Archive for May, 2014

Robinson Cano Injury: Updates on Mariners Star’s Hand and Return

Seattle Mariners star Robinson Cano has been listed as day-to-day after suffering a hand contusion, per Adam Lewis of MLB.com:

Bob Dutton of The News Tribune in Tacoma, Washington, reported that Cano should be healed by the weekend:

Ryan Divish of The Seattle Times reported the All-Star second baseman was dealing with pain between his thumb and hand:

Although Cano struggled out of the gates a bit after signing that massive deal with the Mariners, he’s since gotten back on track. His power numbers might be down (2 HR, 31 RBI, .420 SLG), but he’s hitting .327, which is tied for second in the American League. Cano’s also the only Mariners batter hitting over .300.

Heading into Friday night’s games, Seattle sits fourth in the AL West, five-and-a-half games back of the division-leading Oakland Athletics. Cano’s absence won’t help the Mariners close that gap anytime soon.

He’s only day-to-day, though, so his injury shouldn’t be a major road block in the team’s postseason push.

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Team Needs 2014: Minnesota Twins

The Minnesota Twins are a halfway decent team in 2014. After three straight 90-loss seasons, that’ll do nicely for progress.

But who knows? Maybe halfway decent isn’t Minnesota’s ceiling in 2014. Perhaps the Twins can be better than that. Perhaps they can even be good enough to make some noise in an AL Central division that’s widely viewed as the playground of the Detroit Tigers.

Perhaps indeed. But the Twins are going to need a few things. What they have now doesn’t look like enough.

MLB Lead Writer Zachary D. Rymer is here with some thoughts on that. In his mind, the Twins’ list of needs starts with more power from their most expensive player, continues with more production from their outfield and ends with their perpetually struggling starting rotation.

Leave your comments and questions below if you have any, and you’re also welcome to follow Zachary on Twitter.

 

Follow Zachary: @zachrymer

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Andre Ethier Stars as Johnny Utah in ‘Point Break Live’

Andre Ethier is an All-Star outfielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, but it looks like he has also picked up some things from being out by Hollywood all these years.

The 32-year-old was pulled up on stage for Point Break Live, a live version of the 1991 classic Point Break. A member of the audience is always selected to play the role of Johnny Utah, which is played by Keanu Reeves in the film.

Watching Ethier play the role of an FBI agent should make you want to watch the real deal:

[YouTube]

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Stock Up, Stock Down for St. Louis Cardinals’ Top 10 Prospects for Week 9

Down on the farm, a vast majority of the St. Louis Cardinals‘ top 10 prospects are having noteworthy seasons.

Earning a spot on the big league roster is the ultimate goal for these young players, and the future certainly looks bright with the vast assortment of raw talent the Cardinals boast in their minor league system.

Outfielders Oscar Taveras and Stephen Piscotty are among the Cardinals prospects that are flourishing this season at Triple-A Memphis.

A handful of other prospects are also producing at the lower levels of the minor leagues.

Here’s how the Cardinals’ top 10 prospects fared during Week 9.

Begin Slideshow


50 Cent Claims New York Cop Gave Him a Hard Time for Terrible First Pitch

Rapper 50 Cent’s first pitch was so bad that even the New York police want in on the fun.

On Friday’s Good Morning America, 50 Cent talked about his terrible first pitch before the Mets’ game on May 27. He even tried to blame the wild throw on Curtis Jackson, which is his real name. 

Then 50 Cent caught everyone by surprise when he revealed he was pulled over by a New York cop and, instead of getting a ticket, received some ribbing.

The rapper also denied that the blooper was a publicity stunt, saying his pitch “slipped.”

[YouTube, h/t Fox Sports]

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Joe Girardi Has Yankees’ Bullpen Exceeding Expectations

A rookie closer. A bunch of minor league starting pitching prospects who never panned out. A few no-name relievers. Some kids out of the farm system.

This is what Joe Girardi has had at his disposal in the Yankees’ bullpen throughout the 2014 season. On paper that group does not seem like much. Heading into the season the pen was projected to be a major weak spot for the Bombers, but as of now, that is not the case. To the surprise of many, the pen has been strong, especially David Robertson, Shawn Kelley, Adam Warren and Dellin Betances.

When New York opened the season, its relief corps consisted of the four above plus Matt Thornton, David Phelps and Vidal Nuno. Since then Nuno and Phelps have joined the rotation and several relievers have come along while others have hit the disabled list.

As of May 30, the Yankees’ pen looks as such: Robertson, Warren, Betances, Thornton, Alfredo Aceves, Preston Claiborne and Matt Daley. Kelley is currently out with a back injury but has already begun rehabbing and is expected to rejoin the club soon.      

Again, there is not much notoriety here, but this pen has done an exceptional job, far better than anyone could have hoped for. According to Fan Graphs, the Yankees’ bullpen has an ERA of 3.74 in 170.2 innings pitched. They are allowing less than one HR/9 and have a K/9 ratio of 10.49, the best in baseball. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, the pen has a WAR (Wins Above Replacement) of 2.8, second to only the Red Sox‘s pen (3.0).

As mentioned, several Yankees are standing apart from the rest.

Despite having the unenviable task of replacing the game’s greatest closer in history, Mariano Rivera, Robertson has been everything the Yankees could have hoped for thus far. He has converted 11 of 12 save opportunities, sporting a 2.20 ERA, and has 27 strikeouts in 16.1 innings.

Kelley, before going down, was doing rather well in his new role as the club’s setup man. In 16 games he is averaging just over one strikeout an inning and has a 3.52 ERA. He has also yet to allow a home run this season. At one point, when Robertson was on the DL, Kelley served as the team’s closer, recording four saves in five opportunities. He is expected to throw a bullpen session May 30.        

Warren, after making 90 career starts in the minors, has emerged as a top-notch reliever this year. With a 1.76 ERA in 30.2 innings of relief, Warren has limited opposing batters to a .225 average this season. He has also surrendered just one homer.

Nobody has stood out more the Betances. Another failed minor league starter, Betances has seen his velocity, accuracy and consistency improve coming out of the pen. With a fastball that can reach 100 mph and a devastating slurve, Betances has been able to blow hitters away, striking out 51 in 30.2 innings of work.

In comparison, Detroit Tigers ace Justin Verlander has 50 strikeouts in 71.1 innings. Those same hitters have a miniscule .143 batting average against Betances. Add a 1.47 ERA and it is safe to say Dealin’ Dellin has become the Yankees’ best relief pitcher.

For Girardi, it has been a challenge not to go to Robertson, Betances, Warren and when healthy, Kelley, on a daily basis. Robertson has come in for three four-out saves in the month of May alone, and Warren and Betances are tied for the most innings pitched out of the bullpen.

“There’s times you just have to give guys days off,” Girardi said earlier this week. “That’s all you have to do. I’m trying to do that.”

Warren said his manager has done a fine job of doing that so far.

“There are certain days where you’re like, I could pitch, but I’d rather not just because of the way your arm feels. Joe’s been great at that. He kind of reads it to see how we feel, and he’ll sort of take the decision out of our hands.”

Betances echoed that thought as well: “Joe told me, if you ever need a day or feel sore, (say something). I told him I feel great. He’s communicating with me, trying to give me days whenever he can.”

Regarding his new shutdown reliever, Girardi wants to be careful with his workload, saying, “We’re trying not to kill Betances.”

Girardi, in his use and development of this no-name, no-experience pen, has done a phenomenal job. Very few people thought there was any potential here, but Girardi has brought this bullpen past the point of potential. The majority of this pen has proven to be reliable, some even dominant, and that is now the expectation when the starting pitcher leaves the game.        

All stats were obtained via Baseball-Reference unless otherwise noted and are accurate as of May 30, 2014.

Question or comments? Feel free to follow me on Twitter @GPhillips2727 to talk New York Yankees and Major League Baseball.

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Giants’ Pablo Sandoval Extends RBI Streak to 9 Games

San Francisco Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval hit a solo home run in the sixth inning of Thursday’s game against the St. Louis Cardinals to extend his RBI streak to nine games. Per Alex Pavlovic of the San Jose Mercury News, no Giant has pieced together an RBI streak that long since Barry Bonds also knocked in a run in nine consecutive games during the 2000 season.

Sandoval’s streak is no fluke full of sacrifice flies and RBI groundouts, as he’s been a dominant force at the plate over the last nine games. During the streak, he has five home runs and a .419 batting average, with eight runs and a whopping 14 RBI.

Known to many as “Kung-Fu Panda,” Sandoval created quite a bit of buzz before the season when it was discovered that he’d lost a significant amount of weight. Known for his large frame as much as his free-swinging approach, he was hoping that his improved fitness would play off in a contract year.

He then got off to a surprisingly terrible start, finishing April with just two home runs and a .177/.262/.302 slash line. That line actually fell to .173/.250/.276 by May 10, before Sandoval turned things around with a three-hit game against the Los Angeles Dodgers May 11. He’s now recorded a hit in 18 of his last 19 games, and six of his eight home runs this season have come in the last 11 contests.

As awful as he was earlier this season, Sandoval heads into Friday’s game against the Cardinals carrying a respectable .247/.300/.428 slash line. While the torrid pace obviously can’t continue for long, Sandoval owns a .294/.347/.473 line for his career, so his numbers should only continue to go up from here.

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Blue Jays’ Edwin Encarnacion Ties Record for Most Multi-Homer Games in 1 Month

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Edwin Encarnacion produced his fifth multi-homer game this May in Thursday’s 8-6 loss to the Kansas City Royals, matching the MLB record for most multi-homer games in a calendar month, per Sportsnet’s Shi Davidi.

The other two players to accomplish the feat—Harmon Killebrew and Albert Belle—were also prolific sluggers of their time. Killebrew, a Hall of Famer who played from 1954 to 1975, sits in 11th place on the all-time home runs list with 573 dingers.

Belle probably won’t ever make it to the Hall, but he was unquestionably one of the most feared sluggers in the 1990s, an era known for power-hitting behemoths. With Belle, Machiavelli’s quote that “it’s better to be feared than to be loved” comes to mind.

As for Encarnacion, the Toronto slugger’s assault on the record books may not be complete. His second long ball Thursday gave him 16 in May, matching Mickey Mantle’s American League record and pulling within one of Barry Bonds’ MLB record, per the Blue Jays’ official website.

Looking to a more notable piece of history, Rudy York set the AL mark for most homers in any calendar month with his 18 round-trippers in August 1937. Sammy Sosa holds the MLB record, having somehow crushed 20 homers in June of his historic 1998 season.

With only two games remaining for the Jays in May, Encarnacion is a long shot to match York, and would need four more homers to tie Sosa. Of course, the way he’s been swinging, would anyone really be surprised if EE hits a few more homers in the last two days of his historic month?

 

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Dr. James Andrews Is Helping Create a Mobile App to Aid in Arm-Injury Prevention

Major League Baseball has seen its fair share of serious arm injuries this season, so a couple of notable doctors are creating a mobile app that they hope will help prevent throwing injuries for future generations, especially at the youth level.

According to Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan, there have been 45 players who have undergone Tommy John surgery (elbow ligament replacement surgery) through the first two months of the 2014 season. That is an 80 percent increase from the same point last season.

ESPN.com’s Stephania Bell reports that famed orthopedic surgeon Dr. James Andrews, who has performed countless surgeries on sports’ biggest starts throughout the years, and Dr. Kevin Wilk are working on creating a mobile app—Throw Like a Pro—that will educate players, coaches and parents.

The goal of the app is obviously to reduce arm and shoulder injuries in youth baseball. The app will focus on preventing injuries, but at the same time, the tips should be able to help long-term performance. 

In an effort to make it as helpful as possible, the app will use data to assist users, via Bell: “The app, Throw Like a Pro, will be released in the coming weeks. When available, it will feature four main elements, all centered around scientific data and input from Andrews and Wilk.”

Here are descriptions of some of the sections:

  • Advice from the American Sports Medicine Institute, like throwing with proper mechanics rather than trying to light up the radar gun.
  • A preseason preparation guide and pregame warm-up routine
  • Pitch count and rest calculator, based on age

Those seem like very helpful sections. Every young pitcher wants to be able to throw as hard as Reds closer Aroldis Chapman, but throwing hard can be devastating to one’s health if the mechanics aren’t there.

If Andrews and Wilk are successful, Throw Like a Pro could change the way young baseball players train.

[h/t Hardball Talk]

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Jose Bautista Comes Up Throwing to Nab Billy Butler at First Base

A play like this shows just how good the Toronto Blue Jays have been lately.

The Kansas City Royals’ Billy Butler thought he had a single when he lined one into right field, but the Toronto Blue Jays’ Jose Bautista wasn’t going to concede the hit. Bautista came up throwing and threw Butler out fairly easily:

With his team clinging to a one-run lead in the top of the ninth inning, Bautista‘s laser looked like it would help push his team’s winning streak to 10 games. Unfortunately for the Blue Jays, they blew the lead in the ninth and went on to lose in extra innings.

[MLB.com]

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