February 2009 - Posts

  • Looper scratched due to tight oblique

    Braden Looper was scratched just before the first pitch of today's game against the Los Angeles Angels.

    In his bullpen session before the game, the recently acquired Looper threw a split-fingered pitch and felt a twinge in his left oblique.  He decided against throwing any more pitches, as it is too early in Spring Training to chance anything serious.

    The right-hander apparently felt something in his oblique a couple days earlier when he sneezed, but he had fully participated the last couple days in camp.

    Looper's injury is considered to be minor.  There is no indication that he will miss his next scheduled start this upcoming week.

    Eddie Morlan filled in and threw two scoreless innings.  The young reliever struggled a bit with his command, but managed to work around three walks and a hit.

  • Jim Skaalen speaks sense

    Tom Haudricourt caught up with Jim Skaalen, Milwaukee's old hitting coach.

    Former Brewers hitting coach Jim Skaalen acknowledged that the team struggled mightily at the plate last September, nearly blowing its playoff chance, but he said he still was "confused" about his dismissal.

    "I have no sour grapes about what happened. I was (angry), that goes without saying, and very disappointed," said Skaalen, now the hitting coach for the Oakland A's. "But (general manager) Doug (Melvin) and (former manager) Ned (Yost) gave me the only opportunity I’ve ever had to do it at that level. I couldn’t thank them more.

    "Having said that, I was confused to be let go. Despite the bad September, despite the skittishness overall with which we hit, the MO of that team, they know. They talked about it in January. It’s a predominantly right-handed hitting team that strikes out a lot.

    "What can you do about it? I worked with them, trying to get them improve. That’s all we could do. When they step in the box, they’re on their own." 

    [emphasis added]

    Skaalen says that he is "confused" about his dismissal from the team, but I think he understands perfectly...

    Jim Skaalen was a scapegoat for last season's offensive swoon.

  • Parra shines in victory

    As most of you already know, the site has been down for most of the day.  The folks at SportsBubbler did a great job getting things up and running as quickly as possible.  Hopefully, everything is now solved.

    The Brewers claimed their first victory of Spring Training, beating the Oakland A's 8-5.

    The contest was really a tale of two halves.

    Over the first five innings of the game, the two clubs were scoreless and pitching dominated.  Manny Parra, Mark DiFelice, and Omar Aguilar all tossed scoreless frames before the bats heated up for both sides in the sixth.

    Parra specifically looked sharp on the mound.  He struck out one and did not allow a walk.  Parra kept the ball down very well and only gave up one baserunner in his two frames -- a single to Jason Giambi.  The southpaw featured wonderful control of his fastball and a particularly nasty splitter.  It was a welcome sight for Brewers fans to see Parra command the strike zone so masterfully. 

    Despite the scoreless inning thrown by Omar Aguilar, Brian Anderson and Rock made it sound like the right-hander struggled with his command.  He started his first hitter of the game down 3-0 in the count and surrendered a single to Bobby Crosby.  Omar escaped the inning unscathed, however, mostly thanks to an unassisted double play by Prince Fielder.  The Brewers first baseman snagged a Joe Dillon liner and stepped on first to complete the double play.  If that ball gets by Prince, Aguilar is looking at giving up at least one run in the fifth.

    Offensively in the first five innings, Milwaukee could get nothing going.  Oakland's pitching staff once again handcuffed the Brewers regulars.  Former Brewer Dana Eveland looked great on the mound as well, inducing four groundouts and a strikeout.

    Things changed once some minor leaguers entered the game in the sixth inning.

    Milwaukee's bats broke out and managed to pound out eight runs on fourteen hits.  Angel Salome hit a long, two-run home run to dead-center field in the ninth inning.  Scott Thorman continued his fine spring, going 2-for-2 with an RBI double and a run scored.  The first baseman is now hitting .833 over the first three games of Spring Training.

    Minor league outfielders Cutter Dykstra and Logan Schafer also got their first hits and RBIs in a big league setting.  Dykstra smoked an RBI double off Oakland's James Simmons, and Schafer collected an RBI single and a stolen base in his first Cactus League outing.

    In contrast to the first five innings of the game, the Brewers pitching staff struggled in the second half of the game.

    R.J. Swindle, Chris Narveson, and Chase Wright all gave up runs in their outings.  Wright particularly struggled with his control, giving up back-to-back doubles in the ninth inning.  The lefty could not keep the ball down in the strike zone.  That allowed Oakland hitters to tee off all afternoon.  Control pitchers like Wright usually take longer to progress in Spring Training, but it would have been nice to see Wright impress a bit more in his first outing in a Brewers uniform.

    A couple other notes:

    • Alcides Escobar flashed some spectacular defense throughout the game.  He almost made a sprawling catch behind second base, as the ball glanced off the top of his glove.  He also made a Gold Glove-caliber play according to Brian Anderson.  Escobar showed his terrific range by collecting the ball well behind second, spinning around, and making a perfect throw to first.  The kid can play defense.  He even collected an RBI single and a stolen base in his first Spring Training start.
    • I am coming around to Chris Duffy making the 25-man roster.  He has displayed stellar defense in center field and has shown more power than Tony Gwynn Jr. could hope to bring to Milwaukee.  After tripling in yesterday's game, Chris doubled deep off the wall in the ninth inning on Friday.  Gwynn's injury has given Duffy a chance to showcase his skills in center, and the young man is taking full advantage of it.

    Records:  Brewers (1-1-1); Athletics (0-2-1)

    On Tap

    The Milwaukee Brewers will send Braden Looper to the mound to take on the Los Angeles Angels.  The first pitch will be at approximately 2:05pm CT.

  • Walks aplenty in Brewers loss

    In contrast to yesterday's game, the Brewers pitching staff could not find the strike zone.  They issued 11 walks against a patient Cubs lineup and ended up losing the game, 7-4.

    Yovani Gallardo started the game and set the tone for the Crew.  He worked around one hit and two walks to pitch a scoreless frame.  The young right-hander was then lifted after the first inning due to pitch count constraints.

    Not everything was negative for Gallardo, however.  After his outing, he said that he thought he threw the ball very well and voiced displeasure over the stike zone of home-plate ump, Mike Muchlinski.  Even with the walks, it was just nice to see Yovani get back on the mound pain-free.

    Things only got worse for the Brewers pitching staff following Gallardo's departure.

    Seth McClung had absolutely no feel for the strike zone whatsoever.  The big righty walked three batters and allowed three hits in his losing effort.  The big blow came against minor-leaguer Jake Fox, who hit a three run bomb off McClung.  He seemed to be letting his right shoulder fly open, as the radio announcers kept stressing that McClung was missing up in the zone.

    Carlos Villanueva worked around two walks and a hit to pitch a scoreless frame.  Joe Bateman gave up a couple hits and a walk in his inning of work.  The minor-league reliever surrendered two runs in the fifth, and Milwaukee could never recover.

    Only Mitch Stetter pitched a relatively clean inning, but even he gave up a hit.

    Offensively, however, the Brewers looked pretty good, despite the fact that they only scored four runs on twelve hits.

    J.J. Hardy continued his hot start to the Spring Training season.  He smoked two doubles in his three appearances, including an RBI two-bagger that scored Chris Duffy.  Duffy also had a very nice game.  He went 2-for-4 with a triple and a run scored.  The outfielder also has displayed some fine defense in his limited time in the field.

    Both Mike Cameron and Mike Rivera hit solo shots in the contest.  It was the first home run of the spring for both players.  Cameron specifically got a hold of his homer, turning on a fastball from Chad Gaudin and depositing it well over the left field fence.

    Ken Macha was not extremely pleased after the contest, saying:

    "We're going to hit," Macha said. "What we can't do is walk 11 guys and make errors.

    "If this was the regular season, you'd call this a 'giveaway' game."

    The Brewers even played sloppy defense, committing two errors in the seventh inning, which caused Tim Dillard to give up an unearned run.  Mike Lamb charged a softly hit grounder and absolutely airmailed Scott Thorman at first base, and Alcides Escobar made an ill-advised throw to commit another error.  To be fair, however, the ball did hit Thorman's glove.  It just bounced off.

    Record:  Brewers (0-1-1); Cubs (2-0-0)

    On Tap

    The Milwaukee Brewers will once again take on the Oakland Athletics tomorrow afternoon.  Manny Parra is scheduled to get the start.  The first pitch will be at about 2:00pm CT. 

  • Starting Lineup: Brewers vs. Cubs (02/26/09)

    The Milwaukee Brewers will face off against the Chicago Cubs today at 2:00pm CT.

    Here is Milwaukee's starting lineup:

    2B Rickie Weeks

    RF Chris Duffy

    SS J.J. Hardy

    LF Ryan Braun

    CF Mike Cameron

    C Mike Rivera

    1B Brad Nelson

    3B Casey McGehee

    P Yovani Gallardo

    Besides Gallardo, several other pitchers are scheduled to get work in today:

    RHP Carlos Villanueva

    LHP Mitch Stetter

    RHP Tim Dillard

    RHP Seth McClung

    LHP Chris Narveson

    RHP Joe Bateman

    LHP Sam Narron

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Bernie's Crew is a Milwaukee Brewers blog that addresses everything concerning the Brewers. It discusses major league news, minor league news, and big news around Major League Baseball as a whole. It is a community where Brewers fans can let their voice and opinions be heard. If you have any comments or questions, email me at berniescrew@gmail.com.

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