Archive for April, 2008



Sometimes you learn something good in adversity. Edgar Gonzalez did not have his stuff yesterday. He lasted only 2.2 innings, giving up 6 earned runs on 8 hits. But the guy who came in to get the last out of the second was a revelation. Max Scherzer, Arizona’s first pick in the 2006 draft, then […]

The News: Arizona Diamondback’s manager Bob Melvin announced Wednesday that rookie RHP Max Scherzer will start his first Major League game Monday against the Phillies. Scherzer will replace Edgar Gonzalez who gave up 6 runs in 2 + innings of work Tuesday evening.
Scherzer, the D-Backs number 1 pick in 2006, threw 4 1/3 innings […]

Six outs to get…

Football:Mike Jones, an ‘09 first round pick? His catches definitely need to increase, and with the now traditional weak Arizona State offensive line, Jones may not have the time he needs to finish his routes and get open consistently. I would not be…

Sure Mike D’Antoni may be out as Suns head coach but is it going to be enough from keeping the Suns championship hopes from setting? The vote from us is no.
When you look at the Suns and possible moves during the off season they are very limited. The following contracts are on the book […]

Gameday Thread, #28: 4/30 vs. Astros

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Shaun Chacon
RHP, 0-0, 2.45

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Randy Johnson
LHP, 1-1, 2.70

Baseball-Reference.com preview [opens in new window]

Day-game delight! What? Max Scherzer isn’t starting today as well? Dammit! Still, we go from a man making his first major-league appearance ever, to a man starting his 560th game, with 3872 innings under his belt. Last outing for Randy was clearly his best yet: six innings, only three hits and one earned run, with seven K’s. Velocity and control were both good, and we’ll be hoping for more of the same today.

Poor Chacon has been tagged with five straight no-decisions, despite pitching at least six innings each time. His control appears to be a weakness, with 17 walks in only 33 innings, so that may be something of which we can take advantage.





Looks like Byrnes is back in the lineup; Montero gets the start behind the plate, and ones has to wonder whether Johnson has something against Chris, because it seems to be a case of “anyone but Snyder” for his starts. Be good to head into the off-day with a win, and extend our streak of series without a loss to nine in a row. Probably won’t be about much, due to work, but will hopefully be able to pop in during my lunch-break.

Record: 19-8. Pace: 114-48. Change on last season: +3

Tonight may be one of those games we look back on in twenty years and say, “Yes, I remember seeing Scherzer make his major-league debut.” For our uber-prospect retired all 13 hitters faced, fanning seven, and sending everybody scurrying to the record books. We’ll have to wait, however: Baseball-Reference.com’s stats in this area only go back as far as 1956, and there has been no-one since who started their career with one outing of four perfect innings. We can speculate what might have happened if Scherzer had started the game: probably only his pitch-count would have stopped this from being truly monumental. Perhaps we might even have seen something like Juan Marichal’s first appearance in 1960, a complete game one-hitter with one walk and twelve K’s, that’s possibly the finest debut of all-time.

Instead, we’ll just look forward to seeing how far Scherzer can go. Contrary to what Steve Gilbert says, Max is not the only relief pitcher to have retired the first 13 batters seen in a career: Jeremy Fikac also did that for the Padres in 2001. Who? Exactly… Fikac was plagued by injuries, and his career was over in 2004 - let’s hope better things await Scherzer down the road  But in case you’re wondering, the best recent no-hit streak at the very start of a career belongs to the Giants’ Jonathan Sanchez with 7.1 innings during 2006. The longest recent scoreless opening streak is Matt Smith’s 18.2 innings, in 22 appearances, which took place the same year. Smith was even traded from the Yankees to the Phillies in the middle of the run; again, a fate we trust will not befall our rookie.

Lost in all the excitement is…well, the loss. Scherzer, Slaten and Medders combined to retire eighteen consecutive Astros before Erstad singled with two outs in the ninth. But the damage had already been done, Houston having scored six runs at that point. Edgar Gonzalez was flat, listless and got cuffed around; the batters he faced went 8-for-15 with two walks. It took him 72 pitches to get through 2.2 innings - Scherzer’s 4.1 required only 47. While Edgar was the victim of some poor defense [the four-run fourth should have ended with a double-play that never got turned, and he wasn’t helped by Salazar misplaying a ball down the line the same inning], I wouldn’t be surprised if his and Scherzer’s roles are flip-flopped next Monday.

I was a bit surprised to learn we only left five men on base: somehow, it seemed a lot more than that. However, the bases were cleared through the front four, thanks to a double-play by Salazar, and Jackson’s two run homer.  Drew left two on in the fifth, but a CoJack twin-killing ended the sixth. Our best chance to come back was likely the seventh, where we had the tying run aboard, thanks to an RBI single from Montero, with only one out. However, Young flied out and Drew popped out, to leave us stranded. In the ninth, we got to face old friend Jose Valverde, now the Astros closer. Much like Lyon, a rocky start has since been corrected, and Papa Grande was firing on all cylinders, his fastball touching 99 mph, and he struck out Upton, Burke and Byrnes round Salazar’s double.

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[Click on image, to enlarge in new window]
Master of his domain: Max Scherzer, +11.5%
Honorary mention: Miguel Montero, +11.1%
God-emperor of suck: Edgar Gonzalez, -44.1%
Dishonorable mention: Stephen Drew, -14.9%

Plenty of activity and once again, good to see some friendly visitors from Houston, in the shape of TexSkins and lnewcomer. They contributed to the final tally of 888, at time of writing, assisted by: foulpole, snakecharmer, Turambar, DbacksSkins, kishi, britdback, soco, hotclaws, dahlian, singaporedbacksfan, dstorm, unnamedDBacksfan, Philip from LA, LucaMaz3, 4 Corners Fan, mrssoco, srdmad, seton hall snake pit, isoldout, Augie’s Army, Captain D Bag, Craig from Az and kkenney.

Elsewhere in the NL West, the Dodgers pipped the Marlins by a single run, the Padres lost in Philadelphia and the Rockies beat the Giants 3-2. The last contained some irony - the day after Colorado manager Clint Hurdle was ejected for arguing a balk call, his team scored the go-ahead run in the seventh, on a balk call. This time, Giants manager, Bruce Bochy, took the early shower. Our lead in the division is cut to 5.5 games.

The good news is that Micah Owings has been cleared to make his scheduled next start, versus the Mets on Friday. He pitched a bullpen session today, with some tape wrapped round the ankle he rolled during his last appearance, and experienced no problems. He still has three days left, so while the tape did make things somewhat unusual today, he may not even need it by the time Friday comes around. We’re looking forward to that, as we’ll be at Chase for the game. I will, however, be keeping Mrs. SnakePit well away from the camera, after she erased all the photographs taken at Dodger Stadium on Friday, to make room for pics from the Fangoria show… :-(

As 4 Corners Fan reminded me us, it’s a day-game tomorrow. That will likely mean a Gameday Thread a little closer to game-time than usual, as I’ll be trying to use my morning break to post that, then schedule my lunch for the first couple of innings, so I can see how Randy does. Ah, such are the perils of wage-slavery: can’t we just win the Powerball and get it over with?

(AP Photo/Eric Gay) Once again a season that began with great expectations ended with an early playoffs exit. For the third time in the last four years the San Antonio Spurs eliminated your Phoenix Suns from the NBA post season.
This time it was 4-1 as the Spurs beat the Suns 92-87 in San Antonio to […]

The Suns yet again found a way to lose tonight to the hated Spurs. After playing a rough and tumble, intense 40 or so minutes, the Suns allowed the turnover/stupidity bug to rear it’s ugly head and take a bite out of their collective asses.Missing a whopping 17 free throws won’t win a team […]

Let’s get some runs!