Results tagged ‘ Octavio Dotel ’

Another Error Spells Doom for the Sox

Heading into the bottom of the sixth, the White Sox had a 2-0 lead, but that was soon erased when Richard mishandled a grounder and overthrew first base.  A call of the bullpen was made, Richard was well over a hundred pitches, and Dotel was asked to get out of the inning.  I haven’t been impressed with Dotel as of late and after his outing tonight, my stock in him has dropped even further.  He has constantly been behind in counts, and because of that, he has been hit hard in his last few appearances.  He gave up three huge runs, and the Sox weren’t able to recover.  The Sox lack the offensive power to come back from a huge deficit.  Being down a run these days is a monumental hill to climb, and tonight was no different.   After Dotel’s exit, Carrasco came to the mound, and his outing wasn’t any better giving up four runs which really put the game out of reach.  The Sox didn’t have Konerko or Thome in the lineup, and we do not expect to have CQ back until after the All-Star break.

In this case, I cannot blame Ozzie for bring Richard back out since he was on a short leash.  BUT, having Dotel in that situation where he has been struggling with his control is puzzling.  I rather have Thornton out or even Carrasco.  Granted, I would most likely be bitching about Ozzie bringing out Carrasco with the way he pitched tonight. 

The offense went on cruise control after they scored their two runs.  They had some opportunities for more, but there was some nice defensive players and baserunning blunders that cost the Sox.  Pods was on base three times, and two of those times he was either picked off at first or caught stealing when he overslid the bag.  It’s the little things that is killing this team, and the players really need to have a long look at themselves and work at fixing what is wrong.

This isn’t the way to start a series in which you have a bullpen meltdown.  The only positive I saw was Poreda.  Contreras heads to the bump tomorrow, so I hope we see a better all-around game.  It’s unfortunate that Richard didn’t win because he worked his behind off tonight and SHOULD have won if the bullpen didn’t forget how to pitch.

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.

Sox Break Curse, Swept Past Greinke and the Royals

It has been a great week for White Sox baseball.  Heading into Friday, the White Sox were 2-1 on their six game road trip.  Angel’s pitcher Weaver was just too much for the Sox, and they failed to sweep on Wednesday.  With an important series starting on Friday, the White Sox needed to make up some ground on the Royals, Twins, and Tigers. 

The Pale Hose sent out Clayton Richard to the mound on Friday, and the young southpaw dominated the Royals lineup.  Not only did Richard pitch well, all the Sox hitters managed a hit and scored a run in the 11-2 shellacking.  It was Richard’s fourth start of the season, and it was his second win.  If Richard continues to pitch as well as he has in his last few starts, Ozzie is going to have a difficult decision with Contreras and Colon.  Currently Contreras is pitching in Triple-A trying to regain his lost command.  As for Colon, he has been hit or miss this season.  He is usually good one game and bad the next.  Hopefully he can break this pattern when he pitches against the A’s this week.

The 1-2 combination of Scott Podsednik and Alexei Ramirez are getting it done.  While the tandum isn’t as strong as it was with Podsednik and Iguchi, Ramirez has been working the field more and stopped trying to pull the ball.  He has been more discipline at the plate, and his average has gradually climbing.  Pods has been an excellent catalyst for the White Sox setting up the 3-4-5 hitters perfectly.  He is a much needed sparkplug for the offense, and he is one of the MVPs of the offense along with Dye and Konerko.

Saturday we saw Buehrle looking for win number seven, and he came close but he gave up a solo home run to walk away with a no decision.  The White Sox rallied past the Royals in the ninth to give them their forth win on their current road trip and in line for the sweep on Sunday.  With a 2-2 tie going into the eighth inning, the White Sox put runners at first and second with consecutive bunt singles by Podsednik and Ramirez.  JD managed a walk, and the White Sox took the lead on Thome’s RBI ground out.  Tied 3-3 in the ninth, Getz hit a one-out single, Fields walked, and Podsednik smacked a RBI single to give the Pale Hose the lead again.  Alexei got the Sox an insurance run, and Bobby Jenks nailed down his eleventh save of the season.  The White Sox offense managed to score three runs off the Royals bullpen to get them their second win in the three game set.

Sweeps haven’t been kind to the White Sox this season, and they looked to complete their third attempt of a series sweep in the last two weeks.  To complete this feat, the Pale Hose needed to get a win over Zack Greinke who has been magnificant this season.  At first glance, one might think that the Sox were doomed, but that was before Greinke had to pitch to Podsednik.  The speedy left-hander started the game with a triple and scored on a single to left from Thome who beat the shift.  The Sox lead 1-0, but the lead was a short.  The Royals managed to plate three runs off of Danks in the second.  I am sure there was a lot of collective sighs as Danks didn’t have his best stuff, but he battled and kept the Sox in the game going five and a third innings giving up four runs on nine hits, two walks, and five strikeouts. 

Dotel entered the sixth inning to get the Sox out of a pickle.  The righty has been lights out this season, and he continued to dominate Sunday giving up no runs in an inning of relief.  The Sox scored four runs, three earned off of Greinke in which he hasn’t surrendered more than two runs this season.  Thorton’s outing was superb going almost two innings in relief that lead to the Sox plating a three spot in the top of the ninth.  AJ started the inning with a single.  BA came in as a PH for Wise and coaxed a walk.  Fields walked which lead to Getz’s heroic GW single to right.  The ball sailed over the head of Guillen that plated both AJ and BA.  BA blew through the stop sign that Cox gave, but BA managed a beautiful slide that just beat the tag to put the Sox up by two.  Podsednik got an insurance run, and the Sox cruised to a 7-4 win. Jenks collected the save, and Thornton was awarded the win.  The Sox completed the sweep over insurmountable odds of beating Greinke and completing the sweep.

The curse is broken, and the Sox walk into their next homestand with a 5-1 road trip.  The Sox will see the A’s(4), Indians(3), and the Tigers(5).  It will be a long homestand, and the Sox play a double hitter with the Tigers to make up a previous rained out game.  It’s another important series with the Indians and the Tigers.  Both teams are playing well, and the Sox have the opportunity to gain some ground on the Tigers.  With the win on Saturday, the White Sox managed to slip into second plate in the AL Central.

Josh Fields has been playing much better on this last road trip.  He must have sensed his job might be in jeopardy because he has been delivering some clutch at-bats and showed better plate discipline.  

Jenks Spoils Sox Chance to Sweep

It was a game the Sox were cruising until they hit a speed bump in the bottom of the ninth.  The White Sox defense was the savior for Buehrle who gave up ten plus hits over six innings.  It was a game that you could sense that the Pirates were one hit away from breaking the game open, and they got that chance in the bottom of the ninth off of Bobby Jenks.

The Pirates got within one when Dotel served up a home run in the eighth, but the Sox still had the lead which meant Bobby in the ninth.  He was able to get the first two outs, but Jenks was having issues locating his fastball.  Wilson tied the game with a solo shot, Morgan doubled, and Young snuck a grounder past a diving Fields for the Pirates to take the lead.

It was a disappointing loss because of how Buehrle battled and the defense was working 150%.  For the bullpen to give up three runs as such they did during a weekend in which the pitching staff was on fire, you just need to scratch your head and give it up to fate - or as I like to call the curse.  The curse of the sweep.  Sox cannot finish off sweeps.  Either they struggle throughout the game, a key error, lackluster hitting, or bullpen woes cost Sox opportunities to complete the sweep.  The curse is alive.  It knows it will bite you at the most dramatic moment.  In the case of last nights game, Wilson’s home run and the RBI single to take the lead.

You know closers will blow saves, and it happened to one of the best in the game when Papalbon surrendered a home run.  It’s a tough game to lose, but the Sox had a successful homestand.  They were 4-2, and the pitching was solid minus Thursday’s game and the bullpen blowing the lead last night.

Brian Anderson had a great game.  He smacked his first home run of the season, and he just missed his second one. 

Alexei’s defense was the best I’ve seen it this season.  He made some key plays that kept the Sox in the game.

Carlos managed a double which lead to BA’s home run.  Other than the lone hit by CQ, he is still struggling at the plate.

The Sox need to say focus for they head to LA to play the Angels in which its always a tough series for them.

Thome, Miller Squeek by the Slumping Tribe

It hasn’t been a good few weeks for the Pale Hose, but the Sox got on the board early in an important AL Central matchup with the Tribe.  Thome smacked the first of two home runs in the first inning to give the Sox a 2-0 lead, but that lead would dwendle over the next few innings.

Richard got the nod to start when Contreras was optioned to Triple A.  Contreras struggled mightly in his first five starts, and the Sox management thought it was time to make a change for the right hander.  The Sox starters haven’t been that impressive in their last ten starts.  The only starter that was consistent was Buehrle.  Danks and Floyd, two of the Sox young hurlers, didn’t have exception starts in their last few outings.  Danks did get a no decision in his last outing where he only yielded a run.

It’s hard to win games when your starter cannot go at least six innings.  You end up putting a lot of pressure on your bullpen as well as giving them an excess workload.  And to compound problems, the Sox hitters haven’t been all sharp.  In the game Monday, the Pale Hose were down by five runs in the top of the ninth with Alexei at bat.  Instead of working the count, he swung at the first pitch and effectively ending any type of rally the Sox could muster.  This hasn’t been the first time Alexei has been first pitch swinging.  There are times to be aggressive, but when you are down by five runs, base runners are more a premium than trying to smack the ball a long distance.  There was a reason Ozzie benched him a few games, and it seemed he didn’t learn his lesson.  He sat out of today’s game, but was inserted as a defense replacement at the end of the game.

To make matters worse, Carlos Quentin informed Ozzie of a heel issue that has been nagging him.  He sat out today, and he will most likely sit it tomorrows rubber match.  This will give Carlos a few days rest to heal his sore heel.  I assume if there is any progress, then Ozzie might be put in a position to place him on the DL.  Granted that CQ has struggled this past week, so this might be a blessing that he will have a few days rest.

Nix continues to make his presence known.  He launched his second home run of the season to make it a 3-1 early lead.  He also coaxed a walk in the lead off spot.  Another hero of tonight’s game was Corky Miller.  He is backup to AJ, but he looked far from a backup player.  He managed to toss out Grandy on a base stealing attempt, and he plated two on a clutch two-out RBI single that gave the Pale Hose some breathing room.  The man of the hour was Thome.  He struggled as of late, but two key home runs gave the Sox the lead twice, and he managed to raise his slumping average to a 227 clip.

Dye had a solid game going 2-for-4 with a walk.  He has been one of the most consistent hitters for the Sox these last few years, and the Sox really needed their veterans to step up in today’s game.  While the Sox were only two games under five hundred, you don’t want to see the gap widen between the Tigers, Royals, and the Sox.  Konerko continued to hit well going 1-for-4 with a walk and a double.

When Richard left in the fourth, he gave way to Carrasco.  DJ gave up a bloop RBI ground rule double to Cabrera, but afterwards he shut the door down on the Tribe giving the Sox an opportunity to stay in the game.  While Thome and Miller helped the Sox offensively, I think it was Carrasco who made that all possible with two solid innings of relief.  Thornton and Dotel made the bridge to Jenks possible, and Bobby had a 1-2-3 ninth that gave him his eighth save of the season.

Both the Tigers and the Royals lost today, so the Sox managed to gain a game on the two.  It’s still a tight race in which the top four teams are separated by two and a half games.  It’s going to be a grind, and if the Sox want to make the playoffs, they are going to have to win the division.  The AL East will most likely get the wildcard spot.

Getz, Thome, and Pods Propel Sox Win

Chris Getz and Jim Thome returned to the lineup friday night, and the Pale Hose were glad to have them back.  Getz, 2-for-5, had the game winning RBI triple, and Thome, 1-for-4, had a cluth two-out bases clearing RBI double, but the unsung hero of the night was Podsednik.  Filling in for Brian Anderson who was placed on the DL, Pods made his presence known by legging out an infield single.  Taking second on a balk, Getz split the right-center defenders for the game-winning RBI triple.

Buehrle was his workman-like self.  He surrendered a leadoff home run to Ian Kinsler, an RBI double to Jones, and a sac-fly to Kinsler, but Buehrle battled the potient Rangers lineup until the Sox were able to get on the board in the sixth.  Thome just missed a grand slam, but he had a cluth two-out bases clearing double that switched the momentum to the White Sox.  The RBIs gave the slugger 1,501 career runs batted in.

The bullpen came in and shut the door on the Rangers.  Dotel, Linebrink, and Jenks, sixth save, preserved the win for Buehrle – his forth win of the season.

It was a great game, and I was glad to see Pods go 2-for-4.  He was always a favorite of mine, and I hope he can stay healthy and contribute to the Sox.

Danks, Dye Superb in Tampa

While the game went down to the wire, nothing was more exciting than seeing Danks performance on the mound.  His mastery over the Rays hitters was a pleasure to watch.  He was given a lead early by a two run shot by Jermaine Dye, and Danks ended pitching 6 innings with 8 strike outs.  He was able to pitch out of numerous jams while only yielding one run.

Dotel and Thornton pitched an inning a piece while giving the ball to Bobby Jenks in the 9th.  Jenks, loving the drama, had the bases loaded, but he escaped with the save as he forced Gross into a game ending grounder to Konerko.

While pitching was on target, hitting is still an issue with runners in scoring position.  When one things of 14 hits, they expect the score to be better than 3 runs.  It was the bottom of the order that struggled.  Anderson will quickly be in Ozzie’s doghouse if he doesn’t swing the bat better.

Buehrle Shines, Thome Muscles His 543rd HR

If you are a Sox fan, what would be better as a follow up to Colon’s masterful outing?  A solid performance from your Staff Ace, Mark Buehrle.  Buehrle pitched 6 1/3 innings, giving up a solo home run to Delmon Young, while striking out 5.  White Sox continue to get strong pitching from their starters.

The Twins took an early 1-0 lead in the 2nd when Delmon Young smacked a solo shot to left field. The Sox came back in the 5th when PK scored on the error to make it a tie game.  The Sox put two on the board in the 6th off of Thome’s home run, and the Sox score another two in the 7th off of Field’s single to right and a sac fly from CQ.  Wise had a beautiful sac bunt which he struggled at in previous attempts.  Joe Nathan, Twins Closer, gave up a solo shot to JD in the 8th giving the White Sox a 6-1 lead.

Dotel pitched a solid 2/3rds of an inning in the 7th, and Linebrink followed with a good inning himself for the 8th.  Linebrink struggled in spring training, so it was good to see him have a decent outing.  Clayton Richard came into the 9th, and he quickly put runners on first and second with no outs.  He walked Cuddyer on four straight balls, and Ozzie promptly yanked the young left hander for Bobby Jenks.  The Twins have this uncanny ability stack a few runs when they have to.  Bobby struck out Crede looking on a funky curveball that looked flat and settled in the middle of the plate.  Jenks proceded to get Young to hit into a double play that ended the game.

The only speed bump the White Sox had was Richard’s outing.  It was a great win, and the Sox take the series 2 games to 1.  The Sox head to Detroit on a 10 game roadtrip. 

It’s great to see the Sox manufacture some runs outside of the home run.  If the Sox continue to do that, they will be a deadly team in the Central with their excellent pitching.

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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