Phillies top pitching prospect Kyle Drabek was placed on the inactive list yesterday. He isn't hurt but reached his innings max, throwing 158 innings this year in Double A Reading and Single A Clearwater. He was also 12-3 with a 3.19 ERA for both teams combined. He is not scheduled to pitch in either the Arizona Fall League or the Florida Instructional League either.
Monday, August 31, 2009
Drabek Shut Down
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 4:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Clearwater, Kyle Drabek, Lehigh, Reading
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Phillies Gain Ground
The Phightin's came up with a huge series win on Atlanta tonight, expanding their division lead to eight games on both the Braves and Fish. This series showed how human Cliff Lee can be and how effective Pedro Martinez and Jamie Moyer are in the same game. This gives the Phillies more depth in the bull pen as the "two old goats" could see time there in the playoffs.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:48 PM 0 comments
Labels: Atlanta Braves, Brad Lidge, Carlos Ruiz, Chase Utley, Cliff Lee, Florida Marlins, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Joe Blanton, Matt Cain, Pedro Feliz, Ryan Howard, San Francisco Giants, Tim Lincecum
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Just Call Him the Rain Man
Jamie Moyer has found a new home in his long relief role. Yes Chan Ho Park is still the innings guy but Moyer as excelled this year in his two roles post-rain delay. Grampa Jamie is now officially "The Rain Man."
"You never know what you'll get when you put two old goats out there," Martinez said following a 5-1 victory over the D'Backs on August 18. "It's a scary combination. You're not going to see that very often. You might as well enjoy it. I enjoyed it."
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:02 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Chan Ho Park, Cliff Lee, Jamie Moyer, Jon Lieber, Pedro Martinez
Friday, August 28, 2009
Plundered By Pirates
After exploding versus the Mets, the offense basically died down minus a few spurts versus Pittsburgh. Another problem that needs to be corrected before the season ends is the bull pen. Brad Lidge blew another save in the first game and Ryan Madson even followed that up with one the next game, erasing a great start by Cole Hamels.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:12 AM 0 comments
Labels: Andrew McCutchen, Atlanta Braves, Brad Lidge, Chase Utley, Cole Hamels, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Jayson Werth, Mets, Paul Bako, Pedro Martinez, Pittsburgh Pirates, Ryan Madson
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
What To Do With Lidge
If you think Cole Hamels is pitching like crap, just look deep in the bull pen and you will see another 2008 monster leaving you scratching your head. We know what Hamels' problems are and it's the fact that he is lazy and hasn't had to be challenged all year. He'll be fine in October.
Now back to the problem. Brad Lidge has been absolutely terrible. He was Mr. Perfect. He went 41/41 in the season and 7/7 in the playoffs. This year, Lidge has looked more like Billy Wagner of 2008. In 53 appearances and 46.2 innings, Lidge has blown nine saves and boasts an ERA of 7.33 and a WHIP of 1.80.
Last night was just another example of his wheels falling off his bus. After the Phillies fought back to take a 4-3 lead in the top of the ninth, Lidge surrenders a hit and an error allows the tying run to score. Then he gets rattled so bad that he gave up a two-run walk-off homer to a rookie who doesn't hit for power.
So what do we do with Lidge? Before you think it, you can not put him in the minors unless he is injured. There is a waivers system and he can get picked up. Now he does have knee problems but he is unwilling to admit that he is hurt.
You also have guys in your system as options. Ryan Madson tried his hand at closing earlier this year and failed at it, blowing a pair of saves and took a while to shake the nerves when Lidge came back. You also have Chan Ho Park, who has been their best reliever but you don't want to move him from his comfortable role as long reliever. Newly demoted Jamie Moyer? Not if you want to see 81 MPH fastballs leave the yard. A healthy Romero? See Park.
So what does that leave us with then? Well with a hungry Brett Myers rehabbing in the minors, he looks to be ready by mid-September. He will most likely bolster the bull pen and I can really see him closing games in the playoffs.
Here is why:
He's in his contract year and if teams see him come back with fire in his belly, they will show interest in him. He could also try to impress the Phillies as with his return next year, they could have the best rotation in baseball. Imagine Cliff Lee, Hamels, Joe Blanton, JA Happ, and Myers in a 5-man rotation.
Another reason why Myers could close is how well he pitched in 2007 as a closer. He went 5-5 with a 2.87 ERA. He saved 21/24 games including the game where the Phillies clinched their first division title and playoff appearance in 14 years.
Myers has the mentality to be an effective closer. He also has the stuff. His fastball is hitting the low-mid 90's and he has a really good curveball, more effective than Lidge's current slider. Move Lidge to a different spot in the pen or DL him for the season while Myers takes the reigns and helps this team repeat. Lidge will only hinder this team in the long run. We love you Lidgey-poo but not this year.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:32 AM 0 comments
Labels: Billy Wagner, Brad Lidge, Chan Ho Park, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Joe Blanton, Ryan Madson
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Werth Player of Week
Jayson Werth was recently named the NL Player of the Week for his outstanding play.
Werth led the Majors with five home runs and 29 total bases. He hit .440 (11-for-25) and led the NL with a 1.160 slugging percentage. He also tied for the league lead with nine RBIs while scoring seven runs and collecting three doubles to go along with a .481 on-base percentage.
He will be getting a well deserved day off tonight as the Phillies take on the Pirates. Matt Stairs will play in his place and bat seventh.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 6:03 PM 0 comments
Labels: awards, Jayson Werth, Matt Stairs
Monday, August 24, 2009
New York Invasion
The Phillies and their fans invaded Queens this past weekend, including the Phillies Nation bus trip on Saturday where a fight was shown in their section by Comcast. After dropping the first game thanks to some poor pitching by Cole Hamels, the Phillies bats exploded as they handled the Mets to win three of four games during the series.
Thankfully Hamels has been the worst pitcher of the four who will make up the playoff rotation. He will pick his game back up when he's needed in the clutch. He hasn't been pressured all year due to a lack of competition in the division so I am confident he will be fine come October.
This series saw some great pitching, a lot of errors, a lot of pop from the Phillies line up, and even an unassisted triple play to end Sunday's game by Eric Bruntlett. Pedro Martinez earned a win in his home coming to New York and even tallied a hit.
Friday - Mets won 4-2: Hamels lasted five innings and got the loss as he surrendered four runs on 10 hits. He allowed a home run to Jeff Francoeur, who had a pretty good series versus the Phillies. Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley, and Ryan Howard had two hits apiece for the Phillies.
Saturday - Phillies won 4-1: After Tim Redding dominated the Phillies, he was pulled due to a pitch count. Chase Utley capitalized with a two-run homer that gave the Phillies the lead for good. Brad Lidge earned his 24th save.
Sunday - Phillies won 9-7: This was one crazy game. After the Phillies jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the first thanks to three homers by Jayson Werth and Carlos Ruiz, the Mets answered back. Martinez pitched six solid innings as the Mets stayed in it the whole game. In the bottom of the ninth with a 9-7 score and no outs, Francoeur hit a line drive with runners on first and second to Bruntlett who caught the ball, stepped on second, and tagged out Daniel Murphy for the game ending unassisted triple play. Lidge earned his 25th save.
Monday - Phillies won 6-2: There was no drama in this game but plenty of errors. The Phillies and Mets combined for five errors in the game. Cliff Lee pitched very well despite giving up two runs, none earned. He went seven innings and allowed six hits and struck out five.
Series MVP's:
Ryan Howard: 5-19, 4 R, 2 HR, 6 RBI
Chase Utley: 5-12, 4 R, 2B, HR, 2 RBI
Eric Bruntlett: 4-9, R, unassisted triple play
Next Series: Philadelphia Phillies (72-50, 40-21 on road) @ Pittsburgh Pirates (51-71, 33-28 at home)
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 5:55 PM 0 comments
Labels: Brad Lidge, Carlos Ruiz, Chase Utley, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Eric Bruntlett, Jayson Werth, Jeff Francoeur, Jimmy Rollins, Pedro Martinez, Phillies Nation, Pittsburgh Pirates, Ryan Howard
News 8/24
Dobbs on DL: article
The Phillies had placed Greg Dobbs on the 15-day DL yesterday with a right calf injury. He will be replaced by Miguel Cairo. Cairo is back on the Phillies since being optioned back in May.
I was going to post this yesterday but was busy all day.
Myers to Rehab Today: article
Brett Myers will make his first rehab start today with Lakewood. He was originally scheduled to pitch yesterday but the game was rained out. He made one appearance with Clearwater, striking out the side and allowing two hits.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:26 AM 0 comments
Labels: Brett Myers, Clearwater, Greg Dobbs, Lakewood, Miguel Cairo
Turning Three
Eric Bruntlett's unassisted triple play was something to witness. After being robbed of a base hit in the eighth by Jeff Francoeur, Bruntlett returned the favor, snaring Francoeur's no-out line drive up the middle, stepping on second, and tagging Daniel Murphy for the unassisted triple play to win the game for the Phillies.
It has been that kind of year for the Mets as that was the third time this year they lost on the last play. The other two times were a throwing error that allowed a run to score early in the season and a dropped pop-up by Louis Castillo versus the Yankees that allowed the tying and winning run to cross the plate.
How special was Bruntlett's turn? It is just the 14th unassisted triple play in the regular season in baseball history. It is just the second unassisted triple play to end a game as the only other time happened in 1927. The last Phillie to repeat such a feat was Micky Morandini in 1992.
From Todd Zolecki's article on MLB.com:
"It's hard to know how to react to it," Bruntlett said. "I was almost laughing. That doesn't happen. What do you do there? Game is over. High fives."
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:19 AM 0 comments
Labels: Daniel Murphy, Eric Bruntlett, Jeff Francoeur, Louis Castillo, Mets, Micky Morandini, New York Yankees
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Thank God For Pitch Counts
The Mets thankfully had Tim Redding on a pitch count or else the Phillies probably would have never had that sixth inning. The Mets took Redding out after five innings of one-hit shut out ball. They bring in Pat Misch who give walked Shane Victorino and then gave up a homer to Chase Utley. That right field short-porch in Citi Field has become Utley's Alley as he has killed the Mets there all year.
The Phillies tacked on another run in that inning with back-to-back doubles by Raul Ibanez and Pedro Feliz and then got another off of Carlos Ruiz's RBI single in the eighth to make a final score of 4-1.
JA Happ earned the win, going seven innings and allowing one run on eight hits and two walks. He got himself in and out of trouble as game as he stranded seven runners. Brad Lidge pitched a 1-2-3 ninth with two strike outs to earn his 24th save.
Oh the wedding was nice by the way but I wound up watching the entire game inside where it was air conditioned.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 1:10 PM 0 comments
Labels: Brad Lidge, Carlos Ruiz, Chase Utley, JA Happ, Mets, Pat Misch, Pedro Feliz, Raul Ibanez, Shane Victorino, Tim Redding
Saturday, August 22, 2009
No Updates Until Sunday
I'll be trapped in Harrisburg, PA at a wedding. I hate weddings. I won't be updating and barely tweeting for the next 24-32 hours so enjoy watching the Phillies... I hope. I'm leaving in a half hour.
By the way, Cole Hamels sucks.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:27 AM 0 comments
Labels: Cole Hamels
Friday, August 21, 2009
Myers Pitches
Brett Myers made his first rehab appearance on Thursday with Class A Clearwater, pitching one inning and allowed two singles and struck out the side. This was his first pitching appearance since he pitched with the Phillies back on May 27. He was scheduled to pitch last Sunday but was scratched due to an odd span of injuries.
Here are the two articles related to the injuries:
http://team2beat.blogspot.com/2009/08/myers-falls-on-face.html
http://team2beat.blogspot.com/2009/08/myers-police-say-he-wasnt-in-fight.html
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:04 AM 0 comments
Labels: Brett Myers, Clearwater
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Bringing the Broom Sticks and Boom Sticks
The Phillies did a little cleaning as the swept the Diamondbacks to continue their tear and keep a hold of the NL East lead. The Phillies starting pitching continued to mow down opponents and the bats have awoken from their sleep. Phillies pitchers did not surrender a walk all series and also had six hits, two apiece for Jamie Moyer, Cliff Lee, and Joe Blanton.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:12 PM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona Diamondbacks, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, Carlos Ruiz, Chase Utley, Cliff Lee, David Wright, Jamie Moyer, Jayson Werth, Joe Blanton, Johan Santana, Jose Reyes, Mets, Ryan Howard
The Incredible Cliff Lee
I knew the Cliff Lee trade was a brilliant move but I wasn't fully impressed yet. Sure he tore it up his first three games and I got to see it on TV but my perception changed last night.
I went to the Phillies game last night, my eighth of the season, and I was lucky enough to see Lee pitch live. That changed everything. He worked fast, efficient, and got the job done as the Phillies won 8-1 over Arizona. The game was over in two and a half hours. He had a perfect game through three and lost the no-hitter in the sixth with one out to a pinch hitter. He only allowed one more hit after that as he struck out 11 batters, giving up one run and two hits to earn his fourth win as a Phillie.
He does something else that you would expect from an ace: get the crowd behind him. My heart was pounding watching him pitch. I was on the edge of my seat with every strike. After he gave up that first hit, the place stood up and applauded. It was crazy. The crowd was basically telling him "Okay, that was pretty cool. Now go after these guys and finish the job."
He has been scary his four starts as a Phillie. He's 4-0 with a 0.82 ERA. He has allowed only 18 hits and six walks in 33 innings and has struck out 34. His opponents batting average is .161. If anyone is still crying that the Phillies didn't trade for Roy Halladay, you're a lost cause.
From Todd Zolecki's article:
"He's a for-real ace," Werth said. "He's that type of guy. He's a shutdown guy. He can go out and control a game. Look what he's done since he's been here. That's pretty remarkable. But that's the kind of stuff he brings to table. You can't expect a guy to do that every time out, but so far, the stuff he's offering is definitely different than what guys are used to seeing. At least it looks that way to me. You get a run on the board for a guy like that, you're in pretty good shape."
This guy is the reason the Phillies can repeat. He has picked up tremendously for the slack of Cole Hamels. If Hamels figures himself out and you throw in Joe Blanton and JA Happ's success to make a four-man playoff rotation, there is no reason at all to say the Phillies won't repeat as World Champions.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:10 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona Diamondbacks, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, JA Happ, Joe Blanton, Roy Halladay
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Myers, Police Say He Wasn't In Fight
Brett Myers strongly denies he injured his eye during an argument and fight that took place in an Irish Pub in his home town. He hurt his eye when he slipped out of his truck. Police confirmed that he was not involved in the altercations as well.
"I was in no way involved with pushing or shoving or yelling at anybody," Myers told MLB.com. "People are saying it was me, and it really wasn't. I'm tired of people saying things about me that aren't true."
This is all in relation to the story I posted the other day.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 5:32 PM 1 comments
Labels: Brett Myers
I have my own Twitter account that I used to post on a bit but I got tired of posting personal thoughts on everything. I decided since I mainly use Twitter to follow Todd Zolecki, David Murphy, and Phillies Nation, I figured I would make a new account for this site. Follow me on Twitter @TeamToBeat. If you look in the top left hand corner of the page, you'll see my Twitter feed. I'll post thoughts during and after games, short news I hear from other places, and links to the site.
Speaking of Twitter, Zolecki reported the Phillies signed their 7th round pick, RHP Brody Colvin:
Phillies sign RHP Brody Colvin, a 7th round pick. He had committed to LSU. Phils sign each pick in the top 10 rounds.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: Brody Colvin, MLB Draft, Phillies Nation, Twitter
Monday, August 17, 2009
Pitching, Homers Win Series
I was quieted a bit by the Phillies as I had little faith in them winning this series in Atlanta. They were going into the series 2-7 versus the Braves and wound up winning two. They could have easily had the sweep if Brad Lidge didn't blow his eighth save of the year and the game with his throwing error.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:19 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Brad Lidge, Chase Utley, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, JA Happ, Pedro Martinez, Ryan Howard, Shane Victorino
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Myers Falls On Face
Brett Myers injured his eye when getting out of his pick up truck Friday night. He had originally told the organization he was having a catch with his 4-year old son, Kolt, and that's how he hurt his eye. He was too embarrassed to admit what really happened.
Due to his injury, he was scratched from his rehab start scheduled today in Clearwater.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 6:44 PM 0 comments
Labels: Brett Myers, Clearwater
Friday, August 14, 2009
Classless Fan Turns Self In
I know what you are all thinking before I talk about this: A Phillies fan upset with a classless act by another team's fan? I'm still pissed at the Phillies fan who shined a laser pointer at a Cardinals player last month.
Anyway, this idiot sitting in the front row in center field threw his beer at Shane Victorino as he was catching a fly ball. The Cubs were trailing 12-2 at the time and scored on the sacrifice fly during the play.
Yesterday, the fan identified as Johnny Macchione, 21, of Bartlett, IL turned himself in to the Chicago Police Dept. He was charged with misdemeanors of battery and illegal conduct in a sports facility.
Johnny? What are you 12? Throwing things at athletes and going by the name of Johnny? Grow a pair, be a man, and accept the fact that your team has been irrelevant in the sports world for over 100 years.
"It was a big mistake. I'd like to apologize to Shane Victorino," Macchione told reporters after bonding out of the Belmont Area Police Headquarters on Thursday night. "It really is nothing against him. It was a mistake, like I said.
"The Chicago Cubs -- I'm sorry I disgraced you, the fans of the Cubs, myself, my family. And that's all. The courts will handle itself."
It's a disgrace to any team's fans when a guy does something like this. I know from personal experience. Take your ball and go home, Johnny. Even the Cubs fans are more disgraced by your act then they would be of their team.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:10 AM 2 comments
Labels: Chicago Cubs, Johnny Macchione, Shane Victorino
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Bouncing Back
The Phillies got swept by the Marlins. So how do they respond? They go to Chicago and beat up the Cubs, sweeping the three-game visit to regain some of the ground lost versus Florida. The Starting pitching was the reason this team made the Cubs look like a team who is starting it's decline in the Wild Card race.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:17 PM 0 comments
Labels: Atlanta Braves, Ben Francisco, Brad Lidge, Chicago Cubs, Cliff Lee, JA Happ, Jimmy Rollins, Pedro Feliz, Pedro Martinez, Raul Ibanez, Ryan Howard, Shane Victorino
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Moyer "Disheartened" By Move to Pen
Jamie Moyer feels like he was "misled" by Ruben Amaro Jr. when he was informed a few days ago that he would be moved to the bull pen. Here is what Jamie had to said:
I feel a little disheartened," Moyer said. "I feel a little bit like I've been misled. I feel like I've played this game long enough that the respect factor should be there. I'm really not happy with the decision that the Phillies have made."
"Ultimately, I'm a little disheartened because this past winter when I was negotiating with the Phillies, this was a sore thumb, if you will, about this potentially happening," Moyer said. "You can't promise anything in this game, but I really felt [general manager] Ruben [Amaro Jr.] parlayed to me that this type of situation would not happen. Actually, I even had some discussion with [team president] David [Montgomery] with them reassuring me that this type of situation wouldn't happen."
Even though Moyer was disappointed, hearing him say this was real comforting, knowing he isn't going to pout or pull a Jon Leiber:
"We're in first place," Moyer said. "I probably feel like I haven't contributed as well as I could have, but I think if you go around to the other 24 players on our club, they would probably say the same type of thing.
"Whether I like it or not, this is the situation I'm in. I will deal with it. I will deal with it in a respectful way. I'll be respectful to my teammates. I do not want to be a distraction and I refuse to be a distraction. It's about the 25 players that are here. We all have to pick each other up. We all have to support each other. We all have to be professional about what we do.
"This is a job that sometimes you're in situations that you like or dislike and you have to deal with it. That's why for me dealing with this like a man and taking whatever they choose to do. I'm an employee here, but I don't always have to like the situation that I'm in. And that's OK. Life goes on."
In other news, Pedro Martinez will be set to make his season debut tonight versus the Cubs at 8:05 ET on ESPN/CSN. He will be facing former Notre Dame wide receiver Jeff Samardija, who is making a spot start.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:17 AM 1 comments
Labels: Chicago Cubs, Jamie Moyer, Jeff Samardzija, Pedro Martinez, Ruben Amaro Jr.
Monday, August 10, 2009
Pedro to Debut Wednesday; Moyer to Bull Pen
Hallelujah!
Pedro Martinez will make his 2009 debut with the Phillies on Wednesday. To make room for him in the rotation, Jamie Moyer was informed that he will be put in the bull pen. Chad Durbin was also re-activated and Rodrigo Lopez was sent to AAA Lehigh in his place. A roster move to accommodate Martinez will be announced prior to Wednesday's game.
Moyer has been terrible all year and the Phillies will try his hand in the pen. He will most likely take the lefty long reliever role as Chan Ho Park will be the righty. It's unknown on how effective he will be but Charlie Manuel feels he will still be a key player for the Phillies.
"Based on our reports on how Pedro has pitched in his rehab starts, we felt it was time to move him into our rotation," Manuel said. "Jamie was a total professional and team player when we let him know of the decision to move him to the bullpen. He has been, and will continue to be, a very important part of this team."
The move was highly anticipated by a lot of fans who were getting tired of Moyer's struggles. Martinez went 1-1 with a 5.11 ERA in three minor league starts. Moyer has been terrible all year, going 10-9 with a 5.47 ERA.
The Cubs will also pitch Jeff Samardzija in a spot start Wednesday versus Martinez. The game will be on ESPN at 8:05 ET. He's pitching in place of Ted Lilly.
Pitching Probables for the Cubs series:
Tuesday: Happ (8-2, 2.74) vs Harden (7-7, 4.41)
Wednesday: Martinez (0-0, - -) vs Samardzija (1-1, 6.29)
Thursday: Lee (9-9, 2.95) vs Dempster (6-5, 4.04)
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 5:18 PM 0 comments
Labels: Chad Durbin, Chan Ho Park, Charlie Manuel, Chicago Cubs, Jamie Moyer, Jeff Samardzija, Lehigh, Pedro Martinez, Rodrigo Lopez, Ted Lilly
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Marlins Sweep Phillies
I am extremely frustrated at watching this Phillies team play as of late. Three rants to be had on this team after watching their performance versus Florida (or lack there of).
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 6:19 PM 0 comments
Labels: Ben Francisco, Chase Utley, Chicago Cubs, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Florida Marlins, Jamie Moyer, Jimmy Rollins, Joe Blanton, Pedro Feliz, Phillies Nation, Raul Ibanez, Rodrigo Lopez, Ryan Howard
Saturday, August 8, 2009
All Douche Bag Team
I was bored at work today and my friend challenged me to make a line up of the biggest douche bags in baseball. I decided to one-up him and make a 25-man roster. This may not be the most loved team but it would sure win a World Series if the players were at their best. The only stipulation is that they played from 1993-on. This way I could give a fair assessment of how big of an asshole these guys really were.
Here is my roster. Please don't throw any batteries at them:
Manager: Tommy Lasorda
1B Coach: Tony LaRussa
3B Coach: Lou Pinella
Bench: Don Zimmer
Starters:
C: AJ Pierzynski
1B: Rafael Palmiero
2B: Jeff Kent
SS: Jose Reyes
3B: Alex Rodriguez
LF: Barry Bonds
CF: Milton Bradley
RF: Jose Canseco
Bench:
C: Mike Piazza
IF: Mark McGwire
IF: Alberte Belle
OF: Darryl Strawberry
OF: Gary Sheffield
OF: JD Drew
Starting Pitchers:
1: Roger Clemens
2: Brett Myers
3: Curt Schilling
4: Carlos Zambrano
5: David Wells
Relief Pitchers:
RP: John Rocker
RP: Ugueth Urbina
RP: Kyle Farnsworth
RP: Guillermo Mota
RP: Billy Wagner
CL: Francisco Rodriguez
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:42 PM 0 comments
Labels: Alex Rodriguez, All Douche Bag Team, Barry Bonds, Curt Schilling, Francisco Rodriguez, JC Romero, Jose Canseco, Lists, Mark McGwire, Tommy Lasorda, Tony LaRussa
Friday, August 7, 2009
"Happ's Not Going Anywhere"
"(JA) Happ's not going anywhere," Amaro said. "He's not going out of the rotation. He deserves to stay in the rotation. He has pitched very well. He's one of our most effective starters."
That's exactly what Ruben Amaro had to say about the pitching situation. It's a day late but I figured I'd add to his statement and also talk about the possibility of a six-man rotation, another option Amaro expressed.
Happ's performance three days ago was a gem. It is now safe to say that there are four spots in the rotation locked up. This leaves Jamie Moyer and when he returns, Pedro Martinez. Amaro has said that Martinez was signed to be a starter but it's almost impossible to see Moyer in the rotation.
"Why can't we go with a six-man rotation?" Amaro said.
It's certainly do-able but not when the Phillies reach the playoffs. At least one guy will have to go even though it's ideal for a play-off team to go to a four-man rotation.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:57 AM 0 comments
Labels: JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Pedro Martinez, Ruben Amaro Jr.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Top 10 Phillies Game Pet Peeves
My friend Dan MacNeal, who I used to write with on Justin Evans' "We Hate to Lose," compiled up a list of the top 10 pet peeves when attending a Phillies game. I found this list very humorous but I had to disagree with #10. The Phillie Phanatic demands our attention and we are allowed to give it to him over the game.
Here is his list:
I do want to add two more:1. Do not walk to/from your seat from the concessions during play
Seriously, you can't wait a minute while a guy is batting?
2. All fly balls are not Home Runs
Please watch the outfielders. There is a difference between getting close to the wall, and being shy of the warning track.
3. Show up on time, stay the whole time, or don't come
I can understand if you're coming to work, or you have a kid who needs to get home and go to bed, but if you want to show up late and leave early just to tailgate/go to
McFadden's, you might as well not even go, and let someone else who will stay, get your ticket.
4. If you are going to yell to players, know their name
I understand that not everyone will know everyone's name, but if you don't know for sure, don't say a name, just say "let's go buddy" or "strike this guy out". I am tired of hearing "Go Rick Dorito" or "Let's go Shawn". WHO THE HELL IS SHAWN?!?
5. Don't be an instigator
This one is tricky, because we all like to razz the other teams' fans. My personal rule is if they aren't being annoying (or assholish) then they should be left alone. I am not going to curse at/yell/start a fight with a Brewer fan because he's wearing the jersey. I wouldn't expect that in Milwaukee, Denver, or any other city. Now I can see friendly joking around such as "haha you traveled 1000 miles to see your team lose". If they start stuff with you, or another Philadelphia fan, it is okay to reply (in whatever way you would like).
*This does not include saying (loudly) near a Mets fan that they are in 4th place, 10 games back (especially if said Mets fan is not even at a Phillies-Mets game)*
6. Shut your mouth
I don't mind conversation during the game with a friend or relative, but nobody around you wants to hear about your car breaking down, or how you can't get into bars because you are underage.
7.If you stand, stand with 2 outs, 2 strikes
Personally for me, this is superstitious. You don't have to stand, but if you do, please don't do it before 2 outs, 2 strikes. I have seen so many times people standing with 1 out, or 2 outs, 1 strike, and bad news happens.
8.Jersey fouls
Do you buy a jersey because the player is the "hot player"? Do you buy one just because we've won a World Series? Is your jersey a lesser player because that's all that was left in September last year? Personally I can't wait to see someone rock a Ben Francisco jersey.
9.Promotions should not equal tickets
I like bobbleheads as much as the next person, but I am not only going to go to games just for free giveaways. This ties in with #10.
10.The Game comes first
Sure, I like all the fun stuff like the Bobblehead races between innings, or making fun of people acting foolishly on the Jumbotron, but while the game is on, that is all that should matter. The Phanatic is a distraction at this point, as is leaving to go to McFadden's early, or anything else.
11. Don't wear Eagles, Flyers, Sixers, or any other Philly jersey to the game. You're at a Phillies game. Don't be a jack ass.
12. Don't start and EAGLES chant
EDIT:
13. The Wave..... assholes.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:50 PM 2 comments
Labels: Liberty Bell Sports, Lists
Back On Track
The Phillies got back to work, especially after losing five of their last six. They had two of their best pitchers this year throwing during the series. Jamie Moyer was the same old and JA Happ and Cliff Lee both dominated the Rockies as the Phillies took two of three in the series. The rookie and former Cy Young winner combined for 16 innings of work, allowing one run and striking out 19. Winning this series helped the Phillies maintain a comfortable seven-game lead on both Florida and Atlanta.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 5:29 PM 2 comments
Labels: Cliff Lee, Colorado Rockies, Florida Marlins, Garrett Atkins, Hanley Ramirez, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Jayson Werth, Jimmy Rollins, Paul Bako, Pedro Feliz
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
A Few More Thoughts
So the pitching battle has heated up even more. While Jamie Moyer struggled again, JA Happ and Pedro Martinez continued to gain ground in the race for the final rotation spot. Moyer has one thing going for him: he's uselessness in the bull pen. The Phillies know what his stuff is, and frankly, it's nothing special anymore. The team also doesn't want to lose his knowledge and leadership so they don't want to cut him entirely loose.
Moyer's fastball hits 81 MPH tops. That is ridiculously slow and a lot slower than the 83-85 he hit the past few years. This makes his 73 MPH change up a lot less effective. Hitters have a much easier time sitting on the change up or catching up to the fast ball to fight it off when guessing wrong. As much as the crowd loves Moyer, he's done.
Happ pitched probably the best outing any Phillies pitcher had all year. He went the distance, shutting out the Rockies, only allowing four hits and two walks with 10 strike outs. He improved to 8-2 and his ERA dropped to a 2.74.
Martinez moved one step closer to being major league ready, going six innings and striking out 11 in his third and probably final AA rehab start. The 37-year old also allowed four runs, three earned.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 11:43 PM 0 comments
Labels: Clearwater, Colorado Rockies, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Pedro Martinez
Rotation Battle Pt. 2
The Phillies are in a dilemma that most teams dreamed they were in. They will soon have six very capable starting pitchers once Pedro Martinez is ready. But who will go when he is ready? The Phillies already said that they didn't sign Martinez to pitch in the bull pen. So he is almost locked in.
Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, and Joe Blanton are locked in. That leaves Jamie Moyer (who got shelled again last night), JA Happ (who pitches tonight to make his bid to remain in the rotation), and Martinez to battle for the last two spots. Rodrigo Lopez already lost his spot and has joined Chan Ho Park as the other long reliever in the pen.
So the Phillies are stuck. Right now, Moyer seems to be the obvious choice to dump due to his ineffectiveness all season. He has only pitched seven innings twice all year. He has been the bull pen killer. But he is not the kind of pitcher who could be effective in a relief role due to his style of pitching.
Happ has been proven to be human as of late but is still pitching pretty well. He can tighten up his spot in the rotation with a good outing tonight. If he gets beat up by the Rockies, the rumors of him being sent back to the bull pen could be true. The Phillies know he can start but how well he has pitched in the pen this season prior to starting can really help them boost a bull pen that has struggled tremendously all season.
One could only imagine what the Phillies would be going through next month if Brett Myers is ready. The bull pen would be the likely spot for Myers, who is in the last year of his contract. He may become the new bridge to Brad Lidge and could close if something happens to Lidge. His chances at starting are very slim and deciding to do so could cost the Phillies games.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 9:08 AM 0 comments
Labels: Brad Lidge, Brett Myers, Chan Ho Park, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, JA Happ, Jamie Moyer, Joe Blanton, Pedro Martinez, Rodrigo Lopez
Sunday, August 2, 2009
A Giant Step Backwards
July was a phenomenal month for the Phillies as they went 20-7. But now comes August and it seems as it the Phillies finally cooled down. Cliff Lee's amazing debut saved the Phillies from getting swept as they couldn't figure out the Giants starting pitching, losing three of the four-game series. This was their first series loss since the beginning of July.
Wednesday: COL: De La Rosa, J (9-7, 4.68), PHI: Happ (7-2, 2.97)
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 6:41 PM 0 comments
Labels: Ben Francisco, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Colorado Rockies, Eugenio Velez, Jayson Werth, Jimmy Rollins, Joe Blanton, Jonathon Sanchez, Pable Sandoval, Rodrigo Lopez, San Francisco Giants, Tim Lincecum
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Lee Makes Most of Debut
I usually don't do post-game write-ups but Cliff Lee's performance was something to see. If you missed it, shame on you. After taking a no-hitter into the sixth and a shut out into the eighth, the left-hander pitched a complete game in his debut as a Phillie, beating San Francisco 5-1. He improved to 8-9 with a 3.02 ERA.
Posted by John "Roose" Russo at 10:26 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ben Francisco, Cliff Lee, San Francisco Giants