Series Preview- M’s vs. Detriot Tigers 4/16-4/18

Detroit is 6-3 on the year, while the Mariners are 4-6 and on a two game winning streak.  It’d be great to win these next two series at home and be back to at least .500.  I don’t know much about the Tigers, so let’s learn together!

Who’d You Rather Have (tonight’s line-ups from seattlemariners.com):

C: M’s Rob Johnson    Tigers Gerald Laird  Pick: Laird  It’s going to take someone pretty bad for me to pick Johnson, although I’m beginning to be hopeful that he could conceivably improve someday.

1B: M’s Casey Kotchman    Tigers Miguel Cabrera  Pick: Cabrera

2B: M’s Figgins    Tigers Scott Sizemore  Pick: Figgins

3B: M’s Lopez    Tigers Brandon Inge  Pick: Lopez, I guess.

SS: M’s Wilson    Tigers Adam Everett  Pick: Wow, rough time for shortstops.  I guess Everett. He’s hitting better right now, I guess, and they’re pretty even in glove reputation.

LF: M’s Bradley    Tigers Johnny Damon  Pick: Bradley

CF: M’s Guti    Tigers Austin Jackson  Pick: Guti

RF: M’s Ichiro    Tigers Magglio Ordonez  Pick: Ichiro

DH: M’s Griffey    Tigers Carlos Guillen  Pick: Guillen

That’s Mariners 5, Tigers 4, and they look that even too.  Tigers have a few more big boppers.  Well, they have Miguel Cabrera.  On to pitching!

Starters:

Friday: M’s Felix    Tigers Bonderman  Pick: Felix

Saturday: M’s Ryan Rowland-Smith    Tigers Justin Verlander  Pick: Verlander That’s two of the very best starters in the league back to back, if you didn’t notice. 

Sunday: M’s Ian Snell    Tigers Max Scherzer  Pick: Scherzer, but that’s mostly for the future.  I have no idea how either of these guys will throw on Sunday.

Closer: M’s Aardsma    Tigers Jose Valverde  Pick: Aardsma

That’s two and two on the pitching, and I’d say it’s a wash for this series.  Felix and Verlander will have to be really off to get beat, and anything could happen on Sunday.  I like the way the bullpen’s throwing for the M’s right now.  Andrew will be at tonight’s game and then have the recap afterward.  Have a great weekend everyone!

-Matthew

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Huskies Practice Report – 4/15/2010

We passed the halfway point of spring practice today.  It was the Dawgs’ eighth practice of the year and they have fifteen total (including the spring game).  Today the team was in shorts, shoulder pads, and helmets; apparently taking it easy before the usual Saturday scrimmage.  It was an absolutely beautiful day in Seattle today and I might have come away with a sunburn, which is just fine by me.  Before heading down to the stadium I bought some iced tea and two Choco Tacos (Choco Tacos are the most under-rated snack/dessert of all time.  Seriously, I could eat 5 without any problem.  They are perfect for a warm day like this was.  Choco Tacos are one of those small things that you have to cherish.  Like the movie Zombieland has taught us, it’s the little things in life that make it grand and Choco Tacos are the grandest of the little things.  Go buy one.).  It felt like Summer and it was glorious.

There were no new injuries today.  Jordan Polk is still struggling with a hamstring injury and he played sparingly.  Cody Bruns and D’Andre Goodwin are also out so the depth at receiver isn’t very strong right now.

During drills today I tried to watch the offensive and defensive line more so that I’d have something different to report.  I don’t know a ton about the lines but I came away with a few observations.

  • Senio Kelemente is going to be really good.  He could become a pretty good NFL prospect by this time next year.  It’s clear he’s the best on the line for a number of reasons but when he does get beat by a defensive lineman (this hardly happens) the defensive players celebrate a little bit more.  Talia beat him once in a one-on-one drill today and then they went up against each other the very next play.  Talia got knocked down twice and never did get to the target.  Don’t mess with Senio!
  • Skyler Fancher still appears a step slow and rusty.  He is coming off an injury so I imagine that he’s still getting going but if he looks like this in the Fall I’m not sure how much he’ll play with the return of Cody Habben and incoming freshman.
  • Mykena Ikehara is pretty impressive.  He still looks a little small but he also looks like UW’s second best offensive lineman.  He can play either guard or center, right now they have him at center.
  • De’Shon Matthews was impressive today.  He beat Fancher around the edge 3 different times.  I’ve said this before but I don’t know why he was playing defensive tackle before.  I know there wasn’t much depth when Ty moved him but if he had stuck at DE I get the feeling that he really could have been something special.
  • Talia Critchon is still a little small but his speed is impressive.  If he puts a little more weight on I think he could be pretty successful next year.
  • After watching closer today, I’m a little more worried about Cameron Elisara’s speed at DE.  I don’t know if he can beat people around the edge but time will tell.

As for the rest of the team, it was the usual suspects who put up good performances.  Both of the freshman running backs put up some really solid, long runs.  It is worth coming out to a practice just to watch these two.  They will make you excited about the future of Husky football. 

The defense had it’s way most of the day.  I don’t recall a touchdown today in the team session.  The linebackers and secondary continue to impress.  If anyones trying to lock up their starting job by fall camp it’s Nate Fellner.  He continues to make good plays and more importantly doesn’t make any bad ones.  Will Shamburger also made some really good hits from the safety position today.  All of a sudden depth at safety looks to be a really strong point for this Husky team. 

Just a few more thoughts after the jump. Continue reading

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Game Recap — 4/14/2010

Winner winner chicken dinner! No but really, I just had chicken for dinner…

That was a fun game, especially from the 5th inning on. Stellar pitching met timely hitting again, and the result was a much needed W, a series win, and renewed excitement heading into Felix night on Friday. It would have been rough to be 2-8 or 3-7 today, and after Monday’s let down, I fully expected to be in one of those scenarios. Especially considering our 4 and 5 starters would be taking the mound Tuesday and Wednesday. But one thing I love about baseball is how quickly things can turn around with games almost every day, and the M’s certainly pulled a 180 the last couple nights. Fister and Vargas put great starts together, and the offense finally showed up, albeit in short bursts, to avoid losing this series. Heading into the weekend, you get the feeling the early hole this team dug could very well be history come next week.

The story of the game was probably Vargas’ outing. People in the blogosphere are starting to talk about this guy possibly having a breakout year. If his new cutter is as good as it was last night, this may be true. It can be the perfect pitch to run in on righties. Vargas went 6 innings, gave up 5 hits, 2 runs, and didn’t walk a batter. That’s consecutive nights where our 4 and 5 starters didn’t walk a batter, in a combined 14 innings. You can argue the hits and runs given up ought to be taken with a grain of salt against a poor hitting team like Oakland, but you can’t refute the 0 walks. I especially liked Wak pulling Vargas after 6 innings, even though he had only thrown 89 pitches. The reason I say this is because we have seen Vargas in cruise control for 4, 5, or 6 innings, only to blow up as he begins to tire. By not sending him out for the 7th, Wak ensured his confidence will remain high, and the blow up inning was avoided.

Hero: Jose Lopez. I thought awhile about this but ultimately I’m going with Lopey. Lopez was 2-4 last night with a double, a walk, and the go ahead RBI single. He looked the part of a clean-up hitter, though I’m not sure he is the long term solution in that role. Lopez also made 2 nice plays in the field.
Honorable mention: Adam Moore and Jason Vargas. Moore was 2-4, he had a great throw out on a steal attempt, and he called a great game for Vargas. Some would argue Vargas was the hero, and 6 innings of 2 run ball is good, but not heroic.

Goat: Jack Wilson. Jack was the only starter to not reach base last night. It may just be a slow start, but it’s looking more like Jack won’t have much to offer at the plate this year. Gotta love his glove though.

Onto the quick notes after the jump, which I was jotting down throughout the game.
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Game Recap – 4/13/2010

Doug Fister: Hero

A night after a brutal home opener loss to Oakland, the Mariners sent Doug Fister to the mound in desperate need of a good outing, not only for the team, but for himself. His last outing at Oakland was not good. (4 innings, 6 hits, 3 walks…). This night though, Fister delivered, and delivered bigtime. 8 strong innings. 4 K’s, no walks. He had pinpoint control, working the counts in his favor, throwing strikes. 100 pitches, 71 strikes. Awesome efficiency. I felt he kept the A’s on their heels all night, not being predictable. This is the type of outing we all hoped for! Ah, but as we know with this version of the Mariners, great pitching is only half the battle. Gotta score runs!

As the game wore on, I grew increasingly frustrated with our hitters, especially with RISP. Rob Johnson looked lost multiple times at the plate, as did Lopez with two men on in the 5th. I think it was the most uninspired at bat of Lopez’s career (ok, total overstatement, but that is how I felt at the time watching it live…). Now, I will say Brett Anderson is a flat out stud. He has wicked good stuff, so chopped liver like Johnson and Wilson will naturally look bad, but Lopez is a decent hitter, and Anderson made him look silly. The thing that really made me mad was just the lack of aggression in Lopez’s at bat. It was infuriating to witness.

The next two innings the Mariners proceed to put men on base. The A’s pitchers repeatedly made mistakes with walks and hit batsmen. But the Mariners could not deliver, no clutch hitting at all. It was a foregone conclusion as I watched this game, I kept telling myself there is no way Jack Wilson can get the ball out of the infield, or Figgins getting caught stealing, it was a trainwreck. Ahh, until the 8th inning…

Milton Bradley: Hero

Lopez got his third hit of the night to lead off (ironic that he looked great three of four at bats, but the one in the 5th was just terrible, odd stuff…), then Sweeney worked the count and drew a walk. Up comes Milton Bradley. (I want Milton to succeed. For him, but mostly for the Mariners sake!). Batting left handed, Milton just looks more comfortable at the plate. Boom. 3 run blast to deep right. I went nuts, like we just won the division or something. I guess when run scoring has become such a laborious task for Seattle, seeing a massively clutch home run late in the game made me giddy with excitement. Welcome to Seattle Milton. You start doing things like you did last night and you’ll be loved here. We are simple folk, really.

Ok, on to the Heroes and Goats!!!! YEAH!!!

Hero(s): Doug Fister & Milton Bradley. Not sure if I can pick two, but these guys are the clear cut heroes of the night. The M’s needed Fister to step up, and he did, as well as Bradley. Well done fellas.

Goat: Rob Johnson. 4 LOB, 3 K’s. What else is there to say. He did call a nice game with Fister, but at some point that excuse wears terribly thin, we need hitting from the catcher spot, and Johnson was a complete bust at the plate last night.

–Joe

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Huskies Practice Report – 4/13/2010

It was a beautiful day over at Montlake today.  The wind was blowing a little bit but the sun was enough to keep me and a few hundred other fans warm.  I showed up about 40 minutes late but I only missed a few drills and stretching.  The team is entering its third week of spring practice.  In the past years spring practice had stretched over 4 weeks but this year they stretched it out over 5 to keep the players fresh.  This idea seems to be working.  Guys are staying healthy and the team doesn’t appear to be tired at all.  There have been no significant injuries so far and several guys returned from minor injuries today.  De’Shon Matthews and Cody Bruns had each sat out the last couple of practices but both saw time today.  Nate Williams also practiced at full strength today.  D’Andre Goodwin remains sidelined with a hamstring injury but it doesn’t seem very serious.

The focus of today seemed to be red-zone offense and defense.  This is an area where the Huskies offense struggled last year; I had nightmares of the Notre Dame game while typing that sentence.  The offense and defense both had their moments today.  Specifically, it seemed as if the secondary had a very good day.  I think that group is going to be a strength next year.  These guys go up against one of the best passing attacks in the pac-10 in Jake Locker and a good group of receivers every day and usually hold their own.  I’ll have more on a few players in the secondary after the jump.

The quarterbacks were pretty much how they are every practice.  Jake Locker was great and the other two were mediocre.  Keith Price struggled early in drills but got a little better as the day progressed.  Montana’s always learning and he’s a little slower than the other two but you can see the talent there.

The running backs had decent days.  Deontae Cooper had a 75 yard run for a touchdown and that was probably the play of the day. 

Ryan Tolar got quite a bit of time at backup center today (he’s also working with the starters as guard).  I guess they just want him to be able to play everywhere or maybe they were giving Greg Christine a break.  The starting offensive and defensive lines are usually pretty even but the second team defensive line generally has their way with second team offensive line.  The walk-on defensive end Peter Follmer may actually have an impact on this team.  He made a few plays today and is really strong. 

To end the practice Sark gave the offense the ball and the defense’s 20 and let the starters go at it.  The offense got the ball down to the 2 yard line and then was stopped on 3 different plays.  When the coaches decided they were going to go for it all of the backups came running onto the field and surrounded the play.  They started cheering and yelling encouragement to the players they were backing up.  Deontae Cooper ran the ball in for a touchdown and all the offensive guys ran and tackled him in the end zone.  Then the offense went for a two point conversion and the defense stopped them.  This is what the staff has instilled in this team, competition.  It was a really cool moment and there were many smiles going around as the players left the field.

My players of the day after the jump. Continue reading

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Game Recap — 4/12/2010

Since we were all at the Mariners home opener today we’ll give you all our own perspective.  Enjoy!

Andrew’s Perspective:  This was the first home opener that Ive ever been to and the excitement leading up to the game was something I’ve never experienced at a Mariner game.  I went over to Ivar’s on the waterfront with my parents and then walked over to Safeco from there.  The atmosphere at 1:30 was great and it only went up from there.  Excitement built and built all the way to Randy Johnson throwing out the first pitch.  Wow, what a moment.  When I get really excited my knees start to shake and while the Big Unit was walking in from center field my knees shook as much as I can remember.  Seeing Buhner, Wilson, Edgar, Johnson, and Griffey all together on the field before the game was a great move by the organization.  Those are the guys who made me a Mariner fan and to see them standing side by side gave me goosebumps.

As for the game… Well, yeah.  In the early innings I thought for sure we were going to win.  Hyphen looked very good and I thought the Mariners were going to get some runs off Duscherer.  I kept waiting for something good to happen; I think the entire crowd was thinking something good would happen but it didn’t.  The big turning point of the game was when Guti got a double to start the inning and got to third with one out and then the middle of the order couldn’t drive him in.  That would have tied the game but it just wasn’t meant to be.  The game was the same story as the past week:  bad offense, mediocre pitching, and some spectacular defensive plays but you can’t score runs on defense. 

The game was something to be forgotten but the event wasn’t.

Matthew’s Perspective:  I’d probably go to opening day even if there was no game.  The whole experience is just special for a baseball fan.  My wife’s a school teacher in Bellevue, so I picked her up about an hour before game time and we took off for the bus stop, hoping to make it in time for most of the festivities.  There’s always something fun about riding a bus where you know you’re all going to the same thing, even if you don’t talk to anyone.  We got off the bus east of the stadium, and after navigating the newly constructed and surprisingly long new walkway down Royal Brougham (it seriously adds 10 minutes to the walk), we made it into the stadium during the line-up introductions.  After stopping at an overlook to watch, we joined some family and friends (and fellow Good Guys Andrew and Dan) at our seats just before the national anthem.

In my opinion, there were two special moments before the game.  Randy Johnson’s First Pitch has been well-covered and was every bit as great as everyone has said.  Seeing him throw one last time and the great ovation he received was wonderful.  But just before that they had the annual first run around the bases, which is a tradition I hadn’t known about.  A kid chosen by the Make-A-Wish people gets to be the first one around the bases each year, and this year was a 12-year-old boy who is recovering from kidney failure after a transplant.  I’m kind of a sucker for moments like these, especially involving kids, but seeing this little guy running to home with Ichiro, Griffey and Felix waving for him to slide, and then popping up to high fives from three of his heroes was probably the highlight of the day for me.  Those kinds of dreams and realizations are what make baseball special.  Each player out there is every one of us sitting in the stands, if only we had a little stronger arm or quicker bat.

Unfortunately, the pregame stuff was the highlight of the day, as the Mariners’ offensive woes continue.  RRS looked good all day, except for a few losses of his control.  I thought they should have pulled him after the sixth, but it didn’t really matter much then and ended up not mattering at all later.  I still think an offensive breakout is imminent, but it certainly wasn’t last night.  Any other game, this performance would have been tough to take, and it still was.  But the beauty of opening day is that we’re just happy to be back in the ballpark, and there’s still a whole season ahead to worry about wins.

Dan’s Perspective: I’ve had the joy of being at a few recent opening days in Seattle sports. Last year I welcomed the MLS to Seattle and was overwhelmed by how fun and the Sounders inaugural game was. It felt just like how I imagine being at a champion’s league game in Europe is. A couple weeks later I welcomed Griffey back on an amazing opening day. The M’s won and I got a sun burn in April. Yesterday was another special day because of the pre-game festivities, but certainly not because of the game. I had high expectations for yesterday, and while the sun didn’t shine too bright, Cliff Lee wasn’t pitching, and the game sucked, I still got my money’s worth. In fact, the price of admission was well covered after watching Randy jog in from centerfield, only to be joined by the other 4 Mariner greats from the ‘90s. It was awesome, and I remember thinking, without those 5 guys, we aren’t sitting in Safeco Field, and it’s likely that we don’t have baseball in Seattle at all. I wouldn’t have opposed retiring all 5 of those guys jerseys right then and there. That’s how much they have meant to baseball in Seattle.

The game is actually very simple to recap. Just read our previous 5 posts on Mariner losses! Solid starting pitching was the highlight. But no offense (2 hits!) and a couple timely hits by the opponent spelled the loss for Seattle again. It’s starting to get pretty tough to swallow these games with no offense, and while the law of averages tells us the M’s won’t hit .200 all year, you start to wonder if a 2008 type year is in the making. The ’08 team had high expectations as well, but it was a house built on sand. I really don’t think this team will replicate the failure that was 2008, but as a fan, the thought keeps creeping in my mind, and the only solution is more cowbell!…or some wins.

Also, I will take the honor of selecting the hero/goat from yesterday.

Hero: RRS. He had a no-hitter through 5 innings, and despite 5 walks, he pitched well enough to keep us in the game. Tough to find a bona fide hero from yesterday though.

Goat: Rob Johnson. Most will point to Bradley and his horrible error in left field. But the truth is, that 2 run base hit never would have happened if Johnson could have just caught the foul tip for strike 3. Milton’s play looked worse, but both runs were going to score anyway, and the real culprit of those runs was Robo Rob (because his glove is made of steel). Clever huh?

Joe’s Perspective:  This opening day was special for me personally; it was the first I have attended at Safeco Field. Back in the good old days at the Kingdome, I went almost every year. Since Safeco opened though, not so. I was understandably excited. My brother and I got up to the field early and took in the sights and sounds. Despite the 2-5 start, there was a buzz in and around the stadium. Seattle truly is a baseball city. People love this team.

The pre-game festivities were memorable. Having one of my heroes Randy Johnson throw the first pitch to Dan Wilson, and then Jay Buhner and Edgar Martinez show up along with Junior was a trip down memory lane for me. Those guys are legends to me. I was a teenager in the 1990’s, I grew up with them, and they are heroes. I can’t count the number of times I emulated their stances and swings in backyard wiffle-ball games. The buzz in the stadium was palpable. People were excited, we wanted to believe, we want to believe big, as the slogan goes. We were jacked up. Then, the game started…

The other Good Guys undoubtedly have better summaries than I do. So I will keep this somewhat short and to the point.

The biggest thing I noticed and observed is something you can only do if you are at the game: Watching defensive positioning. The Athletics absolutely have the Mariners figured out. My broither and I made a pact to simply watch the A’s defense all game because frankly nothing else was exciting. I kid you not: There was not one play the A’s were not in good defensive position. Every ball the Mariners hit, with the exception of Gutierrez’s double, was covered by Oakland defense. I was thoroughly impressed. They had Figgins shaded shallow left center, Guti straight away, Ichiro shaded to left, Bradley, Kotchman, on and on, they had the Mariners figured out. I give a ton of credit to Bob Geren for his prep. In the post game news conference Wakamatsu commented that the Mariners had been working on taking the ball the other way, working counts and going with pitches. The problem is for the Mariners the A’s knew this and played defense accordingly. I know this sounds like a minor point, but defensive positioning in baseball is vital to a teams success, and I thought the A’s put on a clinic.

Other than that, there really wasn’t much to say. Ichiro and Figgins were terrible at the plate (I love both of them, they are far from the teams biggest problems…), RRS pitched well, Bradley showed he has a cannon arm from left, (what a throw), but then made the blooper reel misplaying a routine ball in left.

As an aside, again, something you’d only see if you were at the game. Later in the game, Bradley fielded a routine base hit to left and threw the ball in, no big deal right? Well after he threw the ball in, some fans down the left field line stood up and gave him a Bronx cheer, mocking his fielding. I told the guys around me that’s a bad sign. First home game and the fans are already mocking him. You know Bradley saw and heard those cheers. He won’t forget. I didn’t like to see that, it’s already starting here. Very bad sign.

Overall, a great day. Loved seeing the Mariner legends, will always love those guys! Also, I trust Jack Z to make the right calls on this team, so all in all I am not worried, I know changes will come.

Thanks for stopping by and reading!!!

–Joe

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Husky Practice Report 4/10/2010

Just in time for today’s practice, here’s a quick recap of the practice/scrimmage from Saturday.  I don’t have a lot to say that’s different from Condotta or anyone else, but here are my quick thoughts. 

Quarterback: We spent most of the drills watching the quarterbacks.  Locker looks excellent.  I only saw him miss two, maybe three throws at most.  The back-ups are hard to figure.  Keith Price looked good throwing the short stuff, some of the time, but wasn’t accurate at all throwing more than five yards past the line of scrimmage.  Nick Montana, was much more accurate overall, but his arm looks a little weak right now and it took him a second longer to deliver the ball than the other two.  It wasn’t a release issue, just a processing issue, which isn’t too surprising.  A lot of the time, he’d struggle with the first pass on a route, and then the next time throwing it, he’d be right on.  He’s also as skinny as a rail.  I’m sure he’ll keep improving significantly, but I’m not sure either one of them could win many games right now.

Running Back: Those two freshman are good.  They had some mistakes, especially Callier with catching the ball, but they both looked significantly more talented than any of the other running backs (Polk is out).  Cooper looks a lot like Polk to me, and had a nice run through traffic that he broke out for a touchdown.  Callier is very shifty, and had one of the highlights on a run where he reversed field and then juked a guy to the ground before bouncing it outside for a few more yards.  Both will play a lot, I’d say.  Callier looks like an answer at kick returner especially, if he can catch.

Wide Receiver: Not much to say except that they’re going to be excellent.  Kearse and Aguilar might be the best wide receiver tandem in the conference.

Tight End: Didn’t notice a whole lot with them, but I wouldn’t take that as a criticism.  Izbicki actually looked a little better than Middleton, but that could be just circumstances.  He’s a big dude, though.

O-Line: Hard to say anything here, so I won’t.  There were some nice runs in the scrimmage though and I noticed linemen blocking downfield a few times, so those would seem to be good signs.

D-Line: They actually looked pretty good, given the circumstances.  I think Elisara will stick at end.  It just looks a lot more natural for him, and makes for a big line if Thompson can come back and play the other end.  Duncan had a nice play, I believe during drills, where he got through the line to the running back.  Overall, I was encouraged.

Linebackers: Mason Foster has that man among boys look about him.  It’s early, but I told Andrew he’s my sleeper pick for Pac-10 defensive player of the year.  He and Cort Dennison, along with Matt Houston, really stand out size-wise  compared to the other backers.  Logan looked extremely fast, so I’ll be curious to see how he can stand up against the run in a real game.

Secondary:  Nathan Fellner looked a lot better from last year, and made some big hits.  Boyles was with the second team, but clearly has all the tools.  He’s probably the biggest corner and looks confident.  But he clearly isn’t there yet, and with his history, you have to wonder if he ever will be.  I think he’s probably the type where he either won’t see the field a ton or he’ll be one of the best corners in the conference.  It will either click or it won’t.  Overall, the secondary looked pretty good, even with Nate Williams playing sparingly.  Williams looked good, by the way.  I can’t remember the play exactly, but he did something that made Andrew and I both comment on his improvement and how he wouldn’t have made that play before.  Him taking a step forward would be huge.

Kickers: Two of the walk-ons were kicking from the goal line at the sideline towards the goal-post on the same end, and they both managed to hit the upright one after the other.  One of them also seemed to have trouble kicking it across the field, so I wouldn’t take that as a good sign or anything, but they were really excited.

Making judgements from one practice and a quick scrimmage is tough, so don’t take any of this too seriously.  I came away moderatly impressed, though.  As long as Locker is healthy, this offense will be tough to stop, and that’s the clearest path to a bowl this team has. 

Practice Tuesday at 4:00.  Head on out and bring your rain gear!

-Matthew

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M’s vs. A’s Series Preview- 4/12/2010

Just a quick preview here, since these teams just played last week.

Pitching Match-ups:

Monday  Ryan Rowland Smith vs. Justin Duchscherer

Tuesday Doug Fister vs. Brett Anderson

Wednesday Jason Vargas vs. Gio Gonzalez

For those who missed the first series, Duchscherer is making his second start after missing all(?) of last year due to injury and depression, I believe (maybe it was anxiety).  He’s a bit of a junk-baller, fastball in the high 80s, mixes his pitches well.  He was a solid pitcher in 2008, but I’d say the jury’s still out on this year.  Looked okay in his first start.  Anderson was pretty dominant last week against the M’s and stands to become one of the better pitchers in the league in short order.  Still he’s in his second season, so we’ll hope to benefit from some early season inconsistency.  If he’s on, he’s tough to beat.

Gio Gonzalez is the new guy, a young lefty who gave up a couple of runs in six innings in his first start this year.  Spotty command, decent stuff, especially a curveball that gets him a lot of ground balls.  He had mediocre results in about 100 innings last year, but he’s been a top prospect for while.

It’s looking like a gray, rainy week in Safeco.  Hopefully a return home will be good for the Mariners.  I’d honestly be surprised if they don’t win this series.  The bats are in a terrible slump, and Oakland is pretty dependent on its pitching.  Things should start to even out soon.  It’s the bottom of the order throwing for the Mariners, but outside of Felix, I don’t think there’s much difference between the other four pitchers right now.  Snell has left the team for family reasons, by the way.  No other info currently available, but Wak said he doesn’t expect him to miss a start, so it shouldn’t have much effect.

Enjoy the games!  Hope to see you at Safeco.

-Matthew

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