SP33Demon
Lifer
- Jun 22, 2001
- 27,928
- 143
- 106
Nine run seventh inning explosion carries the Phils past the Rockies. Sure, it's Coors Field, but Howard and especially Chase Utely are finally showing signs of life after coming back from injuries.
If those two and Jimmy Rollins catch fire, the Phils will be tough to beat down the stretch.
The Braves are are a hella good team, but if the Phils offense returns to form that two game NL East lead the Braves have will be hard to hold onto.
Yep, especially Howard. His spray chart was pathetic since he's been back, he has barely pulled anything like he normally does and there was speculation that putting his weight on that ankle was still an issue since most of his hits were opposite field. Crazy game last night.
Crashburnalley makes a good case for Hamels being a possible top 3 Cy Young candidate sabermetrically but it's obvious he won't win it because of his W/L record.
The stat-savvy among us called for a rebound for Hamels, but he has exceeded even those expectations. After adding a cut fastball and tacking on two MPH of velocity on his four-seam fastball, Hamels bolstered his strikeout rate to an average of over one per inning and slightly increased his rate of inducing ground balls. Per FanGraphs pitch-type linear weights, all of Hamels pitches have been above-average.
The results have been phenomenal but, unfortunately, he does not have the sparkling won-lost record to earn him widespread praise and potential Cy Young votes from the Baseball Writers Association of America. Hamels 8-10 record is a testament to the Phillies futile offense, not to poor performances on his part. Using support-neutral wins and losses from Baseball Prospectus, his winning percentage jumps from .444 (eight wins out of 18 decisions) to .560 (15 wins in 27 decisions; it assigns a win or a loss to every start, leaving out no-decisions), essentially a three-game jump. ...
Sabermetrically, Hamels is arguably the third-best on the list at the moment. A realistic Sabermetric top-five could go: Halladay, Wainwright, Hamels, Johnson, Latos. With a month left in the season, a lot may change. But for now, its nice to realize that the Phillies have two top-three Cy Young candidates in their starting rotation. Given Hamels fall from grace and the Cliff Lee trade, the phrase the Phillies have two top-three Cy Young candidates in their starting rotation was never expected to be uttered in September 2010.
