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The addition of Shane Reynolds is a boon to a gasping Atlanta pitching
staff, and the former Houston right-hander at least buys some time for
the Braves until they come to terms with -- and solve -- their very
unusual problem of not having enough pitching.
You can't plan for things like Mike Hampton's strained calf (he's due
back within the next week) and Paul Byrd's bad elbow (surgery will knock
him out for two-to-four months).
But most of all, based on history, you can't plan for the beating Greg
Maddux has taken this year.
After signing the most expensive one-year deal in baseball history
($14.75 million), Maddux, at 0-3, is off to his worst start since 1989,
when he was with the Chicago Cubs. He has surrendered 29 hits and 24
runs in 14 innings and his ERA is 11.05, but the silver lining for the
Braves is that they say there are no hidden injuries and, Maddux being
Maddux, they expect him to return to form any day now.
So does Maddux.
"It doesn't do you any good to know how to pitch when you can't throw it
where you want to throw it," he said after the Phillies pounded him for
10 runs (seven earned) and 12 hits in 5 2/3 innings during Wednesday's
16-2 romp. "My location is terrible, and when your location is terrible,
it's tough to pitch."
Opponents are whaling away at Maddux for a .397 batting average and a .792 slugging percentage.
Atlanta skipper Bobby Cox noted Maddux's seven strikeouts against the
Phillies, pointing out that the right-hander's stuff is there -- even if
Maddux has trailed 4-0, 3-0 and 3-0 after the first inning of his three
starts this season.
"But he is making some bad pitches," Cox said. "He might be trying to do
too much."
Whatever, after losing Tom Glavine and Kevin Millwood during the
offseason and rebuilding their staff with Hampton, Byrd and Russ Ortiz,
this pretty much is a worst-case-scenario start for Atlanta. Reynolds
likely will join the rotation soon, and assuming Hampton comes back
soon, that at least gives the Braves a fighting chance.
Which is more than they've had more often than not this season.
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This losing streak is reaching historic proportions in Detroit. Among
many other statistics, there's this: According to the Elias Sports
Bureau, Alan Trammell now owns the longest losing streak in 99
years at the start of his career. By dropping to 0-8 Thursday,
Trammell surpassed the 0-7 mark of Jimmie Wilson of the
Phillies, who won in his eighth game. According to Elias, the longest
losing streak for a manager at the start of his career is 13 games,
set by Malachi Kittridge of the 1904 Washington Senators.
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At least Cal Ripken's wife had the foresight to deliver one of
their kids on an off day so her husband could keep his Iron Man streak
intact (attention, Martha Burk: That was an obvious
tongue-in-cheek statement in reference to what's coming next, so
settle down.) Whether Florida first baseman Derrek Lee's wife
will be that cooperative, well, we'll find out in two or three weeks.
She's due with the couple's first child, and Lee, whose 218
consecutive games played through midweek is the longest streak in the
National League, might actually have to miss a game. The due date is
May 1, when the Marlins are scheduled to be in Arizona. Florida's
closest off days to that date are April 21 and May 5. It's OK with
Lee, who wasn't exactly planning to challenge Ripken's record 2,632
consecutive games played, anyway.
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Maybe there's hope for an old baseball art form that mostly has been
lost in recent years: Nicknames. Oakland's players have taken to
calling quiet slugger Erubiel Durazo "Mongo" after the
Alex Karras character in that excellent flick Blazing Saddles.
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It's official, the Ivan Rodriguez era now is longer than that
glorious Mike Piazza era in Florida. Rodriguez played in his
sixth game the other day, Piazza played in five during his brief
layover there in 1998.
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Sometimes, even Gold Gloves clank. Pittsburgh second baseman Pokey
Reese, who has won two of the awards, committed three errors in
the first five games and then added a fourth in the Pirates' seventh
game. Last year, it took him 76 games before he committed his third
error, and he wound up with only eight in 117 games.
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E-Rawlings? Over in Seattle, another second baseman isn't exactly
having a smooth relationship with a Gold Glove, either. When they
handed Bret Boone his award before Seattle's home opener
Tuesday, his name was spelled "Brett" on the plaque. "A lot of guys
spell it with two t's but, geez, you think they'd have checked," Boone
said.
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Here's a new twist on the old "deferred salary" concept: Pittsburgh
released reliever Matt Herges late this spring and the
right-hander is expected to be recalled by San Diego from Triple-A
Portland by this weekend. Yet he's not finished collecting from the
Pirates: He's owed $1,000 from the team's NCAA Tournament clubhouse
pool for Kansas' second-place finish, and he had Texas in another pool
and is owed $150 for the Longhorns' Final Four appearance.
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Look out -- Barry Zito, Mark Mulder and Tim Hudson
may soon have company. The best pitching prospect in the A's
organization is Rich Harden, and the A's promoted him to
Triple-A Sacramento on Wednesday after he threw 13 perfect innings
over two starts to begin the season at Double-A Midland. Harden worked
six perfect innings against Round Rock (owned by Nolan and
Reid Ryan), then came back with seven more perfect innings against
the same Round Rock team in his next start. He retired all 39 Double-A
batters he faced, and he fanned 17. He is expected to make his
Triple-A debut Sunday.
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Sometimes the trouble with rebuilding projects is the weather. You've
no doubt seen some of the temperatures at ballparks in the Midwest and
East this week, but how about the case of Buffalo, Cleveland's
Triple-A team? The Bisons played their season opener ... then had six
games postponed by snow and ice. "It doesn't do much for player
development," John Farrell, the Indians' farm director,
told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "You don't want to
overexpose your pitching by scheduling six doubleheaders." Wise guy
Paul Hoynes, veteran baseball writer at the Plain Dealer, notes
that, to escape the cold, Buffalo headed north to Ottawa for a series
this weekend.
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And one more minor league note, because we just can't resist moments
like these: Right-hander Mike Crudale, pitching at Triple-A
Memphis, will be lost to the St. Louis organization for the next
several days after breaking the little toe on his left foot. He
reportedly was going to answer the telephone in his Memphis apartment
when the injury occurred.
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Good luck charm, or just plain lucky? We'll see what happens this
summer before judging, but let it be noted that the past two NL West
teams to employ reliever Troy Brohawn have won the pennant (San
Francisco last year, Arizona in '01). So where is the lefty this year?
Ensconced in the Los Angeles Dodgers' bullpen.
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Fun with numbers: Take away that little thing called the offseason,
and Baltimore had lost 38 of its past 44 games through midweek (4-32
to end last year, 2-6 this year). Narrow that down even more to the
12-game losing streak with which the O's -- and we do mean O's --
ended the 2002 season, and they were 2-18 in their past 20 games.
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So you know what's coming next: Baltimore sports talk radio shows are
screaming for Orioles skipper Mike Hargrove to be fired,
conveniently ignoring that matter of the personnel he's had to work
with.
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Cubs closer Antonio Alfonseca is scheduled to throw from a
mound soon at the team's training base in Mesa, Ariz., but the club
says Alfonseca won't be back until early May no matter what. "The way
he was maligned around here last year, if you bring him back too soon
and he blows a couple saves, he's right back to (being maligned)
again," skipper Dusty Baker told Chicago reporters. "We
want him to be 100 percent and throwing the ball like he's capable
with the control he's capable of."
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Count San Diego manager Bruce Bochy as among those who disagree
with San Francisco advertising itself as a club with less power and
more speed this year. The speed part is still possible, but Bochy says
forget the power -- he thinks the Giants will lead the National League
in home runs this year. Of course, that's after watching the Padres'
pitching staff serve up 12 dingers to the Giants in their first six
games this season.
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Lou Piniella gets a whole lot of pub for his volcanic temper,
but here's one more example of why he's so good at what he does:
Trying to find a way to help a struggling young pitching staff through
another rough stretch, he remained at Tropicana Field after a game
with the Yankees on Friday night until 2 a.m., meeting with catcher
Toby Hall about his responsibility in helping pitchers make better
decisions. Among the points Piniella stressed to Hall was the
importance of coming up with a good game plan and sticking with it.
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When Colorado first baseman Todd Helton reached base seven
times in Tuesday's marathon loss to St. Louis, tying a major league
record, he saw 29 pitches from six different pitchers. He also
finished a triple short of hitting for the cycle.
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San Diego, by the way, has never had a batter hit for the cycle or a
pitcher throw a no-hitter since joining the majors in 1969.
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Keep an eye on Cleveland's C.C. Sabathia when he starts against
Kansas City on Saturday. He left last Saturday's start against the
Royals in the seventh inning after hyperextending his left elbow on a
97 mph fastball to Michael Tucker. An MRI and other tests came
back negative, and let's hope it stays that way. Losing Sabathia would
be a huge blow to the Indians.
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If Chan Ho Park flames out in the Texas rotation -- and he's
getting awfully close at 0-2 with a 15.88 ERA -- it could result in
two job changes. The Rangers are pondering moving the disappointing
Park to the bullpen, and there's also the very real chance that
catcher Chad Kreuter will be pink-slipped. The only reason the
Rangers signed Kreuter is because he was Park's personal catcher in
Los Angeles two years ago, and they thought his presence might get the
pitcher going.
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Tampa Bay GM Chuck LaMar was asked for a credential the other
day by an elevator operator. Funny thing was, the elevator (and the
operator) was located in Tropicana Field.
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That shrinking feeling: As Cleveland owner Larry Dolan has
lowered the payroll from $92 million in 2002 to the $50 million range
this year, season ticket sales are down sharply, from 23,000 last year
to somewhere between 14,000 and 15,000 this year. The Indians are
expecting attendance to decline from 2.6 million in 2002 to roughly
1.6 million this year.
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That shrinking feeling II: Colorado's season ticket base is down about
25 percent from a year ago, to 18,300.
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