Draft It Like Beckham

May 10, 2008 by williamwallace

Draft It Like Beckham

Here come the Beckhams! No, we’re not talking about David and Victoria “Posh Spice” Beckham. We’re talking about Timothy and Gordon Beckham, a pair of shortstops from the great state of Georgia. And, no, Timothy and Gordon Beckham are not brothers.

Timothy Beckham is a 6’2”, 190 pound high school senior in Griffin, Georgia who has committed to play college baseball for the Trojans of the University of Southern California. Tim, however, will most likely never play for USC. The opinion is almost unanimous that Tim will be drafted with one of the top 5 picks in the upcoming Major League Baseball amateur draft. Many scouts have commented that Tim has the best collection of tools of any positional player in the upcoming draft. Many believe he will most likely be drafted with the first or second overall pick by the Tampa Bay Rays or the Pittsburgh Pirates. It is often said that Tim will not escape the grasp of the Rays at the first pick because he fits the athletic profile of many picks in the draft history of the Rays: Josh Hamilton, Carl Crawford, Rocco Baldelli, Elijiah Dukes and B.J. Upton.

Tim is a former three sport star who is often seen honing his tremendous skills on a baseball diamond or in a batting cage at all hours of the day and night throughout the year. That wasn’t always the case, however. A few years ago, his passion was football and basketball. His father and older brother, however, patiently guided him back to baseball. “I didn’t lose passion for (baseball), but I fell in love with basketball and stopped playing baseball for about three years,” Tim said. “My brother kept telling me how good I could be. He said that’s my meal ticket out of Griffin. So I gotta take it.”

As a player, Tim is widely regarded as a bona fide five tooler and, depending upon which scout is talking, is often compared to Barry Larkin, Derek Jeter, Brandon Phillips, Edgar Renteria and each of the Brothers Upton. Recent scouting reports have said of him:

“He’s got tools galore… he’s got the ability and potential to hit, hit for power, steal bases and stay at shortstop at the big-league level…… the type of athlete that makes everything he does look easy. He glides to balls hit deep in the hole to either side of him, and runs the bases gracefully, stretching singles into doubles and doubles into triples. He has good arm strength, soft hands and good instincts that should allow him to star at shortstop for years to come. While his defense draws more raves that his bat, he has improved at the plate over the last year and is now considered a legitimate threat, as he stings the ball to all parts of the field and has also shown the ability to hit the ball out as his body continues to mature and add strength….. Of the past ultra toolsy high school players selected in the top 5, Beckham has the best chance of remaining at shortstop with a fluid movement and powerful arm. He is blessed with excellent speed that translates to the basepaths as well. His hands are extremely smooth and he’s able to break in on the ball with rapid movement, while bringing the ball from his glove to his throwing hand faster than any shortstop in recent memory…… profiles as a number two hitter with excellent contact skills and extra base power. Easily could become a perennial 30/30 threat. Beckham’s best asset at the plate is his uncanny patience, unafraid to take a walk and allow the player behind him to drive him in.”

His high school coach recently said of him, “He understands you are going to strike out, he understands you are going to make errors, and if that ever happens, he keeps playing right through it. That’s going to help him get to where he wants to go. He is good about keeping his temperament; he never gets way up, he never gets way down.”

Similar praise and expectations have been known to overwhelm many seventeen year olds. Tim, however, seems to have incredible poise. “Griffin, Ga., is a small town where everyone knows everyone and it’s easy to get caught up in the wrong things sometimes. He’s done a good job of keeping his head on the prize and focused on his future. For him to take this route means a great deal,” Clarence Johns, a Houston Astros cross checker recently said of Tim.

Tim’s ability to stay levelheaded seems to have been aided by the great family support network surrounding him. His father is a GM union representative who makes the 90 minute roundtrip trek everyday from Griffin to the Doraville GM plant to provide the financial means for his family and the baseball dreams of his son. “Tim has been kind of expensive,” his father recently told the AJC. “I paid for him to play AAU baseball.” His father estimates that he has had to annually spend $3000 for Tim to chase his baseball dreams. “We’ve paid for him to be comfortable that way,” his father said. The sacrifices made by his father have not been lost on Tim. “I don’t know how much I’m going to get, but if I do get a lot, [I'll] be able to take care of my family. I’d move my dad out of an apartment, and I’d move my mom out of an apartment, too,” Tim recently told the AJC of his divorced parents. Being the recipient of a lucrative contract as a top 5 pick would certainly benefit his family. His father’s Doraville GM plant is scheduled to close in September three years before his father can retire from GM.

Gordon Beckham plays in Athens, Georgia on the collegiate level for the University of Georgia. Gordon is widely regarded as the premier college middle infielder in the upcoming draft. The earliest Gordon is projected to be drafted is with the number 5 pick by the San Francisco Giants. That’s quite a remarkable leap for a player who was not drafted by any MLB team after his senior year of high school. “I could’ve gone and played football at some smaller schools like Air Force, Ohio and Wake Forest and I could’ve played and been a contributor, or gone to some SEC schools and been a low-key player,” said Gordon. “I figured my future was probably in baseball, even though I wasn’t really looked at as a big talent.”

Gordon recently explained his growth as a baseball player to ESPN, saying: “It’s just getting older and understanding what it takes to be successful. It’s almost learning to fail, I guess is the best way to say it. This is a game of failure. When you finally understand you’re not going to be perfect, the game gets easier.” David Perno, Gordon’s coach at UGA recently explained Gordon’s progress: “He always had the tools and skills, but he always got off to a bad start. He was trying to do too much too soon. Now, he’s letting the game come to him. He’s not having to carry bad at-bats out to the field. I think that’s all it was — him understanding what kind of talent he has and slowing it down.”

Those who have seen him play say the 6’0”, 185 pound Gordon is a good wiry athlete and a solid all around prospect. His speed, range and arm force many to project him as an All Star caliber second baseman instead of a shortstop. He has been praised for being a line drive hitter who possesses quick wrists and surprising power. Although a home run hitter in college, it is expected that he will be more of a gap power hitter with a wood bat in the pros. “I don’t believe that I am a per se “power hitter.” In my opinion, I hit long line drives that sometimes leave the park. I think it used to be a big deal to me. But, as I have matured as a player I have begun to realize that it’s more important to constantly put pressure on the defense, to fight and claw for every hit to help the team. That is more important to me.”

Many project Gordon to be a Michael Young type. Gordon refuses to compare his skills to current or past major leaguers, saying: “Every player is inherently different, therefore in my opinion it makes no sense to model your game after someone. I believe you need to watch major leaguers, see how they carry themselves, and see how they handle their business. I would love to lead my team the way Derek Jeter does, but other than that, I don’t model my game after anyone.”

Gordon plays the game with a hardnosed passion. He recently explained what caused him to hit a homer against a trashtalking opponent. “It’s very frustrating to play a baseball game when you have guys on the other team constantly just chirping like a softball team. This is not softball it’s baseball. I was very frustrated with it because that’s not the way you play baseball in my opinion. Some people believe that that’s the way you play but I was just very frustrated. When Michael (Demperio) got on that inning I was like if he throws it anywhere near the plate I’m gonna hit it as hard as I can, and that’s what happened. He left a fastball right down the middle and I crushed it. It’s very frustrating playing baseball teams that act like that because it’s Mickey Mouse stuff.”

Because he comes from a great, stable family, Gordon has remained level headed. His mother recently said of him, “Gordon does a good job of keeping things in perspective. He’s always been that way. It’s a win-win situation with the draft. If it’s not the right time, he’ll come back for his final year at Georgia. If it’s time for him to move on, then he will.’’

Timothy and Gordon Beckham will never become as famous as David Beckham because that’s almost impossible to do. Timothy and Gordon Beckham, however, may have the ability to be better in baseball than David Beckham ever was in soccer. It’s too bad these Beckham boys will no longer be around by the time the Braves start picking players.

Greg Maddux: Best Postseason Starter Ever In His Prime?

April 18, 2008 by williamwallace

John Smoltz is rightfully regarded as one of the greatest postseason pitchers in the history of the game. Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux, on the other hand, are generally considered postseason disappointments. Overall, for their careers, Smoltz has been superior to Glavine and Maddux in the postseason. Below are their career postseason records:

W

L

ERA

IP

Glavine

14

16

3.42

218

Smoltz

15

4

2.65

207

Maddux

11

14

3.34

194

Maddux and Glavine, however, were actually better postseason starters than Smoltz during the six postseasons in which they were members of the same starting rotation. The applicable period is from 1993 until 1999. Below is a grid with their performance and the average run support they received during those postseasons:

W

L

SV

ERA

WHIP

GS

IP

RS

Glavine

8

5

0

2.48

1.16

18

119.7

4.67

Smoltz

7

4

1

3.12

1.14

17

118.3

4.82

Maddux

10

9

1

2.39

1.11

21

150.7

3.86

Combined

25

18

2

2.64

1.13

56

388.7

4.41

Overall, the Braves were 32-24 when Maddux, Smoltz, and Glavine started for the Braves during the postseasons from 1993 until 1999. Below is the overall team record when each started:

W

L

ERA

RS

Glavine

12

6

2.48

4.67

Smoltz

9

8

3.12

4.82

Maddux

11

10

2.39

3.86

Overall

32

24

2.64

4.41

Below is a table of the performance of Maddux, Smoltz, and Glavine and the run support given to them in the games the Braves won when they started during those postseasons between 1993 and 1999:

G

IP

ERA

RS

Glavine

12

82.7

1.63

5.92

Smoltz

9

68.6

2.63

7.00

Maddux

11

84.7

1.60

5.36

Overall

32

236

1.91

6.03

Below is their performance and the average performance of the offense during the games the Braves lost when they started during those postseasons:

G

IP

ERA

RS

Glavine

6

37.0

4.38

2.17

Smoltz

8

49.7

3.80

2.38

Maddux

10

66.0

3.41

2.20

Overall

24

152.7

3.77

2.25

Maddux was not only the best postseason pitcher on the Braves during the era of The Big Three but, from the 1995 NLCS until the 1999 World Series, Maddux put together the best consecutive string of 120 or more innings of any postseason pitcher in the history of the game. Below are the postseason pitchers I could find that had the best consecutive string of 120 or more innings in the postseason and the average offensive run support provided them in their postseason starts:

Pitcher

Start

End

G

GS

W

L

IP

ERA

OOPS

RS

Greg Maddux

95NLCS

99WS

19

17

8

8

124

1.89

0.562

2.88

John Smoltz

91NLCSG7

97NLDS

18

18

9

2

125.3

2.01

0.573

4.78

Whitey Ford

50WS

62WSG4

18

18

10

4

124

2.03

0.586

4.50

Tom Glavine

92WS

99NLCS

19

19

9

6

129.7

2.22

0.590

4.37

Curt Schilling

93WS

2007WS

19

19

11

2

133.3

2.23

0.586

4.95

Dave Stewart

81WS

93ALCS

18

16

10

3

120.3

2.24

0.569

4.63

Orel Hershiser

85NLCS

97WSG1

18

17

8

2

121

2.38

0.575

4.35

Jim Palmer

66WS

83WS

17

15

8

3

124.3

2.61

0.640

4.67

Roger Clemens

86ALCSG7

03ALCSG3

22

22

8

5

130

3.05

0.562

3.82

Catfish Hunter

72ALCS

78WS

21

18

9

5

124.3

3.11

0.687

3.50

David Wells

89ALCS

05ALDS

26

16

10

4

120

3.15

0.647

5.44

Mike Mussina

97ALDS

06ALDS

20

19

7

7

121.3

3.19

0.660

3.26

Andy Pettitte

98ALDS

03WS

22

22

11

5

136

3.44

0.736

4.45

Randy Johnson

95ALDS

06ALDS

19

16

7

9

121

3.50

0.664

3.50

Mariano Rivera is currently at 117.3 innings and will jump to the top of this list once he surpasses 120 innings pitched in the postseason. Bob Gibson, Sandy Koufax, Christy Mathewson and a few others had excellent runs that did not amount to 120 innings pitched prior to the dawn of ALCS, NLCS, ALDS and NLDS play. Greg Maddux, however, had the best string of 120 or more consecutive innings ever from a starting pitcher in the postseason.

The Truth About Andruw’s Second Half of 2006

April 15, 2008 by williamwallace

**MYTH:** Andruw had a bad second half in 2006

**TRUTH:** Andruw had a .957 OPS in the second half of 2006. That was the second highest OPS for any half of a season he has ever had in his career. The .959 OPS in 2000 was the only one higher.

**MYTH:** Andruw has been in a season and a half long slump

**TRUTH:** Considering that he had a .957 OPS in the second half of 2006, the slump has only been a season long

Kots, KJ, BMac, Frenchy ………..

April 15, 2008 by williamwallace

Kotsay needs to get more rest. He is playing well but why everyday? He should be getting a day or two off a week. Backs usually seem to flare up when you wear yourself out. Once the back acts up, it is hell getting rid of it.

I would drop Kelly Johnson down in the order. I would put Escobar at the leadoff spot and Kotsay at the 2 spot. KJ should hit seventh. KJ is not getting ahead in counts right now because pitchers are being aggressive with him because Escobar, Chipper, Tex, Frenchy and McCann are behind him. Maybe if he was dropped down, pitchers would pitch him less aggressively. That would work to the advantage of his immense patience. He’s too often finding himself behind in the count.

I’m not hitting the panic button on KJ. I think he will be a fine top of the order hitter. I also happen to agree that he will be a poor man’s Chase Utley. I think he and the lineup will be very strong with him at the top of the order.

However, I also think he and the lineup can be even stronger if he hits lower in the order. I think he will be pitched differently. I think he will provide McCann and Frenchy the protection they have rarely had. I don’t think KJ needs much protection because of his patience. My thinking is that he might be the type that is even better with less protection because of his patience. I also think Kotsay would be even better at the top of the order being fed fastballs he can drive.

I think there might be obviously be a resultant dropoff in OPS from KJ to Kotsay. I expect KJ to have a .830 OPS this season. I expect Kotsay to have a .750 or so OPS by the end of the season at the bottom of the order. If Kotsay is put at the top of the order, I think his OPS could be pushed to .770 to .800.

I dunno. Just wanted to make sure people did not think I am hitting the panic button on KJ. I just think what makes him so great for this lineup is that he can be either a run creator because of his OBP or a run producer because of his SLG no matter where he hits in the lineup.

I just happen to think that putting Kotsay up higher in the lineup might increase his OPS 20 to 30 points and dropping KJ lower in the order to protect McCann and Frenchy might increase McCann and Frenchy’s OPS 20 to 30 points and that KJ’s OPS itself might increase 20 to 30 points lower in the order.

My thinking is that the OPS dropoff caused by flip flopping Kotsay and KJ would be offset by a combined OPS increase from KJ, Kotsay, McCann, and Frenchy of 60-120 OPS points.

I dunno. Just thinking out loud and putting that out there for people to think about. Nothing is static about their numbers. Their stats are influenced so much be the dynamics of where and when they hit and how that causes changes in how they are pitched.

One reason why I called KJ a poor man’s Chase Utley is the same reason Jimmy Key was once called a poor man’s Greg Maddux.  Key, like KJ now, was darn good.  But Key was never close to being as good as Maddux and I don’t think KJ will ever be as good as Utley has been the last few years.

Utley and KJ are different hitters.  KJ draws walks once every 7.5 plate appearances.  Utley draws a walk once every 10 or 11 plate appearances.  Utley is more of a pure hitter.  Utley can match KJ in OBP because he is a great hitter who can hit for a high average.  Utley’s AVG makes up in OBP what he gives up in walks to KJ.  Being a good hitter and having a higher AVG also enables Utley to gain 30 to 50 points on Kelly in SLG just based on base hits alone.  When you account for the extra base hits added, his SLG will always be 50-70 points higher than KJ.  That’s why I think KJ will always be a poor man’s Utley much the same way Jimmy Key was a poor man’s Greg Maddux.

It could also be argued that KJ is a rich man’s version of Mark Bellhorn.  They both have similar approaches at the plate.  They both take lots of pitches and take walks and strike out alot as a result and drive balls for extra base hits.  KJ is a better hitter than Bellhorn however because he does not strike out even close to the rate Bellhorn whiffed.  That is why Bellhorn at his best was nothing more than a poor man’s KJ.  If you look at Bellhorn’s 2002 season with the Cubs and his 2004 season with the Red Sox, you can see alot of KJ in his numbers.

I just think when it is said and done, KJ will end up being a slightly better version of Todd Walker.  There’s no shame in that.  Look at how much trade demand there was for KJ.  Look at how Billy Beane and Theo Epstein both obtained Walker and Bellhorn.  The same reasons those two wanted Walker and Bellhorn are the same reasons KJ was the most sought after Brave this past offseason.  KJ is a rich man’s Todd Walker, a very rich man’s Mark Bellhorn, and a poor man’s Chase Utley.  There is no shame in that.

McCann should continue to bat 5th against righties instead of Frenchy. For his career against righties, Frenchy has a .264 AVG with a .300 OBP and a .431 SLG. For his career against righties, McCann has a .303 AVG with a .360 OBP and a .504 SLG. It’s clear McCann should bat 5th against righties and that Frenchy should bat 5th against lefties.

Man Up Pythagoras

April 14, 2008 by williamwallace

The Braves are on pacee to score 905 runs and Tex has done little, KJ is not yet walking and Diaz has not yet started hitting the way Diaz can. Scary how many runs they are gonna score.

The Braves are still on pace to only give up 700 runs. Still on pace for a 200 run differential. That would make them a 100+ win team over the course of 162.

They are 5-7 and have 6 one run losses. However, I challenge you to find a team in the history of baseball that had a 200 run differential and did not win 90+ games.

Pythagoras needs to man the hell up already though. His bride Lady Luck has been whipping his behind for 2+ seasons.

Analysis of Chuck James

April 14, 2008 by williamwallace

This post is in response to many of the criticisms I hear about left handed pitcher Chuck James of the Atlanta Braves.

Chuck James has worked pretty hard on other pitches in the past and has even tried to incorporate them into games early last season. I think he scrapped them because they just didn’t work effectively enough.

Chuck has very flawed mechanics. The only pitch I can really see him effectively developing with his mechanics is a cutter. Any breaking pitch he develops would likely just hang in perpetuity because he doesn’t follow through enough.

It could be argued that he should change his mechanics. His current mechanics leave him too limited in stuff he can develop and incorporate. They also render him a blown out shoulder or elbow waiting to happen.

Changing mechanics however runs the risk of changing the the quality of the two pitches he does have. His flawed mechanics make that fastball and changeup seem alot more special than they are because of the movement on the pitches caused by the flaws and because hitters are not used to eyeballing such flawed mechanics and can have a harder time reading what is being tossed out of those flawed mechanics.

If he abandons his current mechanics, he might end up losing what he does have for the sake of gaining an extra pitch or two that are not special enough to overcome the loss of the 2 bread and butter pitches that made him a big leaguer (and a pretty decent major league pitcher at that).

Chuck is very young and inexperienced as well. People take him to task for not knowing when he is injured as opposed to being just hurt. He’s never been injured before due to throwing, so how the hell would he know how serious his injuries are? He sees Hudson and Smoltz battling through pain and wants to be like them. So he tried last year to imitate them and be tough because his team needed him to make no excuses if he wasn’t injured. Unfortunately, he was too young and inexperienced to understand he was dealing with an injury and not just pain he had to fight through like the tough hombres called Hudson and Smoltz.

Because Smoltz has been through every conceivable injury and pain known, Smoltz is someone who is better able to diagnose what is going on with his arm than the doctors themselves are. Chuck however does not have that experience. It’s really no different than young NASCAR drivers who often drive their crew chiefs crazy because their inexperience doesn’t allow them to understand what is going wrong with the car as they drive in circles for 500 miles. While the crew chief is begging the driver to feed him information so he can fix the problem during the next pit stop, all he gets is a stupid young driver who doesn’t understand how to diagnose or communicate what is going wrong with the engine, tires and whatever. Older John Smoltz drivers like a Mark Martin, however, are able to diagnose it and communicate to the crew chief what needs to be changed so that the next few pit stops can be ultra effective.

Chuck’s inexperience also explains why he has not developed other pitches, worked harder to understand hitters or to fix his mechanics. He’s never really faced adversity as a pitcher. He dominated on the amateur level and in the minors. He has even done pretty darn well in the majors. That kind of success makes young pitchers very reluctant to change what they do. It’s kinda the logic of dancing and going home with the girl you brought to the dance instead of dumping her to try and pick up a new girl and risk ending up with no girls to lay down in bed with that night.

Chuck did face some real adversity last year for the first time in his life as a baseball player. He had injuries and also shaky performance. To his credit, he seems to have been humbled by it and has been honest about how he failed to meet expectations. From his quotes, he really seems to want to figure it out. Due to inexperience and not being the brightest dude and his flawed mechanics, he might never be able to completely figure it out in time before his shoulder eventually falls apart due to his flawed mechanics.

But I think people just need to enjoy Chuck while they can and appreciate that Chuck is a pretty darn good major league pitcher despite his flaws.

Is Frenchy Clutch?

April 13, 2008 by williamwallace

Too many people like to say that Frenchy has lots of RBIs solely because he gets lots of opportunities. They conveniently or ignorantly overlook the fact that he has a much better than average AVG, OBP, SLG, & OPS w/RISP. That’s what causes the RBIs in addition to the opportunity. You have to execute when given the chance. Frenchy executes w/RISP.

Frenchy has 13 homers, 55 RBIs in 89 career games against the Mets and Phils. Pretty darn good.

33 homers, 139 RBIs in 180 career games against the NL East

.314 .373 .505 .878 for his career with 2 outs, RISP

.293 .331 .516 .847 for his career in late and close

.311 .354 .474 .828 in tie games

.333 .381 .534 .915 for his career w/RISP

The Truth About Andruw Jones

April 13, 2008 by williamwallace

MYTH: Andruw had a bad second half in 2006

TRUTH: Andruw had a .957 OPS in the second half of 2006. That was the second highest OPS for any half of a season he has ever had in his career. The .959 OPS in 2000 was the only one higher. July 2006: .923 OPS; August 2006: .921 OPS; Sept/Oct 2006: .942 OPS

MYTH: Andruw has been in a season and a half long slump

TRUTH: Considering that he had a .957 OPS in the second half of 2006, the slump has only been a season long

Yahoo NL Standings

April 12, 2008 by williamwallace
National League
East W L Pct GB Home Road East Cent West Streak L10
Florida Marlins 7 3 .700 3-3 4-0 4-2 3-1 0-0 Won 4 7-3
New York Mets 5 5 .500 2.0 3-2 2-3 4-4 1-1 0-0 Lost 1 5-5
Philadelphia Phillies 5 6 .455 2.5 2-2 3-4 2-4 3-2 0-0 Won 1 5-5
Atlanta Braves 5 6 .455 2.5 3-2 2-4 4-1 1-2 0-3 Won 2 5-5
Washington Nationals 3 9 .250 5.0 1-5 2-4 3-6 0-3 0-0 Lost 9 1-9
Central W L Pct GB Home Road East Cent West Streak L10
St. Louis Cardinals 8 3 .727 5-1 3-2 3-0 2-1 3-2 Won 1 8-2
Milwaukee Brewers 7 4 .636 1.0 4-2 3-2 1-1 3-3 3-0 Won 1 6-4
Chicago Cubs 6 4 .600 1.5 3-3 3-1 0-1 6-3 0-0 Lost 1 6-4
Cincinnati Reds 6 5 .545 2.0 4-3 2-2 2-2 2-2 2-1 Lost 1 6-4
Pittsburgh Pirates 4 6 .400 3.5 1-3 3-3 3-3 1-3 0-0 Won 1 4-6
Houston Astros 3 8 .273 5.0 1-3 2-5 0-1 2-4 1-3 Lost 3 3-7
West W L Pct GB Home Road East Cent West Streak L10
Arizona Diamondbacks 9 2 .818 5-0 4-2 0-0 1-2 8-0 Won 8 8-2
San Diego Padres 6 5 .545 3.0 4-3 2-2 0-0 3-1 3-4 Won 1 5-5
Los Angeles Dodgers 4 6 .400 4.5 2-2 2-4 0-0 0-0 4-6 Lost 4 4-6
San Francisco Giants 4 7 .364 5.0 3-2 1-5 0-0 1-4 3-3 Lost 1 4-6
Colorado Rockies 4 7 .364 5.0 3-3 1-4 3-0 1-2 0-5 Lost 2 3-7
x-Clinched Playoff Spot; y-Division Champ

Last updated Saturday, Apr 12, 2008 6:48 pm EDT

2 Homers, 7 RBIs for Frenchy

April 12, 2008 by williamwallace
Atlanta 10, Washington 2
PreviewBox Score – Recap

(5-6)
Final 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Atlanta 4 0 0 2 1 3 0 0 0 10 13 1
Washington 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 7 0

(3-9)
Box Score Play by Play
Scoring Summary
Top 1st: Atlanta
- M. Teixeira singled to right, K. Johnson scored, C. Jones to second
- J. Francoeur homered to deep left, C. Jones and M. Teixeira scored
Top 4th: Atlanta
- J. Francoeur singled to left, C. Jones and Y. Escobar scored, M. Teixeira to third, J. Francoeur to second advancing on throw
Bot 4th: Washington
- W. Harris tripled to deep center, F. Lopez scored
Top 5th: Atlanta
- J. Smoltz grounded out to third, M. Diaz scored
Top 6th: Atlanta
- J. Francoeur homered to deep left, Y. Escobar scored
- B. McCann homered to deep right
Bot 7th: Washington
- R. Zimmerman hit sacrifice fly to center, W. Harris scored
Atlanta
AB R H RBI BB K LOB Season Avg
K. Johnson 2b 5 1 2 0 0 1 0 .294
Y. Escobar ss 5 2 1 0 0 0 1 .318
C. Jones 3b 1 2 1 0 2 0 0 .386
M. Prado 3b 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 .250
M. Teixeira 1b 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 .186
J. Francoeur rf 5 2 3 7 0 0 0 .298
B. McCann c 4 1 3 1 0 1 2 .351
G. Blanco cf 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 .250
M. Diaz lf 5 1 2 0 0 2 2 .267
M. Kotsay cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 .250
W. Ohman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
J. Bennett p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
B. Boyer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
R. Gotay ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 .286
M. Acosta p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
J. Smoltz p 3 0 0 1 0 1 3 .000
C. Miller ph-c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Totals 39 10 13 10 5 8 13
Batting
2B – K Johnson (1, J Lannan); B McCann (4, J Lannan); M Diaz (1, J Bergmann).
HR – J Francoeur 2 (3, 1st inning off J Lannan 2 on, 1 Out, 6th inning off J Bergmann 1 on, 2 Out), B Mccann (3, 6th inning off J Bergmann 0 on, 2 Out).
RBI – M Teixeira (6), J Francoeur 7 (11), J Smoltz (1), B McCann (8).
2-out RBI – J Francoeur 4, B McCann.
Runners left in scoring position, 2 out – M Kotsay 1, B McCann 2.
GIDP – J Smoltz.
Team LOB – 7.
Fielding
E – J Smoltz (1, throw).
Washington
AB R H RBI BB K LOB Season Avg
C. Guzman ss 5 0 3 0 0 1 0 .321
L. Milledge cf 4 0 0 0 1 1 1 .265
R. Zimmerman 3b 3 0 2 1 1 0 2 .220
N. Johnson 1b 2 0 0 0 1 0 3 .270
J. Hanrahan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
J. Estrada ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 .333
J. Colome p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
A. Kearns rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 5 .250
P. Lo Duca c 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 .212
F. Lopez 2b 4 1 0 0 0 0 2 .207
W. Harris lf 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 .111
J. Lannan p 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 .000
R. Mackowiak ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000
J. Bergmann p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
A. Boone 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 .100
Totals 32 2 7 2 6 6 18
Batting
2B – R Zimmerman (3, J Smoltz).
3B – W Harris (1, J Smoltz).
SF – R Zimmerman.
RBI – W Harris (1), R Zimmerman (4).
2-out RBI – W Harris.
Runners left in scoring position, 2 out – N Johnson 2, R Mackowiak 1, A Kearns 4.
Team LOB – 10.
Base Running
SB – F Lopez (2, 2nd base off J Smoltz/B McCann).
Fielding
DP – 1 (C Guzman-F Lopez-N Johnson).
Atlanta
IP H R ER BB K HR Season ERA
J. Smoltz 6.0 5 1 1 2 5 0 0.82
W. Ohman 0.1 1 1 1 2 0 0 2.25
J. Bennett 0.2 0 0 0 1 0 0 3.72
B. Boyer 1.0 0 0 0 1 1 0 6.75
M. Acosta 1.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 7.20
Washington
IP H R ER BB K HR Season ERA
J. Lannan 4.0 9 6 6 4 2 1 6.75
J. Bergmann 2.0 4 4 4 0 2 2 11.68
J. Hanrahan 1.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7.50
J. Colome 2.0 0 0 0 1 3 0 1.29
WP – J Smoltz.
Pitches-strikes – J Smoltz 90-59; W Ohman 19-7; J Bennett 12-6; B Boyer 16-8; J Lannan 85-48; J Bergmann 29-24; J Hanrahan 10-7; J Colome 26-15.
Ground balls-fly balls – J Smoltz 8-5; W Ohman 0-1; J Bennett 1-1; B Boyer 2-0; J Lannan 7-3; J Bergmann 1-3; J Hanrahan 1-1; J Colome 0-3.
Batters faced – J Smoltz 25; W Ohman 4; J Bennett 3; B Boyer 4; J Lannan 24; J Bergmann 10; J Hanrahan 3; J Colome 7.
Game Details
Umpires: HP–Marvin Hudson. 1B–Randy Marsh. 2B–Brian Knight. 3B–Hunter Wendelstedt. (Plus rain delay totaling 91 minutes in the 1st).
Weather: 76 degrees, overcast.
Wind: 4 mph, out to left.
Game Notes
THE START OF THE GAME IS BEING DELAYED DUE TO RAIN.