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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Night Of The Living Catchers: Angels 7, Yankees 6

So we may as well get the haw-haw-haw out of the way first, because the night's proximate hero has one of those walk-on/walk-off roles — literally — that good pennant races so often spawn, i.e. late-inning replacement Ryan Budde. Budde, for those not keeping score, is a well-below-Mendoza-line defensive replacement who sports a -50 OPS+, the lowest I can recall seeing on any post-2002 Angels team for any player, ever. Of course, he now sports a walkoff RBI double, and against the Yankees, too, and in front of the home crowd, no less. Bask in your moment of glory, kid.

Working backwards, Angels catchers had an unlikely influence on this game, seeing as how they drove in four of the team's seven runs, what with Jeff Mathis' bases-clearing double in the second. Phil Hughes uncharacteristically struggled some (he gave up five walks on the night after giving up only nine in five prior starts), so it might not have been a big surprise to see him get knocked around a bit. More, Mathis shone defensively, getting a not-even-close strike-'em-out, throw-'em-out double play in the fifth. I'm learning to like him more behind the plate, but I'll have to see him throw out some more runners before I really trust him fully.

The game overall was a tussle with no lead staying safe for long. The Yanks scratched out one off starter Dustin Moseley in the first, taking the early advantage. The Angels came right back in the third, loading the bases on Gary Matthews, Jr.'s one-out double followed by a pair of walks to Casey Kotchman and Howie Kendrick. Mathis doubled to left to send everyone home, but it had the feel of a temporary lead.

Sure enough, the Yanks piled one more on with an RBI groundout in the fourth, the last they got off Moseley, who didn't walk anybody the whole night — a huge accomplishment considering the legendary patience of this group of hitters.

Chris Bootcheck entered the game in the sixth and promptly gave up a two-run homer to A-Rod, but settled down to eventually retire the side in that inning and again in the seventh. While he's not exactly a guy you call in for critical eighth-inning situations, it's worth recalling that the homer broke a 15.1-inning scoreless streak. He's been quietly a lot better than Shields this month without having to face the same parts of the lineup Shields normally does, or is expected to. It may surprise you to learn that Bootcheck has inherited more runners (4) than Shields (1) in August — and allowed none of them to score, which is more than Shields can say.

The Angels then pulled their usual merry-go-round style offense on the Yanks in the seventh, getting three consecutive baserunners home on a pair of singles and a Vlad groundout. With Justin Speier, you'd think that lead would be safe, but, well, these are the Yankees, and before you could say "terrace level shot" the ball was in the right field bleachers.

Then the Angels hit into some bad luck in the eighth. With men on second and third following Howie Kendrick's sacrifice bunt, pinch-hitter Maicer Izturis hit a bouncer to first that resulted in Gary Matthews, Jr.'s dead duckdom at the plate, and eventually, extra innings.

Before leaving this game, it's worth noting that Howie Kendrick got on board three times and scored each time, including the game-winning run. Mike Scioscia got ejected for allegedly arguing balls and strikes in Reggie Willits' at-bat — remember him? — though it was more about a lame yeah-he-swung call from 3B umpire Dan Iassogna, whose head, as I recall, is full of bologna. And finally, woot for winning the season series against the Yanks. With a 9-5 M's victory against the Twins earlier in the day, the Angels needed that.

Update: As Bob Timmermann reports, Darren Oliver earned his first decision of the year with the Angels in this game by pitching a scoreless 10th. Oliver had an awful start of the season, but he's putting together an otherworldly second half, with a 1.04 ERA over a modest 17.1 IP, bringing his season ERA below 4.00 for the first time.

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Comments:
To be fair to our good Budde, this is a guy with a grand total of TWELVE major league plate appearances. It's a tad premature to bust out the OPS+ numbers, doncha think? Good grief.
 
And yet, his minor league numbers don't inspire a lot of confidence that he is, in fact, underperforming his level of ability here. He repeated AAA three times, and for the first time in his minor league career, had a batting average above .251, as a 28-year-old. It's perfectly reasonable to say he's not even likely to be a backup catcher in the bigs, although who knows... Jose Molina wasn't all that in the minors, either.
 
You miss my point. No one's predicting greatness for Budde. I'm objecting to metric abuse, not rookie abuse. Personally, in lambasting rookies based on small sample sizes, the greater sin is the misuse of the small sample, not the misuse of a sweet Okie hayseed with a big smile and small prospects.
 
I would think that point would be fairly obvious.
 
Not that any of this actually mean anything (but, then, neither does Ryan Budde's through 11 PA): 2005 saw Lou Merloni go -56 OPS in 7 PA, Chris Prieto go -100 in 3 and David Matranga go -100 in 1; and 2003 saw Julio Ramirez go -100 in 3. Technically, Ryan Budde's season isn't over and he is now at -14 in 12 PA, which puts him ahead of Nick Gorneault this year(-39 in 5), Edgardo Alfonzo in 2006(-32 in 52), and Curtis Pride in 2005 (-29 in 11). Oh, and for completeness sake: Clay Bellinger and Sal Fasano each were at -100 in 1 PA in 2002.
 

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