Brad Lidge placed on DL; Dissecting the move
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Brad Lidge placed on DL; Dissecting the move
Daily News staff
Righthander Brad Lidge was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a sprained right knee, retroactive to June 7, the Phillies announced today. To take his spot on the 25-man roster, the Phillies selected the contract of catcher Paul Bako from double-A Reading.
The Phillies clubhouse does not open to the media for another hour and 15 minutes, so for approximately that frame of time, we don't have much in the way of an explanation for the club's decision to send Brad Lidge to the 15-day disabled list and replace him with catcher Paul Bako, whom the team signed last month after he was waived by the Cubs.
Clearly, this has as much to do with Lidge's recent results as it does the actual pain in his right knee, which has bothered him since early in the season and led to him being shut down from April 26 through May 1. Lidge blew two one-run ninth-inning leads at Dodger Stadium this weekend, and he is currently 0-3 with a 7.27 ERA. After going a perfect 41-for-41 last regular season, he has converted just 13 of 19 save opportunities this season. The difference between Phillies sweeps at Yankee Stadium and Dodger Stadium were three blown saves.
I talked to Lidge about his knee on Thursday in Los Angeles. I was curious about how his knee had responded after pitching in, and saving, four straight games from May 29 through June 1. At the time, he had saved five straight games, allowing one hit and one walk while striking out five in 4 2/3 scoreless innings.
Lidge said that the pain in the knee was still there, but that he did not think it was affecting him on the field.
"It's stronger now, I think," said Lidge, who has worn special inserts in his shoes to fix a slight bend in his right leg that might have contributed to his frequent knee issues. "It feels like I don't really have to worry about it as much anymore. I don't have to worry if it's going to respond. It's stronger, and I am confident that it will [respond].
"[The inflammation is] still there, and it might be for a while, but I'm not thinking about it when I'm pitching."
But Lidge blew a save the following night, allowing two runs on two hits in 2/3 of an inning. Then, on Saturday, he allowed a solo home run to Rafael Furcal that tied the game in the ninth. The Dodgers went on to win in 12 innings.
Whether or not Lidge was being a good soldier in playing down the knee injury, the fact remains the Phillies need him to rediscover the groove that he had last season. They don't need him to be perfect again. But the difference between three blown saves and six blown saves at this point is the difference between a three-game lead in the National League East and a six-game lead.
If such a move was going to be made, now is a logical time. Lefthander J.C. Romero is back and has set-up type stuff. Set-up man Ryan Madson, meanwhile, has been impeccable. Heading into tonight's game against the Mets, the righthander is riding a streak of 10 2/3 scoreless innings. During that stretch he has allowed just five hits and three walks while striking out 13. The Phillies have also been carrying an extra arm in the bullpen since sending outfielder John Mayberry Jr. back to Triple-A Lehigh Valley last Monday night.
A few other observations:
1) The move is retroactive to June 7, the last time Lidge pitched, meaning he will eligible to return on June 22.
2) Bako is known as an experienced defensive catcher, one who served as Greg Maddux's personal back-stop for a time in Atlanta. Although the Phillies have not said this, it would seem that the move will allow Chris Coste to become the right-handed bench player that the team has sought since the end of last season.
3) Bako is expected to be in uniform tonight against the Mets.
I think Madson is a a point in his mound maturity that will allow him to flourish in the closers spot.When Lidge comes back he will go back into that roll.He had better reel off about ten straight saves when He does come back or you'll have blog comment fodder for weeks! saabguy
When Lidge comes back, he'll be the closer. Your job on this team is pretty much locked up unless you're a new guy (like Park) or your name is Jimmy Rollins. DS17
If Madsen plays shut down closer, Lidge is on a very short leash when he comes back. Repubrebirth
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You know I still love Lidge and even if he gives the city nothing else but the image of him from last October that's good enough for me. Get better Lidge, I'd love to see you back and healthy. PAJames
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FreakinMoron-your name certainly fits......Lidge has always been a great pitcher plagued with confidence issues. There is no way he was on juice last year. Now go back to New York. PAJames
And come on Phillies fans.....quit bashing Lidge. Just two months ago he was everyone's hero. This is why the world hates us and why Jimmy Rollins called us "front runners". I'm going to be rooting for Lidge when he gets back like always. PAJames
Madsen is pitching well, Romero is back, good time for Lidge to rest up, they'll need him later. Hope his head heals quicker than his knee! M-star
Does anybody have Jose Mesa's phone #??? jerseyjoe
Lidge is not going to work his issues out by them continuing to run him out there. When you look at him pitch he does not appear to be comfortable or confident. In his last outing, it looked as if he was afraid to throw his slider. It just does not have the bite that it had last year. His lack of follow through, which is probably attributable to the knee, is causing the pitching problems. His slider now is either elevated or into the dirt. So since he can't throw a quality slider now, batters are just waiting on the one that sits up on a tee. Plus, although he can throw that fastball at 95 mph, it lacks movement. He would need to throw it at 100 mph to prevent it from not getting whacked. Once his knee gets better, he can go on a minor league rehab assignment which should include developing a sinker or a heavy fastball to induce more ground balls, or bringing in Greg Maddux as a consultant to teach his fastball grip that induced movement. dross


