Welcome to a different version of 5 Issues I Preferred (Or Didn’t Like) This Week. I’m undecided that Zach Lowe, the progenitor of this format and an unbelievable NBA author, ever thought that it will get spun off into baseball. I’m sure that he didn’t suppose it will get spun off into baseball by somebody who likes each popups and bunts an unhealthy quantity. However right here we’re. Talking of which, I do know what you’re considering: What does Ben take into consideration the 2 catcher’s interference infield flies from this week? I assumed they had been extra annoying than amusing, and that’s not what we’re about right here at 5 Issues. So let’s speak about a much more pleasant popup, plus some infield hits, fairly pitches, and thrilling sequence.
1. A SchwarbloopKyle Schwarber hits majestic residence runs. Generally they dangle within the air for an inconceivable size of time. Generally they get out of the park earlier than you possibly can blink. Not solely is there a reputation for them – Schwarbombs – however Wawa even makes a drink named after them. You possibly can’t get any extra Philadelphia than that.
Schwarber hit a kind of magnificent bombs he’s identified for on Monday. Boy, did that factor take off:
However no matter. That’s boring! He hits a whole lot of homers. I wish to speak about his single that went farther upward than it did ahead and ended up behind residence plate:
That’s a colossal blast of a brief popup. The afternoon solar in San Francisco is cruel, too, which explains how the fielders seemed like this:
That ball would possibly as properly have been invisible, for all of the luck Patrick Bailey and Erik Miller had to find it. It solely narrowly averted clocking Miller on its means down. Matt Chapman was theoretically in cost, however he wasn’t actually. He simply acquired much less blinded than the opposite two and tried to make the perfect of a foul scenario.
Amazingly, the gusting wind took command and turned the ball again in towards residence plate. By the point it hit the bottom, with three Giants helplessly converging round it, the momentum had turned squarely towards foul territory:
By his legs! That’s really exceptional. Schwarber hit the ball means up within the air and out in entrance of residence plate, and he and the wind mixed to roll it proper again over the plate after touching down honest:
I can perceive how that is theoretically doable. Nearly the entire power Schwarber imparted into the ball was directed straight up, so the ahead velocity of the ball was shortly killed by the wind, after which the wind began pushing it backward on that aircraft. By the point it hit the bottom, it was headed backward.
That’s the mathematical clarification, however let me put it this manner: You may play a baseball-themed model of HORSE all day and by no means hit that shot. “Excessive pop, land it 15 ft honest, curl it again foul behind residence plate, by means of the catcher’s legs.” It’s the baseball equal of bouncing one off the ground, off the backboard, after which off the rim and in.
Ought to it have been a success? Eh, in all probability not. It doesn’t appear like Bailey touched it earlier than it rolled foul, although I’m hardly sure:
Nevertheless it’s not reviewable, and to be sincere with you, I didn’t need it to be reviewed. That ought to rely as a success on diploma of problem alone. It’s the least seemingly factor I noticed all week, perhaps all 12 months.
2. The Counsell Bowl
The Cubs and Brewers had already performed in Chicago this 12 months, however the first assembly in Milwaukee was circled on everybody’s calendar. Craig Counsell managed the Brewers for 9 years and oversaw their ascent to a perennial playoff contender and one of many best-run franchises in baseball. Then he left, for a division rival no much less.
The crew performed a tribute video earlier than the primary recreation of the sequence, however followers booed Counsell anyway. I don’t blame them; give it a number of years, and I’m certain the nice reminiscences will overwhelm the sting of betrayal, however seeing your man of their colours for the primary time is all the time going to engender some boos.
That apart, this sequence had every part, and I’m excited for this rivalry, already a hotly contested one, to change into the most effective in baseball for the following few years. These video games had been tense. Justin Steele and Robert Gasser pitched to a scoreless tie on Monday, and when Gasser flagged, the Brewer ’pen picked him up, prefer it did for therefore a few years underneath Counsell. The Cubs relievers… yeah, they didn’t try this. Mark Leiter Jr. and Hayden Wesneski got here in and gave up two walks and three hits, together with a back-breaking Willy Adames residence run, to show a detailed recreation right into a laugher.
Adames was almost the hero once more the following day, when he broke by means of in opposition to yet one more high-leverage Cubs reliever, Héctor Neris, with two outs within the backside of the ninth. His game-tying single rendered Ben Brown’s seven no-hit innings irrelevant and briefly put the Brewers again within the driver’s seat.
The Cubs bullpen has been terrible this 12 months; their relievers have a 4.48 ERA, and their nearer has as many walks as strikeouts. However their starters hold placing them ready to win, and on Tuesday, the offense got here by means of with a five-run outburst within the tenth. There have been excessive tensions, assistant pitching coach ejections (Neris had a controversial balk that put a runner in scoring place for Adames), and massive defensive performs.
After developing empty in opposition to Steele and Brown, the Brewers offense exploded for seven runs in opposition to Cubs ace Shota Imanaga on Wednesday. Adames, as he all the time appears to be, was in the midst of it. The Milwaukee crowd went wild. The Brewers closed out the sequence yesterday by taking down Chicago’s bullpen but once more; after the Cubs rallied to tie the sport 4-4 within the eighth, Luke Little and Tyson Miller mixed to yield two runs and the sport. Miller, who relieved Little with two outs and Christian Yelich on third, promptly surrendered the decisive blast, a two-run Gary Sánchez residence run.
It’s powerful to think about that each sequence these two groups play this 12 months can be so electrical. Counsell’s first return to Milwaukee was all the time going to be an occasion, and the groups being in first and second place on the time added to it. Three of the 4 video games had been tied late, and the opposite featured probably the most thrilling pitchers within the recreation getting tattooed by the house crew. That is 2000s-era Yankees/Pink Sox stuff, two good groups whose followers don’t like one another, with Counsell’s defection upping the stakes for Milwaukee, a metropolis that always feels big-brothered by close by Chicago. The 2 groups play solely six extra instances this 12 months, and listening to that, I discover myself eager for the 19-games-vs.-each-divisional-opponent schedule to come back again so we will see extra video games like these.
3. Good Baserunning
One merchandise wasn’t sufficient to seize that magnificent sequence. Cubs rookie Luis Vazquez has batted solely as soon as within the majors, and he struck out on 4 pitches and three swings at breaking balls within the dust. He’s organizational depth the crew hopes to not have to make use of, and actually they’ve already despatched him again to the minors. In Tuesday’s recreation, nonetheless, he confirmed off the type of baseball IQ that you would be able to’t train.
Guys like Vazquez don’t usually get into high-leverage video games, however catcher Miguel Amaya was the designated runner for Chicago within the prime of the tenth, and that feels like a job for Vazquez.
Mike Tauchman, the primary Cubs batter of the inning, lined a comebacker to Brewers nearer Trevor Megill.
Then, chaos ensued:
First issues first: I hope Megill is OK. He appears set to keep away from an IL stint and solely has a bruise to point out for it. Nevertheless it was absolutely a nasty bruise. Tauchman hit that ball arduous and proper into Megill’s forearm. He instantly recoiled in ache; there was no means he was fielding it:
Poor William Contreras was in a bind. He couldn’t exit and get the ball, clearly; you possibly can’t run 50-ish ft in catcher’s gear, decide up a ball, change instructions, and make it again residence sooner than a speedy runner already rounding third. The mathematics simply doesn’t work. Abandon residence plate, and the run scores. All Contreras may do was level and hope that Vazquez didn’t understand the predicament:
Vazquez realized it. He was coasting till he acquired to 3rd, maintaining his eye on the play and doing his job by getting a base nearer to scoring. Then he did the mathematics and hit the jets:
Each single Brewers fielder was caught between obligations. The nook infielders had runners headed for his or her bases; they had been kind of rooted to the spot once they noticed the ball hit Megill, as a result of if he recovered to area it, they wanted to be in place to obtain a throw. Adames headed to second in case the road drive acquired by means of, then stayed there as a result of somebody wanted to cease Tauchman from getting a free base. Brice Turang had began the play a step in entrance of the outfield grass, so he absolutely wasn’t a part of any plan for who ought to area a ball on the pitcher’s mound.
Maybe somebody missed an project; perhaps Turang ought to have crashed for second whereas Adames charged the mound or one thing like that. Perhaps Owen Miller ought to have deserted first base as quickly as he noticed Megill hopping off, giving up on recording an out to safe the baseball. However none of these performs made a lot sense within the second. As an alternative, everybody simply pointed:
The logic is straightforward: If the ball hits the pitcher after which squirts away towards a fielder, it’s now that fielder’s accountability, with both the pitcher or one other fielder changing them. However Megill was in no place to interchange anybody, and the one fielder the ball was even remotely close to was Contreras, who additionally occurred to have the least abandonable base. The Brewers merely had no good performs.
With a much less alert runner (or base coach), it may not have mattered. Miller really gave up on Tauchman pretty shortly and went for the ball. However Vazquez put the items collectively extra shortly and realized he may rating. So he did. A slower preliminary break might need left him out of place to attain. A extra conservative base coach might need screamed at him to cease. A extra aggressive protection might need restricted the harm to runners on first and third. However none of that occurred, and Vazquez capitalized.
This play ended up mattering way more as a result of it knocked Megill out of the sport than as a result of Vazquez scored. As I discussed up above, the Cubs scored 5 runs within the inning. Any variety of hits and walks would have pushed a runner in from third. However that doesn’t change the brilliance of the play. Taking each risk-free base the opposite crew offers you is a key a part of baserunning, and this was an unbelievable, albeit unorthodox, instance of what it seems to be like at its finest.
4. GrayRod’s Proper/Proper Changeup
I’m a easy man. I just like the finer pleasures in life. A pleasant scorching espresso within the morning, a pleasant chilly lemonade within the afternoon, a pleasant dinner within the night, and right-on-right changeups thrown with impeccable command:
Oh my goodness, these are enjoyable. Grayson Rodriguez has a humiliation of riches with regards to pitch high quality, however his changeup might be his finest. He makes use of it most steadily in opposition to lefties, almost a 3rd of the time, and that’s simply good pitching technique. He has a nasty slider, someplace between gyro and sweeper, that righties wrestle to take care of. He cabinets that in opposition to lefties, after all, however he’s largely fastball/slider to righties.
That’s how changeups get used throughout all of baseball. It’s a form factor, principally; sluggish pitches that break towards righties don’t work properly in the event that they aren’t positioned properly, so pitchers go for higher choices as a substitute. However if in case you have a cambio pretty much as good as Rodriguez’s, it will be a waste to utterly give it up simply due to pesky platoon points.
He doesn’t break it out usually, however when he does, it’s steadily a factor of magnificence. That pitch to Vaughn Grissom seemed hittable proper till it took a pointy flip downward. In-breaking motion? Positive, perhaps, however that doesn’t matter when the batter swings over it by a foot.
It’s an amazing software for coping with hitters who cowl his fastball and aren’t biting on the slider. Julio Rodríguez has been heating up, however he was no match for this diving change:
That pitch is a superb out pitch, and that’s the best way that Rodriguez most steadily will get righties with the changeup. However his command with it’s ok that he can back-door it for a strike too:
Generally, he can tuck it within the zone with sufficient motion to overlook a bat anyway:
That is by no means going to be greater than an occasional mix-in. The fastball/slider combo is simply too good, and he even has a plus curveball for a down-breaking choice if the slider isn’t working. However what an choice to have! Rodriguez seems to be like he’s fulfilling the promise he confirmed as a prospect, and these changeup punctuation marks are a giant a part of it.
5. Loss of life-Defying Bunts
Main leaguers have tried 9 bunts in two-strike counts this 12 months. They’ve gone predictably poorly. 4 have resulted in foul bunt strikeouts. One ended with a swinging bunt strikeout, and sure, it’s as embarrassing because it sounds:
One other one resulted in absolute insanity:
There’s a ton to unpack on that play, like whether or not it made sense for Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to play the ball honest and take a look at for the out at residence. However that’s not why I’m writing about this right now, so let’s hold going. One other two two-strike bunts have changed into profitable sacrifices. The ninth? Effectively, that one occurred on Wednesday, and that’s why I’m penning this merchandise:
Was {that a} good plan? I really suppose it was. Michael Siani had already bunted a ball foul earlier on this at-bat, when he was attempting to advance Masyn Winn to second. The Reds had been so nervous about Winn that they referred to as a pitchout, even. However Winn tried to steal second on 1-1 and acquired caught. That left Siani in a 1-2 gap, and the protection moved again accordingly. Jeimer Candelario had been enjoying outrageously shut firstly of the at-bat:
That’s a reasonably unfriendly defensive alignment, and Siani’s foul bunt was pushed down the primary final analysis. However with no runner on and two strikes, Candelario moved from crashing to enjoying the place the shortstop usually strains up:
You’re simply not gonna get a greater defensive alignment to assault with a bunt than that. The entire expanse of grass by third base is open for the taking! A ball wherever in that normal neighborhood might be going to land. And to not put too high-quality of a degree on it, however Siani is a foul hitter. He has a 61 wRC+ this 12 months, with a pile of strikeouts and few extra-base hits or walks. He was in a 1-2 gap. This film normally doesn’t finish properly for the batter.
The query, then, is whether or not Siani may hold the ball honest. He actually didn’t have to do something greater than that in opposition to this gaping-void model of protection:
In the event you suppose {that a} honest bunt will end in a success half the time, the numbers really help his choice. He’s laid down 16 bunts this 12 months; 10 have been honest and 6 have been foul. Within the majors, he has a .244 OBP after a 1-2 rely; 5 out of 16 works out to .313. Extra broadly, he has a profession .248 OBP total, and we venture him for a .293 mark the remainder of the best way. That is the type of likelihood you possibly can’t move up if you happen to’re a very good bunter getting performed passively. By the identical token, the Reds had been too informal with their protection right here. I’m undecided what number of outs they decide up in the long term with the near-overshift they deployed, however it may’t be sufficient to offset the truth that they’re letting a poor hitter in a foul rely bunt his means on. It’s one factor to shift in opposition to a terrifying slugger, and a special factor fully to shift in opposition to the foremost league chief in sacrifice bunts.
Is Siani the long-term resolution for the Cardinals in heart? In all probability not. He’s a superb defender, however the man actually can’t hit main league pitching. I hope I’m unsuitable, although, as a result of he’s a blast to look at each within the area and on the basepaths. Extra well-considered bunts like this one will definitely assist.