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Wednesday Morning Astros, etc Round Up

JJO has quite a bit of information for us in his latest blog post. For one, Mike Hampton is going to get plasma therapy for his ailing shoulder. And damn it folks, I'm a law student, not a doctor- so here's an article from the New York Times which details the procedure and its benefits. I respect Hampton a great deal for trying as hard as he can to get back, but the fact remains that there are less than 40 games in the season. Since the Astros are most likely going to be using September to see what their young pitchers have to offer in 2010, does Mike even get the opportunity to come back and make a start or two?

Speaking of young starters, fresh off his strong outing on Sunday Felipe Paulino could start on Sunday vs. the D-Backs. Paulino has admitted that his not knowing what his role will be from day to day is mentally taxing:

"You know how good it feels when they say you're going to relieve, because I feel more comfortable when I know what fixed role I have," he said. "Sometimes my mind wanders when I don't know what my role is. It's hard to say it, but it's true sometimes it's harder to focus when I don't have a set role.

Chalk it up to another bit of mismanagement by Cecil Cooper. If the Astros had a loss for every Cecil Cooper blunder...they'd probably be three games under .500 after 135 games.

Yorman Bazardo and Bud Norris will give it a go on Friday and Saturday respectively. So this is it Astros' fans: the potential for a series to be started by three young, promising arms. This occurrence has been like Halley's Comet in the Houston organization. Let's hope that trend ceases in 2009.

From MLB Daily Dish, two interesting links for ya. First off, the Diamondbacks are apparently looking to bolster their bullpen. LaTroy Hawkins, anyone? I don't know if it necessarily makes sense for a struggling team whose farm system isn't all that strong, but we shall see.

Second, Buck Showalter's ready to help baseball with a re-alignment plan. Some of his statements about how the NFL doesn't have two distinct leagues seems a bit off because, well, they have the NFC and AFC. Beyond that though, it's still sort of cool to think about changing things up.

A lot of people have had a coming to God moment- where their minds open up and they come to accept something new. Well, baseball geeks probably go through something similar, but instead of God, they come to sabermetrics.

Zach Levine got to see Jose Vallejo collect a hit in his third straight game, and JR Towles knocked him in once for his first RBI since returning from injury.

0 recs  |  16 comments

Comments

I'm fine with Hampton getting a couple of starts over the season remainder.

I have my doubts he will recover enough to do that. But it might be helpful if it prevents the Astros from penciling Norris in on too many starts for the remainder of the season. Maybe Hampton can save the Astros from blowing out one of the young pitcher’s arms.

The Nationals just signed Livan Hernandez to start for the remainder of the season for that very reason…to reduce the normal of innings piled up by their young pitching staff.

Thoughts

- On Brian McTaggart’s blog Mike Hampton mentioned he’d be willing to move to the bullpen and pitch 40 innings instead of 100+ innings a year.

- I know how Paulino is feeling not knowing what his role is, and that feeling is not fun especially when your boss comes up to you and asks why you’re standing around….uh you didn’t indicate what I needed to be doing, or give my any type of plan.

- I don’t believe the D’backs article was suggesting they trade for Hawkins, but sign him in the offseason.

being a free agent..

i assume that latroy will be at least a “b” level free agent. so draft picks would be coming our way if we offered him arbitration and he refused..we shall see

Showalter's re-alignment plan

Realignment seems a good idea to me; but holy cow I was screaming, “Be consistent, guys”.

 They start by saying every team plays every other team in the MLB six times a year, three at home and three on the road. By reducing the league to 28 teams that leaves each team paying 162 games, same as currently. (I guess they could leave it at 30 teams and add a dozen games to the schedule). I can accept that.

Then they go bananas. They divide the teams into four regional divisions, talking about how thes will save travel time; how this will keep fans from staying up late to watch games in different time zones for the most part,etc

Duh. guys, the only way the second half works the way they intend is to give up the idea of each team playing six games against all the other teams.

What I would like is One NL and One AL, balanced schedule -top four teams from each league making the playoffs. (or if you like Showalter’s plan to have every team play six games against every other team, on league of 28 teams, no divisions) Every day there’d be changes in the standings.

Under the current setup , I not only don’t follow the AL much at atl; but I don’t pay that much attention to NL East and NL West games that closely.

Fangraphs revisits the Lidge-Bourn Trade

Here’s the article. Conclusion:

It’s as if Bourn and Lidge are on some sort of see-saw since being traded for each other after the 2007 season. Lidge isn’t probably as good as he was last season, but he’s not as bad as he’s been this season. The same can be said of Bourn. I have to say, this trade is looking more even than I would have ever expected it to be.

The author believes Bourn isn’t as bad as last year, but that he isn’t really as good as he shows this year. He bases that on Bourn’s BABIP this season. I hope he is wrong about the latter part….for the Astros’ sake we have to hope that he had a break out this year and established his performance level over his peak years. What do you all think?

Time will tell

My money is that Bourn will add slightly more power next year but otherwise continue this year’s performance.

I'm happy

if Bourn is a roughly league-average hitter. As long as he stays a great fielder, the Astros have a solid contributor for the next few years.

I thought he was a very good defender last year and this

At the plate he seems a lot more comfortable. I’d guess he watches a lot of the garbage that he chased last year. And he’s still fast.

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