Tag: Phil Hughes

Paul Maholm and Fantasy Baseball’s Two-Start Pitchers for Week 16

Fantasy Baseball’s Pitching Line of the Week:

 

Paul Maholm (SP-PIT) 

 

9 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, W

 

Paul Maholm, beneficiary of the Pirates unusual offensive barrage on Sunday, pitched the team to a 9-0 victory over the Houston Astros. Maholm pitched a complete game shutout, allowing three hits, no walks and struck out one. The win marked Pittsburgh’s first shutout of the 2010 season, who has surrendered 489 runs to opponents thus far, second to only the Arizona Diamondbacks (524).

 

Prior to Sunday’s winning effort, Maholm was just 5-7 in 18 starts for the Pirates with a 4.37 ERA. The twenty-eight year old Maholm is currently striking out a career low 4.8 batters per nine innings and is walking 3.43 batters per nine, the most since his 2006 season.

 

Maholm was taken by the Pittsburgh Pirates with the eighth overall pick in the first round of the 2003 MLB Amateur Draft out of Mississippi State University. He debuted for the Pirates against the Milwaukee Brewers on August 30, 2005, pitched eight shutout innings and earned his first career victory. 

 

In 2007, Paul Maholm won a career high 10 games, lost a career high 15 games and finished the season with a 5.27 ERA. Maholm’s best season in Pittsburgh came in 2008 when the southpaw finished 9-9 with career bests in ERA (3.71), strikeouts per nine (6.06) and walks surrendered per nine innings (2.75). 

 

Maholm features a fastball that hits 88-89 MPH (with the wind at his back), a curveball, slider and changeup in his modest repertoire. 

 

I can’t help to wonder what his career numbers would look like if he were playing for any other team in baseball.

 

Paul Maholm is currently owned in 17% of Y! leagues. 

 

The “Double Dipper” is a starting pitcher who will get two starts in the same week. Each Sunday we will preview top three options in each league and highlight streaming options for players owned in less than 50% of Y! leagues.

 

 

The No Brainers in the NL:

 

Chris Carpenter/STL ( vs. PHI, @ CHC): Back to his self after two consecutive losses.

Ubaldo Jimenez/COL (@ FLA, @ PHI): Nice and rested. 

Clayton Kershaw/LAD (vs. SFG, vs. NYM): Only lasted 4.1 innings last outing. Don’t be scared.

Tim Lincecum/SFG (@ LAD, @ ARI): 2-0, 15:3 K:BB in last two trips

 

 

The No Brainers in the AL:

 

Phil Hughes/NYY (vs. LAA, vs. KC): Monitor to be sure they don’t skip him.

Matt Garza/TB (@ BAL, @ CLE): Three of last four starts were QS.

Daisuke Matsusaka/BOS (@ OAK, @ SEA): Two strong match-ups

 

 

Warning: Streaming can be lethal. The following are owned in less than 50% of Y! leagues.

 

Tommy Hunter/TEX (@ DET, vs. LAA): Hunter is 6-0 in eight starts. Ride it.

Kris Medlen/ATL (vs. SD, @ FLA): Solid ratios and two decent match-ups

Madison Bumgarner/SFG (@ LAD, @ ARI): 2-0 in last two, allowing only one ER and logging a 11:3 K:BB ratio.

R.A. Dickey/NYM (@ ARI, @ LAD): Lost last two, but no support.

Daniel Hudson/CHW (@ SEA, @ OAK): Tons of K potential on MLB’s hottest team.

 

 

Don’t Touch ‘Em

 

J.D. Martin, Blake Hawksworth, Jeff Karstens, Luis Atilano

 

Who will win the pitching duel of the week: Lincecum or Kershaw?

 

Who will be the best 2-Start Pitcher owned in 50% or less in week 16?

 

Leave a comment, or reply to us on Twitter @TheFantasyFix

 

Tags: Fantasy Baseball Advice, Fantasy Baseball Blog, Fantasy Sports Blog, MLB, Two Start Pitchers, Double Dippers, Fonzy Scheme, Paul Maholm, Pittsburgh Pirates, Tim Lincecum, San Francisco Giants, Clayton Kershaw, Los Angeles Dodgers, Ubaldo Jimenez, Colorado Rockies, Chris Carpenter, St. Lois Cardinals, Phil Hughes, New York Yankees, Matt Garza, Tampa Bay Rays, Tommy Hunter, Texas Rangers, R.A. Dickey, New York Mets, Daniel Hudson, Chicago White Sox, Madison Bumgarner, Kris Medlen, Atlanta Braves

 

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How Much Better Would Cliff Lee Have Made the New York Yankees?

Allow me to introduce you to two mystery pitchers, Player A and Player B.

In their last eight starts, dating back to the beginning of June, both pitchers have been very good. Player A has been all but impossible to beat, having completed almost every game he’s started, and going fewer than eight innings only once, when he went seven. He almost never walks anyone, generally keeps the ball in the yard, strikes batters out…everything you could want in a pitcher.

Player B, while not such a workhorse, has still been very effective. His team has gone 5-3 in those eight games, with him getting the win in four of those five. He strikes batters out just as often as Player A, and is just slightly more parsimonious when it comes to round-trippers. He’s got very good control, too, though not the insanely low walk rate that Player A shows.

           GS  IP  H/9   H   R  BB  SO  HR   ERA  SO/9  HR/9  BB/9  pit/GS
Player A 8 68 8.5 60 18 3 49 8 2.25 6.5 1.1 0.4 107
Player B 8 53 6.6 32 15 16 44 6 2.55 7.5 1.0 2.7 105

 

In their last eight starts, dating back to the beginning of June, both pitchers have been very good. Player A has been all but impossible to beat, having completed almost every game he’s started, and going fewer than eight innings only once, when he went seven. He almost never walks anyone, generally keeps the ball in the yard, strikes batters out…everything you could want in a pitcher.

Player B, while not such a workhorse, has still been very effective. His team has gone 5-3 in those eight games, with him getting the win in four of those five. He strikes batters out just as often as Player A, and is just slightly more parsimonious when it comes to round-trippers. He’s got very good control, too, though not the insanely low walk rate that Player A shows.

It’s also worth noting that Player A has faced much stiffer competition than Player B. His eight starts have come against teams averaging 4.58 runs per game, while Player B’s opponents have averaged only 3.96 runs per game so far in 2010.

Player A’s opponents have included five of the six division winners and another team within two games of its division lead. Player B’s opponents have included three of the six teams bringing up the rears of their divisions (two starts against one of the bottom-feeders), plus two teams within the bottom three in run-scoring in their leagues. Only one team with a winning record was in that group.

Player A, as you probably know, is Mariners’ ace starter and top prize of this year’s trading deadline market, Cliff Lee. He’s awesome. No doubt about it. He automatically makes the Texas Rangers better, prohibitive favorites to win the AL West. They gave up a lot of talent to get him, but it should be worth it this year, at least.

But Player B, as you probably don’t realize, is Javier Vazquez, who would seem to have been the odd man out if the Yankees had dealt for Lee last week, as was so widely rumored. The Yankees have set a limit on Phil Hughes’ innings for 2010—probably around 175.

Andy Pettitte, being 38 years old—and frankly, never this good before—is not likely to win another 11 games in the second half. I still expect him to pitch reasonably well and to be part of the postseason rotation, but of course you’ve gotta get there first, and the Rays and “Sawx” aren’t exactly going away.

That leaves Pettitte, CC Sabathia and (come playoff time) two huge question marks in the rotation.

1. A.J. Burnett, who’s usually fine as long as his starts aren’t aired on national television , and;

B) Javier Vazquez, aka “Player B.”

Of course, Vazquez was atrocious in his first month or so of the season, as I mentioned, but he seems to have gotten back whatever it was that deserted him for the first month of the 2010 season, and has been as good as anybody for the last six weeks or so. Well, anybody but Cliff Lee, I suppose.

But how much better would swapping out Vazquez for Lee really have made the Yankees? At their current rates, over the remainder of the season, Lee could be expected to be pitch about 14 more times, around 119 innings at the rate noted above, and allow about 30 earned runs.

Vazquez projects for only 93 innings and about 26 earned runs. That’s four runs difference, but in 26 fewer innings, and those of course would fall to the Yankees’ bullpen. That bullpen has thus far allowed 103 runs in 224 innings in 2010, so at that rate they’d be expected to allow about 12 runs in 26 innings. So now Lee is better than Javy and the bullpen by a mere eight runs.

Except that, in reality, the Lee will not finish nearly every game for the rest of the season. Indeed, pitching away from the cavernous, offense-depressing SafeCo Field, he would presumably give up a couple of runs once in a while and perhaps occasionally need to come out in (gasp!) the sixth inning .

So, let’s say that Lee throws 20 more innings than Vazquez over the second half instead of 26, still a generous improvement. In those 20 innings, the bullpen will probably allow about nine runs. Subtract from those the four runs that Vazquez “saved” by not pitching as much, and now Lee is worth a meager five runs more than Vazquez, given these assumptions. Given the aforementioned difference in qualities of their opponents we’ll be magnanimous and say that Lee is really worth 10 runs.

Additionally, Lee and Vazquez have both had unsustainably low batting averages on balls in play in that span. Lee’s was .259, while Javy’s was .192(!), and therefore clearly likely to bounce back to more normal ~.300ish levels. S, just for the heck of it, let’s account for that difference with an additional 10 runs, giving us 20 total.

Are 20 runs over the second half of the 2010 season worth, say, Jesus Montero, Mark Melancon and David Adams, names that were rumored in the deal the Yankees considered? Are 20 runs even worth a journeyman reliever and a bucket of used baseballs? Well, yes, in a close race.

More to the point, you’re probably thinking, “It depends on which runs,” and you’re right. Lee helps a team win both by the innings he pitches and by those he prevents the bullpen from pitching, both by preventing runs from scoring and by allowing the offense to win without the pressure of having to score eight runs every night.

If the runs he saves are those that make a difference in getting the team into the playoffs, then they’re worth just about any trade. If he then makes the difference in getting the team to later tiers of the playoffs and even to winning the World Series, then the trade is really worthwhile.

Do you think the Blue Jays and their fans mind that they traded away Jeff Kent to get David Cone in 1992, given that he pitched well down the stretch that year and helped them win their first-ever World Series? I doubt it. I know that Yankee fans would not ultimately have cared much if Marty Janzen or Mike Gordon or Jason Jarvis had become stars.

Those trading chips got the Yankees to the Promised Land in 1996, and helped cement Cone’s place in Yankee history, winning four world championships. Nobody would have lamented the loss of prospects, even ones who blossom in another uniform, if it meant a 28th World Series title.

As it is, since the Rangers gave up a lot of prospects—who may not only eventually thrive, but may do so for a division rival—they’ll have a lot of ‘splainin to do if they miss the playoffs, or get ousted in the first round. For the Yankees and their fans, at least, they can take some solace in the hope that Lee would not have been such an incredible improvement over the man currently holding that spot in the rotation, Javy Vazquez, if all goes well.

If.

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2010 MLB All-Star Game: The Streak Is Broken

That statement is not in reference to Joe DiMaggio’s hitting streak. For the first time since 1996, the National League won the All-Star Game. I didn’t watch the first half, but David Wright went 2-2. Jose Reyes , as expected, did not play.

Braves catcher Brian McCann hit a bases-clearing double in the seventh inning to give the NL the lead, 3-1, and they never turned back. He, of course, won the MVP award. Who was the MVP in the 1996 All-Star Game? Former Mets (and Dodgers and Marlins) catcher, Mike Piazza.

He was with the Dodgers at the time. So the Mets have home field advantage for the World Series now they just have to get there.

W-Matt Capps

L-Phil Hughes

S-Jonathan Broxton

It’s sad that Yankees pitcher Phil Hughes loses the All-Star Game on the same day as the Yankees lose George Steinbrenner. Condolences out to him and his family.

Flushing Baseball Daily reporter, Tyler Moore. Follow Tyler on Twitter, where he’ll discuss Mets, and also his posts. If you wish to e-mail him, send an email to Tyler with the subject of Flushing Baseball Daily Mail. Thanks for reading!

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New York Yankees: How Pitching Will Win a Championship

The Yanks enter the 2010 All-Star break with the best record in baseball and are on pace for 103 victories. But the big news in Yankeeland this past week was the non-trade for Cliff Lee. Since that deal fell through, ESPN Insider is reporting that a Yanks deal for Cubs starting pitcher Ted Lilly “has legs.” What I don’t understand is the Yanks’ sudden obsession with starting pitching. Yes, yes, there are those old pitching adages:

Pitching wins championships.
You can never have enough pitching.

But, seriously, is Ted Lilly going to improve this team? I guess you need to grab Cliff Lee if all you’re giving up is a minor league prospect, but even that seemed like an unnecessary addition—like one of those deals I make for my fantasy team that never works out. The Yanks are the best team in baseball because their starting rotation, from top to bottom, is outrageously good right now.

Let’s talk a look at the Opening Day rotation and where the pitchers stand today.

C.C. Sabathia: After a characteristically slow start, C.C. has continued the dominance that earned him $161 million to play on 161st Street. Since June 1, a period of eight starts, Sabathia is 8-0 with an ERA of 1.81. You’re not going to improve on that. Let’s move on.

A.J. Burnett: “Good A.J.” and “Bad A.J.” have both showed up so far in 2010. But perhaps there’s logic behind his horrid stretch. Yankee pitching coach Dave Eiland left the team during the month of June for personal reasons. Here are Burnett’s stats with Eiland on the team and with him gone:

AJ with Eiland (April, May, July): 9-3, 2.96 ERA, 4 HR in 23 IP
AJ without Eiland (June): 0-5, 11.35 ERA, 9 HR in 85 IP

Does a pitching coach make this much of a difference? Does a pitching coach make any difference at all? I have no idea, but the difference in these numbers is ridiculous. How bad was A.J. in June? Hitters hit .357 and slugged .724 against him; he was worse than 2009 Chien-Ming Wang. But the rest of the season has shown that when he’s on, he’s one of the best in the game.

For folks who don’t remember, he single-armedly carried the Yankees for the second half of the 2009 season; he shut down the Phillies in Game 2 of the World Series, giving up one run and four hits in seven innings, to even the series at one game apiece. Despite his struggles, I want this man in my rotation.

Andy Pettitte: Dandy Andy is an All-Star for the first time since 2001, and his performance this season backs up the selection. He’s 11-2, bringing his career win-loss record to an insane 240-137 (making him the only active pitcher 100-plus games over .500). With victories in the clinching games in the 2009 ALDS, ALCS, and World Series, he also has 18 postseason wins.

Here in 2010, his 2.70 ERA and 1.147 WHIP marks what could be his finest AL season yet. Can he keep it up, or will his age (38) and the admitted previous usage of HGH finally break his body down? Either way, find me one Yankee fan that wants him bumped from the rotation right now. I’ll be waiting.

Javier Vazquez: Javy was the most likely pitcher to be bumped from the rotation with the theoretical addition of Cliff Lee to the Yanks. A quick glance at his overall 2010 numbers (7-7, 4.45 ERA) seem to indicate that he’d be the logical guy to trade away or relegate to the pen. But anyone watching the Yanks closely knows that he’s not the same guy who had his turn in the rotation skipped twice earlier in the season.

On May 17, Javy came on in the ninth inning of a Red Sox game, striking out Kevin Youkilis to preserve the Yanks’ two-run deficit. When Marcus Thames won the game with a two-run shot off of BoSox closer Jon Papelbon in the bottom of the frame, Vazquez earned the win for his one-third of an inning.

Since that game, Vazquez is 7-4 with a 2.77 ERA. Hitters are hitting .181 against him in 65 innings. For folks who remember only his painful 2004 stint in pinstripes, recall that Vazquez was fourth in the NL Cy Young voting just last year, behind Tim Lincecum, Chris Carpenter, and Adam Wainwright. In his last game, Vazquez lost a no-hitter on an infield single with two outs in the sixth inning. Is this a guy you want traded away or dumped to some long relief role? How would that make any sense?

Phil Hughes: Kind of hard to believe that there was once a battle for this fifth spot in the Yankees rotation. Two weeks past his 24th birthday, Phil Hughes will be an All-Star for the first time this evening. Sporting a sparkling 11-2 record, Hughes is the best No. five pitcher in baseball. More hitters have struck out against him this year than have reached base via a hit.

This is exactly what the Yankees hoped for when they selected him with their first pick in the 2004 draft. This is what Yankee fans dreamed of when Hughes threw 6.1 hitless innings in Texas in his second start, back in 2007. He’s really that good. For folks who were eager to deal him for Johan back in 2007, know this: Phil Hughes is costing the Yankees all of $447,000 this year. Santana is earning $20,144,707 across town.

The only issue in this rotation is Hughes’ reported innings limit. As a reliever for most of the 2009 season, Hughes was limited to 105.1 innings last year. Anywhere near 200 innings this season could be disastrous on his young golden arm. The Yankees skipped one of his turns in the rotation in June to cut back on his workload, but it’s tough to bench a pitcher when your team wins 81 percent of his starts.

Besides, is the intention of trading for Ted Lilly, Roy Oswalt, Dan Haren, or any of the other assorted pitchers on the trading block really to give Hughes a break? A spot-starter like Chad Gaudin could always spell the young Jedi, and the Yanks can still hold onto Jesus Montero for the inevitable time when Jorge Posada has to hang ‘em up.

So, as we look at the most important component of any baseball team, its starting rotation, here at the All-Star break, it’s mighty impressive to consider that 60 percent of the Yankees’ rotation will be in uniform for the Mid-Summer Classic. The other two guys have had stretches when they flat-out dominated the league. Take stock and enjoy it, fans. And don’t mess it up, Yanks.

________________

From Mr. Blogtober.

Follow on Twitter: @Mr_Blogtober

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Crazy Fun Numbers, Stats and Projections From MLB’s First Half

This article is a look at the fascinating numbers, unexpected performances, and season projections from the first half of Major League baseball’s 109th season. 

.454 – Josh Hamilton’s batting average in the month of June.

18 – Days the NL West leading San Diego Padres have spent out of first place. Since April 19, they have been in first place for 70 out of 74 days.

82 – The number of All-Stars this season. 

.143/.238/.286 – All-Star David Ortiz’s batting line in April. Since May 1 it is .297/.420/.630

103 – Projected wins for baseball’s top team, the New York Yankees.

52-110 – Win/loss pace of the Baltimore Orioles after they ended the first half on a four game win streak. 

17 for 30 – The success rate of Oriole closers this year.

24 – Number of losses separating the Pittsburgh Pirates from their 18th consecutive losing season.  This would extend their own dubious, American professional sports record.

135 – League leading number of home runs smashed by the Toronto Blue Jays thus far (19 more then second place Boston).  The 1997 Seattle Mariners hold the single-season record with 264 home runs.  The Blue Jays could easily have eight players hit 20 or more home runs.  That would also be a major league record.

97-63 – The record of the NL East leading Atlanta Braves since they traded Jeff Francouer on July 10, 2009.

9.5 – Number of games out of first place the Chicago White Sox were on June 9.  Thirty-two days later, on the last day of the the season’s first half, they moved into first place in the AL Central. 

.990 – Tigers’ rookie sensation Brennen Boesch’s OPS.  This would be the highest OPS posted by a rookie since some guy named Albert Pujols in 2001.  Giants rookie Buster Posey, who does not yet have enough plate appearances to qualify, currently has a .959 OPS.

4.46 – Runs per game during the season thus far, which would be the lowest since 1992.  1992 is also the most recent year with a ERA lower than this season’s 4.16.

7  – Combined number of games separating first from second for the three divisions in both the American and National League. 

4.5 games – The largest division lead in baseball; held by the surprising Texas Rangers.

28 – Ubaldo Jimenez’s projected win total, which would be the highest total since Denny McLain famously won 31 games in 1968. 

16 – Wins for the Atlanta Braves in their final at-bat.  (Read about them here —warning shameless self-promotion contained within)

2112 – League high number of pitches thrown by Diamondbacks ace Dan Haren.

16.8 – Strikeout per nine rate of Cubs reliever Carlos Marmol.

12 – The number of teams with payrolls lower than this year’s combined salaries of Alex Rodriguez (33m), Derek Jeter (22.6m), and Mark Teixeira (20.6m).  The division leading Rangers, Padres and the wild-card leading Tampa Bay Rays are among them.

148 – Projected RBI total for Detroit’s Miguel Cabrera.

5.3 – Wins above replacement (WAR) of Justin Morneau, the highest in baseball during the first half.  Josh Johnson and Roy Halladay lead all pitchers with a WAR of 4.9 each. 

-1.7 – Pedro Feliz’s wins above replacement and the worst in all of baseball.

72.9mph – Average speed of Tim Wakefield’s pitches, the lowest in baseball.  Jamie Moyer’s pitches are 8.1 mph faster.

11 – Number of times the Cleveland Indians have drawn fewer then 12,000 fans this year.  They are last in the league in attendance.

8 – Number of home runs Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista has already exceeded his career-high by (24 to 16).   

15.167 – Cliff Lee’s strikeout to walk ratio.  The record is 11.0, set by Bret Saberhagen in 1994.

3 – Home runs Alex Rodriguez needs to hit in the second half to join Babe Ruth, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Sammy Sosa and Ken Griffey Jr. in the 600 home run club. 

.152 – Carlos Pena’s batting average if you subtract his 18 home runs from his hit total.  He’s hitting .203 this year with a .738 OPS. 

20,500 – Average increase in attendance for the Washington Nationals during Stephan Strasburg’s five home starts. 

61 – The highest number of strikeouts for any pitcher on the Washington Nationals.  The pitcher leading the team—Steven Strasburgh (a feat accomplished in only 42 2/3 innings).

26 – Number of players who have already stolen 15 or more bases in 2010. 

278 – League leading number of outs produced by the Mariner’s Jose Lopez (Derek Jeter is second with 276 outs).  

1.055/.799 – Adrian Gonzalez’s home/road OPS split in the first half.  For his career Gonzalez has produced an OPS 152 points higher on the road than at Petco Park.  Somebody needs to rescue this guy and allow him to be recognized as the major star he is.

1.29 – Josh Johnson’s ERA since his third start of the season, a span of 16 starts. 

10 – Seasons Mariano Rivera will have recorded a sub-2.00 ERA if he maintains his 1.05 ERA.

15.9 – Percentage of pitches Bobby Abreu has swung at outside of the strike zone.  The percentage makes Abreu the hitter with the best batting eye in the game. 

.071 – The National League’s batting average against Ubaldo Jimenez’s fastball.

9,000,000 – Number of dollars the normally cash-strapped Tampa Rays are paying Pat Burrell not to play for them this season. 

103.5 – Percentage of seats sold at Philadelphia Phillie home games this season. I’m not sure how this is possible. 

228 – Mark Reynolds’ projected season strikeout total after fanning 122 times in the first half.  This total would break Reynolds’ own record of 223, set just last year, and give Reynolds 663 strikeouts in the last three seasons. That’s more then Albert Pujols has in his entire career.

74 plus playoffs (if applicable) – Number of games left in the career of Hall of Fame Braves manager, Bobby Cox.  Cox has announced this will be his final season on the bench.  He is baseball’s longest tenured manager at 21 years.

3 – Number of perfect games we should acknowledge and remember as being hurled in first half of 2010.

Also if you had the Chicago White Sox, Texas Rangers, Cincinnati Reds, and San Diego Padres leading their divisions at the midway point of the season, please post some stock picks in the comments, you’re a prophet.

Thanks for reading.  Enjoy the second half.

Please feel free to post one of the thousands of other fascinating stats from the first half which I overlooked.

 

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2010 MLB All-Star Game: Nine All-Stars Who Owe Their Managers One

Each year, one question rises to the surface following the announcement of the American and National League rosters for the Major League Baseball All-Star Game: who got snubbed by the All-Star managers?

Today, I take a look at the other side of the coin. Since 2000, a number of players have been selected by their own managers as All-Star managers, despite the fact that they were having less-than-spectacular seasons.

Here are 10 All Stars Who Owe their Managers One.

Begin Slideshow


The New York Yankees Are Complete Losers Again

How are the Seattle Mariners in last place?

 

The Mariners have the best one-two punch on the mound with Cliff Lee and Felix Hernandez. Add players like Ichiro Suzuki, Milton Bradley, Chrome Figgins, Jose Lopez, and that makes a valid, post-season contending ball-club.

 

The group the New York Yankees have faced the last two nights is not the Mariners who are 13.5 games out in the AL West.

 

Not only did Lee pitch a complete game in Tuesday’s win, his teammate King Felix followed his lead by going all nine innings to defeat the reigning World Champions, again.

 

The King ruled more like a dictator against such a tough Yankees line-up. Allowing only two hits, walked three and fanned 11 Yankee bats, who each resembled a deer in headlights. The Yankees did not score a single run.

 

The Mariners bats certainly did not slack-off because of who was on the mound. They complimented the pitching. Scoring seven runs on both nights against starters Phil Hughes, Javier Vazquez and the Yankees weakest link (aka. the bullpen) is a tremendous deal.

 

Tuesday night, the Mariners had 12 hits off Hughes. Ichiro and Johnson had two RBIs a piece and Gutierrez hit one home-run. Mariners over Yankees 7-4.

 

The Mariners continued on their hitting spree on Wednesday night, as Michael Saunders hit two home-runs, while Milton Bradley and Russell Branyan each had one bomb. Mariners over Yankees 7-0.

 

This leaves me altogether perturbed.

 

Why are the Mariners already throwing in the towel this season? Offering up Cliff Lee for the taking is sure evidence it is over in Seattle.

 

It is not over for the Mariners, unless they are quitters. Giving this team a chance to shine is not going to make things any worse in Seattle, but the potential upside could be fantastic.

 

Just in case any reader is wondering why a lifelong New York Yankees fan is writing this, I had not choice, but the Mariners still do.

 

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Meet the Three New Aces of the AL East

It really is crazy.

In a division that features a 20 game winner (CC Sabathia), a Cy Young winner (Josh Beckett), and the 2008 ALCS MVP (Matt Garza), it’s the kids who have been making the most noise.

Where would the New York Yankees be this year without Phil Hughes?

Where would the Boston Red Sox be without Clay Buchholz?

Where would the Tampa Bay Rays be without David Price?

These three pitchers have stepped up when their teams needed them the most—and not just that.

They’ve also been really, really, really good.

Their success is not surprising. There is a reason why Boston and New York never traded Hughes or Buchholz. There is a reason why Tampa drafted Price first overall in the 2007 draft.

But they have definitely had their bumps along the way. Hughes bounced around as he tried to learn how to pitch under the Bronx microscope.

Bucholz also needed time to develop as he bounced between AAA and the majors. After setting the world on fire in the 2008 playoffs, Price’s star dimmed in his first full season in the majors.

But look at them now.

These three pitchers have shown it takes time and patience to develop young pitching.

But the moves can pay massive dividends if you put in the hard work.

Here’s a closer look at the three new (f)aces their teams could not live without.

Begin Slideshow


Phil Hughes, Joe Girardi and the Da-Boom Theory

Once again, the New York Yankees fell victim to their own rules.

 

Last night, the result ended with a Yankees loss of 7-4 to the Seattle Mariners. The Mariners have consistently held the last spot in the AL West this season.

 

The Mariners had baseball’s best pitcher on the mound in Cliff Lee to face a well-rested Phil Hughes.

 

Hughes has exceeded all expectations this season and entered the game with a 10-1 record, an ERA of 3.17 and has been the most consistent on the Yankees rotation.

 

No question that Hughes is the real deal, but at 24 years old the Yankees worry about using him too much.

 

Hughes just turned 24 and this is his second full season in the bigs—the first as a full time starter. So the Yankees place an innings limit on him, also known as the Hughes Rules.

 

Innings limit on young arms is the latest craze around baseball. I was under the impression it was used when a pitcher was transitioning from the minors.

 

Looking at pitching sensation Steven Strasbourg of the Washington Nationals, it makes sense. The Nats manager was upfront that Strasbourg was allowed to pitch for 120 innings in 2010, no matter what.

 

Strasbourg is clear on this rule, along with everyone who watches Sports Center . It is extremely helpful, especially from a young player’s mental outlook.

 

That is why skipping over Hughes’ start made utterly no sense. Hughes was in a rhythm, which was working.

 

Why did Girardi not let Hughes throw the allowed 170-180 innings on an unchanging basis?

 

Not to mention Hughes skipped start was in his hometown and his parents were planning on attending. Remember the last time Mrs. Hughes was in the house her son almost threw a no-hitter.

 

Did the Joba’s Rules not teach Girardi and GM Brian Cashman anything?

 

It brought horrible memories back for me. Girardi having panic attacks when Joba got near 70 pitches or was through four innings. Even when Joba was throwing heat, everyone knew he was coming out no matter what, including Joba.

 

This whole state of affairs falls under something my dad calls, “The Da-Boom-Theory.”

 

The Da-Boom-Theory is when a person gets an idea (the ‘da’) in their mind that makes sense by anyone’s standards. Then instead of thinking it out or learning from past mistakes, that someone goes boom.

 

The ‘boom’ is acting on the idea with positively no understanding of possible repercussions that might affect the result.

 

Specifically, in these situations the DA would be the Hughes Rules. The boom would be the skipped start, which ended in a Yankee loss and cut Hughes mental game.

 

Aren’t the young guys supposed to be the workhorses and the veterans coddled?

 

It is time to stop babying these men into boys and start letting them work. The timing here was totally off and the Yankees should know better than this.

 

Finally, congratulations to Mariners Cliff Lee who threw his fifth no-hitter of the season. It did not go overlooked, and the Yankees do apologize for the mess.

 

 

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Phil Hughes Gets Batted Around After Skipped Start

The “Phil Hughes Rules” have claimed their first start, which would have been last Friday. Those same rules have also claimed their first loss as the Yankees fell to the Mariners 7-4. 

The Seattle Mariners are among the worst offensive teams in baseball, and with Hughes on the mound, boasting a 10-1 record, the game would appear to be a good match up for the Yankees.

That is of course not mentioning the 10 days in between tonight and Hughes’s last start. Due to limits on innings pitched, he had to miss his last scheduled start on June 25.

Hughes pitched very poorly against Seattle. He allowed at least one run in every inning except for the first, and was pulled after five and two thirds.

The Mariners posted 10 hits, including a home run and four doubles, and six earned runs. That’s coming from a terrible offensive team against arguably the best pitcher for the Yankees this year.

If you ask me that sounds like he either had a really bad night, or something was hindering his effectiveness on the mound. MY9 Broadcaster, Al Leiter thought the latter of the two. 

“By limiting his innings and skipping his last start, I think it has affected his effectiveness tonight,” Leiter said.

Either way, he pitched very poorly, and hopefully this will serve as a lesson to New York  not skip any more starts. But I’m sure they will just say that he had a bad outing.

Yeah, a bad outing due to 10 days off.

Nick Swisher accounted for two of the Yankee runs, with two solo shots off Cliff Lee, but the rest of the Yankee offense was unable to pick it up. Lee threw a complete game.

An embarrassing performance by New York, and one that could be the first of many to come, if Hughes is unable to pitch like he did before the “rules” came into effect.

A game that the Yankees, seemingly, should have won turned out to be an easy win for the Mariners, whose offensive woes ended against a pathetic Hughes.

 

 

 

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