Results tagged ‘ Bartolo Colon ’

Disappointing Homestand

I’ve been at a loss of words for the past week thanks to the performance of the Chicago White Sox.  They started their homestand in grand fashion, but they proceeded to lose the next three games to the Oakland A’s.  While it was a head scratcher, we still had to focus for the Indians were coming into town.  With division games, you simply have to win as much as you can, and the White Sox failed to do that.  There are three phases to baseball: pitching, offense, and defense.  The White Sox lacked most of those phases in their series with the A’s, Indians, and Tigers.  While the pitching was better in the Tigers series, it wasn’t good enough to overcome the errors of the defense or the lack of offense.

While the Sox walked away from the Tigers series losing three out of the five games.  They had opportunities to win every game.  I always believed that good teams overcome errors or bad calls from the umpire, and the Sox aren’t a good time currently.  They cannot align all three phases into a game, and they are suffering because of it.

Offensively, situational hitting is killing the Sox.  The last team the Sox had in which they could execute effectively was 2006.  Alexei isn’t a batter that should be in the second spot.  He started out well because he was seeing a lot of fastballs, but when pitchers started going offspeed and outside the strikezone, Alexei was doing all the work to get him out.  Last year, Alexei was one of the best, or the best clutch, hitter the Sox have seen since Crede, but Alexei has only shone lukewarm highlights of his breakout rookie year last year.  Ozzie benched him for a few games at the beginning of the season for Jayson Nix, and it helped awhile with him sitting back on the breaking ball, but it hasn’t improved his clutch hitting or situational hitting in key moments.  His sacrifice bunting skills are pretty terrible, and he is prone to popping out instead of moving the runner.

I knew that Gordon Beckham would be making his debut in a Sox uniform, but I expected that to happen after the All-Star break.  With the departure of Wilson Betemit, I thought that would give more playing time for Jayson Nix.  Ozzie and Kenny thought that Beckham was ready, and they called him up leaving Fields’ status with the team in jeporady.  They weren’t going to call up Beckham to sit on the bench, so I assume that Kenny would be using Fields as trade bait.  Unfortunately, Fields doesn’t have a lot of value because he is prone to striking out a lot and he doesn’t have a strong glove and gives up big errors in key situations of a game.  The callup of Beckham hasn’t been as hopeful as some might have thought.  Beckham might be an answer to part of the problem, but he isn’t the answer to all of their problems.  Looking at Beckham’s approach to the plate, it seems that he just hacks at the first pitch.  There was one game in which he saw a total of three pitches in the game.  Beckham needs to calm down at the plate and work the count a little.  While there were some pitches that he drived well, start with the little things like singles before swinging for the fences.  The Sox have enough thumpers in the lineup.

There are many more issues with the offense, but I want to get to pitching.  Starting pitching has been blah.  Either we have great starting pitching or it’s been medicore at best.  In games in which you think you have a shot at winning, you watch the starters begin to fade and the bullpen is rushed onto the field to make matters worse.  I do not think Ozzie has been managing his starting pitching every well this last homestand.  He left Buehrle too long in the Tiger series, and it cost him a win.  I understand the desire to save your bullpen, but being down in the standings as you are, you have to treat each game as if it is the final game of the World Series.  I hate to see what would have happened if the Sox lost the last game of the Tiger’s series after Bobby gave up the two run homer to Granderson in the top of the ninth.  The team looked flat as it was, and losing that game would most likely have been a death sentence. 

Linebrink and Dotel have struggled during the homestand.  Giving up big runs when they are called upon to hold games.  Carrasco has been one of the bright shining lights in the bullpen this year, but you are going to get to a point in which you go to the well a little too much.  I think the woes of the offense and the defense has effected the pitching.  Pitchers aren’t confident in overcoming errors or lack of offense.  Danks pitched a whale of a ballgame, but he walked away the empty in his effort.  Gavin Floyd was spectacular in his outing only to see a no decision because Jenks gave up a big two run homer.  The only starting pitcher that notched a win in the Tiger’s series was Contreras – who looked amazing in his first start since being sent down to the minors.  If Contreras can duplicate his outing, we would be in decent shape because we can bench Colon – he is on DL currently.  Colon has been a huge disappointment.  One outing he is amazing, and the second outing he looks terrible.  While you can have a little patience with Floyd and Danks, you expect more from your veterans.  What has been killing the bullpen has been walks.  Starters and Relief alike have been prone to walking alot of batters in a game – especially the leadoff hitter.  Holding runners at first has been a challenge, and it has plagued the pitching staff for the last few years.

Last phase is defense, and the Sox haven’t been a strong defensive team this year.  Those big errors have cost a lot of games for the White Sox this season.  Because of his lack of defense and production at the plate, Wilson Betemit was DFA, and you have a feeling that Fields isn’t that far behind.  Because of the injury to Konerko with his thumb, Fields has been playing a few games at first base.  Still, Fields defense hasn’t been spectacular even though he worked with Joey Cora in the offseason.  Along with his subpar defense, his hitting hasn’t been any better.  He has a high strikeout ratio, and isn’t prone to hitting in clutch.  Then again, you could say that about a lot of the Sox players.  Another player with error issues has been Alexei.  You would think with his talent, he would be more sure handed, but it hasn’t been the case for the young shortstop this season.  Giving extra outs to any team is a recipe for disaster.  Pitching hasn’t been strong enough to simply overcome those errors this year.

I do not see the Sox going far this season unless they can turn around their pitching, hitting, and defense.  With the way that the Tigers are playing, we are going to be hard pressed to make any ground whatsoever.  We had a good opportunity to make a dent in the standings, but we let three games slip through our fingers.  I see the Sox as sellers soon if they have a bad road trip with interleague play.  Most likely you will see JD, Fields, possibly Contreras if he pitches well, Buehrle – his contract value goes up if he is traded I recall, Thome is another possibility – some teams are looking for bats.  While it might be a little early to sound negative, but the Sox really hasn’t shown us something to really cheer about this last homestand – especially against teams in our own division.  I hope they turn it around because I hate to see them lose the way they have been.  You will lose games.  It’s the nature of the schedule, but to lose the games as they have been… it’s simply an embarassment to the fans, to the organization, and to themselves as ballplayers.

Offensive Mistakes, Error Sinks Win Streak for the Pale Hose

We saw the best of the Sox on Monday, and the worst of the Sox on Tuesday.  You had a sense that the game wasn’t in the Sox favor when Alexei Ramirez couldn’t get Scott Podsednik to third, Podsednik getting picked off at second on what appeared to be a steal attempt of third base.  Lets think about that for a moment.  With JD at bat, there is NO reason whatsoever to even try to attempt to steal third – if that was what Podsednik was trying to do.  JD has been one of the hottest Sox hitters these last few weeks, so why on earth would you do something as boneheaded as getting picked off at second.  The kicker?  JD smacked a single that could have scored Podsednik if he was still at second base.

It was a game of missed opportunities.  A game of bad defense, bad pitching, and bad clutch hitting.  Paulie had a good hitter’s count, and he pops up.  I lost count how many times Sox hitters have been overly aggressive at swinging.  Ramirez is notorious for aggressive swinging especially balls out of the strike zone.  As much as it puzzled the annoucers, Kennedy bunted OC to third eventhough he has been the A’s hottest hitter.  He knew that his team has been struggling, and he wanted to make sure there was a runner at third with less than two outs.  Cust earns a sac fly, and the A’s were up 1-0.  The Sox almost had a carbon copy inning except they didn’t score.  Alexei couldn’t execute the bunt, and he popped out, failing to move Podsednik to third.  Execution has been a problem for the Sox all season, but they have been better during the last two weeks.  Why is Wise playing center?  I understand he was the starter before he went on the DL, but BA has been playing better as well as hitting better than Wise has been.  Wise has been terrible at the plate, and I only recall one hit that actually made it to the outfield since he has been back.  He either had soft grounders to the pitcher or strikes out.  While his defense looks good, his offense has more to be desired.  Make BA the starter and stick to it, Ozzie.

While the offense was giving you heartburn, the defense was giving you a stroke.  How many times will Ozzie put Betemit at third base?  It seems that everytime he is at the hot corner, he makes a error that changes the game.  His bat hasn’t been great, and his glove is worse than Fields.  I rather have Fields strikeout three times a game than to give up big errors.  Granted, Fields glove isn’t great, but it’s better than what Betemit has to offer.  I think we are going to see a bigger push for Beckham if Betemit/Fields continues to struggle as they have been.  Yes, Fields has been better, but Monday night we saw the bad Fields striking out three times and look completely lost at the plate. 

Colon doesn’t have the ability to pitch over mistakes.  We saw that in the whitewash the Twins gave the Pale Hose a few weeks back, and last night was no different after Betemit’s error.  Colon flip-flops wins, and last night was his turn to lose, and lose he did.  He was pitching well keeping the game close until the error, and then, as if punishing the team, lost all control walking batters and serving a room service fastball to Holliday for a bases clearing double which effectively knocking the Sox out of the game.

After the mistakes, you could see/feel the energy drain from the players.  They weren’t crisp, and it looked like pressure was getting to them to make plays offensively.  They say that you are only as good as your next pitcher, and the White Sox have Richard, who has been lights out, on the mound tonight.  Hopefully last night was a fluke, and the White Sox can rebound and play a solid game.  It’s another step in Richard’s evolution as a starting pitcher in the rotation, and if he has another quality start, he has my vote.

Nix, Colon Team Up on the Halos

It was Nix’s first multi-home run game, and those runs gave the White Sox just enough to win tonight in Anaheim.  The White Sox scored first on the solo shot from Jayson Nix in the fifth, and he followed up with his second solo shot later in the seventh.  Both home runs were off of Angels Starter Saunders.  Not only did Nix help the Sox with his lumber, he dusted off the leather and had a slick stop up the middle to rob a hit.  It was a night I am sure Nix will never forget.  Also, Nix has a brother that plays for the Reds who also homered, so the brothers make history with their feat.

When Colon pitches, he is Jekyll and Hyde.  You don’t know who will show up, but tonight Colon showed up with his A game, and he pitched a whale of a ballgame.  Going six and two-thirds, Colon managed to give up a solo shot to Bobby Abreu as the only run he surrendered.  He got out of some jams with some slick defense from Nix and Ramirez as well as an outfield assist from Scott Podsednik who nailed Hunter trying to tag to third.

Alexei continues to see the ball well in which he coaxed three walks.  I am amazed at the feat myself, but Alexei continues to do well in the second spot.  JD had a solid night along with Konerko and Fields.

Thornton pitched a solid one and a third innings, and Linebrink managed the save though he surrendered a solo home run to Hunter in the bottom of the ninth.

While Fields has been hitting the ball better in the last few games, some of his decisions haven’t been that great.  He missed a tag in Monday’s game when Hunter stole third.  In tonight’s game, he was at third base and didn’t score on a ground ball opportunity from Miller’s bat.  Later in the game, he couldn’t catch up to the fast ball with the bases loaded.  Hitting is great, but it is the clutch hits and defensive plays that everyone remembers.  Fields needs to step it up, or he might find himself back in Triple-A or on the trading block.

It was a game that had you on the edge of your seat, and it was good that the bullpen held the lead for Colon’s third win of the season.  The White Sox look for the sweep tomorrow at the Big A.  Lets see if the curse is still alive when Floyd goes to the mound as he faces off the Sox Killer, Jered Weaver.

Greinke Shuts Down the Sox’s Struggling Offense

In a game with a small margin for error, the Sox sent Colon to the mound.  Already victims of losing two in a row, the Sox would need to crack Greinke and get a lead early.  Unfortunately, Greinke and the Royals had their own plan.  Colon was workman-like going 5 1/3 innings surrendering three runs, two earned, but the dormant offense continued it’s woes and couldn’t support Colon’s effort.

Where baserunners was a premium, the Sox failed to find that clutch hit with runners in scoring position.  Their greatest chance was in the 7th when the Sox put two on with no outs.  Podsednik strolls to the plate and hits into a double play – effectively killing the momentum and the possible rally.  Losing Dye for the last few days has really hurt the Sox.

It’s fustrating to see your team struggle offensively this much for the last few years.  Having speed in your lineup is great, but if you do not get on base, speed is nothing.  Same goes for your sluggers if they cannot manage the clutch hit.  PK has been stalwart on the offense with runners in scoring position, but you can notice that he has been trying a little too much these last few games.  Carlos’ struggles isn’t helping either.  Ramirez looked like he was swinging the bat better.  He had some hits right at defensemen, so I think he is getting better fixing his timing and swing.  I look for him to errupt soon.

Sox Need Colon to Look like an Ace

The White Sox travel to Kanas City to play a two game set.  Colon takes the mound Monday night versus Zack Greinke, and Colon needs to have a strong outing and right the ship for the struggling offense and starters.

Jayson Nix is playing third for Fields.  Fields sustained an injury to the hand against the Rangers where he was hit by a pitch.  He stayed in the game, but he went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts.

JD is out for the second consecutive game after he was hit by a pitch Saturday night against the Rangers.  Podsednik is playing right field, and Lillibridge gets the nod again to start in center.  After his impressive debut, Podsednik hasn’t done too much with the bat or get on base.  Lillibridge managed to raise his average to a 174 clip.

Sox Split Doubleheader Versus M’s

All eyes were on the matchup with Danks vs King Felix, but Colon had something to say about that.  This outing looked more like his first than his last.  He regained his command, and he was able to tip-toe out of danger.  He struck out six over seven innings of work.  He gave up one unearned run.  Sox Defense needs some work.  They committed two errors in the game that could have proved costly.  In the end, the Pale Hose prevailed winning 2-1.

While the Sox won game #1, game #2 was a different story.  Danks, being one of the hottest pitchers in the MLB at the beginning of the season, didn’t look comfortable on the mound.  He got into trouble early and couldn’t settle himself.  It was an outing that every pitcher comes across once in a while.  Being matched against King Felix is a tall task even if you give up one run, but Danks gave up a three run homer to Yuniesky Betancourt made it harder for the Sox to tally some hits.  They didn’t hit well in game #1, and that trickled into game #2.

I think a lot of people were looking towards game #2, and they might have felt robbed at the opportunity of two pitcher’s duels in a day.  That’s baseball though.  You never know when you will see something new with the game, and that is one of the beautiful things about baseball.

I am not worried about Danks, and if Colon can continue to pitch well, the Sox should do well.  What concerns me the most about the Pitching Rotation is Contreras.  He might need to come out of the bullpen and give Richard another chance.  Contreras is going to pitch in the Rangers series, so it is going to be an interesting game.  If he cannot find his command, it’s going to be a short game for him, and a long game for the fans.

Colon Struggles, Sox Start Homestand with Loss

I guess Colon was channeling his inner Contreras because he looked downright horrible.  He had no command at the plate, and he was yanked early in the game.  The Sox couldn’t recover, and a bad night got worse.

Alexei’s defense was non-existant, and he had some key errors that really opened the game for the Blue Jays.  The bullpen wasn’t any better.  Egbert was a wash, and he was optioned back to Triple-A after his sub-par outing.

The Sox had some scoring opportunities, but they couldn’t get that clutch hit.  It was game I am sure no one will forget.  Everything that could go wrong did.

Bullpen Cannot Hold Lead, Sox Lose

Colon left the 6th with a 5-2 lead.  Once the frame was over, the Rays took the lead 6-5.  Matt Thornton gave up a grand slam to put the Rays on top, and the White Sox couldn’t capitalize on opportunities again.

The Sox took an early 2-0 lead, but the Rays came back and cut the lead in half.  The Sox took a 5-2 lead going into the bottom of the 6th, but a win wasn’t in the cards for the Pale Hose.

It was an unfortunate loss.  When Thornton loses his command like that, it is usually a sign that his arm was overworked.  Linebrink was up to pitch, but he promptly sat down and MacDougal took his place.  He walked one and was pulled for Clayton Richard.

Hopefully the Sox can bounce back tomorrow for the win.  Buerhle is on the mound. 

Colon Outstanding, White Sox Bats Thump Twins

122924_Twins_White_Sox_Baseball.jpgAfter the disappointing loss Friday night, the White Sox responded with masterful pitching, plate discipline, and timely hitting.  Bartolo Colon looked great in his 6 innings of work with 2 walks and 2 strike outs.  He limited the Twins to 3 hits.  Colon was in his Cy Young form that baseball hasn’t seen in a few years.

The bullpen came in and completed the shutout.  Dotel struggled a little with two walks, but Matt Thornton got them out of the inning.  MacDougal pitched 2 innings with 2 walks, 1 strike out, and gave up a hit.  He wasn’t great, but he pitched well enough to get out of some tight situations.

The hero of the game is plate discipline.  Sox batters coaxed 2 walks with the bases loaded against Liriano.  Liriano exited the game in the 4th while giving up 5 runs.  He struggled the second time through the Sox lineup, and I can see why he is 0-2 with a high ERA.

Alexei managed his first two hits of the season and 2 RBIs.  Anderson managed his first hit of the season as well.  CQ continued to see the ball well and hit a solo home run in the 7th that started a three-run rally.

Wise looked better at the plate, and Corky Miller had a superb game on both sides of the plate.  He had two hits, two RBIs.  Still waiting for AJ to get hot.  Lillibridge looked decent in the leadoff role – two walks, sacrifice bunt. 

The White Sox were 5 of 12 with runners in scoring position.

It was a game the Sox really needed to break their three game losing streak.

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