Category: Dailies

One Wild and Crazy Night

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If you were watching the D-backs play the Cardinals on Tuesday night, you saw not only one of the craziest games we’ve seen in this ballpark in some time, but also one of the most amazing individual stat lines you’ll ever see.

Before we get to some fun facts about last night’s 16-run bonanza, here’s the FanGraphs win probability chart, which has a lot more peaks and valleys than you’ll usually see in a game:

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 — Until Chris Snyder’s two-out RBI single in the sixth inning, no team led this game for more than a half inning at a time. The Cards scored two in the first, immediately answered by two for the D-backs in the first. The Cards scored another two in the third, which was immediately trumped by three D-backs runs. The Cards then answered with three in the fourth, which swung the D-backs way again with a Mark Reynolds three-run homer in the bottom of that frame.

 

— It seems hard to believe in a game in which the Cardinals scored seven runs and put 12 runners on base — nine hits, two walks and a strikeout/wild pitch — but the D-backs pitchers closed out the game retiring 16 consecutive batters. Haren intentionally walked Albert Pujols in the fourth inning setting up a Matt Holliday groundout, and no Cardinals reached base after that.

 

— Haren tied the franchise record for hits by a D-backs pitcher with his 4-for-4 effort. They weren’t just random, cheap hits though. In the third inning, Haren had a two-out RBI single to drive in Gerardo Parra to give the D-backs a lead. In the sixth, A.J. Hinch sent Haren to the plate to hit for himself even though Juan Gutierrez was warming up and the move paid off, as Haren poked a two-out single to left to turn the lineup over.

 

— He turned the lineup over exceptionally well, actually. Three of Haren’s four hits came with two outs, the other came with one out.

 

— Haren’s line is one of the strangest things you’ll ever see from a pitcher:

 

Pitching: 6 innings, 7 runs (all earned), two walks, eight strikeouts, three home runs, WIN

Batting: 4-for-4 with an RBI

 

Here are the eight instances in which a D-backs pitcher has had three or more hits in a game. I think it’s pretty obvious who the two best hitting pitchers are in D-backs history:

 

Rk Player Date Tm Opp Rslt PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB IBB SO HBP SH Pos. Summary
1 Dan Haren 2010-04-20 ARI STL W 9-7 4 4 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 P
2 Micah Owings 2007-09-27 ARI PIT W 8-0 4 4 1 4 3 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 P
3 Micah Owings 2007-08-18 ARI ATL W 12-6 5 5 4 4 1 0 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 P
4 Dan Haren 2009-06-02 ARI LAD L 5-6 3 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 P
5 Dan Haren 2008-09-21 ARI COL W 13-4 4 4 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 P
6 Micah Owings 2008-04-26 ARI SDP L 7-8 3 3 2 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 P
7 Enrique Gonzalez 2006-07-17 ARI LAD W 8-3 3 3 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 P
8 Curt Schilling 2001-09-05 ARI SFG W 7-2 4 4 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 P
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/21/2010.

 

— It’s not often that you see a pitcher give up seven runs and still win a game. It takes some luck, some bullpen help and an awful lot of timely hitting by the offense. In fact, the D-backs have won 976 games in franchise history, but only three times has a pitcher given up seven runs and still recorded a win, and last night was the first one in eight years:

 

Rk Player Date Tm Opp Rslt App,Dec IP H R ER BB SO HR Pit Str GSc BF AB 2B 3B
1 Dan Haren 2010-04-20 ARI STL W 9-7 GS-6 ,W 6.0 9 7 7 2 8 3 104 69 32 28 26 0 1
2 Rick Helling 2002-04-20 ARI COL W 9-8 GS-5 ,W 5.0 7 7 7 2 7 2 92 58 30 23 21 0 0
3 Curt Schilling 2001-04-25 ARI FLA W 10-7 GS-7 ,W 7.0 13 7 7 0 12 3 105 77 35 33 31 3 0
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/21/2010.

 

— Since the year 2000, a pitcher giving up seven but still getting the win has happened only 42 times. The last player to do it strike out as many batters as Haren did (8) last night? He was on that list above — Curt Schilling’s 12 strikeouts in 2001.

 

And this, from Jayson Stark of ESPN, on combining Haren’s pitching and hitting lines:

 

Dan Haren had himself a game Tuesday you sure don’t see much. He went 4-for-4 at the plate — but gave up seven runs on the mound. So how long has it been since we saw a pitcher get four hits and allow at least seven runs in the same game? More than half a century — since Mickey McDermott did it for the Red Sox, in a 14-10 win over the Yankees, on May 25, 1953.

 

If nothing else, last night’s crazy game was evidence that it’s always a great night out at the ballpark — you never know what you might see.

 

 

Rodrigo vs. The Best

 

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Photography: Jon Willey

In looking back on the boxscore of what was, by any measure, a really good effort by Rodrigo Lopez last night, I noticed he held Albert Pujols to an 0-for-3 while he was in the game, including the double play on the fly ball to Chris Young in the first inning (which led to a fantastic diving play by Mark Reynolds to save the throw and tag out Skip Shumaker).

 

Anyway, I wasn’t the only one who noticed. Craig Calcaterra of NBC Sports’ Hardball Talk (a daily read for me, by the way… some excellent writers over there) noted Pujols’ struggle against Lopez, and that it’s nothing new. Writes Calcaterra:

 

Albert Pujols went 0 or 3 against starter Rodrigo Lopez last night and is 0 for 8 against him in his career. Lopez should retire now so he can tell his grandkids about that.

 

Surprised as I was by the fact that Pujols has an 0-for-8 lifetime against anyone — and knowing what Fox Sports Arizona showed in the broadcast last week, that Manny Ramirez has struggled against Lopez, too — I figured I’d look up the batter vs. pitcher numbers for Rodrigo.

 

Now, this list is obviously cherry-picked, so it’s not meant to be informative as much as it’s meant to be fun and trivial. But for the record, some good hitters have had some rough at bats against Rodrigo:

PA AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
Manny Ramirez 71 60 15 1 0 2 13 7 15 .250 .324 .367 .691
Hideki Matsui 40 36 9 1 0 1 6 4 7 .250 .325 .361 .686
Ichiro Suzuki 32 31 9 0 0 0 1 1 2 .290 .313 .290 .603
Garret Anderson 27 26 4 1 0 1 3 0 4 .154 .148 .308 .456
Mark Teixeira 18 17 3 0 0 1 2 0 4 .176 .222 .353 .575
Troy Glaus 17 11 2 1 0 0 0 6 1 .182 .471 .273 .743
Carlos Lee 17 13 2 1 0 0 2 3 4 .154 .294 .231 .525
Chone Figgins 15 15 2 0 0 0 0 0 5 .133 .133 .133 .267
Vladimir Guerrero 15 15 3 0 0 0 1 0 2 .200 .200 .200 .400
Nick Johnson 15 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 .000 .000 .000 .000
Carlos Pena 13 13 4 1 0 0 1 0 4 .308 .308 .385 .692
Grady Sizemore 13 12 3 2 0 0 0 1 1 .250 .308 .417 .724
Ivan Rodriguez 12 12 2 1 0 0 0 0 4 .167 .167 .250 .417
Albert Pujols 10 8 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 .000 .100 .000 .100
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/20/2010.

Conor Jackson Placed on DL

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Photography: Jordan Megenhardt

 

D-backs left fielder Conor Jackson came up limping after catching a fly ball in the bottom of the seventh inning of the D-backs’ game against the San Diego Padres Sunday, and the resulting injury has landed him on the 15-day disabled list.

 

The issue seems to be a strained hamstring, and the team’s medical staff, Hinch said, didn’t seem terribly concerned. However, with a few players including first baseman Adam LaRoche playing at less than 100 percent, the team can’t take the risk of playing short-handed.

 

“We’re not afforded the luxury of playing short for that long,” Hinch said. “We’ve got some guys playing with some injuries, so we’ve got to put Conor on the DL. Given how these leg things work, it’s early in the season so we’re going to be smart about it.”

 

Because the injury doesn’t seem too serious at this point, it is possible Jackson could be ready to go before his 15 days are up, in which case the team could have him play in a minor league rehab game and activate him immediately.

 

In a corresponding move, the team recalled right-handed relief pitcher Esmerling Vasquez.

 

“Until our bullpen stabilizes, and we’re able to feel good about our pitching, at least the volume which they’re pitching, we’re going to bring an extra pitcher back,” Hinch said.

 

Vasquez will be available in the bullpen tonight.

 

 

 

Fox Sports Arizona Plus to Carry D-backs

If you’re looking for the D-backs on Friday night, don’t fret when you turn to Fox Sports Arizona and it isn’t there. The network has set up an auxiliary channel to carry the D-backs when there are scheduling conflicts with Coyotes and Suns playoff games.

Here are the channels where Fox Sports Arizona Plus will be running:

Cox (108/SD, 608/HD) in Phoenix and Tucson
DirecTV (608/SD, 608-1/HD) throughout Arizona
DISH Network (452/SD, 9518/HD) throughout Arizona
Qwest (999/SD) in Phoenix
Orbitel (71/SD) in Maricopa
Aztech Cable/Expand (112/SD) in Bullhead City and Mojave County.
NPG Cable (28/SD) in Bullhead City, Flagstaff (46/SD), Kingman (100/SD), Lake Havasu (27/SD), Parker (77/SD), Payson (80/SD), Pine (51/SD), Sedona (45/SD)

D-backs at Dodgers, April 13

 


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Stephen Dunn/Getty ImagesIt’s a beautiful day in Los Angeles as the D-backs take on the Dodgers in their home opener.

Clayton Kershaw moved through the D-backs’ lineup quite well the first time through, as Conor Jackson accounted for both of the only two baserunners through the first 12 batters with a single and a walk.

Ian Kennedy got out of a spot of trouble in the second inning, loading the bases with one out but surrendering only a sacrifice fly to Russell Martin.

— Adam LaRoche drove a ball hard to the left-center field gap for a one-out double to get the D-backs going in the fourth inning.

— It will be interesting to see how Kershaw goes after Chris Young here. He went after him perfectly in the first at bat, keeping all of his six pitches high in the zone (see image below). But we’ve seen so far this week that Young has blasted a few pitchers’ mistakes already.

Kershaw vs. Young

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— Different approach for Kershaw in the second at bat, and a different result, as Young drives a fastball into center field for an RBI single to drive in Adam LaRoche. This time, it was a slider and a pair of curveballs to Young before he drove the only fastball he saw for a hit.

— In my estimation, Daron Sutton and Mark Grace correctly summed up the good luck on that hit. Young’s bat breaking took enough velocity off the ball that LaRoche was able to score, whereas a hard-hit line drive to center might have resulted in a play at the plate or LaRoche being held at third.

— Kennedy was managing a nine-pitch at bat with Manny Ramirez quite well until the last pitch, a slider that Ramirez drove for a homer. Look at where the first eight pitches are — all on the outside edges of the zone, and half of them away. Unfortunately, he missed with the slider, leaving it belt-high over the plate and Ramirez used one of the more valuable skills in his toolbox, which is to foul off pitches until he gets something to hit. Too bad for Kennedy, who really handled that at bat well up to that slider.

Kennedy vs. Ramirez

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— Unfortunately, that set a rough tone for the rest of this inning, too. James Loney pulled a double down the line and Casey Blake got under a fastball on the inside part of the plate for a homer to left-center. It’s 4-1, bad guys.

— Excellent defensive play by Chris Snyder. With Blake DeWitt on first having just walked, Kennedy bounced a pitch in the dirt, which was quickly corralled by Snyder, who gunned DeWitt out at second for the first out of the inning.

— Some good luck going the D-backs way here for sure. Kennedy went to the plate to bunt Snyder — who had walked — to second base. But Kershaw missed the strike zone on four pitches (the last three by quite a bit), walking Kennedy to put two on with nobody out. Interesting… Kennedy is getting wild as the most patient D-backs hitter — Jackson — comes to the plate.

— Jackson ground into a fielder’s choice, as Rafael Furcal makes a diving play to nail Kennedy at second. Game of inches, here. That ball is a foot further to Furcal’s right, and the D-backs would have another baserunner.

— Again, you take the luck you get. Drew hangs in there against, as the broadcasters got right again, a pitch that could have been called strike three, and gets hit with the next pitch to load them up for Justin Upton here.

— Looks like Kershaw got away with one there. He put a curveball right over the heart of the plate, a pitch Upton will usually take back up the middle, but he pulls it for a groundball fielder’s choice to third. Unfortunately, with a flyout from LaRoche, Kershaw gets out of a huge jam there.

— As Jordan Norberto comes to the mound to face James Loney with two runners on, the Dodger Stadium speakers are playing the song that would be my entrance music if I were a closer — The Joker and the Thief, by Wolfmother. I wonder if that’s Loney’s music, or just incidental? Hopefully it pumps up Norberto here.

— (Related note… see a list of all of the D-backs’ pitchers’ music, and thoughts from Kennedy on why he picked his particular song in the next issue of D-backs Insider magazine)

— Kelly Johnson makes a play that you will definitely see in Web Gems on Baseball Tonight this evening. Reaching over his left shoulder to get a ball that would ahve dropped between he and Upton for a base hit to load the bases if not for that fantastic play.

— After the Dodgers added another two runs in the bottom of the fifth, the D-backs get started the right way here in the top of the sixth, with a pair of walks for Mark Reynolds and Young. Johnson is started 2-0 here also…

— Johnson struck out, but Snyder responded with an RBI single to make this a 6-2 game as the Dodgers turn to reliever Jeff Weaver.

— Bottom of the seventh: Against reliever Ramon Ortiz, LaRoche draws a walk, Reynolds homers to left-center, Young doubles and Johnson singles him home. This is a ballgame again, folks, as the D-backs have cut the Dodgers’ lead to 9-5.

Huge Inning Lifting D-backs

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The D-backs just completed the highest-scoring inning in franchise history.

The previous record, eight, was slaughtered when the D-backs put up 13 in the bottom of the fourth today. That photo above was taked right before pitcher Edwin Jackson hit his first career homer, a deep blast to left-center. Chris Young and Kelly Johnson also homered in the inning.

Here’s a quick rundown of the fourth in which they scored 13 runs with eight hits and nearly batted around the lineup twice:

Daniel McCutchen pitching for Pittsburgh
A. LaRoche walked.
M. Reynolds grounded into fielder’s choice to shortstop, A LaRoche to second.
C. Young homered to left, A LaRoche and M Reynolds scored.
K. Johnson homered to right
.
C. Snyder flied out to center.
E. Jackson singled to center.
C. Jackson singled to right, E Jackson to second.
S. Drew tripled to deep center, E Jackson and C Jackson scored.
Hayden Penn replaces Daniel McCutchen
S. Drew scored on H Penn’s wild pitch.
J. Upton walked.
A. LaRoche singled to right, J Upton to third.
M. Reynolds walked, A LaRoche to second.
C. Young grounded out to first, J Upton scored, A LaRoche to third, M Reynolds to second.
K. Johnson walked.
Jack Taschner replaces Hayden Penn
C. Snyder doubled to deep center, A LaRoche, M Reynolds and K Johnson scored.
E. Jackson homered to left center, C Snyder scored.
C. Jackson struck out looking.

— The eight hits in one inning tied a franchise record. 

Reynolds featured in ESPN the Magazine

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D-backs slugger Mark Reynolds is featured in this week’s ESPN the Magazine.

You can read Jorge Arangure’s feature online at ESPN.com here.

He discusses Reynolds’ physical development from scrawny, line-drive hitting kid to a burly, big league masher.

Here’s a glimpse:

Reynolds had been so skinny that his teammates at First Colonial High in Virginia Beach called him Skeletor. His father, Greg, an accountant, used to research training techniques in the hopes of counterbalancing his son’s lack of muscle. “When you’re a little guy, you do what you can with what you’ve got,” says Mark, who was a good line-drive hitter but no slugger.

One of many schemes he tried was swinging a bat with plastic fans on the barrel, to create wind resistance. He hoped the contraption would strengthen his wrists and forearms, making him as powerful as his teammates. No small feat, that: Reynolds grew up playing on travel teams with B.J. Upton, David Wright and Ryan Zimmerman, all of whom would become first-round picks and major league stars. To help the scrawny Reynolds compete, his high school coach gave him a piece of hitting advice that he follows to this day: “Swing as hard as you can.”

The story is behind the Insider wall at ESPN, so you’ll have to be an ESPN Insider member or magazine subscriber to read it. Or, you can pick up a copy of the April 19 issue of ESPN the Magazine on newsstands. It’s worth it, the story is a great read.

 

 

Notes From D-backs vs. Cubs

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Thoughts from Rodrigo Lopez’s final tune-up start before the regular season…

 

— We’re looking at the regular starters for both teams, which is nice. The stats don’t count, but at least the quality of baseball should be high.

 

— A 1-2-3 first inning for Rodrigo, with the only potential trouble being a long fly ball to center off the bat of Derrek Lee that Chris Young tracked down.

 

— Justin Upton hit an opposite-field liner for a double, that might have featured an attempt at a triple in the regular season.

 

— Another three up, three down for Rodrigo, this time with a 4-6-3 double play for Xavier Nady.

 

— Nice opposite field single for Chris Young. Those are the kind of hits I think a lot of people here would like to see from him. He stayed back on a pitch that was out over the plate and pushed a line drive over the head of second baseman Mike Fontenot.

 

— …and he follows it up with a steal of second. RBI opportunity here for Kelly Johnson. Well, that was quick. Looking strikeout ends the inning, scoreless after two.

 

— Another inning, another 1-2-3 for Lopez.

 

— There goes the no-hitter for Lopez. Marlon Byrd just rapped a single to center.

 

— Lopez goes upstairs to strike out Derrek Lee swinging, then on the next batter, Miguel Montero guns down Byrd trying to steal. Three up, three down again for Lopez.

 

— Mark Reynolds just hit a home run that left he park in a hurry, driving in Adam LaRoche (who walked) to give the D-backs a 2-0 lead. That’s Reynolds’ fourth homer of the spring.

 

— Another good strikeout for Lopez, a slider down and in gets Aramis Ramirez swinging.

 

— Kelly Johnson smacks a double to left-center field, which is nice to see. I’m not sure how often Johnson will be hitting out of the eighth spot in the order like he is tonight, but if he does, the D-backs are looking at a great deal of power from their eight hole. A 30-double, 15-homer season is right up Johnson’s alley, and he’s patient enough to lay off some of the junk balls opposing pitchers throw to that batter in order to get to the pitcher’s spot in the lineup.

 

Haren on Opening Day Start

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Dan Haren met with the media Friday night in advance of his Opening Day start against the Padres on Monday at 2:10 p.m. at Chase Field.

Q: Can you give us your thoughts on Monday, Opening Day, and being on the mound?

 

A: It’s going to be very exciting. I’ve been looking forward to this since A.J. told me I’d be starting the first game of the year. A lot leading up to this, all of the workouts in the offseason, Spring Training and getting up early for a month and a half straight. To finally get things going will be exciting.

 

Q: How do you feel about this team now that Spring Training is over?

 

A: I feel the same way I felt coming into the spring. Our lineup is improved, bullpen is improved and I’m just looking forward to just getting out there and competing. I’m sure we’ll score more runs, play better defense and that was obviously a big key for us this spring. I’m just looking forward and I think everybody is looking forward to getting things going.

 

Q: (Brandon) Webb said he thinks you may have some jitters even though you’ve done this before. Do you still get them?

 

A: I get theme very time out. If you don’t get the jitters, something is wrong. There is a lot leading up to the game. I’m sure the night before it will be tough sleeping and I’ll wake up early with a long drive to the field. It will be nice. Once I get out there and throw a few pitches, I’m fine.

 

Q: Can you talk a little bit about the Padres?

 

A: They always give me fits. They always seem to be close games, always, especially at their ballpark and its low scoring. Adrian Gonzalez is obviously one of the best players in the league and it kind of all starts and ends with him. You try not to let him do too much damage and keep the guys off base ahead of him.

 

Q: Do you set goals yourself for a season?


A: Well, the No. 1 goal for me is to be healthy. If I make 33 or 34 starts, the numbers will take care of themselves. I’ve been blessed with health the last few years and hopefully again this year.

 

Q: Is there something special about not only Opening Day, but Opening Day at home?

 

A: Yeah, my first year here, I pitched the home opener, which was nice. I remember it was against the Dodgers. This will be an exciting environment here. It’s going to be fun. It’s such a change. You go from pitching in Tucson or Surprise and all these fields, and it’s such a mellow atmosphere. Then you get out here and it’s electric. I’m looking forward to it.

 

Q: Does it feel different when there’s 35-plus thousand in the house, and you get that big Opening Day crowd?

 

A: Yeah, it’s easy to get loose. The adrenaline starts pumping the second you get on the dirt and start my warm-up tosses. Its easy to get loose, easy to get going and its just a matter of controlling your emotions.

 

 

 

 

Upton Featured on ESPN Today

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ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick has a nice feature on D-backs outfielder Justin Upton today, running on the front of their MLB page.

It’s not behind the Insider wall, so anybody can read it. Here’s the link.

It includes an interesting passage with a note about a player to whom Upton seems quite similar:

The contract is similar to deals signed recently by Hanley Ramirez, Nick Markakis and Ryan Zimmerman, but also to a deal signed by a player to whom Upton has drawn early comparisons: Ken Griffey Jr., who signed a four-year, $24 million deal in 1992 at the age of 22.

Griffey was already a star at the time, and the contract paid off huge for the Mariners when Junior continued to improve and become one of the greatest players in the history of the game. Griffey and Upton have developed a bit of a friendship in recent years, with Griffey lending advice to Upton.

“He actually helped me out a lot last year,” Upton said. “Just the mind-set he has [in baseball]. When it comes down to it, you’re playing a baseball game for a living, and so make it fun and have fun doing it. When things are going bad, smile and continue playing hard.”

Anyway, go check it out. It’s a solid feature.