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Saturday, June 18, 2005

Pickoff Moves

White Sox 6, Dodgers 0

The official recap makes it sound like Houlton had a bad game, but four earned runs in 6.0 IP for a rookie starter doesn't strike me as all that catastrophic, especially coming against the likes of the Chisox. If you're gonna bitch about something, bitch about the offense. And no, I'm not intentionally ignoring the Dodgers, but it does make it easier to bear when I'm at an Angels game. But, c'mon, this injury-wracked team is really no match for the Chisox right now, and expecting otherwise is ridiculous.

Recap

Pin The Blame On The Bulldog?

David Pinto passes on a Dallas Morning News story about how the Nats may have found themselves a nice pitcher in Ryan Drese: he was tipping his sinker by throwing it sidearm, allowing batters to get a better read on it. Nationals pitching coach Randy St. Clair broke him of that, and his recent shutout of the Angels resulted. Pinto recommends that if "Drese continues to perform well in Washington, the Rangers should re-evaluate Orel's performance as coach." I'm not so sanguine; the club's pitching has turned around over the last year and a half, the time Bulldog has run the pitching show. You can't win 'em all.

Roster Moves


Comments:
"the club's pitching has turned around over the last year and a half..."

But how much of that is the fact that it had nowhere to go but up? The law of averages - the ‘Gers would find a few arms eventually.
 
Okay, Richard -- what about the Reds, then?
 
Well, the "law of front office incompetence" trumps all...
 
Richard: from Baseball Prospectus:

Not only was 2004 a breakout year for the Rangers in terms of ERA and the rank of the staff ERA vs. the rest of the AL, but it was also a record year for the team in terms of the number of starters they ran through. Because of injuries and ineffectiveness the Rangers were forced to rely on 17 (!!) starters to get through 162 games. This was just one year removed from the 2003 season in which they had to use 16 starters, and had only one player qualify for the ERA title. The Rangers have had trouble finding effective starters, but they'd had a harder time getting anyone to stay healthy and throw a decent game every fifth day.

In 2004 they found in Ryan Drese someone who pitched quite well and was also able to take his turn every time it came around (33 games started in 2004). In that context it is completely defensible for General Manager John Hart, and his lieutenant AGM Jon Daniels, to ignore the long history of ineffectiveness and sign Drese up for a moderate two-year deal.

For what it's worth, this year the Rangers have used just six starters, and that sixth was needed only after Drese was dismissed. It's too early to pop the champagne, but the Rangers are on pace to have their most consistent starting staff in years.


I find it unlikely Hirscheiser has nothing to do with that.
 

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