Observations: Bastardo, Herndon, Halladay, Fans, More
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Observations: Bastardo, Herndon, Halladay, Fans, More
David Murphy, Daily News Staff Writer
It has been said many times that baseball is a game of failure, yet for seven innings yesterday it was difficult to find any flaws with this team. Every member of the line-up, Halladay included, had a hit. New third baseman Placido Polanco not only drove in six runs, but started a 5-4-3 double play that ended the fourth inning. Raul Ibanez, who struggled in the second half of last season and throughout spring training, reached base twice and scored two runs.
But if you were looking for a reason to worry, the eighth inning blessed you with an opportunity, as young lefty Antonio Bastardo made just the fourth relief appearance of his big league career. Bastardo, as you well know, is the team's only lefty reliever, and likely will be for at least the next two-to-three weeks. If the Phillies need a big out against Adam Dunn or Brian McCann, there's a good chance manager Charlie Manuel will call on his rookie. Yesterday, however, all three lefties he faced put together good at-bats against him. Nyjer Morgan led off the frame with a well-hit double. Willie Harris then made good contact on a 2-0 fastball, but ended up flying out to right field. Bastardo then walked Adam Dunn on four pitches to put runners at the corners with two out. He then struck out right-handed hitting Adam Zimmerman before Manuel called on Danys Baez to replace him (Baez ended the frame with a groundout).
There's no doubt Bastardo is talented. In fact, he could very well wind up at the back of the Phillies' bullpen someday. But his slider is still a work-in-progress -- Morgan's double came on an 0-1 slider -- and while he posted a spectacular 19/3 strikeout-to-walk ratio in spring training, he sometimes hurts himself falling behind hitters. Because he still isn't consistent with his slider, this forces him to throw his fastball. It's a damn good fastball -- Zimmerman struck out on an 1-2 inside fastball -- but when hitters know it is coming, it obviously diminishes its effectiveness. The ball Harris hit was a 2-0 fastball.
This isn't a Code Red situation. Bastardo seems to be what folks in the biz call a red light player -- when the red light on the camera clicks on, so do they -- and spring training and the eighth inning of a blowout hardly qualify as red light situations. In his final appearance of the spring, Bastardo put a couple Pirates on base before striking out three straight. And at-bats like the one against Zimmerman are why the Phillies are willing to endure some growing pains in the hopes that he finds a groove. Bastardo started the at-bat with a high fastball that induced a swing-and-miss. He then threw a 94 MPH fastball for a strike on the inside corner. This gave him a chance to throw his slider, which he buried in the dirt for a ball. But the change-of-pace was just as important as the ball/strike call -- the next pitch was an inside fastball that Zimmerman swung and missed at. If Bastardo can repeat bats like that, he can develop into a serious weapon.
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Other observations from Opening Day. . .
1) Roy Halladay was a big topic of conversation in spring training, both inside the Phillies organization and outside of it. For folks in the National League, he is still something of a curiosity. Everybody knows he is good. What defies conventional wisdom, however, is his consistency. Most pitchers will throw a few clunkers in a row. Most pitchers will suffer a hiccup for a season. Halladay seems immune to both. While working on a story on Halladay for our preview issue, Yanks catcher Jorge Posada fingered this consistency as his biggest strength. Over the course of a 162-game season, Posada said, you are often going to take the mound feeling less than 100 percent. Your fastball might not be working as good as you want it to. You might be struggling with the feel for your change-up. Halladay, he said, is the rare pitcher who is able to overcome this.
Yesterday would seem to be a good example of this. Halladay didn't have his best stuff, yet he still managed to strike out nine and allow one run in seven innings. He threw 19 pitches in the first inning, but finished the day with just 88. He rarely threw his change-up, mostly because with a huge lead he didn't have to. Around the majors, you saw other pitchers endure customary early-season struggles -- C.C. Sabathia, Josh Johnson, Josh Beckett, etc. What sets Halladay apart just might be his ability to make the best out of the bad (relatively speaking) days.
2) Speaking of facing lefties. . .
This is looking well down the road, but things could get very interesting when J.C. Romero and Brad Lidge come back from the disabled list, presumably by the end of April. I say this because the David Herndon who took the mound in the ninth yesterday looked a lot like the David Herndon who cruised through spring training. He gave up a couple of hits, including a double by Ivan Rodriguez, but three of the four balls in play that he allowed were on the ground, and he struck out Cristian Guzman. For a guy making his first ever appearance above Double-A, it was a solid debut. He could prove to be a valuable arm to have, particularly in middle-inning situations, and throughout spring training he has been pretty impressive against lefties (All three of his outs yesterday came against lefties).
3) The first time the Phillies scored 10 or more runs in a game last season, they followed it by scoring three runs. The second time, they followed it by scoring one run. The Phillies scored 10 or more runs in 20 games last season - they lost the next game nine times. In 2008, they lost five of 10 games.
Cole Hamels will be on the mound tomorrow tonight as the Phillies attempt to stop the trend. He'll face RHP Jason Marquis.
4) Plenty of coverage today in the Washington Post on the overwhelming contingent of Phillies fans who invaded Nationals Park yesterday. Half of them might've been in town to boo Donovan McNabb, but in the meantime they turned Washington's home opener into anything but that.
The Nationals couldn't even catch a break from the President of the United States, who donned a White Sox hat before throwing out the first pitch.
"Philly fans doing that in our ballpark, I think that's a statement on where we need to get to," manager Jim Riggleman was quoted as saying.
Wrote Post baseball columnist Thomas Boswell: "It's a shock when rude interlopers boo a home team during its own Opening Day. Perhaps, after a century of almost uniform misery, including a celebration of their own 10,000th loss, it's too much to ask Philadelphia guests to have the class of visiting Yankees or Red Sox boosters who, accustomed to winning teams, invade but don't insult."
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The Hopefully Semi-regular Yunel Escobar MVP Watch
Because of all the heat that I have taken over predicting that Braves short stop Yunel Escobar wins this year's National League MVP, we here at High Cheese are starting a new feature. It is called "The Hopefully Semi-regular Yunel Escobar MVP Watch." Last night, my good friend Jared informed me that if Escobar does in fact go on to win the NL MVP, he will never speak to me again. Because if Escobar does win the MVP, it will give me license to walk around thinking that I am even smarter than I already think I am. And Jared is well aware of how insufferable I can be.
So, throughout the season, we'll be monitoring young Yunel's progress as he mashes his way through the National League, scoring runs and stealing hearts. The thing is, we're only going to provide updates when he does something that makes me look like a genius. In my estimation, that will be every day. But on the off chance that he goes 0-for-4 with three strikeouts, you'll have to get your Yunel news elsewhere.
So, here's the first installation of The Hopefully Semi-regular Yunel Escobar MVP Watch.
Yesterday's performance: Escobar opened the season with a bang, going 2-for-5 with 5 RBI against the Cubs.
Today's projection: The Braves are off, and even Yunel Escobar can't homer when he doesn't play.
Perhaps Thomas Boswell is right. It would be a classy move to act like a gracious guest and respect the home team. Then again the home team advantage comes from actually drawing the extreme majority of fans to the game. If the Phillies are doing all the drawing then might as well accept Nationals games as another Phillies home game. alwaysanotherview
Yankee and Red Sox fans invade and don't insult? Are you kidding me? Apparently this guy wasn't at any of the WS games, or the Red Sox series last year. I kept getting hassled by Red Sox fans, telling me if they were in the WS instead of the Rays, they would have won. OK, buddy.. loctastic
Love it Murph... Love it. Great observations and I have this feeling that if Herndon pitches well, Contreras might be gone because of his low salary number. BammBamm
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Yankee fans are soft compared to Phillies fans. Mh225
Thomas Boswell is campaigning for a merit badge. mick314- Escobar has all the tools to be a pretty good player if he changes his attitude. Bobby Cox almost gave up on him last year and almost got rid of him. If he matures, watch out. EL Zorro
- Escobar's ridiculously large ego will inevitably kill his chances. But, I think you picked the wrong NL East SS (and I'm not talking about Rollins)
Yankee and Red Sox fans come to Nationals Park? duder
"Escobar opened the season with a bang, going 2-for-5 with 5 RBI against the Pirates." Wow that is really impressive, especially when you consider that the Braves played the Cubs yesterday. And the Dodgers played the Pirates. Impressive indeed. AreaMan
"Yesterday's performance: Escobar opened the season with a bang, going 2-for-5 with 5 RBI against the Pirates." Hey Murph, Just FYI -- The Braves played the Cubs yesterday. The Pirates opened up against the Dodgers. Refounder
Insult this...... Earl J
Escobar is the reason Atlanta let Furcal go to the Dodgers. As for the Boswell article, If the Phans booed during the Nats introductions I can see his point considering Phans booed Eaton when he picked up his ring.(classless)If they booed during the game thats different. EarlKeese
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Who else was really excited that Howard's homerun came off of a breaking ball thrown by a lefty? That's usually double-kryptonite for him. amc312
Yo Murph, you're killin' me over here. If Escobar does win the MVP, that means the Braves will have had a very good year. WE DON'T WANT THAT !!! scorpio27
Bet Carpenter, Kendrick and Bastardo go to AAA to make room for Blanton, Lidge and Romero when they are ready. Ruben will never move his Cuban guys even though they seem to be in the twilight of their careers. Though Durbin could go if they find a taker since his contract is up the end of the season. Gotta keep Mr. Roto Rooter, aka David Herndon, coming out of the pen. He is the best ground ball relief pitcher they have had here since the days of groundball Eddie Roebuck way back in the day. The Angels will take Rule 5 Herndon back if offered just like they took back Rule 5 Mosebach last year. Dull
Did anyone else notice Ryan Howard bustin' it down the line for an infield hit, like his shirt was on fire, late in the game, with a TEN RUN LEAD!!! He could have just jogged and no one would have said a thing. That's hustle. That's a Philly-style ballplayer. scorpio27
@amc312. I noticed, and it was good to see. Granted it wasn't Koufax out there, but it bodes well for the season. scorpio27
Comment removed.- david, your articles are great. don't end them with a semi-regular or rarely-regular or any type of regular watch on a member of the braves. that is just annoying. thanks.
I was at the game yesterday. While vocal in my support for the Phils, I didn't once boo DC. Neither did anyone in my section. I also applauded Ryan Zimmerman for his pregame accolades, which are well deserved. There are plenty of overzealous fans, but the majority of Phils fans I saw yesterday, which was at least half the crowd were good baseball fans. reidbetweenthelines
EarlK - the Braves actually wanted to resign Furcal, but felt that he just used them to up the Dodgers' offer. That was a big reason John Schuerholz vowed never to negotiate with Arn Tellem again. catnameddomino
Hey super smart guy. The Bravos played the Cubbies yesterday not the Dodgers who were in Pittsburgh. But he had a very good day as did the kid Heyward who looks like the Bravos have found another budding superstar. But the biggest news yesterday was the Phils lineup. I love it when a Plan comes together!!!! davidlipkin10- The Braves are going to be tough this year. That lineup and pitching staff is awesome. Throw in Bobby Cox retiring at the end of the year and this has all the ingredients of a touch NL East race. I think that's a good thing for the Phillies. Keep them hungry. booman55
Who is this "hard-hitting Adam Zimmerman" that you speak of? The Nationals have two players with the last name of Zimmerman (hard-hitting Ryan and pitching prospect Jordan), but none of them are named Adam. Does anyone edit this? bigd1421- Tell Jared that I find it "insufferable" that you're a beat writer for a major daily, and you don't even know basic sentence structure. According to your sentence below, Posada writes for the Inquirer. Stop blogging about your ego, and take English 101. "While working on a story on Halladay for our preview issue, Yanks catcher Jorge Posada fingered this consistency as his biggest strength." jb99
- Obama wearing a White Sox hat at the Nationals home opener once again shows how 'self absorbed' he is...johnnyu
I have been a David fan for months now. I keep asking the Phils to keep him over Jose. Hope that happens when supposedly the Big guys get back. Who knows? Perhaps Antonio and David and Baez will be the real stars instead. KGKoons
FYI Thomas Boswell - I was at 4 of the World Series games last year - 3 at CB Park and 1 at Yankee Stadium. Yankees fans are the rudest, crudest, over-testosteroned group I have ever seen. In game 2, both me and my wife were continuously pelted with popcorn and cracker jacks, and were threatened with physical violence several times. JesseH
I know people in that bore of a gov't city know or care nothing about athletics. With that being said, someone should tell Thomas Boswell that the Nats & Phils play in the same division hence the boos. If Yankee fans infested Fenway and out numbered Sox fans you would here the same thing. DC teams deserve to be terrible because its a faceless, uber-transient town with no passion for sports. Philadelphiafreedom81
Murph, Yunel did it against the Cubs, not the Dodgers. I know you're excited about his opening day performance, but anyone with a bat had a great day against Zambrano and the CUBS!!! RunningTheBases- Phillies fans ... travel well!! Go PHANS!!!
Those weren't Phillies fans, they were Eagles fans with Phillies shirts on. Phillies fans were at work yesterday. XM202- i agree with the invasion of phillies contingent... there is no need to boo as guests in another's house during opening celebrations...
- amc312, it wasn't lost on me. I think the big guy will hit 50+ this year. DaveCicc
Classic. "Yesterday's performance: Escobar opened the season with a bang, going 2-for-5 with 5 RBI against the Pirates." I guess Murph realized he had the team wrong so he corrected it to say; "Escobar opened the season with a bang, going 2-for-5 with 5 RBI against the Dodgers". Come on Murp, only problem is that the Braves didn't open with the Dodgers either. Way to correct an in-correction with another in-correction. Get it right bro. Nice. jdiggs2525- Tell this Boswell clown to come to Philly when the Sox, Mercenaries, or Mets are in town, no politeness from those invaders. Pelti
shut up Boswell, you puss. spittooncj
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Comment removed.- I'm pretty sure the schedule maker put the Phillies in Gnats park to sell it out and prove that the Nations Capital needs baseball. No other team would have sold out that stadium. Whoever has the most fans wins wins a cheering match. Having said that, don't boo season opening lineups in someone's own park. I did not.
4 for 5 with 2 jacks for Fat Al. Barring injury, he's the MVP again. HandNik
You can go back to sleep now Mr. Boswell. davekrieg
Mets fans are the worst, anywhere, including their own park, followed closly by the Red Sox (especially since they won the WS) and Yankees fans. It the Nats had a better team, maybe more of their fans would show up. pjdj
Boswell needed to sit near a bus full of Met fans at the old Vet. Now that was a show! By the second inning we all could see what Met fan was gonna get it, and by the third inning what Phillie fan was gonna give it. I guess its a visiting fan given right to mouth off but when a Phillie fan gets loud its "insulting". bigphillydad- Escobar is a nice call for longest of long shots to be the MVP. Given that he's a veteran - meaning more like to garner votes - I'll give Murph Cox's worst nightmare, and I'll take God's gift to the swinging of the bat, Jason Heyward, as my longest of long shots MVP picks.
Suck it up Tom Boswell. If your team could sell tix then you wouldn't have the Phillies fans. phillyfaninbeantown
Philles' fans should also invade the Mutts' home games--the journey is a shorter one, though the resistance would be greater. Delaware Jim
Escobar is pretty good I agree, Great post here today. He has no shot at the MVP. Albert is still the best in the NL easily. How in the world could you pick Escobar over Utley to challenge Albert. Thats crazy. I love Polanco hitting second every day for the phils. Rollins will have a better year just because of that. Let me point out two weak areas the Braves are gonna have. Chipper Jones is no longer a strong enough 3 hole hitter anymore. He is a hall of famer in my opinion. I still say when your teams best hitter is the catcher that its not good over the long haul of a season and that is the case with ATL. Also ATL's pen is gonna struggle throughout the season as well as the Phils. Yeah has anyone thought about Polanco helping us big time against ATL this year. I doubt it !! Its gonna be tight but its gonna be fun as well Rob#1phillyfan
The line about the Yankees and Red Sox fans being classy is one of the funniest things I have read for a while. Maybe the guy hasn't been to the Fenway bleachers during a Yankees game -- a step ahead of Baghadad, way way worse than the old 700 level. TripleCap
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And by "Adam Zimmerman" you mean Ryan Zimmerman? Rattyb- If I were going to pick a preseason MVP from the Braves, I’d go with Chipper. He's determined to have a big year, after struggling mightily last year, and with a better surrounding cast and Cox retiring at the end, he could have a monster year. But, I'll go with Howard over him and Pujols. Chipper could have another one of those DL visit, and the last two years Pujols is showing signs of breaking down. Last year, although he won the MVP, he had elbow issues and this year he already has back problems, which for slugger like him is a very, very bad thing. Howard looks in great shape and like some people already pointed out, he hit a homer of a breaking pitch from a lefty and was running hard to first base. He finally is listening to Milt and getting closer to the plate. This could be a repeat of his MVP season. EL Zorro
- Yeah, I agree. We need to keep Herndon. An option will be to ask Contreras to accept a minor league assignment if he struggles like he did in ST, and put him in the AAA rotation. Teams always need an emergency starter or two. Good luck with that. EL Zorro
In other news, Pete Happy is playing 1st base for that shrewdy led Ed Wade Houston Astros. The 'stros are 0-2 and have yet to score a run. Brett Myers, anchoring down the three spot in the rotation, goes today for the 000000000000000000000000000000's. NasallyNutter
Bitter journalism. What a shock. Philadelphia fans always travel well to support our teams. Oh no, we booed the opposing team and cheered ours. We should be removed from the stadium, I guess. When do the nats play the yankees or red sox? Go check out Camden yards when they do come down here, Boswell, you jealous, pouting little boy. I believe Phillies fans just made your organization and stadium a lot of $$$. If you don't want the opposing teams fans at the game, buy your own tickets and create a strong fanbase. adam4
Yankee fans as gracious guests? Please. Has Boswell ever been at Fenway for a Yankee / Sox game? There's nothing gracious about the smattering of yankee fans in attendance - especially when their team take the lead. I'm so sick of this garbage about the rogue, horrendous Philly fans. It's a convenient, lazy and innacurate writers lament. Pay no attention that phils fans sold out nearly every spring training game - including those ridiculous "on deck" series games in Philly. They sold out almost all game last year. Have already sold 3 million tickets this year. And are devoted enough to travel down to invade Washington. Boswell should rip his own fans for not showing up instead of getting on phils fans for showing... oh, they booed! big deal. terryharmon
Thomas Boswell needs to get a clue. At least he didn't mention mets fans, who behave worse on the road than anyone. MattPSU
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You are a moron Murph. Escobar is the worst SS in the NL East. t_bones8


