Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
03.25.2008 1:43 pm

Clement debuts, Reyes deals

JUPITER, Fla. — Continuing what’s become a lengthier — even arduous — grind back to a major-league rotation, Cardinals right hander Matt Clement made his first appearance in a game Tuesday, throwing for the Cardinals Double-A affiliate.

Clement threw 37 pitches and walked four of the seven batters he faced. While his command was flighty and his velocity sat in the mid-80s — according to the radar gun the Cardinals kept — his pitches all had wily movement.

Many of the at-bats were extended by pitches fouled off adding to his strike count.

“Obviously I’d like it to be a little higher, but it is the first time to hitters,” Clement said of the gun readings. ”As I throw with this intensity and over and over it’s going to increase. It was a first step in facing hitters. I can’t sit and worry about velocity right now. It’s going to be what it’s going to be. But I do feel like there’s more going to be coming out.”  

Clement’s start drew members of the Cardinals brain trust — chairman Bill DeWitt Jr., GM John Mozeliak and farm director Jeff Luhnow – and, representing the uniformed personnel, bullpen coach Marty Mason.

Clement threw to Springfield catcher Brandon Yarbrough, pitching in front of a defense that included SS Tyler Greene, CF Jon Jay, 3B Allen Craig and 1B Mark Hamilton.

He faced several batters with major-league ability.

It was a camp day, so Clement threw against the Triple-A team, and the leadoff  hitter was Colby Rasmus. Clememt got Rasmus to fly out to center on the third pitch he saw. If only all of the at-bats were that brief. The length of the at-bats got progressively longer from there as Clement attempted to tame his control even as his pace slowed.

There wasn’t a pitch he threw that didn’t have a cut or a sink to it.

There were few pitches that he threw for strikes.

Sixteen of the final 30 pitches he threw were balls. Eight of his strikes in that span were fouled off, including on up-and-in that caught the bat as the hitter flinched away. 

After Jose Martinez reached on a fielding error, Clement walked the final two batters of the “first inning”. He fed Joe Mather and Josh Phelps a series of 84-mph and 86-mph sinkers that strayed low and lower and 83-mph pitch that came up and in on the righthanded hitters. Clement’s “inning” ended after his 20th pitch with the bases loaded.

In his second inning he struck out Nick Stavinoha on a breaking ball low in the zone after setting him up with an 85-mph sinker that Stavinoha fouled off. Rico Washington then put the punctuation on the day by working a nine-pitch walk from the Cardinals righthander.

“There were a few times where I pitched like I was in a normal game,” Clement said, ”and I was just a hair away from executing exactly how I want to execute pitches.”

Clement had shoulder surgery in Sept. 2006, and he missed all of last season recovering from the repair. The Cardinals signed him to a one-year deal with scads of options built in for performance. He has had an entire offseason bottled into this spring, going from a long-toss program to bullpens to live batting practice sessions and then, finally, to Tuesday’s game appearance.

He will start the season on the disabled list. His final two starts in Florida will help decide where he begins the year — in extended spring or on the verge of a rehab assignment.

***

In additional pitching news: Going into the sixth inning, Anthony Reyes had pitched to one over the minimum. He had allowed a single to Nick Johnson and a walk to Ryan Zimmerman. Of the three hits he allowed, two were in the sixth inning. He had “like a 40-mph wind blowing” into the stadium. Colleague Joe Strauss, who was watching the game for the P-D, said he was effective, economical. Easily his best start of spring — and to do it front of interested teams, too.

Deals today. Could be dealt tomorrow?

“This is where I want to be, and I’m not really thinking about anything else,” Reyes just said. “This is where I want to invest.”

-30-

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 4.33 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...
14 comments

Comments are closed.

Any chance Reyes might join the Cardinal rotation, with Thompson or Wellemeyer going to the pen (instead of Politte)? Anthony’s upside seems much higher than Brad’s, or Looper’s, for that matter. Pineiro is at least three weeks away. Clement sounds like he’s at least month away. Mulder sounds like he’s about a month away, more or less.

My fantasy (unrealistic, I know) is to see this progression over the next six weeks:

Wainwright in the rotation all season

Loshe at #2 until Carpenter returns in July, at which time Lohse, who will be a free agent at the end of the season, is traded to a contender for excellent prospects (deja vu for Loshe)

Looper - replaced by Mulder or Clement, whichever is ready first (Looper, in the last year of his contract, is traded to a team that needs a fifth starter in their rotation)

Wellemeyer - replaced by Pineiro by the third week of April (with Wellemeyer or Thompson traded to one of the teams that sorely needs righthanded relief help)

Reyes stays in the #5 slot until Mulder or Clement returns (whichever happens second), at which time Anthony’s value should be higher (assuming he pitches well) and he can be traded to a contender for good prospects.

Thompson in the pen temporarily until Politte is ready to come up from AAA tune-up, then Thompson (or Wellemeyer) is traded. Then Politte is traded in July to a contender, when Perez comes up from AAA.

If any of the starters goes on the DL, McClellan or Garcia or Boggs steps in to get their feet wet in preparation for next season.

2009 rotation:
Carpenter
Mulder
Wainwright
Pineiro
The best among McClellan, Garcia, Boggs

Is there a realistic chance of ANY of that happening? I admire the way Mozeliak and his staff are setting up a pipeline of starting pitching to avoid the extreme exposure the team suffered last year when one starter after another failed. This team has much better backup, drecovering from injuries, it’s true, but still with excellent talent and enough candidates that the probability of a sufficient number being healthy and effective is very good.

I think the flexibility and options in the rotation offsets the injuries and rehabs more than enough to make the rotation the positive surprise of the season for the Cardinals.

— David in San Francisco
2:53 pm March 25th, 2008

DG,

I assume the best Reyes was doing is auditioning for other teams. Is that about right?

Thanks in advance.

— Elliott
2:56 pm March 25th, 2008

The box score says the wind was coming in from right field at 12 mph, not 40mph. Can there be any question that today\’s performance by Reyes was the best of any starter this spring? Wonder if Dave Duncan will gush over it as he did the lesser,I recent start of Brad Thompson. If LaRussa is running the spring competition as a meritocracy, as he professes, then Anthony should be in the rotation, if not in place of Thompson then in place of Wellemeyer (control - walks - and going deep into games are still issues).

— David in San Francisco
3:02 pm March 25th, 2008

Saw the Brew crew released ClaudioVargas. Can the Cards cut bait with the Clement experiment and sign Vargas?

— erik
3:20 pm March 25th, 2008

David, etc.,
I think we could trade one of the starters (Lohse?), but 5? IMO, that’s unrealistic. If all are healthy by the end of July, we see what we can get for Lohse (unless he’s lights out), and maybe Reyes. I’m of the opinion that you can’t have enough healthy starters. After the season, that’s another story. I agree with your 2009 rotation, but let’s not put the cart before the horse. If history serves any notice, we’re probably going to need 7 or 8 of these guys if we want to stay within shouting distance of 1st place.

— HouTexCardFan
3:22 pm March 25th, 2008

David, That’s a whole lot of trading going on. Not sure any team wants to deal that much depth, especially at a premium position, like, say starting pitcher. There’s no way you get return on all of those arms to make it worth dealing all of those arms. No way.

And there’s an implication there that teams are going to want those pitchers.

But a 2009 rotation of that group … possible. Depends on where McClellan goes with his season and if this chance at the major-league roster is going to make him a reliever. Just wondering — if Reyes isn’t good enough to crack your 2009 rotation why put him on the 2008 rotation. Or was he traded?

***

Elliott, Yes.
David in SF, That phrase should have been in quotes. It is now. Apologies.
Erik, Haven’t heard Vargas’ name come up.

***

Everyone,

Think of the parade of starters coming back in this way; Joel Pineiro after four more starts (20 days, ish); surging Mark Mulder in a month. Matt Clement and Chris Carpenter some time after that, and probably in that order.

dg
-30-

— Derrick Goold
3:32 pm March 25th, 2008

I can easily see Reyes being dealt.

The guy had a good outing today - good enough to interest some other teams. It sounds like Thompson has won the 5th spot in the rotation - so there’s no room for Reyes. Plus Reyes hasn’t done too well in STL, overall … he’s had some good starts, but pitches poorly more often than not.

The guy needs a change of scenary and won’t do anything productive while on the Cardinals, IMO.

There were scouts at the game, so the Cardinals should deal him while he still has some value. Teams looking for pitching will probably take a chance on the kid.

Let’s see what we can get for him.

Derrick, are you hearing of any names that are popping up? Who do you think we could get in a trade for Reyes (and possibly another player in a package)? If Ryan is hurt, it might be smart to pickup a better middle infielder to replace him while he’s out…

— Wes
3:57 pm March 25th, 2008

Rotation by end of July could be:

Carpenter
Mulder
Clement
Wainwright
Pineiro

Cards have control of their contracts next year.

Why not at least trade pending free agents?

Looper
Lohse

The Cards would still have AMPLE backup:

McClellan
Garcia
Boggs
Thompson
Wellemeyer

Those last two will be expendable when Kinney returns and Perez or Mott arrives from AAA to be groomed for next year

— David in san Francisco
4:34 pm March 25th, 2008

Now is the right time to trade Anthony Reyes. He has just pitched a very nice game leading up to opening day. He has options left this year and so a potential trade partner could use him as a 5th/6th starter this year making him far more valuable than trading him at the end of this year and we just don’t need him.

He hasn’t realised the potential he has shown in the minor leagues in STL. As David in SF points out the Cards rotation for 2009 will hopefully be Carpenter, Mulder, Wainwright, Clement and Pineiro with a number of minor leaguers pushing for playing time. Reyes’ window of opportunity in STL was the last two years and he hasn’t taken full advantage of it.

The Cardinals should trade him in the near future, once we are sure of getting Pineiro back, and let him try to rebuild his career elsewhere. With one year of options and a reasonable ST behind him the club should be able to get a semi-decent prospect or two in return.

— Richard
5:21 pm March 25th, 2008

Now is the time to put Reyes in the rotation, not trade him. The Cardinals continue the farce that Todd Wellemeyer and Braden Looper are quality MLB starters. It is 11:59 and Looper is about to turn back into a pumpkin. I’m sure the organization will tell you he is ‘trying a new pitch’ or ‘working on only throwing strikes’ but honestly, he has looked downright awful this spring. Wellemeyer is being praised by Duncan for being economical with his pitches, which is ludicrious as his BB/9 and the total percentage of balls he throws to hitters this spring is right on line with his career averages. Todd Wellemeyer is doing what Todd Wellemeyer does: throw too many pitches and walk too many batters and he is getting away with it because he is facing guys about to be sent to AA or cut.

Anthony Reyes is no world beater but the Cardinals would be better served to put him in the rotation, send either Looper, Thompson or Wellemeyer back to the pen. When a healthy pitcher returns, re-evaluate those 3 and see who should be removed from the rotation. Trade Reyes during the season if you want more value. His value won’t go up pitching in AAA, everyone knows he can dominate at that level.

They’ve yo-yo’d Anthony over the last 3 years so much that he had no idea if he was coming or going. His major flaw was his inability to get people out with runners on, something he has done well this spring. He is still a better pitcher with more upside than either Wellemeyer or Looper.

This isn’t some cheerleading or anything like that. Reyes simply has too much potential and is extremely important to a team that doesn’t want to spend $150 M a year to provide cost effective MLB innings.

DG, can you please ask LaRussa and Duncan why the double standards with Reyes. Reyes has jumped through every hoop they’ve asked. He has trained hard in the off-season, he’s dedicated himself to getting more groundballs and keeping his pitchcount down. He says all the right things in the media. LaRussa challenged him to ‘keep competing’ for the #5 spot and he comes out to throw the best performance of a Cardinal pitcher this spring. Yet, he won’t get a fair shake in these phoney ’spring competitions’.

Maybe he isn’t ’smooth’ or ‘glides with the ball’ or some other ridiculous statement like the ones LaRussa uses to justify starting Izturis.

— HL
5:47 pm March 25th, 2008

Pages: [1] 2 » Show All