Showing posts with label mike scioscia is insane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mike scioscia is insane. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

BBA AL Connie Mack 2014



Once again, it's Baseball Bloggers Alliance award season! It's a lot like the BBWAA award season with different names because they get litigious with their free time. The fine staff here at Off Base will guide you through our ballots over the next few days. First up, the Connie Mack or how I learned to stop worrying about former players managing and love them bombing.

It appears there are two key ways to win the Connie Mack (cough*manageroftheyear*cough). You can manage a team that is expected to be terrible and then accidentally win 92 games and make the playoffs. Or you can manage a team that does well despite key losses and also make the playoffs. It's a good year to be Buck Showalter if you want a trophy.

1. Buck Showalter
Few had the Orioles flat out winning the AL East, let alone running away with it. The O's lost debatably talented Matt Weiters at catcher, stud youngster Manny Machado at third to injuries and Chris Davis to a suspension even though he had regressed all the way back to his Arlington days. Showalter led the team to a 96-66 record, good for second in the American League, and tied for second in baseball. I feel like it was done with a lot of smoke and mirrors as the Orioles starting staff had the 28th best FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching) in MLB and the bullpen ranked 15th in FIP. Still, Zach Britton emerged as a lockdown closer. Nelson Cruz blasted 40 homers, Adam Jones did his thing and Steve Pearce was resurrected from the dead.

How much credit does Showalter deserve? Probably not much. But it was incredibly difficult trying to find a pic of him not pointing at something.

2. Terry Francona
It's not that I don't respect or care about these awards. But Manager of the Year is so hard to determine, I might have voted for Francona when he worked for ESPN one year. For example, when does a manager deserve credit for a player turning a corner? I don't know. But Corey Kluber led baseball pitchers in fWAR (Fangraphs wins above replacement) and Michael Brantley finished third in fWAR behind Mike Trout and Andrew McCutchen.

3. Mike Scioscia
Leading the Angels to the best record in baseball is reason enough to make the AL ballot. But there's a little more to it in my eyes this year. The Angels scored the most runs in baseball. Scioscia actually managed the team he was given instead of forcing his small ball approach on a Jerry Dipoto built roster. It's an old dog learning new tricks scenario that must have made his skin crawl. And for that, he gets a third place vote from me. That said, Dipoto had to trade Ernesto Frieri away from the skipper to keep Frieri from serving up enough meatballs to cure world hunger.

LVM. Ron Washington
Washington resigned on Sept 5 citing personal reasons and later declared he was embarrassed after not being true to his wife of 42 years. Those are certainly his issues to deal with and I don't care to speculate any further. Finishing below the Astros in the AL West is plenty embarrassing enough.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Curveballs for Jobu 5/17/11

Curveballs for Jobu is Offbasepercentage's daily trip around the ballparks.

Today's honorary bat boy is Frank Menechino.

















A's 5, Angels 4 (10).
It was another challenging night for the Angels bullpen as Jordan Walden blew a save and Fernando Rodney made me cry a little. Any rational baseball fan knows the only business Rodney has near the pitchers mound is replacing a rosin bag or etching the Angels logo on the back of it. But Mike Scioscia just keeps running him out there and losing games because of it. Rodney walked two and threw a wild pitch before allowing the Mark Ellis game winning hit. I threw some plastic lawn furniture.

Rangers 4, White Sox 0.
Colby Lewis tossed his first career shutout on 5 hits and 7 strikeouts. It was't that surprising considering how terrible most of the Sox lineup is at hitting baseballs. The Rangers moved back into first in the West and I don't recognize any of the people they have wondering their outfield nowadays.

Indians 19, Royals 1.
How bad was your day yesterday? Yeah? Well Vin Mazzaro's was worse. In the course of recording 7 outs, Mazzaro gave up 14 runs on 10 hits and 3 walks. After the game, he was demoted. So yeah, the deli messed up your lunch? Suck it up jerk.

Cardinals 3, Phillies 1.
Tony La Russa returned to the dugout after battling shingles and plugged Albert Pujols in at third base for the first time in nine years. Why not, I say. While your at it, if you could get Colby Rasmus some time at second base, that would be great. The middle infield of my fantasy team is a train wreck. Pujols went 0-4 but the Cards still managed to defeat Cliff Lee. Lee, uncharacteristically, walked 6 and gave up 6 hits while allowing all 3 earned runs.

Marlins 2, Mets 1 (11).
Josh Johnson had a short outing lasting only 5 innings after being hit by a Carlos Beltran liner. Hanley Ramirez went 0-6 and the game winning hit was delivered by Marlins reliever Burke Badenhop. It was a weird game. But the biggest news broke before the first pitch. An MRI revealed David Wright has a stress fracture in his lower back, crippling the Mets chances for 2011. That would have been funnier if the Mets had any chance at 2011 before the season started.

Brewers 2, Dodgers 1.
Shaun Marcum is quietly having a great season for the Brewers. Overshadowed by the Zack Grienke trade, Marcum improved to 2.54/2.63/3.25 (ERA/FIP/xFIP) after his 7 inning, 5 hit, 1 earned run performance on Monday.

Other games, but down here...
Rays 6, Yankees 5.
Blue Jays 4, Tigers 2. Jose Bautista homers 0
Red Sox 8, Orioles 7.
Mariners 5, Twins 2.
Nationals 4, Pirates 2.
Braves 3, Astros 2.
Reds 7, Cubs 4.
Rockies 7, Giants 4.
Padres 8, Diamondbacks 4.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Curveballs for Jobu 5/15/11

Curveballs for Jobu is Offbasepercentage's daily trip around the ballparks.

Today's honorary bat boy is Noberto Martin.





















Angels 3, Rangers 2.
Albert Einstein defined insanity as doing something over and over again and expecting different results. Mike Scioscia keeps sending Fernando Rodney to the mound expecting him to get outs. Draw your own conclusion. Rodney allowed a hit to the lone base hitter he faced which scored the tying run blowing a win for Dan Haren. Maicer Izturis bailed the Angels out in the 9th driving in the go ahead run. Scioscia also continues to start Jeff Mathis but he did go 2-4 raising his 2011 slash line to .203/.221/.297.

Blue Jays 9, Twins 3 (11).
Jose Bautista hit a 2-run home run in the 11th to spark the 6 run inning. The homer was Baustista's 13th of the season and he's raking a .358/.517/.798 line so far. He's the best hitter in baseball right now and it ain't close. In other news, the Twins are awful this year.

Red Sox 6, Yankees 0.
Josh Beckett continued his nice season by shutting down the Yankees for 6 innings and striking out 9. CC Sabathia, on the other hand, gave up 6 earned over 6.2 innings. Then Jorge Posada said something. Or he didn't. I don't really know what happened but everybody on Twitter seemed enthralled by it.

Marlins 1, Nationals 0.
Livan Hernandez, who apparently will pitch forever, gave up just one solo home run to Mike Stanton over 7 innings and took the loss. Alex Cora went 0-3.

Reds 7, Cardinals 3.
The Reds moved into first place in the Central thanks to a strong outing by Johnny Cueto and a pair of Ramon Hernandez homers. Cueto allowed 3 hits, 3 runs (0 earned) over 7.2 innings, struck out 5, made a tremendous behind the back catch and incited zero brawls.

Diamondbacks 1, Dodgers 0.
Chad Billingsly allowed 1 hit and struck 8 over 8 innings and took the loss. That's gotta be a bummer.

Other games, but down here...
Mariners, Indians PPD. But the Indians still won somehow.
A's 6, White Sox 2.
Tigers 3, Royals 0.
Orioles 6, Rays 0.
Braves 5, Phillies 3.
Padres 9, Rockies 7.
Astros 7, Mets 3.
Brewers 8, Pirates 2.
Giants 3, Cubs 0.