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Daily Archives: June 13, 2006

Cleveland Indians

On Friday we learned that the A’s disappointing season has largely been the result of injuries and massive offensive outage. The A’s then proceeded to sweep the Yankees, scoring an average of 5 2/3 runs per game.

Tonight the Yankees open a three-game series with the American League’s second most disappointing team, the Cleveland Indians. So what’s Cleveland’s problem? It isn’t injuries, only relief pitcher Matt Miller currently resides on the Tribe’s disabled list. It isn’t offense, the Indians have rivaled the Yankees for the major league lead in runs scored all year (both teams have scored 359 runs thus far, though the Indians have needed one more game to reach that total). What does that leave?

That’s right, pitching. Only five teams in baseball have allowed more runs than the Indians, the Brewers and post-Mazzone Braves in the NL and the terrible trio of Baltimore, Tampa Bay and Kansas City in the AL. One reason for that is that in the AL only those three embarrassments and the major-league worst Twins have less efficient defenses than the Indians, who are in a very bad way on both sides of the ball at third (ol’ buddy Aaron Boone) and second (the erratic Ronnie Belliard) and will be in right field as well as soon as Casey Blake’s bat crashes back to earth.

Curiously, the fact that two of the Tribe’s four infielders have had their gloves turn to stone hasn’t had a tremendously negative effect on extreme groundballer Jake Westbrook, but extreme flyballer Cliff Lee has been having a rough go of it. Meanwhile, new addition Jason Johnson has doubled his groundball rate and seen just about every other number on his stat sheet (save for Ks and homers) shoot up as well.

C.C. Sabathia continues to progress toward being a true ace, and Bob Wickman continues to get the job done in the ninth, but elsewhere things are, if you’ll pardon the term, thin. The three best bullpen ERA’s after Wickman are Rafael Betancourt’s 3.57, Jeremy Guthrie’s 4.63 and Rafael Perez’s 0.00, the last representing a single inning’s work. Other than those four and Sabathia, the only man on the staff with an ERA under 5.00 is Jake Westbrook. Guillermo Mota has been a flat disaster, closer of the future Fernando Cabrera has struggled with wildness, and would-be fifth starters Fausto Carmona and Jason Davis have been just plain hittable.

Still, as bad as things might look, that offense counts for a lot. In fact, the Tribe’s Pythagorean record is four games better than their actual mark and would rank them just a game and a half behind the Yankees in the East or all alone in first in the West. Cleveland has a supply of reinforcements in the minors. If things don’t shape up soon, expect to see some of them in Cleveland as we approach the All-Star break and the trading deadline.

Paul Byrd, the other big pitching addition for 2006, will take the Yankee Stadium hill for the Tribe tonight. The Yankees handled Fraiser pretty well in last year’s ALDS (though that fact was obscured by Randy Johnson’s own failings in Game 3). That’s reassuring as Byrd has settled down after a rough April to turn in quality starts in five of his last seven outings. Opposing him will be Chien-Ming Wang, who finally turned in a solid outing against the Red Sox in his last turn.

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Something to Chew On

I caught portions of the Rangers-White Sox game on ESPN last night and dag, Steve Lombardi, you read my mind.

Do you think that Joe Torre is giving Andy Phillips an unreasonably hard time?

You May Be Warshed Up, But You’re Ours and We Luh Ya

At Yankee Stadium, it doesn’t much matter that Bernie Williams is no longer a star player. Williams is cheered for just about everything he does well and is forgiven for his short-comings. He’s earned it, so it has been a pleasure to watch Yankee fans show their appreciation for Williams this year. Not everyone is so lucky. According to Peter Botte in the Daily News:

“Bernie will make an error and they’ll cheer him when he comes up (to bat). For the guys who get booed off the face of the earth, I’m sure they feel it’s unfair, but that’s the way it goes,” [manager] Joe Torre said Sunday. “Bernie’s just never changed. From the first day I met him 11 years ago, to now, and he’s made a ton of money . . . but this man has never changed one bit.”

…”He’s just never felt he was entitled to something. I told him one time that he was a leader here and I think I stunned him,” Torre said. “He’s always been very honest and an elegant individual to me. He’s been a regular player and a great player in postseason and it’s always the ‘aw-shucks’ stuff all the time. But I think he’s enjoying this a lot.”

Williams tells Tyler Kepner how influencial Don Mattingly was for him during the early ’90s:

“He taught me a piece of advice that I take even to this day,” Williams said Sunday. “He said to me: ‘I don’t really care what you do the night before or the week before — when you come to the field, you come ready to play. Mentally ready to play. You’ve got to be all there. You can’t worry about maybe I don’t feel too good today, or I don’t feel 100 percent. You’ve got to go like: dude, get it done.'”

Almost 2,000 times now, Williams has taken the field, with aches most fans never hear about. He estimates that players are in top shape only 25 percent of the time. The other days are a grind, Williams said, but it is important for young players to see veterans playing hurt.

“It has more of a positive influence than you would ever know,” he said.

The Kepner article is worth checking out just to see the photograph of Williams when he was a young major leaguer. He’s rocking the Dorkasaurous Rex glasses and everything.

Bit by Bit

Here is another reason why I admire and appreciate Godzilla Matsui.

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver