Tag: Ubaldo Jimenez

Ubaldo Jimenez Is Colorado’s Commanding Contender for the Cy Young

Baseball in Colorado has always been defined by mile high scores from multiple mile deep homeruns.

Fans in the Rocky Mountains fell in love and were spoiled by the long ball for over a decade and a half.

Sure, the humidor was put in place at 20th and Blake back in 2002 and the number of homeruns have dropped a dramatic 60 per year, but balls still fly out of Coors Field at a high rate.

Since their inception in 1993, the Rockies have tried to go out and get big name pitchers, raise their own, or use homegrown Colorado talent on the mound—nothing worked.

That is, until Ubaldo Jimenez came to Denver from the Dominican Republic in 2006.

Despite his dominating stuff, Jimenez’ five year career numbers are somewhat mediocre at 39-29 with a 3.49 ERA, 499 strikeouts and a .228 opponent batting average.  

In his first four years, the only thing that stood out was Ubaldo’s high number of Ks and the nasty pitches he could throw when on top of his game. Jimenez has always been able to hit triple digits on the radar gun but command was his downfall at those devastating speeds.

When one looks closer at the young phenom’s numbers though, much more becomes clear.

Since Jimenez became a full time starter midway through the World Series 2007 season, he’s improved each and every year.

Along with strikeouts, Ubaldo’s wins have increased while his ERA, opponent’s batting average, walks, and runs have all decreased.

And while he was slightly and slowly improving as a starting pitcher, Jimenez has completely taken over on the mound this season.

Everyone started taking note after Jimenez’ no-hitter April 17th in Atlanta, the Rockies’ franchise first ever, and they haven’t looked back.

Now Jimenez is fresh off his MLB leading eighth win Thursday night against Houston (7 IP, 1 H, 2 BB, 4 K). He was an infield single away from pitching in another no-hitter, when third baseman Ian Stewart tried to bare-hand the hard hit ball and came up with only air.

Along with leading the leagues with eight wins, his miniscule 0.99 ERA is tops as well.

Ubaldo is phenomenal.

To wit, he’s only the fifth MLB pitcher since ERA was first taken in the early 20th century to win eight of his first nine starts and have an ERA under one. The last was Fernando Venezuela nearly three decades ago, in 1981.

Although, even with those spectacular numbers, Jimenez isn’t running away with the Cy Young Trophy—yet.

His two main competitors are the Phillies’ Roy Halladay and the division rival Giants’ Tim Lincecum. Both pitchers have been dominant for many years and both are currently playing stellar baseball. Halladay is 6-3 with a 2.22 ERA and is tops in complete games at four. Lincecum is 5-0 with a 2.35 ERA and his 75 Ks lead NL.

No offense to either of those two magnificent pitchers, but Jimenez is better this year—he deserves the Cy Young.

That is if he can continue this awesome success.

But beyond numbers, Ubaldo is unique, that’s what makes him so great. At 6’4” 205 pounds, Jimenez’ body is more like an NBA shooting guard than your average major league pitcher.

The morning after pitching, when the birds are chirping as Jimenez likely usually smiles with the rising sun, he runs—five miles.

This is no pot-bellied David Wells, the ex-Yankee pitcher that threw a no-hitter while, “half in the bag,” as he said referring to being half drunk.

Jimenez is an extremely hard working pitcher who’s devoted to improving his game.

April’s NL pitcher of the month has done just that.

Jimenez has improved to the point that batters cringe days in advance when they hear his name as the Rockies’ starting pitcher.

While Jimenez is leading the majors in nearly every major pitching statistic, he should have another—most opponents’ knees buckled.

Plainly, Ubaldo Jimenez throws insanely wild and wicked pitches with heat and movement.

He’s untouchable by even the best batters and Colorado knows they have the best chance of winning when Jimenez is on the rubber.

Ubaldo is unique in another way; he’s a pitcher that is exhilarating to watch—something brand new and exciting in this dusty old cow town that grew up on baseball won with the long-ball, not a well executed fastball.

The national media has caught on, so Denver, let’s get out and pack Coors each and every time Ubaldo pitches because he is the biggest professional sports star our city has (playing) right now.

If we’re lucky, Jimenez will lead the Rockies to their third postseason appearance in four years, and bring the biggest individual award to town since Larry Walker brought home the MVP in 1997.

 

Rich Kurtzman is a Colorado State University Alumnus and a freelance sports journalist. Along with being the Denver Nuggets Featured Columnist here on B/R, Kurtzman is the Denver Broncos FC for NFLTouchdown.com , the CSU Rams Examiner on examiner.com and the Colorado/Utah Correspondent for stadiumjourney.com.

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Colorado Rockies 2010 Player Power Rankings

The Rockies have been disappointing this season. There. I said it.

Colorado has been average, mediocre, maybe even boring.

Some guys have been on fire from the start while others can’t seem to figure it out, ruining the party for everybody.

Read on to find out who’s been carrying his weight and who’s looked awful so far in 2010.

 

30. Jason Hammel (SP) – That 7.52 ERA isn’t going to cut it. Even for a fifth starter, Hammel has been nothing short of abysmal this season.

29. Clint Barmes (2B) – When your manager has to defend you in the media to justify keeping you in the every-day lineup, things aren’t going well. Barmes has been a black hole at the plate this season.

28. Esmil Rogers (SP)

27. Rafael Betancourt (RP) – After pitching lights-out at the end of last season, Betancourt has looked terrible in 2010. Add his signing to the long list of reasons why putting money into relief pitching is a bad idea.

26. Greg Smith (SP)

25. Dexter Fowler (CF) – Honestly, Fowler hasn’t done anything well this season. Do I need to be the first one to suggest that some time in Colorado Springs might do him some good?

24. Chris Iannetta (C) – I’m with everyone else on Iannetta. He looked bad in limited time this season, but he really didn’t get a long enough look to justify sending him to Triple-A. Either bring him back up or send him elsewhere for a couple of prospects. He’s too good a player to be sitting in Colorado Springs.

23. Melvin Mora (U)

22. Franklin Morales (CP) – I still have high hopes for Morales, but every time he seems to take a step forward, he ends up back where he was. Maybe this is as good as it gets for him. Maybe he’s going to be a mediocre middle reliever forever. Bummer.

21. Paul Phillips (C)

20. Eric Young Jr. (U) – Always an adventure in the outfield, EY Jr. looks like he needs some seasoning in the minors before he can become a productive major leaguer. Knowing where he’s come from, there’s no doubt he’ll keep fighting.

19. Ryan Spilborghs (OF)

18. Aaron Cook (SP)

17. Jason Giambi (1B) – Giambi has walked in a fourth of his plate appearances this year. It’s not the production fans expected, but it’s something.

16. Randy Flores (RP)

15. Matt Daley (RP)

14. Seth Smith (OF)

13. Jeff Francis (SP) – Two strong starts coming back from injury and fans are already talking about the good old days. I want so badly to believe he’ll be back to his old ways, I’m just not sure it’s going to happen.

12. Jorge De La Rosa (SP) – They hype for De La Rosa was as big as it was for anyone coming into the season, but the injury has derailed his hopes of padding the resume before hitting the open market in the offseason.

11. Matt Belisle

10. Todd Helton (1B) – At times this season, Helton has been hard to watch. At some point, we’re all going to have to admit that he’s nearing the end of the line. At least his on base percentage remains stellar.

9. Jhoulys Chacin (SP) – It’s been a really nice start for Chacin in the majors, probably better than expected. He has the talent to be a No. 2 starter in the majors and this may be the year he starts to show it.

8. Carlos Gonzalez (OF) – CarGo has been a productive middle of the order bat, but his .317 OBP ranks ahead of only Clint Barmes among regular starters. To become a real offensive force, he has to get on base more often.

7. Manuel Corpas (CP) – Corpas has filled in nicely as the team’s closer filling in for Franklin Morales, but fans should remember his struggles in 2008 and 2009. When Huston Street returns, this team will be much better.

6. Ian Stewart (3B) – Stewart is quietly having a very solid season for the Rockies. The strikeouts are a concern, but he seems to be filling out as a player. It’s nice to see.

5. Joe Beimel (RP) – Signed at the tail end of spring training, Beimel has been unbelievable this season. You can’t ask much more from a guy who holds a WHIP and an ERA under 1.00.

4. Brad Hawpe (OF) – Having Hawpe in the lineup changes the entire dynamic of the team. Coming into the season, I saw him as potential trade bait, but at this point I think he may be the key to making the playoffs for a second straight year.

3. Miguel Olivo (C) – As impressive as Olivo has been filling in for Iannetta, there is little evidence that he can keep it up for the entire year. Don’t be surprised if Olivo takes another face plant before the season is out. I don’t trust him yet.

2. Troy Tulowitzki (SS) – I hesitate putting Tulo this high because he really needs to hit for more power and his usually stellar defense has been sloppy at times this season. As usual, the team performs as Tulo does, and the team has been wallowing in mediocrity this year. He needs to produce more runs if the Rockies are headed for the playoffs.

1. Ubaldo Jimenez (SP) – Surprised to see him at the top of the list? Probably not… There’s really nothing you can say except Jimenez has done nothing but exceed fans’ lofty expectations coming into the season. He is one of the single most valuable commodities in baseball, and he looks to become Colorado’s most dominant starting pitcher ever.

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King Ubaldo Jimenez Once Again Proves His Dominance

In Seattle, Mariners fans refer to young starting pitcher Felix Hernandez as King Felix.

News flash to Mariners fans: Your king has been deposed.
With all due respect to Hernandez, who won 19 games in 2009, Ubaldo Jimenez has become the best young pitcher in Major League Baseball. On Thursday Jimenez once again showed his domination, defeating the Astros and Roy Oswalt, 4-0.
Through seven innings, Jimenez gave up just one hit, a broken bat roller that went 45 feet. Third baseman Ian Stewart made a huge mistake and tried to bare-hand the ball. With slow-footed catcher Humberto Quintero running, Stewart had plenty of time to field the ball with his glove and get the out at first.
The play was ruled a hit, which at the time did not seem like a big deal. When Jimenez walked off after the seventh inning, many were wondering, “What if?”
The reason Jimenez is so good is because he cannot be put in the category of a power pitcher. The young Dominican baffles hitters because he mixes two different pitching styles.
Against the Astros, Jimenez struck out only four hitters. Most of the time when a pitcher who throws 100 mph and strikes out just four hitters it is a bad thing. It means they weren’t hitting their spots and left the ball up in the zone.
Not Jimenez.
When the Rockies’ flamethrower only strikes out four hitters in seven innings it is looked at as a good thing. The reason why it is good is because Jimenez does not rely on his heater to blow guys away.
He is the only power pitcher who has movement on his upper-90s fastball. That’s right, Jimenez not only throws 100, but his 100 mph fastball moves.
Jimenez pitches like a guy who needs to fool hitters. Instead of throwing fastball after fastball after fastball, Jimenez mixes in 92 mph split-fingered fastballs that fall off the table, 91 mph sliders that break bats, and knee-buckling curveballs.
It really is almost unfair to hitters.
A quarter of the way through the season, Jimenez possesses an ERA of 0.99, lowest in the league, to go along with an 8-1 record, best in the majors. At some point the national media is going to have to start realizing what a great season Jimenez is having.
The fact is, hitters who play 81 games a year at Coors Field have their numbers dissected and discounted. Even with the humidor in full effect, people talk about Coors Field being the greatest place to hit in the world, and therefore hitters like Todd Helton see their numbers with an asterisks next to them.
So when a guy like Jimenez is putting up numbers on the mound like he has, while pitching half of his games at Coors Field, wouldn’t it make sense that he should be seen in an even better light?
When will analysts start talking about the fact that Jimenez has a 0.99 ERA at COORS FIELD?
Frankly, at this point it is time for people to see who Ubaldo Jimenez is. He is the best pitcher in baseball. The season may only be a quarter of the way done, but Jimenez is proving that he is the most dominant pitcher in his sport.
Sorry Tim Lincecum, sorry Roy Halladay, but Jimenez is the best pitcher in the game right now.

 

For more on the Rockies visit RockiesReview.com
This article is also featured on InDenverTimes.com

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Colorado Rockies-Washington Nationals Rained Out Double-Header On Saturday

The Friday game for the Colorado Rockies against the Washington Nationals has been called due to rain.  As Denver tries to impersonate Seattle, the Rockies lose their third game of the year to the weather, and the second one this week.

After watching the slop the two teams played in Thursday night, there should have been another rain out.

The game will be made up tomorrow (Saturday) at 12:10 Mtn.  Then the teams will play a second game at 6:10pm Mtn. This is a split double-header, so if you want to watch ’em both, you’ll have to have two tickets.

Ubaldo Jimenez will still pitch the first game, and Jason Hammel will start for the Rockies in the second game.

There will be some roster moves.  Eric Young Jr. will be put on the DL between games, Renck of the Denver Post is reporting.  That will put the roster back at the normal 12 pitcher, 13 position player split.

Sunday the Rockies and Nationals wrap up the series with a game at 1:10 pm at Coors Field.  The Rockies will start Jeff Francis in his first start since 2008, as Francis missed all of 2009 with shoulder surgery.  His shoulder was slow to respond and after a good spring training, Francis’ shoulder was sore and he went back on the Disabled List.  That set back was not a shocker, as Francis injury was as bad as a pitcher can have.

Renck is reporting that the Rockies will either send Greg Smith down, or Esmil Rogers to make room for Francis.  Rogers has a live fastball, and one of the best in the NL so far this year. 

His issue is his secondary stuff.  He’s got a good slider, but he’s inconsistent with it.  He also tries to slow it down, into a curve ball, but it doesn’t have a lot of break, and he has no control over it.  He needs work.  The Rockies think Rogers has a bright future as a starter, but might like to keep his fastball in the ‘pen for a little while.

Greg Smith on the other hand is a soft tossing lefty.  He could be a long man out of the pen, but his issue has been his walks. He’s give out 24 free passes this year, in 34 innings!  He also sports a BAA of .305.

Personally, I’m not crazy about soft throwing lefties on the Rockies.  The constant changing of release points, and breaks between sea-level, and altitude is hard on most veteran guys, but for a guy like Smith, it’s even tougher, because he can’t go back to a fastball as his is really hittable. 

Weather is calling for a few passing showers in the area on Saturday, but it looks to be clearing out and Sunday should be a Chamber of Commerce Day.

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Fantasy Baseball Pitchers: Top Guns Report (May 12th)

 

1) Dallas Braden Oak

9.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 6 K, Win and 0.00 ERA

Dallas Braden tossed only the 19th perfect game in major league baseball history on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays.

Braden is only 63 percent owned in most fantasy leagues actually saw his ownership decrease 8.4 percent.

His 8.4 percent drop rate is likely due to losing his last two starts prior to this week’s perfect game.

Braden currently holds a 4-2 record with twenty-eight strike outs and a 3.33 ERA this season.

 

2) Jamie Moyer Phi

9.0 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K, Win and 0.00 ERA.

Moyer is the oldest player in major league history to record a shutout.

His ownership stock however didn’t rise with his accomplishment as he is only owned by 3 percent and saw a 1.7 percent increase.

 

3) Jered Weaver LAA

7.1 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 7 K, Win and 0.00 ERA

Weaver flirted with a no-hitter until it was broken up by Ken Griffey Jr. in the seventh inning.

Weaver’s stock has gone up considerably since the start of the 2010 season.

He has a 4-1 record, forty-seven strike outs, and a 2.66 ERA for the season.

 

4) Jon Garland SD

7 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, Win and 0.00 ERA.

Garland had a stellar outing making this victory his third straight win.

The San Diego pitcher has a 4-2 record, twenty-five strike outs, and has a 1.71 ERA overall this season

Garland is 56 percent owned and saw a giant jump in ownership with 37 percent increase.

 

5) Brian Burres Pit

7 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 4 K, Win and 0.00 ERA,

The Pittsburgh pitcher looks to have earned the fifth spot on the Pirates’ rotation with two impressive outings.

Zero percent ownership is an indication that no one has noticed his recent success. Burres is a risk to pick-up from the free agency due to a high ERA history.

 

 

6) David Price TB

7.2 IP, 3 H, 4 BB, 6 K, Win, and 0.00 ERA

Price’s overall season has been top notch with a 4-1 record, thirty-three strikeouts, and a 1.91 ERA.

 

7) Mat Latos SD

8.0 IP, 2 H, 0 BB, 9 K, Win, and 0.00 ERA

Latos has a 2-3 record, twenty-six, and a 4.19 overall this season, but it looks like he is turning it around.

Latos is 52 percent owned and saw a 1.5 percent increase with this week’s production.

 

8) Ubaldo Jimenez Col

7.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 4 BB, 5 K, Loss, and 1.29 ERA

This week Jimenez was given a loss despite only allowing two hits and one run. His performance on the mound was as good as any this season regardless of the Rockies inability to provide run support.

There isn’t anyone hotter than Ubaldo Jimenez. In April he has been a highlight reel.

This season he has a 6-1 record, 49 strike outs, and a .093 ERA.

He has been dominant and threw the first no-hitter in Colorado history on April 17th .

 

9) Jon Lester Bos

15 IP, 9 H, 3 ER, 4 BB, 12 K, 2 Wins, AND 1.80 ERA

The Boston hurler put in two starts this week and when the dust settled he appeared to be the only reliable Red Sox starter to date.

Lester put in 15 innings on the hill and looked impressive against the Yankees.

 

10) Adam Wainwright StL

14.0 IP, 9 H, 3 ER, 4 BB, 13 ER, Win, AND 1.93 ERA

Wainwright battled with Cole Hamels last week which resulted with a no-decision after an impressive outing.

He earned his fifth win this week giving him a 5-1 overall record with 43 strikeouts and a 2.08 ERA.


 

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The 10 Reasons Ubaldo Jimenez Deserves To Stand with Halladay, Lincecum

Prior to the season, Roy Halladay and Tim Lincecum were easily the top candidates for the National League Cy Young award.

Lincecum has won the previous two, and perennial AL Cy Young candidate Roy Halladay was moved from the Blue Jays to the Phillies, and the movement from AL to NL almost always benefits the player.

With that said, somebody else has joined the picture.

Ubaldo Jiminez has made a name for himself this year by dominating nearly every start he has made. His incredible start mimics that last year’s AL Cy Young winner, aside from one thing, Jiminez has already thrown a no-hitter.

Here are the he 10 reasons Ubaldo Jiminez deserves to stand with Halladay and Lincecum among the rankings of top pitcher in baseball.

Begin Slideshow


Colorado Rockies Looking Shaky Despite Ubaldo Jimenez’ Heroic Efforts

One thing is certain for this year’s Colorado Rockies: Ubaldo Jimenez is the star of the team.

 

Jimenez was credited for one run on two hits in his last start against the Los Angeles Dodgers and it was one of his worst starts of the season. His ERA went up and he took the loss.

 

That’s right: Two hits, one earned run, one loss and an ERA still under 1.00.

 

If the playoffs started today, Jimenez would win the National League Cy Young Award.

 

The rest of the team? Not as impressive…

 

Entering the season, the Rockies were seen as a team that could compete for a pennant in the National League. While the Phillies added Roy Halladay and the Cardinals brought back Matt Holliday for a full season, the Rockies’ young nucleus was supposed to take another leap forward in 2010.

 

It hasn’t happened.

 

Troy Tulowitzki’s power has all but disappeared. Chris Iannetta played his way onto the Triple-A squad. Clint Barmes is struggling to get his on base percentage over .300. Todd Helton looks like a shadow of his former self. The list goes on.

 

The Rockies pitching staff, thought to be one of the deepest in the league, has been riddled with injuries. The only two starters that remain from spring training are Jimenez and veteran Aaron Cook, who has been one of the worst pitchers in all of baseball this year.

 

Here is a team that people thought would have legitimate contact and power hitters at every position on the diamond. Instead, the Rockies lineup has toiled in mediocrity.

 

Here is a team that didn’t seem to have a single hole on its pitching staff.

 

Instead, Colorado tosses out Esmil Rogers and Greg Smith two out of every five games and can’t find a reliable power arm to close out games.

 

You wonder how the team has stayed near the .500 mark this far into the season. And then you remember Ubaldo Jimenez.

 

No one player has meant more to his team this year that Jimenez, who owns six of the Rockies fifteen wins.

 

Just think, if this guy started every game for the Rockies, the team would be sitting at a crisp 27-4. We can only dream.

 

Chances are, Jimenez won’t stay on this pace all season. If he doesn’t, the rest of the team needs to step up. If they can’t, there are going to be some big changes in Denver come July 31 and Rockies fans can prepare for an October filled with San Francisco Giants baseball.

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Ubaldo Jimenez Named Pitcher of the Month

Bobby Valentine was in Japan too long.

Less than a week ago the Baseball Tonight analyst declared if the Cy Young had to be given out after a single month, the only two National League pitchers in the competition were the Mets Mike Pelfrey and the Phillies Roy Halladay.
Good thing Valentine’s vote didn’t count.
On Monday, the league announced that Ubaldo Jimenez was the N.L. Pitcher of the month in April. The award came as a surprise only to Valentine.
When the month ended, the Dominican had nothing less than a 5-0 record, which included the Rockies first ever no-hitter, a 0.78 ERA, all while riding a club record 22-1/3 consecutive shutout inning streak.
This is only the second time that a Rockies pitcher has come away with the award; Colorado native Shawn Chacon received the award after a strong April in 2003.
Jimenez had an April that will be forever remembered by the Rockies and their fans.  The right-hander gets his first chance to make a May to remember with a start in San Diego tonight.
Jimenez is one of the biggest reasons why the Rockies had a decent April. Overall, the team finished a game under .500, not particularly a great start, but based on the April records that the team has posted over the last three years, a game below .500 is the equivalent of David defeating Goliath.
The Rockies look to build on their Sunday win with a game against the surprising San Diego Padres at Petco Park. First pitch is 8:05 local time.
For more on the Rockies visit RockiesReview.com

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