Showing posts with label baltimore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baltimore. Show all posts

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Tribe Use Chicken To Beat Orioles


My vote for 'Strangest Blog Title I've Ever Written' goes to the one above: Tribe Use Chicken To Beat Orioles. Yes, what you're reading is correct, the Indians team did in fact use a chicken in batting practice to help them overcome Baltimore in the rubber game last night. It worked and the Indians have now climbed ahead of the O's in the wild card race. And it's worth stating that no chickens were harmed in the process.

The series got off to a bad start, the Tribe dropping the first game 7-2 and losing Justin Masterson after an inning to a rib injury (more on that later). Thankfully the home-town team responded the next night behind a terrific outing by Ubaldo Jimenez, coming out on top 4-3 after a nervy 9th inning save from Chris Perez. Finally the Indians summoned the powers of the chicken and rallied to win the series last night, emerging victorious in a 6-4 ballgame. The series win keeps the Indians in the hunt for a playoff berth and hopefully the Tribe can kick on from here and take advantage of their September schedule, most games coming against sub .500 opposition.

Let's have a little look at some talking points from the Baltimore series:

Masterson's Season Could Be Over


Justin Masterson, the iron work-horse of our rotation, who leads the team in innings pitched, starts, wins, and strikeouts, had to leave Monday's game after just 1 inning due to an injury in his left rib cage. He's since been diagnosed with a strained left oblique muscle that could shelve him for the rest of the season. Normally this type of injury takes up to 4-6 weeks to heal but the Indians are optimistic Masterson can return to the team as soon as possible and hope he'll only miss one or two starts at the most.

It's a real shame to see Masterson struck down with such an injury. The big right-hander has had a fantastic season, earning a career high 14 wins so far. To be honest, he hasn't looked right for a few weeks now and this injury could explain why. If he's been playing through the pain, that could explain why his control has been out of sorts lately. The silver lining of course is that this injury has nothing to do with his precious arm, elbow or shoulder, and he should be able to make a full recovery without any hindering long-term effects. Here's hoping Justin makes it back before the end of the year and can contribute to our playoff push before September is over. Corey Kluber is scheduled to replace Masterson in the rotation, as he comes off the DL this week, and will face the Mets on Saturday.

Player Of The Series


This is difficult. There were a few contenders who stepped up over the last couple of days. Carlos Santana, who just keeps getting on base with more walks. Ryan Raburn, returning from the DL to make a splash in last night's game. earning 2 RBI. How about Ubaldo Jimenez, pitching 6 shutout innings on Tuesday on route to his 10th win of the season? All these guys are worthy of the award for this series but I can't look any further than one man. Mr Yan Gomes, who has cemented himself as a fan favourite, had 4 hits in the series for a total of 4 RBI, every single one of them absolutely crucial in earning the Indians the series win. Terry Francona just cannot keep this guy out of the lineup and Gomes' production, as well as his defensive prowess behind the plate, more than validate his selection. Congratulations to the Yanimal.

The Tribe can enjoy today off before welcoming the New York Mets to Progressive Field on Friday. I'm a little bit sad that Matt Harvey won't be making the trip but I'm also kind of glad; he won't be able to pitch against us, thus increasing our chances of taking home the series win. Friday's contest will see Scott Kazmir (7-7, 4.36 ERA) looking to rebound from his rough outings recently, as he's been battling fatigue, and he'll face off against the Mets' rookie Zach Wheeler (7-3, 3.36 ERA).

Thanks for reading.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Indians Earn Split in Baltimore


A series split? I'll take that. Before this series in Baltimore, I was a bit worried that the Orioles would destroy us, like they have with so many other teams this year. We've had a rough time of it against those boys from the AL East, the most stacked division in the league (every team is over .500, now the Jays have had a resurgence). So to take away two wins is fantastic in my book. It's too bad the Indians couldn't get the win last night (they lost 7-3) to take the series outright, but you can't have everything your way I suppose.

We did get to see Scott Kazmir pitch a gem, taking a no-hitter into the 7th inning on Wednesday, before the Indians nearly threw it away and lost the game. Thankfully they rallied in the 9th with 2 RBI groundouts to win it 4-3 and save their blushes. Kazmir was electric, allowing just a single hit. It was a superb performance and very comforting to see him string together back-to-back good games.

Anyway, let's look at some of the talking points from the series:

The People Versus Nick Swisher


Okay, I had the idea to do a piece on Swisher earlier this week. Then two of my fellow bloggers beat me to the punch, TD at Waiting For Next Year and Tom at Red Right 88. Both are excellent articles and deserve your attention, but I felt I could still share my thoughts on the Swisher situation.

We all know that Swisher was the marquee signing during the off-season and was immediately made the face of the franchise, the image of the Indians' new beginning behind Terry Francona. All the homecoming stuff was great and you could see Nick's enthusiasm was genuine; he actually wanted to play here and his energy and excitement helped restore some faith in the organisation. The 32 year-old switch hitter had never been "the star" during his career in the major leagues but he came to Cleveland hailed as one.  Unfortunately, Swisher hasn't produced like a star on the field and has yet to find his offensive groove in 2013.

As I type this, Swisher is batting .229 for the season with 7 home runs and 25 RBI. His OBP is .330 and his OPS is .713 (pretty far behind his career average of .822). He's having a really rough month, batting just .125 in June with 5 RBI and no home runs. In fact, the last time he hit a home run was May 26 at Fenway Park. Yes, that's over a month ago. To say Swisher is struggling is an understatement and he obviously hasn't delivered on the expectations we had before the start of the season.


He's been hampered by injuries this year, most recently a problem in his shoulder which must be hindering his play on the field and at the plate. So I can cut him a bit of slack there, it can't be easy playing hurt every day. Still, it's alarming to see how the fans have turned on him. His love of Ohio and being a nice guy around the club is surely holding back some of the fan's venom, but how long will it last? How much more sub-par play will the Tribe faithful put up with before they really turn on him?

Personally, I find it difficult to boo my own players and shower them with intense criticism. It's not a British thing, we boo our guys just like they do in the States and all over the world. Maybe I'm just a glass half full kind of guy? So that being said, I'm not going to start hating on Swisher and I'm not going to jump on the "trade Swish bandwagon", not that that's a realistic option anyway. I drafted him on my fantasy team for pete's sake, I'm not going to give up on that investment just yet. And neither should Tribe fans (in real life, not fantasy. Do what you want in fantasy!). I have to believe that Swisher will turn things around in 2013. The Indians front-office are paying him a lot of money to do just that. If you thought the Indians were getting a powerful 30 HR+ 100 RBI+ first baseman in the winter, you were mistaken, he's not that player anymore and never has been (closest he got to those numbers was 2006). However, I can understand the fan's frustration because I know we all expected more than what we're getting. Nick Swisher of all people knows this and I'm pretty sure he's trying his damn best to correct it.

Player Of The Series


The complete opposite to Nick Swisher offensively at the moment? Why it's back-to-back Player of the Series winner Jason Kipnis of course. Kipnis has continued his blistering hot streak at the plate lately and torched Baltimore for 5 hits, one in each game to continue his 9 game hitting streak, 2 home runs and 4 RBI.

It's amazing how well Kipnis is playing at the moment, showing us his immense talent on a daily basis. He's hitting .398 in June, that's the best average in the league this month amongst players with over 80 at-bats (that's better than Mike Trout and Miguel Cabrera). In his current form, Kipnis is outperforming both Robinson Cano and Dustin Pedroia in nearly every category. He has more RBI this month (Kipnis 19, Pedroia 17, Cano 10), more stolen bases (Kipnis 7, Pedroia 3, Cano 3), more home runs (Kipnis 3, Pedroia 2, Cano 2), more hits (Kipnis 33, Pedroia 26, Cano 18), and a far higher batting average (Kipnis .398, Pedroia .277, Cano .231). Is that not enough for people to realise that Kipnis deserves a spot at the All Star Game next month? I'll admit, overall he's probably not as good as Cano and Pedroia over a full season but right now, Kipnis is the best second baseman in the league. Make it happen people, lets make Kipnis an All Star.

Thanks for reading.