Sunday, April 17, 2011

Ogando-Nation


Alexi Ogando (2-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.54 WHIP) has been a pleasant surprise since being thrust into the starter role for the Texas Rangers. A dominant setup man a year ago (2010 AL ERA leader), Ogando has shown ace stuff, securing the back-end of the Rangers rotation. Ogando was originally signed as a right fielder out of the Dominican Republic by Oakland, but was picked up through the Rule 5 draft and converted into a pitcher by the Texas Rangers.

Ogando has challenged hitters with a 97 MPH fastball, a decent slider which he can throw for strikes, and an underrated change-up. He sports a simple, but deceptive delivery that keeps hitters off-balance.


Alexi hides the ball throughout the entire delivery; behind his leg, body and then completely with his head. This gives the impression of an even faster heater because the ball is difficult to pickup before he releases the pitch.

Ogando is a strike throwing machine, who pitches to contact and rarely walks hitters. In his first two starts he has proven very efficient, completing 13.0 innings with only 169 pitches (13 pitches/inning).  Ogando is the first pitcher in the live-ball era to throw 13.0 scoreless innings over his first two career starts.

Alexi's pitching style raises a number of red flags. He is a fly ball pitcher in a home-run ballpark, and has low strikeout totals for a pitcher with his velocity and stuff. Ogando has the potential to increase his strikeouts and lower his homeruns if he learns to expand the strike zone and coax hitters to chase.

Ogando's change-up has developed into a plus pitch, but he does not trust throwing it. This is common with younger players because the effectiveness of the change is dependent on the pitcher's ability to "sell" the pitch as a fastball.

Alexi's change is the the best secondary compliment to his fastball because it appears like the fastball, but has good movement out of the zone and 8-10 MPH velocity difference from his heater. His change-up is a "swing-and-miss" pitch, which he can also throw for strikes. Over his first two starts he has only thrown the change 5% of the time, as opposed to 24% for the slider.

Alexi faces a challenging assignment in his next start against the powerful Yankee lineup in homerun-friendly Yankee stadium. Homeruns might be an issue, but Ogando has shown that he has the velocity, deception, and control to be an innings-eater and a very successful starting pitcher. 

Monday, April 11, 2011

Great "Britton"


The Baltimore Orioles stand atop the American League East standings with a 6-3 record, thanks in part to rookie phenom Zach Britton (0.66 ERA). The southpaw has won his first two starts of the season, allowing only seven hits and one run over 13.2 innings.

Britton utilizes a 96 mph fastball with good sinking movement that led to a 2:1 groundball ratio in his first start. He leans heavily on his heater, throwing the pitch 80% of the time over his first two starts.

Buster Olney has dubbed Britton "the Strasburg of 2011", but their are concerns surrounding his immediate success. Britton pitches in the American League East, cluttered with strong lineups who take pitches and wear down opposing hurlers, physically and mentally.

Britton's 4:3 K/BB ratio is also discouraging. He will need to keep his homerun rate low and his strand rate high if he is going to continue to walk hitters and not strike them out.

Britton also recorded more outs in the air than on the ground  in his last start against Texas, which is not the plan for a sinkerball pitcher. Against the strong Texas lineup, Britton began to overthrow late in the game, failing to stay behind the ball. This led to him leaving the ball up in the zone and producing many more fly balls than intended.

In an interview with Baseball Tonight on April 10th, Britton admitted that some of his success is due to facing lineups who are unfamiliar with his stuff. He also credited Matt Wieters for his work behind the plate and his good understanding of opposing batters.

The Orioles have had a promising young team for years, but if Britton is an example of the young guns stocked in the minor league system, Baltimore should be relevant in the baseball world soon enough.  

Friday, April 8, 2011

Suprise Suprise



One week into the season is no time to start judging teams by their record or extrapolating their performance over the rest of the season. But what the heck!




Red Sox: 0 - 162

Carl Crawford:   .174 - 0 - 27
Dustin Pedroia:   .227 - 0 - 0
Kevin Youkilis:   .105 - 0 - 27
J.D. Drew:         .231 - 0 - 0
Jarrod Salt:         .071 - 0 - 27




Daniel Bard:     0-54   0 SVs  16.88 ERA
Jonathan Pap:   0-0     0 SVs   9.00 ERA
Clay Buch:        0-27   81 Ks   5.68 ERA
John Lackey:     0-27   81 Ks   22.09 ERA


Well that was unnecessary but fun. The Red Sox have their home opener today against the New York Yankees and enter the game with a 0-6 record to start the season. This year represents the worst start in Red Sox history since 1945 and the team is bottom of the league in almost every productive statistical category.


Friday, April 1, 2011

What Could Have Been


      April 16th, 1940, Bob Feller became the only Major League pitcher to throw a no-hitter on opening day. On April 1st, 2011, Josh Johnson (Not the WR) came within striking distance of this exclusive distinction. Johnson did not have the pin-point control often associated with perfection on the mound, but the ball was literally exploding out his hand at Sun Life Stadium..

         It was in the seventh inning that the country began to pay attention; in disbelief that the second "Year of the Pitcher" would possible begin so quickly. It was at that moment that Johnson's personal nemesis struck another blow.

    Willy Harris received the opening day start in left field for the Mets because of his past success against Johnson. This was truly a compliment to Johnson's dominance, as Harris is only a career .267 hitter versus the Florida flamethrower. Either driven by the confidence bestowed in him by skipper Terry Collins, or by the embarrassment of being no-hit on opening day, Harris served the third offering from Johnson into left-center for New Yorks first hit of the evening.

    What was most impressive about Johnson was not his "almost" no-hit stuff, but his reaction and demeanor after giving up the line drive single to Harris. Johnson displayed no remorse, but instead a driven resilience which was reminiscent of the great professionals of the mound such as Maddux or Mussina. Johnson quickly got back to work, inducing David Wright to fly out to center field on three pitches.

     It is Johnson's mental makeup and professional attitude which separates him from Florida's talented hurlers of the past. The 2003 World Series champion Florida Marlins had a slew of young pitchers who dominated on the game's biggest stage. Josh Beckett, A.J. Burrnett, Carl Pavano, and Brad Penny have all had successful careers, but have faded from the spotlight as they have reached their early-to-mid 30s. They have not shown the ability to make adjustments to compensate for the erosion of natural talent with age.

    With each year that passes, Johnson proves that he has the capacity, the maturity, and the drive to excel late in his career. His no-hit bid on April 1st was only a preview of what he may accomplish in what hopes to be a Hall of Fame career.