Only three pitchers in Red Sox history have had back-to-back outings of at least seven innings with only one hit allowed.
Howard Ehmke, 1923
IP H R BB K BF PIT Game September 7 at Athletics: 9 0 0 1 1 28 Won 4-0 September 11 at Yankees: 9 1 0 1 5 29 Won 3-0Pedro Martinez, 2002
IP H R BB K BF PIT Game April 19 at Royals: 8 1 0 0 6 26 92 Won 4-0 April 25 at Orioles: 7 1 0 1 10 24 103 Won 7-0Daisuke Matsuzaka, 2011
IP H R BB K BF PIT Game April 18 vs Blue Jays: 7 1 0 1 3 23 89 Won 9-1 April 23 at Angels: 8 1 0 3 9 28 115 Won 5-0In addition to pitching a no-hitter, Ehmke went 2-for-4. In the second game, he went 3-for-4, getting half of Boston's six hits.
(Vicente Padilla was the last major league pitcher to have two consecutive starts of 7+ innings and one hit allowed: May 5 and 10, 2009.)
It's time to revisit a couple of quotes:
Peter Abraham, Globe, April 12:
Trading [Daisuke Matsuzaka] would not be easy. ... But it has to be done.Chad Finn, Globe, April 12:
[T]here's not a shred of evidence to suggest Matsuzaka will be a reliable pitcher in the AL East any time soon. ... The Red Sox would be a better team with somebody else in the rotation. ...
[A]t this point putting him in a game is counterproductive to winning. ... [I]t's just not working for anybody.
Last night's masterpiece [2-8-7-2-2 vs the Rays] was Daisuke Matsuzaka's 100th start for the Red Sox. ... I'd just as soon he not make start No. 101 for the Red Sox. Not just three days from now. Not three months from now. Not three years from now. ...
He has to go. ... I don't come to this conclusion easily. I try to avoid opining in lockstep with the sports radio conventional wisdom of the day. The panic button is usually well out of my reach. ...
[H]ere's the dirty truth about Dice-K: He's not just maddening or inconsistent. He's plain lousy ... He's just terrible, and any cure for this prolonged terribleness seems unfathomable ...
If he keeps this up, I will gladly eat my hat.
ReplyDeleteSee, if I knew Chad Finn, I'd give him a hard time about "terribleness".
ReplyDeleteThere's also this quote from Dice after the Tampa game:
ReplyDelete"I watched a video after the game and I noticed a clear difference between when I pitch well and bad," Matsuzaka said. "There's something to fix."
When I first read that at the time it felt like lip service, but looks like he might have really found something...
So Finn says:
ReplyDelete"I try to avoid opining in lockstep with the sports radio conventional wisdom of the day."
But in his April 19th column about Jed Lowrie, Finn says:
Lowrie, despite some perceptions, does not belong alongside Sam Fuld on the 2011 Gritty Gutty All-Stars, as chosen by select fans and media members desperate for their next Eckstein and wondering whatever became of Bo Hart.
So Finn thinks he's different than Joe-Blow-Sports-Writer? Interesting. Let me translate his language for the uninitiated. When Finn says "gritty" he means "white player who falls down a lot." When was the last time a sports writer referred to a non-white player as "gritty"? When a Latin player doesn't hustle, he's "lazy." When it's Chipper Jones, he "must be hurting." When Cecil Fielder almost eats his way out of the game, he's "fat, lazy, and a waste of talent." When John Kruk does the same, he's simply "old school."
Finn's language, like 99% of sportswriters, is hypocritical if not downright boring. And for him to opine as if he is different... is just plain silly.
In my experience, everyone thinks he/she is different. No one thinks they are victims of groupthink or influenced by advertising or media.
ReplyDeleteNo one wants to admit he's a sheep. Let alone a racist!
You throw the Dice out there, you take your chances. At the very least, he currently appears a little easier to trade.
ReplyDelete