Master Index of Archived Threads
To pull (Johan) or not to pull
Frayed Knot Jul 23 2008 08:08 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 23 2008 08:21 AM |
... that is certainly the question of the day
|
AG/DC Jul 23 2008 08:14 AM |
Pat Burrell gets around on lefties. Period. It would have taken a lot of the equivalent of Burrell doubles to cough up that lead, and PB himself would have only come up once. On hundred and five pitches? Gotta send him back out there.
|
Benjamin Grimm Jul 23 2008 08:18 AM |
I would've sent him out there and would have kept him in at least as long as there was nobody on base.
|
metirish Jul 23 2008 08:21 AM |
Seaver would be upset but Seaver today would no doubt acknowledge that the game is different than when he starred.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 23 2008 08:22 AM |
I don't see the big deal in taking him out, especially considering he was due a turn at bat and we still needed runs to make up for the IDIOTIC BASERUNNING which really ought to be the topic of conversation today.
|
Mendoza Line Jul 23 2008 08:22 AM |
Nothing wrong with the move as far as I'm concerned. Maybe Santana could have pitched the ninth, but why push it? It wasn't unreasonable to expect the bullpen to get three outs before the Phils scored three runs, Wagner or no Wagner.
|
Frayed Knot Jul 23 2008 08:27 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 23 2008 08:34 AM |
That's kind of where I'm at too.
|
AG/DC Jul 23 2008 08:34 AM |
Yeah, but the issue isn't what's reasonable to expect. It's reasonable to expect any major league pitcher or borderline major league pitcher to keep his ERA under 27.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 23 2008 08:37 AM |
What's most reasonable, I think, is trying to score in the 8th inning. Where do you stand on the reasonableness of that?
|
Frayed Knot Jul 23 2008 08:37 AM |
Duaner as borderline major leaguer is a bit harsh.
|
AG/DC Jul 23 2008 08:43 AM |
|
Ouch. Certainly. But that's not what I'm being asked in this thread. I'm certainly not implying that Duaner is a borderline major leauger. I'm agreeing that it's reasonable to expect of Duaner, and of anybody.
|
batmagadanleadoff Jul 23 2008 08:55 AM |
The way I see it, when you lose a game where you had a three run lead going into the last inning, you blame the pitchers that pitched the 9th inning, if you have to blame any pitchers, at all. This pitching debacle was compounded by the fact that it was the bottom of the Phillie batting order that did the damage.
|
batmagadanleadoff Jul 23 2008 08:58 AM |
A couple of bad breaks for the Mets that were somewhat tolerated when they occurred because the game seemed to be safely in Mets hands at the time:
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 23 2008 09:06 AM |
If there's one thing to take away from this game it's to drive home what I've been saying all year -- Feliciano has been just awful this year. I know he got switched up on, but that's going to happen. At least with Duaner you know he's capable of better: Feliciano is getting his man less than 50% of the time, killing his teammate's ERAs.
|
Vince Coleman Firecracker Jul 23 2008 09:24 AM |
I pull him. I really thought he looked like he emptied the tank in the 8th, and I don't want to burn a pitcher for any single regular season game. There's a lot more seasons and dollars riding on Johan's arm, and I applaud Manuel's discipline in pulling a pitcher before you put too much stress on him, even if doing so would help in the short-term.
|
Vic Sage Jul 23 2008 10:17 AM |
the loss is on 9th inning performances of Sanchez, Feliciano and Reyes. Endy's failures were the fault of the 3b coach. Luis Aguayo.
|
smg58 Jul 23 2008 10:40 AM |
Santana has, in fact, turned in higher pitch counts in general this year than in the past. But 105 pitches is hardly excessive, and the closer was not available. Plus if Santana starts the inning and one or two guys get on, you can always go to the pen then, but if Sanchez starts the inning and struggles you can't bring Santana back in the game.
|
Gwreck Jul 23 2008 10:50 AM |
|
I was debating Santana's removal last night with others in my section. I argued that removing him was the correct idea, in part to essential tenets of the above comment. Also didn't see a need to push Santana into the 9th when he finished a shorter outing -- keeping him fresh and not tired, and all that.
|
Frayed Knot Jul 23 2008 03:25 PM |
Jerry on his regular weekly radio spot:
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 23 2008 03:27 PM |
|
Here's hoping that works out, but if it doesn't they're not afraid to act.
|
Centerfield Jul 24 2008 02:10 PM |
Anderson sucked for LA before catching fire for the Mets last year right?
|
Benjamin Grimm Jul 24 2008 02:12 PM |
Me too.
|
themetfairy Jul 24 2008 02:15 PM |
I don't miss Willie.
|
metirish Jul 24 2008 02:16 PM |
|
Bill Madden , Jonette Howard , Jon Harper and most of all Wayne Coffey.
|
holychicken Jul 24 2008 02:16 PM |
|
Nope. He makes me wish we would have fired Randolph even earlier . . . like 2:14am EST.
|
batmagadanleadoff Jul 24 2008 02:19 PM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 24 2008 02:44 PM |
I ______ Willie.
|
Frayed Knot Jul 24 2008 02:21 PM |
To be fair to Willie, he used to give that same 'I don't second guess my decisions' speech too.
|
Centerfield Jul 24 2008 02:22 PM |
To me, the biggest difference is that Willie always tried to portray himself as intelligent and confident in his abilities, while Manuel is intelligent and confident in his abilities.
|
Benjamin Grimm Jul 24 2008 02:24 PM |
You can be both unintelligent and confident.
|
Frayed Knot Jul 24 2008 02:41 PM |
See I don't think Willie was baseball dumb. Let's face it, the in-game strategy is virtually indistinguishable since the change and Jerry is getting passes on things that we (and others) would have screamed about before. I think a number of things are better but not so much the Xs & Os.
|
batmagadanleadoff Jul 24 2008 02:41 PM |
I obviously didn't like Willie, notwithstanding my post just above this one. In fact, I never detested a Mets manager as much as I did Randolph. Dallas Green was close, but those mid-90's team (so elegantly dressed) weren't going to contend even if Earl Weaver was in the dugout. Randolph wins this contest based on the level of talent he inherited.
|
sharpie Jul 24 2008 03:47 PM |
I liked Jeff Torborg a whole lot less than Willie. I didn't have much use for Art Howe either and while I liked him as a player I thought Bud Harrelson was a very bad manager. Willie is somewhere in the middle as far as Mets managers go in my opinion. That being said, I like Jerry Manuel a whole lot more.
|
AG/DC Jul 24 2008 07:19 PM |
I don't get it how this Willie-esque comment opens the door to contrast Manuel with Willie. The only difference is (1) Jerry's winning right now like Willie hadn't for a year and a half, and (2) Willie became less believable as time passed and he lost more.
|
batmagadanleadoff Jul 25 2008 02:37 PM |
|
Baseball Prospectus' Joe Sheehan weighs in on last Tuesday's Met game. (A worthy read)
|
AG/DC Jul 25 2008 02:46 PM |
I agree with him on every thing but that the two starts by Santana are the nadir. The nadir had been with Bud Black's recent treatment of Greg Maddux. I'd be insane if I was a Padre fan.
|
metsguyinmichigan Jul 25 2008 02:49 PM |
I like Manuel. Seem slike a straightforward guy, and without the Yankee taint.
|
Vince Coleman Firecracker Jul 25 2008 02:52 PM |
I was about to toss that article in this thread, beat me to it, Batmag.
|
AG/DC Jul 25 2008 03:05 PM |
I hear the "no reason to expect it to happen" argument, but it happend. Twice now in very similar circumstances, as the article reminds us. And it happened again and again last September. So they went out and got Johan Santana at great expense. He's on a roll, only about 100 pitches into his workday, won't pitch again for five days, and the game's pretty tight.
|
Frayed Knot Jul 25 2008 03:10 PM |
One of the things the 'stat-hounds' (not using the term derisively) harp on is how the save rule causes incorrect use when a team automatically uses their closer in 3-run 9th inning games since those games are 95+% wins no matter who you use - so it seems to me that a similar idea should apply here.
|
Benjamin Grimm Jul 25 2008 03:15 PM |
I'm with AG. There's an inherent risk every time you make a pitching change. You know what your current guy has got today, but you don't know what the next guy might have.
|
Rockin' Doc Jul 25 2008 03:59 PM |
I agree that players in general, and pitchers in particular, are babied now days. Complete games are virtually a thing of the past and relievers going more than three outs, other than in mop up duty, is increasingly more rare. It seems that all managers are using the same pampered chef recipes and no one is willing to break out and be different.
|
Benjamin Grimm Jul 25 2008 04:07 PM |
It just takes one manager who dares to be different, and then succeeds.
|
Rockin' Doc Jul 25 2008 05:52 PM |
I agree that pitch counts have their place, but I think most managers/pitching coaches have become too married to them. Pitch counts should not be the same for all pitchers in all circumstances. Some pitchers simply can handle a greater workload due to better conditioning and/or mechanics. Others need to be watched a little more closely. I believe the pitching coach should know his pitchers well enough to know what type of work load each pitcher is capable of best performing under safely.
|
AG/DC Jul 25 2008 07:28 PM |
It's not that they're married to pitch counts; it's that they're married to the number 100 as an indicator of fatigue.
|
Vince Coleman Firecracker Jul 26 2008 05:58 AM |
Dusty Baker is still around, if anyone wants a manager who refuses to be bound by pitch counts. Here's a recommendation from sure first-ballot hall-of-famer Mark Prior: "Dusty's great. Throwing all those pitches really helped me man up. I'm the pitcher I am now thanks only to Dusty and his maverick refusal to kowtow to the pitch count mob. Thanks, Dusty!"
|