Showing posts with label Florida Marlins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida Marlins. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Rock Solid Recap: Caught us a fish: Hook, line drives, and Cook's sinker

Alright, so we know the Rockies are maddeningly incompetent against some very pedestrian pitchers. They've also proven to be dominant at times this season against some of the lower-tier front of the rotation starters -- like a Jaime Garcia, whom they've pounded twice, and now tonight against Ricky Nolasco, whom they had never defeated before in six decisions.

That's why I don't bet on baseball.

Actually, I don't bet on anything, but if I did, baseball wouldn't be it.

Rockies 12, Marlins 5 (boxscore)

The Rockies pounded Nolasco for 11 hits and 11 earned runs in three innings. That's one of the uglier lines in the game this season. But the Rockies did benefit from a couple Marlin defensive lapses early. With two outs and the bases loaded in the first, Chris Nelson hit a dribbler that Nolcaso couldn't glove and Emilio Bonifacio couldn't charge fast enough.

Prrrroooobably should have been an out. Wasn't for them.

The next batter definitely should have been out, but the line drive flyball off the bat of Chris Iannetta was misjudged in center by Mike Cameron. Three runs scored there, and the Rockies were in the driver's seat.


Lineup Card: 8-17-11 Rockies vs Marlins

Link
Colorado Rockies (57-67)
  1. CF Dexter Fowler
  2. 2B Mark Ellis
  3. RF Carlos Gonzalez
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Todd Helton
  6. LF Seth Smith
  7. 3B Chris Nelson
  8. C   Chris Iannetta
  9. P    Aaron Cook
Florida Marlins (57-65)
  1. SS Emilio Bonifacio
  2. LF Bryan Petersen
  3. RF Mike Stanton
  4. 3B Greg Dobbs
  5. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  6. CF Mike Cameron
  7. C  John Buck
  8. 2B Jose Lopez
  9. P   Ricky Nolasco
Tonight's question: How many triples will Bryan Petersen hit? 

Lackluster Recrap: Live by solo home runs, get beat by a solo home run

Yes, the Colorado Rockies came out swinging on Tuesday night, connecting for four home runs! Of course three of those (Troy Tulowitzki, Seth Smith and Carlos Gonzalez) home runs were solos, with only Jason Giambi's too little, too late home run in the ninth being a two-run shot.

The Florida Marlins only hit one home run. That too was a solo blast off the bat of Mike Stanton. It ended up being the difference in the game. Why? Because the Marlins found other ways to score thanks largely to Bryan Petersen's 2nd and 3rd career triples. In case you're keeping track at home, all three have come in this series.

I'd also like to point out that Peterson and Emilio Bonifacio, Florida's 1 & 2 hitters on the evening, finished with five hits, two runs and two RBIs. The Rockies 1-2 punch of Dexter Fowler and Mark Ellis finished 0-for-9 with six strikeouts. Thats difficult to digest in a one-run loss.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Lineup Card: 8-16-11 Rockies vs Marlins

Link

Yesterday's Recap: Rockies finally answer 9th inning wake up call

Lineups

Colorado Rockies (57-66)
  1. CF Dexter Fowler
  2. 2B Mark Ellis
  3. RF Carlos Gonzalez
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Todd Helton
  6. LF Seth Smith
  7. 3B Chris Nelson
  8. C   Chris Iannetta
  9. P   Jhoulys Chacin
Catcher hitting eighth. That can mean only two things. 1) Chris Iannetta is playing. 2) Jim Tracy is still the manager.

Florida Marlins (56-65)
  1. SS Emilio Bonifacio
  2. LF Bryan Peterson
  3. RF Mike Stanton
  4. 3B Greg Dobbs
  5. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  6. CF Mike Cameron
  7. C   John Buck
  8. 2B Jose Lopez
  9. P   Anibal Sanchez
The return of Jose Lopez and a rematch with Anibal Sanchez, who nearly no-hit the Rockies earlier this season. So many subplots! 

Rock Solid Recap: Rockies finally answer 9th inning wake up call

I'll be honest, for eight innings this baseball game bored me to tears.

I'm sorry. After Mike Stanton's first inning moon shot and Tulowitzki's third inning two-run shot, there was little to get excited about or interested in watching. Especially with all the other exciting things happening in baseball like Jim Thome's 600th home run (congrats) and the Brewers turning a triple play on the Dodgers.

But I kept watching, and everything changed in the bottom of the ninth inning... with a Dexter Fowler baserunning error.

That makes perfect sense.

Yes, Fowler, representing the tying run, blooped one into shallow centerfield with two outs, but got caught rounding first base way too aggressively. He was dead to rights. But the Marlins also kinda suck, so they completely butchered any chance at a rundown, allowing Dex to take second easily.

That was the Rockies wake up call. One pitch later, Carlos Gonzalez answered it by tying the game with his own double.

But unlike most Rockies rallies, it doesn't end there. After a Troy Tulowitzki intentional walk, Jason Giambi (likely insulted and pissed off by the gesture) walked it off with a three-run homer.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Lineup Card: 8-15-11 Rockies vs Marlins

Weekend Rec(r)aps and Links
Lineups

Colorado Rockies (56-66)
  1. LF Eric Young
  2. CF Dexter Fowler
  3. RF Carlos Gonzalez
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Jason Giambi
  6. C   Eliezer Alfonzo
  7. 3B Chris Nelson
  8. 2B Jonathan Herrera
  9. P   Kevin Millwood
Florida Marlins (56-64)
  1. SS Emilio Bonifacio
  2. LF Bryan Peterson
  3. RF Mike Stanton
  4. 3B Greg Dobbs
  5. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  6. C   John Buck
  7. CF Dewayne Wise
  8. 2B Alfredo Amezaga
  9. P   Clay Hensley
God this lineup is B-R-U-T-A-L. But do I have one bold prediction: Alfredo Amezaga will have four hits tonight. Just because. 

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Rock Solid Recrap: Marlins walk into winner's circle

Well, the Rockies did a solid job of limiting the Marlins to three hits today. Unfortunately, they walked five, which led to two of those hits equaling six runs -- a three-run 5th inning triple by Omar Infante, and a monster three-run home run by Mike Stanton in the 8th.

And to rub salt in the would, both big hits came with two outs.

Marlins 6, Rockies 3 (boxscore)

-- How would I describe Ubaldo Jimenez's performance?

It was encouraging that aside from the triple by Omar Infante, the Marlins had zero good swings against him. His fastball was overpowering when located, and his movement was very good. But it was discouraging to see him lose his command so quickly in the 5th, walking the 6-7-8 hitters starting off the inning.

That's when you want to see your pitcher to challenge hitters and hopefully get quick outs. Instead he killed his pitch count, left himself exposed to that one back-breaking hit, and that's exactly was Infante delivered. I'm sure fatigue played more a part in that than anything. So once that arm strength builds up he should be in line for a string of excellent starts.

Overall there's much more positive than negative. But when you're matched up with a guy like Josh Johnson, you have to be close to flawless.

-- Yeah, I would agree the Rockies had too many long stretches without hits this week, but the at-bats really weren't terrible. Sure, there are a couple guys that look lost, but it's not at the point where they are giving away at-bat after at-bat, inning after inning. They're drawing walks. Extending pitch counts. Giving themselves a chance for success.

Even Carlos Gonzalez took noticeable steps towards improving his approach this afternoon. Dexter Fowler and Jonathan Herrera continued their production at the top. And surprisingly, I thought Jose Lopez had good at-bats. Nothing to show for them, but he exhibited signs of life.

-- By the way, Tim Lincecum and Josh Johnson are really good pitchers. Anibal Sanchez already had a no-hitter and a one-hitter prior to his outing Saturday. It's not like they're struggling against ham-n-eggers. Sometimes you just tip your cap to brilliant pitching.

-- Clayton Mortensen had a flawless two inning relief appearance. He's up to eight scoreless innings of relief now in his two appearances. And he works really fast. He no more than catches that return from throw from the catcher and he's back on the hill into his delivery. I really like what I've seen so far, and I imagine he stands a good chance of sticking around a bit.

-- Poor Matt Belisle made six excellent pitches to Gaby Sanchez Unfortunately, and ridiculously, four of them were called balls by the maddeningly inconsistent Dale Scott (Pitch chart). Thanks to Andrew Fisher of Purple Row for posting that.

Belisle then made a couple bad pitches to Mike Stanton. The second one resulting in the long, game-deciding homer.

-- No doubt this loss leaves a bad taste in your mouth, kinda like the Sunday loss in Atlanta last April. But overall there's no real reason to feel bad about how that team played. It's just a matter of the Marlins, who by the way are now 13-7, maximizing their opportunities and pitching very well.

-- On to Chicago.

Lineup Card: 4-24-11 Rockies @ Marlins

If you're looking for Rockies game lineups and you don't feel like searching all over Twitter or waiting for MLB.com to post them, check back to Heaven & Helton about 60-90 minutes before first pitch. They should be here waiting for you.

Yesterday's Recrap: Rockies win again on road with simple formula

Colorado Rockies (14-6)
  1. CF Dexter Fowler
  2. 2B Jonathan Herrera
  3. LF Carlos Gonzalez
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Jason Giambi
  6. RF Seth Smith
  7. 3B Jose Lopez
  8. C  Jose Morales
  9. P   Ubaldo Jimenez
Florida Marlins (12-7)
  1. CF Chris Coghlan
  2. 2B Omar Infante
  3. SS Hanley Ramirez
  4. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  5. RF Mike Stanton
  6. C   John Buck
  7. LF Emilio Bonifacio
  8. 3B Donnie Murphy
  9. P   Josh Johnson

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Rock Solid Recap: Rockies win again on road with simple formula

Execution + Good Pitching = Winning

I'm not talking about Charlie Sheen's definition of winning. I mean actually winning. Succeeding. Combining terrific effort with great results. That type of winning.

Rockies 3, Marlins 1 (boxscore)

Execution

It boiled down to two at-bats for the Rockies on Saturday night. Both of those at-bats resulted in outs, but both were very productive outs.

After Todd Helton led off the sixth with a double, Seth Smith immediately followed with a double of his own. However, Helton was unable to score on Smith's double because he's not exactly Dexter Fowler and because Marlins left fielder Emilio Bonifacio, while completely lost on the play, managed to confuse Helton enough to not stray too far from the base.

So that set up 2nd and 3rd with no outs for Ty Wigginton. The guy I've applauded in the past for his clutch two out hits in Pittsburgh and Wednesday at Coors Field against Matt Cain. This time it wasn't a clutch two out hit, but a well struck flyball to right center field. It was plenty deep enough to score Helton, and also positioned well enough to allow Smith to take third. That's a big 90 feet to get with less than two outs.


Jose Morales was walked intentionally which brought up Jason Hammel. Immediately the thought of the squeeze comes into play, and without any hesitation, Jim Tracy called for it and Jason Hammel executed it.


Looking back at it Hammel may have squared around a bit early. I'm a little surprised Vazquez didn't step off, but with a slider away called, he probably figured it would be a difficult pitch to get down fair. So credit Hammel again for bunting a tough pitch.

Good Pitching

But where Hammel makes his money is pitching, and tonight he earned his paycheck.

6 2/3, 7 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, 109 pitches (67 strikes).

Again, it wasn't an outing where Hammel wowed you with stuff. He dealt with his fair share of traffic and wasn't exactly efficient closing out innings, but when the big pitch was needed, he made it. When the Rockies finally jumped ahead, he put that big zero on the board. It was an excellent outing and a very well deserved second win for Jason.

His ERA now sits at a healthy 3.80.

Huston Street, Rafael Betancourt and Matt Lindstrom took over and retired the final seven Marlins in order without a single Rockies fan having to break a sweat. That's always much appreciated by this fan.

Sign of the Night

Oh look, it's everybody's favorite Denver sports tweeter @cheryltweedy.


Seriously, even if that wasn't her, that sign would make the blog. Creative and hilarious.

Lineup Card: 4-23-11 Rockies @ Marlins

If you're looking for Rockies game lineups and you don't feel like searching all over Twitter or waiting for MLB.com to post them, check back to Heaven & Helton about 60-90 minutes before first pitch. They should be here waiting for you.

Yesterday's Recrap: Blame me for one-hit wonder

Colorado Rockies (13-6)
  1. CF Dexter Fowler
  2. 2B Jonathan Herrera
  3. LF Carlos Gonzalez
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Todd Helton
  6. RF Seth Smith
  7. 3B Ty Wigginton
  8. C   Jose Morales
  9. P   Jason Hammel
Florida Marlins (12-6)
  1. CF Chris Coghlan
  2. 2B Omar Infante
  3. SS Hanley Ramirez
  4. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  5. 3B Greg Dobbs
  6. RF Mike Stanton
  7. C   John Buck
  8. LF Emilio Bonifacio
  9. P   Javier Vazquez

Rock Solid Recrap: Blame me for the one-hit wonder

The Rockies were doomed from the start on Friday night. 

Why? 

Because I wrote this when I posted the Lineup Card prior to the game:

There's your best possible Rockies lineup on display for I believe the first time this season. And when you look at where Chacin is right now, that includes the pitcher's spot.

So let that be a lesson to me. Just shut up.

Marlins 4, Rockies 1 (boxscore)

At first this looked like it could be the Rockies night. After Dexter Fowler walked leading off and moved to second on a passed ball, Jonathan Herrera moved him to third with a ground out to the right side. After Carlos Gonzalez struck out again, Troy Tulowitzki hit a routine grounder that third baseman Emilio Bonifacio fielded cleanly, but threw low and Gaby Sanchez couldn't handle it.

Gift run.

But all of that good feeling was quickly washed away when Chris Coghlan pulled Jhoulys Chacin's second pitch into the right field bleachers.

And then went further away when Chacin couldn't make a play on an Anibal Sanchez suicide squeeze in the 2nd. It would have been a terrific play, and he had time to make it, but the scoop toss straight from his glove short-hopped Iannetta and he couldn't handle it.

That right there was all the breathing room Sanchez would need. As you've probably seen or heard, Sanchez only allowed one hit on the evening. That being a broken bat grounder just past the reach of Omar Infante at second leading off the ninth.

Tip your cap to Anibal. He was a special kind of good. And his resume looks pretty good right now with one no-hitter and two one-hitters.

On the other side, Jhoulys Chacin was not sharp at all, but color me not the least bit surprised or worried. All pitchers are going to struggle, and often times they struggle the most when they have extra rest between starts. That's the situation Chacin was facing Friday, having not thrown in an entire week. There's something to keeping a schedule, routine and rhythm for pitchers. That's why Jim Tracy has been conscious of it in the past.

I expect much better from Chacin on Wednesday afternoon in Chicago.

I expect much better overall play Saturday in Florida.

And I expect Dante Bichette to never be invited to throw batting practice rounds again.

On second thought, don't blame me for the one-hitter. Blame it on Dante!

Friday, April 22, 2011

Lineup Card: 4-22-11 Rockies @ Marlins

If you're looking for Rockies game lineups and you don't feel like searching all over Twitter or waiting for MLB.com to post them, check back to Heaven & Helton about 60-90 minutes before first pitch. They should be here waiting for you.

Colorado Rockies (13-5)
  1. CF Dexter Fowler
  2. 2B Jonathan Herrera
  3. LF Carlos Gonzalez 
  4. SS Troy Tulowitzki
  5. 1B Todd Helton
  6. RF Seth Smith
  7. 3B Ty Wigginton
  8. C   Chris Iannetta
  9. P    Jhoulys Chacin
There's your best possible Rockies lineup on display for I believe the first time this season. And when you look at where Chacin is right now, that includes the pitcher's spot. 

Florida Marlins (11-6)
  1. CF Chris Coghlan
  2. 2B Omar Infante
  3. SS Hanley Ramirez
  4. 1B Gaby Sanchez
  5. RF Mike Stanton
  6. C   John Buck
  7. LF Scott Cousins
  8. 3B Emilio Bonifacio
  9. P   Anibal Sanchez

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Missing out on Dan Uggla and other Rockies issues

With the Florida Marlins officially trading second baseman Dan Uggla to the Atlanta Braves for what even the most casual baseball fan would recognize as a weak return, Rockies fans are left to wonder how and why their team didn't get involved.

For the price the Atlanta Braves paid, yes, the Rockies could have easily topped that package without losing a truly meaningful piece to their present or future plan, and probably should have. Unfortunately, for whatever reason, the Rockies were not in on recent discussions.

I don't know why that is. But one thing we shouldn't discount is that the Florida Marlins are a pathetically run franchise. This isn't all about what the Rockies were willing to part with, it's also about who the Marlins valued in return. As Troy Renck pointed out on Twitter, the Rockies didn't have the pieces that would have satisfied Florida based on what they took.

It's also possible Marlins GM Larry Beinfest's demands during talks last off season led Dan O'Dowd to believe a deal would be impossible then and in the future. That could be BS in itself, but believe me, it's never as easy as we're led to believe by the armchair GMs with blogs and Twitter accounts.

I completely understand the frustration, though. I'm frustrated to see Uggla go elsewhere for such a lousy return, but again, there are a lot of factors involved. Of course you can put money at the top of that list.

Other Issues

I don't like the pattern developing with the Rockies roster. In the past 18 months we have seen once valuable trade pieces like Garrett Atkins, Brad Hawpe, Taylor Buchholz and now Manny Corpas unloaded from the squad with absolutely nothing in return.

It's concerning because the model for the franchise to stay competitive is never going to be excessive spending. I don't think it has to be or should be either, but they do need to stay ahead of the competition, evaluate their talent better and trade out pieces before they lose value. That's why I've always been big on the idea of dealing Ryan Spilborghs and Clint Barmes the past two off seasons. Their value will never get that high again.

The Rockies also stand to lose Jeff Francis for nothing in the coming weeks as we're hearing up to five teams have interest. His case is a little different though with the injury bug having bitten him repeatedly.

I've stated many times this is the most important off season for Dan O'Dowd as Rockies GM. It's off to a quiet start. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it's understandable that many fans will start getting antsy. Hopefully we'll see something worthwhile develop in the next couple of weeks so he's not left scrambling to fill several roles in February.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Lineup Card: Rockies @ Marlins

Good morning.  Anyone awake?

Rockies bat?  Are you awake?

Jorge De La Rosa?  Are you alive?

Rockies Lineup (51-43)
  • CF  Fowler
  • 2B  Herrera
  • RF  Smith
  • 1B  Giambi
  • LF  Mora
  • 3B  Stewart
  • C    Olivo
  • SS  Barmes
  • P    De La Rosa
Jorge De La Rosa's life doesn't depend on this start today.  His job might not either.  

How's about we just pretend it does?  That could be fun.  

Marlins Lineup (46-48)
  • LF  Coghlan
  • SS  Murphy
  • 1B  Sanchez
  • 2B  Uggla
  • 3B  Cantu
  • CF  Ross
  • RF  Stanton
  • C    Paulino
  • P    Johnson
Murphy, Sanchez and Stanton can all go someplace else.  Tired of their faces.  

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Lineup Card: Rockies @ Marlins

The Rockies would like Todd Helton to venture out on a rehab before being activated this weekend in Philadelphia.  Are you starting to the get the feeling they're in no hurry for Todd to come back?  Or maybe just in no hurry for Brad Eldred or anyone else to leave.  

Rockies Lineup (51-42)
  • LF  Smith
  • 2B  Herrera
  • CF  Gonzalez
  • 1B  Giambi
  • RF  Hawpe
  • C    Iannetta
  • 3B  Stewart
  • SS  Barmes
  • P    Hammel
Welcome back to regular playing time Chris Iannetta!  You've earned it.  

Marlins Lineup (45-48)
  • LF  Coghland
  • 1B  Sanchez
  • SS  Ramirez
  • 2B  Uggla
  • 3B  Cantu
  • CF  Ross
  • RF  Stanton
  • C    Davis 
  • P    Nolasco

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Lineup Card: Rockies @ Marlins

Is the wind blowing out to right again?  If so, give me a bat.  I think I could park one about 5-10 row ups those bleachers myself.

Rockies Lineup (50-42)

  • CF  Fowler
  • 2B  Herrera
  • LF  Mora
  • RF  Spilborghs
  • C    Iannetta
  • 1B  Eldred
  • 3B  Stewart
  • SS  Barmes
  • P    Francis
Gonzalez sits with a bruised finger.  He needs to catch his breath and slow his heart rate down anyway.  Good day for that against a lefty.  

Mora in LF shouldn't cause too much harm defensively.  LF in Florida doesn't seem like too difficult a task. (Now watch him make three errors)   It'll put a little more pressure on Fowler to cover ground though.  That's not easy because there is more ground in the right-center field area.  

Marlins Lineup (45-47)
  • LF  Bonafacio
  • 3B  Helms
  • SS  Ramirez
  • 2B  Uggla
  • 1B  Cantu
  • CF  Ross
  • RF  Stanton
  • C    Paulino
  • P    Robertson
Lots of luck to Jeff Francis maneuvering himself around this lineup 2-8.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Lineup Card: Rockies @ Marlins

Rockies Lineup (50-41)

  • LF  Smith
  • 2B  Herrera
  • CF  Gonzalez
  • 1B  Giambi
  • C    Olivo
  • RF  Hawpe
  • 3B  Stewart
  • SS  Barmes
  • P    Jimenez
Marlins Lineup (44-47)
  • LF  Bonafacio
  • 1B  Sanchez
  • SS  Ramierez
  • 2B  Uggla
  • 3B  Cantu
  • CF  Ross
  • RF  Stanton
  • C    Paulino
  • P    Sanchez