posted on Tuesday, July 01, 2008 3:02 AM by Jim

Swisher has the Captain in him

At the end of May, we were asking the question, "When do we start worrying about Nick Swisher?"

Well, after watching Swisher close out his June with two homers, including a grand slam, in the White Sox's 9-7 victory over the Cleveland Indians Monday night, we have our answer:

Forget about it.



Swisher finished this past month with a line of .315/.402/.630, and nearly doubled his RBI (23) and homer (7) totals in June alone.  Basically this confirms our most optimistic set of hopes, that:

No. 1:  This kind of thing happens to him once in a while.  In the prior post, I had mentioned his two-month slump of 2006.  He's rebounded better this time around, posting a 1.000-plus OPS one month after instead of two.

No. 2:  He had to have one of the worst runs of luck imaginable.  He's maintaining a career-best line drive rate, but only lately has his batting average on balls in play began to rise at a commensurate level.

Swisher has also reminded Sox fans what it looks like to have a first baseman with some semblance of range.  He showed creativity Monday night, diving and knocking down a ball near the coaching box, then recovering in time to flip the ball to Gavin Floyd.  Paul Konerko and his one-topple range wouldn't have even touched the grounder to begin with.

Meanwhile, the other offseason outfield possibilities have all fallen back to earth to varying degrees after hot starts.  Kosuke Fukudome is the best of them, having settled comfortably at an .800 OPS over the last two months after a blazing April.  Meanwhile, Aaron Rowand finished the month with a .618 OPS and Torii Hunter has seen his OPS tumble from .878 in April to .762 in May to .672 in June.

And Ryan Sweeney?  Even Phil Rogers is calling his .293 average "soft."

It took a couple months, but Kenny Williams' biggest move of the offseason is finally shaping up to be what everybody expected, as the other candidates are shaping up to be what I had expected.  With any buyer's remorse quickly diminishing, it's safe to say the Nick Swisher Era is finally under way.

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

Going from a guy who's on fire to a guy who's not playing at all, Joe Cowley says Juan Uribe could be on the trading block:

But Williams is running out of time to finalize a deal for Uribe. Paul Konerko is still on the 15-day disabled list, and all indications from Williams are he wants to keep DeWayne Wise on the roster. By the time Konerko is ready to return, the hope is moving Uribe would clear the roster spot.

While it's unlikely that Uribe would bring much back in a trade, the Sox would rather not just cut him.

''If Juan said he was happy to be here right now, I would be disappointed because that means he's not a gamer,'' Guillen said. ''Obviously, it's up to Kenny. We have to do what's best for the ballclub and the best for Juan.''

Let's hope they put the ballclub first, because unless there's a Brian Anderson-level personality clash kept under wraps, it's hard for me to fathom why Uribe hasn't gotten a shot to play third this year.

Joe Crede committed his 16th error in the ninth today, one inning after he triple-pumped before finally getting rid of the ball, and bringing additional meaning to Joe Clutch in the process.  The Sox are officially in the second half of the season, and his throws and his inability to hit left-handed pitching (he's now 6-for-63) are legitimate concerns.

Uribe has no significant splits, and has experience playing a good third base.  For the first time this season, he has shown the ability to play cold.  Why the Sox wouldn't use that to their advantage is beyond me.  Pablo Ozuna's the Secret Weapon and all, but they have another scrappy career minor-league utilityman with better speed in Jason Bourgeois down in Charlotte.

Dealing Uribe itself seems like a poor use of resources.  Trading him while keeping Ozuna and Dewayne Wise (whose defense is nowhere near Andersonian in center) makes no sense to me whatsoever.

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

By the way: Adam Russell hasn't pitched since June 21.  And he didn't pitch in a five-run ballgame Monday night.

Just sayin'.

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

Minor league roundup:
  • Charlotte 10, Norfolk 6
    • Talk about a balanced effort -- each Knight had one hit and one hit only.
    • Dave Cook had a walk, two RBI and two runs scored; Javier Castillo also drove in two.
    • Wes Whisler allowed five runs (four earned) over five innings for the win.
    • Derek Rodriguez struck out three over two perfect innings of relief.
  • Birmingham 4, Mobile 3
    • This is why Dewon Day is still around -- three perfect innings, four strikeouts.
    • Ricardo Nanita had two hits and an RBI.
  • Winston-Salem 11, Salem 8
    • John Shelby went 3-for-3 with a double and three RBI, two of them on sac flies.
    • Estee Harris and Salvador Sanchez each drove in two.
    • Matt Long gave up seven runs on 11 hits over 5 1/3 innings, including two homers.
  • Kannapolis 3, Lexington 2 (10 innings)
    • Santo Luis and Leroy Hunt combined for five hitless, scoreless innings of relief, with Luis striking out five over three.
    • Jim Gallagher went 2-for-5 with a double and an RBI.
    • Eduardo Escobar and Logan Johnson each drove in two.
  • Bristol 6, Pulaski 4
    • Justin Greene had two hits, two runs and stole his sixth base from the leadoff spot.
    • Jordan Kendall doubled and drove in two.
    • John Doyle picked up the win with three scoreless innings of relief, striking out four.
  • Billings 8, Great Falls 3
    • Brent Morel added three more singles, and has 12 singles in his last four games.
    • Danny Jordan and Lee Fischer each had a double and an RBI.

Comments

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 8:08 AM by Fundman
Like you, I have no idea why you dump Uribe, especially since Crede's defense is really, really slumping. He looks like he needs a rest.

Can Jim Thome just hit against the Indians this year? What are his numbers against them?

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 9:58 AM by soxfan1
Crede is slumping badly, I think his back is bothering him even though he would never admit it. If Uribe were at third, he might injure OC or Carlos going for pop-up flies!!

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 11:49 AM by chisoxt
I wonder what Crede's value will be in the free agent market? He even admitted recently that he still had back-related issues.

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 2:08 PM by bigsether
Hey fellas, I've been playing lots of poker and traveling for work lately so I'm sorry if I missed some good Sox talk over the past 10 days.

I wanted to make sure I give Gentleman Jim his due, he looked the best that I've seen him all night last night, he was very hitterish. Which makes me wonder if the sitting out for 12 or so games helps big league hitters when they get in a slump. I would like to see the Sox sit Crede down for 3-4 games just to have him gather his thoughts. He's turned into a liability at 3rd and he just flat out stinks at the dish right now. I hate to say it, but I'd rather see Pablo or............JUAN URIBE there. Wow, that sounds weird. I just see what missing a week or two did with Thome. He seems to have regained some focus and I can see what Jim was saying earlier in the year, he may be able to provide some value. Law of averages says he will hit around .280 to get him to .250ish for the year and with the Cell turning into Cleradone Park (softball field on the north side), having a left handed stick in the lineup that can hit 35 HR's this year batting 5th will be nice come playoff time.

Yes, I said it. We are better than any team in the AL Central. The D-Town Pussy Cats are playing out of their mind right now. I still don't believe in their starting pitching and I think they WAY over value guys like Rodney and Zumaya in their pen. Those guys can't get close to 100Mph anymore and with 95-96Mph fastballs and change ups they can't get over the plate, they just aren't the same guys. The Twins remind me of the Milwaukee Brewers from last year. If you have the baseball package, turn their games on and watch how many 2 out hits with runners in scoring position they get, I don't know the numbers but I would venture to guess they are batting in .400's this year which is ridiculous. I hope this doesn't sound like I'm a sore loser here, but that high 2 out runner in scoring position number is all luck. That type of thing can happen for a 30 game stretch but will fade out as the season progresses and I say the Twinkies finish around .500 and a game or two behind the D-Town Pussies for 3rd place.

On a side note, did anyone Hawk propose the "half-errors" last night? He might be the most unintentional funny guy in all of baseball.

I will say this for him, he's better than the guys that call the Red Sox, I watched them and the Rays yesterday and those guys provide no insight and counldn't be more monotone.

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 3:39 PM by MattTheRock
Wouldn't completely count out the Tigers quite yet. Yeah, they've been beating up on soft competition (stupid Rockies)... Yeah they've been just now getting hot... but look at that team on paper. The frightening thing is that they might now just be starting to play to their potential.

That's not a knock against the Sox in any way shape or form, but that's not a team that you can just write off.

With that, the Sox haven't exactly been lighting the world on fire. The offense is still questionable at best, with a lot of parts misfiring at the moment. Danks and Floyd are still the most consistent pitchers at the moment, which makes about as much sense as reaching into a toilet and pulling out a winning Powerball ticket, but whatever works. I still think the Sox are rightfully the top of the division, but it's not time to count out the Tiggers just quite yet.

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 4:05 PM by Jim Margalus
Crede will still get paid. His range is still there, and he's slugging over .500 without being able to hit lefties, so there isn't much reason to treat the odd throwing as more than a blip. He hasn't gone Knoblauch yet.

I had thought Cleveland had a run in them and Detroit was toast, because of the sheer lack of pitching. But then Rogers rebounds and Galarraga has been a godsend, so they're squarely back in it until they prove otherwise.

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 4:27 PM by Joist
Couple of things:

1. Absolutely no reason to dump Uribe instead of Pablo. None. Wise/Anderson are perfectly good pinch-runner types, and using a roster spot on a guy just because of his bunting skills is like ordering the most expensive sandwich at Subway because of the shredded lettuce.

2. bigsether, I caught that Hawk discussion about errors. I was so shocked that he proposed a change in statistics that I couldn't listen to the details. He'd better be careful - next thing you know, he'll be advocating OBP and he'll get booted out of the Crusty Old Timers' Club.

3. I wish I had posted my preseason predictions somewhere, because I was the only one (along with my brother) who didn't see what the big fuss re: the Tigers was. Their lineup is a combination of old, injury-prone, and questionably conditioned. Their pitching sucks, though I didn't see the Verlander thing coming.

I also had no idea that Cleveland would suck. On second thought, I'm glad I didn't post them.

# re: Swisher has the Captain in him

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 9:56 PM by Jim Margalus
Hawk has more than enough crusty old timer cred. He says stuff like that to appeal to the moderates.