Monthly Archives: July 2013

This week in MLB: Nine early games

There are nine MLB games starting before midnight U.K. time this working week, all coming in the second half.

On Wednesday the most intriguing match-up will take place in San Francisco between young Mets pitch Zack Wheeler and Matt Cain. The Giants’ starter had arguably the worst start of his career last time out when the Dodgers hit him for eight earned runs in 2.1 innings.

The stand-out pitching match-up from the group should come on Thursday as Chris Sale and Anibal Sanchez are scheduled to take the mound for the White Sox and Tigers respectively. Sanchez will be making his second start after a short stint on the Disabled List due to shoulder soreness.

BBC 5 Live Sports Extra are scheduled to broadcast the game between the Royals and Yankees on Thursday. Coverage is due to begin at 18.30 although the game may be joined in progress if Day Two of the first Ashes Test runs over.

All times are in BST.

Monday 8 July

No early games

Tuesday 9 July

No early games

Wednesday 10 July

17.40. Atlanta at Miami (Maholm – Turner) *ESPN America
19.10. Cincinnati at Milwaukee (Leake – Hellweg)
20.45. NY Mets at San Francisco (Wheeler – Cain) *ESPN America, MLB.com Free Game

Thursday 11 July

17.05. Toronto at Cleveland (Buehrle – Carrasco) *MLB.com Free Game
17.10. Minnesota at Tampa Bay (Pelfrey – Moore)
18.05. Kansas City at NY Yankees (Santana – Pettitte) *BBC 5LSX, ESPN America
18.08. Chicago White Sox at Detroit (Sale – Sanchez)
20.40. Boston at Seattle (Dempster – Bonderman)

Friday 12 July

21.05. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs (Kelly – Villanueva) *ESPN America

All of these games are available to watch live via the MLB.TV subscription at MLB.com.  The early games being shown on ESPN America are highlighted above, while the full ESPN/ESPN America schedule can be found on their website.  BBC 5 Live Sports Extra can be found on digital radio, digital TV and on the BBC.co.uk website (coverage on the website is only available to UK residents). The complete schedule for this week’s MLB games can be found on MLB.com

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: Seasons made by trades

The MLB regular season picks up momentum in July.

Teams pass the half-way mark in regular season games played, inching us closer to the crunch time in the season.  The All-Star break arrives to provide a momentary breather as we all get ready for the second half. The non-waiver trade deadline looms large at the end of the month.

Last year’s deadline carried an extra subplot as many pondered whether the increase in postseason spots, from eight to ten, would affect the trade market.

Theoretically more teams would be in with a shout of making it to the playoffs, but the consequences of that needed to be discovered.

Whilst more teams might be keen to complete a trade that could be a difference-maker, potentially there would be fewer teams with no realistic chance of playing in October and therefore willing to part with a key player.

The trade deadline in 2012 didn’t provide any conclusive answers, although the general impression was that the market was broadly the same as in previous years. Most teams were out there searching to find a player or two who could improve them and that will be the same this year.

What 2012 did show is that it isn’t necessarily the big names that will produce the best returns.

A good example of this can be found in two separate trades completed on 27 July last year: Zack Greinke moving to the Los Angeles Angels and Marco Scutaro moving to the San Francisco Giants

Greinke was the type of ace pitcher that every potential playoff team would love to add down the stretch. He did pitch well for the Angels in his 13 regular season starts (6-2 with a 3.53 ERA), but it wasn’t enough to get them into the playoffs, let alone help them to the World Series, and Greinke then signed with Los Angeles Dodgers as a free agent over the offseason.

Even though they had acquired an excellent pitcher, the Angels didn’t get the overall benefit they hoped for. Furthermore, those two months from Greinke will look very expensive if Jean Segura, the young shortstop the Angels traded to the Milwaukee Brewers to sign Greinke, carries on the brilliant form he has shown so far this season and develops into one of the better infielders in the Majors in the years ahead.

The Giants’ signing of Marco Scutaro was the polar opposite of the Angels’ signing of Greinke.

Scutaro was a long way down the list of desirable trade targets. His career prior to 2012 could best be described as solid without coming close to being spectacular and his mediocre first half of last season playing home games in the hitter-friendly Coors Field ensured that his trade to the Giants was little more than a ‘by the way’ news item.

No one could have foreseen just how greatly such muted expectations would be exceeded.

The ‘Legend of Scutaro’ will forever be one of the memorable storylines from the 2012 season. His move to San Francisco suddenly turned him into a hitting machine. He put together a batting line of .362/.473/.859 during his 61 regular season games with the Giants and won the NLCS MVP award as he helped the team win their second World Series in three years.

As the trade rumours go into overdrive in the next few weeks, don’t be quick to overlook some of the so-called lesser deals. You never know when one team might just catch lightning in a bottle.

All-Star rosters

The 2013 All-Star rosters were announced on Saturday and there were not too many shocks, unless you were one of the Yankee fans on Twitter who didn’t think the fact that Derek Jeter has been out injured all season should count against his candidacy.

From an A’s fan perspective, having only one player on the AL roster isn’t a fair recognition of the team’s performances over the past twelve months, but there’s nothing to say the rosters have to be ‘fair’.

Individual fans vote for whoever they want to see in the game, players make their selections too based on their own preferences and the managers then have to juggle the requirements of making sure every team is represented and that the roster has enough flexibility so that no other manager has room to complain about the way their players were used during the game.

There is still one place on each roster that is up for grabs in the Final Vote. There won’t be much interest in either ‘race’ although that will be for completely different reasons in the two leagues.

On the American League side you have five relief pitchers who – team bias aside – will not generate any voting enthusiasm whatsoever.

On the National League side you have Yasiel Puig who, judging by the MLB.com promotional campaign, is sure to win in a landslide.

 

2013 MLB All-Star Ballots

The 2013 MLB All-Star ballot closes in the early hours of Friday, U.K. time. Below, Mark George and I explain our picks for this year’s Mid-Summer Classic at Citi Field, New York.

American League

Mark George

1B Chris Davis. Easiest choice on the ballot?

2B Jason Kipnis. Power/speed combo edges Cano.

3B Miguel Cabrera. Honourable mentions to Machado, Beltre, Donaldson and Seager.

SS Jed Lowrie. Not a great deal to choose from, but good to see Lowrie healthy.

OF Mike Trout. Enough said.

OF Adam Jones. Great year, big RBI numbers.

OF Nelson Cruz. Big HR/RBI stats plus better average than other candidates here. Almost went Alex Rios and considered a write-in for Trumbo.

DH Edwin Encarnacion. So last year wasn’t a fluke!

P Scherzer. I thought it might be a Tiger, but it’s not Verlander! King Felix, Buchholz and Moore candidates here too, as is Colon.

Matt Smith

C. Joe Mauer. Brilliantly consistent at the plate, solid behind it.

1B. Chris Davis. A great story and an easy choice with big names like Fielder and Pujols failing to shine so far this season.

2B. Jason Kipnis. Pedroia has been a catalyst for the Red Sox and Cano has an excellent track record, but Kipnis just gets the nod from me.

3B. Miguel Cabrera. The most impressive position on the ballot (add Evan Longoria, current injury aside, to Mark’s list above too) topped by the best hitter around.

SS. Jed Lowrie. No stand-out candidate so I’ll take a slight ‘homer’ pick and go for the A’s infielder who has already proved to be a shrewd offseason signing.

OF. Mike Trout. Not a star in the making, a star right now.

OF. Jose Bautista. Hasn’t put up jaw-dropping traditional stats but is having another very good season to go alongside outstanding power in 2010, 2011 and (when healthy) 2012.

OF. Jacoby Ellsbury. The All-Star Game is a showcase and Ellsbury will add excitement with his speed. Lack of power shouldn’t obscure his impressive contribution to Boston’s first half.

P. Scherzer. Has come on leaps and bounds over the last year or so and knows how important a good start may be for the AL after his teammate Justin Verlander decided to light up the radar gun last year and played a part in Detroit not having home-field advantage in the World Series.

National League

Mark George

C Yadier Molina. Close between him and Posey, but that big average is impressive.

1B Paul Goldschmidt. Possible NL MVP?

2B Brandon Phillips. Matt Carpenter has been outstanding, but Phillips has been even better.

3B David Wright. This was pretty easy.

SS Jean Segura. Almost went Ian Desmond, but Segura has really impressed me when I’ve seen him play.

OF Jay Bruce. Big year with bat and glove doesn’t seem to be getting attention it deserves.

OF Carlos Gonzalez. Tough to ignore strong numbers across the board.

OF Andrew McCutchen. Could have gone Beltran, Brown, Upton, Cuddyer or Marte here, but I’ve like Cutch for a long time.

P Matt Harvey. You could make a case for Wainwright, Zimmermann, Corbin, Lee and Kershaw. I’m sure they’ll all be there.

Matt Smith

C. Yadier Molina. Tough to choose between him and Posey but the potential battle of arm versus speed against Mike Trout (possibly Kipnis and Ellsbury) would be a treat to watch.

1B. Joey Votto. Difficult to separate him and Goldschmidt, so I’ll go with the guy with the longer track record of performing at this level.

2B. Brandon Phillips. Matt Carpenter can consider himself unlucky, but Phillips has had a good first half and has the flashy fielding and personality made for an All-Star Game.

3B. David Wright. The best third baseman in the Senior Circuit so far this season, an impressive track record and a home town hero for the Citi Field crowd.

SS. Ian Desmond. No established star to pick here so I’ll go with Desmond’s power.

OF. Carlos Gonzalez. A brilliant first half and not simply a Coors Field mirage as he’s marginally hit better on the road than at home.

OF. Andrew McCutchen. The Pirates deserve to be represented on the starting roster and there’s no better candidate than one of the best all-around talents in the game today.

OF. Carlos Beltran. Jay Bruce, Shin-Soo Choo and Domonic Brown were three of the other candidates I considered, but I eventually decided to go for Beltran. Another strong season in a very good career.

P. Matt Harvey. Despite Adam Wainwright’s equally impressive first half, the only way Harvey doesn’t start here is if his starting rotation schedule for the Mets gets in the way. A superb talent, Citi Field will be absolutely electric if Harvey starts at home in the Mid-Summer Classic.

BGB Fantasy League Week Thirteen

Week Thirteen in the BaseballGB Fantasy League proved to be unlucky for some and a good week for others.

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

Orpington Isotopes 43 15 40 7 .343 1.047 7 4 47 1 1.89 0.90 10
The Wright Stuff 31 7 28 4 .276 .814 2 5 36 1 3.79 1.41 1

Mark George’s Orpington Isotopes captured the biggest win of the week, taking a 10-1 victory of the Wright Stuff. The Isotopes swept the offensive categories, led by Jason Kipnis’s brilliant week that brought 9 runs, 3 homers, 10 RBI, 2 stolen bases and a 1.650 OPS. Jose Bautista and Yasiel Puig were other key contributors for Orpington, whilst the Wright Stuff couldn’t gain any benefit from Ian Desmond’s impressive performances. Ernesto Frieri’s four saves did help the Stuff to their one category win, but Mark’s pitching staff combined to win four of the other pitching categories for a comprehensive match-up win.

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

NE Riverkings 41 11 27 2 .296 .934 2 3 43 2 2.47 0.85 8
Norwich No II 28 8 30 2 .286 .824 2 6 40 0 2.74 1.24 2

The NE Riverkings launched themselves away from the bottom of the league with an impressive 8-2 match-up victory over the second -placed Norwich No II. Matt Harvey added 11 K’s to the total and Chase Utley rolled back the years to lead the batting lineup with four longballs and ten runs scored. As for No II, Kenley Jansen, Craig Kimbrel and Aroldis Chapman combined for six saves whilst Chris Davis had another monstrous week (4 HR, 7 R, 10 RBI) in a losing effort.

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

Richie’s RBI’s 29 6 27 1 .287 .830 4 3 44 1 2.85 1.44 8
Cardiff Redsox 24 3 17 5 .278 .735 0 2 24 1 2.36 0.94 3

Richie’s RBI’s followed the Riverkings’ lead by putting their 11th-placed position in the standings to one side and gaining an 8-3 win over the Cardiff Redsox. The Redosx were able to combine for 5 stolen bases to win that category, but the RBI’s took the rest of the offensive with Pittsburgh’s Starling Marte going deep twice and putting up a 1.360 OPS. Gio Gonzalez gave the RBI’s two wins and 11 K’s, whilst Yu Darvish added another win and 14 strike-outs to the team’s total.

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

The Cheddar Chasers 22 9 33 4 .254 .742 2 4 42 2 3.48 1.05 4
Weston-Super-Sox 37 12 36 8 .330 .920 1 0 55 2 4.06 1.29 7

What was good news for the Riverkings and RBI’s proved disastrous for my Chasers as their match-up wins and my 7-4 loss to the Weston-Super-Sox saw my team plummet to the bottom of the league. Fernando Rodney and Kevin Gregg both provided two saves and Mike Trout had another solid week across the board, but that was where the positives came to an end. Michael Cuddyer’s hit-streak helped the Super-Sox along, as did a good week from Hanley Ramirez, but the two stars of the show were Miguel Cabrera (5 HR) and Chris Sale (23 K).

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

Beck ‘Nams (GB) 11 4 21 3 .220 .652 3 2 52 2 3.36 1.19 4
Batteries Essential 25 4 21 4 .260 .711 4 4 47 0 3.50 1.41 6

Batteries Essential took a 6-4 win over the Beck’Nams in a week when neither team’s offence really got going. Jacoby Ellsbury scored six runs and David Wright stole a couple of bases as the Batteries picked up four of the offensive categories. Cliff Lee and Felix Hernandez gave the Beck’Nams decent contributions and Tyler Clippard collected two holds to help them to four pitching category victories, but the Batteries were able to take the Wins and Saves to win the match-up.

R

HR

RBI

SB

AVG

OPS

W

SV

K

HLD

ERA

WHIP

Score

SWAT* 30 6 24 2 .275 .751 4 2 39 1 3.95 1.50 6
Iron Men 21 5 18 2 .259 .736 5 3 53 0 2.95 0.92 5

The final match-up saw the first-placed team meeting the third as SWAT and Iron Men battled away and could only be separated by a single category. SWAT took five of the offensive categories, led by Allen Craig’s three home runs and Domonic Brown’s seven RBI and seven runs, whilst Iron Men grabbed five of the pitching set with C.J. Wilson, Madison Bumgarner and Max Scherzer combining for 29 strike-outs and Koji Uehara amassing three saves. The difference in the match-up came through SWAT being able to take the remaining pitching category – courtesy of Darren O’Day’s single hold – whilst the sixth hitting category (stolen bases) was drawn.

Week 14 match-ups

SWAT (1st) v Batteries Essential (6th)

Norwich No II (2nd) v Weston-Super-Sox (4th)

Iron Men (3rd) v Cheddar Chasers (12th)

Orpington Isotopes (5th) v Richie’s RBI’s (9th)

Beck’Nams (7th) v Cardiff Redsox (10th)

Wright Stuff (8th) v NE Riverkings (11th)

MLB this Week: Independence Day and more

It may feel like only a few weeks since the excitement of Opening Day, but we’ve already reached July and the second half of the MLB season is underway.

This week’s schedule of pre-midnight U.K. time MLB games is dominated by a bundle on Thursday, which is Independence Day in the States. The fact that ten day-games will be played on the public holiday is probably responsible for there being only one early game on Wednesday, and one that starts at just gone 11 o’clock, but I guess we shouldn’t be too greedy.

The MLB show on BBC 5 Live Sports Extra will be on air from 18.00 on Thursday, although it doesn’t say on the schedule yet which game they will be broadcasting [Update: it’s the Giants v Reds game]. ESPN America will broadcast two games back-to-back that evening, alongside a game on Monday and Friday. This is the channel’s final month before it ceases to broadcast and MLB coverage moves over to an ESPN branded channel as part of the new BT Sport package.

All times are in BST.

Monday 1 July

18.07. Detroit at Toronto (Alvarez – Dickey) *ESPN America, MLB.com Free Game

Tuesday 2 July

No early games

Wednesday 3 July

23.05. Milwaukee at Washington (Hellweg – Detwiler)

Thursday 4 July

16.05. Milwaukee at Washington (Hand – Jordan) *ESPN America
18.10. San Francisco at Cincinnati (Cain – Leake) *BBC 5LSX
18.10. Arizona at NY Mets (Kennedy – Gee)
18.35. San Diego at Boston (Stults – Webster)
18.35. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (Hamels – Cole)
19.10. Baltimore at Chicago White Sox (TBA – Quintana) *ESPN America
19.10. Cleveland at Kansas City    (Jimenez – Shields)
19.10. NY Yankees at Minnesota (Phelps – Gibson)
19.10. Tampa Bay at Houston (Archer – Lyles)
21.05. Chicago Cubs at Oakland (Wood – Parker)

Friday 5 July

21.05. Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs (Liriano – Samardzija) *ESPN America

All of these games are available to watch live via the MLB.TV subscription at MLB.com.  The early games being shown on ESPN America are highlighted above, while the full ESPN/ESPN America schedule can be found on their website.  BBC 5 Live Sports Extra can be found on digital radio, digital TV and on the BBC.co.uk website (coverage on the website is only available to UK residents). The complete schedule for this week’s MLB games can be found on MLB.com

Weekly Hit Ground Ball: First to Fifty

We’re in a golden period of the sporting calendar.

This past weekend has brought us the second instalment in a gripping Lions series against Australia, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone and Valentino Rossi standing on the top step of a MotoGP podium for the first time in nearly three years (with Britain’s Cal Crutchlow in third place).

Wimbledon is in full swing, the Ashes is just around the corner and football teams are returning to pre-season training.

There’s no such thing as too much sport for us fans, but amidst the competition for eyeballs each individual sport has to find something to capture attention. MLB has a raft of storylines that can draw people in and none better than the lead headline on Sunday morning.

The Pittsburgh Pirates were the first team in the Majors to reach fifty wins.

Their performances over the past twenty years would make you believe that there had been some mistake. Had the headlines said fifty losses the only question would have been why the editor had bothered to turn it into a lead story. The Pirates of recent years are simply not a team associated with winning; an entire generation of Buccos fans has grown up without seeing their team even reach the minimum mark of respectability: winning as many games as they lost in a given season.

It’s no mistake though, the Pittsburgh Pirates woke up on Sunday morning having secured their eighth win in a row the previous night. They had a win-loss record of 50-30, not just good enough to lead the NL Central by a game over the St. Louis Cardinals, but good enough to lead every other team in the Majors too.

The underlying message was one that every sport wants to be able to put across but few can: every fan has a reason to hope that this year may be their year.

Like every other statement, this has to be put into context. MLB’s structure – 30 franchises, no relegation, the best amateur player draft picks going to the worst teams – clearly allows a team’s fanbase to suffer through 20 years of hopelessness to finally arrive at a moment of hope. There’s no penalty against awful owners and feckless Front Offices, no threat of relegation, potential financial ruin and being ran out of town by thousands of protesters to focus the mind.

Then again, the desperation to stay in the Premier League, and the desperation to get there, produces many a negative consequence too (ask fans of Portsmouth FC). There are pros and cons to every sporting set-up, yet the central point of the MLB model is the acceptance that there will always be the mega-rich and the rest. Without allowing the rest to put a longer-term plan in place, leaving current Major League results second in the list of priorities for a while to build for the future, they may never stand a chance of competing.

The Pirates have taken much longer than usual to rebuild, but that’s down to a litany of poor decisions by the club itself rather than a knock against MLB. They are firmly in the running this year and right now the years of hurt only make it all the sweeter.

The Buccos allow MLB to show that money isn’t everything in their competition. The Pirates’ Opening Day payroll was $67m, 25th highest out of the 30 teams.

The biggest spenders at $214m are the Los Angeles Dodgers and prior to Sunday’s action they were bottom of the NL Central with a 37-43 record. Dreadful luck with injuries is partly to blame, yet the Dodgers are showing that it’s not simply how much you spend, but how you spend it. The Boston Red Sox got themselves into an expensive muddle in 2011 and 2012 and their resurgence this year is in part due to the Dodgers taking the multi-year contracts of Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford and Josh Beckett off their books, giving them the flexibility to reconstruct their roster.

And then there are the perennial big-spending New York Yankees. They are still in the playoff race despite a luckless run of injuries; however this is not the sort of roster that fans in the Bronx have come to expect. Their position is epitomized by the walking car-crash that is Alex Rodriguez; their decision to re-sign the third baseman to a 10-year, $275m contract in December 2007 arguably the ultimate sporting example of a player and team being brought down by hubris.

The Yankees’ multi-year investment in star free agents has meant that even they have had to let good players go of late, to the benefit of other teams such as the Cleveland Indians who were able to sign Nick Swisher over the recent offseason.

The Pirates have also been beneficiaries. The Yankees declined to match the Pirates’ contract offer to Russell Martin over the offseason and he’s been a good addition to the Buccos so far this season, whilst the Yankees have been weighed down by the likes of Chris Stewart and Austin Romine taking at-bats in the catching role. Meanwhile A.J. Burnett, current injury notwithstanding, has been a major contributor to Pittsburgh since being acquired in a trade with the Yankees prior to last season. Burnett will earn $33m over the years 2012 and 2013, but the Pirates are only having to pay $13m of it. The Yankees are chipping in the other $20m.

The Evil Empire clearly has a benevolent side.

Let’s not get ahead of ourselves and start planning for World Series games in Pittsburgh just yet. There is a long, long way to go before they get near to that stage and their late season collapse last year will hang over them at every turn. However, the Baltimore Orioles confounded all expectations that their promising first half in 2012 wouldn’t hold up, just as they have proved the pre-season doubters wrong that they would turn back into a pumpkin in 2013.

Maybe this is the year that Pittsburgh becomes a playoff team again for the first time since 1992. If it happens, it will rank alongside any great storyline other sports will produce this year.