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Streamer Report: Thursday's Streaming Pitcher Options

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Ray highlights some starting pitcher options that you should consider streaming on Thursday, including Ian Kennedy and Ubaldo Jimenez.

The Streamer Report provides you with daily startng pitcher streaming selections for owners who prefer to stream starting pitchers on a daily basis. This report identifies starting pitchers who are owned in less than 50% of ESPN leagues, and who either has a decent track record vs their opponent, has pitched well of late, or has a decent matchup.

Thursday's Streamers

Ian Kennedy, Padres vs Marlins

Kennedy is available in 62% of leagues right now and faces a Marlins team that is dominant at home, but very beatable on the road. Kennedy gets the Marlins in Petco on Thursday night so he should put up a nice effort for us. He has pitched to a 3.43 ERA, 1.12 WHIP and an excellent 44-9 strikeout to walk rate in 42 innings this season.

Ubaldo Jimenez, Orioles vs Rays

Jimenez is coming off his best start as an Oriole, shutting out the Twins on three hits over 7+ innings last week. I think he continues to pitch well vs the Rays on Thursday, as he shut them out over eight innings in his lone start vs the Rays last season.

Weekly Streamer Performance

I will be providing a status of how my picks have performed over the course of the season, and below you can find how my picks fared this week. Week 6 is off to much better start than the previous two weeks. Let's see if going with two picks per day provides better results this week.

Pitcher

IP

H

ER

BB

K

W/L

ERA

WHIP

Jon Niese

7

5

0

1

6

0.00

0.86

Jose Quintana

7

1

1

3

3

1.29

0.57

Henderson Alvarez

9

6

0

0

7

W

0.00

0.67

Drew Hutchison

8

9

5

1

6

5.63

1.25

Totals

31

21

6

5

22

1.74

0.84


MLB Draft 2014: Padres middle infielder depth

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A look through the entire organization to see what kind of middle infielder depth the club has going into the 2014 MLB draft.

Once upon a time the Padres had two young middle infielders on the major league roster named Khalil Greene and Josh Barfield. Both were traded shortly after their partnership began and the Padres muddled through with mediocre veterans for years to come. Now once again the middle infield has two young players again and the situation appears to finally be stable.

Both Jedd Gyorko and Everth Cabrera are relatively young and years away from free agency. That is good because there aren't many prospects at their positions waiting in the wings. The Padres mainly have all their eggs in the basket of those two plus a little depth in Jace Peterson, who the Padres may have to move to 3B should Chase Headley leave after the 2014 season. Unlike other positions there is no long line of failures. The team has been selective with drafting these types of players over the years.

Majors

Elite: Everth Cabrera

Top: Jedd Gyorko

Promising: None

Depth: Alexi Amarista

Grade: B+. Normally having an elite player and a top one would get you an A grade, but Cabrera just barely squeaks into that status and Gyorko needs to find his way this season or else that contract extension he signed is going to look ugly. Amarista is still very young, but I don't think there is much development left. He is what he is. A utility player with a very light bat.

AAA

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: None

Depth: Ryan Jackson, Jonathan Galvez

Grade: D. Both Jackson and Galvez haven't been healthy this season and neither have much projections remaining. It's really a shame when it comes to Galvez since he was once projected to have a bright future.

AA

Elite: None

Top: Jace Peterson

Promising: Cory Spangenberg

Depth: Casey McElroy, B.J. Guinn

Grade: B+. Peterson is currently with the Padres, but began the year with the Missions. He's one of the best position player prospects in the organization and the only one of the top prospects that plays up the middle. Spangenberg has lost his luster since being a 1st round pick. There's talk that his ceiling is only as a utility player now. McElroy was injured last year, but he's a good organizational guy. Same goes for Guinn who has less bat, but plays SS.

A+

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: None

Depth: Diego Goris.

Grade: F. Goris has bounced around a bit after being with the Pirates as a teen. At 23 and in High A ball his clock is ticking.

A

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Josh VanMeter

Depth: Fernando Perez, Chase Jensen

Grade: C. VanMeter gets some mixed grades. Some have liked him enough to put him in the Padres' top 20 prospects and others don't believe in his bat. His defense is supposed to be quite good. Fernando Perez played 3B last year and had to play 1B some when Franchy Cordero was on this team at SS and VanMeter was displaced to 2B. With Cordero going back to instructs, Perez is now a middle INF at 2B. His bat is very hot this season so far. 2013 22nd round pick Chase Jensen didn't start the season with Lake Elsinore but has now played in a handful of games and his bat looks good

Others

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Franchy Cordero

Depth: Ruddy Giron

Grade: C+. Cordero was getting same rave reviews this offseason, but double digit errors at SS and a poor hitting display at Fort Wayne caused the Padres to reset some expectations for the season. For many this would be a major setback, but Cordero is just 19 and has time to learn some tough lessons. How he bounces back later this season will be key. Ruddy Giron was a bonus baby last year, signed for $600,000.

05/07 Padres Preview: Game 35 vs. Royals

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Padres look to break past Shields and give Cashner some run support in this afternoon's Royals sendoff.

For the first time in eight tries all-time at Petco Park, the Royals were able to edge out our Padres, evening up the series and setting up the getaway-day rubber game for this afternoon. The two teams close out the three-game interleague series in San Diego, anchored by a very intriguing pitching matchup.

On one side will be Andrew Cashner - Padres ace and one of the more dominating pitchers in the league. The righty will take the mound for his eighth start of the year and try to build on an already impressive 2014. After four lights-out performances to start his season, including most notably a one-hit complete-game shutout against a tough Tigers team, Cashner regressed slightly, giving up four runs in six innings in back-to-back starts (both losses). But he looked great again his last time out, limiting Arizona to two runs in six innings.

Cashner has yet to throw fewer than six innings in a start this season, and San Diego hopes that trend will continue today as the bullpen tries to get some rest following consecutive extra-inning games. And hopefully a long outing outing from Cashner can be rewarded with some run support from a still-struggling (though seemingly improving) Padres offense. They haven't been able to provide a single run of support for their no. 1 pitcher in four of his seven starts this season, including each of his last two. Today will be his first career appearance against Kansas City.

Going for the Royals will be James Shields, who has been brilliant on the road this season, earning each of his three wins on the year away from home. Going even further back, Shields is on par with Adam Wainwright and C.J. Wilson for most road victories since the beginning of 2013. Over his last 17 starts as a visiting pitcher Shields is 12-1 with a 1.82 ERA.

Today he looks to keep up his road dominance against the league's worst-hitting team in San Diego. The Padres' abysmal batting average this year was made even worse over this stretch of 2-5 baseball they're on, during which they've been hitting an embarrassing .181 against opponents.

Take an extended lunch break today to enjoy some day baseball and see how the series plays out at 12:40 PDT.

MLB Scores: Miami Marlins 1, New York Mets 0

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The Miami Marlins defeated the New York Mets 1-0 on Wednesday afternoon. Miami went 8-1 on the nine game homestand.

A Marcell Ozuna ninth inning sacrifice fly sent the Marlins with a 1-0 win and a three game sweep of the division rival New York Mets on Wednesday afternoon. Miami finished the nine game homestand 8-1, with the lone loss coming in extra innings to the Dodgers on Saturday night.

Giancarlo Stanton singled to open the bottom of the ninth, and Casey McGehee walked before Ozuna took Kyle Farnsworth fastball to center field, allowing Stanton to score.

Tom Koehler was dominant against the Mets' lineup and turned in arguably his best performance of the young season. He retired 18 Mets methodically heading into the seventh inning, and had all of his pitches working.

David Wright and Lucas Duda were the only Mets to earn a hit against Koehler, who in eight innings walked one and struck out five. Koehler's ability to get ahead early kept his pitch count reasonable as the game progressed.

Zack Wheeler yielded only two hits to Miami's lineup, but walked five despite striking out seven Marlins. Stanton grounded into a double play with two on and nobody out in the sixth, ending a potential rally.

Closer Steve Cishek pitched a rather uneventful ninth inning for the Marlins. The Marlins have won via a walkoff hit or sacrifice in three of their last four contests.

Miami begins a four game series with the Padres beginning tomorrow night.


Source: FanGraphs

Attendance: 18,010

Hero of The Game: Tom Koehler (.496 WPA)

Goat of The Game: Garrett Jones (-0.125 WPA)

Play of The Game: Marcell Ozuna's ninth inning sacrifice fly led to a Marlins walkoff victory. (0.186 WPA)

Reds at Red Sox, Game 2: Preview/Predictions Thread

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Here's a summary about tonight's game: summary.

If you can remove yourself from the disappointing finish to last night's game between the Cincinnati Reds and Boston Red Sox, there's actually a decent bit to be happy about.  Homer Bailey struggled early, but he still limited a team that scored 57 more runs than any other in baseball last year to just 3 in 6 innings; the Reds rallied late, on the road, against an elite reliever in Junichi Tazawa; both Brandon Phillips and Zack Cozart continued their recent strings of hot-hitting; and Tucker Barnhart looked plenty capable of controlling the rigors of being a Major League catcher.

Hell, Skip Schumaker even looked pretty good.

A loss is still a loss, however, and the Reds will take the field behind Mike Leake tonight in an effort to salvage a series split, and since the good guys have another off-day scheduled for tomorrow, this will be your last chance to watch the Reds play for longer than a Hideo Nomo windup.  Leake has gone at least 7 innings in each of his last three starts, the most recent of which was an 8 inning, 2 run performance in a loss against the Milwaukee Brewers five days ago.  More of that would be nice, Michael.

The Red Sox will counter with Jake Peavy, who has managed a 2.87 ERA through his first six starts despite a WHIP of 1.35, which suggests the Split-Squad Reds may have a puncher's chance against the former NL Cy Young Award winner.  Peavy is 6-0 with a 2.14 ERA in 10 career starts against the Reds (mostly from his time with the San Diego Padres years ago), but aside from Brandon Phillips, nobody in tonight's lineup has ever really faced him enough for it to matter (except for NERTS, who nipped a Peavy pitch for a dinger once upon a time).

I hate clam chowder.

Go Reds.

Bullpen Log

Reliever5/25/35/45/55/65 day totals
Nick Christiani




0.0 IP, 0 pitches
Logan Ondrusek1.0, 10p


1.0, 26p2.0 IP, 36 pitches
Sam LeCure
1.0, 5p1.0, 17p
1.2, 32p3.2 IP, 54 pitches
J.J. Hoover



1.1, 18p1.1 IP, 18 pitches
Jonathan Broxton

1.0, 13p

1.0 IP, 13 pitches
Manny Parra

1.0, 13p
1.0, 9p2.0 IP, 22 pitches
Curtis Partch



0.0 IP, 0 pitches
Sean Marshall




0.0 IP, 0 pitches


T-Rex throws out first pitch at Padres game

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No, you're not on drugs (probably)

While you were out living your normal life, working your normal job, a baby Tyrannosaurus Rex threw out the first pitch in San Diego on Wednesday. I'll give you time to read that again and adjust to our new reality (per MLB):

Tumblr_n580yoxmgh1rs13zco2_400_medium

Tumblr_n580yoxmgh1rs13zco1_400_medium

I, for one, welcome our new dinosaur overlords.

Royals 8, Padres 0: Hey, At Least There Was A Dinosaur

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You all saw the dinosaur throw the first pitch, right? That was pretty great. So was hearing Bobby Cressey play the organ. And, well, those are the highlights. The lowlights? Just about everything else. Three errors, 8 runs allowed (4 unearned), a passed ball, a pair of GIDPs, and a measly 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position.

The Royals took a commanding lead in the first inning, picking up three runs, largely thanks to not one but two errors by Everth Cabrera. A double, a fielders choice, and a sacrifice fly scored another in the third. Andrew Cashner made it through one more scoreless inning before getting pulled. The bullpen didn't fare any better, allowing another 4 runs before all was said and done. I could go into more detail, but I'm not supposed to swear here.

Ian Kennedy toes the rubber tomorrow at 7:10 PM as the Miami Marlins come to town.

Roll Call Info
Total comments112
Total commenters19
Commenter listAlex Nicolas, Axion, Darklighter, EvilSammy, Jay Stokes, JayWantsACat, Mr. Meadows, Sam (sdsuaztec4), Senor_Lumpy, Sergey64, TheThinGwynn, Wonko, ariz2cali, daveysapien, hashtagtroll, jodes0405, turbopan, usupadres, walkoff59
Story URLs

TheThinGwynn led the comments with 18, but walkoff59 topped the rec count with 3.

The outfield wall fell on Alex Gordon's head

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He started it!

Alex Gordon has had a rough week in left field against the Padres. First, he accidentally dunked his glove over the wall while going for a foul ball, and now he's been attacked by Petco Park itself. Or a piece of it, anyway:

Gordon-wall

Petco was only acting in self-defense. You all saw Alex Gordon kick that wall without provocation and will testify as much.


Streamer Report: Friday's Streaming Pitcher Options

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Ray highlights some starting pitcher options that you should consider streaming on Friday, including Tyson Ross and Corey Kluber.

The Streamer Report provides you with daily startng pitcher streaming selections for owners who prefer to stream starting pitchers on a daily basis. This report identifies starting pitchers who are owned in less than 50% of ESPN leagues, and who either has a decent track record vs their opponent, has pitched well of late, or has a decent matchup.

Friday's Streamers

Corey Kluber, Indians vs Rays

Kluber is owned in just 22% of leagues right now, and faces the Rays in Tampa on Friday night. Kluber is coming off a dominating performance in his last outing vs the White Sox, where he struck out 13 and induced eight ground ball outs. He is striking out more than a batter per inning, walking just over two batters per nine and inducing ground balls at a 49% clip thus far in 2014, and I see him pitching closer to his sub 3.00 FIP going forward.

Tyson Ross, Padres vs Marlins

Ross is available in 84% of leagues right now, and faces the hot Marlins who are struggling to score runs on the road this season. They are last in runs scored on the road in baseball, scoring just 32 runs in 12 road games. Ross, is pitching well this season, but has been dominant at home, pitching to a 1.67 ERA with a 4-1 K/BB in 27 innings pitched in four home starts.

Weekly Streamer Performance

I will be providing a status of how my picks have performed over the course of the season, and below you can find how my picks fared this week. Week 6 is off to much better start than the previous two weeks. Let's see if going with two picks per day provides better results this week.

Pitcher

IP

H

ER

BB

K

W/L

ERA

WHIP

Jon Niese

7

5

0

1

6

0.00

0.86

Jose Quintana

7

1

1

3

3

1.29

0.57

Henderson Alvarez

9

6

0

0

7

W

0.00

0.67

Drew Hutchison

8

9

5

1

6

5.63

1.25

Tom Koehler

8

2

0

1

5

0.00

0.38

Mike Leake

7

8

2

2

4

2.57

1.43

Totals

46

31

8

8

31

1.57

0.85

MLB Draft 2014: Padres outfield depth

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A look through the entire organization to see what kind of outfielder depth the club has going into the 2014 MLB draft.

There's no "once upon a time" for this position. This is a position that was constantly filled with veterans and trade acquisitions for years. Will Venable stands out as the outfielder the Padres have produced since pretty much Tony Gwynn and Kevin McReynolds. The others on the major league roster are still veterans and trade acquisitions. However, their time is coming to an end in San Diego and it'll likely be the depth of the system that will have to step up.

Majors

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Cameron Maybin

Depth: Will Venable, Chris Denorfia, Carlos Quentin, Seth Smith

Grade: C+. An OF with Maybin, Venable and Denorfia plays solid defense and each have had quality seasons at the plate. But putting it all together into a productive OF doesn't seem to work on a daily basis. Quentin doesn't provide the defense, but can provide a bat. When healthy. When, if ever, he is healthy. Smith is a quality role player. Denorfia, and Smith  will both be free agents come the offseason, which significantly decreases the depth of an outfield that relies on platoons for success. Venable and Quentin will be free agents the year after leaving some big holes in the corner OF spots. Only Maybin has a chance to provide longer term stability, but he needs to be healthy for that to be an asset.

AAA

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Alex Dickerson, Reymond Fuentes

Depth: Rico Noel

Grade: C. This looked a little more promising before Dickerson' injury and this assumes Dickerson can return to the OF once his foot problem is handled surgically. Now, they can't even fill an OF with prospects and the one promising prospect is probably a 4th OF at best.

AA

Elite: None

Top: Rymer Liriano

Promising: Travis Jankowski

Depth: Kyle Gaedele, Yeison Asencio.

Grade: B. There we go. A full OF of prospects plus an extra for depth. Liriano looks to be on track to supplement the big league roster as some of the current squad go to free agency. Jankowski was trying to show that his speed and defense resume could play in the upper minors, but then he got hurt. That won't answer any questions about his bat. Gaedele has a better bat, but is older and doesn't have the speed or defense. Asencio just borders on depth.

A+

Elite: None

Top: Hunter Renfroe

Promising: Cory Adamson

Depth: Alberth Martinez

Grade: B. The prospects of the Lake Elsinore OF are very similar to the Missions OF. The difference being that Martinez looks to be a better prospect than Gaedele or Asencio. Aussie Adamson is actually the youngest of any OF mentioned so far and has been growing up slowly since being signed as a 16 year old. Hunter Renfroe may be an elite prospect a year from now. He is the premier slugger in the entire system.

A

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Franmil Reyes

Depth: Mallex Smith

Grade: C+. Not all "promising" prospects are equal on this list. Most project at best to be 4th or 5th OF types in the majors if things go well. If things go well for Reyes, the sky is kinda the limit. The 18 year old is starting to see his bat develop like scouts had hoped. He's a big boy at officialy 6'5 240 lbs and as I mentioned in the corner infielders post he might end up a 1B. Mallex Smith also could be better than just depth. He's a base stealer like Jankowski and could be where he is in a couple years.

Others

Elite: None

Top: None

Promising: Jeremy Baltz, Jose Urena

Depth: Rod Boykin, Jhonatan Pena

Grade: B-. Baltz is out injured, but appeared to be a promising bat before he collided with another player during Spring training. I don't know where he would have ended up (either with the crowded OF in Lake Elsinore or the crowded OF in San Antonio), so he goes here for now. Urena got a bit of hype before the season and entered the Midwest League as one of the younger players. After a couple weeks with Fort Wayne the org sent him back to the instructional leagues to work out some kinks. Boykin is a base stealing CF like many the Padres now have. He just turned 19 last month. Pena just turned 20, but had a nice season in the Dominican league. I may be off base about him being a prospect, but since he can play CF I'll overlook his age and see if he shows us something this season.

05/08 Padres Preview: Game 36 vs. Marlins

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After a depressing series finale on Wednesday, our Padres hope to get back in the win column tonight when they welcome the Marlins to Petco Park for the first of a four-game set.

Ian Kennedy makes his eighth start of the year tonight and looks to keep steady as he has all season. Arguably the most consistent starter in the Padres rotation, Kennedy  has pitched much better than his 2-4 record would indicate. He's averaged six innings per start while posting a modest 3.43 ERA. His last time out he gave up a season-high 11 hits and three earned runs in five innings of work. The righty has had some recent success against the Marlins, giving up just one run in each of his last two outings against them, spanning 12 1/3 innings. That includes a six-inning effort in Miami last month, when he kept the Marlins to just three hits en route to a 4-2 victory, which ended the Padres' five-game losing streak against the NL East team.

Kennedy will be competing with Jacob Turner, who will make just his third appearance of the year after suffering a strained right shoulder in April. The right-hander's return to the mound last Saturday wasn't a successful one, however, as he coughed up six runs on nine hits through four innings at home against the Dodgers. But his last outing against the Padres might boost his confidence. He came out victorious against them last June after throwing a seven-hit one-run complete game (the first of his career). He's facing a San Diego team that is battling some major offensive issues as well, so he'll try to keep that trend going tonight.

Tune in at 7:10 PDT to see if the Padres can muster some run support and avoid extending their losing streak to three games.

Miami Marlins vs. San Diego Padres: Stanton homers in extras, Marlins win 3-1

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The Miami Marlins and San Diego Padres were tied up in a low-scoring affair before a critical error by Jedd Gyorko led to a Giancarlo Stanton game-winning home run.

The Miami Marlins just had a successful 8-1 home stand against three competitive teams, and now the team faces its toughest road task of the season. Miami drags an ugly 2-10 road record through an 11-game (in 11 days) West Coast road trip that starts tonight against the San Diego Padres. Jacob Turner will face off against Ian Kennedy in the first edition of Late Night with the Fish!

Pitching Matchup
PROJ ERAFIPERAMARLINSPadresERAFIPPROJ ERA
4.506.109.90TurnerKennedy3.432.653.43

Ian Kennedy first matched up against the Marlins in the first home stand of the season, striking out five batters and giving up just one run in six innings. Turner only made two starts before a batting practice shoulder injury sidelined him, but prior to that, he had not been doing very well anyway. Hopefully he can start throwing strikes like the rest of the Marlins and perhaps adjusting his style.

Lineup

Today's Lineups

MIAMI MARLINSSAN DIEGO PADRES
C. Yelich - LFChris Denorfia - RF
Derek Dietrich - 2BEverth Cabrera - SS
G. Stanton - RFSeth Smith - LF
Casey McGehee - 3BYasmani Grandal - C
J. Saltalamacchia - CJedd Gyorko - 2B
Garrett Jones - 1BCameron Maybin - CF
Marcell Ozuna - CFYonder Alonso - 1B
A. Hechavarria - SSAlexi Amarista - 3B
Jacob Turner - RHPIan Kennedy - RHP

Typical lineup is typical. The Marlins have settled in on a lineup, and the only real question left is whether Casey McGehee will continue to have good fortunes driving home runners.

Notes

- It's Late Night with the Fish! Who will be joining for a late edition of the Marlins tonight?

- Can Miami score as efficiently as they did at home on the road and at a difficult park like Petco? Can San Diego score at all? Is this a 1-0 game?

Bold Prediction: Padres def. Marlins 3-1

MLB Scores: Miami Marlins 3, San Diego Padres 1 (11)

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The Miami Marlins and San Diego Padres were deadlocked in a 1-1 game thanks to an effective Jacob Turner-Ian Kennedy duel. It took two extra innings, but Giancarlo Stanton's two-out two-run homer following a crucial error sealed the game.

The Miami Marlins and San Diego Padres mustered one run a piece, but that was all they could find in an offensively oppressing Petco Park in the first game of their four-game series. It took 11 innings until Miami broke free, and even then it required a critical two-out error that played a role in the difference in the Marlins' 3-1 extra innings win.

Jacob Turner and the Marlins gave up the first salvo to opposing starter Ian Kennedy, who blasted his first home run of his career in the second inning after Turner had a difficult first. To his credit, however, Turner settled down shortly thereafter. The righty, having just returned from a shoulder injury, gave up five hits total and struck out four with a lone walk in six innings. The home run aside, it was a relatively successful evening for a pitcher needing to make a slow progression to success.

Miami could not initially solve Kennedy on the other hand. The team's first hit and baserunner came in the fifth inning, after Kennedy had already whiffed eight Marlins hitters. His first true mistakes came in the sixth, when Miami capitalized with two outs. A Christian Yelich double, followed by a Derek Dietrich single, was enough to tie the game, but Miami could not score further with the bases loaded. Jarrod Saltalamacchia struck out to end their threat.

There were a lot of strikeouts on the Marlins' side. The Fish whiffed 17 times in total, with each member of the lineup striking out at least once. Saltalamacchia held the worst distinction, as he achieved the "Golden Sombrero" of four strikeouts on the night.

Miami finally pushed through in the 11th inning, after a major Padres mistake. With two outs, Dale Thayer got Dietrich to ground a pitch innocently to second, but Jedd Gyorko bobbled it and failed to get the out. The error brought up Giancarlo Stanton, who did not mess up. Stanton launched a wall scraper to deep center field that got through for his 11th home run of the season and gave Miami a two-run lead.

Steve Cishek pitched a benign bottom half to earn his seventh save of the year.


Source: FanGraphs

Attendance: 17,832
Hero of the Game: Giancarlo Stanton (0.432 WPA)
Goat of the Game: Jarrod Saltalamacchia (-0.169 WPA)
Play of the Game: Giancarlo Stanton homered to center field. Derek Dietrich scored. (+0.494 WPA)

Marlins 3, Padres 1: Ian Kennedy Has To Do Everything Himself

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After attending three extra innings games in four nights, I've forgotten what sleep feels like. My life is nothing but coffee and pain. Specifically, the pain of seeing a phenomenal start by Ian Kennedy absolutely wasted by a miserable offense. Kennedy went 7 innings, and was perfect through 4.2. He gave up just a single run on 4 hits and 2 walks while striking out a whopping 12. Oh, and he was also responsible for the sole Padres run, hitting his first career home run in the bottom of the second.

The one black spot on Kennedy's start came in the top of the sixth. After striking out the first two Marlins, Christian Yelich hit a double into the left field gap. Derek Dietrich followed that with an RBI single. A wild pitch and a pair of walks had the Marlins threatening to take the lead, but Kennedy recovered by striking out Jarrod Saltalamacchia. That was all the scoring anybody would do until the top of the eleventh. Dale Thayer recorded the first two outs of the inning with relative ease, but then Jedd Gyorko dropped an easy grounder, allowing Dietrich to reach first again. That brought up Giancarlo Stanton, who did what he does best: Hit home runs. In this case, it was a laser straight into the bleachers (or "beachers", as they're apparently being called now). Gyorko had a chance to redeem himself in the bottom of the inning, but he wrapped up an 0-4 night by hitting a ground out to shortstop to end the game.

Tyson Ross takes on Jose Fernandez tomorrow at 7:10 PM. Fingers crossed this one only goes nine innings.

Roll Call Info
Total comments222
Total commenters19
Commenter listB Cres, Back2SD2006, Conor42, Friar Fever, FunkFootball, Hormel, Jay Stokes, Jonathan Holmes, LetBurroughsPitch, TheThinGwynn, Zen Blade, abara, ariz2cali, daveysapien, hashtagtroll, padres4life, recorddigger, walkoff59, yarrdd
Story URLs

Conor42 dominated the comments, but abara racked up a Kennedy-esque 6 recs.

Padres pitchers homer-hitting facts

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Last night Ian Kennedy became the thirty-fourth Padres pitcher to hit a home run. Don't worry; I'm not going to quiz you on them, just drop some random bullet points. All data was culled from clicking around on the B-R Play Index. On a side note, with certain (read: bad) kerning, 'clicking around' looks like another, more crass, term for what I was doing.

  • Tim Lollar is by far the most prolific home run hitter among Padres pitchers. His eight homers are three more than runner-up Mike Corkins, and twice as many as Eric Show, Andy Benes, and Joey Hamilton hit.
  • Eight other pitchers have hit a pair of homers in whatever the hell colors the Padres were wearing at that point, starting with the O.G. Dave Roberts and most recently accomplished by Mat Latos. Tom Griffin, 2012 interim bullpen coach Jimmy Jones, Calvin Schiraldi, Fernando Valenzuela, Adam Eaton, and Jake Peavy are the others.
  • Seven pitchers homered in a game they entered in relief: Roberts, Corkins, Lollar, Earl Wilson, Craig Lefferts, Tim Stoddard, and Mark Davis.
  • Al Santorini became the first Padres pitcher to hit a home run on August 19, 1969. It was a classic case of helping one's own cause, as his shot to lead off the seventh inning was the margin of difference in a 5-4 win at Montreal, giving him his fifth win of the season.
  • Nine pitchers have homered as part of a multi-hit game a total of eleven times, with Eric Show and Tim Lollar doing it twice. Woody Williams had the sole three-hit game of the bunch, and four pitchers paired their homer with a double: Williams, Dennis Tankersley, Adam Eaton, and Jake Peavy.
  • 27 of the 62 occurrences have happened at home, with Kennedy's homer being only the third at Petco Park. Mat Latos was the first in 2011, and Edinson Volquez hit one last June.
  • Volquez's homer is the only to happen in an interleague game.
  • Kennedy's home run was the twenty-third to be wasted in a loss. It's the first game where the pitcher's homer accounted for the only runs of a loss, although Tim Lollar did hit a two-run homer and have two other RBI in a 6-4 loss to the Expos on May 15, 1984. No Padres pitcher has homered to account for all the runs in a win.

    Miami Marlins confident in ability to win on the road

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    After an 8-1 homestand, the Miami Marlins began their longest roadtrip of the season on Thursday night in San Diego. Miam is just 2-10 on the road this season.

    For a team that lost 100 games in 2013, Marlins Park has been ideal and the Marlins' quick start in 2014 is the result of losing only five games at home after an 8-1 homestand that ended on Wednesday afternoon. And after going just 2-10 on the road to begin the year heading into Thursday's contest in San Diego, the Marlins are confident they can turn things around quickly.

    Miami's current road trip, which began with the first game of a four game series against the Padres on Thursday night, is their longest of the season, and will be a true test of their ability to play consistently on the road. After facing the Padres, the Marlins will travel to Los Angeles and San Francisco, playing 11 games in 11 days before a scheduled off day.

    The 2-10 start on the road is notably significant because of the Marlins' opponents. MIami faced Washington, Phuladelphia, New York, and Atlanta, only coming out with wins over the Braves and Mets. Playing well against the NL East is an integral part of repeated success.

    "Just the fact that we've had the amount of success we've had at home, it makes it feel like [the tough road trips were] a long time ago," Casey McGehee said. "I think we've got a lot of guys feeling good about themselves. The great thing is our pitching staff is always going to give us a chance."

    At home, the pitching staff has the sixth-best ERA in the Majors at home with a 2.73 mark. That ERA on the road: 4.66, last in the NL.

    Miami's pitching staff, led by Jose Fernandez and Nathan Eovaldi, has taken advantage of the spaciousness of Marlins Park. While Miami's lineup has taken advantage of the park's gaps, the job of both the starters and the bullpen to get ahead in counts has allowed them to capitalize on what is one of the National League's deeper parks.

    The Marlins are batting .303 at home, which has a lot to to with the success of Casey McGehee and Giancarlo Stanton with men on base and the productivity of Christian Yelich at the top of the lineup. Derek Dietrich and Marcell Ozuna have also displayed some power, contributing to the offensive turnaround.

    "We're further into the season. Early in the season, you make those first few road trips, it takes a little bit to [get used to] getting back on the road," Jarrod Saltalamacchia said. "We just have to continue grinding away."

    Despite the fact that the Marlins took two of three from the Dodgers to begin the last homestand and two of three from the Padres to begin the year, getting ahead early will be essential for Miami. The consistency of the starting pitching and lineup will determine how the Marlins fare on one of the longer stretches of games of the year.

    MLB Draft 2014: Padres catcher depth

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    A look through the entire organization to see what kind of catcher depth the club has going into the 2014 MLB draft.

    Once upon a time the Padres had Benito Santiago. Wait that's too far back. So there was this top pick named Ben Davis. Oh wait, again too far back, plus he flopped anyway. Wiki Gonzalez was kinda cool. Remember him? Anyway, the team went through a few vets in the 2000s before it was finally thought that Nick Hundley would be the first quality catcher the team had produced since Santiago. They even gave him a contract extension to show faith in him. Hasn't exactly worked out. Still, after the acquisition (and eventual return from suspension and resumption of health) of Yasmani Grandal the team is as deep at catcher as it has been in a while. Oh yeah, and some guy named Austin Hedges is lurking around here somewhere.

    Majors

    Elite: None

    Top: None

    Promising: Yasmani Grandal

    Depth: Nick Hundley, Rene Rivera

    Grade: C+.

    AAA

    Elite: None

    Top: None

    Promising: None

    Depth: None

    Grade: F. The team currently has 30 year old Adam Moore behind the plate and 26 year old 2010 24th round pick Rocky Gale getting very limited playing time. Cody Decker even gets some spot starts behind the dish, which is the only thing of promise at this level.

    AA

    Elite: Austin Hedges

    Top: None

    Promising: None

    Depth: None

    Grade: A-. Can't do much better than an elite prospect catching every game. Only thing keeping this from a A is that Hedges' bat keeps him from being an even higher ranked prospect.

    A+

    Elite: None

    Top: None

    Promising: None

    Depth: John Nester, Jeremy Rodriguez

    Grade: D. I'll be generous and call these guys depth. They currently split time behind the dish and are 25 and 24 years old respectively.

    A

    Elite: None

    Top: None

    Promising: None

    Depth: Dane Phillips.

    Grade: C-. Phillips at one point would have got the "promising" label, but after a failed trial with the Storm last year he is back in Fort Wayne. He has been hitting though, so maybe the promise is still there.

    Others

    Elite: None

    Top: None

    Promising: Rodney Daal

    Depth: None

    Grade: C+. Daal is out for the year due to injury, but scouts really like him. He hit well for Fort Wayne last year and when he returns as a 21 year old he'd still be on track whether he's back with the TinCaps or with the Storm.

    Tony Gwynn Birthday Card: A detective story

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    Since today is Tony Gwynn's birthday, I slipped into default mode and decided to do a card post. I don't have the time to do a 54-card post, so I decided to look for a Tony Gwynn card with the card number 54. After flipping through a few hundred cards, I found ones numbered 53, 55, and nearly everything else in that neighborhood except for 54, so I was back at square one. I began flipping through all the cards again, this time looking at the fronts for something typing-worthy.

    I came across this 1991 Upper Deck Final Edition card of Tony signing another card, and thought it might be interesting to try to identify the card he's signing. I squinted and made out a white-bordered card with an orangeish background behind Tony.

    Z38_medium

    My investigation consisted of me continuing to flip through my Tony Gwynn cards, this time focusing on just ones from 1991 or earlier, for obvious reasons. Like my Joey Cora collection, I keep my Tonys ordered by year, and then alphabetically by manufacturer within each year, so I was starting to get worried by the time I got to 1990. It turns out the card I was looking for was the very last one before the one I had been squinting at. The card he's signing on his All-Star card in the 1991 Upper Deck Final Edition set is his card from the 1991 Upper Deck base set.

    Z39_medium

    Mystery solved.

    Here's hoping that his fifty-fifth birthday sees Tony back in the dugout in the flesh, not just on baseball cards. Get well, Mr. Padre, and enjoy your day.

    Marlins starter Jacob Turner making some progress

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    Last night, Jacob Turner had a solid, acceptable start for the Miami Marlins versus the San Diego Padres. Where did he find success, and where could he use improvement?

    Last night, Jacob Turner took the first step to returning to form in his second start since missing time with the shoulder injury he suffered early in April. Turner struck out four batters in six innings and walked just one en route to a one-run outing that kept the Marlins in the game. The Fish eventually won 3-1 on a Giancarlo Stanton home run, but not before Turner showed a little progress during this latest outing.

    Location, Location, Location

    Turner appeared early in the game to struggle with his location. From a subjective view of the game, it appeared he was burying a lot of his breaking pitches and sinkers in the dirt and failing to locate low in the strike zone. If the game plan was to get Turner to attack the strike zone more often, the early portion of the program did not appear to be executing that plan well.

    But overall, certain pitches for Turner worked fairly well. His two-seam fastball, as codified by Brooks Baseball, seemed to be at its best during the game. He only threw the pitch 26 times all night, but only three went for balls while he threw eight for called strikes. The location of those pitches was primarily low, and against a steady stream of left-handers, Turner was able to notch more than a few pitches in the lower outer half outside of the traditional strike zone, where umpires often call strikes in the lefty shifted zone. In keeping those pitches low, Turner was able to earn good results on swings, and there were a lot of them. The fastball got swings on 58 percent of those pitches and hit the ground a staggering 87 percent of the time in play.

    The breaking pitches were more of a mixed bag. He threw the slider 10 times and the curveball seven times. While the curve recovered decently, the slider fell out of the zone often, with eight balls and only two swings against.

    Swings and Misses

    The whiff portion of the program for Turner was a net loss, as batters missed on only 12.5 percent of their swings. The most effective whiff pitch was the four-seamer, but it only got two swings and misses the entire time. In terms of fooling batters, it was a thoroughly disappointing effort by Turner even with the four strikeouts.

    Part of the blame can again be sent to his secondary offerings. Turner could not locate the slider or the changeup against left-handed hitters, and the fact that they ended up so far out of the zone led to hitters not paying attention to the pitch at all.

    Turnerplotbreaking_medium

    Too many of those pitches ended up buried low to the ground or belt high and way outside to left handers, and hitters laid off often enough to neutralize the potential for swings and misses, This issue with command remains Turner's biggest obstacle for strikeouts; if he cannot come close to nibbling the zone, hitters will not bite.

    Ground Ballin'

    Turner hit the ground hard with his pitches, but so did opposing hitters. The Padres buried 12 of 17 batted balls on the ground, thus upping Turner's season ground ball rate even higher than his current career best. The biggest culprit was the two-seam fastball, which helped to mitigate some of the batted ball damage of Turner's low-whiff repertoire. This should remain a key to success for Turner, as his command of the sinker appears to be acceptable compared to the rest of his pitches.

    Turner only went to the fastball offerings 61 percent of the time in last night's game, but the breaking pitches and offspeed stuff were clearly ineffective for much of the night. Knowing this, it may be worth continuing to emphasize use of the four- and two-seamers in greater percentages over his other pitches, as he has a harder time commanding those offerings. Those may be more ways to coax effectiveness, even at a lower strikeout rate, from a pitcher who has had trouble in the past. For now, Turner showed some improvement, but his secondary offerings still appear to have a ways to go before being good pitches.

    05/09 Padres Preview: Game 37 vs. Marlins

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    We all know how frustrating it's been watching this offense blow it for our pitchers time and time again over the past 5 1/2 weeks. Scanman pretty much hit it on the nose with his recap of last night's game:

    How long this staff can continue to shut down opponents inning after inning of close games remains to be seen, but something;s gotta give. Let's hope it;s this hitting slump before it's the back of this thus far magnificent pitching staff. So…nothing else to do but pick yourself up, adjust your cup, and try it again tomorrow.

    And that's what our Padres will have to do tonight: pick up the pieces of their shattered offense and try to make something happen behind Tyson Ross. Last night, Ian Kennedy had to do literally everything himself, with the offense failing to get any runs home other than the starting pitcher's solo homer and the defense not making it any easier. Ross, and every member of the Padres community (players, front office executives, fans, etc.), hope for a better show of support tonight as the second game of the four-game set against the Marlins gets underway.

    Ross was brilliant through his first four outings this season, posting a 2.13 ERA while averaging 6 1/3 innings each start. That stretch culminated in an eight-inning shutout performance against San Francisco at home, in which he allowed just four hits and a walk while striking out nine. Then he struggled a little in back-to-back starts, giving up nine total runs in 11 1/3 innings of work against the Brewers and the Giants on the road. His last time out he kept the Diamondbacks to three runs (only one of them earned) in seven innings. He's pitching much better at Petco Park than he is on the road this season, so hopefully another chance to shine on the mound in front of the home crowd will help him get in a groove in his first career outing against Miami.

    We all know how important a great pitching performance will be for our Padres to have a chance tonight, but Ross might need to be perfect with our batters going against Jose Fernandez. The reigning NL Rookie of the Year doesn't seem to be experiencing any sophomore slump so far this season, going 4-1 with a 1.74 ERA in his first seven starts. He's also kept opponents hitting just  .176 with a league-leading 65 strikeouts, which obviously doesn't bode well for our cellar-dwelling offense. Add to that Fernandez' two prior career starts against San Diego -he hasn't allowed a single run and has only given up five total hits through 14 2/3 combined frames - and you have the recipe for another incredibly frustrating game tonight.

    Hopefully something can light a flame under these guys tonight and maybe we can catch Fernandez on an off day. First pitch is at .7:10 PDT.

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