Braves Journal

Whipping Boy needed

21 Apr

One-run game thread: Nats at Braves, April 21

I thought of posting all the videos U2 did for “One” in honor of all the one-run losses, but there wasn’t enough room.

202 Responses to “One-run game thread: Nats at Braves, April 21”

  1. 1
    ububba Says:

    “Is it getting better?”

    If we keep winning 6-1, I’d say, “Yes.”

  2. 2
    Another Alex R. Says:

    “Did I disappoint you
    Or leave a bad taste in your mouth”

    Yes, you did, Chris Resop.

  3. 3
    krugerindustrialsmoothing Says:

    ajc is reporting that Chipper is in the lineup tonight. Anybody else have the feeling that between his health and the way Hudson bounces back tonight this is the most important game of the year?

  4. 4
    Mac Thomason Says:

    It’s one of 162.

  5. 5
    csg Says:

    the most important game is the one that clinches us a playoff spot. If that doenst happen then none of them are very important

  6. 6
    Remy Says:

    Chico throws left, so Diaz should be back in the line-up tonight.

  7. 7
    CharlesP Says:

    kruger, I don’t think the game is more important than the rest, but the information we’re likely to get from the game (if Hudson has bigger problems, if Chipper’s going to go down for a significant amount of time early on) is pretty important.

  8. 8
    ububba Says:

    I don’t take any team lightly, but I’m kinda glad Huddy is facing the Nats tonight.

  9. 9
    csg Says:

    me too

  10. 10
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Unless Cain or Lincecum are on the mound, I’d say I take the Giants pretty lightly. Other than that, though, I’m with you.

  11. 11
    CharlesP Says:

    ububba, that plays into one of those things on pitching match-ups I don’t “get”. Here’s my baseball management theory question of the day:

    Why don’t we try to have our #1 guy face their #2 or #3 more often. That should help us get more wins with our #1. Then, when we face their aces if we get lucky our #5 guy and batters have a good day and we win some of those too. It would seem to set things up for fewer tough-luck losses where our guy goes 7 strong innings of 1 run ball and our offense can’t do anything for them.

    If both teams had 5 starters, with ERAs at 2, 2.5, 3, 3.5, and 4 we would statistically (I believe, I’ve not run the numbers so somebody can correct me) be more likely to win more games if we put our 2ERA guy against their 2.5 or 3ERA guy. If we try and match our best to their best then the main way we win is by luck (due to the standard deviation from the average-ness of ERA), force of offense, or by paying and having more guys better than their guys.

    It would seem managerially if you had two “identical” staffs that by shifting off one or two places in the rotation (obviously not every week, but aiming for it and tweaking it as possible) you would give yourself an edge in 3-4 of any 5 games, instead of a toss-up and relying on your hitting for all the games. To me that would seem a better way for a mid-to-low market team to plan things to maximize their wins.

    Statheads and students, tell me how that’s wrong (I’m serious, I don’t have delusions I’m RIGHT, just don’t know what I’m missing in the equation).

  12. 12
    ububba Says:

    Charles,
    I was just thinking about the Nats’ relatively unscary offense, as it related to Hudson.

    Also, I don’t know how the kind of scenario you put out could ever be enacted. Even if you believed in the notion of lining up your #1 vs their #3 or whatever, you’d make a mess of your own rotation in about a month.

    Remember, you have off-days, rainouts, doubleheaders, extra-inning fiascos, injuries, etc.

  13. 13
    Kenny Says:

    That’s funny that you say that. I have thought of that too. I just never thought of it in a team wide aspect, but if you were the number 1 starter and kept facing everyone else’s number 5 starter you could have a great season. I sort of thought that would be a way to cheat a Cy Young.

  14. 14
    A.West Says:

    CharlesP,
    You are correct. For a short series it may make more sense to try to save your best pitcher for a matchup with less than the other team’s best. Particularly if your opponent has one superstar pitcher and then quality falls off after that. It could be better to concede a loss against the superstar, and then boost your chances to win the other games. The problem is that you can’t manipulate the rotation much during the regular season because you’ll mess up the pitchers’ recovery cycles.

  15. 15
    krugerindustrialsmoothing Says:

    OK, I will amend my statement to agree with CharlesP. I’m far less concerned with the outcome than Chipper making it through to garbage time and Hudson pitching 7 strong.

  16. 16
    CharlesP Says:

    ububba,
    obviously you couldn’t screw around with guys schedules very much in the season, but with the various off days I’d think you could shuffle things occasionally to make for better match-ups (maybe once before the all-star break, and once after). Don’t teams do this once in a while already, but to get Ace against Ace matchups instead? It’s not an exact science, but it would seem to be a good strategy for a team like our current Braves. It wasn’t an issue when it as Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz as much, but now it seems we (and others) waste good outings by trying to go ace to ace.

    You would of course have your #4 or #5 guy out there as your opening day starter, which isn’t great PR (though I think winning all season is better PR than having a star on the mound for opening day). And admittedly your #5 guys are going to have even worse records than they already do. But I would think the odds of winning more games would be worth it.

    Another factor for teams like ours. Smoltz is an ace, but he’s aging. If you regularly put him against another teams 3rd starter your giving the offense a better shot at staking him to a bigger lead and letting him only have to pitch 5-6 innings per game and still getting us a win on occasion (as happened with Smoltz’s last start).

  17. 17
    Remy Says:

    I don’t know, Charles. So much of what we see on game day is predicated on the preparation pitchers undergo between starts. The amount of long toss they do to build arm strength or the amount of time they spend working on a particular pitch plays an important role in a pitcher’s success over the course of a long season. Most important, however, is the amount of rest a pitcher receives. And I would think that having a stable routine would help a player–position players included–get through a 162-game season, especially one in which so much travel is involved.

  18. 18
    Cliff Says:

    Some thoughts from our Richmond team.

    Barbaro Canizares needs the nickname carnivore. He is devouring the IL. Maybe we can get something from an AL team for him or get lucky and him learn to catch.

    Thorman is climbing. Not that fast, but at least a little better.

    Lilliquist and B. Jones are struggling. Big time.

    Who in the hell is Reginald Taylor and where did he come from? He had a .982 OPS in the Mexican League last year and is at .990 or so in the IL so far.

    Sammons continues to defy his earlier minor league performance. He is still around 1.000 OPS. Wow! If he can just OPS .800 at Major League level he would be very valuable.

  19. 19
    barrycuda Says:

    its probably just my imagination, but it sreems like over the years the braves hit better against the the star pitchers than the bums. and god help them if they face a guy that they dumped for chornic sorryness or an unknown rookie in a crucial series.

  20. 20
    ryan c Says:

    chipper in the lineup but kj not. i bet they plan on chipper playing part of the game and if we are coasting, they will bring in kj to replace him and move prado to 3rd.

  21. 21
    CharlesP Says:

    Good points Remy, but I’m not actually suggesting they go out there every week and say “who are we going up against?” as much as looking at how others are shaping up going into opening day, any longer breaks you may have (day-off followed by a rain-out), all-star break, etc. So the throwing schedule and such shouldn’t be thrown off by that (for that matter what has happened to the Leo philosophy of throwing twice between starts vs once like most other pitching coaches? Any info on which teams are doing one or the other?)

    Now granted, this would only work for a season or two (if it worked at all) because once a fair number of teams have made the same changes you have, you’re back to ace vs ace again.

    So it’s obviously not a flawless plan, but it would seem to me that there might be a way of gaming the system/schedule a bit to maximize your chances if you’re not a team with 4 aces.

  22. 22
    ububba Says:

    Charles,
    I mean, you could do a lot of things, but I guess I’m not fully convinced that “going for the mismatch” would actually work out in the long run.

    These days, the most “rotation tampering” you see is when an older guy (like Pedro) gets an extra day of rest. Sometimes you’ll see an ace moved up a day in a late-season matchup, but you don’t see a lot of it anymore.

    Plus, let’s not forget that pitchers have become fussy about these kinds of things—they’re slaves to the regimen.

    Sure, a guy like Mike Mussina is an extreme example of someone who won’t budge from his routine, but he’s a royal pain in the ass (and annoying excuse-maker) if anything begins to differ from his norm.

    It may be something that works in APBA or Stratomatic, but maybe not with real people.

  23. 23
    CharlesP Says:

    “It may be something that works in APBA or Stratomatic, but maybe not with real people.”

    That’s probably right. And admittedly this idea always comes to mind after Smoltz has gone 6 or 7 giving up one run and taken a loss anyway, but it’s an idea (good or bad though it may be). It would be interesting to see a team take the chance and send out their #4 guy on opening day, but I doubt it will happen.

    I just looked at his stats, and andruw had 2 hits, 2 walks, and 5 strikeouts during the weekend series… and that brought his average, slugging, and obp all UP from what they were before the series. I feel bad for the guy, hope he pulls it together and has a great career, but either way the Braves should at least induct him into their hall of fame when he retires.

  24. 24
    csg Says:

    Hudson hit 90 on his 1st two pitches

  25. 25
    krugerindustrialsmoothing Says:

    2 90 mph heaters to start, phew.

  26. 26
    Stu Says:

    Was Matt Chico throwing 101 mph in warm-ups or something? Why on earth is Manny Acta playing for one run here?

  27. 27
    csg Says:

    washington’s batting averages after Guzman and Milledge

    .213
    .255
    .212
    .150
    .115
    .256
    .111

    with that said you still have to be very careful with Zimmerman and Johnson

  28. 28
    krugerindustrialsmoothing Says:

    I think he’s just playing for ‘a’ run.

  29. 29
    csg Says:

    Stu, its easy. He was with Bobby for so long thats all he knows

  30. 30
    Douglass Says:

    Guzman’s single was yet another ball that mysteriously went right under Prado’s glove after he made a”valient” diving effort. His ability to achieve this feat everytime he plays second is absolutely uncanny.

  31. 31
    csg Says:

    great throw Frenchy!!

  32. 32
    Mac Thomason Says:

    New poll.

  33. 33
    Douglass Says:

    FRENCHY WITH THE ROPE FROM THE OUTFIELD!

    Good Gawd he’s got a cannon. time and time again.

  34. 34
    Landogarner Says:

    That’s right! You don’t run on Frenchy mofo!

  35. 35
    krugerindustrialsmoothing Says:

    nice throw.

  36. 36
    csg Says:

    didnt even notice Kotsay sitting tonight until I saw him give Frenchy a high five in the dugout there. Blanco in CF

  37. 37
    Landogarner Says:

    That’s a bit of an absurd poll….

  38. 38
    Douglass Says:

    This figures to be one of the most lopsided polls yet. Especially because, to keep up with his nightly quota, Prado figures to make 3 more “nonerrors” before the night is done.

  39. 39
    csg Says:

    Ian Kinsler has lead the second basemen in errors the last two seasons

  40. 40
    Mac Thomason Says:

    He may not be the worst, but he is very very bad.

  41. 41
    csg Says:

    Prado with a double – here comes another platoon

  42. 42
    Landogarner Says:

    See

  43. 43
    Mac Thomason Says:

    And there’s a lot more than errors. Prado has a remarkable ability to make horrible plays that don’t result in errors.

  44. 44
    Landogarner Says:

    You changed it Mac now my comment looks absurd….

  45. 45
    csg Says:

    this could be the worst call Ive ever seen – not even close!!!!

  46. 46
    Mac Thomason Says:

    That is some bad umpiring.

  47. 47
    Landogarner Says:

    OMG THAT UMP IS BLIND!!!1

  48. 48
    Douglass Says:

    WHAT THE #$&U*#?!?

  49. 49
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Nats announcer on Yunel’s bunt: “I have never seen a runner that safe called out.”

  50. 50
    Stu Says:

    What happened?

  51. 51
    Landogarner Says:

    Stu, first base ump called Yunel out and he was safe by a mile.

  52. 52
    Remy Says:

    Please tell me C. B. Bucknor’s not out there.

  53. 53
    csg Says:

    Yunel was honestly past the bag when the ball was caught at first – that is no exaggeration either. He was safe by three or four feet

  54. 54
    Douglass Says:

    @ 43: “Prado has a remarkable ability to make horrible plays that don’t result in errors.”

    It’s beyond remarkable. The dude is a zenmaster of the “nonerror.” He’s turned it into an art form.

  55. 55
    Another Alex R. Says:

    The ump was clearly trying to make up for having called Milledge out, which was a borderline call. But Yunel was very, very, very safe. Safe by more than a step. Beyond the bag when the ball got there. That’s hard to screw up.

  56. 56
    Parish Says:

    Is this the 9th inning already? Why is everybody playing for one run?

    They must have read the title to this thread.

  57. 57
    Stu Says:

    Please tell me Bobby’s getting tossed.

    BTW, what is it with Yunel’s bunts inducing crappy umpiring? Remember when he bunted and they called him out for coming in contact with the ball, only the ball was never closer than 6 inches to him?

  58. 58
    Mac Thomason Says:

    When I say that someone is the “worst [position]” I am referring to defense; I added the qualifier to clarify. Nobody ever got a hit while playing second base; they get hits as batters.

    If the umpire admitted he blew the call, why didn’t he reverse it? That call is suspension-worthy.

  59. 59
    sansho1 Says:

    It was Dan Iassogna (sp?). Worst call I’ve ever seen — even the first baseman had given up.

  60. 60
    Mac Thomason Says:

    It wasn’t playing for one run. It was Escobar bunting for a hit.

    Successfully.

  61. 61
    Frank Says:

    so why no reversal of a bad call? does that only happen when it benefits the other team?

  62. 62
    Frank Says:

    has someone sedated Cox? that call seems ready made for him to get tossed?

  63. 63
    csg Says:

    just showed a replay about 5 to 10 feet away from the bag. Yunels foot hits the bag and the ball still hadnt come into view point yet. Both feet were past the bag when the ball was caught

  64. 64
    Remy Says:

    Wait, Frank. The fireworks come later.

  65. 65
    Mac Thomason Says:

    He didn’t get tossed, the announcers speculated, because the umpire admitted he blew the call. That just goes to show that for all his ejections Bobby isn’t a McGraw or a Martin, because those guys would have humilated the umpire, who clearly deserved it.

  66. 66
    Landogarner Says:

    Frank, they think the ump admitted he blew the call that’s why Bobby didn’t make much of a fuss.

  67. 67
    Parish Says:

    Sorry – watching on Gameday right now. It said – “Escobar – sac bunt to pitcher. Prado to third.”

  68. 68
    Landogarner Says:

    Remy, good call.

  69. 69
    Remy Says:

    What’s the point of admitting you blew a call if you don’t rectify your mistake immediately?

  70. 70
    Stu Says:

    Did the Nats’ announcers then explain why the call wasn’t reversed?

    If I were Bobby, I’d have a much more difficult time swallowing a known bad call and refusal to correct it than I would a mistake.

  71. 71
    csg Says:

    Im very good friends with Jason Standridge, use to pitch for the Reds and now in Japan. I was asking him one day about how hard Adam Dunn hits the ball. He told me that Willy Mo puts Adam Dunn to shame in BP. Too bad Willy has to hit real live pitching some times

  72. 72
    Frank Says:

    Remy–agreed–if you’re willing to admit the mistake why not just reverse your call?

  73. 73
    sansho1 Says:

    Some worse defensive 2Bs than Prado:

    Chuck Knoblauch
    Rod Carew
    Jorge Orta
    Steve Sax
    Jeff Kent

  74. 74
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Knoblauch didn’t used to be worse than Prado, he just got there by coming down with a case of defensive Steve Blass syndrome.

  75. 75
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Julio was a really bad 2B, though oddly he wasn’t that bad a shortstop…

    I guarantee that I would have gotten ejected in that situation, probably before the umpire said anything, because I would have led off with “Do you have money on this game, or are you just drunk?”

  76. 76
    Remy Says:

    Who had the better arm to first? Sax or Knoblauch?

  77. 77
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Heap!

  78. 78
    Parish Says:

    So, the ump admitted his mistake?

    How do we know and when did he do it?

  79. 79
    Landogarner Says:

    Bmac, nice.

  80. 80
    ububba Says:

    B-Mac!

  81. 81
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Oh, and arguably (though it’s not an argument I would make) that call just cost us two runs. I should probably shut up about it now, but God was that bad.

  82. 82
    Stu Says:

    Steve Blass is a disease, not a syndrome.

  83. 83
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Mac, I probably would have gotten ejected, but I guarantee that I wouldn’t have said anything nearly as devoid of four-letter words as yours.

  84. 84
    csg Says:

    so I bench Diaz and he’s 1-1 with a stolen base. Thanks

  85. 85
    Landogarner Says:

    Wow, running a bit more so far this year.

  86. 86
    csg Says:

    perfect bunt situation Bobby

  87. 87
    ububba Says:

    I never saw him play a lot of games at 2B, but Ruben Gotay was often described as a something approaching awful in the field. From what I’d heard & read, Randolph couldn’t stand him when he was on the Mets.

    Of course, having a slick-fielding former 2B as your manager doesn’t help.

    Looks like we got our hitting shoes on today.

  88. 88
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Good point, Stu.

    Also, two straight singles to the opposite field from Diaz and Blanco. I’m gonna go ahead and guess that makes Joe Simpson happy.

  89. 89
    Landogarner Says:

    No dp’s huddy….

  90. 90
    basil Says:

    During Steve sax’s rookie year, the Braves once put up protective netting in front of their dugout when playing the Dodgers.

  91. 91
    Fulton County Bombers Says:

    Timmy Hud-son…

  92. 92
    Fulton County Bombers Says:

    Dear God, I guess Diaz is freakin’ smart. Great reaction there!

  93. 93
    sansho1 Says:

    Some real nice hustle by Diaz.

  94. 94
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Nice suicide squeeze. I was hoping the ump would call Hudson safe — he was only out by about 4 or 5 steps.

  95. 95
    AreJay in KS Says:

    that’s just great baserunning

  96. 96
    ububba Says:

    Let’s dispense with this team quickly. Keep it up, boys.

  97. 97
    Remy Says:

    Thanks, basil. I was wondering if anyone got the joke.

  98. 98
    Fulton County Bombers Says:

    For the record, I was on the Martin Prado bandwagon first!

  99. 99
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Wow — Martin Prado must have had some Rold Gold pretzels before the game.

  100. 100
    Mac Thomason Says:

    He can’t field, but Prado can hit a little.

  101. 101
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Prado te laudamus.

  102. 102
    AreJay in KS Says:

    The guys on ESPN even said you just don’t run on Frenchy.

  103. 103
    Landogarner Says:

    Fulton, I believe I said
    “Prado > KJ” quite a while ago…. But you can jump on with me.

  104. 104
    sansho1 Says:

    Sorry, FCB, I’m Martin Prado’s Only Advocate In All The World (TM).

    AAR, I hesitate to correct a fellow fan of The Fall, but technically that wasn’t a suicide squeeze, because Diaz wasn’t off with the pitch.

  105. 105
    Fulton County Bombers Says:

    I hope Matt Chico’s the most improved pitcher in the NL. This will be a fun summer if that’s the case

  106. 106
    Remy Says:

    Pete and Skip refer to the Diaz run as “the old Chuck Tanner play,” whereby the runner keeps pace with the third baseman as he comes in for the bunt and then takes continues home once the third baseman commits himself. Evidently, Tanner would try that play in the anywhere in the order, but, according to the boys in the booth, he never had any success.

  107. 107
    sansho1 Says:

    Although I never claimed he was >KJ, and reserve the right to crawl back under a rock should he start kicking the ball around again….

  108. 108
    Remy Says:

    @ #106

    Obviously, I need an editing feature.

  109. 109
    Landogarner Says:

    Pfff somd advocate you are sansho.

  110. 110
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Kotsay would have gotten that.

  111. 111
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Sansho, I stand corrected. Here’s what Mark E. Smith would think of the first-base ump, via “Chicago Now!”:

    “Do you work hard?
    Do you try hard?
    You don’t.”

  112. 112
    sansho1 Says:

    Tanner also occasionally employed two pinch-runners on a 25-man roster with the A’s back in the ’70s (abetted by Charlie O Finley). Go take a look sometime at the BBRef pages for Larry Lintz, Matt Alexander, Don Hopkins and especially Herb Washington sometime.

  113. 113
    Landogarner Says:

    lol Mac, nice.

  114. 114
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Yeah, but that was certainly not Tanner’s idea. Tanner has had a lot of dumb ideas in his time, but that was all Finley.

  115. 115
    sansho1 Says:

    #111

    Excellent — and from “Oswalt Defence Lawyer”: “How could he cope with the flashing-by past…”

  116. 116
    csg Says:

    save Huddy tonight or save the bullpen tonight

  117. 117
    sansho1 Says:

    #114

    I’m sure you’re right. But Tanner’s subsequent obsession with Omar Moreno might be evidence that Charlie O rubbed off on him….

  118. 118
    Mac Thomason Says:

    That was interesting. McCann hit the ball right on line with the right fielder… who was playing him like a righthanded pull hitter.

  119. 119
    Mac Thomason Says:

    And I guess Snitker learned something on Saturday.

  120. 120
    csg Says:

    does Bobby try the squeeze with a pitcher and McCann again

  121. 121
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Fantastic double by Diaz, who’s finally showing some real signs of life tonight (though the way Chico’s pitching, he could make anyone look good).

    Literally anyone other than Brian McCann could have scored from first on that one.

  122. 122
    Mac Thomason Says:

    You can’t really run a squeeze when the force is in play.

  123. 123
    csg Says:

    Chico improved?? Just walked Huddy and a run in at the same time

  124. 124
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Does Acta just hate Chico or something? Get him out of there already.

  125. 125
    AreJay in KS Says:

    Huddy with 2 RBI? I love it!

  126. 126
    Another Alex R. Says:

    I like bases loaded walks a whole lot more when we’re not the ones issuing them.

    Will Ohman, I forgive you. For now.

  127. 127
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Well, that time the umpire called the batter safe at first.

  128. 128
    csg Says:

    wow I cant believe he called Prado safe, he was only 7 feet past the bag there.

  129. 129
    Mac Thomason Says:

    And if I were Glenn Hubbard, I definitely would have been ejected right there.

  130. 130
    Mac Thomason Says:

    My God, Acta, put a stop to this already. He’s clearly not right. This reminds me of the game when Bobby messed up Odalis Perez’s arm.

  131. 131
    Nathan Says:

    Wow. Pena just put an elbow in Milledge’s face catching that fly, with Milledge calling him off the whole time.

  132. 132
    csg Says:

    7 pitch inning

    how many does he go tonight?

  133. 133
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Why would you have been ejected if you were Glenn Hubbard?

  134. 134
    csg Says:

    Soriano optimistic about elbow

    http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080421&content_id=2565304&vkey=news_atl&fext=.jsp&c_id=atl

  135. 135
    csg Says:

    Glenn was at first and had the best look at the play, he should have argued

  136. 136
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Also, right now, Wily Mo Pena is bad at everything — he’s not hitting and he’s not playing defense. He should probably be sent down to AAA; even Willie Harris is better than this.

    Nice play by Lastings Milledge, who apparently wasn’t too badly hurt after Pena ran into him for no good reason.

  137. 137
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Because I would have turned around and led the fans in a standing ovation for getting the call right.

    Chico with 72 pitches in three innings. I think this is the game I was talking about with Odalis Perez. Check out the winning pitcher!

  138. 138
    Another Alex R. Says:

    You know what’s weird? Odalis Perez is actually pitching fairly well for the Nats this year. Yet another example of Jim Bowden finding a fairly useful #3/#4 starter. We really could have used him last year.

  139. 139
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Yeah, I had just noticed that. I was thinking that he was in the bullpen and could relieve Chico, but he’s starting

  140. 140
    csg Says:

    what a play from Yunel – not so much from the ever slow Prado

  141. 141
    Another Alex R. Says:

    The Nationals’ third-base coach is really, really bad.

  142. 142
    Remy Says:

    Does Prado still get charge with an error, or is this one of those “errorless” examples of which you spoke earlier?

  143. 143
    Douglass Says:

    Another classic nonerror there by Prado.

  144. 144
    Mac Thomason Says:

    “Hey, we’re down six runs, time to take a chance and go for the plate!”

  145. 145
    mraver Says:

    Haha! You don’t run on Escobar, either. ^_^

  146. 146
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Also, how is it that Cristian Guzman faces us, he turns into George Sisler?

  147. 147
    jj3bagger Says:

    7 walks for Odalis in that game. Wow, that’s brutal. I guess I had blocked out of my memory that Brian Jordan batted cleanup ahead of Javy and Andruw.

  148. 148
    csg Says:

    59 pitches through 5

  149. 149
    Tom L Says:

    A shutout would be really nice. Give the team even more momentum and obviously save the bullpen. I dont think pitch count is going to be a concern tonight.

  150. 150
    Mac Thomason Says:

    They called Prado’s latest misadventure an infield single. I swear, that man may not have The Pictures, but he has something on the official scorer.

  151. 151
    Another Alex R. Says:

    In fairness, it was a sharply-hit grounder up the middle. Maybe they should have called it an error, but no one ever does.

    Also, Blanco’s having another great game. That’s three two-hit games in his first four starts.

  152. 152
    Brandon Says:

    KJ would have got that.

  153. 153
    mraver Says:

    Trivia question:

    We all know that the Braves bullpen has been somewhat over-taxed lately.

    Name the last two days Royce Ring appeared in a game.

  154. 154
    Remy Says:

    Low bridge!

  155. 155
    ryan c Says:

    i really do love escobar and his enthusiasm, but his bat tossing will cause someone to earhole him soon.

  156. 156
    ryan c Says:

    has chipper gotten out this year?

  157. 157
    Tom L Says:

    hit streak continued, batting average raised…let’s get chipper out of the game.

    ps escobar’s bat toss is pretty sweet

  158. 158
    Nathan Says:

    That looked like Chipper just wanted his hit; that was low and away and he just put the big part of the bat on it.

  159. 159
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Royce’s last game: April 15. Last game before that: April 5.

    Also, Brian McCann needs to stop swinging at the first pitch.

  160. 160
    Fulton County Bombers Says:

    I think I’ll go tomorrow night to see Smoltz get #3000

  161. 161
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Hudson and Francoeur seem to love facing the Nats. I wonder if they’ll name their children National?

  162. 162
    braves14 Says:

    After Hudson gets through the 7th, I think it might be a Resop and/or Ring situation.

  163. 163
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Ah, Willie being Willie.

  164. 164
    braves14 Says:

    If Hudson can get through the 7th, anyway

  165. 165
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Prado makes a bad throw… and they give the error to Tex. Of course, he really should have caught the ball.

  166. 166
    braves14 Says:

    Maybe they’ll name them RFK.

  167. 167
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Hey, look! It’s Royce Ring!

  168. 168
    Mac Thomason Says:

    You know, if Acta hadn’t sat on his hands while his starter got his head handed to him, this might be a ballgame.

  169. 169
    Another Alex R. Says:

    I guess he thought it was a teachable moment.

  170. 170
    Mac Thomason Says:

    What, “That’ll teach you to have an off night!”?

  171. 171
    ryan c Says:

    man, adam laroche is down to .125. maybe adam should start the first month of the season in the batting cage and start playing in may.

  172. 172
    ryan c Says:

    and andruw batting 8th. even when the dodgers score a ton andruw goes opher.

  173. 173
    Another Alex R. Says:

    “Matt, sometimes you won’t be good, and sometimes you’ll have the crap knocked out of you. But that’s okay, because it gives you character.”

  174. 174
    braves14 Says:

    If Torre likes the pitcher batting 8th idea, then Andruw might hit 9th before it’s said and done.

  175. 175
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Ah, insight from the AJC:

    So what’s the big deal with Springsteen? | Atlanta Music Scene | AccessAtlanta

  176. 176
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Ugh. Carlyle.

  177. 177
    Parish Says:

    Looks like the F-bomb just singled to load the bases against the Mets. Nobody out.

  178. 178
    Brandon Says:

    Uh oh. Resop sighting. This game definitely isn’t Resop-proof yet.

  179. 179
    Another Alex R. Says:

    “Up until a year ago, my knowledge of Hank Aaron didn’t go much further than those few seconds they showed when Barry Bonds broke his records.

    And that was fine with me.

    Then I started dating a Braves fanatic.

    Most of the time he keeps his obsession to himself. But I have heard from him — and countless colleagues — that Hank is not only “the greatest hitter who has ever lived” but that Braves games are a “religious experience.”

    I had hoped to just take their word for it.

    But the Braves are coming to Atlanta on Friday night. And I have been asked to go.

    So it’s time to see for my self.

    It’s my boyfriend’s 50th game. And my first.

    Anything I should know, look for, expect?”

  180. 180
    ricflair Says:

    You gotta love Buddy Carlyle. What a piece of s###

  181. 181
    Mac Thomason Says:

    More great baserunning from the Nats.

  182. 182
    Another Alex R. Says:

    And Aaron Boone runs his way out of the inning, and the Nationals continue to demonstrate that they run the bases like the 2006 Tigers pitching staff played defense.

  183. 183
    Parish Says:

    Boone hitting for Jesus.

    Are you saying Jesus can’t hit a curve ball?

  184. 184
    pc beachbum Says:

    Has to be a hit. And no error on Chipper since Tex gunned him down.Great play!

  185. 185
    bwarrend Says:

    They just ruled it an E5

  186. 186
    Mac Thomason Says:

    This makes no sense:

    “A Boone reached on infield single to third, A Kearns scored, J Estrada to second, J Estrada to third, A Boone to first on throwing error by third baseman C Jones.A Boone out at second.”

  187. 187
    Another Alex R. Says:

    I’m thinking that Chad Cordero isn’t completely healthy. Or maybe he’s just terrible.

  188. 188
    Remy Says:

    NL Player of the Week

    http://tinyurl.com/3f79r3

  189. 189
    bwarrend Says:

    “A Boone reached on infield single to third, A Kearns scored, J Estrada to second, J Estrada to third, A Boone to first on throwing error by third baseman C Jones.A Boone out at second.”

    The 1st base umpire must have made that call.

  190. 190
    Another Alex R. Says:

    I shoulda kept my big dumb mouth shut.

  191. 191
    Frank Says:

    121–Chico makes everyone but Frenchy look good–luckily the Nats 3B coach does that

  192. 192
    braves14 Says:

    Acosta in with a 4 run lead.

  193. 193
    blake Says:

    cordero used to throw 91…they should have dealt him 2 years ago like the brewers did with kolbb

  194. 194
    pc beachbum Says:

    Ah, Sosa still being Sosa, giving up grandslam and now 7-1 Cubbies!

  195. 195
    Parish Says:

    Can’t we make this easy?

    It was 7-0!

  196. 196
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Seriously. Can we like tape Moylan’s elbow or something?

  197. 197
    Another Alex R. Says:

    Well, that’ll go in the Win column.

  198. 198
    braves14 Says:

    5 in a row!

  199. 199
    pc beachbum Says:

    oops! 3 run homer given up by Sosa. We should bejust one out I think.big change from last week.
    ESPN now laughing over call at first on Yunel.

  200. 200
    Parish Says:

    Holy cow – that’s a five-game win streak.

  201. 201
    pc beachbum Says:

    Guys, my apologies. Been concentrating on the Phillies, Mets and Braves so much that until I just heard on ESPN that the Fish are 12-7, I was thinking we were near the top.
    Like the guy on ESPN said, the Marlins are so young they don’t realize they aren’t supposed to be winning like this!

  202. 202
    Mac Thomason Says:

    Unusually prolix recap up. “Prolix” is a weird word, but “unusually” looks misspelled.

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