After last night's Philip Humber meltdown, you kinda saw this move coming. After starting the season 0-8 with a 9.59 ERA in 9 appearances, Humber was designated for assignment today. The Astros didn't waste any time filling his roster spot either as they signed free agent Edgar Gonzalez who was recently released by Toronto. If the name sounds familiar, it's because Gonzalez made the Astros out of Spring Training, but was designated for assignment before appearing in a game this season to make room for Travis Blackley. Now he's back and will help out in long relief for the Astros. How long he stays on the roster remains to be seen as Josh Fields is getting closer to returning from injury. Gonzalez made 4 starts for AAA Buffalo going 1-0 with a 5.49 ERA, and 3 relief appearances for the Jays in which he posted a 7.88 ERA (7 runs in 8 innings). Gonzalez made 6 starts for the Astros a year ago, going 3-1 with a 5.04 ERA. He beat the Pirates, Reds and Brewers. Is he "the answer" to our problems? Probably not. But, he buys us some more time so we don't have to rush the kids (Cosart, Wojo, etc.)
Some other notes from last night:
1) I really like Trevor Crowe. He did three things last night that stood out for me:
*A two-strike base hit off of closer Joe Nathan in the 9th inning to drive in a run
*Threw out Ian Kinsler at home on a would-be sacrifice fly
*Went from 1st to 3rd on a wild pitch in the 9th inning to set up a run
A switch hitter with good speed, Crowe present us with some interesting possibilities moving forward. A former first round pick, it'd be great if he finally put things together.
2) Erik Bedard was terrific yesterday and deserved to win that game. He left with a 3-1 lead in the 6th after fanning 7 and allowing just 4 hits in 5+ innings. His most impressive inning was the 5th in which he worked out of a 1st and 3rd no out jam without allowing a run. That's the Bedard we thought we were getting when we signed him. He's had an interesting season so far. Let me break it down for you in three parts:
Part 1 (Apps 1-2): 7 1/3 IP 2 H 0 ER 2 BB 5 K - 0.00 ERA 0.55 WHIP
Part 2 (Apps 3-6): 11 1/3 IP 21 H 17 ER 10 BB 16 K - 13.50 ERA 2.74 WHIP
Part 3 (Apps 7-8): 8 1/3 IP 6 H 3 ER 3 BB 10 K - 3.24 ERA 1.08 WHIP
Now if we could just harness parts 1 and 3 and keep THAT guy going forward...
3) Nice to see Sweet Matty D go yard twice against Darvish yesterday getting his first 2 home runs of the year and notching his first career multi-homer game.
4) Jose Cisnero pitched well in relief of Humber allowing a Lance Berkman home run in 3 1/3 innings of work. While Cisnero has pitched well for the most part during his brief tenure in Houston, I think he's the likely guy to get sent back down when Josh Fields returns. It's not a knock on Cisnero's performance at all, but being a young guy, it's more important for him to get work than it is for him to sit on the bench in Houston.
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Showing posts with label Matt Dominguez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Dominguez. Show all posts
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Saturday, May 11, 2013
10 Reasons to be Optimistic Even Though We Lost the Last Two Games:
1) Chris Carter has struck out just 4 times in his last 7 games after striking out 49 times in his first 28. During this recent stretch, Carter is 6 for 18 with 5 runs batted in.
2) Philip Humber pitched 1 1/3 innings out of the bullpen on Thursday night and didn't allow a hit while fanning 3 and walking one. Maybe a move to the pen is just what he needs to turn things around.
3) Trevor Crowe, not known for his power, hit his first home run as an Astro last night off of Alexi Ogando.
4) When Houston faced Ogando in April he fanned 10 hitters in 6 1/3 shutout innings. Last night he didn't make it through six innings and fanned only 3. That, my friends, is progress.
5) Dallas Keuchel turned in a quality start in his first appearance in the Astros rotation this year allowing just 2 runs on 5 hits in 6 innings. Yeah, we didn't get a win, but if you're a realist, you recognize this year isn't about wins, it's about evaluating talent. Keuchel has been a pleasant surprise this year in whatever role he's been asked to fill and could help bolster a shaky rotation if he continues to pitch well.
6) Losing close games is frustrating, but having close games is a step in the right direction. If you think about it, the Astros could have very easily gone 6-2 over the last 8 games. Yeah, we're only 2-6 during that stretch, but that's about learning how to win more than it is learning to play good baseball. We're getting there, and that's reason to be excited.
7) We're two weeks into May and Brandon Barnes is still hitting .327 with an on base percentage of .413. What's more, he's been able to sustain his hot bat despite not playing every day.
8) A day after making an uncharacteristic 3 errors at third, Matty Dominguez was back to his old self again last night. Always nice to see young players with a bad short term memory and able to shake things like that off.
9) Marwin Gonzalez has put together back-to-back multi-hit games after enduring a 1 for 24 slide raising his average back up to .264. Put that together with Ronny Cedeno's .314 clip and suddenly the shortstop position has become fairly productive offensively for us.
10) Lucas Harrell struggled with his control walking 6 in 5 innings on Thursday night, but allowed just 1 earned run. I'd still like to see him work through his control issues, but it was nice to see him battle through a tough lineup despite not having his best stuff.
2) Philip Humber pitched 1 1/3 innings out of the bullpen on Thursday night and didn't allow a hit while fanning 3 and walking one. Maybe a move to the pen is just what he needs to turn things around.
3) Trevor Crowe, not known for his power, hit his first home run as an Astro last night off of Alexi Ogando.
4) When Houston faced Ogando in April he fanned 10 hitters in 6 1/3 shutout innings. Last night he didn't make it through six innings and fanned only 3. That, my friends, is progress.
5) Dallas Keuchel turned in a quality start in his first appearance in the Astros rotation this year allowing just 2 runs on 5 hits in 6 innings. Yeah, we didn't get a win, but if you're a realist, you recognize this year isn't about wins, it's about evaluating talent. Keuchel has been a pleasant surprise this year in whatever role he's been asked to fill and could help bolster a shaky rotation if he continues to pitch well.
6) Losing close games is frustrating, but having close games is a step in the right direction. If you think about it, the Astros could have very easily gone 6-2 over the last 8 games. Yeah, we're only 2-6 during that stretch, but that's about learning how to win more than it is learning to play good baseball. We're getting there, and that's reason to be excited.
7) We're two weeks into May and Brandon Barnes is still hitting .327 with an on base percentage of .413. What's more, he's been able to sustain his hot bat despite not playing every day.
8) A day after making an uncharacteristic 3 errors at third, Matty Dominguez was back to his old self again last night. Always nice to see young players with a bad short term memory and able to shake things like that off.
9) Marwin Gonzalez has put together back-to-back multi-hit games after enduring a 1 for 24 slide raising his average back up to .264. Put that together with Ronny Cedeno's .314 clip and suddenly the shortstop position has become fairly productive offensively for us.
10) Lucas Harrell struggled with his control walking 6 in 5 innings on Thursday night, but allowed just 1 earned run. I'd still like to see him work through his control issues, but it was nice to see him battle through a tough lineup despite not having his best stuff.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
So Close... Yes So Far...
I'm trying to put a positive spin on last night's game, but it certainly isn't easy. For the second time in as many nights, we let a game slip away against the Tigers. This time, closer Jose Veras surrendered a 9th inning 2-run homer to Alex Avila, who's now hitting an Astro-like .179 on the season, dealing us a 4-3 loss. On top of that Jose Altuve got robbed on a great play by Omar Infante in the 9th and Jason Castro hit a line shot, but right at left fielder Don Kelly to end the game. So, positive spin... right. The only thing I can really think to say is that we're in these games, and we're actually expecting the results to be different. A couple of weeks ago, we expected to lose EVERY game, and by a lot. But now the starting pitching is getting better, and with the exception of Veras, both Hector Ambriz and Travis Blackley were solid out of the pen. Robbie Grossman reached base 3 more times as he continues to work his way out of that 0 for 17 skid in Boston, Jose Altuve had 3 hits, we actually rallied from a 2-0 deficit late in the game to take a 3-2 lead... Good things are happening with this club, they just aren't translating into wins yet. And let's face it, this year isn't about wins, it's about next year, and the year after that. It's about figuring out what we have, and who's worth keeping. Did anyone really think Jose Veras was the long term solution at closer? No, he's there the mentor younger guys in the bullpen. But as guys like Ambriz and Clemens and Blackley and Cisnero start to emerge out of the pen, and Harrell and Norris and Lyles have successes in the rotation, Castro emerges as an every day player, Dominguez plays his Gold Glove defense at third, you're starting to put together a team, which is something we haven't been doing since the early 2000s. Don't get me wrong, I hate losing, and it's frustrating to look at our record and see we're 8-22. But we are making progress, however small, and you've got to buy into what the organization is trying to do otherwise you're in for a long couple of months/years. So hang in there, Astro fans, and stay positive. Take the small victories for what they are and a few years from now, you'll be able to say you were there through the dark years, and always believed. It'll make the end reward that much sweeter.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Offense Erupts Again as Astros Win 2nd Straight
1) Chris Carter, aka Trogdor the Bombinator, is finally locked in. Carter crushed his third home run of the series last night, and is 9 for his last 18 effectively rebounding from his 1 for 19 start. I'd still like to see the big man draw some more walks (he has 1 through the first 9 games), but I'm not going to complain when he's just hitting absolute moonshots.
2) J.D. Martinez is going to create some interesting discussions when Fernando Martinez gets healthy again. J.D. has been swinging a hot bat lately driving in 5 runs over the last two games, homering, stealing a base, playing decent defense... Honestly he's playing well enough that he should keep his roster spot. So what do you do when F-Mart, who was on track to make the team out of spring training before his injury comes back? Send him to AAA? Send J.D. to AAA? Send someone else to AAA? Now I don't think Fernando is going to be back TOMORROW or anything that drastic, but he's going to be back at some point. I think the player that makes the most sense to send down right now is Wallace. Carter can play first and DH basically alternating with Carlos Pena and then F-Mart can fill in one of the corner outfield spots against righties. But it's possible that different players could heat up or cool down in the coming weeks and that could always change the whole complexion of the discussion. Needless to say, it's a good problem to have.
3) Marwin Gonzalez's home run last night gave him homers in back-to-back games and matched his home run total for ALL of 2012. The second year infielder and former Rule 5 Draft Pick is 8 for 18 on the season with a double, a pair of homers, a perfect-game wrecking single off of Yu Darvish and a team-high 4 walks. It's clear he's got the hot bat right now, and hopefully Bo Porter rides him until he cools off. I love the left side of our infield with Marwin in the game too. Between him and Sweet Matty D over on the hot corner, not much gets through and that's a huge boost to our starting pitching.
4) I really like what Brad Peacock brings to the table, but he's got to become more efficient with his pitches. Peacock faced just one hitter in the 6th inning and finished his night having thrown 95 pitches. Granted, this was only the fourth start of his Major League career, and you have to figure he'll get better as he gains experience, but he's not really going to blossom until he can go deeper into games.
5) Dallas Keuchel has been something of a pleasant surprise working out of the Astros bullpen so far this season. In 5 innings of work, he's allowed just one run, and he tossed two scoreless innings last night preserving a 5-3 lead to earn the Astros first hold of the season. Keuchel got off to a fast start last year too though allowing just 3 runs in his first 20 innings of work before going 0-7 in his next 9 starts with an ERA of 7.33. Hopefully he doesn't fall into a similar rut this year, because having an effective long reliever could really save the bullpen some work.
6) Rick Ankiel now has two hits on the season, and both of them are home runs. Because of that, despite his .111 average and the fact that he's struck out in 14 of his 18 plate appearances, he's actually second on the team with 5 runs batted in right now.
7) Every Astro in the starting lineup last night got at least one hit, the first time this season that that feat was accomplished. I guess that shouldn't come as a surprise though considering they were hitting around .200 before Tuesday night's game. After their last two wins though? .263.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Seattle Plays Sound Fundamental Baseball and Sends Astros to Sixth Straight Loss
Houston wasted a quality start from Philip Humber and arguably the best showing we've had from the bullpen all season as the Astros were shut out for the third time in the past week, dropping their sixth game in a row by a score of 3-0 in Seattle. Some notes from Game 7:
1) This game was a perfect example of how you don't need a lot of hits to get a win. Seattle had just 5 hits in the game, but produced 3 runs thanks to good fundamentals (two successful bunts), good baserunning (a stolen base to set up the game's first run), and timely hitting (2 clutch hits by Kendrys Morales). The Astros, in 7 games, have yet to lay down a successful sacrifice or attempt a stolen base, and the 3 shutout losses speaks to their inability to get timely hits.
2) I'm a real fan of the work Matty Dominguez is doing over at the hot corner. His defense has been absolutely terrific so far this season, and he's generally had solid approaches at the plate striking out just twice in 21 at-bats. With Brett Wallace mired in an abysmal slump, it looks less and less like the possibility of a platoon over there meaning Dominguez is going to get a long look this season.
3) Humber became just the second Astros starter in seven games this season to pitch through the sixth inning. He threw just 86 pitches, 56 of them for strikes and allowed just five hits and a walk. That makes back-to-back solid outings for the righty, but unfortunately the Astros offense has scored a total of ZERO runs in his two starts.
4) I'm baffled somewhat by how a guy like Rhiner Cruz can throw so hard, and have so few strikeouts. Cruz finally logged his first strikeout of the season last night, and he's already thrown 4 1/3 innings on the year. I don't know if he's tipping his pitches, or if his stuff just didn't have any life, but he's not missing nearly as many bats as he should be.
5) Justin Maxwell, one of the Astros lone offensive bright spots singled in the first to extend his hitting streak to 5 games. After hitting just .153 this spring, Maxwell has hit safely in every game this season with the exception of the Darvish game, and leads the team in runs (5), hits (9), walks (2), triples (2) and batting average (.360).
6) I'd like to see Brandon Barnes start getting some more playing time. We all know about his defense, but he also brings an element of speed to the table, and he's been getting on base lately (2 hits and 2 walks in 3 starts). With Ankiel looking like he'd have a hard time hitting a beachball with a tennis racket, J.D. Martinez getting benched for "mental errors", and Chris Carter struggling on both sides of the ball, it would seem like Barnes is due for an opportunity.
7) Seattle's bullpen is filthy. Carter Capps, Charlie Furbush and Tom Wilhelmsen all had plus stuff and effectively sealed any hopes of an Astros comeback last night. By contrast, the Astros pen has an ERA of 5.18 on the year. Although, they did shut down Seattle's offense in the late innings last night, so maybe they'll turn things around. In their last 10 innings, the Houston bullpen has only allowed 2 runs.
Monday, April 1, 2013
Bang, Bang, Maxwell's Silver Hammer
"The road to being a champion is always under construction." - Bo Porter
For one night, the Astros looked like a contender. Houston outplayed the Rangers in every facet of the game and cruised to an 8-2 victory giving them the best record in all of baseball, and the distinction of being the only undefeated franchise in the American League. I know it's short lived, but I'm going to enjoy this moment, because that's what baseball's about. Some observations from last night's game: And yes, I know this is only one game into the season.
1) For me this game turned on two plays, both of them in the sixth inning. The first came with 2 on and 2 out in the top half, and the Rangers rallying having cut the Astros lead in half. Erik Bedard entered the game to face catcher A.J. Pierzynski and induced a weak fly ball to centerfield to end the threat. A hit by Pierzynski and the momentum swings in favor of the Rangers, and then who knows what happens. Then in the bottom half of the inning, in the same situation, two on, two out, pinch hitter Rick Ankiel crushed Derek Lowe's 3-2 offering into the right field bleachers for a 3-run home run putting the game all but out of reach. GM Jeff Luhnow's offseason moves are looking pretty smart after one game.
2) Speaking of Bedard, the Canadian lefty looked brilliant last night. He faced 11 hitters and surrendered just a broken bat single to Nelson Cruz on his way to his first Major League save. If Bedard pitches like he did when he was with Baltimore a few years ago and stays healthy, he's going to look like a steal.
For one night, the Astros looked like a contender. Houston outplayed the Rangers in every facet of the game and cruised to an 8-2 victory giving them the best record in all of baseball, and the distinction of being the only undefeated franchise in the American League. I know it's short lived, but I'm going to enjoy this moment, because that's what baseball's about. Some observations from last night's game: And yes, I know this is only one game into the season.
1) For me this game turned on two plays, both of them in the sixth inning. The first came with 2 on and 2 out in the top half, and the Rangers rallying having cut the Astros lead in half. Erik Bedard entered the game to face catcher A.J. Pierzynski and induced a weak fly ball to centerfield to end the threat. A hit by Pierzynski and the momentum swings in favor of the Rangers, and then who knows what happens. Then in the bottom half of the inning, in the same situation, two on, two out, pinch hitter Rick Ankiel crushed Derek Lowe's 3-2 offering into the right field bleachers for a 3-run home run putting the game all but out of reach. GM Jeff Luhnow's offseason moves are looking pretty smart after one game.
2) Speaking of Bedard, the Canadian lefty looked brilliant last night. He faced 11 hitters and surrendered just a broken bat single to Nelson Cruz on his way to his first Major League save. If Bedard pitches like he did when he was with Baltimore a few years ago and stays healthy, he's going to look like a steal.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
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