Baseball The Way It Never Was

Tag: Tom Henke

Previewing Series VII: Ottawa Mounties @ Cleveland Spiders

Ottawa heads to Cleveland for four games sitting in 4th place in the Cum Posey division with a 10-16 record. Cleveland is only a game better at 11-15 in the Effa Manley Division, making this a series of evenly-matched mediocrity. Cleveland has struggled to score runs, while the Mounties have just struggled.

The expected pitching matchups are (Ottawa hurler first) Roy Halladay (0-2, 5.34 ERA) v. Cy Young (1-2, 3.35 ERA); Randy Johnson (1-3, 7.27) v. Whit Wyatt (1-0, 1.74); Bob Brown (0-1, 4.91) v. Pat Malone (2-1, 4.55); and Old Hoss Radbourn (1-2, 5.40) v. Bill Steen (1-0, 2.30).

Some of the storylines appear right there: at what point do the Mounties give up–for the time being–on the immense talent contained in Johnson’s tall frame? Can Steen and, especially, Wyatt, continue to be essentially unhittable? (You could add Young to that, who has a 1.23 ERA over his last 14 innings.)

If Ottawa can get that far, closer Tom Henke has been lights-out, allowing only 3 hits in 10 IP so far, leading to 7 saves. Relievers Ted Bowsfield and Gary Lavelle each have streaks of 4 scoreless appearances, so there has been some improvement there.

Cleveland is led by Ron Blomberg (302/396/558) and John Ellis (255/321/608), and come into the series having just shuffled quite a bit of their lineup, instituting Sammy Strang into a platoon at 3B with Evan Longoria and Peanuts Lowery and Rowland Office into one in LF (Lowery was recalled when Office went down with an injury, and has hit well enough to stay). The key for the Spiders is if either Larry Doby (163/278/286) or Louis Santop (222/300/333) can get some offense going.

Ottawa’s offense has been effective at times, mostly when Larry Walker (345/406/690) has been healthy and Tim Raines (298/407/462; 12 SB) has been loose on the basepaths. Things fall off dramatically after those two, and the Mounties need better production throughout their lineup, but more from either Alex Rodriguez (207/250/322) or Ken Griffey, Jr. (205/253/217) would be especially welcome. Griffey has been especially miserable, managing only a .368 OPS over his last 10 games.

Ottawa’s Carlos Delgado has homered in 3 consecutive games.

TWIWBL 7.2: Series VI Notes – Cum Posey Division

{With the day off on April 25th, it was a time of roster moves and lineup and pitching adjustments. As such, there are a few more notes for each team than usual.}

#Baltimore Black Sox

P Lindy McDaniel, massively ineffective over 7 appearances, was sent down to AAA with Mike Mussina coming back the other way. Chick Stahl is tearing up AAA, and if Paul Blair–currently slashing 205/287/337–continues to struggle, he may get a call-up in the next few weeks.

#Chicago American Giants

P Lee Meadows was waived and Joe Lake was sent down to AAA Milwaukee, with Sonny Dixon and Frank Smith joining Chicago. Herb Pennock will join the rotation, replacing Lake.

#Houston Colt 45’s

The final slot in the Colt 45’s rotation remains a mystery, with the team hoping someone from Stubby Overmire, Leon Day, and Dock Ellis steps forward.

Larry Hisle‘s continued struggles (194/275/222) sent him down to AAA San Antonio. 37 year-old Ken Caminiti was waived to make room for DJ LeMahieu‘s promotion to Houston.

Paul Goldschmidt‘s 176/300/265 line sees him likely getting much less playing time in the near future.

#Kansas City Monarchs

After a heart-breaking loss to the Black Yankees, the Monarchs had to do some roster juggling, both to help with bullpen fatigue and to bring in some help for Ozzie Smith at SS. Bob Gibson was sent back to AAA and Bill Doak was waived to free up roster space for RP Adam Russell and SS Jack Rowe.

But the Monarchs fought back, defeating the Black Yankees, first 8-3 and then on a walk-off 5-4 victory powered by Boog Powell‘s 2 HRs and Stan Musial‘s 4 hits in 4 at-bats.

The Monarchs ended up splitting the four game set with the Black Yankees–no mean feat.

1B Andre Thornton‘s slow start (139/333/250) earned him a trip to AAA St. Louis with 2B Robinson Cano, who was tearing up the league at 423/461/634 coming up to Kansas City. The roster still needed a RH OF, so Russell was sent back down after only a few days with the big league team in favor of Ducky Medwick.

#Ottawa Mounties

Randy Johnson may have done just enough–barely–to stay in the big leagues with a decent 5 inning performance against Los Angeles. After the game, RP Greg Holland hopped back on the AAA express, with the Mounties in desperate need for depth at 2B. They recalled George Cutshaw to help there (Cutshaw would have a nice debut, going 1-for-3 with a grand slam HR).

Freddy Parent delivered a 2-0ut, 2-run single that scored Carlos Delgado and Terry Puhl, giving Ottawa a walk-off victory against Los Angeles’ closer Joe Nathan, who fanned the first two batters before collapsing and giving up a three run lead.

Recently recalled Jim Clancy was called into duty as an emergency starter, and the jury is still out. On the one hand, 5 innings, only 1 run, and the victory in a 5-1 win over Los Angeles is great; on the other hand, the traffic on the basepaths was nonstop, with Clancy giving up 10 hits and 2 walks in the 5 innings. Gary Lavelle pitched 2.2 scoreless innings for his second hold, and Tom Henke finished it out for his 7th save.

The Mounties pitching staff is a mystery. They are committed to Johnson, despite the 25 year-old’s 7.27 ERA, as well as to 19 year-old Ken Griffey, Jr, who is only slashing 205/253/217 to date. Gary Peters has been very ineffective, and will spend some time at AAA trying to work out his kinks, joining John Olerud in Montreal with veteran 1B/OF Roy Sievers and P Jamie Moyer heading to the big time (Terry Mulholland was waived to make room for Moyer).

The fifth rotation slot is still unsettled, with Moyer, Clancy, and Monk Dubiel all in play.

TWIWBL 7.0: Notes from Series VI

April 24th

Series VI saw the Kansas City Monarchs slow down the runaway steam train of the New York Black Yankees (they split a four game series) and the Portland Sea Dogs streak into first place of the Marvin Miller Division by taking 4 straight from the San Francisco Sea Lions.

League Standings | League Stats

Leading SP: Walter Johnson (POR), 4-0, 2.23 ERA, 1.13 WHIP; Don Drysedale (BRK), 4-0, 1.00 ERA, 1.11 WHIP; Ron Guidry (NYY), 4-1, 2.32 ERA, 0.98 WHIP, 51 K.

Leading RP: Johan Santana (POR), 0-1, 4.00 ERA, 11 Sv; Tom Henke (OTT), 0.90 ERA, 7 Sv; Bob Howry (PHI) 7 Sv; Ron Reed (PHI) 0-0, 2 Sv, 6 H.

Leading Batters: Babe Ruth (NYY), 449/534/867, 11 HR, 34 R, 32 RBI, 44 H; Jake Stenzel (IND), 261/330/420, 11 2B; Eric Davis (NYY), 290/309/542, 34 RBI; Rickey Henderson 244/421/337, 25 BB, 16 SB.

Boldface indicates league leading mark.

Streaks

Babe Ruth’s hitting streak ended at 23 games, leaving the Wandering House of David‘s Ernie Banks (19 games) and Ruth’s teammate Albert Belle (14 games) as the longest active streaks. Belle has also driven in a run in his last 8 games.

Four players (Bob Bailey of the Detroit Wolverines, Banks, Willie Mays of the New York Gothams, and Frank McCormick of the Birmingham Black Barons) have active streaks of 10 games of reaching base safely.

The Miami Cuban GiantsCamilo Pascual hasn’t allowed a run in his last 15 innings.

Series VI Results

Three Game Series

Cleveland Spiders over House of David

Series Sweeps

Portland over San Francisco

Taking 3 out of 4 in Series VI

Birmingham over Indianapolis ABC’s
Chicago American Giants over Philadelphia Stars
Memphis Red Sox over Homestead Grays

Series Splits

Baltimore Black Sox @ Houston Colt 45’s
Brooklyn Royal Giants @ Miami
Detroit v New York Gothams
Kansas City v New York Black Yankees
Ottawa Mounties v Los Angeles Angels

TWIWBL 6.2: Series V Notes – Cum Posey Division

#Houston Colt 45’s

Bret Saberhagen was hit hard falling to 0-2 and seeing his ERA reach 10.45, but you have to feel for Scott Erickson, who gave up 12 hits and 10 runs in 3 IP in relief of Saberhagen as a sacrificial arm in a blowout loss.

The team bounced back with an extra-innings win, sparked when Tony Gwynn tripled with 1 out in the 10th against New York Gothams‘ closer Robb Nen. Gwynn scored on a single from George Brett; then Brett and Lance Berkman (who singled) scored on a hit from HR Johnson, giving the Colt 45’s a 6-3 victory.

Erickson was sent to AAA, both for the performance and to help get a fresh arm to the big leagues, with hard-throwing Billy Wagner coming back the other way.

#Ottawa Mounties

After a 15 inning marathon loss against Memphis, Ottawa needs pitching arms: C Kirk Manwaring was released and SP Terry Mulholland added to the 40-man roster and promoted to the big leagues.

They’ll need more, as the season finale against Memphis went 18 innings. Jim Clancy started his WBL career strong, with a scoreless inning in the first extra-inning game, and then 3 more in the 18 inning marathon where he combined with Ted Bowsfield, Gary Lavelle, and Old Hoss Radbourne for 12.1 scoreless innings in relief of Roy Halladay. Despite giving up a HR, Tom Henke picked up the save, while Radbourn got the victory.

A pitch from Tim Wakefield broke Larry Walker‘s nose in the top of the 13th, but it’s not clear if Walker will hit the DL or not.

Mulholland was sent right back down, along with Clark Griffith, with Gary Peters called back from his rehab assignment along with Greg Holland.

Season Preview: Ottawa Mounties

The bullpen looks absolutely excellent, which is good given some open questions in the starting rotation. There is some good top end talent here, but the OF is a little suspect. This is a very young team, with 7 players under 22 to start the season. The team has 2 young players at SS who look WBL ready in Alex Rodriguez and Freddy Parent.

Final Roster

SP: Gary Peters, Clark Griffith, Roy Halladay, Bob Brown, Larry Johnson.
RP: Old Hoss Radbourn; Steve Howe; Ted Bowsfield; Greg Holland & Gary Lavelle; Tom Henke.

C: Emil Gross; Gary Carter.
1BCarlos Delgado; John Olerud
2B: Tim Raines; Bernie Allen
3B: Anthony Rendon
SS: Alex Rodriguez
; Freddy Parent
LF: Phil Bradley
CF: Ken Griffey, Jr.
; Rick Monday
RF: Terry Puhl
DH: Steve Garvey

Notes

The power of Randy Johnson‘s left arm prevailed, and he edged out Old Hoss Radbourn for the final rotation slot. Bob Brown struggled, so Hoss may see some starts yet … in a surprise announcement, Tom Henke surged past Ted Bowsfield (who was anointed only after Karl Spooner struggled) to open the season as the closer … Henke and Greg Holland combined to toss 23 scoreless innings in the Spring … The Mounties have decided to go with 11 pitchers (at least until Larry Walker comes of the DL in about a week)–we’ll see if that works, with Ryan Dempster being sent to AAA despite a decent Spring … C Kirt Manwaring beat out an infield hit in his final at-bat of the Spring to avoid pulling a collar for the duration (it was not enough to save him from being sent to AAA) … Emil Gross beat out Gary Carter for the starting C spot … Carlos Delgado will start at 1B … Steve Garvey doesn’t really have a position, but hit enough to open the season at DH.

35 year old RP Gary Lavelle is the oldest player on the opening day roster, with 19 year old CF Ken Griffey, Jr. the youngest (Carter, Garvey, and Alex Rodriguez are all 20).

19 year old 1B John Mayberry and 3B Josh Donaldson (one of the final Spring cuts) are the most likely to receive a call from AAA. At AA, Spooner is expected to recover, and 22 year old Wee Willie Keeler should contribute down the road.

Spring Training Preview: Ottawa

  • The starting rotation is set, but the bullpen is still up in the air. Questions abound about Karl Spooner as a closer, and the group of Greg Holland, Ryan Dempster, and Chris Leroux needs to sort itself out.
    • Old Hoss Radbourn and Roy Halladay have struggled, opening some room in the rotation behind Gary Peters, Clark Griffith, and Bob Brown. Randy Johnson looks the most likely to take advantage.
      • Peters, Griffith, and Brown seem set, but the Mounties still need to sort out the final 3 slots. Johnson’s talent is undeniable, but he and Felix Hernandez have been hit quite hard, leaving Halladay, Dempster, and Radbourn in the lead.
    • Spooner, Leroux, and Scott Diamond have struggled mightily, throwing the bullpen into a bit of chaos. Holland and Ted Bowsfield have been excellent.
      • It just got worse, to the point where Diamond, Leroux, and Spooner were all sent down to AAA. Monk Dubiel and Tom Henke were recalled.
      • Bowsfield is the closer, with Gary Lavelle and Steve Howe in front of him.
  • 1B is a bit of a logjam, with John Olerud leading the way, but being pushed by John Mayberry, Carlos Delgado, and Roy Sievers.
    • The best performer at 1B has been Steve Garvey, who is really more of a 3B at this point in his career. Beyond that, the logjam remains even more closely packed as Olerud and Sievers have both had problems.
      • Garvey and Delgado are doing well, with Mayberry and Sievers heading to AAA.
  • Tim Raines may be the best option at 2B, but he’s not long for the infield, and Roberto Alomar, Bernie Allen, and George Cutshaw aren’t far behind Raines.
  • At 3B, Josh Donaldson and Anthony Rendon are clearly both on the roster, but the starer is yet to be determined. Same thing at SS with Freddy Parent and Alex Rodriguez.
    • Parent is ahead of A-Rod at the moment. Henry Easterday has been added to the roster for some flexibility, but has little chance of making the final roster.
  • The OF is totally open: Brant Alyea and Jackie Jensen look solid, but behind them George Van Haltren, Larry Walker, Phil Bradley, Rick Monday, and Terry Puhl haven’t really separated themselves from each other, and Ken Griffey, Jr. has a shot as well.
    • Ah, Spring. Alyea and Jensen have been the worst of the lot, with Puhl, Bradley, and Monday leading the way.
      • Alyea, Van Haltren, and Jensen would all start at AAA if the season started now.
  • Kirt Manwaring is great defensively, but given he has yet to get a single hit, he’s not likely to make the opening day roster.
Near DefiniteLikelyPossibleLong Shot
Starting PitchersClark Griffith
Gary Peters
Bob Brown
Old Hoss Radbourn
Roy Halladay
Ryan Dempster
Randy Johnson
Feliz Hernandez
Middle RelieversGreg Holland
Reggie Cleveland
Tom Henke
Monk Dubiel
SetupGary Lavelle
Steve Howe
CloserTed Bowsfield
CGary CarterEmil GrossKirt Manwaring
1BCarlos Delgado
John Olerud
2BTim Raines
George Cutshaw
Bernie Allen
Roberto Alomar
3BJosh Donaldson
Anthony Rendon
Steve Garvey
SSFreddy Parent
Alex Rodriguez
Henry Easterday
OFPhil Bradley
Terry Puhl
Ken Griffey, Jr.
Larry Walker
Rick Monday
Brant Alyea
Jackie Jensen
George Van Haltren

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