Opening Night in MLB is Sunday, April 5th, with the Saint Louis Cardinals visiting the Chicago Cubs. With players and fans getting antsy for the 2015 season to begin, the long awaited "play ball" will continue on Monday, April 6th, with a full slate of games.
There was a time when the traditional "Opening Day" game was played on Mondays in Cincinnati with the ceremonial first pitch of the season thrown there and then around the rest of the league. Cincinnati is recognized as the first pro baseball team and opening day in the "Queen City" was and is a real baseball holiday with parades and other ceremonies. I remember skipping school on some opening days, without my parents consent, just to listen to Reds' radio broadcasts of the start of a new season. Huge TV contracts, one of the cash cows and most important revenue streams for MLB, have changed the old format and now the Sunday Night Opening Game is the "new normal".
Opening Day in Cincy at Great American Ballpark (mlb.com) |
Masahiro Tanaka and the split finger fastball. March 2014 (zimbio.com) |
The free-spending Los Angeles Dodgers are without Hanley Ramirez and Matt Kemp this year, two of their best power hitters. 24 year old Yasiel Puig showed a modicum of maturity last year and will need to step up and fill some of that vacuum. The much talked about Puig, be it good or bad, will have to continue to polish his considerable tools and become a bona fide star player to fulfill expectations. Puig hit .274/.366/.414 after the 2014 All Star game with 4 HR's and 17 RBI's in 215 at bats, hardly numbers consistent with elite production. With only Adrian "The Titan" Gonzalez left over from last year's power hitting group, Puig will have to hit and hit with more power. He has to grow up and prove he's the "real deal".
The 2014 World Series champion, San Franciso Giants, have been known to exceed expectations and confound experts predictions to win 3 championships in the last 5 years (2010-2012-2014) This is very, very hard to do. They've played a lot of close games and have a knack for winning the big game, especially in the post season. This year's pitching staff, aside from Madison Bumgarner, the World Series ace, has a chance to be the worst starting pitching the Giants have had in years. Jake Peavy (34), Tim Hudson (39), Ryan Vogelsong (37), Tim Lincecum (31), and Matt Cain (30) are not a group that inspires confidence for a postseason push. Peavy has been very inconsistent and injury prone, Hudson is old and the once powerful sinker is not as effective, Vogelsong is aging and very inconsistent, Lincecum, is not "The Freak" anymore and has been so bad he might go to the bullpen. Washed up at 31? He's lost about 5-6 miles off his fastball. Cain, once the workhorse, is now throwing 91-92 when he threw 95 consistently with a killer slider. Still young, can he salvage his career? With these enormous question marks the Giants bullpen might be in for a long year. AT&T Park favors pitchers but with this group it will be difficult to "read the tea leaves" in San Francisco. Bruce Bochy is known for his deft handling of pitching staffs, but I think this will be one of those head scratching years.
Head scratching year for Bruce Bochy (zimbio.com) |
NAME | AGE | HOME | AWAY | ||
Tim Hudson | 39 | 89 | 3.94 | 100 | 3.23 |
Ryan Vogelsong | 37 | 100 | 3.06 | 85 | 5.10 |
Jake Peavy | 34 | 101 | 2.85 | 101 | 4.60 |
Tim Lincecum | 31 | 94 | 3.91 | 61 | 6.02 |
Matt Cain | 30 | 47 | 3.64 | 43 | 4.78 |
The Home and Away columns feature IP and ERA |
No comments:
Post a Comment