Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Rivalry

Tigers vs. Twins July ‘08

This has been a very interesting series. You have two good teams battling for every win they can get as they both chase the White Sox, and it’s only July 1.

Usually I look at the numbers, but this series brings up the softer(?) side of baseball- the personalities and emotions that make it a game. I didn’t see the bean ball that the Twins’ pitcher Glen Perkins threw at Carlos Guillen, but I saw Galarraga throw 2 at Mauer a couple of innings later and I thought “Wow! That looked weird.” Then I saw a replay of the ball thrown at Guillen earlier and those two pitches made sense. I kind of admire the way that Pudge and Galarraga dealt with it too, they didn’t go after the first batter they faced in the next inning. Nope, they waited- for the Twins’ catcher. No point in brushing back an outfielder, they can’t change anything anyway. Nope, since you can’t show the pitcher you’re pissed you wait for his “battery mate”.

I, personally, don’t see anything wrong with “purpose pitches” as long as the pitcher is simply keeping the batter from getting too comfortable on the plate. It all fits into strategy and tactics in the game. I don’t think letting go at somebody’s head is part of that. I’m not even sure that Perkins meant to do that against Guillen, but Guillen certainly did. When I saw the replay I was impressed with the “look” (stare?, death wish?) Perkins received in return. Then Galarraga returns the favor, just sending a message that “you can’t mess with my boys!”. Good baseball.

Then there is another story in this series- Craig Monroe. He was a huge part of 2006 for Detroit, but in 2007 he couldn’t duplicate and he was traded to the Cubs before he ended up in Minnesota, but not happy about it. He wanted to stay with Detroit and was bitter about how it all worked out. Well, 2008 has been much like 2007 for C-Mo. He hasn’t hit well for the Twins (.218 BA and .451 SLG with 8 home runs). But he saves up something special for when he plays Detroit. 3 of his 8 home runs have been against the Tigers, including a 3 run blast on Tuesday night that turned out to be the game winner. There is some serious emotion there. It reminds me of Magglio Ordonez playing against the White Sox, he just seems to take it up a few notches against his old team (which is should be really scary for Chicago). C-Mo lets his bat speak for him saying “This could have been for you, but now it’s going to hurt you Detroit!”. I admire that (even if I wouldn’t take him back).

There is much to this game that stats don’t really show. That’s why it’s fun to watch teams like Detroit and Minnesota play it the way it is supposed to be played. I just hope Detroit plays a little bit harder on Wednesday to take the series.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Half way there...

Rockies 6, Tigers 7

Well, they are half way there. With the win yesterday over the Rockies the Tigers reached .500 for the first time this season. After today's game they will have played 1/2 of the season. They are currently 5 games behind the first place White Sox in the AL Central.

For the first half of the year the Tigers are batting .274 and slugging .435. They have scored 389 runs for an average of 4.86 (with the trend moving up). They have hit 146 doubles, 17 triples and 86 home runs while taking 278 walks and striking out 489 times.

They are pitching with a ERA of 4.64* for the Starters with 238 earned runs over 461.9 innings pitched. The bullpen has an ERA of 4.81 over 132.8 innings pitched. The Starters' ERA is trending down.

Interleague play ends today. Detroits eats National League teams for dinner (12 and 5 so far). I believe I heard a stat saying that Detroit was 31 and 9 over the past few years of Interleague play. Certainly this year playing National League teams has been a factor in their resurgence. Monday they start the 2nd half of the year against the Twins who are the also playing very well against NL teams (.600 ball over the month of June). Then the Tigers play against Seattle and Cleaveland before the Twins again.

Looking at June for all teams in the AL Central I see that the White Sox scored more runs than any other AL Central team (147 or 6.1 per game) and that includes being swept twice! The White Sox also allowed the fewest runs (101 or 4.2 per game). A really good combo. Detroit won more games but scored "only" 121 runs (5.0 per game) while allowing 102 (4.3 per game). The Twins scored 128 (5.1/ game) and allowed 116 (4.6/ game). The Indians scored 130 (5.2/ game) and allowed 125 (5.0/ game) and the Royals scored 122 (5.1/ game) and allowed 113 (4.7/ game). I hope the White Sox cool down before the Tigers play them again.

They are half way done and have a clean slate. They have to make up 5 games and play .610 ball for the rest of the year to make 90 wins for the season. They did better than that for June.

Let's enjoy this last game against the NL today.