Sox shaping up, questions remain

It will take big balls to make run at the Tigers

As we enter the last week of Spring Training the White Sox roster is pretty close to the Opening Day roster, but several question remain. The first question is off topic and MLB related, could someone in Bud Selig’s office explain the difference between “Opening Day 2012″ and “Opening Series 2012?”

Most of the country was unaware that two regular season games had been played between the Mariners and A’s in Japan on Wednesday and Thursday, but it was not marketed as “Opening Day 2012,” in fact it was not really marketed at all in United States. I only stumbled across it because I was looking up the remained of the Spring Training schedule. “Opening Series 2012″ was really bust back in the U.S., but it allows Selig to continue to market his product overseas in hopes of expansion outside of North America. I had to get that off my chest.

Now, let’s talk about another disaster, Dyan Viciedo. Viciedo has had a disastrous Spring and while Spring means nothing, you expect a little more out of someone who’s projected to hit 24 home runs this season. His only home runs came in a minor league game in which he hit three. Yesterday he had a hit off the end of his bat to go 1-3. Viciedo was supposed to be an improvement over Juan Pierre in left this season, but at the moment it seems more like a lateral move. Before you scream better defense, he misplayed a ball yesterday that turned into a double; sound familiar?

It looks like Thornton will attempt to be the White Sox closer again this season, and that is a huge question mark. When handed the duties last year he completely imploded, and then when the duties were officially taken away he as lights out. Does he have the confidence that he lacked last season? Hopefully, we’ll find out on April 6.

Every Sox fan’s favorite player, Alex Rios, came up gimpy yesterday with a strained Achilles heel, not a kind injury and difficult to play through. He wanted to play, but the training staff would not clear him to play. New manager, Robin Ventura, claims there’s nothing to worry about and he’s penciled in the line-up today batting third.

Other questions seemed have been answered thus far in Spring. Chris Sale seems to be adjusting to the starting role splendidly, with only two walks in 24 innings. His last two outings he was dominant, he struck Matt Kemp out three times yesterday.

Adam Dunn has had a nice Spring, which he did not last season, so that’s a positive sign. He’s kept the strike outs to minimum and walked a lot. In for 43 ABs he has 4 HRs, 13 RBIs, and 13 walks with only six strike outs. His

is an impressive .429 and his OPS is .997. He’s at a home run in about every 10 ABs. A solid Spring, we’ll see what the season brings.

Those were the biggest questions facing the White Sox this offseason besides how will the new coaching staff handle the team. So far, I would give the coach staff an “A” in Spring Training. They’ve reinstated the importance of doing the little things in the game that sometimes lead to bigger things happening for your opponent when not done correctly. Something the Ozzie Guillen coached team lacked.

I’m cautiously optimistic going into 2012, but I think this team will definitely be more fun to watch than last years team. If things go well the Sox are looking at 83 – 79, but if everything clicks you have a 90 – 72 team looking at a possible Wild Card birth.

Another series win, trade…

There’s been a lot to talk about in regards to the White Sox over the last 48 hours including another series win over Detroit, a trade, and GM Kenny Williams letting his team know they need to look like contenders to prevent a fire sale by Sunday. Questions looming – will Matt Thornton, Carlos Quentin and John Danks still be on the White Sox by Monday morning.Wouldn’t mind Thornton going, but Danks can be the future “ace” of this staff. We’ll know more about this the next few days.

Moving on, the White Sox won their second straight series over the Detroit Tigers, and are sitting at just 3-1/2 games behind the Tigers going into a weekend series against the Boston Red Sox, who the White Sox swept earlier this season in Boston. The Sox are starting to make the right decisions as Alex Rios has been benched indefinitely to allow rookie center fielder, Alejandro De Aza, to have playing time. It worked, as De Aza hit a 2-run homer off non-ace, Max Scherzer, which lead to a Sox victory. Two runs were all the Sox needed because John Danks owned the Tigers’ hitters striking out ten.

Before the Sox won for the fourth time in the last five game, Williams moved Edwin Jackson and the terrible Mark Teahan to the Blue Jays, and then the Jays moved Jackson to the Cardinals. I have to give Williams credit for moving Teahan who’s due $5.5 million next year, and really exhibited no reason to start over Brent Morel. It also opened up the scenario of the Sox acquiring Aramis Ramirez before the trade deadline. It would give the Sox the power they’ve been lacking since Joe Crede patrolled the hot corner, but would hog tie them with $12 million next season. That would seem worth it if he helps the Sox get to the playoffs, but nothing’s a guarantee. I’m pretty sure this deal will happen if the White Sox win or split the next two against the Red Sox.

The other good news is the Tigers are about to fall one game under .500 since the All-Star break, as they are trailing the Angels 12-6 in the 7th. That will put the Sox three games back of the Tigers and closing. FIRE!!!!

The paper is thick, Smitty’s argument is thin

Crunching the numbers at stats central.

Let’s just say that disagreements often stem from a misunderstanding of how a person is using a term. I can’t help but wonder this very thing about Smitty’s comments rebutting my statement, “the Sox are a better team on paper than the Tigers,” from my post, “Week three- embarrassing!” Smitty’s retort to my comment was that it’s “paper thin” from his post, “‘On paper’ argument is paper thin.”

I’m not sure Smitty did any research before making this comment, but it is his “opinion” of my comment. Well, before I made the comment I had looked up some stats, and it pointed out that the current Sox team has better stats then the current Tigers roster, historically. That’s what the term “on paper” refers to, not intangibles, or even currently. You look at the historic numbers at the beginning of the season and say “on paper” this team looks like they are going to win the AL Central. That’s what I did last year and it worked out ok for my predictions, although I must admit that last the year the Twins had better numbers than the White Sox, yet I went with my heart. Whoops!

My comment was not meant as an insult, but I do understand how it can be taken that way, but the Sox are a better team then the Tigers and now I shall present my case. I should point out that while performing my research I found out that their numbers are better than the Tigers currently, except in two very important categories, record and blown saves. Those things tend to work themselves out as the season progresses for teams as talented as the White Sox.

1. Scoring 9 runs in not one, but two games is an accomplishment in of itself, but to do it without the services of Victor Martinez is even more impressive.

This would like a Sox fan saying sweeping a team without the services of Adam Dunn was impressive. V-Mart is living up to his broken down status, of being more like K-mart. His current stats of a .250 batting average with two homeruns and nine RBI’s are almost identical to Dunn. The major difference is Dunn’s batting average of .158, but his .OBP is .314 with an .OPS of .559. Neither has been much of a difference maker thus far, but Dunn has been slowed by an emergency appendectomy surgery which put him a week behind. “My timing is almost there, but the stupid surgery has put me a week behind,” said Dunn yesterday.  K-Mart is currently on the DL as I predicted preseason, you can expect that a lot.

2. On paper, I’ll give you that the Sox have a solid rotation, but it lacks a true ace, while the Tigers have not one, but two aces in Verlander and Scherzer…

I think we need define the term “ace” for a pitching staff. A staff ace is someone who’s pitched consistently well year after year, and you can count on that player to give you at least six solid innings. Justin Verlander is an ace for sure, but calling Max Scherzer an “ace” is a stretch. Let’s call Scherzer an ace for the moment, this would mean the Sox rotation is loaded with aces. I won’t bore you with numbers from Scherzer’s first few years with Arizona, but let’s focus on his first year and the start of this season with the Tigers. He’s compiled 16 wins with a 3.46 ERA with 214 k’s.

First, we’ll take a look at John Danks, who over the same timeframe has 15 wins with a 3.65 ERA with 195 k’s. He also had pitched 246 innings to Scherzer’s 226.2 innings. Danks is a staff ace.

Gavin Floyd’s numbers in the same timeframe are 12 wins with a 4.02 ERA with 184 k’s. He’s logged 214.1 innings for the Sox over this time. He also won 17 games two years ago; the same year Scherzer won 9. Might be considered an “ace.”

Edwin Jackson since coming to the White Sox has a 6-4 record with a 3.72 ERA and 107 k’s. He’s pitched 106.1 innings, which projects out to 224 innings over an entire season for the Sox. Jackson also bests Scherzer in k’s and walks per nine innings. Jackson averages 9.1 k’s per nine innings versus Scherzer’s 8.5 k’s per nine, while allowing only 2.5 walks to Scherzer’s 3.3 per nine.  If you call Scherzer an “ace” then Jackson is an “ace.”

Finally, we come to Mark Buehrle, the most reliable pitcher in baseball in my opinion. He’s the only pitcher in the last decade to log over 200 innings pitched every year and trails only CC Sabbathia in quality starts. While his numbers have declined at age 32, he’s truly a staff ace. He’s had one perfect game, one no-hitter, been an All-Star four times, holds the record for most consecutive batters retired at 45, has won two golden gloves, and a World Championship. He’s truly an ace, more than Verlander and Scherzer combined.

In the end, I think all the pitchers mentioned above have a lot to prove before calling them an “ace,” except for Buehrle and Verlander.

3.  On paper, the Sox have an inexperienced bullpen with no closer, while the Tigers have a proven lights-out 8th/9th inning combo of Benoit and Valverde.

Calling the White Sox bullpen inexperienced is as much a mistruth as calling Benoit “proven.” I will not argue the closer issue, but I think Santos will work out just fine. He was my vote from day one. The White Sox bullpen is proven otherwise. Sports writers have considered Matt Thornton the top setup man for the last few years, and now that he’s back in that role I feel he will settle down.

The “proven” Benoit had one good year with Tampa Bay, he as a lifetime ERA of 4.42 and has failed as a starter, closer and reliever up until last year. It will be interesting to see how the Tigers use him, since at around the 80 inning mark his numbers spike. Last year in Tampa he pitched 60.1 innings, his second fewest ever.

If it only takes, one year to become “proven” then Chris Sale and Sergio Santos are “proven” relievers with lifetime ERA’s barley over two. Let’s not forget the Sox have Jesse Crain who currently has allowed one-hit to left handers over his last 15 plus innings and that Santos kid got his first save over the Yankees yesterday in his first opportunity this year while not allowing a run this season in 11 innings. That’s actually better than Valverde, who’s allowed one run over 9.2 innings.

4. THE BIG THREE and TABLE SETTERS

Barely an argument here, but if you take career home run averages for the White Sox big three and the Tigers big three there’s quite a difference. The Sox big three of Carlos Quentin, Paul Konerko, and Adam Dunn collectively average 103 homeruns, while Magglio Ordonez, Miguel Cabrera, and Victor Martinez collectively average 81 homeruns. That’s plus 22 for the Sox for those of you scoring at home.

While Austin Jackson may grow into his shoes at some point, Juan Pierre lead the league in stolen bases last year with 68, and may do the same this season. He currently has five and is batting about 60 points higher then he was last year at the same time. Jackson has two stolen bases at this point and stole 29 last season with a current batting average of .193; that’s 73 points less than Pierre.

The big three for the Sox have currently combined for 32 RBIs, 13 homeruns, and 17 doubles. CQ leads the AL in doubles and total bases.

The big three for the Tigers have currently combined for 25 RBIs, 7 homeruns, and 11 doubles.

If you take team totals you would think the Sox have a winning record, and they would have if not for the bullpen issues in week two and poor fielding. The Sox have 36 doubles, 22 homeruns, and 95 RBIs.  The Tigers have 43 doubles, 18 homeruns, and 92 RBIs.

You be the judge, but what the numbers tell me is that the White Sox are a better team then the Detroit Tigers, not only on paper but current statistics would point to the same. The Sox have had some tough luck, especially in Tampa Bay where the Rays outfield got to every ball hit out there. If we’re using the “sports writer” as a benchmark then read the series of articles that have been published in the last week about the “underachieving White Sox.”

Note: Statistics were compiled using MLB.com and baseball-reference.com

Sox bullpen exposed…they’re good

During the recent struggles of the White Sox something amazing has happened, well not really, but the bullpen is actually pretty good. Jesse Crain has allowed one hit in 13 innings and Sergio Santos has continued his dominance of American league hitters. Will Ohman has settled in nicely as a lefty specialist and Matt Thornton finally has started to look like the pitcher Sox fans have known.

Tony Pena allowed three runs last night against the Tigers which upped the bullpen total to four runs allowed over the last 15.1 innings. Not to shabby. I’ve heard everything from haters about how the Sox have no bullpen and everyone else has a better bullpen than the White Sox, I disagree. This is only the beginning of what we’ll be seeing out of the White Sox bullpen.

Crain and Santos alone will be a dominant one, two punch that will frustrate hitters in late innings, but when you add a confident Thornton back in a set-up role it seems like a pretty daunting task for anyone facing that crew.

Good news for the Sox today, Fat Penny is pitching for the Tigers and Edwin Jackson is going for the Sox. I think we’ve got ourselves a White Sox winner!

Santos or trade are the only options

I stink!

In 2009, Si.com’s columnist, Cliff Corcoran, wrote article about the Top 10 set-up men in baseball, which featured Matt Thornton in the number one spot. Oh, how the mighty have fallen in result of one word, “closer.” Since Thornton has switched roles he’s been completely ineffective as the White Sox’s closer. Chances are he’ll slowly work himself back into his set-up role, as Ozzie Guillen will be forced to make a change.

Next up will be Sergio Santos as he has been the most effective pitcher out of the pen this season with no runs allowed over five innings pitched. Hopefully, the word closer does not affect his psyche as it has done to Thornton and Chris Sale.

The irony of this situation is the Sox addressed their issue with left-handed power by adding Adam Dunn, but let worrisome closer, Bobby Jenks, go to the Boston Red Sox for $6 million a year. Apparently, addressing one problem left a gapping hole for another problem to surface this season. The only solace Sox fans can take is the fact that three closers were used in 2005, but it should be noted that Bobby Jenks taking over that role played a key part of winning it all. I was actually at Jenks’ first game against the LA Dodgers, where he hit 101 on the speed gun and snapped off 69 mph curveballs. Ah, the good old days.

If Santos does not fill the role adequately I suggest a trade with the Yankees for Rafael Soriano. I know that may sound crazy, since they just signed him to have a back-up plan when Mariano Rivera retires or suffers an injury, but the Yankees are a team desperate for starting pitching.

A trade of Edwin Jackson or Jake Peavy for Soriano would nearly be perfect and fiscally responsible. I do not think that the Yankees would take a risk on Peavy at the moment, but if he comes back strong that might be a possibility. By trading Peavy, it would give the Sox the roster flexibility in June or July to add a marquee pitcher for teams looking to deal. A trade of Jackson for Soriano is really a wash roster wise, and will handcuff the Sox from making a key trade for a fifth starter at the trading deadline.

I know Phil Humber had a decent outing the other day, but I’m not sold on him just yet.

Preferably, I’d like Thornton to figure out this problem, and have Santos shift into the closer role with a rotation of Mark Beuhrle, John Danks, Jake Peavy, Gavin Floyd, and Edwin Jackson. Sounds pretty good to me, but not sure that will be case.

7-4 the hard way

Whoops, Juan Pierre drops the ball or should I say Pierror

The 2011 White Sox have done a great job of making things difficult on themselves. Between errors and a manic bullpen, the White Sox could be 9-2 or as terrible as 4-7, instead Sox fans breathe a sigh of relief with a touch of frustration at 7-4.

I’d like to ask anyone calling for the head of Matt Thornton to please take a pill and drink a beer before you over react. The glaring stat is that he only has one earned run in three blown saves; the defense has let him down to say the least. On the other hand, a lead-off double into the gap lead to the tying run crossing the plate the on Monday night prior to Juan Pierror dropping a well hit ball to left.

Last night Alex Rios joined the error parade by letting a fly ball hit the heel of his glove and pop out, luckily that did not lead to any runs. The third error of the year by Alexei Ramirez lead to Edwin Jackson leaving the game after only 4.2 innings of work. He was at 99 pitches at that point, and was having some control problems.

Despite that the Sox overcame again with a Ramirez walk-off home run in the bottom of the 10th, his second of the game.

The bullpen showed the ability to hold the score in place except for Tony Pena allowing a go ahead 2-run home run. Sergio Santos pitched two more scoreless innings, as did Chris Sale. Will Ohman also came in with the bases loaded and two outs in the fifth to get the only batter he faced, which makes that 2.1 innings without an earned run for Ohman.

The White Sox offense for the most part continues to click on all cylinders with double-digit hit outbursts and multi-homer games more often then not. They are also doing a good job of moving runners along.

Hopefully John Danks keeps his concentration this afternoon and does not serve up a late inning homer. GO SOX!

 

Two idiots in la-la land

Let's dance!

I’m passing out two big idiot awards today from the yesterday’s White Sox/Cleveland game. The winners are umpire, Joe West, and Sox closer, Bob Jenks or should I say “Stenks?” Let’s get to West first.

Joe the game is not about you, it’s about the players and their ability to entertain or disappoint their fans, but you made it about you and that’s wrong. West must have decided when he woke this morning to call a few balks on Mark Buerhle seeing as he has been making the same move to first base for nearly nine years now and has had a total of four balks called since 2001. West dictated the game and might have controlled the outcome by ejecting Buerhle, but four scoreless innings of work from reliever Tony Pena helped lead the Sox to victory and take their second straight series. Unfortunately that would not be done without more drama.

Bobby “Stenks” wobbled into the game with a four-run lead and when the game ended he had a one-run lead. He was up to his old tricks again, letting up hits and walking batters. If the Indians did not sacrifice in the ninth they may have actually won the game. Giving up that out really let Jenks off the hook, thank you. Meanwhile, Matt Thornton pitched another scoreless inning. I think a change is in the near future, and I say if the Philly’s want Jenks,take him.

Maybe “Stenks” can join Country Joe West’s band? Yeah, it has a nice ring to it, Joe West and the Stenks.