
Former Braves great Dale Murphy played in an oldtimers/celebrity softball game Saturday before the Braves faced Detroit at Turner Field.
Sitting up in the pressbox, watching Steve Avery pitching to Greg McMichael in an old-timers/celebrity softball game before the Braves face the Detroit Tigers. Kenshin Kawakami had been schedule to start the celebrity game but he was pulled from the rotation.
Kidding, kidding. I’m a kidder.
Actually, there was some hilarious banter in the clubhouse between Dale Murphy and Chipper
Kenshin Kawakami lasted two innings in his last start against Kansas City.
Jones.
Murphy to Chipper: “Are you playing a doubleheader today?”
Chipper to Murphy: “Weren’t you retired by now?”
(Murphy retired when he was 37. Jones is 38.)
“He was all over me [Friday],” Jones said later. “I was like, ‘Murp, you were done when you were 38.’ He was like, ‘Yeah, so?’ I said, ‘So how are you giving me a hard time about being old and not being able to do stuff? I’m playing.’”
No kidding. Jones actually should play out his retirement drama more often. He’s on fire. He has a nine-game hitting streak, during which he is 13 for 33 (.394) with seven RBIs, five runs, a homer and three doubles.
The Braves go into today’s game against the Tigers with a half-game lead over New York and 2 1/2 over Philadelphia. Of course, the biggest story, and possibly the subject of a column later today, is Kawakami. He is 0-9 with a 4.78 ERA. He’s the only starting pitcher in Braves history to lose his first nine decisions. (The franchise’s last 0-9 pitcher, Tom Tuckey with the Boston Doves in 1909, lost seven starts and two relief appearances.)
With Jair Jurrjens on the way back (he’s scheduled to throw a bullpen session Sunday and start against Washington Wednesday). Kris Medlen has been strong (4-0 with a 3.40 ERA as a starter). So this very well could be Kawakami’s final turn in the rotation. Somebody has to go and he’s the logical guy out.
Kawakami is coming off his worst start of the season, blowing a 4-0 lead over Kansas City and allowing five runs on six hits in two innings. He also has committed three errors in his last two starts.
Manager Bobby Cox was predictably evasive on the topic before the game. When I asked him what his plans were for the rotation, he said only, “I have not sat down with [general manager] Frank Wren about it once. We probably will.”
That’s it for now. I’ll be blogging live during the game. Until then, enjoy the air conditioning.
♦
♦
It’s instant re-post (no charge)
♦ Drew finally speaks to Joe Johnson, and he wants him back
♦ A rare Hawks’ draft highlight: Jordan Crawford falls to them
♦ LIVE BLOG: Hawks have a few hours to pick (UPDATE: Hawks expected to get Jordan Crawford in trade)
♦ Dudley gives Thrashers needed jolt in short amount of time
362 comments Add your comment
jer
June 26th, 2010
9:08 pm
I’m okay with not using Wags if he needed the rest. I do not think it was use to him 4 games in a row last weekend. I wonder if we are now paying for that. Wags has shown he can do back-to back games and even three in a row occasionally, but four is ridiculous, especially at his age. Saito has pitched well when used sparingly. However, pitching him 2 days in a row or 3 out of four days as Bobby did is an invitation for disaster, especially when he is just coming back from injury. It is not an accident that he was okay in his first game back and stunk in the next two. He should not be used more than one game in three. I agree Venters would have been the best choice and is looking good as a potential closer for next year.
Joe
June 26th, 2010
9:10 pm
Bry22……you have no idea what you are talking about. He has pitched to a sub 3.00 ERA in his last 8 if you take his last start out of it. He’s pitched well enough to win half of those and has just 1 (today). He’s not going to the pen. Bobby is loyal and he’s aware of KK’s numbers the last 8 starts. Medlen is young and his time will come soon enough.
Techman
June 26th, 2010
9:18 pm
KK gives up just enough to lose? he gave up 1 run today. He gave up 0 a few starts back.
I believe that KK is going to the pen when JJ gets back. I’m not sure I wouldn’t rather Lowe go but I know it won’t happen.
bob smyrna
June 26th, 2010
9:23 pm
He has his win, now put him on the shelf along with soccer.
Where is JJ?
Techman
June 26th, 2010
9:26 pm
for you bashing KK, take a look at Lowe’s and Hanson’s stats. They’re not that far off other than W-L’s. as I’ve mentioned in several other blogs, the quality of pitching KK has faced has been ridiculous compared to the other pitchers on the staff.
jer
June 26th, 2010
9:28 pm
Wags did not pitch because he has a sore ankle. I do not mind using Saito when he has enough rest. However, every time he pitches back-to-back or 3 days in 4 he is lousy. It is not surprising that his first game back went okay but his next two were terrible. He should be reduced to one game in every three and Venters used as the set-up guy and emergency closer, with the idea of bringing him along as closer next year if Wags retires.
jer
June 26th, 2010
9:32 pm
I wonder if the Braves are paying for using Wags four games in a row last weekend. He’s great but Bobby does tend to abuse his relievers (given this I still think BC overall is a good manager). It is asking a lot of any pitcher to throw four games in a row, let alone a 38 year old, no matter how great he is. We cannot afford to wear out Wags.
JohnSmith
June 26th, 2010
9:47 pm
jer — couldn’t agree more, re: Saito and Wagner.
Bry22 — I agree with your assessment of KK. He’s pitched well for the most part, but he hasn’t pitched better than Medlen. Just look at the ERA, number of errors, and, yes, even the win column. Kawakami should go to the bullpen, at least until someone goes down with an injury (knock on wood).
Bleu_Bayou42
June 26th, 2010
9:54 pm
Not to say I told you so, but I told you so.
Bleu_Bayou42
June 21st, 2010
6:07 pm
I am sticking with KK. I watch every game. His stuff is not that bad. It’s just a wierd situation. I think he’s got a good attitude considering. Has it worked out like Frank Wren and KK wanted, of course not. Baseball is unpredictable.
Chipper feeling young again, and Kawakami, Braves benefit | Jeff Schultz
June 26th, 2010
10:01 pm
[...] ♦ We’re LIVE from Braves-Tigers (and is this it for Kawakami?) [...]
rugburn
June 26th, 2010
10:21 pm
i wondered who bc would bring in to try to lose this one for kk now that chavez is gone. saito blew a 4 run lead for kk earlier this year. kk has had a couple of games where he has been really bad which inflates his era. any runners on base when he leaves, bc makes sure they score. imagine if he had treated maddux that way
CaptainMudderland
June 27th, 2010
3:02 am
This closing the game professionally should be solidly established by now–after all we are in first–no, wait, Bobby wants to see this or that matriculate thus and such and all…a 4-1 lead is not much even if the opponent was the Montgomery Biscuits…so, Bobby, please don’t flub another one for goodness sakes and, when in doubt, ask yourself this one question: why do we have a guy on staff with the title of ‘closer?’