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Saturday, April 27, 2013

Bottom of Sox Order Buries Astros

When you think about all the powerful hitters in the Boston lineup, there's some names that don't usually come up: David Ross, Will Middlebrooks and Pedro Ciriaco for example. Last night, Boston's 7, 8 and 9 hitters went 8 for 12 with a triple, three home runs, four runs scored, and 3 runs batted in. By contrast, Houston's 4, 5, and 6 hitters were 1 for 10 with 8 strikeouts. Hard to win when you put up numbers like that. More thoughts on last night's loss:

1) Brandon Laird went 0 for 4 in the cleanup spot striking out in all 4 appearances. He did not look comfortable at the plate at all, and as a result, the Astros missed some opportunities. Houston has yet to really identify a solid option as the cleanup hitter this year. If you're looking for more evidence, look no farther than the fact that Jose Altuve is now tied for the team lead in rbis.

2) It was nice to see the Astros actually bring home some runners with productive outs for a change. Despite going 0 for 12 with runners in scoring position, and not homering, the Astros scored 3 times. This was a result of an rbi ground out from Robbie Grossman (his first Major League rbi) and two sacrifice flies from Jose Altuve. The Astros had just 2 sacrifice flies in their first 22 games. Obviously you want hits, but just getting the runs in was a good first step.

3) Erik Bedard was roughed up last night for 7 extra base hits in just 3+ innings of work in which he threw 91 pitches. This is what the Redsox have been doing for years. They wear pitchers out. Every hitter up and down the lineup seems can work counts. And while Astros pitchers didn't issue any walks last night, they eventually made mistakes (4 homers - albeit all solo shots), 4 doubles and a triple. On the whole, Astro pitchers needed 186 pitches to get through 8 innings. Houston hitters could certainly learn from the Boston hitters' approaches.

4) Paul Clemens was once again sharp in long relief going 3 innings and allowed just a David Ortiz blast while striking out 4. Clemens has pitched REALLY well when the Astros have been trailing, so much so that I think he's earned an opportunity to get some more meaningful innings. I know there's a lot of grumbling about how he should be getting an opportunity to start, but I don't see Bedard or Humber losing their jobs any time soon, mainly because they're both potential trade pieces, and it's in our best interest to let them work out the kinks so we can get more in return for them. As the saying goes, what's the worst that could happen? We gonna fall out of last place? Clemens has a live arm and I think he could help out in the 7th or 8th innings. Heck, he might even be able to close if we move Veras at the deadline. Anyhow, lots of options for him, the big thing right now is that he's performing.

5) Rhiner Cruz's struggles continue. He didn't exactly get lit up last night, but he did give up 4 more hits, and he's not hitting his spots when he pitches. I maintain what I've been saying that he needs to head down to Oklahoma City when Josh Fields gets back to work out some of the finer points of pitching. A gifted reliever with a big arm, he shouldn't be allowing so many baserunners.

6) The Astros banged out 5 doubles last night which was nice to see. Their 14 strikeouts really prevented them from making more of those opportunities though. We touched on it already the importance of productive outs. A weak grounder to the right side will get a runner from 2nd to 3rd, and a fly ball into the outfield can score a runner from third. We need out hitters to do a better job of putting the ball in play. Everybody who's played the game knows you're supposed to shorten up your swing with 2 strikes and put it in play. Hard to force the opposition into making a mistake if you never make them make any plays.

7) As bad as last night seemed to go at times, Houston still had their chances. Jonny Gomes made a diving grab in left to rob Jason Castro of extra bases and save a run in the 5th, and Brandon Laird actually represented the tying run when he came up with two men on against Junichi Tazawa in the 7th. So we're in these games. And whether you want to admit it or not, we are improving. More hitters are squaring up baseballs, we're drawing more walks, and with a little bit better efforts from our starting pitching, we're a decent team. Not a GOOD team, but we're decent.

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