Tag Archives: Ryan Madson

Proven Smoke in the 9th

15 Nov

As you know by now Ruben Amaro Jr. has made another splash in the free agent market inking closer Jonathan Papelbon to a 4-year, $50 million dollar contract.  I’m pretty thrilled to have a closer that throws gas like Pap, the length of the deal scares me a bit.

I’m pretty mixed when it comes to taking Pap over Ryan Madson.  Sure, Papelbon has been closing for years in Boston and has a pretty solid track record, but he relies pretty heavily on his fastball, and I worry that in a few years when his velocity dips we’re going to be upset that we have a guy that throws mostly fastballs.  Ryan Madson had a repertoire of pitches to work with, but that does not mean that he would have any more success in the end.  It’s pretty well documented that guys who throw hard like Pap do, tend to have a tougher time lasting into September and October as they age.

So we’ll see, and time will tell…

Pap does have the edge when comparing the two, having been Boston’s everyday closer.  219 saves (37 per year average) over the past six seasons with a 2.33 career ERA.   2011 probably was  the best year of Papelbon’s career. He was 4-1 with a 2.94 ERA in 63 games, converting 31 save opportunities in 34 chances.  However he blew a pretty big save at the end of the season for the Red Sox that knocked the Sox from playoff contention.  (To be fair the whole team played like garbage down the stretch)

Madson converted 32 saves for the Phillies in 2011, but only started to fill in as the closer in May after Jose Contreras went down with an injury. He does appear to be on the upswing.

With the Aces we have on the mound, I’m just happy the Phillies have a sound closer locked up for some time.

Grading the First Half

15 Jul

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Well Jeez, there sure have been some serious highs and lows to this
season.  I think that the picture to the right here is the absolute
high, but what was the biggest low?  God, there were a lot! Chase
getting hurt?  It’s the most recent blow so it’s understandably the at
the forefront of our choices. Was it the late arrival of Brad Lidge and
Joe Blanton?  Neither one of these pitchers has given us much to cheer
for since their return, so I’m not sure we’re actually better off now
that they’re back.  Was it “The Slump”?  For me it was probably the
absence of Jimmy Rollins.  I guess you could say that Jimmy was
probably a large factor in “The Slump” so we can tie the two of them
together… Anyhow… Let’s take comfort in saying that’s in the past. 

So let’s get to it.  I don’t want to make this super long
winded so we’ll skip the side dishes and just cut into the steak.  It’s
hard to grade the Phillies too well or too poorly.  We probably all
agree that these injuries are killing us.  Let’s quickly list our
players that rode the DL Train this year.  Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley,
Placido Polanco, Brian Schneider, Carlos Ruiz, Chad Durbin, J.A. Happ,
Antonio Bastardo, Ryan Madson, Brad Lidge, Joe Blanton, and J.C. Romero. 

  • Here it is… The Report Card

Our
starting pitchers looked pretty awesome on paper to start the season,
but Blanton and Happ won’t have the season we expected. There is nobody
we can blame there.  ****, as they say, happens.  Ryan Madson is a
complete moron, what happened with him is entirely his fault and I hope
behind closed doors he was reprimanded by the Phillies. Brad Lidge’s
troubles don’t have a definitive cause either.  Is he hurt? Is he mental? 
He’s not 2008 Brad, and he won’t ever be 2008 Brad again.  He’s got
that going against him, so the fans probably won’t ever get off his
back since they saw absolute perfection in him before.  The plus side
of pitching has been Roy Halladay (10-7), Cole Hamels (7-7) and Jamie
Moyer (9-8).  They have kept the Phillies in almost every game they
started.  We shouldn’t leave out Kyle Kendrick.  Kyle had a rough start
but has been getting better as the season is progressing.  He’s now at
5-3 and unless we make a run at another starter before the trade
deadline we’ll have to hope that he can continue to make a strong
effort.

Pitching – C+

Offensively we have had some
struggles, too.  Shane has struggled at the top of the lineup after
getting pushed up with Jimmy out.  Jayson has been in multiple funks
after starting the season white hot.  He isn’t seeing the ball very
well and is settling for strikeouts rather then working walks as he’s
done in the past. Chase had started to look better before hurting his
thumb, and his replacements hit into more double plays then i think we
ever thought humanly possible.  Raul has hit less homers in the last
year then he did in the first 3 months of last season. Lastly, Greg
Dobbs, Castro and Gload have not had very much to brag about on the
bench.  On the positive side Howard has kept his average close to .300
going the other way and not being afraid to punch balls into the shift trying to beat it. His power numbers are down but you can’t argue with
how many RBI he has at this point considering we don’t really get too many
base runners. 

The Bats – D

Should I even grade them? 
The Front Office I mean…  I’ve got a lot of criticism of the
ownership and of Ruben Amaro but I’m not really sure it matters what I
think of Ruben since he has a budget to work with.  The budget that he
won’t mention.  Guys and gals there is a real and defined budget that
this team has to work with.  We’re not the Yankees, we can’t just go
into the free agent market on a shopping spree every winter and go
crazy.  Ruben Amaro as the GM for this team has more then a few jobs. 
The one that you know him for is the guy that manages the scouts,
player development and personnel.  He works out the deals with current
and prospective players.  He’s also the one that faces the media and
takes the wrap.  Do you even know who the owners of the Phillies are? 
Have you ever seen them?  David Montgomery is probably the only one that
ever shows his face. Everyone knew who Steinbrenner was because he
didn’t hide from the media.  Claire S. Betz, Tri-Play Associates
(Alexander K. Buck, J. Mahlon Buck, Jr. William C. Buck), Double Play,
Inc. (John S. Middleton), Giles Limited Partnership (Bill Giles) make
up the rest of the ownership. These guys are the ones that give Ruben
his numbers, but don’t think that’s all that they do.  They have a
hand in who stays and who goes. It’s hard to see how they wouldn’t
stretch the budget a tiny but to keep Cliff Lee in town at a such a
discount of his actual worth. I know it’s not my money, but I don’t
really know where the logic was in this one.  With all the
merchandising and memorabilia opportunities this team could secure with
another post-season win I don’t know why they skimped out this past
winter.  It was a big risk that has already begun to backfire. I’m
happy that they got the Roy Halladay deal done and Jose Contreras has
done pretty well.  He was over worked a bit with Lidge’s troubles, but
has proven to be a good addition.  Danny Baez and Ross Gload cost us
and haven’t really panned out.

The Office – C (Without Halladay and locking up Howard they’d be pretty close to an F)

Your thoughts are much appreciated.

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Bizarre Plays, Walk Offs, Fireworks

9 Jul

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It was truly a bizarre evening at Citizens Bank Park.  Freak plays, blown saves (Yeah two of them), game winning homers and fireworks. 

Both starters pitched well. Cincinnati’s Johnny Cueto gave up two runs – one earned – and four hits in seven innings.

Kyle Kendrick allowed one run and three hits, striking out four in 6 2-3 innings for the Phillies.  It was Kendrick’s third start without any walks.  He was pulled fairly early in the game with a rather low pitch count.  One’s best guess would be that Charlie Manuel didn’t want to try and stretch Kyle out and have him possibly go a little too long.  Leads have slipped away from the Phillies quite a few times in the past few weeks.

Votto gave the Reds a 1-0 lead in the first when he sent one deep into the right-center field seats.  It was all the offense the Reds could muster off of Kyle Kendrick.

A really bizarre play allowed the Phillies take a 2-1 lead in the third.
Rollins walked with two outs. Victorino then hit a sharp grounder that
bounced off Votto’s glove and rolled away. Victorino beat Votto’s throw
to Cueto covering the bag. Cueto’s glove and ball flew off when his arm
collided with Victorino, who rounded the bag.

Votto then grabbed
the ball and threw to a gloveless Cueto, who dropped it for an error.
Rollins came all the way around from first and scored with a headfirst
dive. Cueto was slightly shaken up on the play, but stayed in.

july82.jpgFor the home team it was a little frustrating. Ryan Madson blew a lead when a pitch got away from Brian Schneider and Drew Stubbs scored all the way from second on the wild pitch.  The Phillies regained the lead on a Jimmy Rollins sac fly in the bottom of the eighth.  Sooooo then comes Brad Lidge in the top of the ninth.  It was easy to tell this was not going to be his night.  Two runners got on quickly but Brad got a double play ball leaving a runner at third.  Then the Red’s last hope Miguel Cairo hit a liner to left-center and the game was tied.  The loudest chorus of boos came from the crowd that I’ve heard in a while.

Two innings later Brian Schneider hit a game-ending homer in the 12th inning, giving the
Philadelphia Phillies a 4-3 victory over the NL Central-leading
Cincinnati Reds.  It was very frustrating to watch.  After the previous night when Charlie called the team and front office out, the Phillies looked a little off.  Miscues behind the plate and attitudes on the field were pretty visible. In the top of the 12th Jayson Werth appeared to curse out a fan for getting in the way of a catch.

The frustration is getting to the team.  Victorino had some choice things to say the night before after fans were giving it to him.  Everyone is frustrated, but we’re not giving up hope.

Side Notes –

CBP – Last night was the 81st consecutive sell out.  That’s one game shy of a full season.

Figgy – Nelson Figueroa give the Phillies two scoreless innings. 

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Up in Arms… Over Arms

8 Jul

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There are so many topics at hand with the Phillies that I can’t stop my mind from racing.  Starting pitchers, the bullpen, the slumping offense. These trade talks are becoming so painful to listen to.  The ridiculous things that people are saying, telling me that the Phillies should trade Cole Hamels and Jayson Werth.  I wish I could have punched the guy that emailed me about trading Chase Utley. After July 31st we won’t have to hear about it, but I’m not satisfied having to wait that long. I want to say I trust Ruben Amaro, but I think it’s only normal for us to second guess him. 

After another loss to the Braves on Tuesday (7-5) Charlie Manuel took the mic in his post game show, and in what normally is a breif wrap up of the nights events turned into more of a state of the union address.  According to Charlie the state of the Phillies isn’t good.  “I think we need pitching,” Manuel said. “The game is about pitching.” He continued to say “I think we need it in both places,” meaning in the rotation and the bullpen. “At the same time, if we get these guys (current staff) to step up, that’s good.” 

There are a few places that I’d like to see upgrades. Putting aside Utley and Polly here is where I want to go.

Priority 1) The Bullpen – This used to be the team that we thought going into the 9th that you could prematurely consider the game locked up. Durbin, Madson, and Bastardo have been on the shelf, but there are more issues then just injurys.  The problem with our bullpen is that they just aren’t strong enough.  We don’t have a solid collection of specialty guys with specific roles.  It’s been a lot of all hands on deck if you know what I’m saying.  We can’t sit back and wait for everyone to be healthy again, cause that’s likely to be next season.  Roles need to be established and held. It’s impossible to ever be happy with the bullpen but there has to be some better options available.
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Priority 2) The Staff – The Phillies have already been linked to Cliff Lee, Roy Oswalt, Dan Haren, Jeremy Guthrie, Ben Sheets, Edwin Jackson, Fausto Carmona, Jake Westbrook and others.  But let’s be real, who the hell thinks any of these guys will end up here.  The only one that I think I could picture is Danny Haren, and he would be my choice.  Haren has time left on his contract that would mean we wouldn’t need to work an immediate deal, and he’s proven to stay healthy.  His record is 7-6 with a 4.38 ERA with 119 strikeouts.  Remember that he’s playing for the Diamondbacks, and they bite worse then any snake.  They’re 32-53.

Priority 3) Infielder – There are a few more names that have been added to the Phillies watch list. The Phils are open to acquiring a second or third baseman but I think that Third should be our first choice with Wilson Valdez playing as well as he has.  The Phillies have been tied to  Miguel Tejada, Ty Wiggington,
Kelly Johnson, Jeff Keppinger plus a few others. I like Tejada, he’s known to turn it up when his team plays well and has the best overall average of the choices that the Phillies are showing interest.
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Side Notes –

Ryan Madson – Ryan is in Philly with the team and I’d expect him to be activiated any minute now.  A roster move will be required which will likely be Mike Zagurski.

Chad Durbin – Chad Durbin could return from his hamstring strain as early as late next week and thank god.  Over the past few years Chad has been our most consistent relief pitcher.

Chooch – Carlos is up in Lehigh Valley making a rehab start of the Iron Pigs.  If you haven’t been there to see a game go and check it out.  Coca-Cola Stadium is pretty nice.

Halladay Goes the Distance, Sinks Braves

6 Jul

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It only took Roy 92 pitches to put the Braves on ice for the night.  Halladay threw another complete game and improved his record to 10 and 7 with a 2.93 ERA. Roy allowed five hits and struck out seven to record his second straight complete game.

Other then a homer that was aided by 100 degree weather from mother nature off the bat of Larry Jones AKA Chipper, Roy was superior to the Braves strong lineup.

Run support came to Roy from the unlikely source of Greg Dobbs and Juan Castro.  Dobbs smacked a 2 run homer in the 6th and Castro padded the lead in the 8th knocking in Jayson Werth who was sitting at third.  The offense had trouble again tonight but let’s be fair, Derek Lowe is a good sinker ball pitcher and didn’t leave too many balls up… Other then the one to Dobbs.

In other news…. Chase Utley answered a few questions to reporters on Monday regarding his thoughts on his surgery and the All-Star selections. Chase commented that he was happy to be honored and selected to his 5th straight All-Star game but his focus now is on getting healthy.  When asked if he thought he if he could return sooner his answer was “Absolutely.”

Hey, and I’m happy to be a fan of Ryan Howard.  Howard says he’s going to skip the Home Run Derby.  Howard didn’t give a reason but word is that he wants to concentrate on his health and swing so that this team can put together his strongest effort for the second half of the season.  Go Howard!  That’s what you want to see from the guy you just gave a huge contract to, the desire to push harder. 

Side Notes -

Ryan Madson – Madson will pitch again on Tuesday at Lehigh Valley and barring any complications he can be back to the big club as early as Wednesday. 

Chooch – Chooch was cleared to resume Baseball activities.

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The Unlucky 7

29 Jun

The Phillies are now more then the walking wounded.  They are a team of replacements.  We now have 7 of our Opening Day roster on the DL.  Let’s have a look at the list.

Most recently..

  • Chase Utley - Utley sprained the ulnar collateral ligament of his right thumb in
    Monday’s 7-3 loss to the Reds.
    Utley had a MRI on Tuesday in Cincinnati, and then flew back to Philadelphia on Tuesday afternoon and will undergo further testing
    Wednesday. The Phillies said once they know the severity of the sprain,
    they will know how to treat it. It could require surgery, although
    Phillies head athletic trainer Scott Sheridan said that would not
    necessarily mean a longer stint on the DL.utley 0628 2010-thumb-512x331-2193191.jpg
  • Placido Polanco – Polanco also returned to Philadelphia on Tuesday and was scheduled to
    have a MRI in the afternoon. An X-ray revealed no fracture but
    showed a bone spur that had been there before. An earlier MRI
    also showed the spur.  No timetable for either Polly or Chase.
  • J.A. Happ – Happ is now one of the dark horses of this club.  He’s been pitching a lot but the velocity has not really been there on his pitches.  He could return to the club this year, but it’s uncertain when exactly that may be.  The Phillies have other pitchers in their system that are currently performing better then J.A. Happ. 
  • Carlos Ruiz - Carlos could be playing now but is not eligible.  He had been suffering from head aches from the bat that he took to the head, but says now that he is feeling good.  Expect him to be activated next week when he is eligible. Carlos could possibly head to Triple-A Lehigh Valley for a rehab assignment as early as July 3 or 4.
  • Antonio Bastardo – Bastardo was placed on the 15-day disabled list on June 17, 
    but couldn’t give a timetable for when he would begin throwing Antonio but said he
    hoped it would be early next week, after he gets reexamined by trainers.
  • Chad Durbin – Durbin was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a Grade 1 strain. Durbin
    said the typical recovery timetable is 10 to 14 days, although recovery
    could take three weeks.  We’ll see with this one cause I haven’t heard anything about him since he went out.
  •  Ryan Madson – Reliever Ryan Madson threw a bullpen session last
    Thursday and will headed down to Clearwater, Fla., to begin a rehab
    assignment for his surgically repaired right big toe. Most recently he was scheduled
    to pitch Sunday for Class A Clearwater. Madson should be able to return to the club by the All Star break barring any setbacks.

The Phillies need to find away to keep their head above water.  The Mets and the Braves are playing well, but will come back to earth.  The Phillies will play their division most all of September but if they can hold on over this next month they will be in the pack hunting for fist place.  We all know that you can’t count this team out. 

Viv’ la Choooch!

5 May

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Carlos Ruiz delivers huge in the bottom of the 10th to seal a victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.  Ruiz who’s not exactly know for his power got his first homer of the year to give the Phillies a 2-1 finish. 

What should be taken away from this game is that Cole Hamels and Brad Lidge both looked to really have their **** together.  Hamels went 8 strong and was ready to put the Cards to bed until he was abruptly stopped during his windup. Another intoxicated moron decided to get his 30 seconds of fame, and run onto the field, stopping play.  I’m glad that this ********* was carrying a bag of weed in his pocket so he’ll get a little more time behind bars, bad sadly he didn’t get tased.  Cole hit 95 on the gun a few times during the night, and there was plenty of life on his pitches. As far as Lidge is concerned his stuff was just filthy.  Shortstop Brendan Ryan proved that Lidge’s slider is still un-hittable by whiffing at three consecutive for a quick out.

  • A follow up on Ryan Madson.  He had surgery at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital yesterday where pins were inserted in his toe, and is due back for an evaluation
    in two weeks. Madson will have the pins removed from his toe in four
    weeks. He will be non-weight bearing for two weeks, which will make it a challenge for the Phils to keep his arm strong.  It’s unsure if this 8 week time frame is realistic. 
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