AZ Snake Pit - Game #73: 6/26, Arizona Diamondbacks 2, San Diego Padres 4An unofficial Arizona Diamondbacks community and bloghttps://cdn.vox-cdn.com/community_logos/47033/azsnakepit_f.png2015-06-27T02:00:02-04:00http://www.azsnakepit.com/rss/stream/86194022015-06-27T02:00:02-04:002015-06-27T02:00:02-04:00Diamondbacks 2, Padres 4: As Mt. .500 recedes...
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<img alt="Golde, doing Goldie things..." src="https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/_PBtHl0uxinUcSTVGDbxjcTmyhk=/0x153:1498x1152/1310x873/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/46624612/usa-today-8669315.0.jpg" />
<figcaption>Golde, doing Goldie things... | Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports</figcaption>
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<p>Good news! The long nightmare of alternating wins and losses is over! Bad news? Yeah, we lost again. </p> <p><b>Record: 35-38. Pace: 78-84. Change on 2014: +5.</b></p>
<p>This was one of those games where I had a feeling of doom from the start. Two batters in, we had a .500 OBP against <span>Tyson Ross</span>, which was a vast improvement on last time, due to <span>David Peralta</span> walking. Then, the unthinkable happened: <span>Paul Goldschmidt</span> hit into an inning-ending double-play. Ok, that's not quite unthinkable, but it is only the third time he has done so in the 73 games we have played. So it's right up there with "A falcon, towering in her pride of place, was by a mousing owl hawk'd at and kill'd," in terms of general ill-omen. It seemed to set the tone for the evening's proceedings, and it didn't take long for the orchestra to stop tuning-up and begin playing.</p>
<p>That would be the <i>bottom</i> of the first inning, where the second <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.gaslampball.com/">Padres</a> to come to the plate, reached base on an error by... Paul Goldschmidt. Whaaaaaaat? This is a man with a fielding percentage coming into tonight's game of <b>.999</b>: 700 chances, 644 putouts, 55 assists, one error. And, naturally, this one immediately came back to haunt us, the next batter cranking a double off the left-center field war, to score the runner who shouldn't have been on base to begin with. <span>Robbie Ray</span> escaped the inning without further damage, and the second was scoreless - albeit, in part because after lead-off hitter <span>Yasmany Tomas</span> walked, he was caught stealing.</p>
<p>In the third inning, the <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.azsnakepit.com/">Diamondbacks</a> did strike back, taking advantage of uncharacteristic wildness from Tyson Ross. By that, I mean: Chris Pollock walks. <span>A.J. Pollock</span> walked. And David Peralta walked, loading the bases for Goldie - to that point, Ross had walked five of the 11 batters faced [<span>Chris Owings</span> also stole second, and then strolled casually to third-base, which had been left entirely unmanned by San Diego due to the shift]. Goldschmidt then made Ross pay for this indiscretion, working the count full, then smoothly swatting the ball back up the middle for a two-run single. To no-one's surprise, Tomas ended things by hacking at the first pitch and grounding out weakly.</p>
<p>The lead didn't last long. The Padres singled to start the bottom of the third, with a sacrifice bunt following. <span>Matt Kemp</span> struck out swinging, as the runner tried to take third, but Welington Castillo's throw down to the hot corner was up and in. That might not have been <u>too</u> bad, as <span>Nick Ahmed</span> was covering the play. But the throw glanced just far enough off Jake Lamb's glove, to trundle past the despairing backward flail of Ahmed into the outfield, and the runner came home to score. Things looked like they might get worse, as two more batters reached base, including a rolling ball down to third that just... wouldn't... go... foul, but J-Up took strike three, and disaster was averted.</p>
<p>Or, at least, postponed. San Diego got their lead-off man on board again on the fifth, this time courtesy of a shattered bat bleeder that the runner was just able to beat out to first. He then stole second - the Diamondbacks challenged, but the resulting refusal was almost a foregone conclusion on a night like this [when the Padres used their challenge in the seventh, that call was reversed. This is my unsurprised face]. He was bunted to third, and came home on a sacrifice fly that, it has to be said, A.J. Pollock seemed to catch fairly flat-footed. Ray did suffer no more damage, and left after six innings, having allowed two earned runs (and one unearned), on five hits, with no walks and five strikeouts.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the offense, having failed to take advantage of the earlier opportunities, beyond Goldie's single, seemed intent on ensuring they would not spurn any more - by refusing to <i>create</i> any more opportunities. After Tomas's ground-out, we sent the minimum to the plate in the fourth and the fifth and the sixth and the seventh [sensing a pattern here?] and the eighth. The only base-runner among 18 consecutive D-backs who came to the plate was a single by Ray, who was immediately erased by another double-play, this one off the bat of Pollock. The streaked ended with a two-out walk to Tomas in the ninth, but Lamb whiffed for the third time tonight to end the game</p>
<p>By that point, the third defensive miscue of the night for Arizona gifted San Diego another run. With two outs in the eighth and a runner on third, J-Up bounced a chopper back to the right of David Hernandez. He dived off the mound, tried to throw from his knees, but airmailed the throw over the head of Goldie: it was scored as an infield single with an RBI, the error letting the runner advance, but that seemed charitable. The saddest stat of the evening may be this: we had fewer hits than errors, managing just the singles by Goldschmidt and Ray, a season low. You won't win many games that way, needless to say.</p>
<p align="center"><a target="_blank" href="http://www.fangraphs.com/livewins.aspx?date=2015-06-26&team=Padres&dh=0&season=2015"><img src="https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3828312/chart.0.png" alt="Fangraph"></a><br>[<i>Click for details, at fangraphs.com</i>]<br><b>On the iron throne: Paul Goldschmidt, +17.1%<br><i>Shame! Shame! Shame! [Ding-a-ling]: Robbie Ray, 23.6%<br></i></b><i>White Walkers: Ahmed, -11.6%; Lamb, -10.6%</i></p>
<p align="left">Not a bad 650 comments, with freeland1787 cracking three digits, while DbacksSkins and JoeCB1991 were both between 50 and 100. Others present: Clefo, DeadmanG, Devin Jessup, GuruB, James Attwood, Jim McLennan, Majabe, Makakilo, MrMrrbi, Nate Rowan, SongBird, Umbrella24, Xerostomia, Zavada's Moustache, benhat, cardshuffle, catbat, ford.williams.10, gamepass, hotclaws, luckycc, noblevillain, onedotfive, piratedan7, preston.salisbury, thunderpumpkin87 and xmet. There were no Sedona Red comments to be found, so I'll withhold Comment of the Night. The game didn't deserve it.</p>
<p align="left">Having rolled down the slopes to the gentle foothills of Mount .500, tomorrow, we will try to do more better, and begin a winning streak to get back there. I previously expressed concern that, whatever way the streak broke, it could lead to a lengthy run, and now it has broken the wrong way, we'll see what it brings. <span>Jeremy Hellickson</span> starts for us, going up against <span>Andrew Cashner</span>, with another 7:10pm start.</p>
https://www.azsnakepit.com/2015/6/27/8855733/diamondbacks-2-padres-3-as-mt-500-recedesJim McLennan2015-06-27T00:58:52-04:002015-06-27T00:58:52-04:00Diamondbacks 2, Padres 4
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<figcaption>Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports</figcaption>
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<p>Arizona had their chances against San Diego, but failed to capitalize and failed to play sound baseball either. </p> <p>The <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.gaslampball.com/">Padres</a> got on the board in the first after an uncharacteristic error by <span>Paul Goldschmidt</span> led to an unearned run for Robbie Ray. However, Goldie redeemed himself in the third inning, bringing two runs home with a bases-loaded single back up the middle. Hopes of getting back to just under .500 proved elusive, as another error - this one on a throw by <span>Welington Castillo</span> - helped San Diego level things. They then took full advantage of their luck, converting a broken-bat single into the go-ahead run, with the help of a stolen-base, a sac. bunt and a sacrifice fly. That was the end of the damage against Ray, who went six innings, allowing two earned runs (and one unearned) on five hits.</p>
<p>After the Goldschmidt hit, coming with two outs in the third, the Arizona offense gave up, no position player managing to get a hit thereafter - the only other one came from Ray. We did walk six, the last coming with two outs in the ninth to bring the tying run to the plate, but we send one of the minimum to the dish after that third inning, and paid the price. A <span>David Hernandez</span> error helped San Diego tack on an insurance run in the bottom of the eighth, and we found ourselves three games below .500 for the first time since June 13.</p>
https://www.azsnakepit.com/2015/6/27/8855851/diamondbacks-padres-scoreJim McLennan2015-06-26T20:45:02-04:002015-06-26T20:45:02-04:00Game #73 Preview: 6/26, Diamondbacks @ Padres
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<figcaption>Ethan Miller/Getty Images</figcaption>
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<p>A rematch against Tyson. But will the D-backs be Marvis Frazier again, or more like Evander Holyfield. </p>
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<td valign="middle" width="10%"><img src="https://cdn3.vox-cdn.com/assets/2572695/ari.png"></td>
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<span>Robbie Ray</span><br>RHP, 2-2, 1.78<br>
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<span>Tyson Ross</span><br>RHP, 4-7, 3.61</h5>
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<span>A.J. Pollock</span> - CF</td>
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<span>Matt Kemp</span> - RF</td>
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<span>David Peralta</span> - LF</td>
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<span>Derek Norris</span> - C</td>
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<span>Paul Goldschmidt</span> - 1B</td>
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<span>Yonder Alonso</span> - 1B</td>
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<span>Yasmany Tomas</span> - RF</td>
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<span>Justin Upton</span> - LF</td>
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<span>Jake Lamb</span> - 3B</td>
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<span>Will Middlebrooks</span> - 3B</td>
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<span>Welington Castillo</span> - C</td>
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<span>Clint Barmes</span> - SS</td>
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<span>Chris Owings</span> - 2B</td>
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<span>Melvin Upton Jr</span>. - CF</td>
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<span>Nick Ahmed</span> - SS</td>
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<span>Cory Spangenberg</span> - 2B</td>
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<td class="td-last td-name">Robbie Ray - LHP</td>
<td class="td-first td-name">Tyson Ross - RHP</td>
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<p>If you had gone back to the first of the alternating streak, the opening game of the series against the <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.halosheaven.com/">Angels</a> in Anaheim, bet just ten bucks at even money, and then let it ride going forward, strictly switching between wins and losses, you would be wagering $10,240 on tonight's contest. But if the D-backs are to make it 11 such games in a row, they'll need to do a much better job of handling Ross than they did last week. Tonight's a rematch of last Saturday's contest, when he threw a complete game, allowing only four hits and one run, striking out nine <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.azsnakepit.com/">Diamondbacks</a>. That was more than enough, as the <a class="sbn-auto-link" href="https://www.gaslampball.com/">Padres</a> cruised to a 8-1 win</p>
<p>Meanwhile, news this afternoon on <span>Archie Bradley</span>, which falls somewhere between comforting and scary, and I'm not sure nearer to which end.</p>
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<p dir="ltr" lang="en"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Dbacks?src=hash">#Dbacks</a> RHP Archie Bradley is to get a second opinion from Dr. James Andrews on his right shoulder irritation, <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Dbacks?src=hash">#Dbacks</a> GM Dave Stewart said.</p>
— Jack Magruder (@JackMagruder) <a href="https://twitter.com/JackMagruder/status/614567550647558144">June 26, 2015</a>
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<p dir="ltr" lang="en"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Dbacks?src=hash">#Dbacks</a> Stewart on Bradley: "We're not seeing anything to be alarmed about, but there may be something there." Thus a visit to Dr. Andrews</p>
— Jack Magruder (@JackMagruder) <a href="https://twitter.com/JackMagruder/status/614568104346021888">June 26, 2015</a>
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So, yay! "We're not seeing anything to be alarmed about." But from previous experience, second opinions from Dr James "The Knife" Andrews tend to be Bad Things. I can't think of many pitchers, in fact, who have walked into his office and left with the same number of UCLs as they had going in. We'll see if Bradley can beat the odds.</p>
https://www.azsnakepit.com/2015/6/26/8855179/arizona-diamondbacks-san-diego-padres-previewJim McLennan