Aquasox Game Thread

Dave · June 22, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

With no game for the Mariners or the Rainiers, let me direct you to the Aquasox home page and suggest you listen to Pat Dillon call Everett’s game against Vancouver. Luke Burnett, all 6’8/240 of him, takes the mound against Vancouver at 7:05 pm. The Aquasox have their home opener tomorrow, so you can listen to tonight’s game to get a head start on the roster before you head up to Everett tomorrow night.

Ryan Langerhans

Dave · June 22, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

With Endy Chavez’s season cut short and the team deciding that Michael Saunders could use some more time in Triple-A, the M’s are down an outfielder. Wlad will get the chance to play regularly, but the team can’t seriously go forward with Ronny Cedeno or Chris Woodward as the 4th OF. The team needs a legitimate outfielder on the bench to give the team a major league player to stick in the line-up if someone needs a day off or has to leave a game early. Given the construction of the team, it would really help if that outfielder was left-handed and could get on base a little bit. With the team’s success being heavily dependent on quality defense from the outfield, it would also be nice if that left-handed hitting outfielder had some range. And, with Saunders potentially being ready in the not-too-distant future, that guy shouldn’t cost a lot to acquire, since he might be a very short term fill-in.

Where would you find a left-handed hitting, quality defensive outfielder with decent OBP skills who won’t cost much to acquire? In Syracuse, New York, going by the name Ryan Langerhans. He’s about 49th on the Washington Nationals depth chart, and has basically no hope of getting any playing time in D.C. this year. That is despite the fact that he posted a .353 wOBA for the Nationals in 139 plate appearances last year while playing outstanding defense for them in RF/LF. He was worth 0.8 wins in about 20% of a season, and yet, because MLB is still so tied up in batting average (Langerhans hit .234), he couldn’t land a major league job this winter.

He’s absolutely perfect for what the M’s need. His preseason ZIPS projection had him as a .239/.341/.375 hitter, which would make him about the fourth best hitter on the M’s right now. ZIPS doesn’t know that he’s gone down to Triple-A and started whacking the baseball this year, hitting .279/.383/.508 and showing the best power of his career. He’s drawn 30 walks and has 23 extra base hits in 216 plate appearances for Syracuse, and those secondary skills combined with his range in the outfield make him a very useful role player.

It’s not like he’s some minor league wonder who can’t hit major league pitching. His career line in the big leagues is .233/.335/.378, and that’s dragged down by a disastrous ’07 season. In 2005, 2006, and 2008, he’s been a solid average-ish hitter, and his defensive numbers are terrific (career +27.2 UZR in 2,000 innings in LF/RF), which match up with all the scouting reports about his athletic ability.

Even with the miserable ’07 included, Langerhans has been about a +1 to +1.5 win player per 150 games over the course of his major league career. His minor league numbers suggest he could be even better than that. We’re talking about a legitimate, quality outfielder, with the exact skillset the M’s need right now. And he’d cost as little as anyone on earth to acquire – the M’s could give the Nationals free tickets to the aquarium or a neat picture of the Space Needle or something, and voila, quality fourth outfielder with left-handed stick, good plate discipline, and good defense could be theirs.

Ryan Langerhans please.

Minor League Roundtable #2

Dave · June 22, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

It’s been too long, but we’re finally ready to post our second minor league roundtable discussion between Jay Yencich, Marc W, and myself. We started off with a conversation about Joe Dunigan in early May, but then got side-tracked by the draft, so we finished it off last week talking about Aaron Pribanic, Doug Fister, and Tyson Gillies. Hope you enjoy.

Read more

Minor League Wrap (6/15-21/09)

Jay Yencich · June 22, 2009 · Filed Under Minor Leagues

Dave adds: We’re happy to announce that Jay has agreed to join us full time as a USSM author. He’s done a fantastic job with the recaps, and we were so impressed we asked him to take on a larger role. He’ll still be doing the recaps through the season, but he’s also going to be doing more posts on the goings on below the major league level and generally boosting the site’s coverage of the team’s farm system. We’re really happy to have Jay on board as an author. Welcome to the team, Jay.

A few quick notes before we get things rolling. First off, the Midwest and California League All-Star Games, with M’s farmhands well-represented, will be taking place on Tuesday, not that you would miss a match-up against our hated interleague rivals for the world. Second, Everett and Peoria have started play, with Pulaski also getting going on Tuesday, so be patient as the recaps adjust to the added workload. The first half is over. Let the endurance run begin.

To the jump!
Read more

Game thread

DMZ · June 21, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

Wooooo

Five hundred. Fiiiiive hundred.

DMZ · June 20, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

34-34. Yeah, the offense is bad, and the pitching’s shaky and Bedard’s injured and our middle infield is hoooorrible. And yeah, there’s some luck here too. But folks —

.500

Last year they’d lost 34 before May was out and didn’t win 34 until July.

It’s been a long, horrible year since they were legitimately .500 (this day in 07 they were 36-32), and as a bonus to seeing the team’s return to respectability, we’re seeing the foundations of a team that can win sustainably, too.

We don’t know what’ll happen next, if they’ll sell, or buy and sell, or how the season will go… but to see them claw their way back up after that May collapse makes me happy.

Game 68, Diamondbacks at Mariners

DMZ · June 20, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

I ended up seeing Chavez’s injury a dozen times yesterday, between the game and watching the post-game show, and… I don’t have anything good to say for the game thread today. Endy’s out, Wlad’s in, Vargas is starting, and I’m sad. I know this kind of thing’s entirely unpredictable, and I’ve been trying not to, but to have Yuni involved, and walk away unharmed, after all the frustration of the season, it’s almost too much for me to maintain a wall between Yuni, the player who is underperforming and hurting the team eight ways, to Yuni, the guy who is cursing the team.

I can’t be alone on this, can I? We’re only human, and fans so we’re irrationally emotionally involved with this stuff. If he lets the bat go on a swing and gives Gutierrez a concussion tonight, at this point I’d just shake my head and put it on his tab.

If (as it’s gone so far this season) Yuni responds to this by fielding every ground ball in play and goes 4-5 with four home runs, it’d be a good first step to working off this karmic debt.

Chavez has a Torn ACL

Jay Yencich · June 20, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

Geoff Baker with the story. Not only is the anterior cruciate ligament torn, but it’s possible that there’s further damage to the other ligaments and a bone fracture. Great.

Baker also notes that Zduriencik has made the call that Saunders not be called up. They want to see him play more in Tacoma, and given the shoulder surgery at the end of last year and the slow start to June, along with the usual arbitration clock concerns, that’s a reasonable decision. Left field will be manned by Wlad, with guest appearances by Cedeno and Griffey.

In the meantime, Josh Wilson, who was picked up off waivers from the Padres earlier in the week, will take the spot on the roster until Lopez comes off the bereavement list, and then they’ll have to decide which of their infielders is heading out.

Update from Baker: MCL torn too, meniscus damaged, deep bone bruise, probably out to start 2010. For a player whose game is speed-reliant, it’s difficult to fully characterize how much this sucks.

Aumont Joins Diamond Jaxx

Jay Yencich · June 20, 2009 · Filed Under Minor Leagues

There’s a press release up at an external site, but if you don’t like that, you can confirm the roster. This doesn’t look like a temporary move for today’s doubleheader either, as they released a player to make room for him.

So, what have we learned about our ’07 first-round pick in the past few months? Aumont struggled out of the gate, with some mediocre command marring his April performances and leaving him with a 9/6 K/BB in 10.1 innings. This improved significantly to a 16/2 in 14.1 May innings, but it was coupled with a few more of his hits leaving the park. In June, his performances were more towards the middle; his control wasn’t quite as good, but his home run rate wasn’t quite as bad and hitters were having some difficulty making contact off of him. It would seem that he’s been in the process of adjusting back and forth over the past few months in response to what’s happening around him, which is definitely a good sign.

One more item of interest is that the difference in his splits versus lefties and righties is almost imperceptible, save for a couple of things. He gets twice as many groundballs against same-handed batters than he does opposite, which could help explain the higher home run rate versus lefties and the higher ERA with it. There’s also a slight increase in walks, which would be expected with him. Otherwise, the numbers are identical.

It really makes you think about what he might be able to do in the rotation, doesn’t it?

Game 67, Diamondbacks v Mariners

DMZ · June 19, 2009 · Filed Under Mariners

The Bob Melvin-less Diamondbacks visiting. Be still my trembling heart! Garland v Washburn.

I was trying to remember Washburn’s last good start and I kept casting back to the first game he threw in May against the A’s, but looking at the game log I found a start that dropped entirely out of my memory, and only two weekends ago, May 6th when he gave the twins almost nothing for six innings, winding up with 6 K against 1 walk. The bad news is that the three most fearsome hitters in the Diamondbacks lineup, unlike the Twins, are not lefties and won’t be conveniently stacked on top of each other.

Still, overall the Diamondbacks are a pretty bad offensive team. Not Mariners bad, but we count our blessings where we can find them. And I’m looking forward to seeing how Wakamatsu manages to put together a lineup while being squeezed like this due to circumstance.

« Previous PageNext Page »