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03.11.2008 1:59 pm

As another pitcher falls, Carp climbs

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

JUPITER, Fla. — Cardinals healing ace Chris Carpenter threw a light bullpen off the mound Monday, his first trip up the hill since his failed attempt to pitch through bone spurs last season.

Carpenter threw 20 pitches to a squatting catcher, and did so at slightly more than halfspeed. He joked this morning that he wasn’t lobbing the ball, but wasn’t really “firing it” either. Just as importantly, he came to the clubhouse Tuesday with no soreness or discomfort or swelling in the surgically repaired elbow.

“It was fun to get back out there,” Carpenter said. “I got the ball down real good. It had some pop at the end.” 

Carpenter is still months away from returning to the rotation, but he does enter a stretch not unlike Mark Mulder’s when the lefty first arrived in Florida. He’ll have at least two more bullpen sessions like Monday’s before upping his pitch count and increasing his intensity. His recovery from Tommy John surgery remains on a calendar that could make him available in July.

***

Colby Rasmus slid into the No. 3 spot for Tuesday’s game against Baltimore, and he promptly provided more proof why his batting average is misleading this spring. The Cardinals’ top prospect entered the game with a .217 average and through his first three at-bats only served to lower it. Yet, he was one of the Cardinals contributing to the offense.

This is why there are other columns past the triple-crown numbers.

Rasmus’ .217 average entering the game was the seventh-best among the outfielders competing for a major-league job. But his on-base percentage was fifth best at .379 and his slugging percentage of .565 was fourth best. The Cardinals with the best OPS (on-base-plus-percentage) this spring coming into Tuesday’s game:

  1. Albert Pujols … 1.375
  2. Joe Mather … 1.191
  3. Brian Barton … 1.121
  4. Skip Schumaker … 1.065
  5. Colby Rasmus … .945
  6. Rick Ankiel … .917
  7. Ryan Ludwick … 870

Rasmus’ OPS and slugging is right there among the leaders, some of whom have a batting average 100 points or better. Look no further than one of the other competitors for an outfield job. Juan Gonzalez is batting .308, easily trumping Rasmus’ .217 (and holding). But Rasmus’ OPS routs Gonzalez, .945 (and climbing) to .795. So what did Rasmus do with his plate appearances Tuesday? Typical stuff.

  • Walked.
  • Out.
  • Walked. Stole second.
  • Infield single. Stole second.
  • Struck out with no outs and bases loaded in the ninth.

On-base percentage surges with a 3-for-5. Average inches up 1-for-3. But game is bruised by his failure win the game in the final at-bat. Go figure. 

The other outfielders “have dynamic averages and his is considerably lower than theirs,” manager Tony La Russa said. “He’s handled himself very well. He’s taken better at-bats than his average.”

***

Looks like Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak will put down his cell phone just long enough to host a chat on STLToday.com on Wednesday at noon St. Louis time. Wonder what the questions will be about.

***

No responses to yesterday’s question about the five best defensive third basemen since Mike Schmidt retired his Gold Glove, so we bandied the topic around a bit during this morning’s intrasquad game. Here’s one list (Gold Gloves):

  1. Scott Rolen (seven)
  2. Robin Ventura (six)
  3. Ken Caminiti (three)
  4. Matt Williams (four)
  5. Eric Chavez (six)

***

Going to try a little shotgun approach to the blog today. Shorter entries, perhaps more of them. Thoughts?

***

Viva el Birdos author Larry Borowsky spins a gem over at The Hardball Times, answering five questions facing the Cardinals this coming season. (Quoting the writer, “Only five?”) The questions range from Albert Pujols’ elbow to “when the future arrives” — not to be confused with uppercase The Future. But in the intro, Borowsky mines this nugget of gold from the history books:

In the last half-century, this franchise has recorded back-to-back losing seasons only once, in 1994-95—the last year of Dal Maxvill’s reign as general manager, and the first year of Walt Jocketty’s.

-30-

17 comments

Comments are closed.

Keep up the great work, dg! I look forward to more frequent, shorter posts. Unlike most around here I do not think the Cards need to sign a pitcher. I hope that the injuries force them to use Parisi, McClellan, et al to fill the gaps.

Also, any chance the Cards DFA both Izturis and Kennedy. Both are terrible hitters and butchers in the field. As much as I think Miles is awful, I would rather have a MI of Miles, Ryan, Jimenez and Hoffpauier than any combination that includes Izturis and Kennedy. Its not like they would be adding a whole bunch of salary by releasing those two…they would be replaced by mostly league minimum players. Doubtful I know but one can hope.

— Nick
3:08 pm March 11th, 2008

borowsky makes a comparison of ankiel to dave kingman. i think he is underestimating ankiel’s talent. however, i used to attend a’s games regularly and have seen kingman’s home run shots. no one has hit the kind of shots kingman did. they were majestic, soaring home runs. once in a while mcgwire would hit a similar shot though they didn’t have the hang time of kingman’s. dave kingman lives a couple of miles from here in tahoe. after he retired, he played occasionally for the tahoe stars, a semi-pro team. the power alley in left is over four hundred feet and kingman would clear the fence and the ponderosa pines behind the fence. you haven’t seen a home run til you see kingman hit one at six thousand feet elevation.but i digress, ankiel has power for sure, but he also will hit for a higher average than kingman, he has a much greater arm than kingman, and much more foot speed. ankiel could develop into a gold glover, which kingman most assuredly was not! kingman had the defense of duncan, not ankiel. but otherwise, borowsky hit the nail right on the head. just how good will these kids be in 08?

— roger from lake tahoe
3:11 pm March 11th, 2008

I’m all for youth as well, but I’m noticing Kennedy’s average nearing .300 w/ two hits today. Is he quietly starting to put things together?

— Dan
3:16 pm March 11th, 2008

So…..when do the Vuch reports kick off?

— erik
3:30 pm March 11th, 2008

Maybe I’m missing something. Headline says “As another pitcher falls, Carp climbs”….who fell?? Are we talking about Piniero?? I didn’t see anything about pitchers in the blog other than Carp and Mulder??

— JeffO
3:33 pm March 11th, 2008

Izturis was signed for his defense, figuring he would be a below-average hitter. So far he has been terrible in both categories. Since Ryan is a young kid with upside who could hit .300, it seems absurd that Izturis would play over him.

— Mark
3:44 pm March 11th, 2008

I assume the reason they compare Ankiel to Kingman is because Kingman was, in his college and semipro (Fairbanks) days, also a pitcher (as was McGwire, for that matter).

Fun fact: I was at Candlestick Park early in the 1973 season when Kingman came in to pitch for the Giants - it was the second inning, IIRC, and he relieved Juan Marichal, who was knocked out. Reds the opponent. Don’t remember too much about the outing except that he had trouble throwing strikes, and got a loud cheer from the crowd when he finally *did* throw one.

— Jerry Modene
4:02 pm March 11th, 2008

Think of the blog as a continuous notebook today … So, yes, the headline refers to Pineiro, who was the subject of the previous blog. … As for the DFA — not likely. That is a lot of money and combined it would be three years of contracts bought out. … Can’t agree with the “butcher” reference.

— Derrick Goold
4:10 pm March 11th, 2008

3 years but only 2 seasons for a total of about 11 million. Kennedy’s defense has been atrocious since he came from Anaheim. He shows good range/decent arm but terrible hands. I have only seen the boxes on Izturis but he is committing his fair share of errors. Furthermore, I saw him play with both CHC and PIT last year and he looked nothing like his 2004 self in either range or hands.

As far as the money goes, it is a sunk cost and it is costing the team an opportunity to truly assess their organizational depth. The opportunity to fairly evaluate Ryan, Hoff, maybe Martinez later this year or next is what they are missing by keeping AK and Izturis on the roster. If I could pick one to DFA it would be Kennedy. He only plays the one position, can’t hit his way out of a paper bag, and is not very sure handed.

— Nick
4:29 pm March 11th, 2008

DG — How is this team doing defensively, especially in the outfield? Anybody close to Jimmy Edmonds in defensive ability?

— BNC4477
5:08 pm March 11th, 2008

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