Baseball Musings
Baseball Musings
April 11, 2007
Long Live the King

Felix Hernandez finishes off the Red Sox with a strikeout of Youkilis. His one hitter gives him seventeen straight scoreless innings to start the season. He's allowed just four hits and four walks while striking out 18. The Mariners take the game 3-0.

Matsuzaka pitched okay. He retired Ichiro four times, but the rest of the Mariners found a way to pound out eight hits. And Johjima, who faced Dice-K quite a bit in Japan, managed two doubles. Still, on most days, the Red Sox will take seven innings and three runs from their starter.

By the way, Will Carroll wrote that the pitch that struck out Sexson was the gyroball.


Posted by David Pinto at 09:33 PM | Pitchers | TrackBack (0)
Comments

NESN just showed Hernandez tonight recorded what I believe was 17 ground outs and 3 fly outs, which doesn't include the ground ball that just got by Lopez at second base for a hit.

GB numbers like that for anyone are uncanny, let alone for a strikeout pitcher like Hernandez considering that K's and GB% have a small negative correlation.

What dominance from a guy who just turned 21 a few days ago!

Posted by: Ben B at April 11, 2007 09:45 PM

So, I know it's probably too early for this, but...who has the better season: King Felix or Johan?

Posted by: the other josh at April 11, 2007 11:25 PM

I heard Matsuzaka doesn't really throw a gyro. Huh.

I haven't been impressed by Matsuzaka yet. He beat the Royals. Most good AAA pitchers should be capable of that, so it really doesn't say anything about him. He lost to Seattle, giving up only 3 runs in Fenway. Good, but... it just didn't strike me as the kind of pitching he's supposed to be capable of against a team like the Mariners. I'll have to see him more....like when he's been around a couple months and the scouting reports give the hitters a good idea what to do against him. He certainly doesn't look like he was worth all that money they put into him. In fact, he looks to me like a #3 pitcher who could be a #2 on a good day. I can't put my finger on it though. This is my first impression.

PS. I hope Felix and Johan face each other sometime this year....and if it comes in October, it could be a classic.

Posted by: Devon Young at April 11, 2007 11:34 PM

Most AAA pitchers can K 10 Royals in 7 innings, giving up 6 hits and a walk? Really?

I know they're bad, but that's just a ridiculous thing to say.

Posted by: the other josh at April 12, 2007 12:06 AM

If you saw Matsuzaka vs. the Royals and Matsuzaka vs. the Mariners, you would know that Dice-K's stuff was much sharper against the Royals than it was vs. the M's. For whatever reason, as Varitek and Dice-K acknowledged, he just didn't have a great feel for his stuff tonight. He'll get it back quickly, though, as he has a few truly elite pitches.

That said, he still only allowed three runs in seven innings, which is usually going to be a victory. Not his fault that Felix was lights out.

As for the league catching up to him, I think in this era of international scouting, video and information that there's already a pretty solid book on Matsuzaka within major league organizations. I don't know how much seeing an opposing pitcher for 4 at bats really gives a hitter an advantage.

Posted by: Ben B at April 12, 2007 01:12 AM

I haven't been impressed by Matsuzaka yet. He beat the Royals. Most good AAA pitchers should be capable of that, so it really doesn't say anything about him.

So the Red Sox #1 should go back down to AAA? What was the score? 7 to 1?

Snob.

Posted by: Steven Andrew Miller at April 12, 2007 01:49 AM

I agree that he struck Sexson out on the gyroball, I'm 99% sure. Jerry Remy said that it was a "back door curve," in other words a curve that didn't curve the way it was supposed to. NESN showed the slow motion replay and I recognized it for what it was because I had read the Bill Nye link shortly before the game.


"Instead, it's falling like a rock and moving in the opposite direction of that same pitcher's curveball."

That's what it looked like. Sexson had a smirk on his face and for a brief moment the camera showed him talking to his teammates in the dugout as if something strange had just happened.

Posted by: andrew at April 12, 2007 02:13 AM

Listening on the radio, it sounded like Matsuzaka didn't have great command. He was missing a lot of corners and seemed to have trouble putting batters away once he got two strikes. That's not a great recipe under any circumstances, but he kept them in striking distance ... at least, in striking distance of any lead not being held by 2007 Felix Hernandez, apparently.

All things considered, even if this turns out to be an "average" outing I think the Red Sox will be satisfied. Not thrilled, but satisfied -- he kept the ball in the park, didn't walk a lot of guys, got some strikeouts, kept his ERA on the good side of 4 and wound up going seven solid innings. That's not Cy Young territory, but it ain't half bad.

Posted by: cwp at April 12, 2007 12:06 PM

Let's not forget it was 40 something degrees last night in boston. It doesn't affect a fireballer like King Felix as much, but a control guy like D-Mat, he's gonna have trouble gripping the ball. We saw that with wakefield and Wells last year. He probably should've thrown his fastball more, but the novelty of him is his assortment of pitchers and this was a very heavily publicized game, so he had to show off all those pitches.
Also, I agree, like bill Nye said, it looked like a gyro ball... Don't know how different it really is from a good old fashioned screwball other than the delivery is probably more deceptive

Posted by: Heath at April 12, 2007 12:58 PM

For the record, a "back door curve" is NOT a curveball that breaks in the opposite direction it is supposed to, but a curve ball thrown to break into the outside part of the strike zone. Righties can throw back door curves only to lefties, and lefties can throw back door curves only to righties.

And from what I understand, the gyro is supposed to break right to left, so in the same direction as a curve, and in the opposite direction from a screwball, but different from a curve in that it has no downward break. (Also, the spin and speed would be different from a curve.) But I'm less sure about this than I am about what a back door curve is.

Posted by: ibara at April 12, 2007 06:10 PM

Gotta go with Bill Nye's interpretation of what the gyro should do. He is the Science Guy.

Posted by: Heath at April 12, 2007 10:18 PM
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