posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 3:55 AM by Jim

A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

A.J. Pierzynski probably won't get any relief from the boos as the Sox head from Los Angeles to San Francisco to begin interleague play.  Then again, if his performance against the Angels is any indication, he thrives when he has to play the villain.

Pierzynski went 3-for-5 and scored the winning run in the finale against the Angels, and went 8-for-15 with three walks and three doubles over the four-game series.  Over the last three weeks, if you break his performance apart, he's performing markedly better against cities that generally loathe him:
  • vs. Minnesota and Los Angeles: .519/.581/741 (27 AB)
  • vs. Seattle and Toronto: .125/.222/.188 (16 AB)
Small sample size?  Probably, but I wouldn't put it past Pierzynski to channel his inner wrestler and step up his game when he has an audience to piss off.

We'll see this theory get tested over the next three games, as A.J. returns to the city to play the team that acquired him in one of the most lopsided trades in baseball history.  The Giants traded for the privilege of adding Pierzynski to the clubhouse mix, and it only cost them Joe Nathan, Francisco Liriano and Boof Bonser.  And if you factor in opportunity cost, the Twins also were able to find regular playing time for Joe Mauer.

Pierzynski says the reports of his belligerence are greatly exaggerated:

"Just a lot of the stories that came out weren't true, more than anything," Pierzynski said. "The story where I supposedly kicked the trainer [Stan Conte] in the [groin], I think if I would have done that in Scottsdale Stadium in front of 15,000 people, it would have come out before I was gone. The story about me playing cards and not going over the hitters is not true.

"I told them I'd be there in two minutes, and I came over there two minutes later. The story about me telling hitters what [pitches] were coming, anyone who knows me or sees me at all knows I'm not ever going to do that. I'm the last [person] to ever do that."

While it will be the first game A.J. has played against the team that dumped him during the regular season, it won't be the first time he's gotten digs in at them.  Remember spring training of 2005:

A.J. Pierzynski hasn't let 2004 go just yet. Before the Giants beat the White Sox 6-5 on Monday, Pierzynski promised $100 to any Chicago teammate who homered off Brett Tomko. Joe Borchard scored a C-note in the second inning.

Pierzynski's biggest rivals in the clubhouse -- Tomko and Matt Herges -- are no longer with the Giants, but he still has plenty of people he'll want to show up.  He certainly has momentum on his side to help him achieve that end.

Entering tonight's game, Pierzynski leads the Sox in batting average (.315) and doubles (14), and he's riding an eight-game hitting streak.  He's second in on-base percentage (.373) and extra-base hits (17).

But he doesn't just look good in comparison to his teammates, most of whom are slumping, struggling and scuffling.  He's also on pace for some personal bests:
  • Walks: He has 10 walks and 10 strikeouts, and on pace for 40 of each.  He's never walked more than 25 times in a season.
  • Doubles:  He's on pace for 56, which would be a White Sox record.  More realistically, his personal best is 35, and he's topped out at 24 with the Sox.
  • OBP:  His career best is .365 in 2003, the only time he's topped .335 as a full-time player.
Considering how streaky he's been this season, I wouldn't bet on him legitimately threatening any of those quarter-season projections -- unless the Nintendo DS has dramatically improved his strike zone judgment.

Still, even the most pessimistic of prognosticators can't find many reasons to complain about Pierzynski's start -- especially since he set or came close to setting career lows in most offensive statistical categories last year.  That he's had a hotter seven weeks than at any other point last season makes me feel a little better about the extension he signed last September.  I still feel the Sox jumped the gun and then some, but his efforts of trying to persuade me otherwise are greatly appreciated.

******************

Minor league roundup:
  • Charlotte 6, Syracuse 5
    • Lance Broadway gave up baserunners galore -- nine hits, four walks and a homer over six innings.  One run was unearned, and he struck out three.
    • Adam Russell pitched one scoreless inning, and Jason Childers pitched two for the save.
    • Thomas Collaro went 2-for-3 with two homers and three RBI; he has four homers in five games with Charlotte.
    • Dewayne Wise went 4-for-4, and Brad Eldred went deep.
  • Jacksonville 6, Birmingham 2
    • Ricardo Nanita went 2-for-3 with an RBI.
    • Clayton Richard gave up five runs on nine hits and two walks over five innings.
    • Derek Rodriguez and Jon Link pitched three scoreless innings combined.
  • Winston-Salem 4, Lynchburg 3 (10 innings)
    • John Ely gave up three runs over five innings on four hits and four walks.  He did strike out seven.
    • Lee Cruz went 3-for-4, and Javier Colina and Paulo Orlando had two hits apiece.
    • Steven Spurgeon pitched three scoreless innings in relief, and Ryan Rote picked up the win with two shutout innings.
  • Kannapolis vs. Delmarva PPD

Comments

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 8:31 AM by ballsdeep
I can honestly say the only reason I never liked this guy was because he was on the Twins, and I don't like any of them regardless of who is on their roster or what year it is.

A lot of this was very overblown, and frankly, you have to wonder what was true anymore because the guy hasn't even been whispered to have been a problem here at any point since he arrived.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 10:29 AM by striker
Brett Tomko and Matt Herges suck, so of course they are going to blame someone else.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 10:29 AM by striker
Anyone else liking this new lineup? Now if Ocab can contribute something then we'll be in good shape, well maybe just better shape.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 10:34 AM by biganutz
All I remember was San Francisco pitchers crying abouy A.J. If the fans out there boo him they're retarded. But then again those are the same fans that cheered for a player who's body and head were getting bigger and bigger as the years went bye ( Bonds ). Everyone in America believes Bonds was a steroids addict, I bet if you ask a Giants fan they'll deny the subject.

But anyways, more communication on the field, less errors, and more clutch hitting; The white sox should win this series. White Sox 7, Giants 1. Pick to click: A.J.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 1:09 PM by ballsdeep
SF general manager Brian Sabean truly believes his team is in it as long as there are games to play.

This team is horrible offensively and if they manage to hit Sox pitching we're in trouble.

Looking forward to seeing Captain Fire and Passion in CF for the Giants as well.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 1:33 PM by Fundman
Two very quick thoughts:

First, Jim, do you know where the Sox rank defensively so far this year? It strikes me as damn near miraculous that with horrible hitting and lousy defense they are .500.......oh wait PITCHING.

Second, did anyone see this little number that was done up by FJM on Sabean? Classic:

http://www.firejoemorgan.com/2008/04/movie-trailer-guy-voice-from-mind-that.html

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 4:15 PM by Orestes
I'm looking for Swish to get back on track here and put a few into the bay.

SF is close to Q's college stompin' grounds....alot of recent talent has come out of that campus.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 4:18 PM by Jim Margalus
Well, the Giants fans are right to not like Pierzynski, in that he saved his worst performance for SF, and then bounced back for the Sox the following year. But he seemed to receive the benefit of the doubt zero percent of the time.

The Sox are 12th in the AL in defensive efficiency and runners reaching on error.

# re: A.J. heads into S.F. with big MO

Friday, May 16, 2008 5:52 PM by soxfan1
I thought AJ in 2005 had the best single-season catching performance for the Sox in many years. I'm talking about the whole package: handling pitchers, passed balls, throwing & over all heads up play. I loved Carlton Fisk, of course, but AJ in '05 was fantastic. He's slipped a bit on his throwing, but overall I'd still rank him in the top third of AL catchers. SF is a strange place!! People are worried about more global issues there than baseball. A bum came up to me once in downtown SF and asked for a quarter to help buy a McDonald's franchise. I gave it to him.