Saturday, November 17, 2012

BRASSball - 2013 Draft Lottery - The Results

Welcome to the first annual BRASSball Draft Lottery ceremonies! The inaugural event is hosted by Maury Povich and sponsored by Popov Vodka. Popov Vodka is the official vodka of BRASSball and solo practitioner lawyers.

Ladies and gentlemen... it's Maury! Maury has stepped to the podium with a giant envelope. "Hello, everyone and welcome to the first BRASSball Draft Lottery ceremony. I'm honored to be your host. With me in my hand are the results from the lottery. Fellow BRASSballers... The results of the 2013 BRASSball Draft Lottery are in!"

#6 - Salt Lake
#5 - Brew City
#4 - Sacramento
#3 - Butte County
#2 - North Georgia
#1 - Parkland

Parkland... You ARE the father of the 2013 BRASSball Draft! Congratulations to the Parkland Green!  Until next time, BRASSball!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

BRASSball - 2013 Draft Lottery

The BRASSball draft lottery for the 2013 draft will take place on Friday, November 16th, 2012. Six BRASSball teams will be participating in the draft:

Brew City Warriors
Sacramento Senators
Salt Lake Bees
North Georgia Yellow Jackets
Butte County Hop Heads
Parkland Green

Each team will be awarded one ping pong ball using DraftPickLottery.com. This process replaces the old version of using some combination of NFL games, dice, shots of whiskey, and undocumented commissioner fees.

For this year, the process is very straight-forward. As the administrator of the draft lottery, each team will be entered and awarded a weight of "1." The site will then randomly select teams and set the order for the top six selection spots in the upcoming 2013 BRASSball draft.

In the past two seasons, we've seen some rule changes that have had a significant impact on the draft itself, as well as the strategies that managers use to select their future all-stars. I think the biggest change was the increase in the number of amateurs we are allowed to carry on our roster.

Prior to last season, BRASSball teams could only carry seven amateurs. This increased to eight in 2012, which resulted in more amateurs drafted (an obvious change), but also more players not yet affiliated with a major league club. College players such as Mark Appel were drafted early as general managers speculated that these potential first-round draft picks would make the jump to the bigs sooner than a top prospect out of high school.


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

BRASSball Post-Season 2012: Superior at California - Game 7

Game 7: Superior (Felix Hernandez 7-13, 3.71) at California (Roy Halladay 18-13, 2.98)

Ah yes, a game seven. Can you feel the tension in the air? Summer has ended, but things are heating up in California as the final game of the AL Wild Card series is at hand. The last time King Felix threw for the Blues, the Roadrunners didn't manage to get a single hit. Doc Halladay is 0-2 this post-season, while Hernandez is 2-0. Which team will keep their hopes alive for a BRASSball championship and which team will go home wondering where it all went wrong? It's time to find out.

After getting a hit and making a spectacular play in center field in game six, Torii Hunter was rewarded with another start. With one out in the bottom of the first, he wanted his teammates to know that everyone was capable of hitting King Felix this time around. He took Hernandez deep out to center field and gave California a 1-0 lead.

In the top of the second, Halladay began to unravel early like he has all post-season. Justin Upton and Evan Longoria singled, putting runners at first and third with no outs. Mark Trumbo grounded out to the pitcher, advancing Longoria to second. Ryan Roberts then hit a deep fly to right field, sending Kosuke Fukudome back to the warning track. Fukudome made the catch, but both runners advanced, and the Blues tied the game at one each. Cliff Pennington then struck out to end the inning.

A walk is as good as a hit, right? It's especially true if you're facing Felix Hernandez. With back-to-back walks by Hunter and Ryan Braun in the bottom of the third, the Roadrunners were able to take a 2-1 lead. With runners at first and second, Josh Hamilton singled in Hunter, moving Braun to third. With one out, Aramis Ramirez then walked to load the bases. Mitch Moreland hit a big fly to right, but it was caught. It was deep enough, however, to score Braun from third, giving California a 3-1 lead. Hamilton was thrown out trying to advance to third, but the damage had been done.

In the top of the fourth, Longoria hit a long fly ball to deep center field that cleared the wall and cut the Roadrunner lead down to one. Halladay was able to finish off the inning, but the Blues were keeping the home crowd on pins and needles, reminding everyone that they would fight back.

Fight back the Blues did, by scratching out yet another run in the top of the fifth. Pennington singled and Ichiro followed him up with an infield single. A balk was called while Halladay was busy trying to keep track of the runners on an attempted double steal. With runners on second and third and two outs, Adam Jones singled to center, scoring Pennington, and tying the game 3-3. Superior then took the lead when Justin Upton singled to right to score Ichiro. Longoria struck out to end the inning, but the Blues were in business and up 4-3.

In the bottom of the sixth, it was time to work on the knockout punch against Hernandez. Ramirez singled to right to start the inning, and Moreland moved him to second with a single of his own. With runners on first and second, J.J. Hardy was given the green light to swing away, and he went oppo to drive in Ramirez from second. The game was now tied 4-4, and California had runners on first and third with no outs. Superior yanked Hernandez and replaced him with Brad Ziegler. After getting pinch-hitter Bobby Abreu to pop out, Mark Ellis tapped a ball in front of home plate and was safe after some confusion between Ziegler and catcher Kurt Suzuki. Neither of them appeared to want the ball, and Ellis beat out the throw from Suzuki by a step. Moreland scored on a head's up play to give the home team the lead, 5-4. Ziegler then struck out Fukudome to end the inning.

In the top of the seventh, Halladay trotted out to the mound. In one of the more interesting decisions, the Roadrunners opted to leave the starter in there, possibly to give him some confidence in the chance the team would advance. Instead, the plan backfired, and the Blues capitalized on the mistake. Big time. Jose Tabata launched a two-run home run deep into the rocks in left-center, giving the Blues the lead once again. Finally, a dejected Halladay was relieved from the game in favor of lefty Sean Marshall. Marshall was relieved by Jason Motte after Motte allowed two baserunners. Yorvit Torrealba then threw the ball into center field when Longoria attempted to steal second. This allowed Upton to score on the error, and Superior was now up by two runs, taking a 7-5 lead into the bottom of the seventh.

In the bottom of the seventh, Ryan Braun cut the lead in half with a solo shot, changing the score to 7-6 in favor of Superior. Sergio Romo was called on to relieve Ziegler and faced the lefty Josh Hamilton. Hamilton flied out to right for the second out. Ramirez hit a two-out single to keep things going and that brought Moreland to the plate. Moreland hit a line drive to left-center just out of the reach of Ichiro. The ball was hit hard enough, though, that Ramirez couldn't score from first. Hardy then struck out, stranding the tying and go-ahead runs on base to end the inning.

The final two innings were quiet for both teams and the Blues finished off an amazing two-game ride at California. Superior now moves on to face Santa Barbara in the ALDS.

BRASSball Post-Season 2012: Superior at California - Game 6

Game 6: Superior (Javier Vazquez 12-4, 2.43) at California (Dan Haren 17-13, 3.68)

The series returned to California after the Roadrunners took two-out-of-three games from the Blues at Superior. Javier Vazquez got the call after he lost game two, while Dan Haren started his second game of the series as well. Haren was knocked around in game three, but was pulled after three innings and took a no-decision in the team victory.

Haren appeared as if he couldn't handle the short rest from the very first pitch. After a lead-off walk to Jose Tabata, Adam Jones blasted a two-run home run that just cleared the wall in left-center. Superior was out in front, 2-0. Then, with two outs, Evan Longoria hit a long ball to almost the exact same spot that Jones did and the Blues added to their lead, 3-0. Mark Trumbo struck out to end the inning, but the damage was done, and the Roadrunners were now in catch-up mode.

In the bottom of the first, the top half of the California lineup was called on to pick Haren up. Torii Hunter was given the start over the struggling Bobby Abreu and responded with a one-out single to center. Ryan Braun then singled, and both runners advanced a base when Josh Hamilton grounded out to the pitcher. With two outs and first base open, Vazquez fired a 2-2 fastball and Aramis Ramirez smacked it into the rocks to tie the game at three apiece. Mitch Moreland struck out, but not before the home team reset the game at 3-3.

In the bottom of the second, the Roadrunners got power from an unlikely source in Mark Ellis. With two outs and the bases empty, Ellis took some high cheese and sliced it over the center field wall, giving California a 4-3 lead.

Everything was quiet until the top of the sixth. Adam Jones singled off Haren and stole second. Justin Upton was then hit by a pitch, and it appeared as if Haren had run out of gas. With the right-handed Longoria due up next, California called on Jason Motte to clean up Haren's mess. Longoria wasted no time and hit a double off the wall in left-center. Jones scored to tie the game, but Upton was held at third. The game was now tied 4-4 with no outs.

Mark Trumbo stepped in with first base open, and the Roadrunners had their biggest decision of the game: issue the free pass to Trumbo, or try and strike him out. The intentional walk was chosen, and Ryan Roberts was given a chance to make the Roadrunners pay. And pay they did as Roberts hit a hard ground ball between Ellis and Moreland to score both Upton and Longoria. The Blues had a 6-4 lead with runners on first and third and nobody out. Chad Pennington grounded out to Ellis for the first out, but Roberts advanced to second. Kurt Suzuki was up next and tried to get under one, hoping for a sacrifice fly. He hit a lazy fly ball into right that Fukudome was able to charge. Superior picked the wrong time to get aggressive on the base paths and decided to send Trumbo. Fukudome's throw was right on the money and Trumbo was out at home. The damage was done, though, as the Blues led by two heading into the bottom of the sixth.

California could not do anything against the Blues' bullpen, and the game ended 6-4 in favor of Superior. The AL Wild Card series now moves on to a game seven with the winner advancing, and the season ending for the loser.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

BRASSball Post-Season 2012: Superior at California - Game 2

Game 2: Superior (Javier Vazquez 12-4, 2.43) at California (Ian Kennedy 16-10, 3.72)

The second game of the series featured Javier Vazquez of Superior against Ian Kennedy of California. Kennedy quickly made it through the first to give the anxious Roadrunner offense a chance to hit.

Vazquez ended up walking the first two batters he faced, but was able to strike out Ryan Braun. Clearly upset with the calls behind the plate, a frustrated Vazquez then walked Josh Hamilton to load the bases. After words were exchanged between the home umpire and pitcher, Aramis Ramirez took the first pitch he saw and planted it into the rocks in left center for a first-inning grand slam. California was in business with a 4-0 lead to start the game.

Kennedy was able to enter the second inning calmly, but lost command of the game and allowed a second and third situation to almost get away from him. Brian Roberts doubled, but Superior played conservative Baseball once again and held Justin Upton at third with two outs. Cliff Pennington then struck out to end the inning, but not before Kennedy had thrown a significant number of pitches.

In the bottom of the 4th, the Roadrunners were hungry to add to their 4-0 lead. Mitch Moreland led off the inning with a walk. J.J. Hardy followed with a single that moved Moreland over to third with no outs. Miguel Olivo hit a deep fly to center that plated Moreland, putting California up by five.

The Roadrunners weren't finished though, as another run crossed the plate in the bottom of the 8th. Josh Hamilton scored the sixth run for California after Olivo drove him home with a two-out single. Would that be enough to hold off Superior in the 9th?

Down to their final three outs, the Blues' Evan Longoria led off the inning with a double off Kennedy. Immediately, the California bullpen got busy, with both Sean Marshall and Mariano Rivera getting loose. Mark Trumbo followed with a walk, and it was clear that Kennedy was in trouble. After a quick visit to the mound, the home team decided to leave the starting pitcher in to face one more batter. Ryan Roberts hit a ground ball right at second baseman Mark Ellis, who started the 4-6-3 tailor-made double play. The Superior bench watched on as their last batter, Cliff Pennington, grounded out to end the game.

California took the second game 6-0 behind a complete game shut out by Ian Kennedy. The series now moves on to Superior for three games.

BRASSball Post-Season 2012: Superior at California - Game 1

Game 1: Superior (Felix Hernandez 7-13, 3.71) at California (Roy Halladay 18-13, 2.98)

The aces were up in the first game of the series as Superior sent Felix Hernandez to the mound while the Roadrunners called on Roy Halladay. Neither starter allowed a hit through the first three innings, but the Blues made a bit of noise in the top of the 4th.

Ichiro Suzuki laced a single to center, and then stole second. Justin Upton then singled to center, but Superior's third-base coach decided to hold Suzuki at third. Evan Longoria then flied out to right to end the inning, stranding Ichiro at third.

Superior's offense could not be contained any longer. Possibly rattled by the previous inning, Mark Trumbo launched a solo "Trum-Bomb" into deep left-center to give the Blues a 1-0 advantage.

In one of the more surprising post-season moves, Superior decided to pull Hernandez from the game after only six innings pitched. This was six innings of no-hit Baseball we're talking about. Brad Ziegler got the call in the bottom of the 7th. Ziegler struck out Ryan Braun, but Josh Hamilton decided to stroke a single to center to break up the no-hitter. Aramis Ramirez hit into an inning-ending double play, and that was all California could muster through seven.

In the top of the eighth, it was the other Suzuki that got things started for the Blues. Kurt Suzuki lined a single to center after just missing a solo home run. He was moved over to third after Ichiro singled. Andruw Jones then stepped up with two outs and singled through the infield to center to give Superior a 2-0 lead. Halladay was pulled from the game in favor of Jason Motte who was able to get Justin Upton to fly out to center to end the inning.

In the bottom of the eighth, and Ziegler still in the game, Mitch Moreland walked. Sergio Romo was quickly called in to face J.J. Hardy who lined out to Longoria at third. Miguel Olivo then hit into a double play, and Superior had once again kept the California offense and home crowd quiet.

Romo took care of the Roadrunners in the ninth, and preserved an outstanding overall performance from the Superior pitching staff. The Blues took game 1, 2-0, but one can only wonder if we missed out at a chance for history when King Felix was pulled.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Braun Going to California

Eureka! California finally found what hopes to be the missing piece to their potential playoff roster. In a four-player deal with the Plaza Lions, the Roadrunners added slugging left-fielder Ryan Braun to the team. California sent three top prospects to Plaza: Brett Lawrie, Jarrod Parker, and Anthony Gose. All three players were poised to make an impact in 2013, but the Roadrunners have an excellent shot at the playoffs this year (currently first in the AL wild card standings).

In 2011, Braun hit .285 with 20 home runs and 84 RBI after signing a four-year deal with the Lions. This year, he was on pace to top all of those numbers, hitting .313 with 14 home runs, 33 RBI, and 23 stolen bases.

The only player on the Roadrunner roster that can compare with that kind of offensive production is Josh Hamilton. After missing all of April, Hamilton has returned in a big way, leading the team with a .335 average, 8 home runs, and 34 RBI. He also plays left field, Braun's natural position.

"I have no issue making room for Brauny when he arrives. Torii (Hunter) and I will be more than happy to slide over a spot in the field if we can get some extra pop in our lineup." Braun will join the club for the last three blocks of the season, and will most likely hit right in front of Hamilton. That MVP-caliber righty-lefty combination -- along with their solid pitching staff -- should be enough to give California the edge in the AL playoff race.

If they miss the post-season again they'll be left standing on a hill in a mountain of dreams. They'll be wondering what could have been, and second-guessing their sacrifice of future talent for a shot at winning it all.

Monday, April 16, 2012

BRASSball Amateur Scouting - Lake Elsinore Storm at Lancaster Jethawks - April 15, 2012

Lake Elsinore Storm vs. Lancaster Jethawks
The family and I decided to catch some local Minor League Baseball action on Sunday, April 15, 2012. The Class A Advanced California League Jethawks (Houston Astros) play in our backyard, one valley over in Lancaster, California. The Lake Elsinore Storm (San Diego Padres) were the opponent as the Jethawks were looking to complete a sweep of the Storm, but fell short 7-5.

Cook County's Rymer Liriano
Three BRASSball amateurs were on display on Sunday: Rymer Liriano (Cook County) and Cory Spangenberg (Hessville) of Lake Elsinore, and George Springer (Plaza) of Lancaster.

Liriano went one-for-three with a walk and was caught stealing once.

Hessville's Cory Spangenberg

Spangenberg (pronounced "SPAN-JEN-BURG," not "SPANK-EN-BERG" like I thought) went one-for-five with a stolen base and strikeout.

Plaza's George Springer

The home crowd favorite Springer managed to only go one-for-four with a walk.

The biggest draw for the kids is the Jethawk mascot "KA-BOOM." He's walking around and mingling with the crowd frequently. If you want a kid-friendly, casual atmosphere, and a place with decent prices on food and parking, don't forget about your minor league clubs around the country. Go out and support the future of BRASSball!

Sunday, April 1, 2012

BFSR 2012: Post-Draft Edition

Cook County's Danny Hultzen
The 2012 BRASSball season is well underway, so it's time to take a look back at how the 2012 draft impacted the BFSR standings.

The rosters, prospect rankings, and farm system standings were last updated on January 17, 2012. Since that time, there have been a handful of trades that impacted the scores of several teams. The Jacob Turner trade to Cook County, Jesus Montero being dealt to Myrtle Beach, and Santa Barbara acquiring Randall Delgado all influenced the scores of teams on both sides of the deal.

The completion of the annual 2012 BRASSball draft had the greatest impact on the scores. For those not familiar with what the score means, it is, in general, a way to quantify the BRASS amateur/minor league system in terms of player progression. In short, if you have an uncarded player that moves up the minor league ranking systems or even makes it to the majors at some point, your team is awarded "progression points." The total team score should forecast how a BRASSball team will perform in the future as the future stars become legitimate major leaguers.

Three Up
Cook County took over the number one overall position in the rankings after a successful 2012 draft. Not only did the Maulers seem to have two or three picks in every round, they snatched Jacob Turner (22.07) away from Tinley during the off-season. Their first two picks in the draft, Danny Hultzen (18.02) and Brad Peacock (14.17), combined with Turner, yielded an upgrade of 54.26 points to the team. The Maulers earned a league-high 267.87 point gain since January.

Myrtle Beach tumbled all the way down to the second spot in the standings. The Mermen amassed an additional 154.91 BFSR points due largely in part to the Jesus Montero (24.43) trade. Montero was the fourth overall prospect in BFSR behind Julio Teheran (25.38), Matt Moore (25.26), and Trevor Bauer (24.70). Their first-round pick, Addison Reed (19.13) and second-round pick, Andrelton Simmons (13.66) helped keep the Mermen near the top of he heap.

Simi Valley leaped nine spots from 20th overall to 11th overall. The Vikings used the draft to restock their minor league system and did so in a hurry. Wisely finding prospects in the middle of the draft that were ready to make the jump, they picked up Taylor Guerrieri (13.78) in the bonus round (between rounds three and four), Brian Goodwin (13.10) in round four, and Joe Wieland (12.98) in round eight. Those three, along with second-round pick Nathan Eovaldi (12.91), put the Vikings in the top half of the BFSR standings entering the 2012 season.

Three Down
Metropolis fell mightily from the third overall spot to fourteenth. The Avengers were the only club to actually lose points in the standings, trimming 12.03 points from their total. This was mainly due to the Jesus Montero trade that benefited Myrtle Beach. They spent their first-round pick on Cuban defector Yoenis Cespedes who was not ranked as a "prospect" and more of a free-agent-type. Metropolis, however, has positioned themselves for a run at the title in 2012 and are in full-on championship contender mode. Why bother rebuilding when you can try and win it all right now.

Tinley is caught in a tough position in terms of rebuilding and playing for the here and now. The Redbirds fell one spot to the cellar of the BFSR standings after dealing Jacob Turner to Cook County. They did improve, however, especially with the addition of Jemile Weeks (8.60) with their first pick (second, overall). However, the progressive prospects were few and far between with Louis Coleman (3.00) the only other mildly significant contributor. Although they finished with only 57 wins in 2011, the Redbirds hope to rebound and make a playoff run. If they start slow, look for them to start rebuilding in mid-season and begin to climb the BFSR standings quickly.

Florence gained the second fewest amount of BFSR points with 35.34 and fell seven spots in the standings. Their first-round selection of veteran Joe Mauer hurt their overall score even though the addition of Mauer clearly makes the River Bats better in 2012. The team of extreme drafting then selected college star Mark Appel in round two. Although Appel has no current BFSR value, he could be the first overall player taken in this year's MLB draft, which would put Florence right back on the map for player progression. Daniel Norris (13.30) and Todd Frazier (8.45) were solid pick-ups for the River Bats in the draft.

Current Standings
Here are the current BFSR standings as of April 1, 2012.


RANKTEAMBFSR POINTS
1Cook County469.94
2Myrtle Beach422.94
3California404.10
4Parkland338.21
5Santa Barbara325.54
6Boston302.61
7Fremont293.83
8Plaza293.73
9North Georgia250.56
10Fleetwood250.34
13Springfield244.00
11Simi Valley241.63
12Brew City236.29
14Metropolis219.61
15Superior213.90
16Glen Allen192.38
17Hessville189.31
18Brooklyn168.43
19Lancaster165.60
20Latrobe154.12
21Florence152.71
22Schaumburg147.42
23SoCal143.46
24Tinley100.22

Saturday, March 31, 2012

BRASS Opening Day 2012

California's Roy Halladay Strikes Out 11 in Home Opener
There's no better way to find out if your club has what it takes to make a run at it than playing the defending champs in your home opener.

The California Roadrunners opened their 2012 campaign against the Springfield Isotopes. Springfield (105-57 in 2011) has captured the BRASS title in each of the past two seasons, and were hungry to start the new season off right in search of an unprecedented third straight league title. California (88-74 in 2011) fell short of the AL playoffs and made drastic changes in the off season in hopes to make up enough ground to make the post-season this year.

The Roadrunners scheduled their new ace, Roy Halladay for the home opener. Halladay went 20-6 with a 3.57 ERA and 207 strikeouts with the Latrobe Steel in 2011. The Isotopes trotted out Erik Bedard, who missed all of 2011 and was signed to a three-year deal this off season. The lineups were set. The hot dogs were burning. The beer was cold and expensive. It was time to play ball!

The game was tight through three innings. In the bottom of the fourth, the Roadrunners scratched out a run to take a 1-0 lead. Mike Aviles lead off the inning with a double. He then took third on a wild pitch by Bedard. Scott Sizemore struck out, but Brent Lillibridge hit a sacrifice fly to right that scored Aviles.

California got to Bedard once more in the fifth inning. Torii Hunter led the game off with a single, followed up by a double by left-fielder Jerry Sands. Aramis Ramirez was dealt an intentional walk to load the bases. Seeing an opportunity, Kosuke Fukudome was brought in to pinch hit for Jeff Mathis. Fukudome hit a sacrifice fly to center field to score Hunter, putting the Roadrunners up 2-0.

Two runs were all Halladay needed in this one. Clearly set out to please the sellout crowd of over forty-seven thousand in Southern California, he pitched an absolute gem. The Roadrunners were victorious with Halladay going the distance with eleven strikeouts and only one walk. The Roadrunners are off and running in 2012!


BOXSCORE: 2012 Springfield Isotopes At 2012 California Roadrunners   4/5/2012
 
  Isotopes           AB  R  H RBI AVG     Roadrunners        AB  R  H RBI AVG
  N.Morgan LF         4  0  2  0 .500     M.Aviles SS         3  1  1  0 .333  
  J.Thole C           4  0  0  0 .000   B-Y.Torrealba C       0  0  0  0 ----  
  L.Berkman 1B        3  0  1  0 .333     S.Sizemore 2B       4  0  0  0 .000  
  H.Pence RF          4  0  0  0 .000   E-M.Ellis 2B          0  0  0  0 ----  
  J.Posada DH         4  0  0  0 .000     B.Lillibridge RF,LF 2  0  0  1 .000  
  R.Zimmerman 3B      3  0  0  0 .000     J.Mayberry Jr 1B    3  0  0  0 .000  
F-R.Doumit PH         1  0  1  01.000   D-M.Moreland PH,1B    1  0  0  0 .000  
G-J.Hairston Jr PR    0  0  0  0 ----     C.Lee DH            3  0  1  0 .333  
  S.Drew SS           4  0  0  0 .000     T.Hunter CF         3  1  1  0 .333  
  M.Scutaro 2B        3  0  0  0 .000     J.Sands LF          2  0  1  0 .500  
  I.Suzuki CF         3  0  1  0 .333   C-R.Cedeno SS         1  0  0  0 .000  
                                          A.Ramirez 3B        2  0  1  0 .500  
                                          J.Mathis C          1  0  0  0 .000  
                                        A-K.Fukudome PH,RF    1  0  0  1 .000  
                     -- -- -- ---                            -- -- -- ---      
         Totals      33  0  5  0                 Totals      26  2  5  2
 
A-Pinch Hit For Mathis In 5th Inning
B-Subbed Defensively (C ) For Aviles In 6th Inning
C-Subbed Defensively (SS) For Sands In 6th Inning
D-Pinch Hit For Mayberry Jr In 8th Inning
E-Subbed Defensively (2B) For Sizemore In 9th Inning
F-Pinch Hit For Zimmerman In 9th Inning
G-Pinch Ran For Doumit In 9th Inning
 
Isotopes........ 0 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 0  -  0  5  0
Roadrunners..... 0 0 0  1 1 0  0 0    -  2  5  1
 
Isotopes (0-1)           IP       H   R  ER  BB  SO  HR    ERA  SCORESHEET
E.Bedard LOSS(0-1)        6       4   2   2   1   7   0   3.00  A1 C5
S.Casilla                 1 2/3   1   0   0   1   2   0   0.00  C6 D3
B.Bray                    0 1/3   0   0   0   0   0   0   0.00  D4
Totals                    8       5   2   2   2   9   0
 
Roadrunners (1-0)        IP       H   R  ER  BB  SO  HR    ERA  SCORESHEET
R.Halladay WIN(1-0)       9       5   0   0   1  11   0   0.00  A1
Totals                    9       5   0   0   1  11   0
 
ATTENDANCE- 47,159 DATE- Sunday, April 5th 2012 TIME- Night WEATHER- Average
UMPIRES- Tim McClelland, Larry Vanover, Mike Everitt, Mike Dimuro
T- 2:36
LEFT ON BASE- Isotopes: 7  Roadrunners: 5
DOUBLE PLAYS- Isotopes: 0  Roadrunners: 0
ERRORS- M.Moreland
DOUBLES- M.Aviles(1st), C.Lee(1st), J.Sands(1st)
STOLEN BASES- I.Suzuki(1st)
SACRIFICE FLIES- B.Lillibridge, K.Fukudome
WALKS- L.Berkman, Y.Torrealba, A.Ramirez
HIT BY PITCH- B.Lillibridge
STRIKE OUTS- N.Morgan, J.Thole, L.Berkman, H.Pence, J.Posada-2, R.Zimmerman-2,
             M.Scutaro-2, I.Suzuki, M.Aviles, S.Sizemore-2, B.Lillibridge,
             J.Mayberry Jr, C.Lee, R.Cedeno, J.Mathis, K.Fukudome
BALKS- R.Halladay
WILD PITCHES- E.Bedard
 
Roy Halladay reeled off a total of 11 strikeouts as the California Roadrunners
defeated the Springfield Isotopes by the score of 2 to 0 at Angels
Stadium.
 
Halladay(1-0) was simply too much for the Springfield batters.  He didn't give
up much, just 5 hits and 1 walk in 9 innings.  Both teams totaled 5 hits on
the night.  
 
Erik Bedard(0-1) ended up with the loss.  'Halladay gave us exactly what we
needed tonight.' Brendan Conrad said. 'When he threw the fastball he threw it
for strikes.  They were really fooled by his change.  Most of the time he had
them chasing it.'