Results tagged ‘ Joel Peralta ’

Rays End Late Rally, Ruin Kuroda’s Yankee Debut

GAME 2

RAYS 8, YANKEES 6

Luke Scott slapped a two-out bases-loaded single to drive in two runs in the first inning as Tampa Bay built a 8-2 lead and held on late to edge New York on Saturday at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, FL.

David Price (1-0) gave up two runs on five hits and four walks and he struck out five in 6 1/3 innings to pick up the win. Hiroki Kuroda (0-1) surrendered six runs (four earned) on eight hits and four walks and he fanned two in 5 2/3 innings to lose in his Yankee debut.

Fernando Rodney came in to face Alex Rodriguez as the tying run with two out in the ninth and he retired him on an infield grounder to pick up a save.

The Yankees rallied to put four runs on the board in the ninth, including a three-run home run by Nick Swisher off Joel Peralta, only to ultimately come up shorr.

The Yankees are 0-2 on the young season and the Rays are 2-0.

PINSTRIPE POSITIVES

  • Not much was positive on this night though Swisher’s first home run of the season did bring the Yankees back from a 8-3 deficit to an within two runs in the ninth. He guessed fastball on an 1-0 count and got it from  Peralta and deposited the ball deep into the right-field bleachers. Swisher was 1-for-3 with two walks on the night.
  • Pinch-hitting for Andruw Jones in the ninth, Raul Ibanez hit a line drive to center-fielder Desmond Jennings to score Curtis Granderson, who had begun the inning with a triple off reliever Josh Lueke. Ibanez now has five RBIs in the first two games of the season.
  • Cory Wade was the only pitcher who seemed to know what he was doing on Saturday. He faced five batters and retired all of them, three by strikeout. Wade had struggled a lot during spring training and it was unclear if it would carry over to the regular season. But based on his first appearance, it looks as if Wade has straightened himself out.

NAGGING NEGATIVES

  • Kuroda was very disappointing after having an exceptional spring. His command was off (four walks) and he looked to be pitching tentatively all night. After Scott’s two-run single in the first, the Rays added a RBI single by Carlos Pena in the second, a solo home run by Matt Joyce in the third and RBI hits by Scott and Jennings in the sixth, which finally chased the 37-year-old right-hander.
  • Lefty specialist Clay Rapada, who drew raves all spring when he recorded an 0.90 ERA, was ineffective in his Yankee debut also. He walked the lefty-swinging Pena to open the seventh. Then he gave up a disputed home run to Evan Longoria that the umpires used TV replays to change into a double. However, the ruling did not matter when the lefty-swinging Joyce slapped a bloop single to left to score both Pena and Longoria. In the long run, those runs really hurt the most.
  • The Yankees are getting frustrated by the Rays’ defensive shifts, which have taken away hit after hit in the series. Rodriguez’s game-ending groundout was stopped by second baseman Sean Rodriguez, who was positioned up the middle, right where A-Rod hit it. A fitting end to a frustrating night.

BOMBER BANTER

Manager Joe Girardi opted to shift his lineup against the left-handed Price. He slotted Swisher in the No. 2 spot and moved Granderson into Swisher’s No. 6 spot. He also played Jones in left and benched Brett Gardner. Girardi said Swisher has a high on-base percentage against lefties and he might be used as the No. 2 hitter against lefties this season. He also said Gardner will still get playing time against lefties this season.  . . .  Girardi is considering giving Rodriguez a day off on Sunday after Derek Jeter was used as the DH on Saturday and Eduardo Nunez played shortstop. Girardi said Eric Chavez would replace Rodriguez in the lineup. Russell Martin also could sit in favor of new backup catcher Chris Stewart.

ON DECK

The Yankees look to salvage a game on Sunday in their finale with the Rays.

Phil Hughes will get the start for the Yankees. Hughes, 25, is looking to rebound from an injury-plagued 2011 campaign. Hughes is 403 with a 4.01 ERA lifetime against the Rays.

The Rays will counter with second-year right-hander Jeremy Hellickson, who was 13-10 in his rookie season. Hellickson is 2-1 with a 4.10 ERA against the Yankees in his career.

Game-time will be 1:40 p.m. and the game will be telecast by the YES Network.

 

2012 Rays Will Go As Far As Starters Take Them

As spring training camps open it is time to look at the American League East competition for the New York Yankees. How will the other teams fare as they gear up to dethrone the 2011 division champions? Do these teams have the pitching? Is there enough offense? Let’s see.

PART 3 – TAMPA BAY RAYS

Last season was supposed to be the time that the Tampa Bay Rays dropped from contention in the American League East. After all, they lost their star outfielder in Carl Crawford, their slugging first baseman Carlos Pena, their league-leading closer in Rafael Soriano and almost all the elements of what was a very good bullpen in 2010.

Yet, the Rays made the playoffs with a miracle finish that overtook a Boston Red Sox team that choked its way to the finish line. The Rays qualified with a 91-71 record but they lost in the first round of the A.L. Division Series against the Texas Rangers.

What is in store for the Rays in 2012? Do they have another miracle or two left in them?

STARTERS

It is real easy to see what the Rays strategy is for 2012. Run out the best five starters you have and keep them in the game as long as you can to cover up a weak middle of the bullpen and hope the offense can muster enough stolen bases and home runs to eke out a victory.

Right-hander James Shields was the poster boy for this team. In 2010, he was 13-15 with a 5.18 ERA. Last season, he was 16-12 with a 2.82 ERA and 11 complete games. The question is will Shields pitch like he did in 2010 or 2011? As the dean of the staff at age 30, his fortunes will set the tone for the rest of the staff.

The ace of this staff was supposed to have been David Price, who was 19-6 with a 2.72 ERA in 2010. Price, 26, fell from his perch with a 12-13 mark and a 3.49 ERA. The problem is that Price is basically a one-pitch pitcher: his fastball. His breaking stuff was inconsistent and as a result he was a .500 pitcher. Price needs to harness control of his slider and develop even a decent change-up in order to be successful.

Many people were stunned the Rays dealt Matt Garza to the Chicago Cubs. But the Rays knew they had rookie right-hander Jeremy Hellickson ready to jump into the rotation. Heliickson, 24, pitched as the Rays hoped with a 13-10 record and a 2.95 ERA. While Price is still searching for a change-up, Hellickson uses his as a weapon and the Rays hope he gets even better.

The Rays used right-handers Wade Davis and Jeff Niemann in the No. 4 and No. 5 spots last season. But both pitchers struggled with command and injuries in 2011.

Davis, 26, was 11-10 with a 4.45 ERA in 29 starts and Niemann was 11-7 with a 4.06 ERA in 23 starts.

One of these two pitchers is likely to lose their starting spot this spring. The Rays believe 22-year-old left-hander Matt Moore may be ready for prime time in 2012. Moore made one start during the regular season, a five-inning shutout of the Yankees. Then he threw a gem to defeat the Texas Rangers in the ALDS. Moore is a consensus pick to follow Hellickson as A.L. Rookie of the Year.

Though this is the best rotation in the division, there are still concerns. If Shields and Price do not pitch well and Hellickson and Moore do not follow up on their success, the Rays are in big trouble. This is a team that does not have much of Plan B behind its five starters.

BULLPEN

The Rays luck in 2011 even extended to their bullpen in 2011.

They replaced Soriano with former Yankee scapegoat Kyle Farnsworth as their closer and Farnsworth ended up pitching well. (Yankee fans may let out a primal scream now). Yep, Farnsworth, was 5-1 with a 2.18 ERA and he saved 25 games out of 31 chances.

Journeyman right-hander Joel Peralta also did a nice job replacing Joaquin Benoit, who left to sign with Detroit. Peralta, 35, was 3-4 with a 2.93 ERA and he added six saves. Veteran right-hander Juan Cruz also helped tighten up the bullpen in the late innings but he was allowed to leave as a free agent.

So the Rays will be building their bullpen around Farnsworth and Peralta in 2012.

The Rays did pick up former closer Fernando Rodney from the Los Angeles Angels. Rodney, 34, has good stuff but has been bothered with back problems. He was 3-4 with 4.50 ERA with the Angels in 2011.

The Rays are hoping left-hander J.P. Howell will get over his arm problems and pitch like he did in 2009 when he was 7-5 with a 2.84 ERA. In 2011, Howell struggled and was 2-3 with 6.16 ERA in 46 games.

The Rays bullpen likely will be rounded out by disappointing left-hander Jake McGee, right-hander Brandon Gomes and the loser of the battle between Davis and Niemann for the final spot in the rotation.

There is no guarantee Farnsworth and Peralta will pitch like they did in 2011. There also is some real soft spots in middle relief and the lack of an effective left-hander may really hurt in a division filled with lefty hitters like Adrian Gonzalez, David Ortiz, Robinson Cano, Curtis Granderson and Mark Teixeira.

That means manager Joe Maddon might be forced to leave his starters in the game longer than he might like to cover up the deficiencies and that takes its toll on those starters late in the season. The bullpen is an area of some concern.

STARTING LINEUP

The Rays have always been a running team who like to bunt, take extra bases and force opponents into making errors. The loss of Crawford did not change that in 2011. However, the Rays newest emphasis is on the home run.

The Rays had five players hit 16 or more home runs in 2011 and they re-signed first baseman Carlos Pena as a free agent and he hit 28 for the Cubs last season.

The team still revolves around third baseman Evan Longoria, who shook off another season of injuries to hit .244 with 31 home runs and 99 RBIs. The batting average has to be worrisome but Longoria is the team’s only real all-around threat as a hitter and power source.

The Rays also was boosted by a comeback season from Ben Zobrist, who hit .269 with 20 home runs and 91 RBIs. He will likely play a lot at second base and some in right-field as he did last season.

The Rays also rely on the power and speed of centerfielder B.J. Upton, who hit .243 with 23 home runs, 81 RBIs and 36 stolen bases.

Rookie Desmond Jennings arrived and he played well in 63 games. He hit .259 with 10 home runs and 25 RBIs as the team’s leadoff hitter. The Rays have high hopes he will surpass Crawford as an athlete and player.

The Rays also caught a bit of luck when Matt Joyce finally began to live up to the promise he showed with the Detroit Tigers. Joyce started off hot but collapsed badly after the All-Star break. He finished with a .277 batting average with 19 home runs and 77 RBIs as a platoon right-fielder and DH.

Sean Rodriguez figures to be the primary shortstop in 2012 though he hit just .223 with eight homers and 36 RBIs. That is because incumbent shortstop Reid Brignac was worse, hitting .193 with one home run and 15 RBIs.

The Rays also reshuffled their catchers for 2012 and they are looking to start former Yankee backup Jose Molina as a starter after he hit .281 with the Blue Jays. Molina, 36, was signed because the Rays were getting beat at their own game. Teams like the Yankees and Rangers were stealing on them at will.

Molina figures to end that with his defensive abilities and arm. However, an offense that relies on the stolen base will be slowed considerably with Molina on base. That is the big tradeoff.

To show how much more the Rays are valuing power, look no further than the signing of left-hander Luke Scott as the team’s primary DH. Scott averaged 28 home runs from 2008 through 2010 with the Orioles before injuries short-circuited his 2011 season. Scott and Joyce will certainly slow down any running game. But the Rays will hit their share of home runs in 2012.

BENCH

Maddon uses his bench a lot and he will again in 2012.

Brignac will battle career backup Eliot Johnson for the backup middle infield job. Johnson is the better hitter but Brignac is a bit better on defense.

For a while it looked Sam Fuld was going to be the next Pete Rose. Instead, reality set in and he ended up being the next Reggie Willits. But Fuld does provide speed and effort off the bench as an occasional outfield starter and pinch-runner.

Rookie Jose Lobaton will likely back up Molina. Lobaton hit .118 in 34 at-bats last season. The Rays do have a hitting catcher in Robinson Chirinos, however, his inability to throw base-stealers make him a project behind the plate for right now.

This bench is merely adequate. Maddon will use it a lot but there is not much of substance to it.

ANALYSIS

The 1963 Los Angeles Dodgers may be most interesting world championship team in history. They beat the Yankees in four straight games to win the World Series despite having one power hitter in Frank Howard, who led the team with 28 home runs. Outfielder Tommy Davis led the team with 88 RBIs.

How did they win? Well, they had Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and Johnny Podres combine to win 58 games and they had Maury Wills and Davis’ brother, Willie, combine to steal 65 bases.

So they relied on pitching, defense, line-drive hitters and speed and athleticism to win. This is similar to what the Rays would like to build in 2012.

They will go as far as their rotation will allow them to go. Maddon will have to rely on them a lot.

As far as offense goes, Maddon is actually counting more on the home run than the stolen base because only Jennings, Upton and Zobrist are consistent base stealers. Maddon will use his other players like Longoria and Rodriguez to steal in certain situations.

But this team did need the Red Sox to go through a monumental collapse to make it 2011. I do not think their luck extends to 2012. They will not fall precipitously as they should have last season. But I do not see them winning the division. They look to be a contender for second place with the Red Sox. Nothing more and nothing less.

ON THURSDAY – PART 4  BOSTON RED SOX


Jeter Hits No. 3,000, Later Wins Game For Yanks

GAME 87

YANKEES 5, RAYS 4

When Derek Jeter steps into baseball history he does it with a flourish.

On a day when “The Captain” needed just two hits to join 27 immortal members of the 3,000 hit club, he collected five. With Jeter noted as the most prolific singles hitter in Yankee history, his 3,000 hit was a home run. Revered for his patented inside-out swing that sends most of hits to right, the future Hall-of-Fame shortstop only drove only one to the opposite field.

Oh, and on a day when he could have been happy going 4-for-4, Jeter merely stroked an RBI single in the bottom of the eighth inning that drove in the game-winning run as the Yankees downed Tampa Bay on Saturday afternoon in front of a sellout crowd of 48,103 raucous and excited fans at Yankee Stadium.

Wearing his familiar No. 2, Jeter strolled to the plate with one out and nobody on in the third inning, having singled to left for hit No. 2,999 off Rays left-hander David Price in the first inning. The crowd rose to its feet to honor the only Yankee shortstop they have known for the past 17 seasons. I-phones, cellphones and cameras were poised to record the event.

After fouling off two pitches in a 3-2 count, at exactly 2 p.m. Eastern time Jeter measured up a Price hanging slider and he connected with the ball and sent it soaring majestically into the first row of the second deck in the left-field bleachers. The home run was Jeter’s third of the season and it tied the game at 1-1. But those facts seem to be meaningless to the wild celebration that followed.

His 17-year teammate and close friend, Jorge Posada was the first player to reach him after he crossed home plate and gave him a big hug. The rest of the Yankees, including fellow 17-year teammate Mariano Rivera and manager Joe Girardi followed suit as the whole team poured out of the dugout in succession. Jeter then disappeared into the dugout and then came out for one final curtain call to the event for the fans.

Jeter is only the second player to reach the 3,000-hit mark via a home run. Former teammate Wade Boggs did it, ironically with Tampa Bay, on Aug, 7, 1999. Jeter, already the Yankees all-time hit leader, also becomes the only player in the long and rich tradition of the Yankee franchise to reach 3,000 hits.

“It means a lot,” Jeter said. “It’s a number that has meant a lot in the history of the game, because not too many people have done it before. To be the only Yankee to do it … to be the only Yankee to do anything is pretty special.”

Meanwhile, the Yankees and Rays played in a seesaw affair all afternoon.

The Yankees took a 2-1 lead on the Rays after Jeter’s historic homer when Russell Martin singled in Curtis Granderson. However, Yankees starter A.J. Burnett could not hold the lead for long. He gave up a two-out, two-run home run to B.J. Upton in the top of the fourth.

Jeter then started a two-run rally in the fifth with a leadoff double down the left-field corner. Granderson then shot a ball down the right-field line for a single that scored Jeter with the tying run. After a Mark Teixeira single advanced Graderson to third, Robinson Cano lifted a sacrifice fly to left to give the Yankees the lead back.

They held that lead until David Robertson surrendered a long leadoff triple to deep center by Johnny Damon. Ben Zobrist scored Damon with a single to center on a drawn-in Yankee infield.

But Jeter got his chance to be the day’s hero in the bottom of the inning.

Eduardo Nunez, replacing an injured Alex Rodriguez at third, opened the frame with a leadoff double off reliever Joel Peralta (2-4). Brett Gardner bunted Nunez to third and Jeter followed a single to center on the Rays’ drawn-in infield to score the eventual winning run.

Robertson (2-0) was the winner despite giving up a run for the first time since June 9, a span of 11 appearances. Rivera pitched a perfect ninth to earn his 22nd save in 26 chances in his first appearance since a blown save against the Mets on July 3, when he first noticed a right triceps injury that sidelined him all this week.

With the victory, the Yankees broke a string of four losses in their past five games. They improved their season ledger to 52-35 and they still trail the Boston Red Sox in the American League East by one game. The Rays dropped to 49-40 and they are five games out of first.

PINSTRIPE POSITIVES

  • Jeter’s five hits on Saturday raised his season average from .257 to .270. After going 0-for-4 in his first game off the disabled list on Monday in Cleveland, Jeter is 9-for-19 (.474) with four doubles and a home run. It is the first time Jeter has reached the .270 mark this season since May 12.
  • Rivera’s ninth inning was perfect with one strike out and it only took him 11 pitches to dispatch Sean Rodriguez, Kelly Shoppach and Justin Ruggiano in order. Though Rivera pitched effectively, he has decided not to pitch in Tuesday’s All-Star Game in order to rest the triceps injury during the break.
  • Burnett actually pitched good enough to earn the victory. He ended up giving up three runs on only three hits and three walks and he fanned nine batters, most of them with his curveball. However, of the three hits Burnett gave up, two of them reached the bleachers. Matt Joyce hit a solo home run with two out in the second inning. Upton hit his two-run shot two innings later.
  • Granderson was 1-for-4 with a walk, drove in a run and scored two runs in the game. The two runs scored increases his major league-leading total to 79, which is nine runs better than Toronto’s Jose Bautista, who is second.

NAGGING NEGATIVES

On a day in which Jeter made Yankee history and he led the team to victory with Rivera looking sharp, it is hard to find fault with anything.

BOMBER BANTER

The lucky fan who caught Jeter’s 3,000th hit was 23-year-old Christian Lopez, a Verizon sales rep from Highland Mills, N.Y. Instead of asking for a princely sum of money to return the ball to Jeter, Lopez only asked to meet Jeter and get a few signed balls. The Yankees security staff whisked him away and he was given three signed bats, three signed balls and two signed jerseys. In addition, the Yankees gave Fernandez four front-row Legends tickets to Sunday’s game and four Champions Suite tickets for the remainder of the season, including if the Yankees make the postseason.  . . .  Alex Rodriguez said on Saturday that he will seek a second opinion on his right knee. An MRI taken on Friday revealed Rodriguez has a slightly torn meniscus. Dr. Lee Kaplan will examine Rodriguez’s right knee in Miami on Monday and then Rodriguez will decide whether to have surgery, which would sideline the All-Star third baseman for about a month. Rodriguez already has opted out of the All-Star Game.  Rodriguez originally injured the knee on June 19 in a game against the Cubs in Wrigley Field. Rodriguez has not hit a home run since June 11 at Yankee Stadium in a game against the Indians.  . . .  Outfielder Nick Swisher was not on the lineup on Saturday so he could rest his ailing left quad muscle. Swisher injured his left leg running down Zobrist’s triple to leadoff Thursday’s game with the Rays. No further tests are planned on Swisher and he is listed as day-to-day. Andruw Jones started in right-field on Saturday and batted seventh.

ON DECK

The Yankees will complete what ended up being a three-game series with the Rays on Sunday and it also will be the last game before the All-Star break.

The Yankees will attempt to win the series with lefty ace CC Sabathia (12-4, 2.90 ERA) on the mound. Sabathia has won nine of his last 10 starts and he is coming off a game in which he shut out the Indians and struck out 11 over seven innings. He is 8-5 with a 3.24 ERA in his career against the Rays.

The Rays will counter with All-Star right-hander James Shields (8-6,2.47 ERA). Shields allowed three runs (two earned) on six hits and three walks in seven innings on Monday against the Twins. He is 3-9 with a 4.83 ERA against the Yankees in his career.

Game-time will be at 1:05 p.m. EDT and the game will be telecast by the YES Network.

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