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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Royals Today: 4/11/2009"

45 Comments -

1 – 45 of 45
Anonymous Curtis said...

Is it too soon to try to reserve www.fireseitzer.com?

I jest, I jest.

Sort of.

Somebody hit the freaking ball!!!

April 12, 2009 at 12:50 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I wouldn't be putting anything on Seitzer at all yet. The end results aren't there to this point, of course, but you can see the ground's been laid; with the exception of (a) the guys who aren't going to start showing selectivity anyway no matter who the hitting coach is and (b) Billy Butler (?!), everyone else is at least showing a better approach up there. Heck, even Jacobs has been seeing what seems, at least, to be more pitches per PA than I would expect given his career OBP.

I think it also behooves us to remember that while the actual runs-across-the-plate number is anemic, a lot of that is just dumb bad luck. The rubber match of the Chicago series, the Royals were blistering the ball all over the place -- just happened to be blistering it right at people. Teahen's been smoking balls -- at people. Coco's been hitting the ball hard. Butler, despite looking mostly lost so far, still got robbed a couple of times by Josh Fields. It's frustrating as hell when this sort of luck all falls in one clump, but it is what it is.

April 12, 2009 at 2:08 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Rany, it has never been as iconic as Harvey taking it in the back or Ambres letting it fall behind him, but you MUST get Lefebvre's call from the game where MacDougal air-mailed a throw to the plate--I believe he called it "The worst thing that has ever happened in sports." Hilarity. Painful, painful hilarity.

April 12, 2009 at 5:55 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Is there a right hand-hitting free agent out there? Friday's 3-4-5 combination of DeJesus, Jacobs, Gordon showed as clearly as possible the need for a competent righty in the middle of the lineup, absent Guillen. You're not going to face Buehrle, Danks, Pettite, and Sabathia every week, but how is this weekend's lineup ever going to do any damage against lefties?

April 12, 2009 at 8:48 AM

Blogger Shelby said...

I'm pretty much calling Alex Gordon a world class bust at this point. I've given up all hope.

April 12, 2009 at 11:29 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree that we need some patience; that said, however, I can remember at LEAST ten years of consoling ourselves with lines like, "their pitcher was just really good---it'll get better." We ALWAYS seem to say the other teams have really good pitchers, so our offense is excused. Maybe we'll someday notice that other teams' offenses don't seem so intimidated by all those "really good" pitchers (Sabathia excepted).

April 12, 2009 at 12:02 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't know if such a statistic is kept, but it seems like the Royals' hitters must lead the league in checked swings. Wouldn't it be better if they went ahead and just took a good whack at the ball, instead of trying to check their swings all the time?

April 12, 2009 at 12:11 PM

Blogger Jared Launius said...

Agreed that the defensive moves have been perplexing. It feels like Trey is treating the first week of the season like it's an extended Spring Training, the way he's moving everyone around and getting everybody starts at different positions in the field- and the line up.

it's also tough to ignore the fact that willie bloomquist was truly awful last night in right field.

April 12, 2009 at 12:59 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow. What a bottom of the eighth. Staring 2-4 and a panicked fan base, the Royals rally behind Brayan Pena, and sneak one out. Everything isn't fixed, but damn things look better sitting 3-3 with the Indians coming.

April 12, 2009 at 3:59 PM

Anonymous Dave said...

If anything today's performance from Buck and B. Pena make the Olivo signing that much more perplexing. Is it too early to start calling for Buck to be the regular catcher again? Was I the only one thinking Olivo was secretly pissed at Buck's day when the showed him sitting in the bullpen?

April 12, 2009 at 4:20 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Think about this. With Gordon out, we have 3 catchers, 2 backup IFs, and 2 OFs. We don't even have a 3rd OF. Yet, TPJ remains on the team and Maier is in Omaha.

When Gordon comes back, we will still have a week without Gordon. Playing Teahen at second and Bloomquist in the OF makes zero sense. If you stick Callaspo at second and Teahen in RF, you not only get better hitting but you get better fielding as well. When you have both better hitting and better fielding, I'm not quite sure what the decision is that needs to be made.

It's decisions like this that frustrate me as much as anything. That and mental errors in the field. I sure would love to know why Hillman and DM make these decisions when they are against what everyone else (and I mean everyone) thinks differently. It was quite obvious that Farnsworth was the wrong choice and all of us knew that before it happened but for some reason Hillman didn't.

Finally, the thought process that is behind putting HoRam in the rotation is baffling. I understand the desire to have a lefty in the rotation, but if that lefty is Scott Elarton compared to the righty that would replace him, why do they still think that the idea of a lefty in the roation is the best idea? Stick my grandma out there. She's a lefty and she wouldn't cost $2mil. I've already had her agree to a tentative $450,000 contract if the Royals will agree.

April 12, 2009 at 5:09 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Does anyone know how to get Rany's podcasts from itunes? what needs to happen to get those available so I can subscribe!

April 12, 2009 at 9:43 PM

Anonymous Curtis said...

Now, we do have to give it up to Hillman for pushing some correct buttons.

He made the right call in pinch hitting with Butler for Jacobs. He then also made the right call in running with Pena.

I don't think Jacobs gets on against Marte, and then we are forced to deal with Rivera. The guys had to execute, but Trey put them in a good spot this afternoon, and I appreciate it.

Even if I, like everyone else, cannot fathom using Bloomquist as a corner outfielder.

April 12, 2009 at 11:09 PM

Blogger BornBredBlue said...

Yes, I know we nearly doubled our run total on the year today, but our offense is still awful. Coming into today, we were the worst in the majors at batting average (under .200), walks (10), and runs scored (8). The next best team doubles our run output. And the Dodgers, the best walking team in the league, take FIVE free passes a game so far. Wow. We're the only team in the league that is under .300 in both OBP and SLG%. Oh, by the way, we strikeout more than all but two teams. Our offense flat out stinks right now.

As bad as the offense has been, the pitching has been equally good. 2nd best in both ERA (3.07)and AVG against (.214). Best in the AL for both. We're top 5 in strikeouts and walks allowed. Those numbers also translate to the lowest OBP and fewest baserunners per nine in the majors. (and the fewest long balls in the league)

So, thank you pitching. And thank you, offense *heavy sarcasm added*. But why can't we just put the two together for once? And how long can we actually count on the pitching to hold it together with little to no run support? Today's game was a through-the-legs, Bill Buckner, seeing-eye, broken bat, double error slap from Callaspo with two on in the fourth away from being swept. Not to mention getting some timely hitting in the eighth. So, maybe we chalk this one up to the offense picking up the pitching. A good sign of better times to come? Maybe.

(Side note: A 12-year-old could manage this team better than Hillman. When your ace is throwing lights out and only has 91 pitches in the 7th, don't take him out (ala opening day). And a week later, when the same guys needs 25 to get through the first, then starts to implode in the 7th, take him out before he gives up three runs. And can we see the lineup stay the same for two freakin' days in a row, please? Is that so hard? And let's not even talk about who plays where on the field.

All that being said. I'll take a 3-3 start. I think April will lay the groundwork as a microcosm of our season. If we can somehow at least stay flirting with .500 (say, within 3 games) come May 1st, we might be okay. But if we're 5 under .500 and 7 games out by the end of the month, then it will be a miracle if we win 70 games.

April 12, 2009 at 11:20 PM

Anonymous Derek said...

The decision to have Horacio Ramirez in the rotation reminds me of when I was watching a Cardinals-Brewers game a few years back. The announcer brought up the fact that the Brewers didn't have any lefties in the bullpen. The color man said that when he asked Ned Yost he responded that he'd rather have the best pitchers available in the bullpen and not have crappy lefty just to have one. Obviously the bullpen is a little different, as there's always need for a situational lefty in my opinion. But I think it is stupid thinking to put a lefty in the rotation just so you can have one. Put the best pitchers out there who give you the best chance to win.

April 13, 2009 at 1:00 AM

Anonymous David said...

Great win yesterday! It was nice to see them come back when down. I think we can attribute much of that win to john buck. How many games do you think Buck will end up starting this year?

BTW great article, as always.

April 13, 2009 at 7:00 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

To the guy that wanted to subscribe via ITunes, just go to the link he gave you and subscribe to additional programming for now.

April 13, 2009 at 8:35 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

There is no reason Tony Pena is on this team when we could have an offensive upgrade like Shealy or Maier up here. Either one of those guys would solve the problem of having Bloomquist in the outfield. Maier obviously could play right but Teahen could also move out there with Shealy playing first.

April 13, 2009 at 8:42 AM

Anonymous Curtis said...

ESPN right now is showing the probables for Friday and Saturday night to be Ramirez and Meche for the Royals.

My understanding is that we would skip Horacio with the off-day coming up and so we would have Meche and Greinke for those games.

I am debating a trip up for the games, and let's just say I'd rather see Greinke that Horacio. Can anyone confirm who we will be pitching?

April 13, 2009 at 8:50 AM

Blogger Beetle said...

I can't remember a player with a more signature pitch than Soria's "Bugs Bunny curve." I don't think enough emphasis how incredible this is. Joe Pa's article does a good job and will be far more eloquent than I.

I can just picture John Buck sitting there like Tom Berenger in "Major League."

“Gosh, all these pitches to choose from . . ."

April 13, 2009 at 10:40 AM

Anonymous Matt Berger said...

So how about tonight if we play at all, and if Bloomquist has to play, we let Greinke hit and the DH can DH for Bloomquist.

April 13, 2009 at 1:05 PM

Anonymous Larry said...

Umm, how about Rivera and the cutter?

Bruce Sutter and the split finger fastball?

Fernando Valenzuela and the screwball?

Nolan Ryan's fastball?

April 13, 2009 at 1:10 PM

Blogger Shelby said...

Zack is scary-good tonight.

April 13, 2009 at 8:24 PM

Blogger Shelby said...

That said, Bob Davis calls a baseball game like a toddler eats a chili dog.

April 13, 2009 at 8:25 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

lol, I can't believe how bad Hillman really is. After the inning Farnsworth has he brings in Mahay, which I'm not even that upset about, but you bring him in to face two switch hitters and then PULL him after they get on base, only to bring in Soria to face two LEFTIES. This is borderline insane, the games not even over but we've seen about all we need to see out of Hillman.

April 13, 2009 at 10:30 PM

Anonymous Nathan said...

Anonymous @10:30,

You'd rather have Mahay in the game than Soria at that point? Mahay's career splits are nothing to write home about, and as he'd already allowed two baserunners, leaving him in would just be stubbornness. Hillman made the right call.

April 14, 2009 at 1:06 AM

Anonymous drewfuss said...

i think the "issue" (not just with Hillman but with managers in general), is everytime you go to the 'pen, you have little idea how the new pitcher will be that day, but you have a better idea how the pitcher currently in the game is throwing that day. this idea that, well, my reliever got a 1-2-3 inning, so let's take him out immediately! wouldn't want to shake his confidence by asking him to face another batter after such success! that's what tends to irk me, regardless of the next guy's performance.

April 14, 2009 at 8:13 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Even after Soria's first 2 pitches where lined into right field I wasn't worried. When the wild pitch came, I have to admit, I thought it was going to be one of those games and we were screwed. It's nice to have a closer that even on an off night, if you can call it off after the way he made the 3,4,5 hitters look ridiculous, we can still pull out the victory. Let's hope Davies continues the momentum and Gordon is rested and ready to rake.

April 14, 2009 at 8:39 AM

Anonymous Curtis said...

I was reading a report the other day and I think it was about the Cubs, and that Gregg the closer has a knee that stiffens up fairly easily, and so he performed a whole lot better when he got warmed up, came immediately into a game, and then didn't pitch or even loosen up in multiple innings. And so he is going to be the ninth inning guy, and they will use Marmol in the leverage situations late and with the greater flexibility.

Which is neither here nor there as it concerns the Royals, except there could be a similar dynamic working there with Farnsworth - Hillman has used Cruz for two innings in a high leverage situation back in Greinke's first start.

So yes, Farny was dynamic last night in going 1-2-3. But if he has the same kind of issue, it may well have been best to go a different direction to start the ninth. I don't know those kinds of things. I assume the actual manager knows better than I do, and so this is one call I don't second guess.

And I totally agree that it was time to go to Soria when he came in. I wish it had gone a little smoother, but the one thing we all knew is that he would keep his wits about him. And after struggling while in there - two hits and a wild pitch is a virtual shelling - the curve ball he broke off to end the game on a 3-2 count was ridiculous. Maybe his best pitch of the season.

April 14, 2009 at 8:44 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I'm guessing that anonymous is unaware of Soria's reverse platoon splits, as he's slightly better versus lefties than righties. Both of the lefties did get hits off of Soria, but strategically, the move was correct. Soria is better versus lefties, and he's our best reliever overall.

We can definitely discuss whether Farnsworth should have been taken out. But once Mahay put the two leadoff men on, it was unquetionably the right decision to go to our best reliever. Hillman made a good decision going to Soria in that situation last night.

April 14, 2009 at 11:20 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

never pays to be a big league manager. Never right, even with a win. I like Hillman, think he will continue his development into one of the better Royals' managers, although I will agree the competition has not been too stiff lately. The weather we've had is certainly not baseball friendly (both teams have it of course) but we've gotten 4 wins, 3 of them in our division - with almost no runs. Can't c/o the pitching staff too loudly. McClure's work has proven solid over time, and I trust the managers to know who throws how many pitches, etc. I was delighted Soria came in, even though the wild pitch had be talking to the TV.... Billy Butler saves a run with his defense -- who'da thunk it? I'm just delighted to have some depth in the organization to have position players and pitchers that deserve a shot, rather than be rushed to the big leagues because we're out of other options. Chemistry in the club house sounds good -- we fans should try and join the spirit.... Rany, good columns as usual. Must not be up to much with the new addition...

April 14, 2009 at 12:25 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

I hate that Trey Hillman keeps moving Teahan around. I know that we've got injuries, but surely when we planned this season and factored Teahan in as our everyday starter at second, we had somebody in mind for a utility infielder/outfielder to cover for Gordon/Guillen. If not, that poor management of the roster.


Also, I hated the booing of Farnsworth AND Ponson on opening day. Yes, Farnsworth blew the game the other night, and I hate him at least a little for that, and I question whether or not he was ever a good sign, but I'm not ready to start booing my own team after one inning of bad work. The last Royal I booed was Graeme Lloyd, and that man deserved every bit that he got.

As far as booing Sidney Ponson, I was appalled by that. I found myself cheering for him, not because I like the guy, but merely to counter all the boos he was getting. There's no reason to boo your starter at the home openener---he hadn't pitched an inning yet as a Royal!

I want to win as much as anybody else in Kansas City, but I also don't want to become Philadelphia, where Santa has to hide from sports venues.

April 14, 2009 at 2:36 PM

Anonymous Derek said...

I think it's safe to say Buck should be the starter at this point.

April 14, 2009 at 10:11 PM

Anonymous Casper said...

I'm with you, Shelby: Gordon is a bust. In fact, I started saying it around the All-Star break last year. Yes, he had a good second half but one half is not a whole season. Plus, really, when you're that bad the first half you can only get better, right?

I hope I'm wrong, I hope Gordon is just starting to figure it out and will come on strong once the weather heats up, but he was supposed to be the left-handed version of Evan Longoria - those guys aren't supposed to need to figure it out; they're just supposed to step in the box and rake from Day One.

Final thought on Gordon: He reminds me of the sister in "A League of Their Own", the one that can't hit the high fast ball but also can't lay off them. Just pitch him low and outside; same thing - he can't hit them, and he can't lay off them. Hell, he can't even foul them off.

April 14, 2009 at 11:22 PM

Anonymous Nathan said...

I totally agree with John-Paul about the booing. Making Ponson our 4th starter might have been a dumb move, but he certainly doesn't deserve to be booed for it, especially by his hometown on opening day before he's even thrown a pitch. That was classless behavior, and I hope the cheers drowned out the boos.

April 15, 2009 at 1:56 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

The spirit in the clubhouse always sounds good.


Also, what's worse, rushing a prospect or leaving a prospect down too long? Both are examples of poor management.

April 15, 2009 at 3:50 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

I think the booing of Ponson was more about booing his signing and addition to the rotation. I guess those people could have booed the offices like protesters booing the Clintons the night before W's first term started.

April 15, 2009 at 3:53 AM

Anonymous Dave said...

Gordon looked like sh*t last night. Period.

John Buck better at least DH today. Lefty on the mound means Jacobs should sit while Butler plays first.

April 15, 2009 at 8:03 AM

Anonymous Eric said...

I agree Dave. Gordon looked like dog crap against a bad righty. That's not good. And I don't see how anyone could blame the hip or whatever -- a sore hip doesn't affect a man's pitch recognition - something that Gordon simply doesn't have. His last at-bat he struck out on 3 straight pitches. They're just hammering him with inside fastballs, which he can't turn on and hit, and then offspeed stuff away. He's a sucker - doesn't have a clue up there. For the first time, I'm considering the possibility that it's just never going to happen for him, which really, really sucks. Longoria, Braun, Zimmerman - they all just stepped in and had "it". If "it" was an absolutely clueless approach, then Gordon would have "it" too. I'm sick of hearing about the pressure that's on him, too. Pressure is making $50K a year with a wife and kids to support and knowing that if you suck at your job you will lose it, not get paid, and face losing your car, your home, and your life in general if you don't find another job real quick. Pressure is not a guaranteed $4 mil signing bonus and a guaranteed major league contract.

Right now, Gordon is a liability in the lineup. Just pitiful. They should just send him down to AAA, but my guess is that he'll get DL'd with a phantom injury so he can save face and try to figure it out.

April 15, 2009 at 8:23 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Forget WHB.....new column, please!

April 15, 2009 at 9:22 AM

Blogger Antonio. said...

I'm not sure, but I'm thinking pressure isn't limited to money issues. Money changes things, including pressure. People that have none think that it will ease a lot of the pressure they feel. It doesn't. It changes the pressure. And I would consider the hopes of millions of people to be pressure. I would consider competitive drive pressure. I would consider being compared to a HoF player, the best player in the organization's 40 year history BAR NONE to be pressure.


And 50k? Are you kidding? That's a very good living and well above average in this country.

April 15, 2009 at 1:13 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Can we cut Farnsworthless already? Or at least get Trey Hillman a shock collar that goes off if he get Farnsworth up in the pen in a game closer than four runs either way? I'd rather see Doug Waechter on the hill in a tie game.

April 15, 2009 at 3:34 PM

Blogger SarahBFox said...

I want to officially submit a nick name for Mark Teahan. He shall now be known as Smalls. Because he's killing me.

April 15, 2009 at 3:50 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

SarahBFox, I approve of all nicknames which originate from Sandlot references.

April 16, 2009 at 12:17 PM

Anonymous Mike said...

I guess the news about Gordon's hip will shut up some of these anti-Gordonites.

Luckily, the Royals didn't trade Teahen, or they'd really be screwed.

April 17, 2009 at 9:37 AM

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