M's split two 50-50 games with Angels
Since when did the M's become, not wussies?

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Tough thing in soccer:  the ball chips into open territory.  Two fast players have similar angles on it.  A "50-50" ball.  You have five  basic possible outcomes:

  • You tackle, miss, he nips by you and you've allowed a horrible fast break against your team
  • You or he tackles, stops the attack, and what happens next is anybody's guess (another 50-50 ball maybe)
  • You back up, play the angle, and concede possession
  • He backs up, plays the angle, and concedes you possession
  • He tackles, misses, you nip by him and there's your exciting counter on

Notice that the intelligent thing to do, short-term, might be to concede a few more balls than teams actually do.  The impactful thing to do is to stick a cleat into the ball.  Remember Kam Chancellor's first play in the Super Bowl?  Toughness warps the game.

...........

The Mariners, the last two days, have played a whale of a tight couple "50-50" games against the Angels.  What's your visceral reaction to these games?  What instinctive feeling does it produce, when the games are hanging by a thread for 600 consecutive pitches?

  • I savor the tension, every pitch a possible "tipping point"
  • I just want my team to roll like a juggernaut; any threat of defeat is annoying
  • I empathize with the athletes in blue, doing battle; my loyalty increases
  • Mostly I am just cringing and waiting for his kill shot
  • At least I feel alive
  • I DVR past most stuff

The M's have out-hit the Angels 24-17, have a 7:25 EYE to the Angels' 7:26 ... they have 5 extra-base hits to the Angels' 7.  The M's have a 3:0 stolen base to caught ratio; the Angels have a 1:2 ratio.

Both teams used their #1 and #2 starters, matched up, stylistically similar.  Both teams used 13 relievers apiece, following their two aces.

Two titanic struggles, the outcome never clear.  Howja feel about the last two games?   Are you into sports?

............

Five things:  Wilhelmsen looked pretty smooth those four innings, din't he?  About on track with Taijuan.  The image of Garrett Richards couldn'ta done any harm.

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Cano ripped one into the gap Friday on his 4-for-6 day, he bounced out of his popup slide a little, and they called him out because the little 2B held the ball on him.  That's my definition of "weak."  You lost the play.  C'mon.  The other guy hit a homer off you; don't whine about the pine tar now.

I mean, Billy Martin woulda done it, sure.  :- )  But the pernt is, the Angels went 600 pitches* with the M's bare-knuckle.  Did you see anybody back down out there?  Been awhile, hain't it?  The 2014 Mariners, suddenly, aren't wussies any more.  That's worth something to me.

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It says on MLBTR that rival execs say that Jack Zduriencik "is hard to push across the finish line."  He is, or his committee is?

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The little rumor about Zobrist & ? for Franklin and Maurer:  (1) probably 50, 100 groups of names have changed hands.  (2) If this were really a rumor with legs, all it goes to show is how fast these scouts get onto new developments.

Brandon Maurer is a fast-moving target, value-wise.  In just a month or two the M's might have themselves a Hochevar.  "Hey, how about we finish up this Franklin-Zobrist deal with one or your relievers".... sure thing, mate.  Justin Leone.  Sounds like we're within a PTBNL on that one.

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Wouldn't it stand to reason that the M's had the advantage in the bullpen on Sunday?

...............

The Mariners' visceral reaction to a 600-pitch bloodbath:  to fight to the last pitch.  A deep bullpen, and a tough manager, will do that to you.  Dr. D especially enjoyed the fact that they won the second game, after getting gut-punched in the first game.

Cheers,

Dr D

 

 

Blog: 

Comments

1

1.  The only M's bullpen guy who looked like he might crack under the pressure was Rodney.  I thought he looked completely lost as his inning began last night.  
2.  I think I reacted differently than everybody else to the 'Yer safe! 'Yer out! tag of Cano.  My immediate thought was the the Angels had seen that on tape or in a previous M's series and had made their IF aware.  I thought they won that battle fair and square and that one of the best  players in the game got careless.  Kudos to them, thinks I. The Angels' statement was "Game on." Did you see Seager hug the bag after his slide last night?  Our statement was "Bring it on."  Kudos to us, now thinks I.

2
Anonymous's picture

1. Love the low score/high tension. My favorite kind of game (although less than five hours would be fine with me).
2. Agree with Moe--i would want EVERY one of my infielders to hold the tag on EVERY relevant play. Don't see how this is different from trying to throw out a runner at the plate tagging up on a fly ball. What this held tag play really does is expose the dramatic decline in skills in sliding. I have to believe this is seldom if ever taught anymore as players develop. And the dead giveaway is the prevalence of the head first dive.
3. Jack is hardly flawless--but how is he such a master at bullpen construction?

6

Mariners get spectacularly unlucky multiple times in a row in game 1 and lose...Angels get unlucky in game two and lose it. These two teams are equals on the field against each other...not sure why the Angels are so much better at cremating bad teams.

7
bsr's picture

That was my basic reaction too. Along with, I can't stop watching these games! :) I think the M's are dead even w/ the Angels at this point, heads up. These were long, hard fought games where the whole teams got involved, and we basically played to a draw. If Jack can swing some more talent our way, IMO we are better than them.

8
tjm's picture

I think the teams were very close three days ago - until Angels got Street. The end of their bullpen and the end of their rotation were their only real weak spots. They just eliminated one. The M's have better pitching overall, but Street pulls the bullpens much closer. And the Angels' offense is an overwhelming advantage. The Angel broadcast crew Sunday was aghast at the M's lineup - 5 out 9 guys threatening the Mendoza line. It's amazing what you can get used to.

9

He hasn't been as scary as I thought he would be during this series. Kendrick is a tough, tough out. But yeah, the Angel lineup is solid, front to back, and they have Cowgill on the bench having a career year, albeit injured now. Cron too.Trout is unreal. Mariner pitching has been phenomenal. Just give us a one game playoff with them. That's all I ask.

10
tjm's picture

Just noticed that the Angels optioned CJ Cron to AAA to make room for Street. Cron would be batting clean-up for the M's.

11
RockiesJeff's picture

Amazing how Street has made a comeback. When he was in Colorado he started off as an above average closer and soon became the twin of Bobby Ayala.

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