posted on Thursday, July 10, 2008 2:44 AM by Jim

Dotel slams the door; Dye inexplicably upset

Finally moving away from Pablo Ozuna, Octavio Dotel achieved a feat Tuesday night Bobby Jenks hadn't reached since Sept. 2, 2006:

He struck out the side in the ninth inning.

In a Steve Nebraska-like performance Wednesday night, Dotel only needed 10 pitches to get it done.  Dotel's record as a closer is spotty, as he only was good for 22-of-28 opportunities in Oakland in 2004, and was a key part in the A's second-half fade, as his Baseball-Reference.com page's sponsor would suggest.

But as far as we're concerned, so far, so good.

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Now, back to the spats.

I heard about Orlando Cabrera and Jermaine Dye's spat during and after the eighth inning, and I can't say I understand where Dye is coming from in this instance.

Sure, there was another situation this year in which a Cabrera steal of third might have hurt more than it helped.  On May 31 with the Sox down 2-0 with two outs, Cabrera stole third while Carlos Quentin took strike two.  Quentin ended up striking out.

In that instance, taking the chance of distracting the hitter was a risk too great to take, especially since Cabrera's run wouldn't be the one that mattered.

So maybe Cabrera's reputation preceded him a bit here in Dye's opinion, but Cabrera was justified by both the means and the end for the following reasons:

No. 1:  It was a ridiculously easy steal off Ramon Ramirez.

No. 2:  There was one out in a one-run game, and Cabrera went from needing a single to score to needing as little as ... a balk.  Hmm....

No. 3:  Had he been on second, the Royals' defense would've looked more normal with Jim Thome at the plate, and he might've grounded out instead of singling.

No. 4:  It's possible the steal rattled Ramirez to the point where he would balk in the go-ahead run.

So hats off to Cabrera for some excellent baserunning, and let's hope that this doesn't brew into something bigger.  Cabrera left the clubhouse early -- both Mark Gonzalez and Joe Cowley noted it, not just the latter -- but Dye and Ozzie Guillen seem to consider it no big deal.

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Revisiting the bullpen,
D.J. Carrasco (pictured right) -- not Ehren Wassermann or, more gratefully, Esteban Loaiza -- was the lucky winner of the bullpen spot vacated by Bobby Jenks.

Carrasco adds another former Royal to the Sox bullpen, which is scary.  His major-league numbers are thoroughly mediocre at best, and while his Triple-A numbers are solid (23 strikeouts to seven walks, 21 hits over 22+ innings), they aren't unprecedented either.

He can work multiple innings, so he's basically a third mop-up guy.  The book, as far as I've gathered from seeing him a couple times, is that he throws his fastball from a couple different arm slots and goes for grounders.

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Minor league roundup (a.k.a. Happy Super Pitching Bonanza Time):
  • Charlotte 4, Rochester 1 (Game 1, 7 innings)
    • Clayton Richard pitched six strong innings, with a solo homer providing the only run.  He allowed four hits and a walk, striking out five.
    • Josh Fields went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts in his first game back at Triple-A.
    • Fernando Cortez homered and drove in two.
  • Charlotte 4, Rochester 0 (Game 2, 7 innings)
    • Jack Egbert threw a two-hitter, striking out seven without walking a batter.  He needed only 80 pitches.
    • Josh Fields went 2-for-3 with a double, walk, run scored and strikeout.
    • Javier Castillo went 2-for-3 with an RBI; Nick Blasi drove in two.
  • Carolina 3, Birmingham 1
    • Justin Cassell allowed one run on three hits over seven innings, striking out six.  The run was a solo homer.
    • Fernando Hernandez took the loss, allowing three hits and two runs in an inning's work.
    • Robert Hudson had three hits and drove in the lone run.
  • Winston-Salem 9, Frederick 3 (11 innings)
    • Anthony Carter allowed three runs over 5 2/3 innings, with two walks and one strikeout.
    • Jacob Rasner (3 1/3 IP) and Kanekoa Teixeira (1 2/3 IP) worked five scoreless innings in relief.
    • Brandon Allen drew five walks; John Shelby doubled and drove in three.
    • C.J. Retherford went 3-for-6 with a double and an RBI.
  • Kannapolis 6, Columbus 1
    • Johnnie Lowe allowed one unearned run over five innings, allowing four hits and a walk while striking out five.
    • Hector Santiago, Eric Stephenson and Tyson Corley shut Columbus down the rest of the way.
    • Mark Fleisher went 3-for-5, homering twice and driving in five.
    • Jim Gallagher went 2-for-5 with a double and two runs scored.
  • Orem 2, Great Falls 1
    • Frank Rosario allowed two runs over five innings.
    • Drew O'Neil and Ronald Morales held Orem scoreless despite allowing six baserunners in three innings.
    • Johny Celis went 2-for-3 with a double and an RBI.
  • Bristol vs. Princeton PPD

Comments

# re: Dotel slams the door; Dye inexplicably upset

Thursday, July 10, 2008 10:45 AM by bigsether
I thought that was a little out of character for Jermaine Dye. When it first happened, I suspected Ozzie and OC as the ones getting into it. Nonetheless, I don't think it's a big deal and this contributes to to me liking Cabrera more. I love how he seems to always be in the game and even though he doesn't really care for playing on the Sox this year (that's the way it seems to me), he still wants to win really bad.

Great win last night but Javi and the Count are really making me nervous about the second half.

# re: Dotel slams the door; Dye inexplicably upset

Thursday, July 10, 2008 4:20 PM by Adrockski
As much as I'd like to see JD in the All-Star Game, I'm beginning to think he could really use the time off.

# re: Dotel slams the door; Dye inexplicably upset

Thursday, July 10, 2008 6:21 PM by Jim Margalus
You know, of Dye's 19 homers, only one of them has come with a runner on second. Hmm....