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The early starter was the only winner on a 1-4 Tuesday on the farm. Three one-run losses — two in extra innings — and a doubleheader sweep were the lowlights.


Buffalo 5 Rochester 2

Rochester, NY — In a morning affair, the Twins affiliate got on the board first with a first inning home run by Clete Thomas. However, Dave Bush (3-1) put up zeroes after that. Though he had at least one baserunner to deal with over his six innings, he scattered six hits and hit a batter while compiling a K-BB total of 5-0 and a GO-FO ratio of 7-4. Ramon Ortiz missed a three-inning save by one out as he was charged with a run on two hits, two walks and an HBP. Neil Wagner came in with the bases loaded and allowed a run-scoring base hit before getting the final out for his seventh save.

Josh Thole gave the Bisons the lead for good after belting a two-run homer in the fourth inning off North Battleford, Saskatchewan native Andrew Albers. The Herd added the eventual winning runs in the ninth on a Ryan Goins RBI single; a throwing error by the catcher after Goins stole second and a sacrifice bunt by Anthony Gose. Thole was 4-for-4 at the plate while Goins and Luis Jimenez had two hits apiece. Mike McCoy, Mauro Gomez and Lance Zawadzki also had base hits. Gomez also swiped a base. Gose and Andy LaRoche were both 0-for-4.


Trenton 6 New Hampshire 4 (Game 1 — 7 Innings)

Trenton, NJ Kevin Pillar began the game with a bang in the form of a leadoff home run against the Yankees affiliate. Clint Robinson followed suit with a leadoff homer in the second inning. Ricardo Nanita connected for a two-run shot in the fifth to give the Fisher Cats a 4-3 lead. Nanita was 3-for-3 and had the only multi-hit effort for New Hampshire. Ryan Schimpf, Brad Glenn, and John Tolisano all had singles and Jack Murphy hit a double in the ninth to bring the potential tying run to the plate. Adam Loewen was 0-for-2 but drew a walk, leaving Kevin Nolan the only Fisher Cat not to reach base as he went 0-for-3.

Ryan Tepera
(3-1) had a chance for the win but took the loss instead after he left. His WHIP over four-plus innings was 2.50 after four hits, four walks and two hit batters. That resulted in five runs with one of them being unearned after a Tolisano error at second — one of three he was charged with in the game. He did strike out five and four of his six outs in play were on the grass. Lefty Matt Wright let both Tepera runners score after he served up a three-run homer to Slade Heathcott. Wright also issued two walks and struck out two over 1 2/3 innings. Trystan Magnuson needed just one pitch to strand both of Wright's runners to end the sixth.


Trenton 2 New Hampshire 1 (Game 2 — 8 Innings)

Trenton, NJKevin Pillar got to round the bases again to lead off the game but he did not put the ball over the fence this time around. He singled, stole second, advanced to third on a groundout and scampered home on a wild pitch. Pillar accounted for half of New Hampshire's four hits and also drew a walk. Clint Robinson and Adam Loewen had the other base hits. Ryan Schmipf managed to get on base twice via the base on balls. John Tolisano, Ricardo Nanita and Sean Ochinko all heard ball four once. Kevin Ahrens was 0-for-2 but did lay down a sacrifice bunt. Amadeo Zazueta wore the collar, size 0-for-3.

Austin Bibens-Dirkx
was victimized for an unearned run, courtesy of Tolisano's fourth error of the doubleheader, in the second inning. Bibens-Dirkx pitched four frames, yielding two hits and two walks. He struck out four and posted an impressive GO/FO mark of 8-0. Chorye Spoone walked one and struck out one in a scoreless fifth inning. Chad Beck kept the Yankees affiliate off the board despite two hits and two walks over two frames, thanks in part to a pair of K's. Trystan Magnuson (1-1) — perhaps gassed after his one-pitch appearance in Game 1 — had an outing that lasted five times as long without recording an out. A ground-rule double, a bunt single and another single gave the Thunder a walk-off win and a doubleheader sweep.


Jupiter 5 Dunedin 4

Jupiter, FL — Dunedin broke a scoreless tie with three runs in the fifth inning against the Marlins affiliate. A two-run double by Jon Berti and an RBI single by Peter Mooney put the Jays in flight. Dunedin did not score again until the 13th when Andy Burns lifted a sacrifice fly. Berti, Mooney, K.C. Hobson and Matt Newman had two hits each with Hobson getting a double. Newman added a walk to reach base three times. Burns had a hit, a walk and a stolen base. Jason Leblebijian and Nick Baligod were 1-for-5. Marcus Knecht was 0-for-6 while Pierce Rankin went 0-for-5.

Jesse Hernandez delivered 5 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball by giving up just two hits and three walks. He struck out three and five of his eight outs in play did not leave the infield. Lefty Tony Davis stranded a Hernandez runner but was charged with a run on one hit over 2/3 of an inning. Scott Gracey allowed Davis' runner to score and gave up two of his own on three hits over 2/3 of an inning to blow the save. Dustin Antolin permitted just two hits and struck out a pair over three shutout innings. Marco Grifantini overcame two walks to pitch two scoreless frames. Blake McFarland (0-1) got one out in the bottom of the 13th but gave up two runs on three hits to blow the save and take the loss.


Cedar Rapids 5 Lansing 4

Cedar Rapids, IA Roberto Osuna (1-2) allowed just three hits over four innings to the Twins affiliate but two of those hits were two-run homers, one by Byron Buxton. Both homers were preceded by errors with Jorge Flores throwing one away at short while Chris Hawkins booted one in left field. Three of Osuna's four runs were earned but his K-BB ratio was 5-1 and his groundout/flyout rate was 5-2. Arik Sikula pitched two scoreless frames with a walk as his only blemish. Catcher Aaron Munoz erased that runner on a steal attempt at second. Ian Kadish struck out two batters in his perfect frame but Tucker Donahue was nicked for a run on two hits while striking out one in his inning of work.

The Lugnuts offence did not get on the board until the seventh inning. Munoz lifted a sacrifice fly to plate the first run before Dalton Pompey singled home another but Lansing left runners at second and third. The other two runs came in the ninth on a throwing error by the third baseman but the potential tying run was stranded at second base. The Lugnuts also blew a bases-loaded, nobody out situation with a strikeout and double play in the fourth inning. Christian Lopes — who lined out to right to end the game — had a pair of base hits along with Hawkins and Shane Opitz, who also drew a walk. Munoz and Kellen Sweeney reached base twice with a walk and a knock. Pompey and Carlos Ramirez had the other base hits. Flores was 0-for-5 and Gustavo Pierre went 0-for-4.


Boxscores


*** 3 Stars!!! ***


3. Kevin Pillar, New Hampshire — A .983 OPS over his last 10 games and is 9-for-12 in stolen bases.


2. Dave Bush, Buffalo — Now sporting a 1.61 ERA and a K-BB ratio of 17-4 over 22 1/3 innings.


1. Josh Thole, Buffalo — His OPS is now up to 1.006, including a .569 slugging percentage.


Wednesday's Probable Starters...


DunedinAaron Sanchez (1-1, 3.16) @ Jupiter, 6:35 p.m. ET.
New HampshireMarcus Walden (1-3, 3.29) @ Trenton, 7:05 p.m. ET.

Exhibition

Lansing TBA vs. Michigan State, 7:05 p.m. ET.
One More Win Than Yesterday! | 19 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Richard S.S. - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 03:41 AM EDT (#271313) #
Josh Thole will only come up if A.A. decides to make the call, or if Henry Blanco or J.P. Arencibia are injured.

Kevin Pillar is progressing nicely, it's hard to judge where he'll end up, but he may advance fast if needed.
wacker - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 08:07 AM EDT (#271321) #
What is the fascination with Loewen? He sucks! Striking out 50%. They sat Glenn in the second game to play him. Heck Van Kirk is better than him and he's stuck on the phantom DL. I don't get it...
Mike Green - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 10:22 AM EDT (#271329) #
For what it's worth, it is likely that Kevin Pillar is a better player than Rajai Davis right now.  He might even be better than Melky Cabrera...

Nonetheless, it would be very unusual for a club to promote someone with 100 PAs above high A.
92-93 - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 11:31 AM EDT (#271333) #
Slow down there. I don't even like him as a player, but Rajai Davis is a proven MLB hitter who can play a competent corner OF and provide a ton of value on the bases. He's a valuable bench player.
Dave Rutt - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 11:47 AM EDT (#271335) #
Well, it's worth noting that the skills Pillar brings to the table (speed, defense) are skills that peak early and don't generally require as much refinement as hitting and pitching, so prospects can often jump in and make an immediate impact in those areas. That said, Davis is probably a better baserunner and I have no idea what Pillar's defensive reputation is (but it wouldn't be too hard to be better than Davis.)
92-93 - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 12:19 PM EDT (#271336) #
From what I've seen, his defensive reputation is not good, which makes the suggestion seem silly considering Rajai's speed. When you add in the fact that we have Gose at AAA I have no idea why you'd want Pillar fast tracked.
hypobole - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 01:26 PM EDT (#271342) #
Marc Hulet discussed Pillar's defence with a scout who gave him a 50 rating. In other words, major league average. I've seen nothing that says he's any less than that. I know he can't be a regular CF, because despite his gaudy SB totals, he only has average speed. I have seen reports that suggest he has plus makeup - a smart highly focused individual who makes the most of his talents.
hypobole - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 01:40 PM EDT (#271343) #
On the other hand, I agree with 92-93 on Davis. One of our favorite whipping boys is someone who has skills that have been misused. He can hit LHP - sOPS+ 121, 108 and 160(SSS) the past 3 years.

However he has been given far too many PA's vs RHP - 611 and counting with the Jays, compared to 279 PA's vs LHP. Part of this is the managers' doing, but also a large part of this is on the GM.

He has great speed on the basepaths, but poor decision making at times. It's the managers job when to give the green or red light.

He's a defensive liability. His speed allows him to lessen the impact of his poor skills - sometimes he can catch up to his mistakes, but our GM has never seemed to put any sort of priority on outfield defense for some reason. Managers have used him because other options were usually even worse (Thames, Rivera, Patterson come to mind).
Mike Green - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 01:43 PM EDT (#271344) #
To be clear, while I think that Pillar is likely better than Davis and fills the same niche (which incidentally is complementary and not competitive with Gose); I am not suggesting that it is a mistake to keep him in AA at least for another 100 PAs or so.  He's a .330 career hitter in the minors in generally poor environments.  These guys are unusual, and useful.

On the other hand, the fact that Josh Thole is still in triple A while Blanco plays every 5th day is a clear error.  Negrych vs. Bonifacio is a mistake, as well, if not quite so clear.



hypobole - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 02:20 PM EDT (#271347) #
There have been a couple of people who've suggested bringing up Thole and Negrych and sending Blanco and Bonifacio down. That will be next to impossible. Bonifacio is out of options. He would have to be DFA'd and the chance of him making it through waivers is probably zero. Blanco has enough service time that he can elect free agency. With his poor numbers this year and last maybe he won't, but it is his decision. If he goes the FA route and we lose Boni, what happens if Thole and Negrych are not what some of us believe them to be or injuries occur? Thole, if healthy, is more than likely an upgrade over Blanco, but if anything happens to him or JPA? The catching remaining in our high minors would be a pretty dismal alternative.
Mike Green - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 02:44 PM EDT (#271348) #
Obviously if Blanco doesn't accept the assignment, you do need to get another catcher to accompany Nickeas in Buffalo.  Blanco is a replacement level talent, and if you cannot get someone else of his quality, you're in the wrong line of work (Anthopoulos has generally done a good job of it this past offseason).

Bonifacio is a trickier case.  You ought to be playing to win in 2013 and Bonifacio is a poor player now.  Maybe he improves, but giving him regular work (particularly in a position of defensive significance) is problematic.  He fills the same niche as Rajai Davis (in effect) but doesn't do it as well.  You could bring up Negrych in place of DeRosa if you wanted in order to try to derive some long-term benefit from Bonifacio; either way, it's a mistake to give Bonifacio regular work in center-field or at second base. 

The theory with Bonifacio was that he was hampered by injury in 2012 (the same as it was with Thole).  The difference is that Thole appears to have recovered and Bonifacio has not. 

Beyonder - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 02:49 PM EDT (#271349) #
Josh Thole has 58 at bats. There is almost nothing that can happen in 58 at bats that would make it a clear error to prefer Blanco over him. Remember also that AA may still be trying to develop Thole and want him to get in games on a regular basis.

As far as Negrych over Bonifacio is concerned, I don't think very much weight is being given to Bonifacio's track record of success. If Negrych hit .296 over 600 at bats with an on-base percentage of .360 it would be the surprise story of the year. If Bonifacio did it he would only have replicated what he did in his last full season in the majors.
Mike Green - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 02:56 PM EDT (#271350) #
If you truly believe that Arencibia's defensive struggles have nothing to do with the team-wide pitching issues, you can justify the Blanco over Thole decision.  It's these kinds of judgments in the face of the evidence (i.e. what we see when we watch the games) that lead general managers into a whole lot of trouble with their bosses.  The bosses don't ask why things aren't working; they just notice that a whole lot of money was spent on pitchers who did very well in past years and aren't doing very well now. 
hypobole - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 03:11 PM EDT (#271351) #
"Blanco is a replacement level talent, and if you cannot get someone else of his quality, you're in the wrong line of work"

Obviously a lot of GM's are in the wrong line of work. 16 catchers last year got 100 PA's of negative WAR. 20 catchers this year have negative WAR. Why do teams play so many sub-replacement level catchers when there are replacement level catchers sitting around waiting for phone calls?
Beyonder - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 03:13 PM EDT (#271352) #
Maybe, but when you break it down: Arencibia doesn't catch Dickey, who is the main underperformer (relative to expectations and what we gave up to get him); JP caught Morrow last year in Morrow's best ever season, so unless you postulate some sort of deterioration in skill over the last year, it's tough to pin Morrow's rough start on JP; and Happ is off to a relatively good start. I guess you could make him wear Buehrle and Johnson's rough starts if you were inclined.

Also, Rogers is a lot of things, but one thing they are not is quick with the hook.
Mike Green - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 03:37 PM EDT (#271354) #
WAR is not an exact science.  I am not saying that catchers noticeably better than Blanco are freely available.  I am saying that catchers as good as Blanco are freely available.  He's almost 42 years old, and he can't hit.  He doesn't even throw particularly well any more.

I am surprised that the question of Blanco's replaceability is a controversial proposition.  It seems to me that the explanation for management's behaviour is simple.  Management believes that Arencibia is (or will be) good enough to catch 4 games out of every 5 and that Dickey would prefer if Blanco caught the 5th game and this is good enough for management.  Neither part of the underlying beliefs are working out well, and frankly, it ought to have been expected that it would be so.
Richard S.S. - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 06:52 PM EDT (#271363) #
The problem with having depth, is when you need it, it's no longer depth - just not good enough.   Replacing Bonifacio with Negrych means losing Bonifacio (unless using a smaller bullpen) and creating another hole where there was depth.    Replacing Blanco with Thole means the same thing - another hole created.   I'd like both up, but maybe that's not so good an idea.
cybercavalier - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 09:29 PM EDT (#271371) #
For available free agent catchers who have MLB experience per the baseball cube, all are RHB except the switch hitting Jose Morales.

Dusty Brown 30, R
Ryan Budde, 33, R
Brian Esposito, 34, R
Michel Hernandez, 34, R
Steve Holm, 33, R
Jose Morales, 30, S
Clint Sammons, 29, R
Craig Tatum, 30, R

Alfonzo, Brown and Morales have the best 3 AAA career performance in stats.
cybercavalier - Wednesday, May 01 2013 @ 09:35 PM EDT (#271372) #
Funny, Dusty Brown is now a private catching coach in Austin, Texas but on his website, he went under the knife in 2012 for Tommy John. I guess he is helping out in Austin while rehabbing from the TJ. Alfonzo is linked to the Dodgers organization so could Morales be available ?
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