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If there's anything more fun than a minor-league no-hitter, I'd like to know what it is. The fans (usually an intimate crowd that figures out early what's going on) are totally into it, the players (most of whom are very young and have never experienced one before) are crazy-intense, and the celebration afterwards is amazing. Sincere congratulations from the Batter's Box crew to Robert Ray and Adrian Martin of Auburn, whose outstanding performance was the signal highlight of a 4-2 night on the farm.



Buffalo 4 Syracuse 1

Gabe Gross, speedster? Gross went 0-for-4 with a strikeout last night, driving in the only run for the Skychiefs on a groundout. His line continues to be a solid .297/.383/.443, but he also stole his 14th base in 16 attempts, his highest stolen base total since he was a junior at Auburn (the university, not the NY-Penn League). So: Gross hits for average, has great on-base numbers, plays an excellent outfield and runs very well on the bases. Someone out there is going to find that an attractive combination, and is going to have the patience to let Gross’s power develop in the big leagues, which it should do in about two years. That team pretty clearly won’t be the Blue Jays, but if everything breaks really well, dealing Gross will help bring in a key part of next year’s contending ballclub. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – he will be a productive and complete ballplayer for whichever team he ends up with.

Prospect Watch:

- Ted Lilly: 3 2/3 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 K: pretty strong rehab start
- John-Ford Griffin: 0/3, BB: .248 BA

Box score


Portland 4 New Hampshire 3

I’ve been giving him a pretty hard time this year, but I have to admit that Miguel Negron is on another hot streak lately, compounded last night with a double, single and RBI in 5 trips. Negron’s now batting .259/.306/.390, which isn’t that impressive but still represents a step up from previous levels of production. All that said, Negron also celebrated his 23rd birthday this week, and even after several years of professional ball and pro coaching, he’s still sporting a 23/90 BB/K rate and has been caught 11 times in 34 steal attempts. Today, he looks a lot more like Maikel Jova than Alex Rios, and I’m just not confident he’ll ever make a move from the former to the latter. New Hampshire suffered a tough loss to their divisional rivals last night: Jesse Carlson started the bottom of the ninth of a tie game with a walk and HBP before being yanked; Ryan Houston replaced him and allowed an intentional walk and an infield single to lose the game.

Prospect Watch:

- Josh Banks: 6 1/3 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 4 K: 3.73 (Two walks? That’s twice what he gave up in his previous 7 starts combined. He's out of control!)
- Chip Cannon: 1/2, 2 BB, RBI: .230 BA (I was kidding about Banks being out of control, by the way)
- Curtis Thigpen : 2/4, 2B, R, K: .254 BA (It's hard to communicate humour in these reports.)
- Rob Cosby: 0/4, K: .316 (We're the Aristrocrats!)

Box score

Dunedin 7 Fort Myers 1

The organization’s second-best left-handed pitching prospect named Romero doesn’t want to surrender the surname battle to Ricky just yet. Another sterling performance from Davis Romero last night, as he fired 6 innings of 1-run ball, scattering 4 hits and 3 walks and striking out 8. Davis’s line now looks like this: 8-6, 3.56, 33 G, 17 GS, 118 IP, 126 H, 34 BB, 134 K. A couple of caveats: I don’t have start-relief splits for him, so I don’t know how much better he’s pitched out of the pen, which has always been his strong point. And second, though he’s allowed 59 runs, only 47 have been earned, meaning his ERA is a little misleading. Romero is small and he’s young (won’t be 23 till next March), and while he’s not in the Jays’ A-tier of pitching prospects, he’s on top of the B-tier.

Prospect Watch:

- David Smith: 2/5, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 2 R, K: .299 BA
- Carlo Cota: 2/5, HR, RBI, 2 R, 2 K: .317
- Adam Lind: 1/5, K: .312

Box score


Lansing 3 Southwest Michigan 1

High-school pitchers generally take a long time to work out the kinks, which is one of the reasons the Jays don’t draft very many. One guy they did draft under JP Ricciardi, Russell Savickas, doesn’t have the most impressive line in the world (6-6, 5.31, 17 GS, 78 IP, 99 H, 33 BB, 60 K), but he is showing flashes of domination, such as last night’s performance: 7 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 9 K. It might be a while before Jays fans see Savickas at higher levels, but outings like this one demonstrate that the talent is undeniably there.

Prospect Watch:

- Eric Nielsen: 3/4, 2 R, K: .266
- Aaron Mathews : 1/3, BB, K: .286
- Charlie Anderson: 1/4, 2B, 2 RBI, K: .250

Box score


Auburn 5 Batavia 0

I’ll let the good folks at Minor-League Baseball.com take this one:

Robert Ray is sure he had the hard part.

After pitching five innings, Ray watched from the bullpen as Adrian Martin finished off the Auburn Doubledays' first no-hitter in seven years, a 5-0 blanking of the Batavia Muckdogs.

"It was definitely worse watching it than doing it," said Ray, the Blue Jays' seventh-round pick in the 2005 draft. "Every out in the ninth inning, I was grabbing the fence, gritting my teeth. I was definitely feeling some anxiety."

As it turns out, Martin didn't need any spectacular defensive plays to complete the first no-hitter of the season in the New York-Penn League. The 20-year-old right-hander set down the final 11 batters, six on groundouts, for his third save.

"That's pretty much my specialty," said Martin, a 19th-round pick in 2003. "If I get strikeouts, great, but if I can get the guy in less than three pitches, that's fine. I dropped my arm angle this year to get some sink and it's definitely been working."

The only runner against Martin during his four-inning stint came on a throwing error in the sixth. Ray, a 21-year-old Texas A&M product, walked two and struck out two before reaching his pitch count.

"I really didn't realize I hadn't given up a hit until they said, 'You're done,'" Ray said. "Then I started thinking, 'I don't think I'd given up a hit.'"

Ray headed for an exercise bike, re-emerging with one out in the eighth. Martin, meanwhile, knew exactly what he was getting into when he came out of the bullpen.

"I was just kind of getting ready, knowing his pitch count might be approaching. I knew I was jumping into a situation, but you still want to go out there and do your job," he explained. "I had a lead to hold and now you've got a little bit of added pressure."

Martin retired Clay Harris on a ground ball to third baseman Chris Gutierrez to end the game, then was mobbed by teammates at Falcon Park. Later, both Martin and Ray received shaving cream pies to the face.

"I had my head down and just, wham, everything goes white," Ray said. "It's a cool deal."

Prospect Watch:

- Robert Ray: 5 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K: 2.56 ERA
- Adrian Martin: 4 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K: 2.88
- Ryan Patterson: 3/3, 3B, BB, 2 R, 2 RBI: .333.
- Sean Shoffitt: 1/2, 2B, BB, 2 R: .253
- Joey Metropoulous: 2/4, RBI, K: .291

Box score


Pulaski 10 Kingsport 3

It was a bit of a surprise that the Blue Jays sent Jacob Butler, their 8th-round draft pick from the University of Nevada in this past June’s draft, to Pulaski to begin his pro career (though Auburn is pretty stacked with hitting talent as well). Butler, a collegian, could be expected to be dominant in Rookie League ball, and that’s what’s happened: 196 AB, .291/.384/.582, 16 2B, 13 HR, 48 RBI, 30 BB, 60 K. His power and on-base numbers are very impressive, but he has struck out a lot -- continuing a trend from his college days, where he posted OPS over 1000 each of his last 3 seasons but did swing and miss a fair bit. That may be why the Jays broke him in slowly at Pulaski. Aside from the K's, Butler is doing everything he needs to do right now, and the Jays would probably benefit by starting him at Lansing next year.

Prospect Watch:

- Shane Benson: 5 IP, 5 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 6 K: 5.52 ERA
- Graig Badger: 4/4, 2 2B, 3B, BB, 4 R: .281 BA
- Jesus Gonzalez: 3/5, HR, 4 RBI, R, K: .271

Box score


Your Three-Star Selection: Some deserving players, like Davis Romero, Russell Savickas, Shane Benson and Ryan Patterson, can’t make the cut tonight.


3. Graig Badger: Triple, 2 doubles, a single and a walk, reaching base 5 times and scoring 4.

2. David Smith, Dunedin: Two home runs and 5 RBIs in the D-Jays’ big win.

1. Robert Ray and Adrian Martin, Auburn: Nine innings pitched, no hits. Take a bow, guys.

9 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 5 K | 11 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Erin - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 09:10 AM EDT (#126818) #
I was at the Auburn game and I was soooo nervous during the final few innings. That was the first no hitter I ever saw and probably my last game of the season since I head back to school today, but it was worth it!
Gerry - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 10:27 AM EDT (#126820) #
Banks's start yesterday was notable in another way, it was his fifth time to face Portland in his last nine starts. This was the second time in a month that he has faced Portland two starts in a row, and don't forget that Portland are the top team in the league. It is tough for a pitcher to face the same team back to back. Today, in Syracuse, Shaun Marcum pitches against Ottawa, the same team he faced on Monday. In Buffalo this week Marcum told me he dislikes having to do that, and it is tougher on a control pitcher, the opposition remembers some of your bag of tricks.

All 5 of Banks's starts against Portland have been quality starts. Banks line for the five starts is 33.2 IP; 30H; 3BB; 22K; 11ER, for an ERA of 2.94. That is some good pitching.
Nick - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 11:12 AM EDT (#126823) #
Jordan - I have visited Batter's Box almost every day for the past couple years and you have finally opened the door for me to correct you on something. Ted Lilly's rehab start for Syracuse last night was not "very strong." The results were good as he allowed only 1 ER but his command was (in Lilly's own words) "pretty terrible." Lilly threw 63 pitches, only 28 for strikes. He was pitching behind in the count all night. His lowlight of the evening was when he plunked 3(!) batters in a row in the 4th inning. Here is the Buffalo News game story:

http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20050827/1006491.asp
Jordan - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 11:15 AM EDT (#126824) #
I sit corrected. :-) Thanks, Nick.
NDG - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 11:49 AM EDT (#126828) #
Re: Butler in Pulaski.

I think the problem is 1B/OF is pretty crowded in Auburn. Actually I was kind of surprised Patterson didn't get promoted earlier this year. While I know and understand why JP doesn't like promoting the first year guys, there just isn't enough AB's for Patterson, Patton, Pettway, Metropolous, and Thomas in Auburn. Seems weird to me as Thomas and 'Big City' don't get full time at-bats despite the fact they are hitting reasonably well, and are both young (Metro is younger than all the P-Boys, and Thomas is really only older than Pettway).
David Paul - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 07:40 PM EDT (#126852) #
Janssen left today's game after facing just two batters. Anyone know what happened?
Gerry - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 07:59 PM EDT (#126854) #
Ankle or foot injury
Brian W - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 09:15 PM EDT (#126863) #
Apparently the Dunedin sound tech was tossed from Thursday's game for inciting the fans against the umpires.

link

Marc Hulet - Saturday, August 27 2005 @ 10:37 PM EDT (#126875) #
Jesse Litsch also left after only 2.2 innings in Auburn, allowing no runs. Any idea why?
Dave Till - Sunday, August 28 2005 @ 11:01 AM EDT (#126895) #
So: Gross hits for average, has great on-base numbers, plays an excellent outfield and runs very well on the bases. Someone out there is going to find that an attractive combination, and is going to have the patience to let Gross’s power develop in the big leagues, which it should do in about two years.

Gross has 28 doubles in Syracuse, so he may develop more home-run power. But I was wondering: how many of Gross's doubles are line shots to the wall, and how many are low line drives up the gap? If he's hitting the ball hard, but it's not quite going out, some of those doubles will turn into home runs as Gross matures. But if he's hitting gappers, that won't happen.

I think Gross can now help a club, if used properly (assuming he successfully adjusts to major-league pitching). I'd guess that his Syracuse numbers translate into roughly what Reed Johnson is doing at the major-league level. But I still don't see him having any star potential at all at this point. And the Jays have Cat and Sparky, who have similar skill sets, so they don't need Gross.

Nigel - Sunday, August 28 2005 @ 12:01 PM EDT (#126897) #
I agree about Gross' skill set being similar to Cat's, with better defense. Of course, the reason to want it is that it comes at league minimum cost. You can then use the $2m difference on something else.
9 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 5 K | 11 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.