Game 146, White Sox at Mariners
Floyd vs Rowland-Smith, 7:10 pm.
So, yeah, about Saunders playing again? Not happening. Jose Romero reports Wak’s comments that they’ve basically shut him down for the year, as they didn’t like the lack of improvement they were seeing at the plate. Not a fan of this, honestly. Players struggle, and they learn from it. He’s not going to learn anything on the bench, and this eliminates the chance that he plays well enough to give them confidence to head into the off-season knowing that they don’t have to go out and get a left fielder. Now, it’s a question mark, and the team already has enough of those.
Line-up:
Ichiro, RF
Gutierrez, CF
Lopez, 2B
Griffey, DH
Beltre, 3B
Johjima, C
Carp, 1B
Langerhans, LF
Josh, SS
Hall and Saunders
You’ve probably noticed that Bill Hall has been essentially an everyday player since he arrived in Seattle, and that after Adrian Beltre returned and Mike Carp joined the club when rosters expanded, Wakamatsu has found playing time for Hall by sticking him primarily in left field. Because of that decision, Michael Saunders has essentially disappeared. In the last two weeks, Saunders has three plate appearances. Three.
I know the M’s wanted to see what Hall could offer them if he got regular at-bats, and Saunders hasn’t exactly made a case for more playing time with his performance, but I’m not a fan of this arrangement. While Hall was a nice little pickup as a potentially useful and relatively cheap utility player, his total potential value to the M’s is fairly limited. He turns 30 this winter, and the odds of him fixing his contact problems are slim at best. Given his inability to regularly put the bat on the ball, Hall’s just not going to hit enough to make him a good enough player to be the team’s regular left fielder in 2010.
Saunders, on the other hand, actually has some real ability to improve with regular playing time. He’s had a rough go against major league pitching so far, but there’s a reason they call it a learning curve – the rate of improvement increases exponentially with playing time. We can’t really expect him to figure out how to hit a major league breaking ball sitting on the bench, and the 2010 Mariners could really use a version of Michael Saunders that can hit a breaking ball.
With the team out of contention, the goal for the last two weeks out of the season should be to help next year’s club as much as possible. And for that team, Michael Saunders is simply more important than Bill Hall is. I’m fine with Wak getting Hall in the line-up, but not at Saunders expense.
Less Bill Hall and more Michael Saunders please.
Game 145, White Sox at Mariners
We’ve covered Snell. The pitching matchup also features the return of Freddy Garcia, in case that’s of interest to you.
It’s stretching things a little bit, but I could imagine a starting outfield of guys who are in some fashion a product of the Garcia trade. Put Ichiro at DH for a day to rest his hamstring, and you could have Langerhans (acquired for Morse) in RF, Gutierrez of course in CF, and Endy Chavez in LF. Both of the latter two were part of the trade that involved, among others, Jeremy Reed. So what if Chavez is on the DL and they wouldn’t have even picked up Langerhans if he hadn’t been hurt, this is just a silly exercise.
The real lineup:
RF-L Ichiro
CF-R Gutierrez
2B-R Lopez
DH-L Griffey
3B-R Beltre
LF-R Hall
C-R Johjima
1B-L Carp
SS-R Jack
Show Something Soon, Ian
Ian Snell takes the hill for the M’s tonight. He needs to pitch well pretty soon, or the M’s are going to have to seriously re-evaluate whether they can go into the off-season planning on him taking one of the spots in their rotation next year. To be frank, Snell has been terrible since the M’s acquired him. Really, really bad. Here’s a comparison, for instance:
Snell as a Mariner: 40 1/3 IP, 38 H, 6 HR, 28 BB, 21 K, 6.13 FIP
Silva, pre-DL stint: 28 2/3 IP, 38 H, 5 HR, 9 BB, 10 K, 5.91 FIP
They haven’t been terrible in the same way, of course – Silva gave up a ton of hits, while Snell has just been walking everyone in sight, but their performances were roughly equivalent in terms of expected runs allowed. Neither of them have pitched like major league starters in Seattle this year.
When the M’s made the trade with Pittsburgh, they clearly did it with the intention of turning Snell’s career around and sliding him into their rotation for 2010 and beyond. He’s due $4.25 million in salary next year, so he’s going to get a lot of chances to earn his paycheck. But he can’t continue to pitch like he has since the trade and still be penciled into the starting five for 2010. The M’s simply can’t head into spring training next year with Snell expected to break camp in the rotation if he continues to pitch like he has in his first eight starts as a Mariner.
Tonight would be a great time for Snell to show that he can still throw strikes and miss bats. The stuff is good, but his command has been abysmal, and on the nights where he has thrown strikes, he’s been a pitch to contact guy. We have enough of those. We need Ian Snell to get a bunch of outs on his own without putting men on base every inning. We need him to pitch up to his abilities. And we need him to do it soon. Otherwise, he’ll have to be relegated into the already large group of guys who haven’t shown enough to be considered reliable starters for 2010.
(Cal League) Playoff Baseball
The Mariners are still mathematically alive in the playoff race, but so are all the teams in the AL Central coming into today, thanks to the weakness of their division. But, if you’re hungry championship baseball a few weeks ahead of schedule, without all the nastiness of a well-funded juggernaut steamrolling the plucky young up-and-comer, might I recommend giving the High Desert Mavericks a tune-in?
The Mavericks are in game three of their division series against Rancho Cucamonga, hated Angels affiliate, and have thrown consecutive shut-outs at Mavericks Stadium. Stephen Hensley allowed three hits and a walk while striking out ten in the first game, and in the second, Mauricio Robles, who came over in the Washburn trade, had two hits, a walk, a balk, and eight Ks through seven innings. Michael Pineda, who has been remarkably dominant since coming off the DL, takes the mound for the Mavs as they try to extend their scoreless inning streak and sweep the series. The one cause for concern is that the offense has “only†managed nine runs so far.
A likely championship scenario has the Mavs going up against San Jose, also looking for the sweep today. While the Mavericks have had by far the best hitting in the league, San Jose ranks at the bottom of hits, runs, and walks allowed, and combined for a league-high thirteen shutouts over the season. That series should begin on the 17th, and will undoubtedly be an interesting one.
Game time is the usual, 7:05 pm PDT.
Quick public service advisory
If you read, anywhere, that Ichiro’s milestone is meaningless, and that milestone is used to write a column (or heck, part of a column) about how Ichiro! is overrated, his batting average hollow, defense too highly regarded — to generally recycle the lazy shots against him, you should stop reading that writer, because they are not worthy of even your eye roll.
Game 144, Felix time!
NWS @ 7:11 local:
LIGHT TO MODERATE RAINFALL WILL CONTINUE ACROSS NORTH TEXAS
THROUGH 1 AM. POCKETS OF HEAVY RAINFALL WILL BE POSSIBLE…
ESPECIALLY SOUTHEAST OF THE METROPLEX. RAINFALL AMOUNTS OVER THE
NEXT SEVERAL HOURS WILL GENERALLY AVERAGE HALF AN INCH OR
LESS…BUT ISOLATED LOCATIONS MAY RECEIVE AN INCH OR MORE.
Compared to last night, that’s paradise.
A surprising nugget
From a Baker piece today on the delays and possibility of playing tomorrow:
Spoke earlier to Mariners player rep Brandon Morrow and he told me he’s been in touch with the players’ association and that MLB has gotten involved as well. The Mariners players have almost unanimously come up to Morrow to tell him they do not want to stay and play tomorrow and the message has been conveyed to the union, which in turn has passed that on to MLB.
Morrow was optioned to Tacoma on July 11th and was down there for two months. Now, this either means that they handed the union rep badge around to whoever was the most junior player on the roster and then back to Morrow on his return, or… I’m not sure what the interim solution was.
I know on many teams the player representative is something to be shirked, but I’m always surprised when I find out that the guy sticking up for the interest of his fellow union members in cases like this isn’t the guy we hear is the veteran clubhouse leader (Beltre, say) but whoever is relatively junior and put their hand up. It certainly doesn’t helps with accusations that players don’t take union issues like steroids seriously enough (it does make me wonder why the union doesn’t do a better job advocating for low-service-time players, though, if they’re so disproportionately represented).
In any event — Morrow’s recalled on the ninth, makes a start, and four days after he rejoins the team he’s lobbying on everyone’s behalf with the union and the league. I’m sure whoever he took the badge back from was happy to be the complainer rather than the complainee.
Game 143, they’re going for it, huh
Fister v Hunter.
Here’s a question — why not Felix? If you think there’s a good chance you’re only going to get one in, and maybe only a partial of one, get him the start and the shot at the win.
M’s Add Three More From Tacoma
Tacoma went down last night, putting up a bit of a fight, but ultimately losing 13-8 as the pitching self-destructed. While not good for a number of guys, including the guilty party on the pitching staff, who gets to go home and think about what he did, it is good news for others who are now being promoted to join the Mariners in Texas. Welcome back to the show, LHP Garrett Olson and IF Matt Tuiasosopo, along with newcomer C Adam Moore. To make room for Moore, the Mariners have parted company with RHP Stephen Kahn, who seemed to unable to so much as look at a pitching mound without one of his ligaments exploding in terror.
Olson, we all know from earlier in the year as a bullpen arm/fifth starter on the fringe. I’d be pleased if I could happily report some recent breakthrough of his, but his latest Tacoma stint has only seen more of everything: hits, walks, and strikeouts. Tui hopes to get more playing time now than he did earlier in the year, and some of his recent performance has warranted that. While he did hit just .200/.375/.320 in September, he was .322/.426/.619 in August and has been getting some additional playing time at second base of late. Moore, who came off season that had him post a .902 OPS in double-A, had a disappointing 2009, as he couldn’t break .800. There’s nothing glaring that hints towards some flaw he needs to overcome, his discipline is the same if not slightly better, he just mysteriously lost about ten doubles. He works well with pitchers and is a darling of the organization because of it, though he has a bit of a passed ball problem. The organization hopes to build around him in the future, even if he won’t get much playing time at present.