Archive for June, 2007

Down On The Farm: Mason And Longoria Receive Honors

June 6, 2007

Montgomery 3, Carolina 2. Jonathon Barratt struck out 7 and only allowed 1 run in 6 innings. Dale Thayer gave up a solo home run in the 9th, but settled down to pick up his 13th save. Evan Longoria hit his 13th home run and Reid Brignac went 0-4.

Sarasota 7, Vero Beach 2. Jacob McGee was pounded for his second loss of the season. He gave up 6 runs in 5.2 innings. He allowed 8 hits including 3 home runs.

Columbus 1, Rome 0. Another strong performance from Jeremy Hellickson. He tossed 7 shutout innings to pick up his 3rd win of the year. Desmond Jennings stole his 23rd base of the season, good for 5th in the SAL.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

  • We have heard of games being cancelled for lots of reasons. There was even a game once at the Astrodome that was rained out (nobody could get to the game because of flooding). But this the first time we ever heard of a game being postponed because the tea flight was cancelled, as the Bulls were last night. Since when do minor leaguers fly? Vince Naimoli would have never let that happen.
  • Evan Longoria was named the Southern League player of the month for May. In 28 games he hist .317 with 7 home runs and 25 RBI.
  • Chris Mason was named Southern League pitcher of the week for the second time.

The 2006 Draft: A Look Back

June 5, 2007


With the 2007 MLB draft two days away, the Devil Rays front office is busy preparing for their second rodeo. Now is a good time to take a look back and make an an early assessment of how the organization did in their first draft. We all know about Evan Longoria, but what about the rest of the picks.

While analyzing each pick we took a look at the next 5-10 players picked and how they are performing to see if there are any gems the Rays missed. We are only looking at the next 10 picks because once you get past that mark, we start looking at players that many teams missed out on, not just the Rays. One of our biggest draft analysis pet-peeves it to give too much credit to teams that get a superstar in a later round. For example, the New England Patriots are always credited for drafting Tom Brady in the 6th round. That pick should not be used to show their drafting prowess. They got lucky. If they knew how good Brady would turn out to be, they would not have risked waiting until the 6th round to select him.

Without further ado, we present you the Tampa Bay Devil Rays 2006 top 11 draft picks recap…

  1. Evan Longoria. The Dirtbag was simply an outstanding selection. Already a top-10 prospect in baseball, he hit .315-18-58 in only 62 games covering three levels. This year he has picked up right where he left off, hitting .291-12-43 in 55 games. Their are rumors circulating that the Rays are considering a second-half call-up for Longoria. Player missed: Tim Lincecum Reportedly, the Rays second choice was Lincecum. Lincecum was 4-0 in 5 starts at AAA with a 0.29 ERA and 46 Ks in 31 innings. He is now a permanent member of the Giants rotation and is 2-0 in 6 starts.
  2. Josh Butler. Butler made only 2 starts and 3 relief appearances in 2006 with mixed results. This season, Butler has been outstanding. At low-A Columbus he is 4-1 with a 2.14 ERA. For a big right hander in low-A his strikeout totals are not what you would like with only 45 in 63 innings with 17 walks. Player missed: Sean Watson (Reds) is 4-2, with a 1.81 ERA in low-A, with 74 Ks in 59.2 innings.
  3. Nicholas Fuller. As good as the Rays first two picks were, this one was nearly as bad. Fuller never signed with the Rays and chose to attend college. Player missed: Aaron Bates (Red Sox) is a slugging first baseman hitting .302-13-46 (nearly identical to Longoria) in high-A.
  4. Alexander Cobb. Made 6 appearances (1 start) in rookie ball in 2006 and has not appeared in a minor league game yet this year. Is likely to begin 2007 at Hudson Valley. Player missed: Ben Snyder (Giants) is a lefty with 63 Ks in 59 innings with a 2.14 ERA at low-A.
  5. Shawn O’Malley. Shortstop hit .213 with 1 home run and 10 stolen bases in 50 games for Princeton in 2006. Has not appeared in a minor league game yet this year. Is likely to begin 2007 at Hudson Valley. Player missed: No notable players
  6. Nevin Ashley. Catchers are notoriously slow developers but Ashley has held his own. After a .333 rookie campaign, this season he is hitting .286 with 15 extra-base hits and 8 steals for Columbus. Player missed: Adam Moore (Seattle) is a catcher chosen two picks after Ashley. He is hitting .278-10-39 in the hitter-friendly Cali League. We can’t knock the selection of Ashley because we have no clue how either catcher is defensively.
  7. Ryan Reid. Reid made 12 starts for Hudson Valley after being drafted, but this year he is filling the roll of closer for Columbus and doing it quite while. In 32 innings, he has 38 strikeouts with 5 saves and 3.38 ERA. Player missed: No notable players
  8. Tyree Hayes. Hayes was solid if unspectacular in 7 starts at Princeton in 2006. He will begin the 2007 season at Hudson Valley. Player missed: Chris Cody (Tigers) has 79 srtikeouts in 76.2 innings with only 13 walks and a 1.76 ERA.
  9. Eligio Sonoqui. First baseman hit .201 with no homers for Princeton in 2006. Will likely begin season with Hudson Valley. Player missed: Brian Bockock (Giants) a shortstop has 27 steals in 37 attempts this season while hitting .291 between low-A and high-A.
  10. Desmond Jennings. Jennings had 32 steals in 56 games in rookie ball last year and this season he is 22-31 in 49 games. He is hitting .283 with an excellent 23 to 29 walk to strikeout ratio. Player missed: No notable players
  11. Heath Rollins. OK, so we were originally only going to rate 10 rounds, but the Rays 11th pick was too good to ignore. sue us. If you read this site on a regular basis, you know we have been a bit enamored with Rollins recently. On the season he has a 1.09 ERA in 11 appearances. He has been even stronger recently with only 2 earned runs in his last 56 innings (9 starts). Player missed: No notable players

In the first 11 picks, the Rays selected a future all-star (Longoria), two pitchers that project as major league starting pitchers (Butler, Rollins), major league relief pitcher (Reid) and a guy that could steal 50 bases in the majors with an excellent OBP (Jennings). The Fuller pick was a big blow, but 5 future major leaguers in 11 picks is a solid first effort.

Bill Chastain Pretends To Cover The Devil Rays

June 5, 2007

Bill Chastain writes regularly for devilrays.com. We would like to think that a writer that specializes in a certain topic, in this case it is the Tampa Bay Devil Rays…would know more about the topic than the average fan that is reading his articles. No? OK, then is it too much to ask that he know at least as much as the average fan? Apparently it is too much to ask.

Yesterday, Chastain gave us an article entitled “With No. 1 pick, Rays sit atop 2007 Draft“. The first part of the story is a nice little Kansian piece about the When, the Where and the Who. Towards the end, Chastain decides to give us a Devil Rays Draft history lesson, during which he recaps what has happened to several of the recent draft picks since they became Devil Rays. There was just one small problem…We take that back…There were only several large errors

[On Jeff Niemann] Neimann has struggled with injuries, but is now at Triple-A Durham and appears on the fast track to reach Tropicana Field. He has three quality pitches, he throws strikes and he’s working on a changeup and a splitter. If healthy, he could dominate.

Niemann has never struggled with injuries. Yes he did have one surgery that caused him to miss considerable time and has delayed his arrival to the big leagues. BUT, that was not really an injury as much as it was preventative maintenance. Niemann had the bone shaved down in his shoulder so that it would not cause problems in the future. Even if you do want to call that an injury. That is but one injury. Not injuries.

[On Wade Townsend] Townsend spent the 2006 season rehabbing from Tommy John surgery that was performed on Nov. 21, 2005. He is now pitching for Class A Columbus. Prior to his surgery, he had a good fastball, which is expected to come back.

Townsend did have a mid-90s fastball when he was drafted but most scouts thought his best pitch was his knuckle-curve. Two plus-pitches is why many scouts projected Townsend as a closer in the majors.

[On Reid Brignac] Rising fast: Reid Brignac, a shortstop, was the Rays’ Minor League Player of the Year in 2006 after combining to hit .321 with 24 home runs and 99 RBIs at Class A Visalia and Montgomery. He is earmarked to be the team’s shortstop of the future, a player known for his bat but one who has come a long way with the glove.

We know it is early, but Brignac has regressed with the glove. He has 13 errors in 54 games. 2006 looks like the exception more than the rule.

And our personal favorite…

[On Andy Sonnanstine] Cinderella Story: Andy Sonnanstine, a right-handed pitcher taken in the 13th round of the 2004 Draft, was named the organization’s Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2006 after setting a Minor League single-season record with 15 wins. What he lacks in physical gifts he more than makes up for with mound savvy and pinpoint control. He is currently pitching at Durham.

Please keep in mind that this article went up on the website on Monday. We guess we can forgive Mr. Chastain for missing the news that the Rays promoted Sonnanstine last Friday and is starting for the Rays tonight in Toronto.

Other Rays news that Mr. Chastain may have missed:

  • That short Japanese guy that is playing third base, is not Aubrey Huff.
  • No, Lou Piniella is not much calmer these days. That is Joe Maddon in the dugout.
  • The Rays are not tied for first place in the AL East. The Yankees really suck this year.
  • The team in green is the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.
  • Bill Chastain is paid to cover the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, not the 4-H hog-tying festival.

With No. 1 pick, Rays sit atop 2007 Draft [DevilRays.com]

The Hangover: El Gato Strikes Again

June 5, 2007


Devil Rays 4, Royals 2.
Carlos Pena was 3-3 and hit his 12th home run and his 56th catwalk. How good has Pena been this season?

  • Of the 12 players in the AL with at least 11 home runs, Pena’s 131 at bats are at least 56 fewer than any other player.
  • He also raised his batting average to .313 which is 70 points higher than his career average coming into this season.
  • His .641 SLG and 1.017 OPS would each be good for 2nd in the AL if he had enough at bats to qualify (Maglio Ordonez leads with .681/1.117)
  • If Pena had just 190 at bats (many players are already over 200), he projects to 45 RBI, which would be tied for 6th in the AL.

As a side note…Pena has played in the majors for parts of 7 seasons. However, we dusted off our abacus and it looks like his service time was only 4 years heading into 2007 since he has spent much of those seven seasons in the minors (a player is a free agent after 6 years of ML service). If we are reading this right, and we like to think we are, Pena is only arbitration eligible at the end of the year and will not be a free agent unless the Rays fail to offer arbitration. Has anybody heard any differently?

As for James Shields…Well, James the Greater justs keeps on truckin’. Shields moves to 5-0 on the year. Only Josh Beckett in the AL has more wins without a loss. Another outing in which he pitches into the 8th inning. Only 4 hits and 1 walks. He did allow 2 more home runs, which gives him 11 on the season. That is tied for 9th in the majors. However, 5 of those came in his first 3 starts of the season. James the Greater.

Of course the big news today is that Andy Sonnanstine will make his major league debut tonight in Toronto and Thursday the Rays may add a future ace to their already deep pitching pool in the MLB draft. We will have more on the draft later, but tonight all eyes will be on the tele. The rotation is finally starting to come around. We know it is still early for JP Howell, but after one start he has given us hope that the Rays can send out a pitcher with a good chance of winning 3 out of 5 days. Can Sonny make it 4 of 5? We might be able to tolerate another month or two of “Edwin Jackson Development” if he was the only hole in the donut.

Looks like we are going to have a busy day around this here internets, so come back early and often.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • How do you know when you spend too much time neck-deep in all things Devil Rays? When THIS title scares the hell out of you. Too make ammends we are now running to the bathroom with a Maxim magazine.
  • No surprise here. Akinori Iwamura will not make the trip to Toronto but should be ready to join the team in Miami when the Rays face the Marlins.
  • The Crime Dog played first base for the Devil Rays. Is Carlos Pena El Gato del Crimen…The Crime Cat?
  • Shawn Riggans just can’t catch a break (Like what we did there? Aren’t we clever). Riggans was placed on the 15-day DL and the Rays with Josh Paul already on the 60-day DL, were forced to add Raul Casanova to the 40-man roster and promote him to the Rays. To make room, Chris Seddon of Montgomery was designated for assignment.
  • Carl Crawford has now tied Aubrey Huff for the franchise record for most hits (870). Fittingly, he did it with a triple.
  • Akinori Iwamura is back with the latest installment of his diary. Not often the sentimental types, but we think it is pretty cool that in his first year in the US, Aki’s wife is pregnant and the baby is due on July 4.

Down On The Farm: Justin Ruggiano Continues His Torrid Pace

June 5, 2007

Louisville 10, Durham 2. Jeff Niemann did not survive the 5th inning, allowing 6 runs on 6 hits and 4 walks. Niemann is now 4-4 with a 4.29 ERA on the season and looks to be a long ways from the Trop. Justin Ruggiano, on the other hand, wants to be included among the Rays crowded outfield. Last night he hit a home run in the second consecutive game and his 5th in the past 8 games. He now has 9 on the season.

Montgomery 4, Carolina 3
(10 inn). James Houser struck out 7 and allowed 2 runs in 6 innings. Reid Brignac was 0-3 with 2 walks. Evan Longoria did not start, but came on to pinch hit in the 9th and struck out. Nick DeBarr gave up a leadoff home run in the 9th inning to blow the save, but Chris Nowak won it in the bottom of the 10th with a 1-out home run, his 2nd.

Vero Beach 5, Sarasota 3. Erold Andrus was 3-5 and hit his 7th home run.

Rome 5, Columbus 3. Woods Fines gave up 4 runs in 5 innings. Maiko Loyola stole his 14th and 15th stolen bases and Desmond Jennings stole his 22nd.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

We’re Going Mock Drafting! The Baseball Mock Draft To End All Mock Drafts

June 4, 2007

We love Mock Drafts. We love them because they make us laugh. So called experts spend countless hours sifting through scouting reports and game film and try to match these kids with team needs. They are immensely popular in football and basketball but have recently began to gain steam in baseball and now that MLB’s entry draft is going to be televised it will only get worse.

The best part, and by “best” we mean “funny”, is that fans read these mock drafts like they are scripture and yet these experts are never right. Mel Kiper, the so-called draft guru, correctly picked 10 of the 32 first round picks this year for the NFL draft and he had one of the better marks. Peter King only got 3 correct. And this is the NFL draft which features players that fans and experts have actually seen perform and teams whose needs are usually fairly obvious. On the other hand, in the baseball draft, there is not a single player in the draft that we have ever seen play and we have no idea what other team’s minor league systems look like and whether Team X needs a catcher or a third baseman.

Still things are a bit easier if we try to predict who the Tampa Bay Devil Rays will select with the first pick of this year’s draft. The Rays scouting director R.J. Harrison even helped us out by announcing that the team has narrowed their choice down to one of three players.

So let’s take a look at the three prospects and then we will give you our first ever Mock Draft!

David Price (LHP, Vanderbilt Univ.)

[From Minor League Ball] To summarize, Price is polished, smart, throws hard, throws strikes, changes speeds well, is confident, is athletic, and has good mechanics. Sounds like a great pitching prospect to me. Frankly he has no major weakness that I can see, aside from the usual worries about workload leading to injury eventually. But there is nothing here indicating that his injury risk would be any higher than average for a pitcher in his cohort, and his athleticism and repeatable delivery may lower the risk to some extent.

Most people think that Price is the obvious choice, and that the Rays are just keeping their options open for negotiating purposes. Even we referred to the race for the #1 pick last season as “The David Price Sweepstakes.” While Friedman talks about team needs in 2-3 years, Price may be the most polished player in the draft and could be in the majors as early as the second half of 2008. There is always some risk in taking a pitcher, but the success of Evan Longoria may give the Rays front office a little bit of leeway to take a risk at the top of the draft in 2007.

Matt Wieters (C, Georgia Tech)

[From Baseball America] One national crosschecker said recently, ” I would make a case for Wieters over Price at 1. With the switch-hitting, the power and he catches so easy, I think he’s the best (amateur) catcher I’ve seen outside of Joe Mauer.”

Keep in mind that everybody assumed the Devil Rays would take a pitcher with the 3rd pick in 2006 because of the lack of pitching at the major league level. Andrew Friedman has stated, and smartly, that nobody knows what the teams needs will look like in 2-4 years when these players are ready to contribute at the major league level. Rather the team would prefer to take the best player available and there are some that believe that Wieters is that player, much like Evan Longoria proved to be that player in 2006. The other argument for Wieters is that the top position player is a safer pick than the top pitcher. In 2001, the Twins were faced with this exact dilemma when they were forced to choose between Joe Mauer and Mark Prior. In the end the Twins made the correct choice, because pitchers are fragile. Still, winning in baseball is about three things. Pitching, pitching, pitching. In order for the Rays to pick Wieters he needs to be considerably better than Price. If he is, this will be the Rays selection. If there is any doubt, then Price will be the pick.

Josh Vitters (3B, some high school in Calif.)

[From Minor League Ball] Ranked as the top high school hitter in the class this year by Baseball America…I like his size at 6-3, 195 pounds: not too small, but not so large that his strike zone gets unmanageable. He has plus power to all fields, and scouts expect he’ll be able to hit for average as well. No one questions his bat; about the only doubt is if he’s a 20 homer guy or a 30+ homer guy in the long run…Physically, his speed is just average. He has a strong arm but has to keep working on his defense at third base; it should be OK in the long run as long as his legs don’t get thick. He could end up as a right fielder if hot corner defense becomes an issue.


Ummmm…No. The last time a team picked a high school position player with the first pick of the draft, it did not turn out so well. In 2004 the Padres selected Matt Bush and three years later he is still in single-A and is no longer even considered a prospect with a career that includes a batting average of .221 and 2 home runs. And while we applaud the team for not drafting for need, third base is one position the Rays have zero need. In addition to Iwamura
at the major league level, the team has several top prospects climbing the charts in the minors including last season’s #3 overall pick. So unless the Rays project Vitters as a first baseman, this is a long-shot at best.

And now we present you with the first ever Rays Index MLB Mock Draft, which we guarantee will be at least 93.3% correct

2007 Rays Index Mock Draft:

1. David Price, Tampa Bay Devil Rays. A team can never have too much pitching and the Devil Rays, despite a number of top pitching prospects, are still far from having too much pitching.

2-30. Twenty-nine other guys, including 3-4 that we will cringe about in 2-3 years when we realize the Rays could have had so-and-so.


The Hangover: JP Howell Proves Better Than Axis Of Evil

June 4, 2007


Devil Rays 5, Royals 1.
Let’s see if we can make it three for three…

On two previous occasions we have been critical of headlines found on devilrays.com. On both occasions, the title of the article was subsequently changed. On the first occasion, the title was factually wrong and on the second occasion the title was a gross understatement. In the first case we suspect that the team may have requested the change and in the second case maybe they just realized it was dumb.

Now devilrays.com brings us this title: “Howell gets first win since Sept. 2006

The title is neither wrong, nor is it a gross understatement. So why do we have an issue with this particular title? Because it is just plain stupid and misleading.

Yes, this was Howell’s first win since September 2006. But it was also his first start since September 2006. In fact, Howell last won a major league game September 23, 2006 against the New York Yankees. He made one more start in 2006, five days later, against the Indians when he posted a no-decision.

In the first inning of yesterday’s game, JP Howell needed just 13 pitches to put down the Royals in order. Of those 13 pitches 5 were called strikes and of the 5 balls he threw, at least 4 of those were out of the strike zone with intent. In other words, Howell was commanding his pitches and hitting his spots. As Howell walked off the field after that first inning, we knew that the Rays would only need 2-3 runs to win the game. With Howell dealing and displaying confidence and command we had confidence that the Royals were not going to score many. How many times have Rays fans been able to say that with Jae Seo, Casey Fossum or Edwin Jackson on the mound?

In fact, the Axis of Evil made a combined 30 starts this season and Howell’s 8 innings may have been better than all but one of those starts. The only outing that may have been better was Seo’s outing on May 13 in Toronto in which he worked 7 shutout innings and allowed only 2 hits and 2 walks. In Howell’s 8 innings, he only allowed 5 hits and he did not walk a batter while striking out 7.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • Joe Maddon stated that Edwin Jackson will make his next scheduled start on Thursday in Toronto.
  • With the promotion of Andy Sonnanstine, the Rays now have 7 rookies on the roster. 18 of the 25 players on the active roster have less than 3 years of major league experience.
  • Carl Crawford is now 2 hits shy of tying Aubrey Huff for the franchise record for career hits (870).
  • Edwin Jackson’s 0-7 record is one loss shy of the team record for consecutive losses to start a season. Tanyon Sturtze was 0-8 to start the 2002 season.

Down On The Farm: Seth McClung Bests Josh Hamilton

June 4, 2007

Durham 4, Louisville 3. With two pitchers recently promoted from the Bulls rotation, Durham did not have an available starting pitcher on Sunday. Relief pitcher Tony Peguero, who made 21 starts at Montgomery a year ago, was called on and pitched 3.2 innings and allowed 3 runs. Seth McClung pitched a perfect 9th for his 5th save including a 1-out strike out of Josh Hamilton. Justin Ruggiano continues to hit at a torrid pace. He had his third straight multi-hit game and hit his 5th home run in the past 10 games. He is now hitting .302 with 8 home runs and 26 RBI. Jonny Gomes went 1-4 and hit his 1st home run since being demoted

Montgomery 4, Carolina 2. Chris Mason struck out 5 in 6 innings and allowed 1 run on 6 hits and 3 walks. Reid Brignac hit a 2-run home run in the first, his 5th of the year and first since April 29th, a span of 34 games. Brignac also committed his 13th error.

Sarasota 16, Vero Beach 0. yuck.

Columbus 8, Rome 5. Wade Townsend picked up his 4th win, but allowed 4 runs on 7 hits and 2 walks in 5 innings. Cesar Suarez hit his 2nd and 3rd home runs of the year. Nevin Ashley stole 2 bases and now has 8.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

  • Biscuits outfielder Fernando Perez checks in with his latest player journal at MiLB.com. Perez has been participating in extended spring training and his journal entry gives an excellent account of what life is like at extended spring training.
  • Jeremy Flanagan was scheduled to be promoted from Montgomery to Durham but was deactivated instead because the Bulls are traveling to Ottawa and Flanagan does not possess a passport. Guess he has no plans of of playing in the majors this year either.

The Hangover: Edwin Jackson’s Starts Are Numbered

June 3, 2007


Royals 9, Devil Rays 4.
Only Edwin Jackson could throw up a stinker and make the Kansas City Royals look like the ’75 Reds.

After Saturday’s loss, Edwin Jackson is now 0-7 in 10 starts and has not won a game in 33 appearances since being acquired from the Dodgers. His last win came on Sept. 26, 2005, as a member of the Dodgers. How much longer can the Rays allow Jackson to go to the mound and give up 6 runs and not be able to complete 4 innings?

Promoting two minor leaguers and inserting them into a major league rotation at the same time is a major shake-up for any team. The major league experience of JP Howell helps ease the transition, but Andy Sonnanstine only has 11 starts above AA. At what point does the team give up on Jackson, move him to the bullpen and insert a third pitcher from Durham into the rotation? If the move is made sooner, rather than later, it will undoubtedly be Jason Hammel who has major league experience.

On Saturday Jackson could not even finish the 4th inning against one of the weakest hitting teams in baseball, who were also missing their only real offensive threat, Mike Sweeney. We can’t imagine Joe Maddon and the Rays will allow more than one or two more outings like that.

DEVIL RAYS WEBTOPIA

  • Akinori Iwamura who batted leadoff for the first time as a member of the Devil Rays, was removed from the game one inning after a foul ball bounced up and hit him in the eye. He is expected to miss 4-5 games.
  • After Saturday’s loss, Edwin Jackson is now 0-7 in 11 starts since being acquired from the Dodgers. His last win came on Sept. 26, 2005.
  • Josh Paul was moved to the 60-day DL. A player on the 60-day DL does not count towards the 40-man roster, so when Jon Switzer was activated from the 60-day DL, the move became necessary.
  • Interleague play is back next weekend and the Rays pitchers will need to swing the lumber. James Shields is considered the Rays best hitting pitcher and went 3-8 last year.

Down On The Farm: Another Strong Outing By Josh Butler

June 3, 2007

Louisville 7, Durham 5. Jason Hammel struck out 9 in 5 innings but allowed 7 hits and 3 walks that led to 4 runs. Justin Ruggiano and Wes Bankston contributed 2 hits apiece. Ruggiano is now 12-38 (.315) with 4 home runs and 3 doubles in the past 9 games.

Montgomery 4, Carolina 3. Chris Seddon gave up 9 hits and 3 runs in 6 innings. Jason Pridie collected 2 hits and an RBI, including the game-winner in the bottom of the 9th. Reid Brignac, who has struggled this season, was moved from the 3-spot in the lineup to the 2-hole. He went 1-4 with a 2-run double. Those were his first RBI since May 23, a span of 11 games. Evan Longoria batted 3rd and went 0-4.

Vero Beach 8, Sarasota 4. Mike Wlodarczyk struck out 5 in 6 innings and allowed only 1 run on 4 hits and 2 walks. He is now 3-1 with a 3.49 ERA. Garrett Groce was 1-5 with a 2-run double. Rhyne Hughes was 2-3 and is now hitting .337.

Columbus 2, Rome 0. Josh Butler pitched 7 scoreless innings allowing only 3 hits and 1 walk while striking out 6. Last year’s 2nd round pick, is now 4-1 with a 2.14 ERA.

NOTES FROM DOWN ON THE FARM

  • Josh Hamilton hit his 4th home run in the 5th game of his rehab assignment against Durham on Saturday.

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