Back in late April JP did a little roster shufflin', DFA-ing Chiefs starter Josh Banks (50th overall pick in the 2003 draft) to make room on the 40-man for minor league invitee Shawn Camp. There was little outcry at the time; Banks had scuffled through 2 tours at AAA in 2006 and 2007, showing little beyond excellent control and a propensity for surrendering bushelfuls of home runs. Banks didn't help his cause by getting off to a craptacular start this year and had fallen down on the starting depth chart behind the likes of veteran roster fillers John Parrish and Kane Davis.
Sharing a first name and skill set with another recently departed starter I'd rather not name, there wasn't the remotest chance he'd crack our rotation at any point this year and the DFA gave him an opportunity for a fresh start. The Padres picked him up. Score! What pitcher wouldn't want to ply his trade in the friendly confines of PETCO? Camp, meanwhile, has been a productive member of the Jays bullpen and will probably stick after guys like Brian Wolfe and Jeremy Accardo come off the DL. Seemed like a win-win for all parties. So far so good?
When you're off to a horrible start and temporarily unemployed, why not tinker with your game a bit? That's what Banks did.
"I just kind of modified my delivery on my own," he said. "That was one of the things I had thought about doing with Toronto before I came over."
Easy shmeasy, right? Who needs a pitching coach? The result? 17 scoreless innings and counting for the Pads, including a complete game victory over the Giants in his last outing. Teammates are over the moon for the guy. A sampling of their comments:
"He's got a little of Roy Halladay, the way he turns," [Jake] Peavy said.
"He's got like 13 pitches and throws strikes with all of them," said Padres reliever Heath Bell.
"He's a crafty righty," [manager Bud] Black said.
One man's garbage is another man's treasure, I suppose. Jean Machi must be praying he gets DFA'd too.
The ESPN supercomputer says the Jays have a 46% chance of victory as the enigmatic AJ Burnett takes on the less mystical Jon Garland. Garland hasn't pitched particularly well against the Jays through his career, but always seems to end up winning (10-2 with a 4.17 ERA in 16 career appearances).
A win today putting the Jays at 4-2 in California through this trip would leave me ecstatic. The Jays really had no business winning last night's game (which they lost), but Gibby really muffed it badly in extras.
Walking the bases loaded with less than 2 outs in a tie road game in extras is like betting heavily on a pair of twos. If you're curious, here's a numbers heavy piece from Tom Tango at The Hardball Times on when you should and shouldn't intentionally walk the sacs full. Short version: it's like the bunt; traditional baseball wisdom goes that you should set up the inning-ending double play with runners on second and third and one out, but cold hard mathematical probability says you've just increased your opponent's probability of scoring by doing so. When one run wins it, that's just not smart. And never, under any circumstance, should you intentionally walk a hitter as bad as Jeff Mathis.
-- Johnny Was
Sunday, 1 June 2008
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3 comments:
as for banks, well, that fucking sucks.
but do you really think camp is going to stick around? i figured he's a goner when accardo and WOOF come back...although woof and camp are the same to me, both don't really belong. i'd rather have league.
since you keep tabs on the boys down on the farm, and i'm one lazy mother fucker, want to let me know how brandon is doing down in 'cuse?
I think Benitez gets moved at the deadline (he's just being showcased for a trade), Wolfe goes to AAA when he's healthy, and Accardo obviously comes up when he's healthy. Somebody will inevitably get hurt, too.
Wolfe can't be exposed to lefties, Camp can.
League has been pretty solid down on the farm:
http://syracuse.chiefs.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.jsp?n=Brandon%20League&pos=P&sid=t552&t=p_pbp&pid=434181
Good K rate, crazy number of groundouts. In the first half of May he had three 3 IP+ outings and it looked like they were stretching him out to start (coolness), but it looks like that plan's been abandoned.
If he has the stamina, I'm all for using him as a SP next year. There's no glaring need for him in the pen, so why not let him compete for the 5th starter spot?
thanks man.
and i think league in the rotation is a good idea, especially considering AJ is all but a goner after this year. and we'll have janssen back in teh fold, too.
you think league comes back here sometime this season?
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