Oakland's pitching needs some help. One big Angels inning due to a three-run
homer, and another on a rally (after the A's had rallied in the top half of that
inning) buried the A's.
The number of men the A's left on base wasn't overwhelming, but since the Angels
only left three on for the game (they had ten hits and three walks), it was too
many. Miguel Tejada and Mark Ellis left four apiece. For Ellis, it was just a
down game in the midst of a hot streak. For Tejada, it's more of the same from
the past few weeks. It's getting tiresome. I'm not sure why he's the three
hitter anyway. He's clearly not the best hitter on the team. Erubiel Durazo,
down in the sixth slot, is hitting behind three guys he should be hitting
behind: Tejada, Chavez, and Dye. All three are fine hitters, but Durazo is
better than fine.
That said, lineup effects are small, so this isn't a terribly big deal, but it's
appealing to my sense of asthetics for the team's best hitter to bat third.
How's
Terrence Long doing? He got a hit. A double. The recap says it was a
little bloop, but hey, it's what's in the box score that counts, I guess. He's
at 222/349/528. He's walking about once every seven PA's. I'll obviously
forgive a low batting average if his OBP and SLG stay high. I asked for a 280
because I didn't think he could get a 340 OBP or a 450 SLG without a batting
average that high. I'll be happy to be proven wrong. Long's about 3 runs above
replacement for his position in this early small sample size, by the way.
Nothing else is very remarkable on the offensive side. Nothing really
remarkable on the pitching side, either. Halama pitched pretty poorly (it was
his error that allowed the three-run homer to not be earned runs). Ricardo
Rincon gave up two runs in his inning and also let inherited runners score.
Mike Neu gave up his first run of his major league career, though it didn't
really matter. The A's had used their one good rally already, and weren't
coming back from down four against Ben Weber and Brendan Donnelly.
At least Keith Foulke pitched an apparently uneventful ninth (one hit, one
strikeout, 13 pitches). With Foulke's pitch efficiency, I think he'd make an
excellent starter. The A's have a ton of guys ahead of him, though, and a team
doesn't really want to be jerking roles around in dangerous ways like that when
it's trying to win a World Series. If they keep him past this year, maybe it's
something they can ask him to prepare himself for in 2004.
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