Latest Starting Five Stories
Posted: Oct 4th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Angels, Dodgers, Rockies, Tigers, Twins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That the final day of the regular season has arrived and there are still two meaningful baseball games to be played. There would have been three if the
Dodgers hadn't snapped their five-game losing streak by beating the
Rockies, clinching the National League West and relegating the Rockies to the wild card.
Meanwhile, the
Tigers kept sliding and the
Twins kept climbing. Minnesota's 5-4 victory over Kansas City and Detroit's 5-1 loss to the
White Sox left the two teams dead even. The Tigers had been alone in first since July 24.
If it's not settled on Sunday -- the Tigers host the White Sox at 1:05 PM ET and the Twins host the
Royals at 2:10 PM ET -- the teams will meet on Tuesday at 5 PM ET at the Metrodome to determine who goes on and who goes home.
Posted: Oct 3rd 2009 6:00 AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cardinals, Dodgers, Marlins, Rays, Rockies, Tigers, Twins, NL West, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That the NL West race will come down to the final weekend of the regular season.
The
Rockies held on for a 4-3 win over the
Dodgers Friday night, cutting Los Angeles' lead in the division to one game behind shortstop
Troy Tulowitzki's 32nd home run of the year and 10 strikeouts from
Ubaldo Jimenez.
The Dodgers, who lost their fifth straight, have already won the season series, meaning that Colorado will have to win the final two games of the regular season in L.A. to win the division since both teams have already clinched playoff spots.
Posted: Oct 2nd 2009 6:00 AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cardinals, Dodgers, Phillies, Rockies, Tigers, Twins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... Chris Carpenter may win one of the closest NL Cy Young races in years, but his final start of the regular season will be better remembered for what he did with that bat.
The right-hander
threw five shutout innings in a 13-0 win over the
Reds. Six of those Cardinal runs were driven in by Carpenter, who hit the first home run of his career, a grand slam, in the second inning. He added a two-run double later.
"That was one of the funner days I've ever had," Carpenter said. ... "I think the only other home run I hit had to be in high school. I was a really good hitter, I guess, but I grew up in New Hampshire, and we didn't see many 90 mph fastballs."
Posted: Oct 1st 2009 6:00 AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Braves, Marlins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That the Braves are all but done in the NL wild-card race, not that there was anything they could do about it. Atlanta, which had surged into contention over the last few weeks, ran into the Marlins' Ricky Nolasco Wednesday night.
He was on -- very on -- and now the Braves' playoff push is off.
Nolasco struck out 16, a Marlins record, including a stretch where he fanned nine in a row, one shy of the major league record of 10 straight held by Tom Seaver.
Posted: Sep 30th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Braves, Cardinals, Cubs, Dodgers, Rockies, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...
That a couple of game tying three-run homers threatened to make the NL wild-card chase really wild, but the teams that hit them both lost, leaving the Rockies three games up on the Braves with five games to go.
The excitement began in Atlanta, where the Braves'
Matt Diaz hit a sixth-inning shot to erase a 4-1 lead. Unfortunately for Atlanta, the Marlins responded with
Jorge Cantu's tie-breaking single a half inning later, and Florida held on to snap the Braves' seven-game winning streak.
A few hours later, Rockies closer
Huston Street was looking to convert his 27th consecutive save opportunity when he gave up a game-tying homer to the normally powerless
Jason Kendall of the Brewers in the ninth. Like the Marlins, the Rockies overcame it, winning in the 11th on
Chris Iannetta's two-run homer.
Posted: Sep 28th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Marlins, Red Sox, Rockies, Royals, Tigers, Twins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...
That
Zack Greinke is doing everything in his power to win the American League Cy Young Award.
The
Royals ace will not get anywhere close to 20 wins, but he did pick up his 16th of the year with seven innings of one-run ball against the
Twins. He's now won five straight decisions dating back to Aug. 25 and his ERA is down to 2.06.
As pointed out by
FanHouse's Jacob Wheatley-Schaller, if Greinke pitches seven shutout innings in his final start of the year next Saturday in Minnesota, he'll finish the year with his ERA under 2.00.
Only one AL pitcher in the last 15 years --
Pedro Martinez in 2000 -- has thrown more than 200 innings in a season and finished with a sub-2.00 ERA
Posted: Sep 27th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Athletics, Braves, Cardinals, Dodgers, Nationals, Red Sox, Yankees, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That
Jim Thome picked a good time to finally make his first significant contribution since the Dodgers got him to be their star pinch-hitter. Thome's two-run pinch-hit single keyed a four-run inning in a come-from-behind 8-4 victory over the Pirates that locked up a playoff spot for Los Angeles.
Thome had been 2-for-11 pinch-hitting for the Dodgers, with no RBI. He came up just after the Dodgers had taken a 5-4 lead and delivered a two-run single. Just a day earlier, Thome had an injection in a sore foot that has hampered him for a couple weeks.
After the Dodgers won, they had a subdued champagne toast -- no dumping or spraying -- to celebrate the team's third postseason appearance in the past four years. They are holding off on the big party until they close out the Rockies. Their magic number to win the NL West is two. They could do it as soon as Sunday.
Posted: Sep 26th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Blue Jays, Braves, Cardinals, Cubs, Dodgers, Reds, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That when we told you a few weeks ago that the Braves were
just about dead, we might have been a bit premature. Led by
Javier Vazquez's third complete game of the season, the Braves beat the Nationals, 4-1, winning their fourth game in a row and 12th out of the past 14.
The Braves are still 3 1/2 behind the Rockies in the wild-card race (and mathematically alive in the NL East, believe it or not), but they do have at least one thing in their favor. They play the Nationals six more times in their final nine games, with the other three against Florida.
In Friday's game, Vazquez added another line to his under-appreciated resume. He is 10-2 since July 7. He has 15 victories this season. The only pitcher to win at least 10 games every year since 2000, Vazquez is second only to
Randy Johnson in strikeouts in the decade.
Posted: Sep 25th 2009 6:00 AM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Braves, Indians, Mariners, Nationals, Orioles, Pirates, Red Sox, Rockies, Royals, MLB Injuries, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action, with a quick nod to what is ahead. You Oughta Know ... One team has 100 defeats, two more could follow -- and there could even be a record-tying four 100-loss teams.
The
Nationals on Thursday fell to 52-100 with their 7-6
loss to the
Dodgers. And the
Pirates are 56-95 after a 4-1
defeat at the hands of the
Reds.
Anyone want to bet Pittsburgh -- 3-23 since Aug. 28 -- goes better than 6-5 in its final three series against Los Angeles, Chicago and Cincinnati?