably disappointed relative to expectations, but Scherzer’s ability to consistently blow away opposing batters stands out as one of the most impressive individual feats by any MLB player this year.  

Washington isn’t going anywhere this postseason, and Scherzer isn’t likely to make any real Cy Young noise with Zack Greinke and Jake Arrieta continuously wowing.

However, there’s no denying, bad second half or not, that Scherzer was a bright spot for the Nationals this year. Scherzer showed he’s the ace Washington wanted when it signed him this past offseason.

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Max Scherzer Jokingly Chokes Bryce Harper During Pregame Handshake

A few days after Washington Nationals closer Jonathan Papelbon choked Bryce Harper in the dugout, the face of the franchise once again was getting “choked” by a teammate.

Don’t worry, it was all in good fun this time.

On Sunday, Papelbon and Harper were involved in a dugout altercation during their contest with the Philadelphia Phillies. The incident included Papelbon choking Harper:

The Nationals suspended Papelbon four games for his actions. The team’s suspension was tacked onto the three-game ban the league had already handed down after Papelbon threw at the Baltimore Orioles’ Manny Machado on Sept. 24, ending the reliever’s season.

Skip ahead to Thursday. That’s when Nationals ace Max Scherzer decided that the “too soon” phase had passed and jokingly choked Harper in the dugout during the club’s road tilt with the Atlanta Braves.

Update: As a reader points out, Scherzer and Harper have done something like this pre-Papelbon incident.

[MLB.com]

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Scherzer Throws 3rd Complete Game in Span of 4 Starts

After throwing just one complete game in the first 210 starts of his career, Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer went the distance for a third time in his last four outings in Thursday’s 2-1 loss to the Atlanta Braves, per ESPN Stats & Info.

Having previously tossed complete-game shutouts against the Milwaukee Brewers on June 14 and Pittsburgh Pirates on June 20, Scherzer allowed two runs over 8.1 innings Tuesday night against the Braves.

He was a tough-luck loser in the game, giving up a walk-off RBI single to Braves outfielder Cameron Maybin in the bottom of the ninth inning.

A dominant starter since the beginning of 2013, Scherzer could typically be counted on for six or seven excellent innings during his time with the Detroit Tigers, but his strikeout-heavy profile made it hard to keep his pitch count low enough to finish off games.

A move to the National League seems to have helped him in that regard, and his statistics have somehow been more dominant than ever.

Through his first 16 starts with the Nationals, Scherzer owns a 9-6 record, 1.82 ERA, 0.78 WHIP and 139-to-14 strikeout-to-walk ratio over 118.2 innings.

Among qualified National League starters, he ranks first in WHIP and innings and second in ERA and strikeouts.

Scherzer has thus emerged as the early favorite for Cy Young honors, although Los Angeles Dodgers pitchers Clayton Kershaw and Zack Greinke, among others, figure to mount a strong challenge.

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Predicting the 2015 MLB All-Star Game Starting Lineups

Major League Baseball released its sixth All-Star Game balloting update Monday, with final results for the July 14 game in Cincinnati to be announced Sunday. Voters have until Thursday night to cast online, although there is always the threat of some votes being “scrubbed” away when the final count is announced.

The latest update shows that MLB’s cancelling of more than 60 million votes has taken some of the steam out of the Kansas City Royals’ domination of the American League starting lineup, but the message has likely been received that some tweaking to the system is needed going forward.

For now, we have the system MLB has relied upon since 1970, where fan voting determines non-pitching starters for each league, including a designated hitter. Despite the game determining home-field advantage in the World Series, the fan-voting system remains in place and has led to ballot-stuffing incidents, including this year, when eight Royals players were leading the AL voting as of June 15. That led to the cancelling of votes days later.

In the American League, there are only two races—second base and DH—where the leader and second-place player are within 1 million votes of each other. In the National League, there are likewise two—the race for third base and the third outfielder.

Some of the spots are therefore likely cemented, but a surge in some territories could lead to final-week upsets. So, knowing how things stand just days before polling closes, click through to check out Bleacher Report’s All-Star Game starter predictions.

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Scherzer Reaches 16 Consecutive Innings Without Allowing a Hit

After tossing a no-hitter against the Pittsburgh Pirates last weekend, Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer didn’t allow a hit until the sixth inning in Friday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies, making him the first pitcher since Dwight Gooden in May 1996 to throw 16 consecutive no-hit innings, per Elias Sports Bureau (via ESPN Stats & Info).

The streak started against the Milwaukee Brewers on June 14, with Scherzer holding the Brew Crew hitless over the final two innings to finish off a one-hit, one-walk complete-game shutout that included a season-high 16 strikeouts. He took a perfect game into the seventh inning, but lost it on a single by Brewers outfielder Carlos Gomez.

Scherzer then carried a perfect game into the ninth inning of last Saturday’s start against Pittsburgh, but he lost it with two outs in the final frame when he hit Pirates outfielder Jose Tabata with a pitch. The right-hander still hung on for a no-hitter, giving him 11 consecutive innings without allowing a hit, in addition to back-to-back complete-game shutouts.

Although he didn’t allow a hit through the first five innings, Scherzer wasn’t quite as dominant in Friday’s start, as the Phillies eventually got him for two runs on five hits and a walk over eight innings. The Nationals still managed to come away with a 5-2 victory, improving Scherzer‘s record to 9-5 on the season and giving him exactly 100 wins for his career, per MLB Milestones.

When all was said and done, the streak without allowing a hit lasted 54 batters, 12 days and three starts, with just one walk and one batter hit by a pitch during that span, per the Nationals’ official website.

Had Scherzer retired Tabata instead of hitting him with a pitch, he would’ve set an MLB record by tossing 15 consecutive innings, per Sportsnet Stats.

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Max Scherzer Becoming the Summer’s Must-Watch Event

Admit it: Somewhere around the fifth inning of Max Scherzer‘s start Friday night against the Philadelphia Phillies, you were expecting history. Not just hoping for it or believing it was possible. You assumed it would happen.

“It,” of course, being a second consecutive no-hitter. If Scherzer had managed the feat—and he teased us, not allowing a baserunner in this 5-2 road win until Freddy Galvis doubled with one out in the sixth—he’d have become just the second big league pitcher to do so. The other, Johnny Vander Meer, did it in 1938.

For now, Vander Meer remains alone in his exclusive club. But the mere fact that Scherzer came so close, and had basically everyone convinced he could do it, tells you all you need to know about how far the ace right-hander has elevated his game.

Yes, he was facing the woeful Phillies, cellar-dwellers in the National League East who saw their manager, Ryne Sandberg, resign earlier in the day, as reported by Philly.com‘s David Murphy.

And yes, Scherzer has been good for a while now. He won an American League Cy Young Award in 2013 with the Detroit Tigers, after all, and posted a career-high 252 strikeouts last season.

But something seems to have clicked since Scherzer arrived in the nation’s capital, some other gear we didn’t know he had. Maybe even he didn’t know he had it.

Scherzer‘s overall numbers with the Washington Nationals are excellent: 1.79 ERA, 110.1 innings pitched, 130 strikeouts.

But over his last three starts, he’s truly become a one-man, must-watch event.

On June 14, he took a perfect game into the seventh and wound up with a complete-game, one-hit, 16-strikeout shutout against the Milwaukee Brewers.

Then, on June 20, came the no-hitter, during which he retired 26 straight Pittsburgh Pirates before beaning Jose Tabata. It was a painfully close pass at perfection but still a transcendent performance.

By comparison, Friday’s win over the Phils was second-tier, B-side Scherzer, as he lasted “only” eight frames and surrendered two earned runs.

In the midst of all that stellar pitching, Scherzer put together an eye-popping scoreless stretch, as CSN Washington’s Mark Zuckerman highlighted:

CBS Sports‘ Mike Axisa joined in the praise parade:

Scherzer is on an extended run of dominance right now, the likes of which we don’t see very often. A one-hitter, a no-hitter, then eight innings of two-run ball? Any one of those three would represent the best start of the season for most pitchers. Scherzer‘s done all that in the span of two weeks. He is the best pitcher in baseball right now…

“[This] is some of the best baseball I’ve thrown, best pitching I’ve done,” Scherzer said after his no-no, per MLB.com‘s Jacob Emert and Tom Singer. “I just feel like I’m executing with all my pitches. I just continue to keep getting better and it shows you hard work pays off.”

Hard work and, perhaps, a move to the Senior Circuit. Not to take anything away from Scherzer, who looks like he could get anyone out right now without breaking a sweat, but it’s worth noting that his uptick from very good to great has coincided with his move to a league that doesn’t feature the designated hitter.

A look at Scherzer‘s PITCHf/x data, per FanGraphs, doesn’t reveal anything radical, though his fastball velocity is up a tick compared to last year (93.6 mph versus 92.8 mph). He’s also relying a bit more heavily on his slider and a bit less on his changeup.

Whatever the reason, Scherzer has attained elite status. He gives off that vibe every time he takes the hill that something is happening. Think Clayton Kershaw during last year’s Cy Young/MVP campaign (but not so much Kershaw in the playoffs).

Can it continue? Can Scherzer ride this wave straight to a second Cy Young Award and join an elite fraternity of hurlers who have won the prize in both leagues? Right now, that group includes Pedro Martinez, Randy Johnson, Roger Clemens, Roy Halladay and Gaylord Perry.

With the way he’s been throwing, Scherzer‘s name fits right in. Perhaps he’ll hit a few bumps this summer, as even the great ones do. But there’s every reason to assume the Nats can ride him straight through to October.

OK, here’s one more testimonial of how dominant Scherzer has been. In compiling the latest installment of Bleacher Report’s Team of the Week, I gave Scherzer only an “honorable mention,” even after his no-hitter (the week in question didn’t feature either of his other starts).

My reasoning was simply that anything less than perfection feels like less than what Scherzer is capable of. He’s being judged on another level because he’s playing on another level.

Call it unfair. Call it stupid. Just don’t forget to call him flat-out filthy.

 

All statistics current as of June 26 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Scott Miller’s Starting 9: Outrage over Max Scherzer’s Missed Perfecto off-Base

1. Warning: Unwritten Rules Ahead

Jose Tabata, villain for either (a) leaning into or (b) not getting out of the way of a hanging slider and ruining Max Scherzer’s perfect game?

Or the latest victim of the Internet rushing to a speedy and unfair judgment?

Here’s the thing about Tabata, as opposed to the horde that instantly condemned him online in the hours after Scherzer’s pitch went plunk! and a historic perfect game went splat!: He had a split-second to react. Everyone else had time to fix a sandwich, grab a fistful of Cheez-Its, rewind the video a few dozen times and chew on the play from a dozen different angles.

The best reaction I saw all weekend came from a pitcher, who, surprise, surprise, actually was siding with the hitter:

That was my initial reaction watching the play, and it was still my reaction after rerunning it half-a-dozen times.

Tabata looked like a hitter staying in against the slider, expecting it to break. He moved with the pitch and, when it didn’t break, yes, his elbow had dropped a couple of inches, and, no, he didn’t back away.

Why? Because Scherzer’s slider had been so precise all afternoon. Time after time, Pirates hitters saw that slider come in and then break, and they looked like slow men chasing a fly with a fly swatter.

Tabata had battled his rear end off in that plate appearance, by the way. If you listened to a large part of the social media narrative afterward, he sounded like a man who went to the plate looking to get hit by a pitch.

Wrong. It was an eight-pitch at-bat, during which Tabata fouled off five Scherzer offerings. He put up one heck of a fight.

Yet when Scherzer hit him, on the Nationals broadcast, analyst and former infielder F.P. Santangelo said, “That is just the worst way ever to lose a [perfect game]. Are you kidding me?”

Agreed, it was a wholly unsatisfying moment given the mounting drama.

But perfect games are extraordinarily difficult, which is why there have been only 23 of them completed in more than 100 years of baseball.

Have we been so conditioned in our instant gratification, politically correct, everyone-goes-home-with-an-orange-slice world that when a pitcher is on the verge of history, hitters should go into politeness mode and not dare to do anything to offend? Just roll over and take it?

Horseradish. You keep playing, and whatever happens, happens. Say what you will, but Tabata did not dive into the pitch. Which, incidentally, is why plate umpire Mike Muchlinski was correct as well. Some blamed him for not stepping in and disallowing the hit-by-pitch when it simply was not as egregious and obvious as so many were willing it to be.

“I wanted to get a hit,” Tabata told reporters in a Spanish-language interview the next day. “People don’t understand that those were the instincts people have. I wasn’t looking to get hit. I wanted to get a hit. I wanted to get on base.”

Meantime, no surprise that Scherzer, as classy a player as there is in the game, told multiple outlets afterward that he held no ill will toward Tabata.

“It was a slider that was in,” he told MLB Network Radio’s Jeff Joyce. “I kind of lost a little control over it. It backed up on me. I have no qualms about it whatever. That’s just baseball. He did what he needed to do. So kudos to him, actually.”

It reminded me of another controversial incident in May 2001, when the Padres’ Ben Davis bunted for a base hit when the Diamondbacks’ Curt Schilling was five outs from a perfect game.

Schilling and some of the D-backs were “a little stunned” at this breach of baseball etiquette. But it was May, the eighth inning of a 2-0 game and early enough in the season that the Padres were just one game out of first place in the NL West at the time.

“I guess they wanted us to drop our weapons and raise our hands,” then-Padres manager Bruce Bochy said. “We’re trying to win the ballgame and we got the tying run up to the plate. We almost won the ballgame.”

Baseball etiquette and the unwritten rules can get awfully confusing at times. But here is something that should never be confusing: Play the game, from start to finish.

It’s called integrity.

 

2. Royal All-Star Voting Crisis

So MLB canceled more than 60 million votes for fear of improper All-Star voting. Nevertheless, as one American League player who is not with Kansas City told me the other day, he continues rooting madly for the Royals to continue to dominate the vote.

Why?

To throw the system into complete chaos, the player said. Because, he said, he thinks everything about the All-Star voting process needs to be re-evaluated. 

The player is not alone, and as MLB continues to lurch toward what will wind up being a humiliating situation if seven or eight Royals are voted in as starters, the bottom line remains that MLB must decide once and for all what it wants from the game.

Should it be a meaningful contest that decides World Series home-field advantage?

Or should it be a midsummer carnival, an overall celebration of the game?

I lean toward the former. But that means the players, such as Mike Trout and Bryce Harper, should play seven or eight innings, many others won’t get to play and when players are removed, they should stay in the dugout and not go interact with fans on Twitter.

For the fans, it would be great theater.

For the players who spend their midsummer’s break traveling to the game and sitting on the bench, it would be a bummer.

As things stand, though, I don’t blame Kansas City fans for voting relentlessly. They’re just doing what baseball is telling them to do. Flipping through various games Sunday, I got to Cincinnati’s, and on the field is a logo that read “#VoteReds.” I got to Kansas City and saw a logo on the field reading “#VoteRoyals.” I got to Washington and saw a logo on the field reading, “#VoteNats.”

Over on MLB.com, I clicked on Arizona’s site and read “Help send the D-backs to the All-Star Game by going to MLB.com/Vote to put your stamp on the Midsummer Classic…”

I clicked on Philadelphia’s site, home of baseball’s worst team, and read, “Help get your Phillies into the NL All-Star starting lineup at Great American Ball Park…”

And so on.

Instead of urging fans to vote for the game’s best, each precinct is urging fans to vote for the hometown players.

Absolutely nothing wrong with that…if the All-Star Game is going to go the carnival route, celebrating everything about the game. But if the World Series is to remain attached to it, then baseball should be pushing for fans to vote for the best players, period.

So maybe while fans in Kansas City continue to vote feverishly, MLB can finally decide once and for all how to conduct the game.

 

3. Hacking: Cardinals Are Down but Not Out

No question, the alleged hacking into Houston’s Ground Zero computer system has tarnished the pristine reputation of the Cardinals.

The FBI and Department of Justice are investigating, and the Cardinals are conducting their own in-house investigation. Early indications are that owner Bill DeWitt Jr. and president/general manager John Mozeliak knew nothing about the hacking and that it was the work of some rogue, lower-level IT guys.

Based on what we know now, this is not something that is going to leave a permanent scar on the St. Louis organization.

Nevertheless, as you would expect, some folks are going way overboard. Like, way overboard. Like this Los Angeles columnist, who made the absolutely ludicrous connection between the hacking scandal and the Cardinals’ schooling of the Dodgers in each of the past two NL Championship Series.

Yup, just because St. Louis bludgeoned Clayton Kershaw and broke Hanley Ramirez’s ribs with a pitch, suddenly it is fair game to wonder if it did that by cheating, too.

“If the Cardinals would sneak into an opponent’s computer, which is a federal crime and far worse than deflating a few footballs, what else would they do to gain an edge?” Bill Plaschke wrote. “If they would cheat against a long-struggling team such as the Astros, why wouldn’t they cheat to beat the richest team in baseball and their Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw?”

Please. As the New York Times noted in the story that broke this thing wide-open, it has been believed all along that the hacking “Was executed by vengeful front-office employees for the Cardinals hoping to wreak havoc on the work of Jeff Luhnow, the Astros general manager, who had been a successful and polarizing executive with the Cardinals until 2011.”

Except for in the minds of wildly imaginative folks, there is zero evidence of on-field cheating by St. Louis.

 

4. He’ll Be Here All Night, Folks

Not to give injured Dodgers starter Brandon McCarthy too much love in one Starting 9 notebook, but I can’t resist pointing you toward a second tweet of his this week because it’s just so funny and perfect:

 

5. A-Rod and the Sounds of Silence

Hello darkness, my old friend…

Has there ever been a 3,000th hit ignored by so many? Alex Rodriguez smashing his 3,000th, a home run Friday night against Detroit’s Justin Verlander, might have been a big deal in the moment in Yankee Stadium.

Nationally, however, it probably was the least impactful 3,000th hit ever. And even in A-Rod’s subsequent at-bats that night, as B/R colleague Danny Knobler noted, “It may as well have been another day in August, for as little reaction as there was from the fans.”

The reaction from the New York tabloids was decidedly different. For your viewing pleasure:

 

6. Edgar to the Rescue in Seattle

So the weak-hitting Mariners followed the Yankees and Mets by firing their hitting coach over the weekend. The new guy is someone you might have heard of: Outside of Safeco Field, there is a street named after him, Edgar Martinez Way.

Inside of Safeco Field, there is a restaurant named after him, Edgar’s Cantina and Home Run Porch.

It will be very nice to have Martinez back in a Mariners uniform for all concerned. He is an all-time great who knows a few things about hitting.

He also is the sixth hitting coach in GM Jack Zduriencik’s seven years on the job. The Mariners have been an utter disappointment this season, and when they sacked Howard Johnson to name Martinez, their offense ranked last in the majors with a .233 batting average and last in the American League, averaging 3.36 runs per game.

 

7. Weekly Power Rankings

1. Max Scherzer: Has allowed just one hit over 18 innings in his past two starts, against the Pirates and Brewers, while striking out 26 and walking one. Can a guy be underpaid at $210 million?

2. Pete Rose: Poised to star in The Notebook II with Rachel McAdams and James Garner?

3. Astros passwords: Maybe CarlosCorreaRocks isn’t a good idea.

4. McDonald’s: Closing more restaurants than they’re opening in the United States this year for the first time since 1970. Sounds like the way the Phillies are going.

5. Giants manager Bruce Bochy stranded at Dodger StadiumTeam bus left thinking everyone was aboard. The skipper was forced to call a cab. The way the Giants have been pounding the Dodgers this year, Tommy Lasorda should have called Bochy a cab to get him off the Dodgers’ property.

 

8. The Angels and the 1 Percent

The most bizarre story last week was off the field, when Robert Alvarado, the Angels’ vice president of marketing and ticketing sales, resigned.

Speaking to the Orange County Register last month, he said the Angels were OK with a downturn in ticket sales in 2015 if they sell higher-priced tickets to higher-income fans. Alvarado told the newspaper:

We may not be reaching as many of the people on the lower end of the socioeconomic ladder, but those people, they may enjoy the game, but they pay less, and we’re not seeing the conversion on the per-caps. In doing so, the ticket price that we’re offering those people, it’s not like I can segregate them, because I’m offering it up to the public, and I’m basically downselling everybody else in order to accommodate them.

As far as ticket plans go, I’ve heard better.

 

9. Matt Harvey at 50

Fifty games, that is. The kid is just 26 but through his first 50 games, he ranks with some pretty heady company. Check out this from stats guru Bill Chuck:

 

9a. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week

Presumably, Pablo Sandoval and Hanley Ramirez are not under this “angels” umbrella, but James Taylor has released a new album featuring a song about the Red Sox, Angels of Fenway (and the reviews are brutal):

“We were living on a tear and a sigh

“In the shadow of the Bronx machine

“Man, you could feel it smolder

“The whole town had an attitude

“Then you’d get a little chip on your shoulder

“Say something that’s downright rude

“Oh, damn them Yankees

“Outspending everybody two to one

“Picking up on the cream of the crop

“Stealing everyone’s favorite son

“Angels of Fenway, hear our prayer

“We have been chastened

“We have been patient”

—James Taylor, Angels of Fenway

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


What We’ve Learned About the Washington Nationals Near the Halfway Mark

The Washington Nationals‘ erratic first half of the season has been a learning experience for the fans as they come to grips with a team that may not, after all, be the first-ever 162-game winner, and for the clubhouse staff as they conduct detergent-related science experiments to get chocolate sauce out of jersey fabric. 

Baseball rarely ever follows a script, but it looks like the Nationals didn’t even attempt to learn their lines. After opening the season as consensus World Series favorites, Washington promptly started said season with a 3-8 record. The team followed that early face-plant with three months’ worth of peaks and valleys. 

With heroic individual performances serving to balance out inconsistent pitching, the Nationals were one of the hardest teams to predict in the first half of the year. But Washington hasn’t been without flashes of dominance on its way to a 37-33 record and a seat atop the NL East. 

The Nationals are still finding their identity, and once that process is complete the team’s raw talent could overwhelm the rest of baseball. But to hazard any guesses regarding the second half of the season would be just that: guesses. 

So while we wait for the team to advance the story for us, here’s a look back at the anatomy of the Nationals’ first half of the 2015 season. 

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