Yoshida, 18, is still looking for her first win. In seven starts, she is 0-3 with a 12.68 ERA.
IP H R ER BB K BFYoshida's last two starts were in Canada, pitching in Victoria on July 27 (pictured above) and in Calgary on August 1. She is the first woman to pitch professionally in three countries, including her native Japan. (Here is an article about the British Columbia connection to women who have played pro ball.)
0529 Tijuana 3 5 4 4 1 0 14
0612 Yuma 4 4 2 1 2 1 18
0624 Edmonton 5 3 3 2 3 0 23 L
0702 St. George 3 5 5 4 1 0 17
0723 OC 3.1 7 6 6 2 2 18 L
0727 @ Victoria 2.1 1 8 8 7 1 18 L
0801 @ Calgary 1.1 5 8 6 1 0 13
7 starts 22 30 34 29 17 4 ERA 12.68
At first, there was about two weeks between Yoshida's starts, but then, after a gap of three weeks in July, she started twice in five days. I wonder if the infrequency of her starts is contributing to her ineffectiveness. There are plenty of general articles on the web, but very little information on something like usage patterns.
Chico has won four of Yoshida's seven starts, but she has not pitched enough innings to qualify for the win in any of them. She was given the loss in the other three games. (She pitched five solid innings against Edmonton, but the pen allowed six runs in the eighth inning and Chico lost 10-2.)
She is 1-for-7 at the plate, with one walk and two RBI.
Do you think Tim Wakefield is all done as a Red Sock?
ReplyDeleteThe contract he signed in November 2009 will pay him a base salary of $1.5 million in 2011, plus various bonuses for # of GS and IP.
ReplyDeleteHe has been a solid league-average pitcher at roughly 150 IP per season for the last 7 years, although this year has been a bit of a dip. That's a bargain, so if he's willing, they should give him a look.
(Looking at his salaries at B-Ref, I am surprised to see he has never made more than $4.7 million in a season.)
I think we should have Yoshida replace MDC in the pen.
ReplyDeleteI love this pic of her. Thanks for linking to the Tyee story, too.
ReplyDeletevs Maui: 3.2-4-4-4-0
ReplyDeleteGreat news.
ReplyDeleteI always thought the one to break the barrier would play 2nd base - never thought of knuckle ball pitcher.
Absolutely Fabulous!
She didn't break the barrier yet. The person before her to try was also a pitcher, although not a knuckleballer, Ila Borders. Yoshida has not yet gotten as far as Borders did.
ReplyDelete