Category: Prospects

Henry Owens Debut Spoiled by ‘Pen

Henry Owens pitches in his major league debut against the Yankees on 8/4/15. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Henry Owens pitches in his major league debut against the Yankees on 8/4/15. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

This one started with so much hope. So much promise. The much-ballyhooed Major League debut of Henry Owens, in the Bronx against the first-place Yankees. For five innings, this was a lot of fun to watch. The 23 year old lefty was a little jittery to start, giving up a run in the first and generally working up in the zone in the first two innings, but then starting mixing and locating a little better. After giving up a single to start the 2nd, he settled into a nice groove, sitting down the next 12 Yankees he faced. He broke off a couple of comely eyes-to-thighs backdoor curveballs to righties and “will it ever get to me?” changeups to lefties. It wasn’t dominant debut à la Eduardo Rodriguez, but still good, solid pitching.


In the 5th, the Sox scraped together a couple of runs in support of their young starter. Napoli doubled, De Aza had a bunt single that moved Nap to 3rd, Swihart singled him home and advanced De Aza to 3rd, and Jackie Bradley Jr. lifted a sac fly to score Alejandro, giving the Red Sox a 2-1 advantage.

In the bottom of the 6th, however, Owens gave up a single and a double to start the inning, and got the quick hook from Farrell, leaving the game having struck out 5, walking one, and allowing only one run, although the runners on 2nd and 3rd were his responsibility. When Owens left the game, the virgins all wisely began to trim their wicks, because the bullpen was a disaster of biblical proportions.

Hank was relieved by Robbie Ross Jr. who hastily allowed both inherited runners to score (the kid deserved better), plus one of his own, giving the Yankees a 4-3 lead.

He was in turn relieved by Jean Machi. Machi had a 5.14 ERA and a WHIP of over one-and-a-half in the NL and was waived by the Giants, so the Red Sox thought “Hey! He’ll fit in perfectly in our bullpen! Plus he kind of looks like El Guapo” and boy! were they right. He gave up 3 runs, 2 earned and only recorded one out. He he was followed by Craig Breslow who allowed 2/2 inherited runners to score plus a few of his own, and he was followed by Alexi Ogando who allowed 2/2 inherited runners to score plus one of his own. By the time the father hen had called his chickens home, the Sox’ bullpen had surrendered 10 RUNS. Just look at this:

Boston IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA
Owens (L, 0-1) 5.0 5 3 3 1 5 0 5.40
Ross, R (BS, 2) 0.2 2 1 1 1 0 0 4.14
Machi 0.1 1 3 2 1 1 0 5.65
Breslow 0.2 4 5 5 1 1 1 4.25
Ogando, A 1.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3.97

Even the beast with ten horns and seven heads was wailing and gnashing its teeth.

The only other offense was Sandoval hitting a bomb.

I take a tiny amount of comfort in the fact that the Red Sox’ starters aren’t the only ones who struggle with the gopher ball.

Notes:

Mookie worked out on Sunday and Monday and is no longer experiencing concussion symptoms. He will travel with the team to Detroit, and hopefully play a game or two in that series.

Brock Holt made a pretty play behind Owens in the 5th.

-Yankees’ top prospect Luis Severino will start and make his major league debut tomorrow. The Yankees think he’s the real deal, and hope he’ll provide a boost to their rotation as they push for the playoffs since they failed to add a starter at the trade deadline. I think he may be able to do that, mainly because he shares a birthday with other stratospherically successful sensations such as Phil Esposito, Charles Barkley, Cindy Crawford, Kurt Cobain, Justin Verlander, Rihanna, and Righty. Would’ve been cool to see him square off against Owens tonight, but at least it’ll give Lefty something interesting to watch tomorrow.

-To cleanse your pallet: This is Red Sox prospect Rafael Devers

He’s 18 years old and does stuff like this

Sox Win 3rd in a Row – Eduardo Rodriguez Tipping Pitches?

The Red Sox won 4-3 over the Blue Jays last night, their third straight victory. Here’s how it happened:

The story coming into this game was “is Eduardo Rodriguez tipping pitches?” If you hadn’t heard, the scuttlebutt was that Eddie was showing his hand early in his last outing, but only when pitching from the stretch. This theory certainly held water, seeing as in that game he retired the first 10 Orioles he faced, then one batter reached and Rodriguez surrendered 6 runs, and only recorded one more out.

Over the course of the past four days that theory had been confirmed. Eduardo was looking at the ground before throwing his offspeed pitches, and looking more to the side before throwing his fastball.

Eduardo Rodriguez Tipping His Pitches

lEduardo Rodriguez Tipping Pitches (NESN)

Last night, he was definitely conscious of his head positioning. Several times Eddie took the sign from the stretch, lowered his head, then stepped off. Since he was involuntarily tipping his pitches (obviously), I’d imagine it was tough for him to concentrate on locating his pitches while fighting a natural instinct. Regardless, Rodriguez performed admirably, holding Toronto to one run in six innings. This was especially impressive considering that the Jays touched him for 9 runs the last time he faced them.

Pitchers IP  H  R ER BB SO HR ERA
Rodríguez (W, 4-2) 6.0 4 1 1 2 4 0 3.92

Rodriguez was opposed by Marco Estrada, who had been untouchable in his last two starts, taking no-hitters into the 8th inning both times. It was evident right off the bat that Eastrada didn’t have the same no-hit stuff. He walked four men in the first frame, giving up two runs on 0 hits (Mookie reached on an error to lead off the inning).

Somewhere in that first inning it looked like Estrada lost the feel for his fastball, and he started relying heavily on his changeup. He as a good one (he’s no Clayton Mortensen but who is?), but he went to the well many too many times.

In the top of the second, Jackie Bradley Jr. sat on an all-systems-go change that hung on the outside corner.

Unfortunately for Jackie, this might be too little too late. John Farrell announced after the game that Hanley will be back in the lineup tomorrow after putting on a show in BP before the game. De Aza has been exceptional of late, and Victorino is nearing a return. Barring anything unforeseen, JBJ most likely won’t get consistent at-bats for the remainder of 2015 – maybe in September if things break a certain way.

In the top of the 3rd, it was Ortiz’s turn to be cleared for launch on an Estrada change.

That ball might’ve actually gone to the moon. It’s not quite Manny’s shot, which was last spotted near the Andromeda Galaxy, but a rocket nonetheless.

This put the score at 4-0, and the Red Sox would need all of those runs. Tommy Layne surrendered two more runs on top of Rodriguez’s one, to bring the score to an uncomfortable 4-3. With Toronto’s lineup and the roof closed in the Rogers Centre, a one run lead feels like you’re starting every inning with a runner already on 3rd, but Ogando had a big-time 8th inning, getting Joey Bats, Edwin Encarnacion, and Chris Colabello in order, and Koji came in and had a 1-2-3 ninth, sealing the Sox’ third straight win.

Notes:

-After the game Rodriguez acknowledged explicitly that he was tipping his pitches with his head position. I thought it was kind of odd that he openly admitted the specifics of it, even if it was pretty obvious. I’m guessing because it’s not a mechanical thing, just something he has to be conscious of, it’s not as important to try and keep the “tip” a secret. If it was mechanical it’d be a much bigger issue and a longer fix, and may even have meant a trip to the minors to sort it out. This is a relief, and maybe he can even use it to his advantage by looking down when he comes set, then firing 95 MPH cheese.

Ryan Hanigan will be called up tomorrow. It’ll be interesting to see what happens here because Swihart has played well and deserves to stay with the big club in my opinion, but Leon has been Buchholz’s personal catcher … and he’s out of options.

-The Sox inked their top two draft picks Andrew Benintendi and Austin Rei.

-The White Sox’ Chris Sale had 12 K’s last night, giving him 10 or more strikeouts in eight straight starts. The only other guy to do that? Pedro in ’99.

Brock Holt!

-Everyone else in the division lost last night. Here’s how the AL East is looking, in case you had tuned out:

East W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STRK
Baltimore 41 36 .532 7-3 L2
Tampa Bay 42 37 .532 3-7 L3
NY Yankees 41 37 .526 0.5 0.5 3-7 L3
Toronto 41 38 .519 1.0 1.0 4-6 L2
Boston 36 43 .456 6.0 6.0 6-4 W3

Not exactly apocalyptic.

Offense Forgets to Show Up

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I’ve been itching to cover an Eduardo Rodriguez start since he got the call from Pawtucket. All season, every time a starter turned in a bad performance I’d tell my friends they should give Rodriguez a turn. It got to the point where it was a little irrational. “Well, yeah, Buchholz went 8 and struck out 11 and didn’t walk anyone. But I’d still like to see what Rodriguez can do.” My friends now refer to him as “your boy” when they’re talking to me, which I take as a huge compliment.

Anyway. Eddie (he needs a nickname. Any suggestions?) was once again impressive, but in a different way than his first two dominant starts. He didn’t have great command of his slider or changeup, but battled through and turned in 6 shutout innings, essentially with one pitch – six of his seven strikeouts came on his fastball.  It helps when your one pitch is a lively 95 MPH hairy heater, but still superb work by the rookie.

His crucial sequence came in the bottom of the 5th. After surrendering a leadoff single to J.J. Hardy, Rodriguez hit Ryan Flaherty when he was trying to bunt, putting runners on first and second with nobody out. The next batter was Manny Machado, who he coerced into a fielder’s choice on a 1-1 changeup, one of only two outs he’d record with that pitch all night. Rodriguez followed that with big back-to-back strikeouts of Delmon Young and Adam Jones. After the strikeout of Jones, Eduardo was FIRED UP. Jones didn’t like Rodriguez’s reaction too much, and kind of sarcastically grinned in his direction as he was walking towards the dugout.

Pitchers IP  H  R ER BB SO HR ERA
Rodríguez 6.0 3 0 0 3 7 0 0.44

When the Red Sox acquired him, the Orioles scouts were sad to see Eduardo go and said he had another level, another gear that facing major league competition would bring out of him. I don’t know how they could possibly know such a thing, but a 0.44 ERA over his first three starts suggests that they knew what they were talking about. This one must’ve been hard for them to watch.

The lone run in this game came in the bottom of the 7th on a wild pitch from Matt Barnes. With runners on first and third with no one out, Barnes shook off Swihart, who I assume called for something hard, and threw a first pitch changeup that went about 55 feet. It’s a pitch that Swihart might block 8/10 times, but he lifted up on it slightly and it got away. Definitely a wild pitch, but still blockable. That was enough for the O’s to win the game 1-0.

Notes:

-The Red Sox lineup looked like it was filled with graduates from the Milford Academy.

Milford Academy

-0-8 with RISP.

-Not helping: Hanley fouled a ball off of his knee and had to leave the game. Let’s hope it’s just a bruise.

Mookie has hit a rough patch. He’s batting just .156 since May 30.

-Don and Jerry have been comically bad at predicting the outcome of reviewed plays this season. Their chuckles and self-deprecating humor after the call is made almost makes the multi-minute delays palatable.

-If anyone suggests “E-Rod” for Rodriguez’s nickname you will be tarred and feathered and publicly shamed for lack of originality.

-The Red Sox had the #7 overall pick in this year’s draft and selected Arkansas outfielder Andrew Benintendi. I was somewhat surprised that they didn’t take Carson Fulmer (RHP, Vanderbilt), who was taken by the White Sox with the next pick, and who the Red Sox were very high on leading up to the draft. Fulmer was considered to be the best pitcher in the draft, but two others were taken ahead of him, including the Twins taking a college reliever with the 6th pick – I can’t quite figure that one.

Benintendi (is that Italian for “good Nintendo”?) shot up the boards after hitting .380/.489/.715 with 19 homers in 221 ABs this season. He’s got a sweet, compact lefty stroke and the potential to be a gold glove outfielder. With such a high ceiling, he was probably too tantalizing for the Red Sox brass to pass on. Definitely no reason to be upset if you’re a Sox fan.*

*Obviously I reserve the right to backtrack on this statement if Fulmer is the next Pedro and Benintendi is the next Billy Beane.