Monday, March 12, 2018

March 12, 2018 - Washington Nationals vs. Detroit Tigers



Listening to the Washington Nationals and the Detroit Tigers play a spring training game. (Well, I was until the MLB AtBat app started having buffering issues – first time that’s happened in a long time.  As I post this, it’s now 3-3 in the bottom of the eighth – but remember in spring training the wins don’t matter.) Mets apparently are off today, as are the Cubs. I enjoy listening to Tigers games, even though the team itself is probably going to be lousy this season (they’re leading 1-0 as I write this, but mostly because they have a lot of their starters in, while the Nationals are playing nothing but reserves). Dan Dickerson is very solid at play by play (his first few years overlapped with the last few years of the legendary Ernie Harwell), and Jim Price is a longtime Tiger personality, having been a catcher for the team from 1967-1971. (He’s also 76 years old, so listen to him while you can.)
A few things I’ve learned from the broadcast:
      1) Tigers catcher John Hicks may make a difference for the team. I gather James McCann’s three-year stint as their starting catcher may be in danger, since he’s not very good at framing pitches. I don’t know about Hicks’ pitch-framing abilities, but he ended two innings in a row from behind the plate – throwing out Moises Sierra trying to steal second base in the second inning, and then picking Brian Goodwin off first base to end the third. That will get you noticed.
      2) The Nationals don’t have many openings, but fifth starter is one of them. They’re auditioning Edwin Jackson today, and I don’t think he has much of a chance.  Jackson is the very definition of the term “well-traveled” – he’s been on 12 of the 30 major league teams, and this is his second tour of duty with the Nationals. He was an average-to-above-average starting pitcher through 2011, and, in a move that Theo Epstein probably won’t mention when he writes his autobiography, was signed to a four-year, $52-million deal with the Cubs. Jackson responded by going 16-34 with a 5.37 ERA and -3.4 WAR over two and a half years, at which point the Cubs threw in the towel and ate the remainder of the contract. He wasn’t terrible today – one run on three hits and two walks in three innings – but nothing worth remembering, either. I think the Nats were hoping Jake Arrieta would take a bargain-basement deal to sign with them, but he went to the Phillies over the weekend (which might give the Phils an outside chance at a wild-card spot if everything goes right), so they’re looking at Jackson and two rookies, A.J. Cole and Erick Fedde. Cole appears to be the favorite (he was not awful in 52 innings last year), but honestly, if I were running the Nats I’d be putting a call out to Alex Cobb, who’s the only noteworthy free agent left other than reliever Greg Holland, and who would probably take a low-end deal with incentives to play for a contender. This is the last year the Nats are going to have Bryce Harper, barring something miraculous – do they really want to go with Edwin Jackson as their fifth starter?