White Sox 5, Mariners 4

=== Takin' the Good With the Bad ===

I had cheerfully grabbed Aardsma's first 5-6 saves and laughed all the way to Interurban Avenue, so I'm not going to throw a snit fit now.

Aardsma never claimed to be a Prime Time, $10M closer and 38-for-42 again this season will be just fine.

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

What did make Dr. D smile was the postgame quotes, that Aardsma "had left two fastballs up."  Needless to say, (1) Aardsma strikes guys out because he throws fastballs up.  Also, (2) he has very little control as to whether the pitch is up or down anyway.

His postgame comments should be read simply, "That's baseball.  You rolls the dice and you takes what you get."

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

SSI has been white-knuckled for at least a year on "The DA."  A 96 fastball up is a swinging strike or a tater, and he's been taking all the swinging strikes he can get.

Aardsma is what he is:  an ad hoc closer until you can get one with legit lockdown skills, like Brandon League or Mark Lowe.

.

=== The IceMan Cometh ===

Doogie's first good start came with the M's record at 2-6, it was a pitcher's duel matching zeroes into the 8th, and then Milton Bradley's 3-run shot turned around their April.

We notice that again today, the White Sox (1) gutpunched the M's the night before, and (2) Freddy Garcia had a 1-hitter late into the game.  In these very unlikely circumstances, Fister again handed the ball to the closer with a lead.  That's unpossible, Ralph.

Fister's performance under duress was surgeon-calm.  Wakamatsu put on the headset for the TV guys in the 3rd inning and that was exactly what he observed about Fister:  he's calm out there.

Dr. D would take this to mean that Fister's pulling away on the inside for the rotation job security.  At least he hopes so.

.

=== Tui at SS ===

Tuiasosopo gets his backside lower than do most ML shortstops, and he plays deep.  Most shortstops prance over to a backhand ball like an antelope, lean over at the waist, and with feet already set, throw as hard as they can, to get the runner by a step.

On a grounder in the hole today, Tui scrambled over, bent wayyyyyy low to the ground, smothered the ball sure-handedly, stood up... with both feet on the outfield grass, took a 1-2 step and gunned the ball over to 1B on a line to get the runner by several steps.

Same thing glove side:  he gets in front of the ball early, lowers the entire CG to ground level, pulls it into his belly, and then relies on his arm to buy the time back.  (He booted one gloveside the other day because he leaned over at the waist on the run; today he was exaggerating his fundamentals.)

Tuiasosopo is never going to start in the majors at short, but I'd sure rather see him there than Jack Hannahan.  And he's liable to be VERY plus at third base.

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

SSI will cheerfully concede that his K rate bears watching.  Tui is getting deep counts, which is good, but the swing-and-miss rate is mortifying.

But:  don't be one of those fans who runs over to a blue-chipper, watches his first 50 AB's go awry, and then wanders off having lost interest.  That's free advice.  :- )

Gotta keep the inexperience in context.  Fans want blue-chippers to show their stuff yesterday, but Tui's a work in progress at the plate.  He will be for awhile.

.

=== The Won-Loss Record ===

Geoff Baker Live! eerily prophesied (1) a three-game sweep by Chicago, (2) a 2-1 M's win in KC, (3) a .500 record in April, (4) and the M's where they want to be when Lee comes back.

The M's got gutpunched in Oakland, too, just as bad.  They rallied, no sweat.  Earl's Seventh Law: momentum is only as good as that day's starting pitcher.  The M's have Felix, Lee, and Fister to stop downhill slides.

.

;- ) ,

Dr D

Comments

1

I'm not a Tui guy, but I'll definitely concede that he doesn't have eyes as wide as saucers out there, and other than some bonehead plays at positions he doesn't have a lot of experience at, he's doing all right in the field.
The 0:10 BB:K rate is not gonna get him an extended look though.  If he doesn't get that fixed soon he's gonna lose the playing time he's getting.
Swings and misses are gonna happen - he still needs to get on base.  Chone can't hit anything right now, but that walk rate is keeping him useful.  We're already at capacity for guys with and OBP under .300.   Tui needs to find some ball fours while he gets his feet under him.
~G

2

Not advocating, just pointing out.   I root for Tui.
Tui's been given 22 ABs with 0 XBH and 0 BB.  .182/.182/.182.
On his heels: Hannahan has 2 HR and 4 BB in 6 games back at Tacoma -- and is on the 40-man.
Ramon Vazquez was signed (minor league deal) and is playing his way into shape at Tacoma.  The former top Ms prospect (anyone remember Vazquez, Brett Tomko and Tom Lampkin for Ben Davis, Alex Arias and Wascar Serrano?) was a plenty handy utility guy for Texas in 08 (.795 OPS and played all four infield spots), and despite inconsistent results has always had a decent eye and a fair amount of extra-base pop. Vazquez is not on the 40-man, but has played MLB shortstop way more than the other two (though I have no idea how he is at age 33).
 Am not sure they would sign Vazquez if they had full faith in Tui as a major leaguer this season.

3
glmuskie's picture

Lately I'm awfully leery of AAA stats' predictive power to MLB, especially short term numbers.
Remember the fiery death Clement rained down on AAA for a spell?
With Hannahan and Vazquez, IMO you can pretty much ignore what they do in AAA because you KNOW what you're going to get in MLB.  With Tui, we're not sure yet.  I'm hoping he'll bust out and become an impact player, but he might not.  And, I'm almost certain he won't unless he plays a bunch, and he's just not getting enough playing time to allow him to develop. 
I suppose at this point, since Tui isn't going to play much, I'd be happiest if he got traded to a team where he could get a full time job.  Then bring up Vazquez, because he can bring a modicum of offense.  Hannahan, I have no interest in seeing on the team.
 

4

That you take a seasoned ML vet and put him against kids, after-the-transition, and you can throw the MLE's pretty much out the window.
To me, the MLE's are worth more when they're talking pre-transition and when they're weighed 2-3 years' worth together.
... Josh Wilson slugging .500 in AAA means zero to me.  Ezequiel Carrera would be another matter.
My $0.02.

6

Yep - at the moment Tui and Moore both seem to be floundering.
On a potentially worse note, looks like Saunders is imploding at Tacoma.  We can hope they're re-tooling him.

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