After stumble at home, Braves hit the road
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.mlblogs.com
ATLANTA — Going to keep this short, as we’re now nearly 24
hours clear of Thursday’s offensive (and umpiring) debacle against the Pirates at Turner Field, and
a few hours away from the start of the road trip.
No way in the world the Braves should’ve lost that game
yesterday. No way. I told myself when Matt Capps (who’s from my hometown, by
the way) fanned Brian McCann to seal Atlanta’s 3-2 loss that I would keep
myself off the blog for 24 hours, lest I rip apart the team from bow to stern.
Close enough to 24 hours, although I’m still seething about
the Braves blowing the absolute best start by an Atlanta hurler this season. Javier Vazquez
was dealing, folks. Total command of the strike zone. Could do anything he
wanted at any time. Even the homer he gave up wasn’t a bad pitch.
When your starter gives up two hits and one run in eight
innings with no walks and 12 strikeouts, you have to win that game. I don’t
care if you’re playing the Red Sox, the Yankees, the Pirates, or my kids’
Little League team, you have to win that game. The Braves managed to lose it,
and it hurts.
I understand it’s hard to sweep a four-game series, but the
Braves really needed to take care of the Pirates Wednesday and Thursday before
embarking on this roadie through Baltimore, Cincinnati and Boston.
The Orioles are struggling, yes, but the Reds have that great young pitching
(and the Braves never play well in the little bandbox along the banks of the Ohio), and we all know
what the Red Sox have been doing lately.
So here are the Braves, heading into tonight at Baltimore with Tommy
Hanson toeing the slab for his second career start. Save the fastballs that
were up in the zone in the middle innings Sunday, I don’t think the youngster
could’ve had a better debut. His stuff is electric. I love his makeup and
moxie. I don’t think pitching on the road will faze him one bit (and typically
I shudder when a rookie makes his first start away from home).
As we all know, the pitching hasn’t been the problem.
Vazquez’s effort yesterday was better than Derek Lowe’s season-opening gem in
Philly, better than Kenshin Kawakami’s duel with Roy Halladay. The Braves won
both of those games. They should’ve won yesterday.
But they didn’t. The season marches ahead. On to Baltimore … hopefully the
Braves packed their bats.
–30–
Time running out for Frenchy to turn things around
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.mlblogs.com
ATLANTA
– If the carnage on the side of the road, the smell of stink permeating the air,
the storm clouds on the horizon seems familiar, it’s because we’ve trudged down
this road before with Jeff Francoeur.
The path from Parkview High to Braves all-time great took a
disastrous turn in 2008, as the Golden One was anything but sterling. Coming
off a season in which he hit .239 with just 11 homers – and a Fourth of July
weekend sidetrip to Double-A Mississippi – Francoeur spent this offseason
reshaping his swing and rebuilding his confidence.
The results? All too familiar.
Following an 0-for-3 in Wednesday night’s 3-2 loss to Pittsburgh at Turner
Field, Frenchy is hitting .240. He has one home run since the second of May. In
his past 10 games, he has almost twice as many strikeouts (seven) as RBIs
(four) and sports a .160 average in June.
Stop me if you’ve heard this before: A strong April,
followed by a maddening downward spiral where Francoeur swings too early, too
often, and at too many pitches out of the strike zone.
Every time we’ve seen a glimmer of hope – his two-run
game-tying homer last Tuesday against the Cubs, for example – it’s been
followed by more struggles. As Francoeur’s average drops, the howls from Braves
Nation grow.
It’s already reached a deafening level. Given the injuries
to Casey Kotchman and Martin Prado, and the recent slumps of Kelly Johnson
(three hits in his past 24 at-bats) and Garret Anderson (four for his past 20),
the bottom half of the Atlanta
lineup has turned into a black hole where rallies go to die.
But Francoeur remains the flash point for Braves’ fans
criticism. After two and a half stellar seasons, we’ve seen a season and a
third of mostly offensive ineptitude from the right fielder.
So I ask: has the time come to do what was once unthinkable,
yet is mentioned over and over again on blogs and talk shows – trade Jeff
Francoeur? The sheer thought of even mouthing or writing those words in the
same sentence was laughable just 15 months ago. But now?
The Braves are in a tough spot. The offense is better with
Nate McLouth, but still could use one more consistent bat. Francoeur’s trade
value never has been lower. Despite his struggles the past two seasons, this is
still a player who won a Gold Glove, drove in 100 runs twice and hit 29 homers
one season.
Do the Braves deal Francoeur and risk seeing him blossom in
another team’s uniform, knowing they won’t get much in return? Given the way
the fan base has turned on him, it may be time for Atlanta to send the once-untouchable
player elsewhere, given him – and the team he grew up cheering for – a fresh
start.
Staying the course, no matter how hopeful one may be of
emerging from the bewildering fall of Jeff Francoeur, may not be an option much
longer.
–30–
Great win for Braves, but difficult schedule looms large
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.mlblogs.com
ATLANTA
– Six extra innings of angst and teeth-grinding tension in the books. As we
wipe the sleep from our eyes on this sunny Tuesday morning, let us ponder: was
it a statement game or one that just delays the inevitable for the Atlanta
Braves?
There are a lot of fun things that result in winning an
extra-inning contest in walk-off fashion in front of the home fans — albeit
many of those folks hit the Downtown Connector well before David Ross’ grounder
in the hole chased home Jeff Francoeur with the game-winning run in the 15th
inning late Monday night (or was it early Tuesday morning?).
Regardless of what the clock said at the finish, it’s a win
the Braves desperately needed to get, after squandering a 5-1 lead in the
opener of a four-game series against the struggling Pirates. Oh sure, you’ve
heard about Pittsburgh,
Braves Nation. You now employ their former center fielder, the popular and
talented Nate McLouth, whose move into the leadoff spot in Bobby Cox’s lineup
has helped spark Atlanta’s
moribund offense to 15 runs in the past two games.
These are the types of games, the types of series, the
Braves absolutely must win if they hope to stay afloat in a June where the
schedule-makers did Atlanta
no favors. By now, certainly you’ve cast an eye at the calendar, which includes
three at Cincinnati, three at Boston, a make-up game with the Cubs at home,
three in Atlanta against the Yankees, a three-game series at home with Boston,
and (whew!) three more at home with Philly.
Yeah, survive that, and the Braves are squarely in the race,
figure to make a big move before the July 31 trade deadline (right fielder,
anyone?), and look to ride their strong starting pitching and (for the moment)
revived offense into the heat of a pennant race.
Or, if they don’t survive that, the focus turns to 2010.
Simple as that.
Sitting at 28-28 on the season at 5½ games out of first
place this morning, the Braves know what’s facing them. They know games like
Monday, where they’re playing a team publicly reeling and questioning their own
management (the Pirates lit a candle for McLouth in their locker room the day
after the trade … a bit extreme, don’t you think?), are games that have to end
on the left side of the ledger.
Still, these are the Braves we’re talking about, the Braves
of this era, who more often than not rise up and play inspired against the best
teams in baseball, and who more often than not stumble against the Nationals
and Pirates of the world.
Can’t have that happen. Not now. The direction of this
season will be determined during the next four weeks. I’m sure Frank Wren knows
that as well, which is why the Braves’ front office catapulted the franchise
through a dizzying journey on the transaction wire last week. Perhaps you’ve
heard: Jordan Schafer got demoted and Tom Glavine got released and Tommy Hanson
got promoted and McLouth got acquired.
A vast swath of moves, all designed to jump-start a team
that – on paper – should be north of .500. Addressing the fifth starter’s spot,
addressing the lack of power and speed in the outfield, Wren moved with broad,
sweeping strokes.
And now, it’s up to the Braves to make it happen on the
field. Victories Sunday and Monday, albeit earned in longer and more winding
fashion that one would hope, are a good start. But two wins do not a season
make. There are more games to be played, tough games, and with 5½ games
separating Atlanta
from the top of the NL East, there is no time to dawdle.
–30–
Legends better served by being quiet and moving forward
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.mlblogs.com
ATLANTA
– It’s time for Tom Glavine and John Smoltz to take the high road.
Yes, I know it’s hard when you’ve performed at the very top
of your field for the past 20 years. Yes, I know it’s difficult when the employer for whom you’ve plied your craft for most, if not all, of those two decades doesn’t believe
it in their best interest to employ your services.
But the words coming from the mouths of Glavine and Smoltz -
two future Hall of Famers who were foundational pillars of the Braves’
unprecedented run of division titles through the 1990s and the first part of
this decade – only make the breaking up even harder to do.
Smoltz, who signed with Boston as a free agent in January, criticized
the Braves for not offering more guaranteed money when he left. Glavine, who the Braves
released Wednesday after deciding the results of the lefty’s minor-league rehab
outings weren’t good enough to warrant placement on the 25-man roster, came out
today on an Atlanta radio station and criticized the Braves for their decision.
Smoltz chimed in shortly after news broke of Glavine’s
release Wednesday, once again taking shots at Atlanta
for its treatment of both players. Braves Nation has swayed with
mixed emotions the past 48 hours, ranging from rage at the thought of these franchise icons
toeing the slab for somebody else, to those who believe time has passed by both
star hurlers.
Enough, already.
Look, nobody can refute the importance of Smoltz and Glavine
to the Braves during the salad days. But this is 2009, and we’re talking about
pitchers on the other side of 40 who are coming off surgery, pitchers who
combined to pitch in just 19 games last season.
Nobody can deny the work done by Glavine and Smoltz in an Atlanta uniform will
resonate as long as anybody talks about elite pitching, or baseball in this
city. But again, that was then, and this is now.
And the harsh reality of now is, the Braves are better
served without the services of either former Cy Young winner.
Frank Wren watched Glavine, Smoltz, Mike Hampton and Tim
Hudson take up extended residence on the disabled list in 2008. Hell-bent on
not having that happen again, the Braves’ GM reconstructed the starting
rotation this offseason, landing Derek Lowe, Javier Vazquez and Kenshin
Kawakami to join emerging star Jair Jurrjens. Smoltz was offered a contract
that hinged mostly on incentive money, a fair offer for a pitcher who wasn’t
going to be ready at the start of the season (and still hasn’t thrown a
major-league pitch through the first nine weeks of the season).
Glavine was signed in Feburary as an insurance policy. If
healthy, he would be the fifth starter. But he wasn’t. And after a setback in
early April, followed by several rehab starts in recent weeks, the Braves brass
decided Tommy Hanson’s 22-year-old arm and 99-mph fastball would better fill
the fifth spot than Glavine’s sheer will to compete.
And that’s what all of this really comes down to, doesn’t
it? The competitive nature that drives an athlete to great heights, to the very
stratosphere of his sport. It’s not easy to shut that off if one believes he
still can perform. I can totally appreciate and respect that. I don’t blame
Glavine or Smoltz one bit for trying to pitch, if they are able.
But I do blame them for the whining and belly-aching about not
being able to pitch here. The Braves have made it crystal clear: they no longer
wish to employ either Tom Glavine or John Smoltz.
At the end of the day, both legends would be better served
by accepting that reality and moving on with their careers and their lives.
–30–
Wren’s nest aflutter with flurry of gutsy moves
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.mlblogs.com
ATLANTA
- Say this for Frank Wren: the man has guts.
The Braves GM is the talk of baseball this morning, one day
after a dizzying flurry of late-afternoon moves resulted in the departure of a
franchise icon and future Hall of Famer, the promotion of the organization’s
most ballyhooed prospect in years, and the acquisition of a player who
addresses the team’s most glaring needs.
Taken as singular events, the release of Tom Glavine, the
promotion of Tommy Hanson, or the trade for Nate McLouth would be attention-grabbing
transactions. But all three in one day? That’s a seismic shift, one that
changes the perceptions of this team, and the man calling the shots.
Heading into last season, Braves Nation was all aflutter
about the reunion of Glavine and John Smoltz in the starting rotation. We all
know how that sad story played out: Both missed significant time with injuries
(as did Mike Hampton – no surprise there – and Tim Hudson – quite a surprise),
helping to torch the rotation and plunge the Braves to their first 90-loss
season since 1990.
Smoltz signed with Boston
in the offseason, and Braves fans crucified Wren for not guaranteeing more
money to a pitcher who threw just 28 innings the year before, one coming off
his fifth major surgical procedure. I wrote the day Smoltz left it was a
difficult decision, but the right decision to make.
I feel the same about Glavine.
If indeed there are concerns about velocity and pitch
location, the Braves would be doing themselves a disservice by thinking Glavine
could help them win. This coming from somebody who watched with his own two
eyes as Glavine threw eight shutout, one-hit innings to win Game 6 of the World
Series in 1995.
That was 14 years ago. The goal is not to wax poetic about
years gone by; it’s about adding to those memories by making the playoffs this
season. There comes a time where even future Hall of Famers don’t have it
anymore (Steve Carlton, anyone? Fifty earned runs and 12 homers allowed in his
final 52 2/3 innings), and Wren and Co.
believe that time has come for Glavine.
Of course, it’s a little easier to make such a move when you
can plug in a 22-year-old who throws a wicked slider, a 99 mph fastball, and
who has dominated at Triple-A. It’s never been a question of if Hanson would be
promoted this season, but when. After striking out 90 hitters in 66 1/3 innings
pitched for Gwinnett, with just 11 earned runs allowed, his time has arrived.
The right-hander gets the nod Saturday night against Milwaukee at Turner Field.
It’s a bold move, thrusting a rookie hurler into the mix
with so much riding on the line – the Braves open play today six games in
arrears of Philly in the loss column – but Hanson isn’t your average rookie.
There hasn’t been a young arm come through the Braves’ farm system generating this
much buzz since Steve Avery. There is nothing left for Hanson to prove in the
minors, and the big-league Braves need Hanson in the rotation (and for that
matter, need the impressive Kris Medlen to bolster the set-up guys in the
bullpen).
Pitching hasn’t been the Braves’ problem, though (thanks
largely to moves made by Wren the past two years: signing Derek Lowe, trading
for Jair Jurrjens and Javier Vazquez). Offensive production – or rather, an
offensive excuse for outfield production – has been. Once again, Wren moved
with bold and daring strokes. Tuesday, he sent the promising, yet overmatched,
Jordan Schafer to Gwinnett. One day later, he filled the black hole in center
by shipping three prospects to Pittsburgh
for McLouth, a Gold Glover who does two things – hit for power and steal bases
- the Braves sorely need.
To get a player who hit 26 homers, 46 doubles (tops in the
NL) and stole 23-of-26 bases last season WITHOUT giving up any of the team’s
top prospects – Charlie Morton, Gorkys Hernandez, and Jeff Locke aren’t in the
class of Hanson, Medlen, Jason Heyward or Freddie Freeman – is a steal. This
isn’t Wren renting a player for two months or a season and a half, either. At
27 years old and locked up through 2011 (with a club option for 2012), McLouth
becomes a key part of this team’s foundation for the foreseeable future.
The timing of the deal, pulling the trigger in the first
week of June, shows Wren was not willing to watch the Braves’ offense languish
any longer. Instead of hoping Glavine could turn back the clock, hoping Jeff
Francoeur would remember to hit, hoping Gregor Blanco could add something
offensively to the outfield, Wren eschewed relying on hope and went to work on
fixing his team.
It would’ve been easy to stand pat, to trot Glavine out for
a farewell tour, to hold off promoting Hanson, to hope the current cast of
outfielders would hit. But Wren knew something had to be done.
Give him credit for having the guts to act.
–30–
Jurrjens gets run support as Braves sweep two-gamer from Fish
By Bud L. Ellis
budmansbravesbeat.com
Atlanta 4, Florida 2
Top of the Order: Hark! Offense!! On a day where Jair
Jurrjens pitches!!! Release the pigeons!!!! Jurrjens fired three-hit ball over
seven innings, and home runs from David Ross and Casey Kotchman sparked the
Braves to consecutive victories for the first time in two weeks.
The Good: Kotchman fell a triple short of the cycle (not
that we expected Ol’ Casey to snag a three-bagger), going 3-for-4 with his
first homer of the year and two RBIs. Ross drove in two with a two-run homer in
the second, giving the Braves the lead for keeps. Jordan Schafer had two hits,
as did Kelly Johnson – needless to say, both of those guys needed a two-hit day
given their recent struggles. Johnson even stole a base. Jurrjens, for whom the
Braves had scored just four runs in his previous four outings, allowed two
Hanley Ramirez homers but nothing else, walking two and striking out four in
seven strong innings. The bullpen locked down the end of the game again, Rafael
Soriano pitching around a hit and walk in the eighth and Mike Gonzalez firing a
perfect ninth.
The Bad: What, you want me to complain after not being here
for two weeks? OK, seriously, not much. Jeff Francoeur got thrown out trying to
steal and later was picked off first base. The Braves were 0-for-5 with runners
in scoring position.
View from the Sports Garage: Man, could you imagine Corky
Miller catching every day for two weeks? Wait, don’t go there. Ross’ season
stats are something only the Corkster could dream of: .298, three homers, nine
RBIs. Hopefully Brian McCann and his specs – which must’ve been delivered via
Pony Express from Brazil
- will be ready to go in Philly Friday night. But Ross has been awesome,
reaching base in 14 of his past 15 games (I don’t think the Corkster did 14
things right in his two seasons as a Brave … and I’m right! Miller had exactly
12 hits in 87 at-bats over 43 games in 2007-08). First series win since taking
two of three in Cincinnati two weeks ago, which also marks the last time the
Braves won consecutive games (April 22, 24-25). Hopefully this is the start of
something for a team that, for all its offensive floundering, started the day
just three games out of first in the under-achieving NL East.
On deck
Braves at Phillies
7 p.m. Friday, Citizens
Bank Park
The Skinny: It’s Jo-Jo Reyes making his fourth start, and
he’ll try to dodge the one-inning blues that have undone two of his three
previous efforts. Reyes (0-1, 5.00 ERA) hasn’t pitched poorly, but one bad
inning in Pittsburgh and one tough inning against the Astros in his last start
Sunday kept him from breaking his winless streak, now at 15 games. Encouraging
stat for Jo-Jo: twice as many strikeouts (14) as walks (seven). For the
Phillies, ace Cole Hamels (0-2, 7.27 ERA) hasn’t resembled the guy who won the
World Series MVP last fall. The left-hander left his last start April 28
against the Nationals with a sprained ankle, after missing the Braves on
opening night with a tender elbow. Alarming for Hamels is the 27 hits allowed
in 17 1/3 innings.
Return to Bloggage: Not as much fun as return to bondage,
but I digress … good to be back. Been a crazy two weeks since I wrote my last
post. My Dad is battling cancer and heart problems, and events dictated I pull
away from everything to be with family last week, but the battle – as does life
- continues. Sitting in the stands at Turner Field Tuesday night with my two kids, I realized how much I missed blogging. Good to be back. Play ball.
–30–
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