9/28/09 Linescore of the Day: Andy LaRoche

Pirates Cubs BaseballAndy LaRoche had a career day against his old mates, the LA Dodgers, in the last game in Pittsburgh for 2009.Ā  LaRoche was 5 for 5, with six runs batted in, 2 doubles, 2 homers, & 1 single, were among his hits.Ā  LaRoche said, he knew he was seeing the ball well when he singled his first time up against Hiroki Kuroda.Ā  Truth be told Andy has been seeing the ball well lately, hitting .368 over his past 14 starts, in that span he’s gone deep five times, driving in 13, while hitting safely in each game.Ā  His five home runs are more than he hit in the first half of the season.Ā  He finished his most reason series against the Dodgers going 10 for 18.

Andy LaRoche 5 for 5, 2 2Bs, 2 HRs, 6 RBIs, 4 runs

Nationals will charge you less to watch them lose in 2010

With the season they had, this had to be coming.  The Washington Nationals have lowered their ticket prices for many of their seats. 

Here’s President Stan Kasten with the spin:

The Nationals are committed to providing a top-notch, affordable, fan experience for all guests.  We are pleased to lower prices on over 3,300 seats, including over 2,000 in the lower bowl, and will continue to offer season ticket plans for as little as $10 per game. We thank our fans for their continued support of the Washington Nationals as we continue to build towards a winning ballclub in the Nation’s Capital.ā€

More details at The Biz of Baseball

Pujols sets NL assists mark

Tired of hearing about Albert Pujols’ prowess with the bat?  Little exasperated with Albert Pujols leading the league in most meaningful offensive category in the NL?

Maybe this story will cheer you up (but probably won’t).

Today, Pujols set the National League record for assists for a firstbaseman with 181 passing Mark Grace’s record set in 1990. 

In typical fashion, Pujols was quite humble, passing the credit on to his teammates:

"That’s good," Pujols said of the record. "That will tell you that our pitchers are keeping the ball down and keeping me busy at first."

…and a bit sheepish as well…

"I also made an error that cost us the game right there," Pujols said. "That’s part of the game. It just gave me a bad hop and that’s it."

Fall and Winter Ball dates to put on your calendar

For some baseball fans the season doesn’t end when the World Series is concluded.  Bus Leagues Baseball provides us the dates (via MLB’s Winter League page) for Fall and Winter League Baseball to put in your calendar. 

October 9 – Mexican Pacific League Opening Day
October 9 – Venezuelan Winter League Opening Day
October 13 – Arizona Fall League Opening Day
October 16 – Dominican Winter League Opening Day
November 7 – Arizona Fall League Rising Stars Game
November 20 – Mexican Pacific League Second Half Begins
November 23 – Arizona Fall League Championship Game
December 13 – Dominican Winter League All-Star Game
December 21 – Dominican Winter League Regular Season Ends
December 30 – Mexican Pacific League Regular Season Ends
February 2 – Caribbean Series Begins
February 8 – Caribbean Series Ends

TBZ’s intrepid co-blogger, Teddy Ballgame, usually makes it down south to catch some Arizona Fall League action.  As a result, we get some pretty good coverage of the prospects down there.

Teddy, mark your calendar!

Cubs’ Harden taking off the rest of the season

Rich Harden and the Cubs have agreed that the right-hander will take the rest of the season off.

ā€œHe doesn’t want to pitch and we respect his wishes,ā€ Piniella said. ā€œI spoke with him briefly and he’s not going to pitch any more. He’s done a real nice job here and the staff has done a nice job of keeping him nice and healthy.ā€

In an email, my friend DonS explained his thoughts on the matter.  He senses a little behind-the-scenes agreement between the two.  Here’s his speculation:

The Cubs agreed to let Harden take the rest of the year off, in exchange for a promise. Under the secret agreement, Harden declares for free agency, the Cubs offer Harden arbitration and Harden turns it down, as promised.
 
  That way, the Cubs get the draft choices that the present team gets when the free agent turns down arbitration and Harden gets the rest of the year off with pay and becomes a free agent.
Thoughts?  Is DonS on track or just a conspiracy theorist?

Twins Complete Sweep of White Sox @ Cell

buehrle

They were the last three games I could go to at the Cell to see my White Sox play in 2009, Monday, Tuesday, & Wednesday nights against the Twins.Ā  The weatherman predicted rain, so I decided not to go.Ā  On Monday the rain held off, but the Twins bats did not, the Sox lost 7-0, Rob went to a Patio Party that night, but couldn’t persuade me to join him, glad I decided to stay home, the White Sox didn’t show up to play, so why should I show up to watch?Ā  Tuesday again looked like rain, Chuck was buying tix for his family on stubhub & wanted me to join him, I politely declinced.Ā  Again we lost, but this night we hit three homers, and lost by a score of 8-6.

I was determined not to go again on Wednesday, but then it hit me.Ā  This was the last game I could go to in 2009.Ā  I have a tradition that goes back nearly 40 years to September 28, 1969 when I first attended the last game of the season.Ā  After the game somebody tossed a baseball up to my father for me.Ā  As we were leaving the ballpark, Dad asked if I’d like to go to the players parking lot to see if we could get some autographs, I’ve still got that baseball proudly on display in my room, with just about everybody’s signature from that team on it.Ā  Since then I’ve taken off school to see the White Sox play their home closer, whenever possible I was there.Ā  I was there when Bill Melton hitting leadoff in order to bat more often hit a home run (# 33) off Bill Parsons to pass Norm Cash, and become the Home Run Champion of 1971, I bought a button of Bill Melton commemorating the event, which I’ve still got.Ā  But even if I couldn’t make it to the last game, I’d still venture out to the last game I could make.

So halfway through Wednesday I decided I would be going down to the Cell to see Mark Buehrle pitch.Ā  Mark Buehrle, who has been far from perfect since pitching his perfect game, seeing his record drop from 11-3 to 12-9, and his ERA rise from 3.28 to 3.84.Ā  But still, Mark was my guy, this was my team, I was going down there on the Red Line with hope of avoiding the sweep.Ā  It was obvious from the beginning Buehrle didn’t have it, he was yanked after giving up 5 runs, and we were down five to zip.Ā  I was hanging behind homeplate with Al, Anthony, & Dan, Dick & Bea, Caramel Corn Mike, Debbie, and bought a beer from BIG Bill (we talked a little baseball), my friend Adele saw me from her seats near firstbase, and called my cell.Ā  I joined Adele and her friends Tina & Kate, while visiting with them we managed to close the gap to 5-3, but then Tina & Kate went off to get some snacks & drinks, Minnesota put the game on ice with three runs in the top of the 7th.Ā  I returned to my normal spot behind home, the Sox closed to 8-6, but couldn’t quite pull it off.Ā  We talked about what we’d do if we were in charge, then we bid each other adieu, till next year, when we’ll all be back for another season of White Sox baseball, rooting for our team.

LET’S GO WHITE SOX!

I just love Baseball Reference’s new SHARE feature

Kudos to Baseball Reference again, this time for their ā€œShareā€ feature that they just implemented in their stat pages. 

The Share feature does what it implies… it allows people to share any stats on almost any Baseball Reference stat page in a variety of formats. 

The formats available are html table, bbcode, a javascript widget, an html iframe, pre-formatted text, comma delimited file or just simply a hyperlink.  Those baseball bloggers, forum posters and stat hounds who frequently cite baseball statistics will find this very useful. 

Just browse to the stat page you want to quote and click the ā€œShareā€ link. Since Clyde Vollmer was born today, I’ll use his batting stats as an example.  The ā€œSharing Toolboxā€ will then come up. 

sharing toolbox

This is where the best feature comes up.  Don’t want to display the CS stats?  Not interested in the age of the player?  Not to worry, BR has allowed for us to customize the display of the table by deleting columns or rows that you want.

Just click on the red X of any unwanted column or row and it won’t appear in the final result.  There’s also a red X within an arrow on each row and column that will delete trailing ones. 

redx

In Vollmer’s case, I’m going to make his table a simple one with just homeruns and rbis.  I’ll click on the red arrow on the rbi column deleting everything to the right of it.  I then deleted every other column except Tm, Lg, HR, and RBI.  Not being interested in per team stats I deleted every row below his career stats, too.

Don’t forget, stat tables in Baseball Reference allow you to click on stat column headers to sort by stat categories.  In my example with Vollmer though, I’ll keep it in chronological order.

Once you get the stat table the way you want it, click on the format type you want.  A window will then pop up giving you the code or link you need. 

In the Vollmer case, I clicked html table and was given html code for a table. 

Here is the result for Clyde Vollmer’s homerun and rbi totals for his career:

 

Year Tm Lg HR RBI
1942 CIN NL 1 4
1946 CIN NL 0 1
1947 CIN NL 1 13
1948 TOT MLB 0 0
1948 CIN NL 0 0
1948 WSH AL 0 0
1949 WSH AL 14 59
1950 TOT AL 7 38
1950 WSH AL 0 1
1950 BOS AL 7 37
1951 BOS AL 22 85
1952 BOS AL 11 50
1953 TOT AL 11 74
1953 BOS AL 0 0
1953 WSH AL 11 74
1954 WSH AL 2 15
10 Seasons 69 339
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 9/24/2009.
 

There you go.  A reasonably good looking table that was easy to generate (probably easier than I made it sound).  It’s easy enough to go into the code and remove the link to B-R but why be a tool?  It’s the least I could do.

It should be emphasized that this feature works from almost any stat page in Baseball Reference.  Splits, Game logs, team stats, you name it. 

Oh managers pages too.  I just used it in a recent post about Bobby Cox.

In this day and age when MLB is trying their best to lay claim to baseball statistics as a commodity, it nice to see Baseball Reference making it easy to share them.  Keep up the good work, B-R!

Braves’ Cox will re-up then retire after 2010

Atlanta Braves manager Bobby Cox has agreed to a one-year extension but says he’ll plan to retire after the 2010 season.

"While I have decided that 2010 will be my last season in the dugout, I want to make it clear that we will all be working as hard as ever to win another world championship," Cox said in a statement.

While this statement sounds like the typical PR clichĆ©, there’s no doubt in my mind that Cox really wants a World Championship for the Braves.  Cox ranks fourth all-time and second among active managers in wins.  He also ranks #1 in postseason appearances among all managers with 15.  

 
Rk Mgr Yrs G W L W-L% Plyof App WSwon PennWon
1 Connie Mack HOF 53 7755 3731 3948 .486 8 5 9
2 John McGraw HOF 33 4769 2763 1948 .586 10 3 11
3 Tony LaRussa 31 4762 2550 2209 .536 12 2 5
4 Bobby Cox 28 4335 2408 1924 .556 15 1 5
5 Joe Torre 28 4156 2242 1908 .540 14 4 6
6 Sparky Anderson HOF 26 4030 2194 1834 .545 7 3 5
7 Bucky Harris HOF 29 4408 2157 2218 .493 3 2 3
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 9/23/2009.
 

Yet among all those postseason appearances, Bad Bobby Cox has only one World Championship to his name (when the Braves won it all in 1995).  I’m sure in the back of his mind, he’d like to shirk the bridesmaid title. 

Illowa APBA League convenes for All-Star weekend

ial 2009 all star 034

I spent this past weekend with the Illowa APBA League as we had our All-Star get-together in Naperville, Illinois

Check out photos and summary of the festivities on The APBA Blog

The Illowa APBA League is a 10-team keeper league that is in its 35th year of existence. 

Guest Blogger: Baseball Musings’ David Pinto predicts the National League postseason

Each day this week, The Baseball Zealot has been featuring special guest bloggers who have been giving their predictions on the 2009 MLB end-of year-awards and postseason matchups.  To wrap up the series, we are fortunate to have David Pinto bring out his crystal ball and post his thoughts on how the National League postseason is shaping up.

david David Pinto, for those who few baseball fans who haven’t heard of him, is the god-blogger of baseball updates.  For 10 years, Pinto served as chief researcher for ESPN’s Baseball Tonight.  Now, he spends his time editing his very popular Baseball Musings blog.  Baseball Musings was one of the very first baseball blogs I followed on a regular basis (and still do to this day). 

You’ll also find Pinto’s analysis in his Sporting News weekly column

NL Predictions

The National League playoff picture looks set.  The Cardinals hold a huge lead in the NL Central.  The Phillies lead the Marlins and Braves by a healthy amount, but as the last two years taught us, there is no such thing as a safe lead in the NL East.  While the Dodgers are looking stronger for an NL West win, and the Rockies built a big enough lead in the Wild Card race that they probably make the playoffs.

The seeding then becomes important in determining which team eventually wins the NL pennant.  Right now, the Dodgers own the best record in the National League.  Their remaining schedule points to the team staying at the top of the league.  Los Angeles plays teams still competing for the playoffs six times, while the rest of their games are against the weakest teams in the league, including the Pirates and the Nationals.

The Cardinals and Phillies are very close (the Phillies hold the tie breaker).  The Cardinals schedule is a little easier than the Phillies, as they play the Marlins and Braves, who are still trying to chase them down.  It looks to me like the Cardinals should sneak by the Phillies for the second seed in the NL playoffs.  That would give us the Dodgers hosting the Phillies, since they can’t play a wild card from their own division, and the Cardinals hosting the Rockies.

 

Rockies vs. Cardinals

This really looks like a pitching series.  The Rockies lead the majors in quality starts, but the Cardinals on average produce better results from their starters.  That’s due to a quality of the St. Louis staff versus the quantity of the Rockies starters.  With Carpenter and Wainwright, the Cardinals throw two pitchers who rank in the top five in the National League.  Joel Pineiro comes in as one of the better third starters in the league.  There’s a fall off in pitching after that.

The Rockies have a fine ace in Ubaldo Jimenez, but their 2-5 starters are interchangeable.  Unless there are injuries, however, starting pitching depth doesn’t count for much in the playoffs, especially with two off days in the series allowing the possibility of using just three starters.  The edge in pitching goes to the Cardinals.

The quality versus quantity argument shifts when examining the offense.  Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday both hit better than anyone on the Rockies.  There is a fairly wide gap between those two and the rest of the hitters on the team.  With the Rockies, they send out four high quality hitters; Helton, Smith, Hawpe and Tulowitzki.  All four get on base and hit for power, but not at the level of Pujols and Holliday.  In a way, the Rockies pitchers will have an easier time.  They need to get around two batters, and any of the Rockies starters are good enough to handle the rest of the lineup.  Without facing Holliday, the Rockies posted a 2.25 ERA against the Cardinals in four games this year, the team going 4-0.  The offense favors the Rockies.

Colorado does not play as well on the road, as so three games in St. Louis might make the difference.  The offense just doesn’t hit as well out of the thin air and the big outfield.  I suspect Carpenter and Wainwright will take full advantage of that in games 1 & 2, and one of them can try to do it again in game five if needed.  I believe it will be a close series, but better front line pitching and home field wins out for St. Louis.

Phillies vs. Dodgers

This is one series that is tough to call due to the state of flux in the two starting staffs.  The Phillies added Cliff Lee and Pedro Martinez and both came on like gangbusters (although Lee slowed down lately).  The Dodgers staff struggled with injuries, causing them to add Jon Garland and Vicente Padilla, both of whom improved ERAs compared to the time spent with their former teams.  With Kershaw hurt and Billingsley pitching like the Verducci effect is catching up to him, the Phillies come into this series with a better starting staff.  Hamels is pitching well again, Happ has time to recover from his injury and Lee and Martinez showed great control since joining the team.

Offensively, this series pits the Dodgers ability to get on base against the Phillies superior power. The Dodgers hold the best OBP in the National League, the Phillies the best slugging percentage.  The Dodgers score runs by keeping the bases full of batters.  The Phillies strike with big blows. This may be Philadelphia’s great advantage.  The Phillies pitching staff, especially the starters likely to pitch in the series, walks few batters.  Take away the Dodgers walks, and they’re going to need to hit a lot of singles to score runs.  The Dodgers pitchers do a good job of limiting home runs, but the Phillies may only need to hit one mistake out of the park to make the difference in the game.

I like the Phillies power against the Dodgers ability to get on base in this series.  Los Angeles will need to keep the games close so their superior bullpen might win out, but I favor the Phillies to go on to the NLCS.

 

Phillies vs. Cardinals

This should be an exciting series.  The starting staffs for both teams are excellent, with the Cardinals better at the top of the rotation, the Phillies better at the back.  The offenses are more evenly matched that it seems at first glance, since Busch Stadium depresses offense, while Citizen’s Bank Park helps offense.

The Phillies own two advantages, however.  The Cardinals hit poorly against left-handed pitching, and with Hamels and Lee Philadelphia can throw two good ones against St. Louis.  The other is depth of offense.  Pujols and Holliday are as good if not better than anyone on the Phillies.  Backing up Utley and Howard, however, are Victorino, Werth and Ibanez.  The two through five slots in the Philadelphia lineup give the Cardinals starters little respite.  The top talent on the Cardinals is close enough to the front line talent of the Phillies that the Phillies depth should win out.

Much thanks to David Pinto for his great insight! 

That wraps up The Baseball Zealot’s week of special guests analyzing the end-of-year awards and postseason races.  I hope you have enjoyed them. 

I want to thank all of the good folks who have taken the time to write some fantastic articles for TBZ this week.  They all have been really excellent.  If you haven’t already, take some time to read the others:

Enjoy!