1,134
The number refers to the number of walks the Mariners are on pace for after collecting seven in the 5-2 Opening Day victory over the Rangers.
Seven walks! Unbelievable! Obviously the concept that you are able to accomplish more if you’re able to get on base was something that Mike Hargrove was unable to get across during the past few hack-tastic Mariner teams. Being able to coax bases on balls, and then running on the base paths, generated most of the Mariners’ runs, beating Kevin Millwood, even though the Rangers’ ace is now the early season ERA leader after allowing no earned runs over six innings. A Michael Young error allowed the M’s to go ahead 2-1 in the sixth inning, allowing Millwood to pick up the loss despite an unblemished ERA. Throw in a clutch two-run double by Jose Lopez an inning later- after a passed ball, wild pitch, and an intentional pass to Ichiro by Rangers’ reliever Kazuo Fukumori- as Lopez flashed the form that led to 58 first-half RBIs and an All Star berth in 2006 and that’s all she wrote.
And with the Angels dropping their Opening Day match-up to Livan Hernandez and the Minnesota Twins 3-2 (with Torii Hunter being held hitless in four at-bats), the M’s find themselves alone at the top of the standings. While that first win is indeed satisfying, the realist needs to point out that the only thing it really means is that the M’s will not challenge the 1988 Baltimore Orioles’ record of dropping their first 21 games of the season.
While it was great to see the M’s defying expectations and demonstrating some patience at the plate, somebody should pass that memo to Jose Vidro who, in the eighth inning, after a four-pitch walk to Brad Wilkerson by Rangers reliever Esteban German immediately swung and miss at a pitch up and out of the zone. *Sigh* That’s the M’s designated hitter for you….
Erik Bedard did a serviceable enough job, battling a strike zone that was arguably squeezed by home plate umpire Jim Joyce. Still, despite giving up that first-inning home run that I totally called (though it was a solo shot to Young rather than a three-run blast), and walking a tight rope as he went to a full-count on ten of the first eighteen batters, Bedard pitched well enough to give the M’s a chance to get back into the ballgame, allowing just three hits while striking out five in five innings.
With tomorrow’s match-up pitting Felix Hernandez against Vincente Padilla (is he really the Rangers’ number two man? really?) you almost have to feel sorry for Rangers fans. Padilla has never really capitalized on the potential he showed with back-to-back 14-win seasons he had with the Phillies a handful of seasons ago. To say Padilla’s 2007 season was a disaster is putting it mildly. His walk rate rose, his strikeout rate plummeted, and his offerings were absolutely hammered by opposing batters. In three appearances against the M’s last year, Padilla lost the first two, allowing 15 hits and 13 runs over nine innings, before tossing six innings of one-run ball against the Mariners last August, the last time the M’s have seen the offerings of the Nicaraguan right-hander. Ichiro has collected 12 hits in 23 at-bats against Padilla for a career 1.281 OPS, while Adrian Beltre may be held to a .240 average by Padilla, but four of his six hits have gone yard. I’m calling a funk blast for Beltre tomorrow.
It’s almost unfair to pit Padilla against Felix, but that’s how the M’s rotation falls. The consensus about Felix is that this season he should come into his own, cementing himself as one of the dominating starters in the game. When you consider that the last time he made an official major league start, he came within an out of a complete-game win against the Rangers last September, holding Texas to four hits and two runs while striking out eight. It’s going to be interesting to see if Felix can top that. With McLaren having to go to the bullpen four times on Opening Day, he will be looking to get as many innings out of Felix as he can. Is it too much to expect a three-hit shutout?
Let’s temper the expectations a bit. The Rangers will at least be able to put across a run, but putting up plural may be a problem. I’m picking the M’s to win by a final score of 10-1. Yes, it will be ugly.
March 31, 2008 - Posted by trueslicky | Seattle Mariners | Adrian Beltre, Baltimore Orioles, Bard Wilkerson, Erik Bedard, Esteban German, Felix Hernandez, Ichior Suzuki, Jim Joyce, John McLaren, Jose Lopez, Jose Vidro, Kazuo Fukumori, Kevin Millwood, Livan Hernandez, Los Angeles Angels, Michael Young, Mike Hargrove, Opening Day, Philadelphia Phillies, Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers, Vincente Padilla | 2 Comments
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5 more walks tonight. very nice…but it is texas pitching after all.
I think Felix has a firm lead in that era race over millwood now, give him the cy young…or a gold glove at least. After making a terrible throw early in the game, his defense was spot on multiple times afterward.
Hopefully Silva can make Bavasi look like a genius in the rubber game.
god i hate josh hamilton…
[...] and games like yesterday’s may be all too common for the rest of the season. In my pre-game write-up, I said the game would be ugly. And it was, but for all the wrong [...]
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