Monthly Archives: May 2011

BST guide to this week’s early MLB games: Memorial Day and more

The week starts with a public holiday on both sides of the Atlantic.  Our Spring Bank Holiday aligns with Memorial Day in the States, meaning that we both get to enjoy some live baseball to bring a perfect end to the long weekend.

Wednesday’s a great day for some pre-midnight games as well, although Thursday is unusually light when it come to early games.  Still, 18 on the week is a very decent number (albeit the two hosted by Tampa only just dip into the pre-midnight bracket) and gives us lots to look forward to.

All times are in BST.

Monday 30 May

18.05. Minnesota at Detroit (Blackburn – Penny)
18.05. San Diego at Atlanta (Harang – Hudson)
18.05. Philadelphia at Washington (Halladay – Hernandez)
19.20. Houston at Chicago Cubs (Rodriguez – Lopez)
21.05. NY Yankees at Oakland (Colon – Cahill)
21.10. LA Angels at Kansas City (Santana – Hochevar)
21.10. Baltimore at Seattle (Arrieta – Fister)
21.15. San Francisco at St. Louis (Bumgarner – McClellan)
23.40. Texas at Tampa Bay (Holland – Davis)

The top match-ups on Monday are in the National League, with Tim Hudson starting for the Braves against the Padres and an intriguing pitching contest in Washington featuring Roy Halladay and the veteran Livan Hernandez.

Rodrigo Lopez makes his Cubs debut after being acquired from the Braves last week.  The Yankees start their series in Oakland with Bartolo Colon and Trevor Cahill set to take the mound.

Tuesday 31 May

23.40. Texas at Tampa Bay (Wilson – Sonnanstine)

This should be a good series in Florida between two play-off contenders.  As on Monday, this game starts at 6.40 p.m. local time and gets under the pre-midnight UK barrier by 20 minutes. Jeff Niemann is currently dealing with a back injury, so Andy Sonnanstine will take his spot in the rotation.   Continue reading

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: Posey’s injury poses many questions

WHGB11The recent injury suffered by the San Francisco Giants’ catcher Buster Posey has led many to debate whether the rules should be changed to stop such collisions at the plate. 

I have always found it curious that this type of physical play is allowed to happen in the first place.  Baseball is typically a non-contact sport and allowing two players to collide in this way – the runner deliberately trying to smash the catcher, who is effectively a sitting duck – just seems odd. 

There’s no skill to it, the play is merely a test of misguided bravado.  It’s not ‘playing hard’, it’s ‘playing dumb’.

Still, plays at the plate are one of the most exciting parts of baseball.  That’s shown by the buzz that sweeps through the crowd when a player tags up or hurtles around third while the outfielder pegs the ball in from the outfield.  You don’t want to take that away from the game by changing the rules to greatly hand the advantage to one side.  It should be a contest, just one that involves skill (a masterful sweeping tag by the catcher, an acrobatic leap and slide by the runner etc) rather than muscle.

The incident and resulting injury have hit the headlines because of the person who ended up on the wrong end of the collision.  If it had happened to the Giants’ back-up catcher Eli Whiteside for example then – rightly or wrongly – it wouldn’t have generated such a loud reaction. 

Buster Posey is one of the brightest young stars in the game, a player of great importance to his team and the sort of talent that any baseball fan, regardless of their rooting interests, should be sad to see shelved for any length of time.  It’s natural that an incident involving him should raise concerns, but perhaps the Giants and Posey might have acknowledged them more before the incident even happened. 

On any given day a catcher could be involved in a close play at the plate.  If the potential loss of Posey would be so devastating, should he be put at such risk in the first place? 

Moving him to another fielding position would be going too far, certainly so early in his career.  If someone is a good catcher and can hit as well as Posey can then that’s a great advantage for any team.  However, there are ways that a catcher can protect himself through the position they take up when fielding a play at the plate.

Posey got himself into an awkward position to receive the ball and that clearly played its part in him suffering an injury.  Similarly you often see catchers blocking the plate and essentially challenging the baserunner to run them over if they want to score.  Posey didn’t quite do that in this case, Scott Cousins did have part of the plate to slide into, but it’s the sort of thing you see in the Majors time and again and it leaves you wondering how more injuries don’t occur. 

As Posey begins his recovery, the Giants should think about whether they can do more in helping their young star protect himself in future; working on his positioning and making it clear to him that he doesn’t have to put his body on the line.

This may make it harder to stop the runner in some cases, but the risk of letting a run score every now and then has got to be worth taking when the alternative is to lose the heartbeat of your team for a substantial length of time.

Pitchers should pitch in at the plate

In discussing Interleague play last week, I only made a brief mention of the issues caused by the two leagues playing by different rules.  Two National League games on ESPN America made me think about the topic more closely this week.

ESPN America was showing the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and Detroit Tigers before rain disrupted play and the channel turned its attention to the Washington Nationals-Milwaukee Brewers game instead. 

We joined the action just after Mike Morse had hit a home run off Zack Greinke to tie the game at 3-3.  It was the only blot on Greinke’s strong pitching performance and he backed that up with his first home run in a Brewers’ uniform.  It wasn’t a cheap effort either, sailing high through the sky and just bending the right-way around the foul pole. 

Greinke had previously hit a home run for the Royals during Interleague play and was known as a decent hitter prior to his professional pitching career.  He wasn’t the only pitcher swinging the lumber to good effect either.

The next night on ESPN America, Cliff Lee went 2-for-4 at the plate for the Phillies while driving in three runs.  Carlos Zambrano, probably the best-hitting pitcher in the Majors, had a 3-for-3 night against the Mets on Thursday as well.  Then you had the D-Backs’ Zach Duke hitting a three-run homer on Saturday against the Astros, and the Astros’ J.A. Happ hitting a longball of his own yesterday. 

Watching pitchers get key hits is one of the joys of National League play and most baseball fans also appreciate seeing a pitcher do the less-flashy, but equally important and skilful tasks such as laying down bunts to advance runners.  I don’t mind the two leagues playing by different rules; it adds something to the Majors by creating two slightly different styles of the game.  However, if consensus called for the rules to be aligned then there’s no doubt which way it should go. 

There are a very small number of genuinely star-level hitters who would be affected by the DH being discarded (demonstrated starkly on Saturday when the Toronto Blue Jays used Corey Patterson as a DH. Yes he hit a walk-off home run, but he’s still a long, long way from being an impact bat, as his lifetime sub .300 on-base percentage shows). On the other hand, pitchers taking their spot in the batting lineup forces managers into making additional tactical decisions about in-game substitutions and, more importantly, pushes pitchers into developing another side to their game.  That’s something all professional sportsmen should take pride in doing, even if that means using their athletic talent and dedication simply to become adequate at a particular skill.

Infielder Wilson Valdez’s recent pitching effort may have been something of a freak event, but pitchers stepping up to the plate should continue to be a regular part of baseball.

Seeing-eye singles

I keep hoping that the Twins will recover some good form to make my prediction that they would get to the World Series look marginally less silly.  Those hopes haven’t come to much yet.  All is not completely lost though.  Their loss against the Angels on Friday, letting a 5-0 lead slip in the final two innings, could have pushed them over the edge; however they followed it up with a stunning victory on Saturday.  Anthony Swarzak pitched eight shut-out innings in a spot start, taking a no-hitter into the eighth inning, and Danny Valencia hit a walk-off single in the tenth to win the game 1-0.  That showed a lot of character in Ron Gardenhire’s team.

Evan Longoria in the lead-off spot for the Rays?  Manager Joe Maddon is never afraid to try something unconventional and it might be just what’s needed to help the third baseman out of a slump.

It will take a while for the Giants’ gloom to lift, but Brandon Crawford really gave their fans something to smile about on Friday night. He became only the sixth player in Major League history to hit a grand slam in his first big league at-bat.

Performance of the Week: Week Eight

Last week’s award was shared between Jose Bautista and Jason Giambi, as both hit three home runs in a game.

Shift ahead to this past week and that would make two hitters prime contenders for the award.  The Milwaukee Brewers’ Corey Hart hit three home runs in a game against the Nationals on Monday and the White Sox’s Carlos Quentin repeated the feat on Tuesday with a triple-salvo against the Texas Rangers.  They deserved to be in the running, but hitting three homers is clearly a ‘last week’ fad that they decided to latch on to, so they don’t quite get the vote this time.

Who else had notable performances on the week?

In terms of individual games, James Shields pitched a complete game shut-out, with 13 strikeouts, against the Florida Marlins on Sunday.  Meanwhile the Cleveland Indians’ shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera is having a great start to the season and he went 5-for-5 on Sunday against the Cincinnati Reds, with two home runs, five RBIs and a stolen base.

The Washington Nationals’ Michael Morse had an impressive series this week as well.  He hit three home runs in three days against the Brewers, although that didn’t stop the Nats from being swept in the three-game series. 

The winner  Continue reading

British Baseball Beat: An early glimpse at playoff contenders

BBBWe’re not far into the regular season, but teams are already starting to jostle for position in their respective divisions in British baseball. 

We don’t yet have a published playoff format so the number of teams set to head to the postseason, and exactly how they will qualify, is still not completely clear.  Hopefully those details will be published relatively soon, but in the meantime we can look back at last year’s competition and take a few educated guesses.

Last Sunday’s games included both the Bristol Badgers and Bolton Robots of Doom having their unbeaten starts to the season brought to an end.

NBL: Mustangs feel the Flames behind them

The National Baseball League, British baseball’s top tier, has increased from eight to ten teams this season and the league is now split into two divisions.  Last year the top two teams in the eight-team division went straight on to the National Baseball Championships, with the third to sixth-placed teams playing an additional playoff round to add two more teams into the mix.

There are two obvious ways that the NBL postseason could be set up this year: either simply sending the top two teams through from each division or having the division winners qualify automatically, with the second and third placed teams competing in a playoff.

The decision could be particularly significant in Pool A.  The pace-setting Southampton Mustangs (8-0) sat out over the last weekend and Richmond Flames (7-1) took full advantage by winning twice against the Croydon Pirates.  That brought the Flames within one game of the Mustangs in Pool A prior to their double-header this coming Sunday. If only the division winner qualifies automatically for the NBC, it could be a very tight battle all the way to see who ends up with a possible banana skin in a single-game playoff.

Judging by the early going, either postseason qualification format will be tightly contested in Pool B.  Lakenheath Diamondbacks (6-2) took two victories over London Mets (4-2) to lead the division on Sunday, while both the Southern Nationals (4-4) and Mildenhall Bulldogs (2-4) swept double-headers against the Essex Arrows and Herts Falcons respectively.   The Falcons are still without a win this season and their next attempt at breaking their duck should come this Sunday in a rearranged double-header with the Croydon Pirates.

Triple A: Trojans take two from the A’s, Bears break the Badgers’ unbeaten run

The top two teams from the AAA North went straight through to the NBC last year.  The Liverpool Trojans are a strong bet to head back to the main event in 2011, but second place could be an exciting tussle.

The much-anticipated clash between the Trojans and the Manchester A’s wasn’t quite the thriller that was hoped for after their previous meeting.  The A’s travelled to Bootle Stadium without several key players and Liverpool Trojans showed no mercy.  The Trojans’ dynamic duo of Martin Godsall and Rob Vondy picked up a win apiece as the home team battled the wind to earn two relatively comfortable victories.  The teams are scheduled to meet again on 12 June and the A’s will surely be desperate to be back at full strength to challenge Liverpool next time.

Meanwhile Halton Jaguars earned two victories over Menwith Hill Patriots to move ahead of the A’s into second place in the division.  The Jags and A’s will face each other in six out of their last ten games, which could make for a grandstand finish.

In the South, the seemingly unbeatable Bristol Badgers were brought back down to earth by the Windsor and Bracknell Bears.  The Badgers took the opener 12-2 in a shortened mercy rule win and most would have expected them to make it a 10-0 start to the season in the second game.  The Bears were having none of it and showed great character to win the second game 10-8, proving to the rest of the league that while the Badgers are clearly a force to be reckoned with, they can be beaten.

London Metros beat the Essex Redbacks twice, Club Chairman Matt Jennings being refreshingly honest in stating that “it was an off-day for the Redbacks today, we were rubbish”, and they sit second in the division ahead of Oxford Kings, who were handed two forfeit wins by the Richmond Knights.  Last year the second and third-placed AAA South teams went into a single game playoff to join the division winners at the NBC.  Right now, it’s shaping up to be a three-way dice between the Metros, Kings and Redbacks behind the Badgers.

Double AA: Sidewinders stay hot, Bucks stay unbeaten, Robots of Doom suffer a malfunction

The Double-AA postseason included two playoff rounds before the NBC last year, with the top two teams from each division extending their season.

The Sidewinders improved to 5-0 and stayed ahead in the South Pool B thanks to an 18-5 victory over the Richmond Dragons.  Guildford Mavericks (4-1) kept the pressure on by beating Herts Hawks 21-8, with Poole Piranhas (2-1) not playing at the weekend.  The Piranhas will be in action this coming Sunday against Latin Boys (4-1), who split a double-header with Thames Valley Bisons (3-2) to stay in second in Pool A.  Essex Archers were another team sitting it out on Sunday, so they remained on top of Pool A with a 3-0 record prior to their significant double-header against the Sidewinders this coming Sunday.

In the Midlands, the MK Bucks kept their winning run going with two victories against the Leicester Blue Sox, while the Birmingham Maple Leafs recovered from being swept by the Bucks the previous Sunday by taking two games from the Blue Sox II.  The challenge to the top two looks most likely to come from the 4-4 Nottingham Rebels, but it would be dangerous to completely count out the Leicester Blue Sox from making a charge as the season progresses.

The Bolton Robots of Doom have a healthy lead at the top of the North, but their unbeaten start to the season was brought to a halt by Manchester Torrent.   Bolton led their opponents 7-1 before Manchester defied the odds and made a memorable comeback to win the game 8-7.  Suitably annoyed, the Robots hit back with an 11-3 victory in the second game to rescue a split.  There was also a split in the other double-header of the day between Humber Pilots and Sheffield Bladerunners, leaving those two teams on 2-2 records and Manchester half a game back on 2-3.

Single A: Top two continue their winning ways

The top two teams from each Single-A division went through to the playoffs last year, competing against teams finishing third and fourth in the AA-Midlands and AA-North.  There’s no doubt which two teams are early favourites to win each A-South division as the Cambridge Royals and Southampton Mustangs II both made it five wins from five on Sunday, with victories over Braintree Rays and Guildford Mavericks II respectively.

Second place in each pool is much more open.  Old Timers won 36-3 over Tonbridge on Sunday to nip ahead of the Rays by one game in Pool A, while London Marauders took advantage of Guildford’s loss by beating the Herts Raptors and joining the Mavericks II on 2-3 records.  The one game scheduled for this Sunday sees the Marauders hosting the Mustangs II at Finsbury Park in what should be an interesting test of London’s recent good form at home.

BaseballGB Fantasy League 2011: Week Seven

BgbFantasyHeadlineWelcome to our weekly round-up of the BaseballGB Fantasy League competition.  This is a mixed Head-2-Head league involving BGB writers and readers.

There are fourteen teams who pair up in different combinations each week, making for seven match-ups in any given week. The teams battle over twelve statistical categories, gaining one point for each category they win. 
 
All the points are carried over into the season league table at the end of the weekly match-ups. The top six teams with the most points at the end of the fantasy season will go on to the playoffs during the last three weeks of September.
 
 
It is time to look back at Week Seven of the BaseballGB fantasy baseball league. It was a good week to avoid Vin Mazzaro’s historically bad outing for the Royals and own Asdrubal Cabrera.
 
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  R HR RBI SB AVG OPS W SV K HLD ERA WHIP Score
Weston-Super-Sox 29 7 29 8 0.246 0.788 3 1 49 0 2.18 0.95 9
Bonestalkers 25 5 20 5 0.267 0.721 0 8 35 0 3.94 1.23 2
 
 
We begin with a fairly comfortable 9-2 win for the leading Sox, who took five out of six offensive categories against Bonestalkers. Kemp and McCutchen provided a lot of offense, while Wandy Rodriguez, Trevor Cahill, McClellan and Niese all had great weeks for the rotation and contributing to a sub-1.00 WHIP. CarGo and Martin were Bonestalkers’ star hitters, while the bullpen of Putz, Nunez and Hanrahan combined for eight saves.
 
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  R HR RBI SB AVG OPS W SV K HLD ERA WHIP Score
Orpington Isotopes 36 7 27 4 0.284 0.775 5 7 74 0 2.91 1.13 7
Iron Men 20 7 20 3 0.238 0.708 5 4 49 1 2.61 1.06 3
 
 
My hitters finally woke up, taking all six categories in the 7-3 win over Iron Men. A-Rod had the best overall week, while Walker had 8 RBIs. Daniel Hudson’s second win of the week on Sunday night forced a tie in wins, while Axford and Madson collected seven saves. Marcum and Pineda both had excellent weeks for Iron Men, contributing four wins and helping take ERA and WHIP.  Continue reading

BST guide to this week’s early MLB games: Every day except for Monday

CovHlSqIt’s set to be a good week of early starts in MLB. 

All days but Monday offer us at least one game beginning before midnight and there is plenty of choice on Wednesday (nine early games) and on Thursday (six).  All times are in BST.

Monday 23 May

No early games

Tuesday 24 May

20.10. Arizona at Colorado (Saunders – De La Rosa)

We start our working week of live baseball in Denver.  The Rockies missed out on Interleague play over the weekend as they faced the Milwaukee Brewers in the NL-only part of the schedule.  Familiarity didn’t help Colorado as they were swept by the Brew Crew. 

Meanwhile the D-Backs swept the Minnesota Twins to make it six wins on the spin.  That left Arizona just half a game behind the Rockies in the NL West prior to this series.

Wednesday 25 May

17.05. Boston at Cleveland (Lester – TBA)
17.35. Atlanta at Pittsburgh (Minor – McDonald)
18.05. Tampa Bay at Detroit (Sonnanstine – Penny) * ESPN America
18.05. Toronto at NY Yankees (Reyes – Garcia)
18.10. Washington at Milwaukee (Marquis – Greinke)
18.10. Seattle at Minnesota (Bedard – Duensing)
19.05. Chicago White Sox at Texas (Floyd – Wilson)
19.05. LA Dodgers at Houston (Lilly – Rodriguez)
23.35. St. Louis at San Diego (Carpenter – Latos)  Continue reading

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: Interleague play how it should be

WHGB11Fenway Park always radiates with history, yet Boston’s latest home series had an extra special quality to it.  The Chicago Cubs were in town for the first time since the 1918 World Series. 

The two teams came off the field on 11 September 1918 with Boston celebrating their third World Series win in four years.  Red Sox fans would never have believed that their team would wait 86 years to taste such sweet victory again.  Cubs fans would have been even more incredulous at the thought that by 2010 – and counting – their team still hadn’t lifted a trophy to put that World Series defeat to rest. 

And who would have thought the sides would wait until 2011 before meeting again in Boston.  Watching the Cubs and Red Sox playing at venerable Fenway was a real treat, particularly on Saturday when they wore retro 1918 uniforms. 

We have interleague play to thank for that series.  On its own, it is a decent argument in favour of the format that was introduced in 1997.  However, there are still plenty of arguments against it and they always get a vocal airing when interleague play comes around each season.

Prior to 1997, American League and National League teams only met in the World Series, with players from both leagues also meeting in the All-Star Game.  The division of the teams into two leagues is a legacy of baseball’s past that in many respects no longer seems relevant.  They play by slightly different rules, but for all intents and purposes, it’s all MLB in the end.

Consequently, only allowing two teams from ‘rival’ leagues to face each other every year would be unnecessarily restrictive.  In an age when we’re all used to having more choice than we can cope with, not taking advantage of a fuller range of different match-ups would be foolhardy.

A possible 2011 World Series between Texas and Philadelphia wouldn’t be the least bit undermined by their recent interleague series.  If anything, it adds an extra layer of intrigue.  Fans could look at the series just gone with visions of it being a possible prequel to the World Series, while if that does transpire then there will be a short, but not insignificant, recent history to refer back to.

Interleague play should be something special, something unique to add an extra feature to the MLB regular season.  The question is whether that uniqueness is being lost?

Most teams play 18 interleague games in a season and that’s possibly at least three games too many.  The timing of the games also could be improved.  Playing them altogether, or in two distinct blocks, would make them stand out as events during the year.  The recent splash of three games make no sense, there’s no time for a build up and the teams immediately head straight back into normal play. It’s only the occasional unique contest, such as the historic Cubs and Red Sox set, that avoid becoming just another series.

And then you come to the actual fixtures.  The interleague rivalries were part of the big plan, allowing teams in places such as New York, the Bay Area and Los Angeles to face each other.  However, now these teams meet six times every year and, again, it becomes just another part of the season. 

Others have noted the unfairness that interleague play adds to the schedule and how this will be exacerbated if the number of playoff teams increases to ten next year, as seems inevitable.  

With the playoff expansion likely to take place, it’s a good time to make a wider assessment of the MLB schedule.  I’m all for keeping interleague play so long as it produces unique contests more consistently than at present. 

Breakfast time baseball

Checking MLB.com over breakfast is a daily ritual for me.  Normally it’s a case of being able to catch up on all of the games that had taken place while Britain slept, but occasionally we’re treated to some live breakfast-time baseball. 

We don’t get to enjoy it all that often, but every now and then a west coast game runs on for longer than normal and is still in progress as the kettle boils and cereal is sleepily poured into a bowl here in Britain.

I was able to munch down my cornflakes last Tuesday morning while watching the A’s playing the Angels.  The game was originally scheduled to start at 7.05 p.m. local time in Oakland, making for a less-hospitable 3.05 a.m. start here.  However, a 1 hour 25 minute rain delay meant that the game didn’t get underway until 4.30 UK time.

The A’s were trailing 4-3 as I logged on at 7 a.m. and my initial delight at having a live Oakland game on at breakfast time soon turned into thoughts that it might not be such a welcome surprise after all.  Watching your team lose to a fierce division rival before you’ve had time to finish a cup of tea is hardly getting your day off to a good start. With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, it seemed that my walk to work would feel longer than usual.

Thankfully, my fears were soon allayed in dramatic fashion.  Coco Crisp got on base with a single, stole second and was then driven home by Daric Barton to tie the game and send it to extras.  The Aussie Grant Balfour got three strikeouts to shutdown the Angels in the top of the tenth and Mark Ellis grounded-home the game-winning run in the bottom of the frame. 

A come from behind, walk-off win over breakfast: is there a better way to start your day? 

Seeing-eye singles

The rivalry between the Reds and Cardinals shows no signs of diminishing.  Even the commentators are getting in on the argument now, with the Reds’ Hall-of-Famer Marty Brennaman angering the Cards’ skipper Tony La Russa by branding Chris Carpenter a “whiner and excuse-maker”.  No doubt some killjoy – probably going by the name Bud Selig – will step in and try to take the spice out of it.  While it may make for a better corporate image for all concerned to act professionally, some petty, playground-style verbal jousting adds to the fun for me.

Bad news for the Indians this week as Grady Sizemore, Trafis Hafner and Alex White all went on the Disabled List.  Most have been waiting for Cleveland to cool off from their hot start and they can’t afford to lose too many players.  Still, a sweep of the Reds was a good way to make up for their losses, in the short term at least.

In more positivie injury news, Josh Hamilton and Nelson Cruz could both come off the DL for the Rangers today, while the Phillies may finally get to see Chase Utley start his Major League season soon as well.  Both teams can be forgiven if they are cautious in how they bring those players back into action.  They will be key players if their respective teams are to be successful this season and if that means taking a day or two off here and there during the end of May and start of June, so be it.

MLB on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra: Mets @ Yankees

Mlb5XtraHlThis evening’s MLB game on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra is the rubber match from a three-game Subway series. 

The New York Mets and New York Yankees have shared the first two games at Yankee Stadium, making today’s contest the decider of bragging rights until the teams meet again on 1 July.

Coverage starts on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra at 18.00, with first pitch scheduled for 18.05.

The Mets need something to cling on to after wobbling through a dismal 2010 season and holding only an outside chance of contending in 2011. 

Under the guidance of new manager Terry Collins, the Mets have started the year 21-22, but the Phillies, Braves and Marlins all look like having stronger rosters that could leave New York languishing in fourth place yet again when September comes to an end.  Fourth place is not where the Mets expect themselves to be, but it appears to be their level right now.

As for the Yankees, they are tied for the lead in the AL East alongside the Tampa Bay Rays, with the Boston Red Sox just half a game behind.  That’s a positive position to be in on the face of it; however when you consider the desperate starts to the season that their main AL East rivals suffered, the Yanks have to feel disappointed that they don’t have a cushion at the top of the division. 

Their star-studded roster should hold them in good stead, but the Rays and Red Sox – maybe even the Toronto Blue Jays – don’t need any encouragement and that’s exactly what the Yankees have given them by not taking full advantage in the early going.

What the Yankees have excelled at so far this season is hitting the longball.  They lead the Majors in home runs by a considerable distance (70 to the Cincinnati Reds’ 52) and the Bronx Bombers lived up their nickname again last night while launching four round-trippers off the Mets’ starter Chris Capuano.  The home team won 7-3, levelling the series after the Mets had taken the opener 2-1.

The two starting pitchers today, Mike Pelfrey for the Mets and Ivan Nova for the Yankees, have pitched well of late.  Add in the 1-1 series scoreline and New York pride on the line and you have the makings of a closely fought, exciting game.

Nat Coombs and Josh Chetwynd will be bringing UK fans all of the action, with former Baseball on 5 presenter – and loyal Mets fan - David Lengel scheduled to join the gang during the evening.  You can listen in on digital radio, digital TV and online (UK residents only), while the MLB on 5 Live Facebook group is sure to be brimming with conversation.

Saturday’s early MLB games: Reds-Indians, Rays-Marlins and more

MlbHlSqIt’s the first round of interleague play in 2011. 

I’m not completely a fan of this part of the schedule, that’s something to delve into more on Monday in Weekly Hit Ground Ball, but it does throw together a few novel encounters and can add a bit of extra interest during what is a long regular season.

We had a series of exciting games last night and I’m sure we’ll have plenty more today. Six of them are starting before midnight UK time.

18.07. Houston at Toronto (Brett Myers – Brandon Morrow)

Astros v Blue Jays is not one of the interleague match-ups that grabs a neutral’s attention, if we’re being honest.  The series opener last night was a good game though.  Jo-Jo Reyes pitched seven strong innings for Toronto, only for the Blue Jays’ bullpen to cancel out his good work.  The Astros levelled the game at 2-2 with two runs in the eighth and then added on three more runs in the top of the ninth to take the win.

Brett Myers has been on a losing run of late, but pitched a decent game last time out.  Morrow has consistently been able to strike batters out in the Majors and he’s continued that trend this season with 37 K’s in 26 innings.  To make the next step to being a front-line starter, he needs to find a way to keep up those K’s whilst getting deeper into games.

19.10. LA Dodgers at Chicago White Sox (Jon Garland – Mark Buehrle)

Jon Garland faces the team he won a World Series with in 2005.  The Dodgers were down to their last out in the opener before Russell Mitchell hit a game-tying home run.  L.A. went on to score three runs in the top of the tenth and the Sox could only get one of those runs back in the bottom of the frame.

Expect another closely-fought contest today.  Continue reading

Weekday baseball in Britain in the 1970s

This week the London Mets announced a new midweek baseball league for 2011. The initial iteration of the story supplied by the club suggested it might be the first non-weekend experiment in British baseball history, but — as much as I support this innovative venture — I felt the need to point out that the idea was not truly a new one. So the story now mentions a weekday league in 1976. There was certainly weekday baseball in Britain’s earlier history, and the man behind the 1976 experiment — Jeff Archer — has kindly supplied details of a variety of other successes in getting baseball going during the week in the late 1970s.

Jeff’s note to me includes encouragement of the Mets’ current experiment and even has an idea that could be tried if the current umpiring stalemate in the NBL becomes a long-term phenomenon.

In Jeff’s words…

Continue reading