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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

egbert and floyd: a tale of 2 sox

i’m tooting my own horn here. i’ve been floyd’s biggest supporter for about 2.5 years now, and i wrote this article late last year, thinking that i really liked the progress floyd had made over the course of the 2007 season, with the spin of looking forward to what he would do in 2008.

he’s taken 2 no hitters into the 8th inning, one of them into the 9th, and i’m ready to jump 100% into his bandwagon, without reservation.

well, maybe with one, OZZIE: PLEASE STOP RIDING HIS ARM.  give him a few starts with about 90 pitches, and let him adjust more softly to being a quality major league pitcher.  i know that a no hitter is a special thing, but he’s not going to last the season if you ride him into the ground every time he has a modicum of success.

steagles Posted: May 07, 2008 at 01:17 AM | 3 comment(s)
  Related News: Chi White SoxPhiladelphia

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   1. SuperHat Posted: May 07, 2008 at 02:07 AM (#2771884)
Not to steal his thunder or anything, but I think this is more of an indictment of Twins hitting tonight than Floyd's pitching. Here is what a Twins beat writer had to say about it. http://ww3.startribune.com/blogs/neal/2008/05/07/thoughts-on-the-near-no-no/

Thoughts On The Near No-No
Posted on May 7th, 2008 – 12:01 AM
By La Velle

I have seen three no-hitters in person in my lifetime. Bret Saberhagen’s against the White Sox in 1991, David Wells’ perfect game against the Twins in 1998 and Eric Milton’s no-no against the Angels in 1999.

If Gavin Floyd had pulled off a no-no against the Twins on Tuesday it would have been the sloppiest, most unjust no-hitter that I can remember.

Floyd was far from overpowering. In fact, I sent Joe C. a text message around the fourth inning remarking how Floyd couldn’t get ANY breaking pitches or his change up, over for strikes. I was convinced that the Twins would sit on the fastball and start pounding him. I thought Nick Blackburn pitched than Floyd in the early innings but didn’t have the results to show for it.

That great adjustment by Twins hitters never came, which was disappointing coming off of their game against Kenny Rogers on Sunday.

One thing I noticed was that the Twins, while trying to have good at-bats, took a few fastballs down the middle for strike one. I really thought they were going to get to Floyd. Floyd didn’t even get a curveball over for a called strike until the seventh inning, based on my recollections.

The Twins should have hit this guy. I know its easy for me to write that from my position but geez….

How about Joe Mauer? Two big hits in two games.

Everyone will talk about how well Floyd pitched on Tuesday. I won’t. The Twins created the mess.
   2. Walt Davis Posted: May 07, 2008 at 06:53 AM (#2771901)
Floyd has just 19 K and a whopping 18 walks in 39.2 IP. He's got a BABIP of 238 -- not gonna continue.

With that K rate and that walk rate and a relatively average 4 HRs given up (and an awful ML career HR rate), there's no way he can be a successful pitcher.
   3. Slinger Francisco Barrios (Dr. Memory) Posted: May 07, 2008 at 09:13 AM (#2771932)
The first half of the game was rough for him, but Floyd was getting his breaking stuff over by the seventh. Some of those later curves were ill.

If Gavin Floyd had pulled off a no-no against the Twins on Tuesday it would have been the sloppiest, most unjust no-hitter that I can remember.

And they call us the B*tch Sox. Shee, how whiny can you get.
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