Bases Loaded, So What? The Roller Coaster Rolls On cover art

Bases Loaded, So What? The Roller Coaster Rolls On

Bases Loaded, So What? The Roller Coaster Rolls On

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Just when we thought the Mariners had found something, Kansas City showed up and took the broom to us. Travis and Ryan break down a brutal sweep at the hands of the Royals — a team that has gotten a lot better lately, but still. Three games, three losses, and a bullpen that lost two of its biggest arms: Brash and Spire both went to the IL, leaving Munoz as the closer and the back end looking thin.

Saturday night was the real gut punch. Randy Johnson retirement ceremony, the number 51 going into the rafters, the whole ballpark riding high. Then Emerson Hancock goes out and deals: fourteen strikeouts, a sweeper nobody could touch. We still lost in ten innings because Randy did Randy things on the basepaths, Julio missed a ball in the outfield, and Munoz couldn't hold it. It felt very Felix-era. All the strikeouts in the world, zero run support.

Then the Braves came to town. A rotation of studs, a bullpen with sub-1.00 ERAs, four guys hitting over .300. We were expecting a second sweep in five days. Game one looked like we were right until Luke Raleigh, 1-for-17 coming in, had a chat with Edgar Martinez and hit a three-run bomb. JP Crawford followed with a moonshot to right that Aaron Goldsmith tried to talk us out of believing in. It had plenty. 5-4 final, bullpen held. Series.

Game two, Kirby shoved for six and JP hit another two-run shot, but Munoz served one up to Matt Olson in the ninth. Game three, Brian Wu put up nine strikeouts over six shutout innings, Julio hit a tank off Martin Perez, and Jose Ferrer worked three straight days, 10 outs across three appearances, to close it out. Series win against the best team in the NL.

Big topics this week: the closer conundrum (Munoz is streaky, a committee approach might be smarter until Brash returns), the Emerson Hancock question (his 14-K gem has forced the fifth starter conversation with Bryce Miller on his way up), and the fact that the American League is historically bad right now. Three teams over .500. Two solid weeks and we could be in first by three games.

Also: Framber Valdez threw at his own catcher, started a bench-clearing brawl, and got five or six games. The Phillies have taken off since making their managerial change. And the NL Central's worst wild card team has a better record than we do.

The roller coaster keeps rolling. It's early. We'll forget that tomorrow night around the seventh inning.

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