Thursday, July 26, 2018

We Got A Man For That, Biscuits Lurking




Another post about the Biscuits good road numbers vs their bad home record?

Nah, we have been over that before. Five wins and ten losses at home in the second half is terrible, thirteen wins and five losses on the road is awesome.

Skipper Brady Williams probably isn't that concerned about it with over a month left in the season. "Just win series" he has told me, "and things take care of themselves."

The club has shown that it can win series and is in a good position going into the final pennant push. Have faith, Skitz fanz!




BISCUITS LURKING
The Biscuits have some solid hitters in the lineup, several are pretending to be in a slump but its just a ploy to lull opposing teams into a false sense of superiority. At the right time, the Montgomery batters will pounce on unsuspecting pitchers and seize the day.


 Here are a few of those likely to break out in the final stretch.

Brosseau playing first base
Mike Brosseau has found his power stroke, slugging over .800 since the start of June. Mike makes himself more valuable by getting time at multiple positions.

Brossy is particularly reliable with a runner on first and clutch in extra inning at-bats. Mike hits okay at home but is best on the road, enjoying a .275 average in away games.

The glove never slumps tho, Mike Brosseau is a capable defender at any position between the chalk lines.



David Rodriguez - who is this guy?
David Rodriguez
The Venezuelan catcher came out of Charlotte and has spent plenty of time behind the dish for the Biscuits since the end of May.

His current .220's average is a ruse, David is a career .250s hitter and has raked a .261 average so far in July. Rodriguez has good doubles power and has shown solid skills behind the plate. 


Peter Maris - hit .300 in June and then .200 in July. Scuffling a bit as he adjusts to double-A pitching, Maris is a .275 hitter on the road and is ripe to go on a tear at the plate. Provided he can force his way into the lineup every day!



Nate Lukes - this guy is a sneaky beast in right field. When opposing hitters loop a single into right field and take a peek to see if they can stretch it to a double I have started yelling "GO FOR IT!". Very few go for it.

Nathan Lukes has a cannon arm in the outfield and word has got around that you don't run on Lukes.
Nathan Lukes in right field

At the plate Nate has stepped up, batting .285 with a .750 OPS, both nice improvements to his numbers from last year. He has cut down on the strikeouts and taken more walks as well as swiping seven bases already. Lukes is another one that could be on the cusp of a big finish.


WE GOT A MAN FOR THAT

Thomas Milone
aka "We got a man for that"
The crack of the bat, a fly ball soars in an arc across the Riverwalk outfield as a lone white shirt streaks across the green grass and fans predict the orbs final destination.

We got a man for that - Milone
Them: "That ones gone!"

Them: "Oh, its a homerun!"

Them: "Whoa, thats crushed!"

Us: "We got a man for that..."

And the sphere settles in the glove of the man aforementioned.

His name is Thomas Milone and he is perhaps the best outfielder not named Kiermaier the Biscuits have had. He isn't as fast as Braxton Lee, though he draws  those comparisons due to the vast amount of sod that he prevents baseballs from landing on.


Milone is a nice guy, as friendly as any on the club, but opposing hitters dislike him intensely. I know this from the words they say as they walk away after watching him nonchalantly toss a ball back to the infield that the hitter was sure would become a souvenir, or at least a two base hit.

During the last series, Milone was patrolling centerfield as usual when a daisycutter rolling towards him hopped over his glove, not stopping until it hit the wall. The batter circled the bases for a little-league homerun and Milone was charged with the Error.

It was just his second miscue in over seventy games this year, but one fan called for him to be benched after such a boneheaded play. What have you done for us lately, Tommy? haha 



#BULLPENLIFE




On Pitching
I guess I am a pitching fan, baseball highlight shows are a horror movie that just show pitcher mistakes with no reference to the situation, glorifying hitters.

For a pitching fan, there is lots to like about what the Biscuits have cooking.
Welcoming a sixth starter in Brock Burke pushes Brandon Lawson to the bullpen and gives Brady Williams another option for relief.

NEW GUY: BROCK BURKE
Brock Burke
Burke, a Colorado native, is off to a fast start with Montgomery. In his first two games he picked up a win and a no decision while striking out fifteen over ten innings.

Lefthanded, Burke was drafted by the Rays in the third round of 2014 and should fit nicely in among the Biscuits rotation of impressive lefties.

Burke can be overpowering on the mound, able to provide swing and miss stuff as well as good velocity. Occasionally Brock will fall victim to giving free passes but usually manages to keep the ball in the ballpark and induce a ground ball.

Burke is just the second Colorado native to be a Biscuit - can you name the other? 

 LAWSON
Righthander Brandon Lawson had a nice 3.81 ERA as a starter in five games for Montgomery and could work his way back into the rotation later. Lawson had trouble missing bats at times, allowing a few too many hits. The Festus, Montana native didn't give up a homer in any of his five starts. He has allowed three homers in five appearances as a reliever.

CABRERA
Lefty starter Genesis Cabrera has been mostly excellent with the Biscuits this year, anchoring the rotation and ranking second in the league in strikeouts with 115. However he leads the league in bases on balls with 57 and sports a rather un-sexy 4.20 ERA and average 6-6 record.

The numbers aren't all flattering but Cabrera has pitched better than his stats and could be in for a big finish.



THE OPENER
The Biscuits have been using Dalton Moats as an opening act, starting games and then giving way to another pitcher - usually Genesis Cabrera.

It has had mixed success in the case of Moats numbers. As a starting pitcher, Dalton strikes more out and walks fewer hitters but also gives up more base hits.  In his last start, Brady may have simply waited one batter too long to bring in Cabrera, leaving Moats hanging a pitch and hurting those stats.

I like the concept but the jury is still out on how it helps the home team, I am not sure Genesis Cabrera is the kind of pitcher who needs an opening act!


BENTON IS BACK
Pitcher Benton Moss returned from the DL, he had lost most of two fingernails and had to let them heal. Moss had made nine starts before the injury and now looks to build on his 3-4 record. The bewhiskered righthander from North Carolina was a sixth round choice in 2015 and provides valuable innings to the rotation.



DR. MARTIN & Mr. HYDE
Early in the year during a J.D. Martin start, the knuckleballer was taking his time pushing flutterballs past opposing hitters when a fan sitting near me said "Oh, man, how slow can he be? How many more starts is this guy gonna make?" So I tried to buck him up with "About twenty or so."

Knuckleball pitchers take their time to get hitters anxious to swing the bat. It makes for a good way to induce bad at bats.

Indeed the veteran moundsman Martin has made 24 starts to this point and has eaten over 100 innings while keeping the Biscuits in the game more often than his 7-9 record would indicate.

Yet the J.D. Martin we see at home games is nothing like the pitcher he is on the road.

At Riverwalk he is winless in nine games with seven losses. Opposing hitters tee off on him at a .326 clip, he strikes out five men per nine innings and walks about the same.

In ten road starts, and two relief appearances, he has been dominant with seven wins against just two defeats. Martin strikes out a few more on the road, walks significantly fewer hitters and has much more success with opposing batters hitting just .246 against him, a full 80 points lower.



FAN REACTION
Last weeks post had a long piece on Mike Kilkenny, a brief preview of the Braves visit, a big pile of Montgomery history and a couple paragraphs on the attendance slacking. It garnered a couple comments, always a cool thing as comments are super helpful to tell me what you like and I view it as kind of a reward to get! haha

However one of the comments, now removed, decried "Fake News" and contested my statement that concession prices had gone up.

This pains me, as truth and honesty are coin of the realm here, if you want spin or propaganda you know where to find such.

The information in question came to me via fans at the park who said that they thought prices had been raised on some items. Since I get the same six things (beer - corndog - chicken tenders - supernachos -icee - ice cream) I don't notice changes on other things. I mentioned it because it was something I heard more than once.

When someone felt it was questionable, I checked it out. Prices have not changed at the Biscuits concession stands, as far as I can tell. Fans just feel  like they have.

One of the good things about writing a blog, mistakes happen and its not mission critical for anyone. I am certainly not afraid to make mistakes, it is an important part of the learning process. At least, it is for me.

However the context of my original statement was, and is, more about public perception and how it affects attendance. F'rexample...

Last Thursday I picked up two "Thirsty Thursday" beers at two bucks each. Walking away with two fistfuls of brew, a perfect stranger literally yelled at me "Those beers ain't worth two dollars! Those cups are smaller than they used to be!"

Of course I know these are the same cups that have been sold for two dollars at every thursday Biscuits game since they threw open the doors. But that guy knew what a two dollar beer looked like, and that wasn't it.

Obviously dude had been there before and knew what he was expecting. And that wasn't it. Perhaps it was back in '04 or '05 or 2012 or whenever. But it wasn't now. Simply put, fans expect a little more from their two dollar beers than they used to.

Lou, Parney, Porter, Trible and crew are doing everything right, but its tough to turn attendance numbers around with the public perception being what it is.





THIS WEEK IN MONTGOMERY BASEBALL HISTORY


JULY 27th 1967 
The Montgomery Rebels defeat Bham for sixth straight win, taking first place in the league with a doubleheader sweep 2-0 and 5-1. Rebels pitchers Bob Reed and John Gregory both pitch complete games. Reed allows four hits in the opening game and Gregory gives up just three base hits while striking out seven


JULY 28 1909 
Montgomery pitcher Lively throws a no-hitter against Little Rock, walking none, but one man reaches via error to break the perfect game.


JULY 29 1920 
Knoxville, TN
"Gray Sox Win One, Lose Two - Knoxville, Tennessee, August 6.

- The Knoxville Giants lost their first game in a three game series, but managed to annex the following two from the Montgomery Grey Sox. There was plenty of pep in all three games. The Dixie Jazz Band furnished the music. These victories placed Knoxville in first place and Montgomery in second.

 Steel Arm Dickey, with 25 straight victories to his credit, suffered his first defeat of the season. His failure to field a bunt, his wild throw to first and a dropped fly ball by Fielder Bosby, all in the first game, gave the Sox a 3-run lead. It looked as though the giants might win with the bases full, but Mason tightened. That was in the first game. July 31 Dickey came back and made good defeating the visitors."


JULY 29 1972
Montgomery hosts the Southern League AllStar game, a Bucky Dent homer wins it in dramatic style at Paterson Field. Back then the team with the best record in the league took on the players voted as AllStars.




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