posted on Thursday, June 12, 2008 1:33 AM by Jim

Roadhouse blues

For the first two months of the season, the White Sox had been one of the few teams in baseball showing no ill effects of the massive home-road split that has plagued the league as a whole. 

After losing their fifth consecutive road game on the heels of winning eight consecutive home games, that's not the case anymore.  Two losses to the Tigers have dropped the Sox to 17-19 away from U.S. Cellular Field.  The Angels and the Rangers are the only two teams at or above .500 on the road in the American League now.

As Jayson Stark suggests, the Sox may have picked the wrong year to stop using amphetamines.

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Alexei Ramirez,
like Carlos Quentin, seems to make his own adjustments, says Greg Walker:

"But the thing I've noticed about him since spring training is that he's very smart. He knows how to make adjustments. The first few weeks of spring training he was trying to impress us and trying to do too much. His swing was timing-based and very long. But you still could see the physical ability was there."

The Sox saw Ramirez start to tinker with his leg kick and his stride, and the improvement was noticeable toward the end of spring training. He convinced the Sox's staff to keep him on the Opening Day roster even though this is his first year playing organized baseball in the U.S. after leaving Cuba.

The phrase "The Sox saw Ramirez..." indicates that Ramirez changed his approach without any outside help.  But then again, Nick Swisher and Joe Crede went out of their way to praise Walker for his help, so it's pretty hard to tell whether Walker is one of the more humble coaches around, or if Sox hitters are trying to cover up for him because he's like the cool uncle who lets them have a beer when their parents aren't around.

I'd guess the former, but the latter is fun to think about.

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More evidence that the Sox
can go with a six-man bullpen: Esteban Loaiza couldn't get out of the 70s.

If that's the junk he's throwing, they may as well call up Charlie Haeger.  In his debut, his knuckler was clocked at 75 -- roughly three to four miles per hour slower than Loaiza's "fastball."

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Minor league roundup:
  • Charlotte 11, Norfolk 2
    • Brad Eldred and Jason Bourgeois each had three hits, including a homer apiece.
    • Josh Fields hit a pair of doubles; Jerry Owens had two singles and his 16th steal.
    • Lance Broadway enjoyed his finest start in a month, allowing two runs on four hits and two walks over seven innings, striking out eight.
    • Ryan Bukvich took the loss for Norfolk, though he did throw six innings.
  • Birmingham 7, Carolina 2
    • Kyle McCulloch tossed seven shutout innings, scattering six hits, walking one and striking out four.
    • Victor Mercedes went 3-for-5 with a double, two RBI and two runs scored.
    • Noah Hall doubled, walked twice and drove in a pair.
  • Potomac 7, Winston-Salem 1 (Completed game from June 10)
    • Matt Long allowed five runs over four innings in relief of Anthony Carter, who pitched three scoreless innings Tuesday.
    • John Shelby, Billy Killian and Javier Colina each had two hits.
  • Potomac 4, Winston-Salem 1 (7 innings)
    • Jacob Rasner struck out six over five shutout innings, allowing only two hits and two walks.
    • Ryan Rote allowed four runs over one inning in relief.
    • Brandon Allen went 2-for-3 and provided the only run with his 11th homer.
    • Lee Cruz went 2-for-3 with a double.
  • West Virginia 7, Kannapolis 1
    • Miguel Socolovich allowed five runs (three earned) over five innings.
    • Sergio Morales had the only multi-hit game; Lyndon Estill the only extra-base hit, a double.

Comments

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 7:30 AM by Salty Dog
Looks like I picked the wrong week to stop sniffing glue.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 1:04 PM by bigsether
Last night was Thome's 26th game this year in which he was held hitless. In 2005, Crazy Carl Everett went 41 games without a hit in the entire season.

*I'm not counting games in which they JUST pinch hit.

It was really good to see Brian Anderson get a couple hits last night. I feel like I'm the only one lobbying for him to get more playing time and more at bats. He's the 4th guy in the outfield but that's because Dye can't DH. It's frustrating, but I think the White Sox have been really unfair to him and owe him another shot at everyday playing time.

I would hate to say that today's game is a must win because it's June and we are playing a team that is 9 games back, but getting swept by the Tigers does 2 very big things:

1. Kills any momentum we had going into the series.

2. Picks the Tigers up off the ground and allows them to feel like they can compete with the best in the Central. Right now we have our foots on their throat, we need to keep it there.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 3:28 PM by bigsether
My day was just ruined

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 3:28 PM by Salty Dog
Well today's game certainly sucked it hard. We must keep our winning spirit in a locker at The Cell when we go on the road.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 3:56 PM by Jim Margalus
Yup, Thome killed them today.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 4:27 PM by bigsether
26 out of 62 games in which Thome has played this year, he's gone hitless.

I'm not giving an opinion about Thome, I'm stating a fact.

And with "Yup, Thome killed them today," he didn't play so I'm assuming that is sarcasm at it's finest. We should go back to the May 9th post and talk about how Thome has solved the White Sox problem with lack of speed because he stole a base the game before.

He does it all folks, he hits the furthest home runs of all time, he gets lots of walks, he had games where he knocked in runs, he scores runs, AND he steals bases. Jim Thome for MVP. And look, one game when the Sox didn't play him, they lost so that proves he should be on their team and they should exercise his 2009 option too. See sarcasm? It's not hard.

I did take away a positive see The Bird Man have his 4th (I'll count Tampa Bay) good start in his last 5.

This is game number 8 in which the Sox have lost when their pitching staff has given up 2 or less runs.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 7:43 PM by Jim Margalus
Yeah, but they popped up a lot with Thome in the lineup yesterday, and popped up a ton without him today. Replace him with somebody slightly better, and the result is maybe an extra baserunner. There's no real point to single him out every day when there are bigger fish to fry, like the Sox's general approach to hitting, especially when there's no easy way to replace him.

It's kind of the same thing with Uribe, before he was replaced by Ramirez. He was painted as everything that's wrong with the team (not without reason), and replacing him with Ramirez still leaves the Sox offense struggling to put together good weeks of baseball.

I ended up defending Uribe more than I cared to because I don't get the rolling scapegoat phenomenon. It deemphasizes the fact that the offense as a whole isn't getting the job done.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Thursday, June 12, 2008 10:30 PM by soxexile
Picking on Thome isn't the answer any more than picking on Konerko, Uribe, or whomever. This team hasn't had a consistent offence for years. I recall Paulie joking back in '05 that the team motto was to score just barely enough runs to win. An offense built around lots of power but a low OBP will have some awsomw games, particularly at home, but it will also get shut down a fair bit as well.

# re: Roadhouse blues

Friday, June 13, 2008 10:58 AM by bigsether
I completely agree with you Jim. I think I do scapegoat Thome because he is somewhat of an easy target. I actually have more of a problem with Greg Walker and I'll explain later. I'm pretty busy with work today but wanted to respond to your response to my response about the response about Thome.