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Showing posts with label Tim Lincecum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Lincecum. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - July 29, 2013



Today on The Sully Baseball Daily Podcast, we look at the last place defending World Champion San Francisco Giants.

So many things that broke well in 2010 and 2012 are breaking the other way this year, such is the pendulum that is baseball.

Jose Fernandez, David Ortiz, Ubaldo Jimenez and Jason Heyward all owned baseball on July 28, 2013.


To see the up to date tally of "Who Owns Baseball?," click HERE.
Subscribe on iTunes HERE.

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - July 29, 2013


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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - July 14, 2013


 It is the Sunday Request on The Sully Baseball Daily Podcast!

So what are my thoughts of seeing MY (the Red Sox) throw no hitters?
And I share a recording of my dad and I listening to the end of the Lincecum no hitter.


AJ Griffin, Didi Gregorius, Lonnie Chisenhall and I suppose Tim Lincecum  all owned baseball on July 13, 2013.


To see the up to date tally of "Who Owns Baseball?," click HERE.
Subscribe on iTunes HERE.

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - July 14, 2013
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Saturday, July 13, 2013

The Most Recent No Hitter For Each Franchise (Updated for July 13, 2013)




Look at that! A no hitter by someone other than Homer Bailey!

Tim Lincecum has done a lot in his relatively young career. But now he can add "no hitter" to a resume that includes "2 Cy Young Awards", "World Series clincher" and "best pitcher who looks like he is 10 years old."

Is this a turning point for the Giants?
Who knows?

But what I do know... it is time to update my list!



THE MOST RECENT NO HITTERS
FOR EACH FRANCHISE


SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
Tim Lincecum - July 13, 2012.
9-0 over San Diego.


CINCINNATI REDS
Homer Bailey - July 2, 2013.
3-0 over San Francisco.

SEATTLE MARINERS
Felix Hernandez - August 15, 2012.
1-0 over Rays. (Perfect Game)

NEW YORK METS
Johan Santana - June 1, 2012
8-0 over St. Louis.


LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
Jered Weaver - May 2, 2012.
9-0 over Minnesota.



CHICAGO WHITE SOX
Phillip Humber - April 21, 2012
4-0 over Seattle. (Perfect Game.)



DETROIT TIGERS
Justin Verlander - May 7, 2011.
9-0 over Toronto.


MINNESOTA TWINS
Francisco Liriano - May 3, 2011
1-0 over Chicago White Sox

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
Roy Halladay - October 6, 2010
4-0 over Cincinnati. (Playoff Game)


TAMPA PAY RAYS
Matt Garza - July 26th, 2010
5-0 over Detroit.

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS
Edwin Jackson - June 25, 2010
1-0 over Tampa Bay



OAKLAND A'S
Dallas Braden - May 9, 2010
4-0 over Tampa Bay. (Perfect Game.)


COLORADO ROCKIES
Ubaldo Jimenez - April 17, 2010
4-0 over Atlanta.

CHICAGO CUBS
Carlos Zambrano - September 14, 2008.
5-0 over Houston.


BOSTON RED SOX
Jon Lester - May 19, 2008.
7-0 over Kansas City.


FLORIDA MARLINS
Anibal Sanchez - September 6, 2006.
2-0 over Arizona.


HOUSTON ASTROS
Roy Oswalt, Peter Munro, Kirk Saarloos, Brad Lidge, Octavio Dotel and Billy Wagner -
June 11, 2003.
8-0 over New York Yankees.


ST. LOUIS CARDINALS
Bud Smith - September 3, 2001
4-0 over San Diego.


NEW YORK YANKEES
David Cone - July 18, 1999.
6-0 over Montreal. (Perfect Game.)


PITTSBURGH PIRATES
Francisco Cordova and Ricardo Rincon - July 12, 1997.
3-0 over Houston. (10 innings.)


LOS ANGELES DODGERS
Hideo Nomo - September 17, 1996.
9-0 over Colorado.


TEXAS RANGERS
Kenny Rogers - July 28, 1994.
4-0 over California. (Perfect Game.)

ATLANTA BRAVES
Kent Mercker - April 8, 1994.
6-0 over Los Angeles.


KANSAS CITY ROYALS
Bret Saberhagen - August 26, 1991
7-0 over Chicago White Sox.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS (AS MONTREAL EXPOS)
Dennis Martinez - July 28, 1991.
2-0 over Los Angeles. (Perfect Game.)


BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Bob Milacki, Mike Flanagan, Mark Williamson and Gregg Olson - July 13, 1991.
2-0 over Oakland.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS
Dave Steib - September 2, 1990.
3-0 over Cleveland.


MILWAUKEE BREWERS
Juan Nieves - April 15, 1987.
7-0 over Baltimore.

CLEVELAND INDIANS
Len Barker - May 15, 1981.
3-0 over Toronto. (Perfect Game.)

Bonus
WASHINGTON SENATORS
Bobby Burke - August 8, 1931
5-0 over Boston.



Earlier this month, the Giants were no hit in a game started by Lincecum. Giant fans prefer this.

Meanwhile, PetCo Park hosted its first ever no hitter.
Padres were victimized. They are still searching for their first no hitter.

You are still on the clock, San Diego



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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - June 12, 2013




What should the Giants do with Tim Lincecum? They need to do SOMETHING.

Meanwhile the Dodgers and the Diamondbacks had a brawl. Who cares? Brawls stink.

This and more on today's Sully Baseball Daily Podcast.

Tyler Colvin, Corey Kluber, Desmond Jennings and Andrew Cashner  all owned baseball on June 11, 2013.

To see the up to date tally of "Who Owns Baseball?," click HERE.
Subscribe on iTunes HERE.

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - June 12, 2013


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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - March 13, 2013

 


While driving along the 101 heading to San Jose, I decided to talk about Johan Santana, the Mets, the trade block and Manny being Manny in Taiwan.


Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - March 13, 2013

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Friday, February 08, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - February 8, 2013





On today's podcast, I talk about Felix Hernandez's contract, the similarities between the Expos and Mariners and Tim Lincecum's hair.

It all makes sense.

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast - February 8, 2013 Follow sullybaseball on Twitter

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Tim Lincecum can redeem his season with one start - A Bleacher Report Article


Tim Lincecum had the worst season of his career. And yet he could wipe out all of the bad stats with one good start tonight.

As I wrote in Bleacher Report, Lincecum could join a celebrated list of post season heroes whose October glory erased a subpar regular season.

You can read the whole story HERE.




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Friday, July 13, 2012

Halfway done... let's take a look at my playoff picks
















So here we are at the halfway mark of the year.
This has been a bonkers year. Some things nobody could have foreseen.

(Like YOU saw the Nationals being awesome and the Phillies being terrible.)

Some I actually predicted.

 (Yup, I predicted the Pirates and Dodgers having a good year.)

Let's see how my picks look.

AL East 
Pick - TAMPA BAY RAYS
Actual at break - NEW YORK YANKEES
If you told me the Yankees would lose Mariano Rivera and have a ton of pitching injuries, I would assume they were around .500. Instead the Yankees have the best record in baseball and the biggest lead. Don't count the Rays out. They can still pitch and Joe Maddon has the team winning with mirrors. As a Sox fan, I remember all too well how the Rays can win down the stretch.

AL Central
Pick - DETROIT TIGERS
Actual at break - CHICAGO WHITE SOXLike YOU picked the White Sox. The South Siders have been winning with a dynamite young pitching staff led by Jake Peavy and Chris Sale. Plus they can hit and Adam Dunn found his home run swing. But a late surge by the Tigers put them over .500. Look out.

AL West

Pick - LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

Actual at break - TEXAS RANGERS
The Angels got off to such a bad start and the Rangers came out of the gate so strong that the West might have been clinched in the Spring. That being said, the Angels and the Rangers might be the two best constructed teams in the American League

AL Wild Cards

Pick - NEW YORK YANKEES and TEXAS RANGERS

Actual at break - LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM and BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Whomever doesn't win the west is getting a Wild Card slot. As for the Orioles, Buck Showalter has them in position for the post season for the first time since 1997 despite a -37 run differential. Say what you want about Buck. He can manage.

NL East

Pick - MIAMI MARLINS

Actual at break - WASHINGTON NATIONALS
What is more startling? How good the Nationals have been or how bad the Marlins and Phillies are? It's a tough call in the Division where black is white and up is down.

NL Central

Pick - PITTSBURGH PIRATES

Actual at break - PITTSBURGH PIRATES
Oh, I am gloating about this pick. Andrew McCutchen is blossoming into an amazing star.

NL West

Pick - LOS ANGELES DODGERS

Actual at break - LOS ANGELES DODGERS
More gloating. It's fun to be at Chavez Ravine. Who called it? Oh, that would be me.

NL Wild Cards

Pick - PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES and SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS

Actual at break - ATLANTA BRAVES and CINCINNATI REDS
I thought the Phillies would take a step back. I didn't see them falling off a cliff. The Giants are only half a game back and if Tim Lincecum has a good second half, they could catch the Dodgers.

OK, enough of looking back.
Let's play ball and see how this season REALLY ends.


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Monday, May 14, 2012

Should the Giants trade Tim Lincecum?

















Just a few months ago, even suggesting that would be sacrilegious.
This is TIM LINCECUM!
The Franchise.
The Freak.
The man who delivered a World Series title to San Francisco.

A man who I thought even back in 2009 could become the most popular sports figure San Francisco had ever seen since Joe Montana.

And here I sit on May 14, 2012 and wonder if he should be on the trade market.

This isn't simply a knee jerk response to his poor start.
Sure it looks odd that the ONLY Giants pitcher not worth a damn this year has been Lincecum. That The Franchise is teetering while Barry Zito has been effective and giving the Giants quality innings.

But this is more than a panic move.
It could be preventing future panic.

Lincecum will be done with his contract when he is 29 years old at the end of next year. And let me tell you something, dear readers. Pitchers entering their 30s is a very dangerous territory. Even for multiple Cy Young Award winning World Series heroes.

When Bret Saberhagen was 25, he was a 2 time Cy Young Award winner and the hero of the 1985 World Series Champion Kansas City Royals.

After age 29, he had a grand total of 2 noteworthy seasons.

By 25, Fernando Valenzuela was a perennial Cy Young contender (and winner in 1981) and a World Series hero.

After 25 he fought injuries and was a fair pitcher but no longer dominant.

More recently Brandon Webb won a Cy Young at age 27 and nearly won a second one in 2008 at age 29. Since 2008, he has thrown 4 innings in the bigs and none since 2009.

Jake Peavy was a young Cy Young winner and after three years of injuries is just now regaining his All Star form.

Josh Beckett was the hero on two World Series winners before he turned 28 but since then has been agonizingly inconsistent.

Need more examples? Ramon Martinez, Steve Avery, Jack McDowell, Frank Viola...

Each looked like difference making studs whose career dipped and did so pretty quickly.

And I didn't bring up Viola's name randomly.

In 1987, Frank Viola won the clinching Game 7 of the 1987 World Series. Like Lincecum, he pitched 8 masterful innings to win the title.

Like the 2010 Giants, it was the teams first World Series title in their city despite a rich and talent filled history there.

In 1988, Viola won the American League Cy Young Award, beating out Dennis Eckersley, Dave Stewart, Roger Clemens, Bruce Hurst and Mark Gubicza.

He was THE stud of the Minnesota staff.

In 1989, the Twins traded the 29 year old Viola to the Mets in the middle of the season.

The reigning Cy Young winner was the prize of the trade market and the Mets, in need of a positive jolt, plunked in the Hempstead native into the rotation.

It was a dream come true. And to be fair, at age 30 he did have an excellent season in Flushing.
But that was it. He was a not bad but nothing worth remembering pitcher from 1991 to 1993. And save for a cameo here or there, his career was over after that.

Meanwhile the Twins, who traded away Viola when his value was at its peak, brought in 5 pitchers to their system. One, Rick Aguilera, became the bullpen ace and another, Kevin Tapani, became a solid starter for many years. A third, David West, was a key lefty out of the bullpen and all three contributed to the Twins World Championship in 1991.

The Twins have won two World Series since the Mets last title.

In 1989, that same year, the Mariners flipped their 29 year old left handed stud, Mark Langston, to Montreal and got three pitchers. Langston would up having 2 or 3 good seasons in his 30s but lost a One Game playoff to his former team in 1995, his last good year in the majors. The symbolism was ripe as the pitcher he lost to, Randy Johnson, was acquired in the Langston deal.

My point is this.

Lincecum has been amazing. But pitchers, especially with his slender built and violent motion, can break down faster than you can say Dontrelle Willis.

If what we are seeing is the beginning of that decline, realize that you will never get a better deal than right now.

Not everyone is Greg Maddux or Tom Glavine or even Mike Mussina.
Not everyone has the decades long career.

If the next great Giants team can be built partially from the loot that Lincecum would bring, it is at least worth thinking about.



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