Friday, April 13, 2007
Another Of Those Days
4.12.07 Review:
Phil Hughes had a game similar to Tyler Clippard’s last one. His stuff wasn’t as crisp as could be, but the primary issue was his control and command. Hughes would consistently just miss outside of the zone or within the zone and as a result he struggled to put batters away. In another similarity to Clippard’s start, Hughes was able to keep the ball low in the zone and generate groundballs. Unfortunately, as is often the case when there’s a combination of groundballs and no strikeouts, hits would fall in or bad hops would occur. Overall, I wouldn’t worry much about Hughes’ start, just like I wouldn’t worry about Clippard’s last one. These types of starts happen from time to time and aren’t reason to condemn a player. When a player falls apart and everything is out of the strike zone or everything is being hit hard, I worry. When guys are missing by a bit and serve up the occasional meatball to get over, I don’t worry. It also doesn’t hurt if those guys have great track records.
Eric Duncan built on the previous night’s game as he went 1 for 2 with a single and a walk. The single was a line drive groundball up the middle and he just looked very comfortable at the plate. Other than the night where he struck 3 times, Duncan has looked good thus far.
Around The Minors:
Trenton was rained out and will made up as a doubleheader.
At Tampa, Jose Tabata seems to be taking Bobby Abreu’s spring advice about being patient to heart as he was 2 for 3 with 2 singles, 2 walks, and 1 strikeout. His strikeout is higher than ideal at the moment, but it’s early and everything else is great, so I’m not worried.
Juan Miranda seems to be finding his power stroke; he went 1 for 2 with a double, a walk, and a strikeout.
Finally, Francisco Cervelli continued to hit well, going 1 for 3 with a double and a walk.
On the mound, George Kontos struggled a bit. Judging by the box score, Kontos just got tired as most of the damage against him was done late.
Finally, in Charleston, Jose Gil was 1 for 2 with a single and Wilmer Pino continued his hot start by going 2 for 4 with 2 singles. Pino’s start probably reminds some of Reegie Corona’s from last year, but I like Pino’s tools a bit more so I’m more excited by what he is doing than I was by Corona. Austin Jackson also had 2 hits, but struck out twice, so I would chalk that up as a negative night.
Spotlight On:
Scranton. The guy on first and the guy on the mound might help out soon. Who knows?
Comments
If I remember correctly, Miranda is 23 years old and he has some talent. What do you think are the chances of seeing him in the majors in the next couple years? I’ve heard very little about him and his time in Cuba.
According to Pinstripes Plus, Jesse Hoover will be seeing some game time action on Saturday.
Remember him?
Missed all of 2005 and 2006 with back injuries.
I’m rooting for him to do well.
If my memory serves me right, I think Hughes was mediocre last year at AA for three or four starts. He eventually got used to the environment and settled in. Hopefully, that will repeat at AAA. It does tell me that he’s not a lock to be outstanding as soon as he arrives in Yankee Stadium. Nerves are an issue for most any rookie. It does tell you that his fastball isn’t so fast that it can stand on it’s own without secondary pitches working.
What was Hughes’s line?
Peter Abraham is reporting that Pavano will not pitch tomorrow. I didn’t catch Torre on WFAN today, but apparently he mentioned Pavano has some muscle scoreness in his piching arm, but that it wasn’t completely unexpected because he hasn’t been doing the 5 day rotation thing for so long now.
Ugh.
http://yankees.lohudblogs.com/2007/04/13/pavano-not-pitching-tomorrow-2/#comments
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