The A's got beat up tonight. Crunched. The Phenom
got smoked for eight runs in just 2 2/3 innings. What's most upsetting about
his performance is his seven walks, a symptom of his inability to throw even 50%
strikes (of his 77 pitches, just 35 were strikes). His season ERA approaches Ted
Lilly's now, actually.
Mike Wood got a trial by fire in some sense, relieving Harden in the third.
Wood is up because the A's put Mark
Mulder on the DL with his hip problem. This could be some trouble. John
Halama is reportedly going to get Mulder's start(s). While Halama has been
decent of late, I don't really trust him as a starter, and I'd rather he add
depth to the bullpen than take away from it by working as a five-inning starter.
Jim
Mecir and Mike Neu
got an inning apiece, too, and only Mecir escaped unscathed, even getting a
strikeout in his 1-2-3 inning.
The offense put up five runs, which is more than most A's fans are used to, and
which is usually enough given their pitchers, but with a rookie going tonight,
even a good one, against a historically good offense, I wasn't optimistic going
in.
Terrence
Long finally sat, and Eric
Byrnes replaced him in left field. Byrnes actually got a couple of hits,
including his eighth (!) triple and 22nd double of the year. Even with Byrnes'
recent terrible slump, his .809 OPS is significantly closer to decent than Long
can ever hope to be. Mark Ellis
had two doubles and a single in the leadoff spot, providing as much offense in
one day as Long tends to provide in a month.
I don't see what's wrong with this lineup. Ellis is a better option than Long
to lead off, Byrnes is better offensively than Long, and we still get to keep Chris
Singleton in center for defensive purposes. With the acquisition of Jose
Guillen, he can shade over to left to help out Byrnes when he gets one of
his trademark terrible jumps. When Tim Hudson
and Mulder are on the mound, outfield defense isn't all that important anyway.
Those two are ground-ball freaks, giving very few opportunities to the outfield
to make a difference.
So with Seattle's loss, the A's remain three back in the West, while Boston
moves to just one back of Oakland in the wild card. The A's go to Toronto next
while Seattle visits Boston. It's one of those situations where every game the
A's win moves them up in the standings on somebody, while every game they lose
moves them down. In other words, it's a terrible time for the starting pitching
to go into injury chaos.
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