Tag: Ubaldo Jimenez

THE YEAR OF THE PITCHER: Jimenez, Halladay, and Wainwright

In less than half the year we’ve had some amazing, and I mean amazing games by pitchers. Three no-hitters from Ubaldo Jimenez, Roy Halladay, and Dallas Braden, with the last two being perfect. Technically we’ve had three perfect games if you count Armando Galarraga’s, which I think we should. Have the pitchers finally taken the lead in fantasy value over batters? Lets take a look…

2010
3 no-hitters (Jimenez, Halladay, Braden)
5 complete game one-hitters (Matt Cain, Johnny Cueto, Jon Niese, Mat Latos, Armando Galarraga)
4 complete game two-hitters (Adam Wainwright, Jamie Moyer, Jeff Niemann, Justin Masterson)
3 one-hitters in eight innings pitched (Matt Cain, Brett Cecil, Ted Lilly)

2009
2 no-hitters
4 CG one-hitters
12 CG two-hitters
2 one-hitters in eight IP

2008
2 no-hitters
5 CG one-hitters
8 CG two-hitters
1 one-hitter in eight IP

As you can see, in less than half the games, we already have more complete game no-hitters and one-hitters than 2008 and 2009. So again the question is are pitchers more valuable in fantasy terms this year?

Out of the top 25 ranked players eight are ranked under 25 (Chris Carpenter is No. 26 so I’m including him too). Of those eight, two are relief pitchers. Not even making the top 25 list are some names who are having unreal years too like David Price (33), Jon Lester (36), Latos (37), Andy Pettitte (38), Phil Hughes (42), Mike Pelfrey (44), and Jaime Garcia (46). This gives us a total of 15 in the top 50. Here’s the best part, Tim Lincecum isn’t even on the top 50 yet, but we know that will change by years end.

In comparison to 2009, there were nine top-25 and 14 in the top 50. For 2008 there were only five in the top 25 and only 12 in the top 50.

Okay, so the rankings weren’t a tell-tale sign of how good the 2010 pitchers are but a quick look at ERA definitely shows us the truth:

The 2006 MLB league average ERA was 4.53
The 2007 MLB league average ERA was 4.47
The 2008 MLB league average ERA was 4.32
The 2009 MLB league average ERA was 4.32
The 2010 MLB league average ERA was 4.18

All in all, it’s still early in the year and you never know what will happen. Jimenez could go down with an injury tomorrow and offset the whole league’s ERA.

So why the huge drop in ERA? Are pitchers actually getting better or are batters getting worse? Did the steroid era catch up with us and are batters are finally human again?

Let’s hear your thoughts.
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Could Ubaldo Jimenez Be The Next Pitcher To Win 30 Games?

Watching Ubaldo Jimenez is strange.

At times he looks like a power pitcher, inducing strikeouts one after the other. At other times, he seems like an efficiency pitcher, inducing ground ball double plays when his W is on the line. The type of pitcher he is though, doesn’t seem to matter any more.

What does matter, is that he is helping to keep an average, if not below average at times, Rockies club in the NL West race. As a fellow Bleacher Reporter put it, the Rockies are the definition of “Meh” this year. They don’t look good, but they don’t look Mendoza either.

What the Rockies need, aside from an offense, is a quality start from a rotation that largely seems lacking quality most of the time. Jeff Francis and Aaron Cook have been pretty consistent at home, but anything but consistent on the road. Yea, it’s been pretty tough to deal with the loss of the other “supposed to be great” story this year in Jorge De La Rosa. The 29 year old De La Rosa helped the Rox a great deal in the second half of the 2009 season. winning 16 games. This year, the nasty injury to his hand has kept him on the DL. He should return shortly and I believe, if he can rehab well, be another reliable starter for a team that needs them.

Why do the Rockies need quality starters? Because so far in the 2010 season, the Rockies are 0-23 when trailing after 7 innings. Their inability to rally is a sure sign that they need their starting pitching to keep goose eggs on the board. If this were Boston, LA, NY Yankees or Tampa Bay, It may not be a huge problem to have rough outings from the staff, but the Rockies offense just can’t seem to recover.

That’s why Ubaldo Jimenez is so important. Out of those 23 games they have lost after trailing in the 7th, he started in only one. That rainy crappy Denver day last weekend against Toronto when he couldn’t seem to grip the ball.

Ubaldo Jimenez is Diamond in the rough for a ball club that seems terribly inconsistent. If he can continue to perform consistently at this level he may find himself the loan gunmen of this battle beaten Rockies staff. At this point it looks as if Jimenez will start at least 18 more games for the Rockies this season. Again, if he stays healthy, and if he doesn’t suddenly lose his composure, that seems to be a conservative number.

He’s 13-1 as of 3:30 Mountain Time on June 17th. That’s the best start since Roger Clemens went 13-0 in 1986. That’s pretty good company to be with. So here’s the question, can Ubaldo Jimenez win the unprecedented 30 games in 2010?

No one has done it since Denny McClain in 1968 with the Tigers. 1968! It hasn’t been accomplished in 42 years. But, here we are on June 17th staring at a 13-1 record, by far the lead in all of Major League Baseball. At this point, it goes without saying that Ubaldo will win at least twenty. If he lost six starts the rest of the season, conservatively, he would still be at 23 wins. Where does this ceiling end? If he maintains this pace, barring unseen circumstances, could he accomplish this feat? I don’t think he will, but I won’t be surprised if he does either.

 

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Ubaldo Jimenez Does What He Does, Dominates Twins

The story is the same one every fifth day, it seems. Ubaldo Jimenez once again dominates an opponent. On Thursday afternoon, the Rockies salvaged the final game of a three game series, winning 5-1.

This time, the victim was the Minnesota Twins. After two wins over the lifeless Rockies, Minnesota looked to sweep Colorado out of newly-built Target Field. The only thing standing between them and their goal was a pitcher who had already racked up 12 wins coming into the game.
The way Jimenez has pitched all year, when the Rockies picked up three runs in the first inning off of a seemingly nervous Francisco Liriano, it almost felt as if the game was in the bag before Jimenez even stepped on the mound. After all, Jimenez has only given up three runs in a game once all season long, and that came last Friday night in rainy, wet conditions that kept him from getting both a good grip on the ball and a firm landing spot on the mound.
On Thursday, however, Jimenez did not have his best stuff. He was consistently around 97 MPH on the radar, but was leaving pitches up in the zone just enough for the Twins to be able to get some decent wood on the ball.
What is starting to set Jimenez apart from other pitchers in the league, however, is that there is no need to fret when he allows runners on base. On Thursday, he erased five base runners with double play balls turned by his defense behind him. While his defense provided some great plays, it was Jimenez inducing ground ball after ground ball that kept the Twins runners off the bases.
Normally when a pitcher possesses the ability to throw 100 MPH, that pitcher relies on the strikeout when he gets into trouble. Not Jimenez. Jimenez simply pounds the lower half of the strike zone and induces ground ball double play after ground ball double play.
In all, Jimenez went eight innings. He gave up one run on eight hits. He struck out four and walked just two. The lone run came in the eighth inning when Jimenez was clearly tiring. Jim Thome pinch hit and lined a one-out double to the base of the wall. He was lifted for a pinch runner and the next batter, Drew Butera, dropped a single into center field that scored the run.
For those watching Jimenez pitch all season long, it is a different feeling when he is on the mound. Every pitch is nerve-wracking because of the ERA game going on with Jimenez. It almost feels as if he has to outdo himself every time he takes the hill. Even with a 5-0 lead in the eighth inning, it feels like something went horribly wrong when a run crosses the plate on Jimenez’s watch. It makes sense when he has given up just 13 runs in over 100 innings pitched.
There are a few mind boggling numbers that go beyond Jimenez simply having 13 wins in the middle of June. This was the 10th time Jimenez has picked up a win after a Rockies loss. His ERA, after giving up one run in eight innings, went up to 1.15. There is not another pitcher in the league who would dream of having their ERA go up after an eight inning, one run performance.
The Rockies have something special with Jimenez. He is putting together a season that may be remembered for years to come. It would be a shame if the rest of the team never reached their full potential and made all of Jimenez’s good work be in vain.
For more on the Rockies visit RockiesReview.com
This article is also featured on INDenverTimes.com

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2010 MLB All-Star Game: Who Should Pitch in the Battle of the Best?

On July 13, MLB’s best players will take a break from their normal schedules to square off at Angel Stadium in the 81st Midsummer Classic.

Fans have been voting for their favorite position players for quite some time: Albert Pujols is the obvious pick for NL first baseman, and Joe Mauer is the overwhelming favorite for AL catcher.

Baseball worshipers hope to see their teams’ leaders hit the long ball every time they enter the batter’s box.

But who will pitch to these super sluggers?

That part of the whole shebang is up to All-Star managers Charlie Manuel and Joe Girardi.

So who will they choose? Will they pick deserving veterans or intriguing young guns?

Odds are they’ll choose both.

Here is a list of whom we should actually expect to see on the mound.

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How Have We Overlooked Ubaldo Jimenez?

The 1968 season pitched by St. Louis Cardinal’s ace Bob Gibson (22-9 , 1.12 ERA, 268 strikeouts, 0.853 WHIP, Cy Young, and MVP)  is the standard of supremacy that every pitcher aspires to match. (Where was Gibson’s run support that caused him to lose nine games with that earned run average?!?! )

Bob Gibson was a first ballot Hall of Fame selection in 1981.

 

Since Gibson’s remarkable season forty-two years ago, Major League Baseball has seen superb seasons by Dwight Gooden (1985 <!– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:””; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –> —1.51 ERA), Greg Maddux (1994 <!– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:””; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –> —1.56 ERA, 1995 <!– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:””; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –> —1.63 ERA), Nolan Ryan (1981 <!– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:””; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –> —1.69 ERA), and Pedro Martinez (2000 <!– /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:””; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-fareast-font-family:”Times New Roman”;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –> —1.74 ERA), but in the “power” era of baseball, no hurler has matched the historic precedent set by Gibson.

And yet, through fifty games in the 2010 baseball season, we have NEVER seen a pitcher display the dominance that Colorado Rockies ace Ubaldo Jimenez has shown in eleven starts.

I tried trading Josh Beckett for Ubaldo Jimenez in my fantasy league. Unfortunately, it was declined.

 

This season, Jimenez, the front runner for the Cy Young award in the National League, has already thrown a no-hitter (the first in Rockies history), won NL pitcher of the month for April and May, and is the third player in Major League Baseball history to win ten of his first eleven games, while having an ERA under 1.00.

Somehow Jimenez and his 10-1 record, 70 strikeouts, 0.90 WHIP, and sparkling 0.78 ERA have flown under the radar from significant baseball press coverage.

We have been so caught up in the hype of Stephen Strasburg (whose Triple A starts have garnered more attention than Jimenez’s Major League outings), the perfect games by Roy Halladay and Dallas Braden , and the controversial one-hitter by Armando Galarraga that we have overlooked the consistent ungodly numbers that Jimenez has put together so far.

Last season , the 26 year-old from the Dominican Republic, showed he had the stuff to be an elite pitcher in the majors when he posted 15 wins, 198 strikeouts, and a 3.47 ERA in his second full season with the Rockies.

However, if you told a Rockies fan on Opening Day what his current season statistics would be, they would say you went on the free Coors Tour one too many times.

More amazing than the way Jimenez has pitched, is where he has pitched.

At Coors Field , where the altitude  is known to turn the effects of three beers into that of five, and ERAs from 3.00  to 5.00, Jimenez is 4-0 with a 1.29 ERA.

Today, the Rockies will face the Diamondbacks in Arizona with the thrilling Jimenez (he often hits 100 MPH on the radar) on the mound.

While most of the baseball nation counts down to Strasburg’s debut on Tuesday, on Sunday we will overlook a 6-1 road record and 0.52 ERA from somebody that is  ALREADY special and in the early stages of a historical season unmatched by even Bob Gibson.

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Ubaldo Jimenez: How Good has the Colorado Rockies Ace Been?

How good has Ubaldo Jimenez been through 11 starts in 2010?  Almost unbelievably good.

Everyone knows, or should know, that Coors Field in mile-high Denver, is far and away the best place to hit in the major leagues.  Jimenez has a 1.29 home ERA this year, and only an 0.52 ERA on the road.  Based on that performance, I’d guestimate Jiminez’s current ERA (0.78 in fact) at 0.60 if he played his home games in a completely hitting/pitching neutral park.

By way of comparison, the modern record (since 1900) for ERA is Dutch Leonard’s 1.01 ERA in 1914 (in 223 innings pitched, which was only 15th most in an eight team league).  BTW, the lowest post-1900 ERA for any pitcher who pitched significantly over 100 IP that I am aware of is the immortal Ferdie Schupp, who had an 0.90 ERA in 140.1 IP for the 1916 NY Giants. 

The truly modern (since 1946) record is, of course, held by Bob Gibson, who posted a 1.12 ERA in 1968.

These records were set in extreme pitchers’ eras in baseball history.  The fact that Jimenez has an 0.78 ERA pitching in his home games in probably the best hitters’ park in baseball, at least since they closed down the Baker Bowl in Philadelphia, is truly amazing.

According to wikipedia, the Baker Bowl was only 280 feet down the right field line and an even more astounding 300 feet to right center—around 1920, the Phillies added a metal fence at the top that made the right field wall 60 feet high, but at those dimensions it simply turned a lot of routine fly balls from homeruns into doubles and triples.

By way of comparison, the current dimensions of Fenway Park, according to the Red Sox, are 310 feet down the left field line, 379 to left center and the Green Monster is 37 feet high.  The wall at the Baker Bowl long had a huge painted sign stating, “The Phillies Use Life Buoy Soap,” but, of course, the Phillies of that era still stunk.

It’s definitely time to wonder whether the pendulum is swinging back from the extreme hitters’ era that ended with a proper testing regime for performance enhancing drugs. 

I always though that PEDs helped hitting more than pitching, because even if PEDs allowed a pitcher to throw harder, ‘roids weren’t necessarily going to help command or breaking stuff, and the faster the ball comes in, the faster jacked-reflex hitters like Barry Bonds could turn the ball around.

We’ve now had what should have been three perfect games in less than a month, and you have to start to wonder if this isn’t going to be a strong pitchers’ year when all is said and done. 

Keep in mind also that the strike zone is definitely bigger than it was a decade ago, since MLB has made a concerted effort to make umpires call pitches between the letters and the belly button strikes.  There are a lot more fastballs at the letters called strikes now than there were 10 years ago.

All that being said, I’m certain that Ubaldo Jimenez will not finish the 2010 season with an ERA of 1.12 or lower in 200+ innings pitched.  There will be a hot night in Denver in July or August when the air is absolutely still, and everything Jimenez throws up there will be hit into a gap or will carry off somewhere into the Denver night.  It only takes one such game in Denver to end all hope of a record setting pitching season.

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MLB Awards for the First Third of the Season

We are now about a third of the way through the 2010 baseball season, and the time is ripe for a new awards list.

Many players on this list are the usual suspects, but there are also a few surprises.

Many are clear cut (see above), where other categories, such as NL Comeback player of the Year, have at least a quartet of deserving candidates.

Not all these players will actually win the award at the end of the season, as this list is who I believe should win right here, right now.

The fellow shown above is on verge of an historic season. Will he be able to continue his dominance for the final two-thirds?

Time will tell.

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Baseball’s Top Five Craziest Current Events

A typical response to why someone is not a baseball fan is that the game is too slow and boring.

If they only knew that baseball loves the drama.

Right now, it could not be more of a soap opera. Teams are soaring when they should be collapsing, and vice versa.

Here is my list (in dramatic order) of the top five craziest things currently going on in MLB:

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2010 MLB Month In Review: May

25 Thoughts and Observations on May

 

1. To call this season “’68 redux” may be doing it a disservice. After all, only one perfect game was thrown that year; we saw two this past month. I suppose A-Rod can’t question Dallas Braden’s credentials any more. As for Halladay, nothing he does surprises me. Every time he takes the mound, we’re truly witnessing greatness.

2. His first name could be Bob or Tom, and America would still know Ubaldo Jimenez’s name after the month he just had. He started May with an ERA of 0.79, and ends it at 0.78.

3. 2009’s equivalent of Jimenez, Zack Greinke, continues to be let down by his offense. Despite 5 quality starts in 6 May outings, he lost four of those games while only winning one.

4. You have to give the Braves, Red Sox, and Dodgers a ton of credit for turning their seasons around.

5. Halladay’s perfecto aside, what a forgettable last 10 days its been for the 2nd place Phillies. That they have been shut out in 5 of their last 9 games, never scoring more than 3 runs in any of those games, is nothing short of astonishing.

6. R.I.P. Ernie Harwell, Robin Roberts, and Jose Lima.

7. Starlin Castro knows how to make an entrance.

8. Whether he was giving it all or not, Hanley Ramirez lost all credibility when he essentially said that Fredi Gonzalez doesn’t know what hustle is because he never played in the majors. That said, the situation could’ve been a lot worse so props to everyone with the Marlins for not fanning the flames.

9. Part of me wants to say that the Kendry Morales injury is the dumbest thing I’ve ever seen. On the other hand, it’s really not surprising given how extravagant end-of-game celebrations have become.

10. How Charlie Morton (1-9, 9.35 ERA) was in the majors up until he was placed on the DL a few days ago is beyond me.

11. It seems the Blue Jays knew what they were doing when they brought back Cito Gaston and Gene Tenace. Under their watch, Aaron Hill has blossomed, Vernon Wells has risen from the dead, and Jose Bautista and Alex Gonzalez are having career years.

12. Andre Ethier is a beast. Enough said.

13. It was only a matter of time before the Royals let go of Trey Hillman. They’ve played better baseball under Ned Yost but as Dayton Moore said (and due in large part to his own incompetence), that organization is years away from being relevant again.

14. Very quietly, Justin Morneau is leading the AL in BA, OPS, OBP, and SLG.

15. Even as the Mets and Nationals have come down to Earth, and the Marlins have continued to struggle, no one is out of it in the NL East yet.

16. Daric Barton’s .825 OPS leads all A’s, and Adam Rosales is their home run leader with 4. Nonetheless, they find themselves atop the AL West through May.

17. The Padres have been a nice story so far, but I’m gonna play Debbie Downer and guess that their reign atop the NL West won’t last much longer. The Dodgers and Rockies are coming.

18. The Chinese Zodiac says 2010 is the year of the Tiger; that Tiger is Miguel Cabrera. Having rededicated himself to baseball, he is demanding the attention of the baseball world after years of obscurity. He is almost single-handedly keeping the Tigers afloat.

19. The Dodgers and Rangers sound like the most logical Roy Oswalt landing spots to me.

20. The Mariners thought they were getting Milton Bradley so he could help them win the AL West; instead, they’re helping him get his life together. As the Griffey napping incident showed, the situation in Seattle is a straight-up debacle. You really can’t blame Cliff Lee for already talking about leaving.

21. It is laughable that Mark Teixeira (with his whopping .725 OPS) is ahead of Miguel Cabrera and Justin Morneau in the AL 1B vote, and that Jimmy Rollins is leading NL shortstops despite playing just 12 games. Needless to say, the time has come to abolish fan-voting for All-Star game starters. Make it happen Mr. Selig; the integrity of the mid-Summer classic depends on it.

22. Despite not spending a day in the minors, Mike Leake is making a difference in the Reds’ rotation.

23. Each member of the Rays’ rotation is in the top 30 in the AL in ERA, and they all have at least 5 wins. The only question is who is the Cy Young frontrunner; Niemann or Price?

24. Vladimir Guerrero was the best signing of the off season.

25. Congratulations Esmerling Vasquez; you and the D-Backs take the cake for dumbest loss of the year so far. http://losangeles.dodgers.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=8559549&c_id=la&topic_id=8878826

 

Report Cards Through May

A: Padres, Rays, Reds, Twins, Yankees

A-: A’s, Blue Jays, Braves, Cardinals

B+: Dodgers, Red Sox

B: Rangers, Rockies, Tigers

B-: Mets, Nationals

C+: Giants, Phillies

C: Angels, Marlins

C-: Cubs, White Sox

D+: Brewers, Pirates, Royals

D: Diamondbacks, Indians

D-: Astros, Mariners, Orioles

 

Sizing Up The Races

 

AL East

Through May, the division is home to four of the top five teams in the American League. 

The Rays are not going away; they are doing this year what I predicted they’d do in 2009. They’re hitting, playing solid defense, and most importantly, they’re pitching better than anyone in the AL. The Yankees started and ended May well, compensating for playing quite mediocrely in the middle of the month. These are the two AL East teams I expect to make the postseason.

The Blue Jays still haven’t faded but I’m not buying into them. They only have two more wins than they did at this point last season (they finished 4th), and I don’t think they have enough in their rotation behind Romero and Marcum. As fine a month as they had, all the Red Sox have to show for it is a 4th place standing. However, their pitching has really gotten it together recently; Buccholz and Lester have been fantastic.

In Baltimore, I suppose there’s always 2011… or 2012… or 2020.

 

AL Central

Not only would I not be surprised if the teams finished in this order, I’m expecting them to.

Note to self; never pick against the Twins again. It truly is them and then the rest of the division. To put it simply, they don’t beat themselves; they don’t commit errors and they don’t walk batters. Mauer and Morneau continue to get it done and I expected nothing less; what does surprise me is that their rotation, top to bottom, has been so remarkably steady.

The Tigers are an average team with a few excellent players. After a slow start, their pitching is coming together rather nicely. However, their offense is really starting to hamstring them as I feared it would. They just have way too many holes for an American League lineup. Early signs are that they still don’t know how to beat the Twins; they got swept at Target Field earlier in the month.

After Detroit, it’s a sizable drop-off. Few teams have been as disappointing as the White Sox this year. Outside of Danks, their much vaunted starting rotation has been horrible. Rios and Konerko are having nice years, but few of their other hitters are. As I expected preseason, the Royals and Indians have been two of the AL’s worst teams, and I can’t see things improving for either team.

 

AL West

This division race was hard to make sense of after April. A month later, that’s hardly the case.

The A’s are in first because of their pitching, as Anderson, Braden, and Gonzalez have all blossomed this year. Their offense has been quite sub-par, but they haven’t needed much run support lately. Despite Nelson Cruz’s nagging injuries, the Rangers offense has been fine thanks to Vlad Guerrero. Rich Harden and Scott Feldman’s struggles have been minimized thanks to the continued success of Colby Lewis and C.J. Wilson. I still think that overall, the Rangers are the best team in this division.

The Angels are down but not out. Their pitching has been nothing short of atrocious, the bullpen in particular. Either they’ll be crippled by the loss of Morales, or a few of their struggling hitters (Aybar, Rivera, Matsui) will get it together and their offense will get by. For all their struggles, they’re just 2.5 games out.

As for the Mariners, they’re done. They just do not score runs; the attempt at bringing back Whiteyball was valiant but ultimately ill-advised. They really had no business getting the hype they did preseason.

 

NL East

Wild, Wild East? Thus far, no one has fallen out of this race.

After ending April in last, the Braves find themselves atop the division 31 days later. This was largely due to their offense, which scored almost twice as many runs in May as they did in April. Clearly, Bobby Cox has no intentions of going out quietly. The Phillies ended May on a horrific note, as their offense went AWOL. They’ve got issues but they’ve also got talent, and it’s not time to panic yet.

After the top two, it’s a cluster of mediocrity, as the Marlins, Mets, and Nationals all find themselves at .500 and tied for 3rd place. The Marlins, having survived the HanRam fiasco, pose the biggest threat of the three. Their pitching has been solid if unspectacular, but they continue to shoot themselves in the foot by playing porous defense. 

The Mets had a May to forget, going 12-17 and getting outscored by 16 in the process. Their offense continues to fail them, and they have struggled to get quality innings from the starters behind Santana and Pelfrey. Despite a 13-16 month, the Nationals never lacked a buzz, as the baseball world anticipates the debut of Stephen Strasburg next week.

 

NL Central

You fans of bold predictions are in luck, as I’m about to make my first one of the season.

The Cincinnati Reds are going to win the NL Central. After years of unfulfilled promise, they have arrived. The only NL team that scored more runs last month were the Braves, and after a slow start, their pitching has come together nicely (without Edinson Volquez and Aroldis Chapman). Make no mistake though, the Cardinals are still a force to be reckoned with. Even with Penny and Lohse injured, the rest of the rotation has been phenomenal. This looks it will be quite the two team race.

The Cubs and Brewers have disappointed tremendously. It’s not that the Cubs have been awful; they’ve merely been thoroughly mediocre in every aspect of the game. They certainly have the talent to turn it around, but they’ve got to start making their move now. Just as the Mariners just don’t hit, the Brewers just don’t pitch. Gallardo has been fine, but contributions from the rest of the rotation have been few and far between; they are last in the NL in quality starts.

Aside from the intensifying Roy Oswalt sweepstakes, nothing new to report on the Astros and Pirates. They’re both hapless teams, just battling to stay out of the basement.

 

NL West

Things are starting to make more sense in this division, though it remains a shock to see who’s on top.

Simply put, the Padres are pitching their hearts out; that’s been their saving grace because only two teams scored fewer runs in May than they did. As I said, they’re a great story but I think it’s only a matter of time before their luck runs out. No matter what, there certainly are a lot of positive things going on in San Diego.

It took them a month, but the Dodgers finally got the memo the 2010 season was under way, closing to within 2 of the Padres. Even more impressive is that they did this with Andre Ethier missing half the month. Their rotation has really turned it around, as Kershaw and Billingsley are being the aces Joe Torre needed them to be. Ultimately, I think it’s only a matter of time before the Dodgers overtake the Padres for good.

It’s been a struggle at times for San Francisco and Colorado, but both have stayed afloat because of their pitching (the Giants because of their whole rotation, the Rockies because of the brilliant Ubaldo Jimenez). Both teams have the talent to keep the NL West a four team race the rest of the way.

D-Backs’ fans are being straight up tortured this year; their bullpen is that bad. Josh Byrnes really misjudged how far away this team was from contending.

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U The Man! Rockies’ Jimenez Dominates to Magnify Lifeless Landscape

He reminds us of an endless movie, the grandest baseball script of the season.

It’s stunning to see a pitcher in the age when baseball is contaminated with performance-enhancers and bring much enthralling scenes to a fragile game, horrid of all the steroid scandals and dirty crimes.

Such is difficult to grasp America’s Pastime in an era we live in the Steroid Era, disgusted and burnt out of all the continuous frauds betraying the positive images of integrity.

Because the majors are constantly dispraised for shameful revelations, poisoning the beauty of the game, we have been downplaying the values of baseball and have neglected applauding Ubaldo Jimenez, the one pitcher emblazoned for becoming the majors’ first 10-game winner this season.

The most powerful and strongest pitcher in the game would be U’s the Man, a nickname that was given to Jimenez when he had a flawless outing in April by pitching a perfect game, the first no-hitter in Rockies’ 18-year history.

Within a lifeless sport known for stereotypes and fraudulent depravity, Jimenez, a 26-year old star pitcher has emerged as an ace and becomes the conversation in the majors with his dominance of late on the mound.

It’s unbelievable that he’s the best and hottest pitcher, a savior in a lame sport for his craftiness and creativity in not allowing earned runs, normally finishing an outing hitless and scoreless.

He’s focused on chasing batters early, attacking aggressively and mixing his pitches in the strike zone, fiercely pitching and attacking the zone with vigor and perception, realizing his relentless pitching duel is needed amid a fraudulent era.

Years after the major leagues declined, we never acknowledged a pitching sensation for all the ravaging shams, transforming the way people viewed the game.

But now, it seems the fuss in sports is the growth of the emerging Jimenez, who suddenly has imposed all recognition, erasing any dreadful thoughts of corrupted imagery that has disparaged the features of a distressing sport.

If there wasn’t any regards that he’s the purist thrower, maybe there’s much assumption that he’s the front-runner for the National League Cy Young award.

If there wasn’t any promise after he has thrown 26 consecutive scoreless innings, a franchise record as a starting pitcher, maybe there’s an understanding that he could one day be enshrined in Cooperstown.

He seems like a 10-year veteran, calmed and forced earnestly, roughly symbolizing that the poisoning aspects of the game could be cured.

Once again, Jimenez verified that baseball is still relevant in many ways by popularizing and reducing the ill-awareness, regenerating purity among a competition nudged by an oblivious crisis.

When the buzz engendered over Memorial Day weekend, an event created a conversation involving two primary right-handed pitchers. In what was quickly divulged as a Memorial Day pitching duel, Jimenez was impeccable and unbeatable.

Not until he pitched a complete game four-hitter as the Rockies shut out the San Francisco Giants in a 4-0 matinee at AT&T Park, fantasy owners and the casual fan clearly witnessed the potential Cy Young award winner and the idealistic right-hander, outshining pitching sensation Tim Lincecum at a premium in his domain.

It’s barely approaching June and still there’s plenty of baseball left in the regular-season, but it’s not too early to admit that Jimenez is a journeyman, suddenly turning into a high-profile ace with monstrous numbers.

And since the majors are obsessed with numbers more than wins, Jimenez is 10-1 with a 0.78 ERA.

If he preserves one more win, he would tie the franchise record of 11 wins by the All-Star break. For his foe, Lincecum, his throwing mechanics weren’t anywhere near a reigning Cy Young winner, horribly allowing four runs, three earned in 5 2/3 innings.

It’s incredible how a pitcher can magnetize the perception of an unsteady game, impelling all followers to embrace the gratifying development of a big-name pitcher.

Keen to succeed at the highest level, he’s resilient and durable, normally lasting longer than the average ace, pitching either until the late innings or the entire contest.

What’s fascinating about baseball is that a spectacular display on the mound magnifies one’s curiosity, just as does Jimenez, the 26-year old absorbing all the thrills for his incomparable and overwhelming achievements.

It’s easy to assume that the staggering numbers place Jimenez as the favorable pitcher to be named for the momentous award.

His results speak for itself, such as a no-hitter and a one-hitter, scoreless streaks of 25 and 17 innings, seven earned runs allowed in 71 1/3 innings. Also, it’s not every day you hear a pitcher yielding merely one home run.

Without argument, he’s a prolific starter with impressive landmarks, attaining the most deeds in Colorado. Over the years, high altitude seemed burdensome for many pitchers, but has yet affected the excellence of Jimenez’s powerful arm.

Just recently, Rockies manager Jim Tracy insisted that he’s the greatest pitcher. “He’s the best pitcher in the game,” he said. “He is as quality a human being as you would ever want to be around. He is humble, soft-spoken and accountable. He has all the attributes to be a star in this game for years to come.”

Ahem, I believe he’s already a star?

Apparently, when you are unbeatable, you are a star.

Let’s anoint U’s the Man.

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