Game 39, Mariners at Yankees
Yusei Kikuchi vs. Jonathan Loaisiga, 3:35pm
A day after a dispiriting defeat, the M’s try to get back in the win column (and avoid dropping below .500) behind Yusei Kikuchi. Kikuchi is coming off of his best start of the year, a masterful 10K performance against the (admittedly poor-hitting) Indians. He did by studiously avoiding the advice I’d given him about his position on the mound, and we’ll see if he’s able to build on that start and use his fastball to actually miss bats on a regular basis. That’s going to be huge; if he can be a bit more of a power pitcher and a bit less like his crafty lefty pals, the M’s rotation would look rather different.
The M’s offense has been great, but they’ve struggled slightly against velocity. Not too much, mind you, and their wOBA against fastballs at 95 and above ranks 12th in MLB, per statcast, but it’s just a far cry from how well they hit slower fastballs. That seems obvious and all, but every team is different; the Dodgers are hitting velocity much, much better than “regular” fastballs, for instance. Thus, it’s a bit of a concern to see the Yankees hand the ball to Jonathan Loaisiga, one of their seemingly inexhaustible pitching prospects with solid velocity. The righty’s averaging 96 on his straight four-seamer in his brief career, and pairs it with an interesting change at 89 and a hard curve/slider at 84. The change in particular seems good at generating swings/whiffs/grounders, which is a pretty good little trifecta. He saves it for lefties, though, giving righties the breaking ball instead.
That breaking ball’s easier to elevate than the cambio, and thus his overall GB% is quite low. It may not stay in the mid-30s forever, but for now he’s an interesting young arm who gives up a lot of fly balls in his bandbox home park. The route to victory here for the M’s is thus pretty plain, but as we’ve seen, the M’s don’t just need to score more while Loaisiga’s in the game, they need to be winning after their bullpen has had a go. That’s been…an issue, as it was last night. As Rob Mains writes at BP today, we haven’t seen the spread between relievers and starters this narrow in a long, long time. Reliever have traditionally had not only higher K rates, but lower HR/FB rates as well. As teams began building super bullpens, they took innings away from starters and handed them to more and more relievers, and for a while that worked. Starters benefited from more rest, and batters struggled against a parade of seemingly-fungible same-handed guys throwing 95. But that’s starting to slip, both as more innings get spread across a talent pool that may not be deep enough, and as teams sit by and let the actual Craig Kimbrel sit at home and go with a live arm in their system instead.
1: Gordon, 2B
2: Haniger, CF
3: Vogelbach, DH
4: Encarnacion, 1B
5: Santana, LF
6: Bruce, RF
7: Narvaez, C
8: Healy, 3B
9: Moore, SS
SP: Kikuchi
Game 38, Mariners at Yankees
Marco Gonzales vs. Masahiro Tanaka, 3:35pm
The less said about Felix’s start, the better. I’ll just say that whatever secondaries Felix throws, it’s becoming clearer and clearer that his fastball(s) simply aren’t working. That’s been clear for a while, but he’s got to do something about it now. Develop a cutter, maybe, like Sabathia, or pitch backwards like…today’s Yankee starter, Masahiro Tanaka.
Tanaka came over from Japan with a reputation for having a very good fastball to pair with a solid splitter. Whether it’s the new usage pattern, age-related decline, or what have you, Tanaka’s lived up to exactly half of that billing. His splitter’s his bread and butter pitch and he throws a ton of them, and while it isn’t quite as successful now as it was back in 2014, it’s a good pitch. His fastball? Noooo, not so much. In his career, batters are *slugging* .620 against his four-seam. He went to a sinker for a while, but after it got torched in 2017, he went back to his four-seamer. Neither pitch is all that great, especially now that his velocity’s down in the 91 range. What’s remarkable though is that this has not been a disqualifying flaw. Tanaka just…doesn’t really throw it often. Between the two pitches, he’s been around 25% – 30% fastball usage for a while now, throwing 2/3 sliders and splitters. This hasn’t quite insulated him from the HR binge, and his splitter’s seen quite a few dingers in recent years. But there he is, putting up 2.5+ fWAR and RA9-WAR seasons pretty reliably. There’s a lesson in Tanaka’s stat page.
Marco Gonzales was coming off of his best two starts of the year before a crushing defeat on May 1. Was that just a case of running into a hot-hitting team at the wrong time? Or are teams learning to recognize his cutter? That’s been his bread and butter, but the Cubs hit it hard. Can he get back to inducing called strikes with his sinker or foul balls with that cutter? This is turning into an important start, as the M’s need stability from this spot, and Gonzales has been a pretty streaky pitcher in his M’s tenure. Marco struggled in Yankee Stadium last year, but of course this line-up looks nothing like the Bronx Bombers who got to him last June.
1: Gordon, 2B
2: Haniger, CF
3: Vogelbach, DH
4: Encarnacion, 1B
5: Santana, LF
6: Bruce, RF
7: Beckham, SS
8: Healy, 3B
9: Murphy, C
SP: Gonzales
The M’s made a minor trade (no, really) recently, acquiring former Nationals RP Austin Adams for lower-level flyer Nick Wells, who’d regressed in the M’s system. Adams strikes out a ton of batters, but has issues with control. He throws a straight bowling-ball-esque four-seamer and has an excellent slider to pair with it. He’ll be in Tacoma for now, who made a bit of room by waiving 1B Joey Curletta, who’s since caught on with Boston.
In one of the least surprising news items I’ve seen recently, Modesto’s Ljay Newsome was named the California League pitcher of the Month for April. Well deserved.
Justin Dunn starts game 1 of a doubleheader between Arkansas and Amarillo today, and Tyler Cloyd starts for Tacoma against Reno – good day for a game at Cheney. Modesto faces San Jose, and West Virginia have the day off.
Game 37, Mariners at Yankees
King Felix vs. CC Sabathia, 3:35pm
Happy Felix Day, friends.
Larry Stone’s got an interesting article on Felix’s changes this season, both mentally and mechanically. In particular, he focuses on a change in pitch mix, with the curve ball taking over from Felix’s less-successful change, especially given that Felix’s fastball can’t keep batters off of the cambio. And he highlights the fact that today’s opponent, CC Sabathia, is someone many of pointed to for Felix to emulate.
I don’t intend to quibble with everything in the piece, which you should read, but I did want to make a couple of larger points. First, I’m not sure that pitch mix is where I’d start if I set out to explain Felix’s improvements this year. Second, the lesson I take from CC Sabathia is that there is no single “reinvention” a pitcher makes when he loses velocity. CC’s been a survivor because he keeps changing. The CC of 2019 has a very, very different pitch mix from the CC of, say, 2016, and both would be unrecognizable to the CC of 2008. I think fans, and, I worry, the M’s at times, have built up this narrative that Felix can’t do X anymore, and if he just did Y, then everything would be fine. If pitchers could “just do Y” and survive throwing 89-90MPH fastballs, then the league would be full of such pitchers. It’s not. Change is a means, not an end; as soon as Felix finds a pitch mix that really works, he should be preparing to throw it all away and figure out the next one.
In 2018, easily Felix’s worst season as a pro, he threw 33% sinkers, 24% change-ups and 28% curves (the rest were the odd four-seamer or slider, etc.). The change and curve had shockingly similar results, with the change yielding a few more base hits, while the curve gave up fewer hits in total, but more HRs. So, what’s that look like now in his new-look 2019? Felix is NOW throwing 33% sinkers, 18% change-ups and 36% curves. That’s a noticeable difference, but given when in the count he uses each pitch, it’s not as big a change as it might seem. Despite throwing way more curves, he’s given up a similar number of balls in play against each. And just as in the past, the single most effective pitch in Felix’s arsenal is still the change. The shift is more about getting to use it in more favorable counts, and stealing strikes with first-pitch curves. I don’t want to minimize or hand-wave this shift, but I want to make sure we put it in perspective. The change is still his out pitch, and he uses it so much more when he has two strikes (part of the reason his results on it are so good). But he’s now able to take some of the pressure off of his sinker on the first pitch or when he’s behind. That’s great, but I’m not sure it’s as big of a shift as the M’s or the article may make it seem.
CC Sabathia, like Felix, is one of those rare birds still in the game that began their career firmly in the pre-pitch fx world. Thus, we don’t see young CC’s velo and pitch mix using the same tool as we see…everyone else’s until 2007, which was CC’s *seventh* full season in MLB. He still threw 95, and threw those 95 MPH four-seamers over 60% of the time, with changes and sliders making up the rest. By 2010, he was still four-seam dominant, but had a sinker and had begun mixing in a curveball. That was still the pitch mix he used in 2013, when age and 3 MPH off of his fastball caught up with him. It took a while, but he eventually swapped out his four-seamer, by this point at 90 MPH or so, with his sinker. That kept him in the league, but it didn’t make him terribly useful, but then his new-found cutter showed up, and he had another tool to keep batters guessing. By 2017, he’d become cutter/slider dominant, with the sinker more of a grace note and the four-seamer essentially gone entirely. That brings us to the present, with CC’s velocity at 89, and a pitch mix of 50% cutters and another 1/3 sliders. To lefties in particular, CC will throw about 2/3 sliders.
CC faced the exact same problem as Felix: his secondaries were still effective, but he couldn’t GET to them, because batters were destroying his fastballs. First, he shifted to a sinker, much as Felix did when HE stopped throwing 95. But he didn’t stop there: Sabathia kept tinkering, kept adapting, until he found that his cutter could keep righties at bay, and somehow not blend into his slider. So much of this looks “wrong” from a strategy point of view; I’d be nervous as hell about throwing a slider-ish pitch as your main fastball when your primary weapon is a slider, but I’m not CC Sabathia, and I’m not watching batters react to it. I can imagine some pointing to his FIP and saying that it’s *still* not working, and he’s just forestalling the inevitable with strand rate and luck. But *all pitching is forestalling the inevitable*. The point is that he’s taking his time and continuing to adapt. My hope isn’t that Felix copies CC, but that Felix learns not only from this off-season, but from waaaay back when he had to adjust his pitch mix early in games, or any of the other changes he’s made. It can’t be a one-time thing, and any cursory glance at his past shows at hasn’t been. It’s uncomfortable, sure, but that’s part of the coaching staff’s job – not to make everything easy, but to make it seem like the ideas came from Felix, not from some distant brain trust or an out-of-patience manager.
1: Haniger, RF
2: Beckham, SS
3: Encarnacion, DH
4: Santana, LF
5: Bruce, 1B
6: Healy, 3B
7: Narvaez, C
8: Bishop, CF
9: Gordon, 2B
SP: FEEEELLLLLIIIIXXXX
Game 36, Mariners at Indians
Erik Swanson vs. Cody Anderson, 10:10am
Erik Swanson is perhaps not the intriguing starter with the fastball that plays up that we saw in his first start against Cleveland. But he’s also not the replacement-level guy getting battered around the park against San Diego and Texas. Swanson’s been kind of a throwback in that he’s throwing fastballs over 2/3 of his pitches. That was the norm a generation ago, and it’s oddly hanging on up in Milwaukee with the likes of Freddy Peralta, but baseball, as a game, is moving away from heaters.
Take Swanson’s opponent, for example. Cody Anderson throws a 94 mph fastball with decent movement, but he *really* wants to throw his change up and slurvy curve. In the past, he’s tried to set them up with fastballs, but after an injury/rehab and some poor MLB results, it looks like he’s changed his plan. He’s thrown all of 5 IP at the big league level, but he’s now pitching off of his change, and will mix in fastballs – not the other way around. Does this work? I don’t really know, but the “traditional” approach didn’t work, nor did it save him from injury, so you understand Anderson’s shift here.
In the past, that change helped him run reverse platoon splits, and he may continue to run reverse K:BB ratios at the big league level. But as with everything else, home runs will determine your overall line, and thus it’s harder to say if he’ll *really* have reverse splits.
1: Gordon, 2B
2: Haniger, RF
3: Encarnacion, 1B
4: Vogelbach, DH
5: Bruce, LF
6: Beckham, SS
7: Narvaez, C
8: Moore, 3B
9: Bishop, CF
SP: Swanson
Good day for M’s pitching in the minors as Damon Casetta-Stubbs starts for West Virginia and Darren McCaughan starts for Arkansas. West Virginia, Modesto, and Tacoma all lost last night, but Arkansas got the M’s affiliates on the board with a 7-4 win over the Amarillo Sod Poodles, as Dom Thompson-Williams went 3-4 with a dinger.
Tommy Milone starts for Tacoma, who’ll be playing their first game in the Copa de la Diversion as La Familia de Tacoma against Los Mariachis de Mexico (FKA the Albuquerque Isotopes).
Game 34, Mariners at Indians
Yusei Kikuchi vs. Shane Bieber, 4:10pm
The M’s embark on a 10-game road trip that’ll see them play the Yankees and Red Sox after they finish this three game set with Cleveland. This is big, as the bats have been faltering, the pitching staff under siege, and the defense…no, let’s talk about something else.
Yusei Kikuchi’s coming off of his first shortened start, which means he should be well-rested, or perhaps appropriately rested. He’s not been an ace, but he’s been solid for the M’s thus far, and by BP’s DRA stat, he’s been their most valuable starter. This, of course, is something of a low bar, though to be fair, it rates Felix decently. It just doesn’t have much time for Marco Gonzales, to say nothing of Mike Leake, who rates as the single LEAST valuable pitcher in the game. But this isn’t about DRA, it’s about Kikuchi. As a lefty with a 93 MPH fastball and a quality slider, he shouldn’t need to make too many adjustments in order to become an effective middle-of-the-rotation starter. What he needs, and what the M’s are hopefully giving him, is a roadmap to get there.
I’ve been saying a lot this year that his fastball’s being hit too hard. No, it’s not a Paxton-like blazing heater, but it doesn’t need to be. Anyone else out there with a similar fastball who’s made it play at the big league level? Meet Tampa’s Jalen Beeks, a hidden-starter for the Rays – a guy who pitches several innings after an opener. He’s small, but sits 93 with his four seamer that’s a dead-ringer for Kikuchi’s by pitch tracking data. To top it all off, he’s even got the same hidden-ball delivery:
Beeks had some control issues in the minors, mostly in the Red Sox system, and he brought that with him to the majors last year. Between the walks and some dinger issues, his fastball wasn’t good enough for him to get to his best pitches (his best pitch is a change-up, for the record). This year, he’s moved about 2′ on the rubber – back towards 3B, so he’s delivering the pitch pretty much right on the center line instead of coming from out towards 1B. That seems to have helped him control and command the pitch, and thus he’s getting more first-pitch strikes (though he throws plenty of 1st-pitch curve balls, too). Moving over also helps him keep his FB in on righties, something that’s hard for many lefties.
By contrast, if you look at a heatmap of Kikuchi’s FB usage to righties, it fills the zone. This is a great recipe to never walk anyone, and indeed, Kikuchi’s is toeing the company line regarding the zone and the control thereof. Compare that to Beeks’ usage. I should mention here that Kikuchi’s release point is slightly lower, but very similar to Beeks’ in 2018. I wouldn’t mind seeing Kikuchi make a similar shift on the rubber and see if that helps him keep his fastball in under RHBs’ hands as opposed to starting from far away from right-handed bats and traveling in to them.
Today, the M’s face Shane Bieber, who was a tricky match-up for them when they saw him at home a few weeks ago. He’s since had a solid start against Houston and a disaster against Atlanta, so perhaps the league is booking him somewhat.
1: Gordon, 2B
2: Haniger, CF
3: Vogelbach, DH
4: Encarnacion, 1B
5: Santana, LF
6: Bruce, RF
7: Narvaez, C
8: Beckham, SS
9: Healy, 3B
SP: Kikuchi
The M’s have their lefty-heavy line-up in there to face the right-handed Bieber. The Tribe’s got Francisco Lindor back, which is good, as their replacement SS that we saw in Seattle were pretty darn awful. The injury news is still generally poor for Cleveland, who just lost Corey Kluber to a potentially fractured forearm when he was struck by a line drive. With Clevinger and now Kluber out, it gets harder for Cleveland to hold off the charging Minnesota Twins.
Logan Gilbert was promoted to High-A and made his debut with Modesto last night. He had a rough first couple innings, then settled in; his final line was 4 1/3 IP with 5 H, 3 R allowed on 2 BB and 7 Ks.
Justin Dunn and Arkansas took apart Frisco last night 13-2. Dunn went 7, allowed both runs, and struck out 6 against no walks (33:B seasonal K:BB ratio). Jake Fraley had 2 HRs and looks pretty ready for Tacoma, especially if Bishop is going to be in Seattle a while.
Tacoma blanked Salt Lake 4-0 on bullpen day, as Tyler Cloyd, Robin Leyer, David McKay and Parker Markel combined to 4-hit the Bees. The Bees’ pitchers struck out a ton of R’s, but couldn’t prevent Shed Long from going deep.
Clay Chandler takes his Sally-League-Leading 0.31 ERA into Greensboro today, while Ricardo Sanchez takes HIS Texas-League-leading ERA into Frisco to face the RoughRiders. Jon Niese is leading no leagues, but will lead the Rainiers against Albuquerque tonight at Cheney Stadium. Modesto heads to Stockton to face the Ports in a series beginning tonight.
Game 33, Cubs at Mariners
Marco Gonzales vs. Jon Lester, 3:40pm
It’s a day game today, pitting Gonzaga product Marco Gonzales against Bellarmine HS product Jon Lester. As always, the most conflicted man watching this game must be M’s head groundskeeper Bob Christofferson, who coached Lester as a youngster.
I continue to marvel at Marco Gonzales’ transformation this year. His velocity is still down – noticeably- from 2018, which was down from 2017. Instead of confusing batters with 4 pitches each thrown 25% of the time, Marco’s more selective, with three pitches in his tier 1 arsenal, and then 2 more a tier 2 “every once in a while” group. What’s interesting is what’s dropped away: it’s his curve, which, to me, was his best weapon last year. And while he used this pitch mix to keep batters off balance in the first half of April, he’s since gone on a bit of a strikeout binge, and odd sight for a pitcher throwing 88 in 2019.
At the heart of this is the change Marco made last year, when he finally started to separate his fastball into two separate pitches. His fastball had given him HR problems in 2017, and even in spot duty last year, his new, rising four-seamer still produced 3 HRs. He gave up only 1 on his sinker (really the remnant of his old “fastball”) in nearly twice the pitches, though. How? You can’t homer if you don’t swing, and batters, for whatever reason, are really reluctant to swing at Marco’s sinker. I’d love to understand this more, because batters cannot swing enough at his change and cutter. With 2 strikes, you’d expect batters to swing, and against his change and cutter this year, opposing batters’ swing rate is around 70%. For his sinker, though, it’s *still* below 40%. To sum up: Marco Gonzales throws more strikes than anyone, and when batters have two strikes against them and Gonzales throws an 88 mph sinker, they eye it like an intensely picky eater inspects an unfamiliar food. This is fascinating.
Lester is such a great match-up today, because they’re similar in a lot of ways, but have such a different approach. In his younger days, Lester would touch 95, but is now 90-91, or where Marco was last year. He throws the exact same 5 pitches, but in a different mix and with a very different strategy. Lester pitches off of his four-seam and cutter, with the other three (curve, change, sinker) clearly a step below in terms of usage. To righties especially, he throws a four-seam or cutter over 70% of the time. The point here isn’t that these are necessarily his best pitches, but he seems to want each change or curve to really “count” and be as unfamiliar to the batter as possible (probably good for a guy who’s pitched as long as Lester has). He’s had decent enough results with his Big 2 pitches, but what his usage pattern has done is to make the change/curve more effective. Since the start of 2018, batters are slugging under .300 on those pitches.
Still, it’s an open question whether this is all results-based thinking. He had the same approach in 2017, and had (by his standards) a poor year because a few more of those curves went over the fence. This year, it’s still too early to say much, but he’s running a 95% strand rate. Neither pitcher is untouchable, but both are amazing competitors and get the most out of their raw stuff.
1: Haniger, RF
2: Santana, LF
3: Encarnacion, 1B
4: Beckham, SS
5: Voglebach, DH
6: Healy, 3B
7: Murphy, C
8: Bishop, CF
9: Gordon, 2B
SP: Marcooooo
Damon Casetta-Stubbs is now up to 12 1/3 IP on the season and has yet to give up a run. The Vancouver product got the win in West Virginia’s shut-out in Lakewood last night. Jarred Kelenic homered, so it was a good day all around.
The Rainiers blanked Forrest Snow’s Salt Lake City Bees by an identical score of 2-0 in a shortened game. Tommy Milone got the win, and Kris Negron supplied the power with a HR.
Ljay Newsome, who really has to be the story of the early going in the M’s system, tossed 7 brilliant innings at Lancaster, going 7 IP with 1 R on 6H and no BB and 8 Ks. Sadly, the bats couldn’t do too much against the JetHawks Antonio Santos, and so the game went to extras tied 1-1. Because the minor league rules are the minor league rules, the game ended 8-3 in the 13th. Both teams failed to score in the 10th, but then BOTH scored a single run in both the 11th and 12th. And then the JetHawks, who just couldn’t read the bloody room, scored 5 in the 13th. Gauche.
Arkansas lost to Frisco earlier today, but Justus Sheffield takes the hill for Tacoma in Salt Lake, so tune in to that one after the M’s game (Gametime is 5:35 for that PCL contest, by the way).
Game 32, Cubs at Mariners – Let’s Hope They Got It Out of Their System
King Felix vs. Cole Hamels, 7:10pm
A most happy Felix Day to all of you this Tuesday. I apologize for missing the last two posts, but if you’re going to miss a couple, could you possibly pick better games to skip? I didn’t even watch, as I fell ill, and spent essentially the entire weekend sleeping in the day and feeling sorry for myself at night. It’s been miserable. It’s almost like the M’s caught something though, too, and if their abysmal play was a gesture of sympathy, uh, that’s…that’s not necessary, guys. If it was just one of those weird things a team will go through during a season, that’s fine; all’s forgiven. Now score the King some runs!
The M’s made a pretty big personnel move, optioning CF Mallex Smith down to Tacoma and bringing back Braden Bishop. The UW product will slide into Smith’s spot, and Smith, who’d recently been working on his defense, will now get to work on his…everything in the lower pressure environment of the PCL. 2019 started so brightly for Smith, but he’s in a funk that quickly took on worrying proportions. Chris Davis spotted him an 0-33 start, but he’s since surpassed Smith’s slash line, and to be clear: Davis’ line is still awful.
I don’t think Smith’s a bust or anything, but whatever the M’s were doing wasn’t working, and when it perhaps started impacting his defense (as we saw in the Texas series), then the M’s made the move. It’s a great opportunity for Bishop, who was hitting .267/.356/.444. Bishop’s always carried a great reputation for his glovework, so the M’s don’t need him to carry the offense. The 10%+ walk rates he’s put the past few years give him even more of a cushion. As Brendan Gawlowski mentioned on Twitter today, he’s the first Mariner who’d also played at the University of Washington since Sean White back in 2010. The M’s org has had a number of Husky products get to AAA but not the majors, like Jeff Heaverlo, Forrest Snow, Andrew Kittredge (who made MLB with Tampa), and Nick Hagadone (who’d previously made the majors with Cleveland, et. al.).
The M’s face veteran lefty Cole Hamels, who I’ll always remember as one of the big prospects who debuted *After* Felix. If we separate baseball into the pre- and post-Felix eras (and we should), you’ve got Felix and Justin Verlander right at the 0 point. Matt Cain was just a bit later that same August of 2005, and Francisco Liriano was a call-up in September. And then, in 2006, the next wave came with Jered Weaver and Cole Hamels.
At the time, Hamels was a straight-over-the-top lefty who released the ball from about as high as he could reach, and that angle produced pure backspin on his fastball, giving it some of the best vertical rise you’ll see. That helped it play up from its so-so 90 MPH velocity. But of course whenever you talk about Hamels, you have to talk about his change up. It’s been his best pitch for well over a decade, and it’s stayed effective even as his arm angle dropped and his fastball doesn’t have quite the rise it once did (on the plus side, he’s throwing faster now than when he came in). He mixes in a cutter that’s been one of his favorite toys in recent years, and he’s thrown his curve more since joining the Cubs.
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SP: FELIX.
It was only, what, a week or so ago that the M’s announced they’d hired former great Mike Cameron to be a roving instructor for the club. Today, the M’s doubled down on legendary coaching hires by making Ichiro Suzuki an instructor who’ll focus on OF play and hitting for both Seattle and Tacoma. Maybe he can help Mallex Smith?
Jarred Kelenic is 2-3 thus far in West Virginia, with a HR and 2B. He’s on a long hitting streak, and now the question is just how long the M’s will keep both Kelenic and Logan Gilbert down in A ball.
Speaking of old friend Forrest Snow, he’s starting tonight against the Rainiers in Salt Lake.
Last night’s action featured a walk-off loss for Tacoma, a nice win for Arkansas capped with a Kyle Lewis HR, and a classic Cal League 14-11 slugfest in which Lancaster outlasted Modesto.
Game 29, Rangers at Mariners – Justus Time
Yusei Kikuchi/Justus Sheffield vs. Shelby Miller, 7:10pm
The Rangers made some roster moves before the game, with the Rangers optioning Wisdom down to the minors and activating Odor to replace him. Odd strategy, but after last night’s game, I guess you have to think outside the box. Seriously, that’s an actual transaction and it is awesome, and please stop booing me.
The M’s own name-as-noun player, Justus Sheffield’s up with the club and he’ll see several innings today after the M’s have Yusei Kikuchi pitch an abbreviated start. This is part of the plan they put in place this winter to limit Kikuchi’s workload, but with the long layoff after the two games in Japan, they haven’t needed to implement it until now.
It opens the door to Sheffield, who looked impressive in the spring, but has struggled with his command mightily in Tacoma. He’s thrown 18 1/3 IP in the PCL and given up 13 hits and *14 walks* against 11 Ks. Command has never been his strong suit, but this is something else entirely. I’d like to blame the ball, but AAA is now using the MLB baseball as opposed to the different baseball used in the rest of the minor leagues. His best pitch is his slider, a swerving pitch at 85 with very good vertical drop. He’s got a change-up as well that’s lagged behind a bit, but may be improving. The command issues seem to be centered on his fastball, which comes in at 92-93-94. When he’s on, he can get strikeouts and grounders thanks to the natural sink on his pitches, which come from a lower-3/4 slot. My worry is that it’s a profile that could struggle with opposite-handed hitters, but we’ll see how the Rangers fare against him.
To make room for Sheffield, the M’s DFA’d reliever Shawn Armstrong, the interesting ex-Clevelander who looked off after coming back from an oblique injury in the early going. Here’s hoping the M’s can slip him through waivers. Of potential interest, Armstrong is at the top of the list on the M’s in fastball spin rate, with a legitimately impressive nearly 2,600 RPM. Unfortunately, he now joins several spin rate champs who’ve opened the season poorly – guys like Chris Stratton and Corbin Burnes.
1: Haniger, CF
2: Santana, LF
3: Vogelbach, DH
4: Encarnacion, 1B
5: Bruce, RF
6: Beckham, SS
7: Narvaez, C
8: Healy
9: Gordon, 2B
SP: Kikuchi-then-Sheffield
Jarred Kelenic homered today for WV, supporting Logan Gilbert, who went 5 2/3 IP giving up 3 R on 4 H and he struck out 8.
New Mariner roving instructor Mike Cameron (wooo!) is in Arkansas today, working on OF defense and baserunning with the Travs.
The Rainiers are in a bit of a funk right now, falling to 7-14 after last night’s drubbing at the hands of Sacramento. Tacoma’s gone through a lot of pitchers, and signed Tyler Cloyd, who’ll make his seasonal debut and pitch a few innings. They also called up RP Reggie McLain, who’d been at Modesto, and it sounds like his velo’s ticked up this year like his old teammate Ljay Newsome. The M’s also appear to have signed former Mets SP Jon Niese, who hasn’t pitched since 2019.
Game 28, Rangers at Mariners
Marco Gonzales vs. Taylor Hearn, 7:10pm
The Rangers starting rotation currently has an ERA that starts with a 6. Of the seven players who’ve started a game for Texas, only Mike Minor and Lance Lynn have ERAs under 7. Their FIP is somewhat better, but that’s a low bar. At 5.52, it’s 26th in the league, and remember that the league includes the Orioles. No one really expected the Rangers to contend, but they’ve been so thoroughly bad, it’s remarkable.
They’ve got the worst walk rate in the league, by a wide margin, at 4.55 walks per 9 innings. Atlanta’s in second, but at least their rotation is staffed with up-and-coming prospects, and plus, they generate some strikeouts. The Rangers K/9 ranks 26th, ahead of the Mariners’, who rank last. But again: the M’s don’t give up walks, and their ERA/FIP – while not earth shattering – are perfectly fine. A big, big problem for them has been the home run, and just like the M’s of a few years ago, they built a fly-balling staff (they have the lowest GB% in baseball) only for the ball to get all rubbery and lead to a volley of dingers.
Of course, arguing that their plan had failed due to bad luck may be to stretch the word “plan” past its breaking point. This rotation is pretty much all reclamation projects, from ex-Mariners like Drew Smyly and Adrian Sampson, to MLB vets like Edinson Volquez and Lance Lynn. Nominal ace Mike Minor is 31, and of their original starting 5, only Shelby Miller – another reclamation – was under 30. But with Smyly and Volquez hurt, the Rangers are turning to some of their numerous pitching prospects to log some innings. Rule 5 guy Kyle Dowdy was in the ‘pen, but made a spot start, and now the Rangers have given today’s start to their #9 prospect, Taylor Hearn. Hearn’s a 6’5″ lefty with a very live fastball and a solid curve and change. What he hasn’t shown much of yet is control. Thus far in AAA, he’s racked up 10 walks in 20 innings, though to be fair, that’s balanced by 26 K’s. He’s been solid in the Rangers system, having come over in last year’s Keone Kela deal from Pittsburgh, but he may not be the guy to bring down Texas’ eye-watering walk rate.
1: Haniger, CF
2: Santana, RF
3: Encarnacion, 1B
4: Beckham, SS
5: Vogelbach, DH
6: Healy, 3B
7: Narvaez, C
8: Moore, LF
9: Gordon, 2B
SP: Gonzales
Modesto’s Ljay Newsome is pitching today, as the Nuts played an early game. He’s at 8Ks through 5 IP, which would tie for his *lowest* number of strikeouts on the season. It’s been a massive, massive improvement for the righty out of Maryland this year, and it’s been helped by an uptick in his velocity. He’d been great from a K:BB ratio standpoint in the past, though that was more the product of a very low denominator than a great numerator. This year, it’s both, and it’s moved him from great org depth to something more. Today’s start doubled his seasonal walks-allowed; he’s now given up 4 in 29 1/3 IP. But it brought his strikeouts up to 46, which is officially insane.
It’s kind of nice that Newsome’s got company in the best story among homegrown pitching prospects. Arkansas’ Darren McCaughan continued his torrid start in yesterday’s 8-1 win, running his season numbers to 1-1 in 4 starts with 23 Ks and 2 walks in 24 IP. He had 7 Ks in last night’s 7 IP performance, giving up just the one run.
Continuing this joyous theme, Vancouver, WA product Damon Casetta-Stubbs got his first professional win last night, spinning 5 hitless/scoreless in West Virginia’s 2-1 win over Columbia. He struck out 4 and didn’t walk anyone.
Sacramento beat Tacoma 4-1 behind a great Ty Blach start. Today, the R’s send veteran Tommy Milone on to start.
Game 27, Mariners at Padres
King Felix vs. Chris Paddack, 12:40pm
Happy Felix Day. It’s an early game today as the M’s try to resume their HR barrage after getting skunked by the Padres last night. Today they face heralded rookie Chris Paddack, who’s been devilishly hard to hit this year, though he’s yet to record his first big league win. Of note, the M’s will be the first team to face him for a second time. No, he hasn’t faced them in a real MLB contest yet, but he just pitched against much the same line-up at T-Mobile park in late March after the M’s returned back from Japan. It doesn’t “count” but it totally counts. How will the M’s adjust? Will they stalk fastballs in particular counts?
I mentioned Paddack in yesterday’s post, so I want to put the focus back on Felix. Everyone knew Felix needed to make some adjustments, and Felix is an interesting lens through which to see the impact of the M’s new pitching coach and the assorted development folks who are new to the org. Felix has had numerous issues over the past few years, but a big one is that as his velocity dropped (or, as his stuff worsened), batters could wait for pitches over the plate. If Felix didn’t throw them, they’d take a base on balls, and thus Felix’s walk rate, which was 5% in 2014, climbed to 7%, then nearly 10% in 2016, and has bounced around 7-9% since. If he DID pipe get-me-over fastballs in the zone, they’d destroy them. He struck out 92 batters on FBs in 2014, and gave up 6 HRs in the last year of the little batting ice age. In 2015, that ratio was down to 62:15, before dropping to 32:11 in 2016 and then 20:11 in fewer innings in 2017. It got slightly better last year (31:14), but this is still a serious problem, and obviously the ball’s juicier this year.
When Felix first came up, he threw a ton of strikes, but still had a high walk rate. He was hittable in and around the zone, despite premium velocity. As Felix learned to pitch more effectively, he was able to drop his walk rate AND the rate of pitches he threw in the zone. This is the best of both worlds, obviously, and something I’ve talked a lot about in regards to Hisashi Iwakuma. When Felix’s change-up was perhaps the best pitch in the game, Felix could throw it for a ball knowing that batters would swing anyway. So, in 2008, Felix could throw 53.3% of his pitches in the zone and produce a walk rate of 9.3%. But by his magisterial 2014 season, he threw just 44.6% of his pitches for strikes, but walked just 5% of hitters. And then, for several years, the plan stopped working.
In 2016, as I mentioned, his walk rate was nearly 10% and he posted his lowest-ever zone%, at just over 40%. Worse, as I showed above, it didn’t really prevent HRs. His two strengths had flipped to weaknesses, and thus began Felix’s long trek through the pitching wilderness, a journey in which he seemed to get very little actionable information from his pitching coach. He’s brought his zone% up in recent years, but the walks are still high, and the dingers…man, the dingers. So what’s the strategy now? Avoid the zone and nibble around a bunch and keep the game close? Or just throw strikes and let the dingers fall where they may?
It’s still early, but thus far, Felix seems to have thrown his lot in with Plan B, and is just going to throw strikes. His zone% is now 55.7%, the highest it’s ever been in the pitch fx era (since 2007). His walk rate is absurdly low, at 2 walks in 18 1/3 IP, though that’s misleading, as he’s plunked 3 as well. Thus far, it hasn’t resulted in a HR barrage, but it’s made him hittable. As I’ve been talking about all year, that seems to be a team-wide philosophy. The M’s have given up the 2nd-most base hits this year to the abysmal Orioles, and while they’ve faced the most batters, they’ve given up 24 more hits than the A’s in 25 more PAs, and 56 more hits than the Padres. But like many of his teammates, Felix is sort of muddling through. True, his BABIP has been awful, so the ERA doesn’t exactly show that this new philosophy is working, but if he can gut through some starts without too many HRs and without walking people, he’ll be doing fine as a 5th starter. In this rotation, he’s just doing what everyone else is doing. Among starters with at least 20 IP, Marco Gonzales, Yusei Kikuchi, and Mike Leake rank 5th, 6th, and 7th, respectively, in zone% out of 115 pitchers. Felix is just under 20 IP (so he’ll get there today), but would rank fractionally ahead of Gonzales as the team’s preeminent strike thrower.
1: Haniger, RF
2: Vogelbach, 1B
3: Santana, LF
4: Narvaez, C
5: Beckham, SS
6: Gordon, 2B
7: Healy, 3B
8: Smith, CF
9/SP: El Cartelua
The M’s made a trade today, picking up RHP Mike Wright from Baltimore in exchange for 2018 draft pick, shortstop Ryne Ogren. Ogren was with West Virginia, where he homered last night in a big win. Wright had been DFA’d by Baltimore this week, as the fly-baller had never quite adjusted to life in the live-ball era. His career ERA is nearly 6, and his FIP is solidly over 5. There’s no way around the fact that he’s been bad, and bad enough that the worst pitching club in the game DFA’d him. But it’s equally true that Baltimore’s been stunningly bad at developing or helping pitchers recently, and thus if you want to bargain shop, they’re not a bad little thrift store. Jake Arrieta’s the big example, but Wade Miley may be another. Not saying Wright’s going to do that; his stuff isn’t great. He throws a straight FB at 93 or so, has a decent-looking change, but his out pitch is a hard slider at 89. He used to have a curve, too. We’ll see what the M’s want to do with him.