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| we are all of us Blurry Vladdy |
Kevin Gausman's third strikeout of the night was the two-thousandth of his career, making him the sixth active member of the fairly compelling group of ninety-one pitchers to have ever achieved this objectively enormous amount of strikeouts. By the end of the night—a night that did not otherwise go his way at all (seven runs [six earned] on ten runs in four-and-two-thirds is far and away his worst start so far this year, and I'd honestly be very surprised if he has another one that goes this poorly all season [the Rays, sadly, are going to Ray])—Gausman added another pair of Ks, putting him in ninetieth place all-time. It really is quite a list of guys, as you'd expect: everyone Gausman will move ahead of going forward (should he be spared) is either a recognized great of the game, or else someone who has been very good and durable during a high-strikeout era of the game (such as our own just now). How high might he get? Gausman, thirty-five, has talked about his current, expiring contract as possibly being his last, and he seems like a fairly balanced and interesting guy for a starting pitcher (a position that famously cultivates maniacs), one who might actually want to just enjoy his time with his family and go on little adventures and whatnot, rather than play baseball until he is receiving cortisone shots in both his elbow and thumb to try to keep his pitching arm attached to his body into his early forties (no shade to Max Scherzer, who did both of those things just this past week, and whose fanaticism plainly enriches us all). I bet he'd be good for a-hundred-and-fifty strikeouts a year for another three seasons if he wanted to be, no? Were that the case, he'd end up top fifty, knocking on the door of top forty. Fairly wild to contemplate! Anyway, if he does stick around, I do hope it's with us, even as the passage of time brings him back towards the middle of the pack, as starting pitchers go. I like Kevin Gausman, and it's pretty neat to watch somebody do all this with essentially two pitches (four-seam fastball and the splitter, which old-timey baseball simulation through the indispensable Baseball Mogul has taught me was once known as "the dry spitter" [unaccountably off-putting!]).
Aside from all of the Gausman-pondering, last night brought us two homers (five RBI!) for Andrés Giménez (I continue to his enjoy his work!), and also Vladdy's really nice hug to retire Cedric Mullins (formerly my favourite Oriole, then briefly my favourite Met, now my favourite Ray), who is struggling right now. As is Vladdy, a little, whose triple slash line, as they say (AVG/OBP/SLG), is down to .300/.386/.433. It's super clear that Vladdy has been out of sorts at the plate of late, but at the same time, I do not wish to overstate the matter: you'd take that AVG and OBP every day, and Vladdy has been slow to slug to start several seasons (although he was fairly monstrous in the WBC [following last year's all-time wonderful October run]). It's also worth keeping in mind, as a poster helpfully noted on the boards, that Vladdy's weekly wRC+ (in which one-hundred is league-average batting, adjusted for ballpark) numbers so far this season run thus (again, this is weekly): 182; 106; 175; 134; 163; 120; 12. It really is that last one that has been the trouble! I feel like it will come up a little, though. Have you noticed that Shohei Ohtani has a had a brutal May so far at the plate, too? He's been .111/.220/.139 in the month so far, and, perhaps darker still, just .233/.363/.404 overall. Mind you, he may very well be on his way to the NL Cy Young award this year, which will be tougher for Vladdy to achieve. And yet we dare to dream.
Edited to add: I nearly forgot to mention that, following Sunday's poor showing, Eric Lauer got DFA'd (I'll be interested to see what happens next for him), and that Yariel Rodriguez got called up—as did Yohendrick Piñango, on account of how Addison Barger is *back* on the IL, seemingly because of how hard he threw the ball on Saturday (in fairness it was super duper hard). A drag! I also should have mentioned the neat fact that Gausman's first ever major-league strikeout, way back in 2013, happened in Toronto, too, though he was of course an Oriole at the time (I still believe in bird-team solidarity).
KS

























