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Weekend Recap: not good.May 19th, 2008
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It wasn’t a good weekend to be a Cleveland fan.
The matchup Friday night was a first-place Indians team on an 8-2 tear, facing a last-place Cincinnati team that was just starting to show some signs of life after winning three straight and six of nine. The most telling part of that night: down one run in the top of the ninth, Cincinnati closer Francisco Cordero not only struck out the side, but got both Casey Blake and Jamie Carroll to strike out looking.
Now I know the offense is bad, but down one run - I repeat, one run - they were too afraid to swing? Were they scared they might actually put the ball in play? I’m pretty sure, and someone should probably look this up, but if you don’t swing, your chance of getting a hit is 0, right? Besides, isn’t there some sort of rule that you should never get called out on a third strike in the ninth inning? Then again, at least the Cavs won that night, so it wasn’t all bad.
Saturday was all bad. After Fausto Carmona pitched another brilliant outing for the Indians, this time allowing one run on four hits with no walks, Masa Kobayashi came in and allowed a three-run walkoff homer to Adam Dunn. And, to top it off, Dunn tried to sac bunt earlier in the at bat.
And then there was Sunday. Cliff Lee, he of the 0.67 ERA, decided to revert to human form. He gave up six runs - five earned - and all came after there were two outs in the inning. Even worse, in the fifth inning, after needing only six pitches to retire the first two batters, Lee gave up two runs on four straight singles, all after he was ahead in the count to each batter. In the sixth, on the two-out double to Javier Valentin: Lee was ahead 0-2. On the home run to Joey Votto: Lee was ahead 0-1.
(Well, at least Lee was ahead at some point yesterday, unlike the Cleveland Cavaliers, who were eliminated in game 7 of the conference semifinals on the road in Boston. First, the Red Sox beat the Indians in 7 games in the ALCS last year. Then the Patriots beat the Browns in a regular season game. And now the Celtics over the Cavs? I think I speak for all of Cleveland when I direct this message toward Boston: #@$!#@%*!)
Here’s the thing though: despite Jensen Lewis walking in the go-ahead run in the first game, Kobayashi giving up the game winning home run in the second game, and Lee pitching poorly in the third game, the Indians didn’t lose the series because of poor pitching. They lost because of anemic hitting.
Want proof? How about this: for the fifth time this season, the Indians have failed to score 10 runs in a series. That’s five times in less than two months. Last year, guess how many times it happened during the course of the entire season? That’s right, four times. I can’t make this stuff up.
Actually, if you want to take something positive from the weekend sweep, it’s that the Indians left a combined 47 men on base. Yup, I said it: positive. See, at least they are starting to get on base, right?
Of course, that’s akin to Bill Engvall saying, “At least TBS and TNT are shoving my ads down people’s throats.” Unfortunately for Bill, that doesn’t mean his show is funny or that people will watch it. And, similarly for the Indians, getting guys on base doesn’t mean squat if nobody can drive in runs. Right now, it looks like nobody can.
Looking ahead: the Indians better hope playing the Rangers and the White Sox cure their ailments, because 13 of the next 16 games are played against these two teams. With the White Sox currently in first place by a game and a half, the next two weeks could play a very important role in who emerges from the AL Central by year’s end.
I say: if ever there’s a time for the Indians to start scoring runs, it’s now.
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May 19th, 2008 at 10:30 pm
“I think I speak for all of Cleveland when I direct this message toward Boston: #@$!#@%*!”
Understood.
On the bright side, after being clinically dead at the plate since the ALCS, Pronk looks like he may have received resuscitation this month.
And the Indians are still the class of the Central. Gavin Floyd’s going to eventually run out of goats to sacrifice to the BABIP deity, and the ChiSox will fade soon after.
So, I’m fully anticipating a BOS-CLE rematch in the playoffs.
What do you think about those Matt Holliday/ Garrett Atkins rumors?
A package of Adam Miller and Nick Weglarz plus something else for Holliday (and his looming mega-deal if you wanna keep him): do you pull the trigger if you’re Shapiro?
May 21st, 2008 at 7:45 am
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