Blog Archives

April 22, 2008

Cardinals 4, Brewers 3: Gagne Gets a Night Off

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A day after royally blowing a save to the Reds, the Brewers (11-8) gave Eric Gagne the night off and instead turned to Derick Turnbow (0-1) to face the Cardinals (13-7) with a tied game in the top of the ninth.

Turnbow did slightly better than Gagne the day before, only Turnbow doesn’t have the four-days-in-a-row of pitching excuse. Brian Barton lead off the inning with a double and score an out later on Skip Schumaker’s hit.

Ryan Franklin (1-1) picks up the vulture win after having blown the save, and Jason Isringhausen (S 7) got the actual save.

The two face again Tuesday at 1:05pm EDT. Kyle Lohse faces Manny Parra.CA

April 20, 2008

Similar Script, Different Ending

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As the Cincinnati Reds came to bat in the bottom of the tenth inning of Sunday’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers, the situation looked suspiciously similar to Saturday’s game between the same two teams. In that one, the Brewers had scored a pair of runs in the top of the tenth to take the lead, and closer Eric Gagne had slammed the door with a 1-2-3 inning to nail down a 5-3 Milwaukee win.

Now, one day later, here were the Brewers, fresh off scoring a pair of tenth-inning runs and leading by 3-1, and here was Gagne taking the mound again for the Brew Crew. As Yogi Berra might have said, “It was Deja Vu all over again.”

Aaron Harang had pitched eight innings of one-run ball for the Reds, striking out eight and lowering his ERA to 2.83, but left with a no-decision, the score tied at 1-1 as the Reds’ Edwin Encarnacion and the Brewers’ J.J. Hardy exchanged solo homers. Then the Brewers scored twice in the tenth off Jared Burton, aided by an Encarnacion fielding error. Rushing to start what would have been an inning-ending double play, Edwin booted a grounder to load the bases for the Brewers. Burton then uncorked a wild pitch, allowing the go-ahead run to score for Milwaukee. The Brewers scored another run moments later on an RBI single by Hardy. Although Burton escaped further damage, it looked like the Reds were headed to their second extra-innings loss in two nights when Gagne took to the hill in the bottom of the tenth.

The rain-soaked fans who were still inside GABP (most of them were already in the parking lot by the time the fun started) booed Encarnacion when he came to the plate to lead off the inning. This time, though, the Reds came up with a different ending for the story.

Encarnacion and Paul Bako went back-to-back on Gagne to tie the score, and Scott Hatteberg drew a walk, chasing Gagne. Ryan Freel was inserted as a pinch-runner, and after Salomon Torres fanned Corey Patterson, Brandon Phillips beat out an infield single to set the stage for Ken Griffey Jr. Griffey wisely laid off two consecutive low pitches as Torres tried to induce a double-play grounder. Finally, behind in the count and with the dangerous Adam Dunn in the on-deck circle, Torres was forced to challenge Griffey, who smoked the 3-1 pitch over Corey Hart’s head and into deep right field for a walkoff single to plate Freel and hand the Brewers their first extra-innings loss of the season.

April 19, 2008

Giants 1, Cardinals 11: How Do They Keep Winning?

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I saw that the Cardinals (12-5) scored 11 runs and thought, how on earth do they keep playing so awesomely? And then I saw that they were playing the Giants (6-11), which goes a long way in explaining that 11-spot.

Still, the Cardinals continue to surprise. Todd Wellemeyer (2-0), of all people, had a great start, limiting the Giants to 1 run over 7 innings. Matt Cain (0-2) got the loss, due in no small part to the homeruns he allowed to Chris Duncan and Albert Pujols.

The middle game of the series is this afternoon at 1:10pm EDT with Tim Lincecum versus Joel Pineiro.

April 19, 2008

Rockies 11, Astros 5

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The Astros (6-11) finally had their offense show up yesterday as they scored 4 runs in the first inning. If only the Rockies (8-8) hadn’t already scored 6 in the top of the first.

Chris Sampson (0-2) couldn’t make it out of the first inning. He allowed 6 runs, all of them earned. It was all downhill from there, as it usually is when you have to go to the bullpen in the first.

Franklin Morales (1-1) got the win for the Rockies, although he wasn’t too sharp either. When a total of 10 runs are scored in the first, you know you’re not in for a pitchers duel.

The Astros turn to Wandy Rodriguez to end their two-game losing streak and hopefully start some winning today. Gametime is 7:05pm EDT.

April 19, 2008

Brewers 5, Reds 2: Arroyo Steps Up His Game

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No doubt pumped up from playing loud music in the clubhouse, Bronson Arroyo (0-2) allowed all of the Brewers (10-6) runs in the less than six innings he pitched for the Reds (7-10). Can’t blame that one on the bullpen.

Ben Sheets (3-0) got the win, but pulled up lame before the 6th. Who had April 18 in the Sheets injury pool? Actually, that’s a bit earlier than I expected.

A very hairy Eric Gagne (S 5) got the save for the Brewers, coming in to stop the Reds only scoring inning of the day. It’s a good thing the Reds did score those 2 in the 9th, otherwise it might not have looked close.

The same two teams play again today at 1:10pm EDT with Jeff Suppan battling against rookie phenom Johnny Cueto.