Archive for the 'Alex Cobb' Category

The Rays Rotation Has Been Set Up To Dominate In 2012

Alex Cobb, Alex Torres, David Price, James Shields, Jeff Niemann, Jeremy Hellickson, Matt Moore, Wade Davis 11 Comments »

One of the biggest concerns with young starting pitchers is their workload and easing them into a 200-ip season. The Rays typically prefer to limit their starters to a 20 percent increase in innings from one season to the next. If a pitcher exceeds that mark, they could be at a higher risk for injury or just a tired arm in the next season.

Last year, we saw the red flag with David Price, whose 221.1 innings pitches in 2010 was a 36.1 percent increase over the 2009 season. And while Price’s FIP improved from 3.42 in 2010 to 3.32 in 2011, his ERA ballooned from 2.72 in 2010 to 3.49 last year. Was he just unlucky? Maybe. But Price also showed that at times last year, he tired late in games.

So let’s take a look at how much the pitcher’s were used in 2011 and if there are any red flags…

Maybe the most important thing we see in this table is that the Rays big-6 starting pitchers (David Price, James Shields, Jeremy Hellickson, Wade Davis, Jeff Niemann, Matt Moore) are all free to throw Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Flash’s Future, Playing Short, And Triple-A Playoffs

Alex Cobb, Desmond Jennings 5 Comments »
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Rays 5, Rangers 4 (10) (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Flash. Desmond Jennings only needed one pitch in the bottom of the 10th inning to end the game. His lead-off trot-off home run was the game winner. Jennings is now hitting .302 with 9 home runs and 15 stolen bases in just 44 games. Our only fear now is that the Rays will feel that Jennings is still not ready for the big leagues. Maybe they will send him down for another 1,000 triple-A at bats. Heck, the International League playoffs began last night, and we all know how important those are for the Rays organization (these last couple of sentences are sarcasm…partly).

THE BAD: Back-End Bullpen. The Rays, whose bullpen ranks 9th in the AL with a 3.78 ERA and 11th with a 4.20 FIP, has been a sore spot this season for the most part. But, if there were two bright spots it has been Joel Peralta and Kyle Farnsworth. But yesterday, those two each gave a home run and blew a 4-2 lead in the 8th and 9th innings…Sean Rodriguez. At this point, we would rather see BJ Upton playing shortstop than Rodriguez. Wait. We take that back. No, really! Is it too late?

THE TELLING: The Rays now have 1,000 wins in franchise history.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Guess who is now just one step away from the big leagues. [Business Insider]
  • Baseball America named Mike Trout the 2011 Minor League Player of the Year, and not Matt Moore. [Baseball America]
  • More end of the year charts for the Durham Bulls. [WDBB]
  • Busted Coverage wondered if this was Jeremy Hellickson’s lady friend. One of our followers on Twitter suggested she might be a friend of Alex Cobb’s, who is #53, but is not currently on the roster. [Busted Coverage]

DOWN ON THE FARM

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Web Gems, Scoring Struggles, And Friedman’s Free Agency

Alex Cobb, Andrew Friedman, BJ Upton, Chris Archer 12 Comments »
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Tigers 2, Rays 1 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Web Gems. In the seventh inning with no outs, a runner on third and the Rays still nursing a 1-0 lead, Longoria went into foul territory to field a grounder from his knees. He then took just enough off the throw to clear the runner and get a surprised Delmon Young at the plate (here is the video). And then there was the glove flip by Reid Brignac to start a double-play in the 6th and erase a leadoff single.

THE BAD: Where’s the Beef? And just like that, the Rays lost their groove at home, once again struggling to find ways to push runners across the plate. 11 hits (including 2 doubles) and 4 walks, and yet they scored just 1 run. In five innings, the Rays had a runner on second or third, but they were only 1-7 with runners in scoring position. But maybe the biggest problem was that in only one inning did the Rays get a runner into scoring position with less than two outs. That runner scored.

THE TELLING: BJ Upton’s MRI on his shoulder was negative and he did pinch-hit last night…The game was delayed by 20 minutes after the weather caused some of the lights to go out. That sure seems to be happening a lot recently…The Rays shot their video for the “It Gets Better” campaign prior to last night’s game.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • We will be posting an interview with Evan Longoria shortly. So be sure to check back in a little bit.
  • Will Andrew Friedman be baseball’s most important free agent this winter? [Business Insider]
  • Marc Topkin appeared on “Chicago Tribune Live” yesterday and said he doesn’t see Andrew Friedman taking the Cubs’ GM job. [Chicago Tribune]
  • Despite his control problems, Chris Archer has been promoted Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Perfect Relays, A Home Run Giveaway, And Moore’s Continued Dominance

Alex Cobb, David Price, Matt Moore 4 Comments »
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Rays 5, Yankees 1 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Relayed To Perfection. We’ll get to the home runs in a moment, but the most important play last night was Sean Rodriguez’ relay in the bottom of the 4th from Ben Zobrist (at the wall) to Kelly Shoppach nailing a runner at home and keeping the score at 3-1. It was a thing of beauty…Home Run Barrage. Apparently the first 10,000 at the Yankees game last night wearing Rays gear got a home run. Five solo home runs off of CC Sabathia, by five different batters…Joel Peralta. It wasn’t the most important inning ever, but a 4-run lead against the Yankees is like a 2-run lead against most teams. And Peralta came in and struck out the side for a 1-2-3 9th inning...David Price. Nice to see the bounce-back game. And interestingly, he mixed up his pitches a bit more than usual. Of his 114 pitches, only 66 (57.9% were fastballs). Normally he is closer to 75% fastballs. And only 1 of those last night was of the two-seem variety.

THE BAD: Nothing to report today.

THE TELLING: The Rays are now 7.5 behind the Yankees in the Wild Card. Keep in mind that the Rays are also a half-game behind the Angels in the Wild Card, so there is another team involved here…The Rays are now 5-5 against the Yankees this season…In 5 triple-A starts (30.2 ip), Matt Moore has struck out 49, walked 7, given up just 16 hits and has an ERA of 0.88. Yeah, he’s pretty good.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • If you missed it, it looks like we might be able to add weed to the list of items stolen from Evan Longoria, David Price, and Reid Brignac back in March. [Rays Index]
  • Alex Cobb’s surgery has been pushed back. [Rays Report]
  • Evan Longoria makes an appearance in Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss A Shortstop Shuffle, Cobb’s Surgery, And A Comeback For The Ages

Alex Cobb, Bill Foster, Hak-Ju Lee, Justin Ruggiano, Reid Brignac, Tim Beckham 12 Comments »
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Rays 8, Royals 7 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Comeback For The Ages. Wow. Just wow. 9th innings don’t get anymore exciting than that. When the 9th inning started, the Rays had a 1.5% chance of winning the game. But like any great comeback from a big deficit, the players need to remember there are no 5-run home runs. And the Rays singled and doubled the Royals to death. When Evan Longoria doubled home the first run we sat up a little straighter. But then two infield groundballs scored the next two runs, the second by Casey Kotchman who hasn’t run that fast since he was 18, and all of a sudden we were getting exciting. Still only 1 out, we were skeptical with BJ Upton and Sam Fuld due up. Upton was either going to hit a walk-off home run or strikeout. He did the latter. That left Fuld and we’ll admit, we were just praying for a walk. With Elliot Johnson on first base, typically you would want the runner stealing second with 2 outs to get into scoring position. But with that canon behind the plate, Johnson might as well have been wearing cement shoes. So he was stuck at first. And that meant our best hope for Fuld was just to get Johnson into scoring position and prolong the inning. He went several steps further, driving a ball into the right-center gap which you knew would tie the game. What you didn’t know was that the throw to third would get by the bag, and Fuld, running slower than we have ever seen, found enough gas to scamper home and dive in ahead of the tag. That, that was fun.

THE BAD: Sam Fuld. Yes. Super Sammy. Before he won the game in the 9th, he represented the tying run on third base in the 8th and got picked off by the catcher. Sometimes these things happen, but it can’t happen then. And it can’t happen after the same catcher had already demonstrated his lethal arm several times in the game…Jake McGee. McGee faced three batters striking out 1, walking 1, and giving up a 3-run home run which seemed to seal the Rays fate. So, of course he would get the win.

THE TELLING: Justin Ruggiano was placed on the DL and Reid Brignac was recalled from Durham. Interesting. So a player who has made one start in 3 weeks and who is out of minor league options, suddenly goes on the DL with knee bursitis? Of course he does…Tim Beckham was promoted to triple-A and Hak-Ju Lee was promoted to double-A. Interestingly, Derek Dietrich was not promoted to Charlotte to replace Lee.

RANDOM THOUGHTS: If you get a chance to watch the replay of the pile at home plate, look for Robinson Chirinos. During the entire scrum he is circling the pile looking for a way in, the whole time doing it with a big ole smile on his face. It’s adorable. Like a little kid that wants to play with the big boys…If the Rays sweep the Yankees this weekend, things could start to get interesting. But anything less than a sweep will just be status quo…Look for Tim Beckham to get a nice long look in spring training next year. But we would still be surprised if we see him in the big leagues before August.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • If you missed it last night, there has been an arrest in the burglary of the spring home of Evan Longoria, David Price, and Reid Brignac. [RaysIndex]
  • Like we speculated, Alex Cobb will be shut down for the rest of the season. He is set to have surgery on his hand, but is expected to be ready for the start of the 2012 season. [TBO.com]
  • Mayor Bill Foster and Stuart Sternberg haven’t spoken since early May. [TampaBay.com]
  • The Rays failure to send a representative to the Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Shields’ Latest Gem, Longo’s Hair, And The Fastest Game In Team History

Alex Cobb, Evan Longoria, James Shields 15 Comments »
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Rays 4, Royals 0 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: James the Greater. You could see it with the second batter of the game. Shields struck out Melky Cabrera on a changeup, the nasty variety. And right then you knew Shields wouldn’t need much support. Shields had 10 swinging strikes on the night. 9 of those were on changeups. The result was his 8th complete game and his 4th shutout…Evan Longoria’s Hair. Longoria shaved his golden locks and the result was a 2-run single in the first, and then a 2-run home run later just for shites and giggles. But then he booted a goundball. So he will probably be bald today.

THE BAD: Evan Longoria’s Barber. We are beginning to think that Longoria spends too much money on clothes and not nearly enough on his hair (above). Who is cutting his hair, David Price?…Oh BJ. Guess who was bitching at the home plate umpire, again, after another called third strike.

THE TELLING: Game took 1 hour, 53 minutes. That is the fastest 9-inning game in franchise history, and just the second to go under 2 hours. Previous fastest was 1:54 vs Astros in 2003…James Shields’ 4 shutouts are more than 26 teams. His 8 complete games are more than 25 teams, and more than the Padres, Cubs, Red Sox, Brewers, Astros and Royals combined.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • The Glazers money problems are about to go away. Is that a good thing for the Bucs? [Business Insider]
  • Happy to hear the Rays will be joining the “It Gets Better” campaign. [TampaBay.com]
  • A breakdown of the Rays hitting prospects and how good (or bad) they have been in several key categories. [Rays Prospects]
  • We talked yesterday about the wear and tear on Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss More Magic, McGee’s Bad Matchup, And Price’s Lack Of Control

Alex Cobb, Cesar Ramos, Derek Dietrich, Jake McGee, Kyle Farnsworth, Reid Brignac 9 Comments »
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A’s 5, Rays 4 (10) (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Casey Kotchman. Three more magical hits for Kotch including his 6th home run. He also just missed a second home run when he hit a line drive to the warning track…Des Jennings. Flash was on base 3 more times with 3 singles…Kyle Farnsworth. In 2010 Rafael Soriano was worth 1.6 Wins (WAR) and cost $7.5 million. This year, the Rays are paying Farnsworth $2.6M and he’s on pace for 1.5 WAR. Seems like a fair trade to us.

THE BAD: Jake McGee. Josh Willingham can’t do a lot. But he can mash fastballs. In the last 3 seasons, Willingham has been worth 33.8 runs above average on fastballs alone. McGee came in to the game to start the 10th with Willingham leading off. McGee threw him 6 straight fastballs, the last of which was of the 350-foot variety to give the A’s the lead for good…David Price. Price didn’t even finish the 5th inning, giving up 4 runs. He did strike out 7, but it took him 110 pitches to get there struggling with his control. Of his 110 pitches, 45 were balls.

THE TELLING: Alex Cobb went on the DL and Cesar Ramos was recalled from Durham…SS prospect Derek Dietrich (single-A Bowling Green) hit his 16th HR. That is tops in the minors among middle infielders…John Jaso will begin a rehab assignment in Durham that will last at least 2 weeks…Don’t be shocked if Alex Cobb is shut down for the rest of the season even if his hand injury is not serious.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Alex Cobb says his arm has a “dead arm” feel to it. [TampaBay.com]
  • Bill Chastain writes about the Rays sudden surplus of catchers. [MLB]
  • Rays Prospects takes a look at how the draft picks from 2008 and 2009 are faring this year. [Rays Prospects]
  • Yesterday we showed you a pic of poor Reid Brignac wearing
    Read the rest of this entry »

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss A’s Running Wild, Cobb’s Hand, And The Return Of The Anemic O

Alex Cobb, Kyle Farnsworth, Matt Bush, Robinson Chirinos 2 Comments »
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A’s 8, Rays 0 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Honey Nut Chirinos. Robinson Chirinos had 2 more hits. It was almost enough to hide the fact that the A’s were 7-7 stealing bases. Wait. Nevermind. No it wasn’t.

THE BAD: Anemic O Returns. The Rays were shutout on 5 hits and 2 walks. It was the 11th time the Rays were shutout this season. That only happened 10 times in the entire 2010 season, and the Rays have 51 games left this year. The loss was also the 36th time the Rays have scored less than 3 runs…Alex Cobb. The rookie was due for one of these starts where he just didn’t have it. Cobb did have an issue with his hand that was serious enough to require a trip to the hospital after the game. But if the hand was an issue during the game, why was he allowed to throw 93 pitches?

THE TELLING: Alex Cobb had to be taken to a hospital following his start for a possible blood clot in his hand…The Rays are now 10 games back in the Wild Card.

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • Matt Bush has added a slider to arsenal with resounding success. The former number 1 overall pick has struck out 8 and allowed no runs in 4.1 innings since adding the new pitch. Prior, he was almost exclusively fastballs with occasional curveballs. But the fastball isn’t too shabby. Stacy Long reports that he hit 100 mph the other night. [Montgomery Advertiser]
  • Evan Longoria got a private drumming lesson from the Goo Goo Dolls. [The Heater]
  • Peter Gammons is reporting Read the rest of this entry »

Rays Offered Cardinals Choice Of Starting Pitcher For Rasmus

Alex Cobb, Colby Rasmus, Edwin Jackson, Jeff Niemann, Wade Davis 14 Comments »

[6:30pm] Joe Strauss is now reporting that the Cardinals insisted on either James Shields or Jeremy Hellickson for Colby Rasmus.

[4:40pm] Buster Olney is now reporting that the Rays offered the Cardinals Jeff Niemann and JP Howell for Colby Rasmus. It is unclear if the other pitchers were interchangeable or if they would have required accessories that differed from Howell.

[12:25pm]Buster Olney is reporting that the Rays offered the Cardinals their choice of Jeff Niemann, Wade Davis or Alex Cobb for outfielder Colby Rasmus (via Twitter).

It’ll be interesting to see what STL gets for Rasmus, because sources say Cards were offered one of three TB SP: Niemann, Davis,Cobb

However, it looks like that has been rejected. Former Rays pitcher Edwin Jackson was traded from the White Sox to the Blue Jays, and there are reports that Jackson will now be flipped to the Cardinals for Rasmus, as part of an 8-player deal.

Let us repeat…The Cardinals could have had Niemann, Davis or Cobb. Instead they will take Jackson, who has now been traded five times in seven years and is about to be traded again.

[THE HANGOVER] The One Where We Discuss Rays Time Of Death: July 20th

Alex Cobb, Casey Kotchman, James Shields, Robinson Chirinos, Wade Davis 34 Comments »
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Yankees 4, RAYS 0 (click image for boxscore)

The GBT – The Good, The Bad and The Telling sandwich, where The Bad is nice and lean and the The Telling is ripe.

THE GOOD: Jokes. Evan Longoria, BJ Upton, David Price, and JP Howell walked into a bar. No it’s ok. In the joke, it is October and the Rays season is over.

THE BAD: Time of Death, July 20. That’s it. Hey, we know there are some of you that are still holding out hope. The Rays do play their next 20 games (after today) against the Mariners, Royals, Jays and A’s. But you know they will only win just enough of those games (12?) to tease us. But this team is not competing this year. And hey, we knew they needed a miracle. And they needed help. They needed either the Yankees or the Red Sox to fall on their face. Neither happened. And now? Let the firesale begin. BJ Upton? Gone. James Shields? Good chance he is gone (you really think the Rays are going to a 6-man rotation? Shields and Price HATE extra rest). Johnny Damon? Probably Gone. Kyle Farnsworth? Gone. But hey, the Rays will get 20 more super-duper prospects that might play for the Rays in 2-3 years.

THE TELLING: After the Yankees stole 10 straight bases in the series against Robinson Chirinos, he finally nailed one in the 8th inning…Casey Kotchman is second in the AL in hitting (.337).

THE JUNKYARD DOGS WEBTOPIA

  • This article by Tim Kurkjian will make you feel a little better. A little. [ESPN]
  • Wade Davis will be back in the rotation on Friday. However, Alex Cobb will remain in the rotation and start Sunday. Joe Maddon said he may stick with a 6-man rotation for a while.
  • James Shields does not want to be traded. [TampaBay.com]
  • Ken Rosenthal thinks it is more likely that James Shields is traded this off-season. [Fox Sports]
  • The national media is starting to Read the rest of this entry »