Batter's Box Interactive Magazine Batter's Box Interactive Magazine Batter's Box Interactive Magazine
Nearly every game by the affiliates featured runs by one team or both in the first inning. Many of the games settled down after that and, aside from a 28-hit affair in Nevada and Lansing’s pitching allowing double-digit runs, most the games were relatively closely and not large-scoring affairs. Las Vegas, New Hampshire and Dunedin won, but then you have to go down to Bluefield to see another victory. The victories in Double and High-A saw strong pitching performances by prospects continuing to improve their ranking.

Colorado Springs 7 @ Las Vegas 9Boxscore

This game was tied at 2 after the first inning, although Scott Richmond settled down after that frame. He wound up going 6.2 innings and surrendering five runs, all earned. Richmond allowed ten hits and three walks, but struck out five. Wil Ledezma struck out three batters over 1.1 innings of hitless relief and Winston Abreu allowed a two-run homer in the ninth, but didn’t let Colorado Springs get any closer.

David Cooper hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the first to tie the game. He added a single and a walk and scored three runs. Mike McCoy had two singles from the leadoff spot and center fielder Travis Snider contributed with two singles and a double and three runs scored. Adam Loewen had a single, a run and an RBI. His OPS now sits at .920 and there are no reports that he dropped any key fly balls in the ninth inning yesterday. Kevin Howard had three hits, 2 RBIs and a run, but decided he fancied himself Rajai Davis and was caught stealing twice. Ryan Shealy was 3-for-4 with a two-run shot and 4 RBIs. Chris Woodward had a double, Dan Perales had two hits and Brian Jeroloman, who entered the game for Ryan Budde, was 0-for-2 with a pair of walks.

New Hampshire 6 @ Portland 2Boxscore

Joel Carreno started for the Fisher Cats and improved to 7-5 on the year. Carreno threw 7 innings and allowed a single run on five hits and two walks. Carreno struck out six and threw exactly two-thirds of his pitches for strikes. If you thought that was impressive, Yohan Pino did one better, throwing 22 of his 29 pitches for strikes (76%). Pino struck out three, but allowed a solo homer over 2 innings.

Adeiny Hechevarria went 1-for-4 in the leadoff spot and is now hitting .235 on the year. Anthony Gose went 0-for-2, but was lifted for pinch-hitter Justin Jackson. Jackson was 1-for-3 with a double and an RBI. He also contributed in the field, throwing out two runners on the bases in half a game. Mike McDade contributed with a solo homer and a single. He scored two runs and drove in a pair. Moises Sierra went 1-for-4 with a double and Travis d’Arnaud contributed with a pair of singles. Ricardo Nanita added a single and a run and Mark Sobolewski added a two-run homer. John Tolisano and Calix Crabbe went 0-for-6 with five strikeouts.

Dunedin 6 @ Lakeland 0Boxscore

Jonathan Diaz drew a pair of walks in the leadoff spot and also went 1-for-2 with a double and a run scored. Kevin Nolan came into the game to play shortstop and drew a free pass. A.J. Jimenez and Kevin Ahrens put up identical 1-for-5 with a single and a run scored. Jon Talley was hitless, but Brian Van Kirk was 2-for-4 with a double, a run scored and 3 RBIs. Brad McElroy banged out three singles. Chris Hopkins copied Diaz’s stat line with a pair of walks and a single, while Joe Bowen and Ivan Contreras were held hitless.

Meanwhile, on the mound, Drew Hutchison continues his scoreless inning streak at High-A. He threw another 6 innings and didn’t allow a run. Hutchison struck out four batters and didn’t walk a hitter. He surrendered three hits, two of which were doubles. Hutchison also retired 9 of the 11 batters he got out on balls in play on ground balls. Steve Turnbull and Wes Etheridge combined for 3 innings of hitless relief and retired 7 of 8 batters on balls in play on ground outs (one batter reached on a Kevin Ahrens error and the next hitter grounded into a double play).

Lansing 3 @ Great Lakes 10Boxscore

The Loons scored four in the first and four in the bottom of the eighth, bookending a ten-run performance and an easy victory over the Lugnuts. Casey Lawrence took the loss, allowing six runs, but only three were earned. Matt Nuzzo made the costly error, booting a ball at second base. Lawrence allowed nine hits, but didn’t walk a batter, striking out seven. After a difficult first inning however, he soldiered on and went 5 plus innings. Dustin Antonlin and Danny Barnes combined for two scoreless innings. Brandon Berl was the pitcher victimized in the eighth, allowing all four runs.

Markus Brisker was hitless in the leadoff spot and Nuzzo added a double and a run scored, batting second. Jake Marisnick and Marcus Knecht added an RBI each, with Marisnick hitting a single and Knecht adding a sacrifice fly. K.C. Hobson went 2-for-4 with a double and a run, although he made his 13th error on the year with an errant throw. Oscar Dominguez added a triple and Gari Pena had a single and a run.

Eugene 5 @ Vancouver 2Boxscore

The Canadians outhit the Emeralds 10-6, but they left 15 on base and went down in defeat 5-2. Vancouver scored one of their runs in the first inning, as with two out Balbino Funemayor, Stephen McQuail and Eli Boike strung together consecutive singles. Fuenmayor was 3-for-4 with a walk and a double. That was the only hit on the afternoon for McQuail and Boike, but each also drew a pair of walks. Shane Optiz and Pierce Rankin were held hitless. The Jonathons each had a hit, as Jones was 1-for-5 and Berti was 1-for-3 with a walk. Matt Newman had a pair of singles and Randy Schwartz had a solo homer in the eighth.

Taylor Cole started and went 4 innings. He allowed two runs on five hits and two walks. Cole also struck out six. Nicholas Purdy entered the game and only retired two batters before being lifted. He had allowed one run and left the bases loaded for Travis Garrett. Garrett walked the first batter he faced to force in a run, but then got a ground out to escape the inning. Garrett then retired the next six batters he faced. Philip Brua and Alex Pepe each pitched an inning of relief, with Brua allowing an unearned run to cross the plate. San Diego’s 2011 draft picks did well, as Jace Peterson was 2-for-4 with a pair of triples and first-round pick Cory Spangenberg was 0-for-2 with three walks. Each also stole a base, while Kyle Gaedele was 1-for-2 with a double and a walk.

Bluefield 8 @ Princeton 2Boxscore

A four-run first inning propelled Bluefield to victory. Noah Syndergaard finally allowed a run, surrendering two runs over 4.1 frames. Syndergaard allowed five hits and two hits, while striking out six. His ERA sits at 1.35 and he has struck out 19 over three starts against four walks. Mitchell Taylor inherited two runners and stranded them both. Taylor went on to throw 4.2 innings of two-hit relief and didn’t allow a run.

Bluefield only had six hits during the game, half of which came from Art Charles. The Blue Jays also worked six walks. Andy Fermin and Gustavo Pierre batted first and second and worked identical lines of 0-for-4 with a walk and two runs scored. Kevin Pillar was 1-for-5 with two runs scored and an RBI. Charles was the only Bluefield hitter with an extra-base hit, as he contributed a double and a triple. Yudelmis Hernandez had a single and a walk and Aaron Munoz was 1-for-2 with two walks.

GCL Blue Jays @ GCL Pirates (Postponed)

Game postponed.

DSL Angels 9 @ DSL Blue Jays 3 (11 innings)Boxscore

This was a well-pitched game, at least until the eleventh inning. The DSL Angels jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the top of the first and then the Blue Jays struck back for three in the bottom of the second. The game was then scoreless until the DSL Angels scored one in the top of the ninth to send the game to extra innings. The DSL Angels struck for six runs in the eleventh off Gilberto Vielma and turned the extra inning contest into a laugher. Luis Zerpa and Luillyn Guillen combined for 6 innings of one-run relief. Catcher Kervin Santiago led the attack with four of the team’s nine hits in his five at-bats.

Three Stars:
3rd Star – Art Charles, 3-for-5, 2 R, 2B, 3B, 3 RBI, 6 TB
2nd Star – Joel Carreno, 7 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K
1st Star – Drew Hutchison, 6 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K

First Inning Runs | 18 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
sam - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 11:52 AM EDT (#237853) #
This might not be the year for big signings in the IFA market for the Jays. Its looking like they are going to miss out on several of the big names this year. Ronald Guzman looks like he is heading to the Rangers.
ramone - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 01:41 PM EDT (#237856) #

It's now being reported that Guzman has signed with the Rangers, they are throwing around some of that Cliff Cash this year.

VBF - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 02:13 PM EDT (#237858) #
The Vancouver Canadians on Twitter are promoting a Twitter chat with manager John Schneider at 1pm PST, 4pm EST via @vancanadians.
metafour - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 02:15 PM EDT (#237859) #
Google translate spit this out:

On the other hand, it was learned that the young Wilmer Becerra, Marck Malave and Jesus Gonzalez made ​​a deal with the Toronto Blue Jays and Chicago Cubs for a total of six figures, like Joseph Ruiz, who made ​​$ 1.2 million dollars with San Diego Padres.

Unclear who exactly we signed; but we have been linked to both Becerra and Jesus Gonzalez.
TheBunk - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 04:14 PM EDT (#237862) #
There's been what, five signings so far? The market is just getting started and the Jays were only attached to one of those names(Ronald Guzman) and they weren't the frontrunner.
finch - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 04:53 PM EDT (#237863) #
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that the Blue Jays won't be too too active on the Latin front this season, rather spending that money for the draft they just had. I believe that the Blue Jays will spend between $20M to $25M on the draft and perhaps spend +/- $3M for the Latino players, roughly signing 2 players.
greenfrog - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 05:51 PM EDT (#237866) #
I would be surprised if the Jays spent that much on the amateur draft. They spent $11.6M in 2010. I could see them spending more this year, especially if they're intent on signing Beede, Anderson, Comer, Norris and Stilson (to name a few). But it's hard to imagine them doubling last year's record spending.
krose - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 07:35 PM EDT (#237872) #

Can't claim to be an expert on the procedures or costs of building a contender. However, it seems to me that building a contending team costs more in the drafting and development part, early in the rebuilding, than what needs to be spent in the drafting part once the team becomes a solid contender.

When a substantial core of players has been developed, fewer high end players will need to be drafted and more money will be spent on retaining the core.

My point is that AA appears, at present, to be willing to spend unusually large amounts of money on the draft: Even breaking last years record amount. That spending, in that area, is likely only a phase in the developmental plan for building a contender.

Mike Green - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 08:39 PM EDT (#237876) #
It has been a discouraging evening so far on the farm. Dustin McGowan was roughed up in 2/3 of an inning for the D-Jays, and Henderson Alvarez lasted longer, but gave up 6 runs for the Fisher Cats.
hypobole - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 08:55 PM EDT (#237877) #

Henderson Alvarez lasted longer, but gave up 6 runs for the Fisher Cats.

So he pitches effectively and hardly strikes anyone out, then gives up 6 runs in 5 IP while striking out 8??

Kelekin - Saturday, July 02 2011 @ 08:57 PM EDT (#237878) #
On the flipside, Mike, lots of good offensive performances tonight.
bpoz - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 09:36 AM EDT (#237883) #
I don't mind Alvarez or any pitcher having a poor game or even a stinker once in a while. Actually I expect it. They say even good ML pitchers have the odd bad game.

Things can go wrong that is beyond the pitchers control.
Like errors, cheap hits.
Also something is not working, flat FB or other pitch, just missing strikes.

In Alvarez's case, I am not worried unless it is some kind of health issue. It is even possible that he is smart? enough to throw his developing pitches what ever they are and take his lumps for the sake of progression.

So maybe Lugnut Fan & Mamboon can enlighten us on Hutchison's incredible pitching, to date & going forward. Is he using a wide variety of pitches that are both successful & a work in progress.

Hutchison & Alvarez seems to have adjusted to the big increase in velocity. OK that is a misleading statement,that FB probably has great success in the minors, but how about NYY & other super stars.
Lugnut Fan - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 10:26 AM EDT (#237884) #
Hutchinson is a sinker, slider, change up guy and his command of the strike zone was pretty solid once the weather broke. Since the weather broke up north, his mound presence improved tremendously and I think he had a better fee/ for his pitches. Like I said in an earlier post, he was having a ton of trouble with grip in the cold weather and would go to the rising bag after almost every pitch. That stopped when the weather broke. Pitching in the cold was the one and only flaw I saw in his game which he will have to gain more experience in, but he should move through Dunedin fairly well for the remainder of the year from what I saw.
TamRa - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 05:16 PM EDT (#237906) #
if that's the case, one wonders if they won't do as they did with Jenkins and return him to Dunedin next spring until about 4-6 weeks in before moving him to NH

Assuming all goes well between now and then of course.

bpoz - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 05:58 PM EDT (#237911) #
Thanks Lugnut Fan. Sinker, slider & changeup. I reread Gerry's interview with Hutchison, he was going to university as a pitcher & SS, so he can field as well. He throws a 4 & 2 seam FB.

One more thing... with the large number of errors the team made, how did Hutchison handle the stress? Did you notice anything?
metafour - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 06:33 PM EDT (#237914) #
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that the Blue Jays won't be too too active on the Latin front this season


We have been rumored to have signed 3 players for bonuses in the ~$1.3 mill range each (Becerra, Lugo, Gonzalez), as well as a fourth who is likely somewhere in the six-figure range (Cordoba).  We have also reportedly made the first "offer" on another pitcher that will be a 7-figure bonus signing (Osuna).
bpoz - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 07:07 PM EDT (#237918) #
These 16 year old kids are the cream of the crop.There is a start date for signing July 2nd, but not really a closing deadline. Is that right? Because we have signed some players in 2011 before July 2nd eg L Martin.

Just idle speculation:-

1)Offers are made, but also with drawn.
2)These kids continue to grow as they mature. So there have to be many NOT hotly contested kids that just leapfrog some of the hot shots.
3)We have quite a few DOB 1993/94 kids in the DSL that we signed quietly. I don't know how good they are.

That Devy Estrada is interesting, he has reasonable success and with a 85mph FB. Garis Pena, SS, is another interesting kid. They are my underdogs.
Lugnut Fan - Sunday, July 03 2011 @ 11:39 PM EDT (#237934) #

I don't think the errors affected Hutch or any other pitchers on the staff BPoz.  Even with all the errors, the Lugnuts still earned a playoff spot which tells you how the pitchers performend in spite of the erriors.  It seemed like they were always able to make the big pitch to get out of an inning.

I understand the reasoning in keeping Hutch in Dunedin to start the season next season Tamra, but with all due respect I disagree.  If he continues to pitch well in the FSL, and puts up good numbers in spring and looks like he can perform at that level, I think that he should.  The only way he is going to learn to pitch in the cold, is to pitch in the cold.  If it was his turn in the rotation for an early season start in Boston or NY, or deep in October against say MInnesota, those aren't the times to learn to pitch in the cold.  The more he can pitch in the cold, the more he is going to be able to work on his grip and feel.

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