Friday, July 11, 2008

No Bones; Sox crumple, lose to O's 7-3

Clay Buchholz entered the game with an ERA+ of 78, and he lived up to the billing, allowing 4 runs in 5 innings as the Sox dropped a snoozer to the Orioles, 7-3.

Much has been made of the attempt for Clay to increase his command of the fastball, but tonight that big overhand curveball that makes scouts drool was all seasoning and no meat. He consistently left the curve high and inside on righthanded hitters and away from lefties, which belies an early release point and perhaps some here-you-take-it anxiety.

Perhaps to hide the criminal neglect of his talent, Buchholz flashed his potential like a fake badge, striking out 5 in the 3rd and 4th innings. In the 4th he whiffed Luke Scott on an archetypal changeup, down and away, a pitch that added to the sum total of beauty in the world.

But true baseball beauty comes in patterns and repetition. The mechanical aspect of pitching in command is the discipline to duplicate previous motions; Clay was not pitching so much as his body was throwing, and save that one stretch, was not in control of anything. With 5 walks and 107 pitches in 5 innings, he fought a losing battle.

The game as a whole had no bones; and before the last gasp failed rally in the 9th, the Fenway crowd was unusually silent. Sox hitters uncharacteristically took a rather blase approach to mediocre Orioles starter Brian Burres, who somehow made it into the 7th inning with a low pitch count despite walking 3. Instead of the grinding approach characteristic of the Sox that erodes top starters and pulverizes the middling, the Sox seemed to think that with minimal effort on their part, the bats would hit Burres' underwhelming stuff for them. But sluggish is not slugging, and the Sox failed to capitalize on the Yanks and Tampa losses.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was actually impressed with Buchholz. I know the offspeed stuff wasn't exactly pretty last night, but I felt like his fastball had good life (and seemed like it was located pretty well in the middle innings of his start), and in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th he was dominant. I am a believer that he will be a strong starter the rest of the way, if healthy of course.



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Soxlosophy said...

You're right, Joe; Buchholz was certainly impressive at times, and his fastball velocity sure was high- consistently 94, 95 and even 96 a couple of times.

I focused more on his bad innings than his good- I think i'm less a pessimist than a perfectionist, in that i'm quick to be bothered by what I perceive as sloppiness, or out of control-ness, even if there are good moments or results in between.

But there's every reason to believe he'll be good down the stretch, and it's obvious why he's such a highly touted prospect.

Soxlosophy said...

Hey Joe- I saw you added me to your blogroll. Thanks! I've added you too.

Anonymous said...

Only add me if you think I am worthy. I don't add for the sake of adding. :)

Soxlosophy said...

well, you meet both my conditions. a) good blog. b) friendly. plus, i'm always happy to promote any club that will have me as a member...