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Diamondbacks 12, Braves 6 - Owings, home, homers and homers

Record: 71-53. Change on last season: +9. Pace: 93-69
Playoff odds: 77.1%. Playoff Magic Number: 35

Quote of the day: "It's up there with the best ever. To be back home and have the game I had tonight, I'm just unbelievably blessed." -- Micah Owings

Blessed. That's one way to put it. It's probably best just to start of with a litany of the records set or broken by Micah Owings during the game tonight. Not so much with his pitching, as the final line (seven innings pitched, three earned runs) was respectable, rather than spectacular, but the hitting. He's been talking a mean at-bat, and while the reality has been good (.205 and 5 RBI), it's not quite been as claimed. All that changed this evening: we came up with some of these during the Gameday Thread, but they're worth a recount, in increasing order of awesomeness.

  • Four hits. Franchise record for a pitcher - previous best, three, by three players, most recently EnGon (July 17, 2006). Bobby Livingston had four hits just a few weeks ago (July 16th) for the Reds against Atlanta, but the last pitcher before him was back in 2001, on August 11th, when it was done by...Livan Hernandez. 26 pitchers since 1957 have managed it.

  • Two homers. Franchise record for a pitcher - previous best, one, by eleven players, most recently Micah himself on July 26th. It's the first time in the majors since Dontrelle Willis did it on September 20th last year, but it's kinda rare: only five occasions since 1990, and eight since 1978. Rick Wise and Dick Donovan managed it twice in one season (1971 and 1962), while Tony Cloninger did it twice in one month (6/16 + 7/3, 1966). Wise also threw a no-hitter in one of his games!

  • Six RBI. Franchise record for a pitcher - previous best, three, by Brandon Webb (5/20/06) and Andy Benes (9/22/99). Only one pitcher has reached that level since 1969; Robert Person had seven RBI for the Phillies against Montreal on June 2nd, 2002: he had a grand-slam in the first and a three-run homer in the fifth.

  • Eleven total bases That destroys the franchise record for a pitcher - the previous best was only four, by (duh!) all the pitchers who hit a home run, and Brian Anderson, who tripled and singled back in 2001. Only seventeen position players in the entire majors this year have managed eleven bases in a game: it's the most by a pitcher, at least since 1957, which is as far as BaseballReference.com records go back for game performances. We're waiting for a formal judgement, but this could conceivably be the best hitting performance by a pitcher in baseball history...

Not technically a record, but still extremely worthy of mention. Owings' line at the plate is now .273/.283/.568, for an OPS of .851. That OPS is ahead of everyone else on the team bar Eric Byrnes, who's at .857, and would rank him 47th among qualifying major-league hitters this year. Players with a lower OPS this season include: Paul Konerko, Lance Berkman, Alfonso Soriano, Carlos Beltran, Derek Jeter, Frank Thomas, Ichiro, Adrian Beltre and (hahaha!) Luis Gonzalez.

Outside of the offensive juggernaut which was Micah Owings, what else is there to talk about? A vaguely interesting feat, in that he gave up only three hits, but all three were home-runs. Cliff Lee did that too, for Cleveland on June 8th, but they fall well short of the best in this category: Charlie Hough of Texas pitched 7.2 innings against Cleveland on June 24th, 1989, and gave up five hits, all of which left the park. But Owings is the first pitcher to do it and pick up the win, since Ramon Ortiz pitched a complete-game four hitter, with four solo shots, on June 14th, 2002. Good for Micah to get the victory monkey off his back, earning his first W in ten starts.

The rest of the offense hopped aboard the M-Train as well, with Orlando Hudson pacing Owings, getting four hits and two RBI. Stephen Drew and Jeff Salazar also got two apiece. Young and Reynolds were the only starters not to get a hit, though Tony Clark probably had the worst day, going 1-for-5 with a double-play and eight men left on base. Chipper Jones homered to give Atlanta the lead in the first, but Arizona reeled off twelve straight runs, around a rain delay, to put this one away, helped somewhat by three Braves errors.

Owings then allowed back-to-back long balls to Francoeur and Andruw Jones, but got to walk off the mound under his own steam at the end of the seventh. Nippert did get some work, posting a scoreless eighth, before Jailen Peguero probably punched his own ticket back to Tucson tomorrow, with a lifeless inning. He allowed three runs, all earned, on four hits, as the Braves restored a bit of respectability to proceedings, having managed only five base-runners (three hits, one walk, one HBP) and one run in the first fifteen innings of this series. Still, it wasn't enough, by a very long way, and the Diamondbacks are now assured of their ninth consecutive series victory.

The "What will Micah do next?" Gameday Thread was thoroughly entertaining, though personally, my enthusiasm for the game waned after Micah's mortality was cruelly exposed, the Braves finally getting him out at the fifth attempt. Joining me in praise of Micah were Ben, LucaMaz3, hotclaws, DBACKS KICK ARSE, DbacksSkins, VIII, Peachy, DbacksSkins, TwinnerA, snakecharmer, Englishdback, oklahomasooners, batster, npineda, johngordonma, icecoldmo and muu.

Gameday Graph

[Click graph to enlarge, in new window]
Master of his domain: Micah 'The Hitman' Owings, +27.6%
God-emperor of suck: Tony Clark, -8.3%
Honorary "Well done!": Micah 'The Pitcher' Owings, +13.9%

We've seen cases where the starter has been both at the top and bottom of the win expectancy chart: but I think this is the first ever time he has been #1 and #2 in the same game!

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Congrats to Micah!
What a great outing his rookie year.  If he still works on his current pitches while expanding his repertoire, he will be quite the asset to the Dbacks in the future.  Now, for a quick question, what is OPS?

p.s.  I think he was a first baseman/starting pitcher in college.

p.s.s.  Jim, thanks for the great recap.  You are very eloquent and I always enjoy reading your posts.:-)

by batster on Aug 19, 2007 12:37 AM EDT reply actions  

Today's lesson :-)
OPS is an overall measure of offensive performance, first popularized in 1984 by The Hidden Game of Baseball. It stands for On-base percentage Plus Slugging Percentage, and is a decent one-number summary of production at the plate. Slugging Percentage doesn't take into account walks. On-base Percentage doesn't take into account power. But adding the two together gives you something that accounts for both; it's not perfect, but gives you a decent idea.

.800 is solid; .900 is very good; 1.000 is bordering on MVP level. Bonds currently leads the majors with 1.084, mostly because of his phenomenal on-base percentage of .493 (he gets on base almost half the times he comes to the plate!). A-Rod, Chipper Jones, Cabrera and Magglio Ordonez are all also above 1.000 at the moment.

Glad you like the site! Happy to have you aboard!

by Jim McLennan on Aug 19, 2007 1:05 AM EDT up reply actions  

I assume....
The Cabrera you're referring to is Miguel.
Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 7:08 AM EDT up reply actions  

Enjoy it!
Enjoy this 2007 squad "D*Backs" fans, after all it's YOUR team.

YOU are the ones who wanted Major League Baseball in the desert.

YOU are the ones who paid your own money to build the BOB.

YOU are the ones who voted on the team name.

YOU are the ones who couldn't stop jumping up and down on that one November 4th.

YOU are the ones who afterwards never felt more proud wearing the hometown colors.

So sitting at home, sipping a cold one, watching the "D*Backs" battle tough teams like the Phillies, Cardinals, Braves, Reds, Red Sox, Nationals, and Astros for a much desired spot in the playoffs, take pride in your team!

Take pride in the ads that cover your stadium.
Take pride in the shortened name.
Take pride in the abandoned colors.
Take pride that you didn't get a say on the identity theft.

Take pride in 2007, Arizona. After all, it's YOUR team.

by biggerunit1 on Aug 19, 2007 3:11 AM EDT reply actions  

Paging Bitter, party of one...
That would actually be the stadium paid for by a sales tax increase, which never went before the electorate on a ballot. That would also be the team name unilaterally chosen by Jerry, when everyone else involved saw it differently. So what we really got were the "Arizona Colangelos". Maybe if he'd listened to other people a bit more, instead of acting like Der Phoenix Reichsfuhrer, things might have turned out differently.

I could go on. But I won't. We appreciate you staying off the bandwagon. Have fun wallowing in your nostalgia for all thing purple and teal. I'll send you a postcard from the land of consistently competitive teams, based on a strong farm system rather than by running the franchise's finances into the ground. The team is on pace to win more games this season than that World Series side did, and in a way that won't cripple the franchise for years to come. Frankly, they could play in green polka-dots and be called the Arizona Poolscum, for all I care. :-)

Take pride in players from our farm system
Take pride in astute trades
Take pride in the youngest hitters in the National League
Take pride in the best record in the league too
Take price in doing this with the smallest payroll in the division, and the 26th-largest in the majors.

That's what really matters. They may not be your Arizona D-backs any more, but they certainly still are mine. Thanks for stopping by. The door is over there.

by Jim McLennan on Aug 19, 2007 4:17 AM EDT up reply actions  

Yes, it's OUR team.
I'm more proud of a team of young, hungry and homegrown players than I ever could be for a 2001 team of aging mercenaries that only came to Arizona because Colangelo offered them the most money.

While I cheered just as hard as the next person, it's funny that for all of the criticism now about how the Yankees are merely trying to buy championships, in 2001 it was the Yankees that fielded the lineup full of homegrown talent.

by dahlian on Aug 19, 2007 4:27 AM EDT up reply actions  

Can you at least explain one thing to me?
I'm not even going to bother trying to convince you about this team, because obviously you've got your heart set that laundry is the most important thing about the team you root for and I doubt that will ever change (barring a World Series, of course)

But please, please tell me, what are you trying to get at with that random list of the "tough teams" were battling.  I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or serious.  If the latter, why would you make such a random list - there's nothing connecting those teams in either chronology or results - and if the former, why would you include the Braves, Phillies and Red Sox?

My mind is playing boggle.  Please, please put it at ease again.

by dahlian on Aug 19, 2007 4:47 AM EDT up reply actions  

Red
Red uniforms. I don't get the obsession myself - but apparently it gets a small percentage of 'fans' worked into a purple lather.  

I've seen a boatload of red merchandise on people's backs so it's obvious most weren't bothered by the change much.  Or <gasp> even welcomed it.

 

by cavscout on Aug 20, 2007 6:21 PM EDT up reply actions  

Oh yes.
What a damned shame that this year's team is so awful. JC's last team in 2004 (yes, they wore ridiculously stupid purple and teal jerseys) was so much better. Keep finding things to bitch about. I beg you. You're only making yourself look silly.
Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 7:03 AM EDT up reply actions  

I;m not from Arizona
I'm from far away rainy Manchester ,UK and I'm damn proud of the team I support.I was behind them in the bad seasons and now when the years of patience have finally paid off as the baby backs come into their own ,I'm extatic.I like the new Sedona Red,though not the reason for the change.Win or lose,they are MY team and I love them.I play a virtual equestrian game on line and called my stables Chase Field in their honour!I may not live in the desert but it feels like my beloved team to me.
We will meet in Red 3 at the hour of scampering.

by hotclaws on Aug 19, 2007 9:49 AM EDT up reply actions  

One stat you forgot, Jim....
Forget pitchers. The last PLAYER to have a 2 HR, 4 hit, 4 run, 6 RBI game in the majors, according to ESPN, was... um.... who is this... looks like an A. Rodriguez, circa 2005. Now WHERE have I heard THAT name before....??

(And no, I'm not a hypocrite for having watched ESPN. It was on in all the bars we hit tonight. Micah was #1 in the Sportscenter top 10, btw. :-P)

Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 7:13 AM EDT reply actions  

By the way....
Any answer to my question in the gameday thread about whether Pwnings' 446 ft HR is the longest ever by a pitcher not named Babe Ruth?
Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 7:22 AM EDT reply actions  

I was at the game last night
Micah was unbelievable.  Even the Braves fans were rooting for him to hit for the cycle.  Hudson was awesome also with Drew having a good game.  Clark was horrible.  He looked like he had the flu or something.  It was just an unbelievable game.

by DiamondbacksWIn on Aug 19, 2007 7:28 AM EDT reply actions  

Yeah....
"Even the Braves fans were rooting for him to hit for the cycle"

Yeah, the Braves fans are some of the best in baseball, I think. Probably comes from having a team that won the division all those years in a row: you come to understand what good baseball really is.

I still remember the standing ovation the Atlanta crowd gave Randy when he tossed his perfect game.

Now compare the Braves fans to some of their NL East counterparts -- I'm talking the Marlins, whose 5 fans don't a great crowd make, and what can be said about New York and Philadelphia fans that hasn't already been said??

Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 2:33 PM EDT up reply actions  

Good game to go to!
Bet that wasn't high on your list of expectations - "Well, I imagine we'll see our pitcher smack two homers and drive in six." A nice surprise. :-)

by Jim McLennan on Aug 19, 2007 4:12 PM EDT up reply actions  

Yeah...
And you were upset that you didn't get to see Brandon Webb, right? I'll bet Micah's game was more of a show...
Come on, Sandy Baby, loosen up. You're too tight.

by DbacksSkins on Aug 19, 2007 5:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

I did not expect the fireworks from Micah
I knew he could hit but who expected this.  Another highlight was getting Webby's autograph with my sons before the game.  He seemed like a genuine great guy!

by DiamondbacksWIn on Aug 20, 2007 7:47 PM EDT up reply actions  

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