Tuesday, February 28, 2023

#288---CLE @ CHA, 3/19/2022


The Guardians sent fourteen men to the plate in the fourth, tallying nine runs on six singles, two doubles, two walks, and a hit batter. Since the system I was using to track hit locations used a dot, I replaced my standard dot for an out with an “x”, but I think it makes the scoresheet looked too cluttered. The next time I used this system, I think I will use an open circle (which is my usual RBI symbol) for an out. 

I’ve described those hit symbols before, but I think looking at the at bats for Cleveland’s #3 hitters should give you enough to decipher it: line drive single to center in the fourth, ground ball single to left in the second at bat in the fourth, line drive double to left in the seventh, flyball triple to left in the eighth. Anderson reached on an infield single to third base in the third.

Monday, February 27, 2023

2023 Bonus Game---CLE @ CIN, 2/25/2023


This was the spring opener for both the Reds and Guardians and the first game played under the pitch clock that I had the opportunity to score, so I’m including it here as an example of how I handle pitch clock violations. Namely, I put an “a” prefix in front of the normal letter used to designate the pitch, or in the case of a violation for ball four or strike three, in front of the “W” for walk or “K” for strikeout. There weren’t any of these terminal violations in this game, but they would be “aW” or “aK” (actually, it would be a backwards K as it’s pretty obviously a called strike and not a swinging strike, but that’s not easy to render in text).

In this game there were three examples of violations:

* Bottom of the 2nd: First pitch from Cal Quantrill to Jose Barrero is an automatic strike

* Top of the 3rd: First “pitch” from Daniel Norris to Mike Zunino is an automatic ball

* Bottom of the 5th: Seventh “pitch” from Xzavion Curry to Jason Vosler is an automatic ball (watching Curry pitch in the fourth I declared that if he was allowed to pitch much more, he would commit a violation)

As for the game, Cleveland’s regulars led off the game with three straight singles against Brandon Williamson to get a run, and later unlikely sources David Fry and (especially) Roman Quinn hit solo homers. Quantrill allowed a run in the first and another in the second and had to be relieved with one out, but from that point Cleveland pitchers retired sixteen in a row before Cincinnati tied it in the eighth and won it on Matt McLain’s one-out solo homer in the ninth.

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

#287---ARI @ CLE, 3/3/2021


2021 Spring Training games offer the opportunity for all manner of oddities. I already had an example of a schedule game of less than nine innings and the notation “IT” for “inning terminated” in #261, and this game features those examples as well. What it adds is Taylor Widener making two separate stints on the mound for Arizona without moving to another position in-between. I decided that the best way to handle this was to give him two separate pitching lines and note that the second stint was a “re-entry”. As for the game, the Indians committed four errors including two by former Gold Glover Roberto Perez in the third (“[CE2]” indicating a muffed foul pop that extended Leyba’s at bat). One of the highlights was listening to Tom Hamilton not even bother to try pronouncing “Querecuto”. 

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

#286---KC @ CLE, 7/26/2020

 

This bullpen game didn’t go great for the Royals, with Jose Ramirez’ two homers leading the Cleveland offense to nine runs. Carlos Carrasco fanned ten and walked one over six frames, allowing two runs. Oliver Perez and Dominic Leone each added two Ks, and Cam Hill one in his ML debut for a big total of fifteen.

Tuesday, February 7, 2023

#285---CLE @ KC, 4/4/2019




This is the kind of back and forth game that illustrates why I don’t think trading the convenience of seeing the whole game on one page for extra room on the scoresheet is worth it. The Indians got a leadoff homer from Leonys Martin and added two more in the first, but Corey Kluber didn’t have it, surrendering two homers in the second for four runs, and two more runs in the third, being knocked from the box after just 2 2/3 innings with 89 pitches and 5 walks. Cleveland trailed 8-5 going into the seventh, but scored three off Richard Lovelady to tie it. The Royals set the Tribe down 1-2-3 in the eighth and ninth, and in the home half Brad Hand was up 0-2 before walking Ryan O’Hearn. Pinch-runner Terrance Gore swiped second, took third on a throwing error, and came home on the next pitch went Hunter Dozier lined a single down the left field line.

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

#284---NYA @ TOR, 3/30/2018


The Yankees beat the Blue Jays 4-2 behind a very efficient start from Masahiro Tanaka, who struck out eight, did not issue a walk, and allowed just a run on 79 pitches over six innings in his first start of the season. Aroldis Chapman got the save by striking out three in the ninth, albeit with two doubles sandwiched in.

New York’s offense came largely from unexpected names at the bottom of the order – all the RBI were accounted for by Brandon Drury and Tyler Wade, who each drove in a pair. 

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

#283---LA @ CHN, 4/10/2017

 


This was not my favorite baseball viewing experience, but it was early in the season and the only game I had access to that night so I soldiered through. It was the Cubs home opener, and there was various pageantry surrounding their 2016 World Series win that needed to be fulfilled (as an Indians fan I have to admit to being a tad bit annoyed by that), and then there was a long rain delay but the stupid ceremony proceeded before the game, because I guess the fans couldn’t be denied this. I’m sure the Dodgers, who had been beaten by the Cubs in the NLCS, found this even more irritating than I did.

Once the game started, it was a good one, with the Cubs taking a 2-0 lead after four but stranding six. The Dodgers pushed around single tallies in the sixth and eighth to tie it, also loading the bases with none out in the seventh but failing to score. In the ninth John Jay pinch-hit with a single off Sergio Romo and moved to second on a groundout. Kenley Jansen was summoned to face Kris Bryant, who he fanned with Jay swiping third. Anthony Rizzo lined a 1-1 pitch down the left field line for the winning single 

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

#282---CLE @ TEX, 4/1/2016

The Indians tuned up for the season with an exhibition at the Ballpark at Arlington by launching four homers and getting 6 2/3 innings with just one run allowed from Cody Anderson. As they would win the pennant, the homers kept coming to some extent, but quality pitching from Anderson did not.

You can see I kept this game with my modified version of LL Bean’s pictorial system, which I most often using when scoring off the radio and so unable to record precise (or phonily-precise as the case may be) batted ball locations. One thing the system doesn’t make easy to represent is a foul pop caught by the pitcher; I used my normal symbol indicating foul (`) in the center of the circle, but felt the need to make a note on the bottom of the page explaining what that symbol meant.

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

#281---ATL @ MIA, 4/7/2015

Mat Latos faced nine hitters in the first inning, seven of whom reached and eventually scored. Brad Hand came on in relief, allowing the first two hitters he faced to reach, but then settling in to retire thirteen of the final fourteen he faced. The Braves pinned another disaster inning on a top Marlin pitcher in the ninth, as Steve Cishek retired the first batter he faced and then allowed four straight to reach. Miami managed only two runs, clustered around Donovan Solano’s pinch-hit triple in the fifth. I was going to point out that this game features an Ichiro as a Marlin sighting, but had forgotten that he actually appeared in more games for the Marlins (432) than the Yankees (360). 

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

#280---NYA @ BOS, 4/24/2014


Yankee batters drew a whopping twelve walks, and every starter either drove in or scored a run. Mike Carp, first baseman turned pitcher, walked five in the ninth, including four in a row. Boston also managed six walks, three of which paired with a double and a Jeter error for their biggest inning in a three-run seventh, much of it coming off of Shane Greene (making his MLB debut).