A hateful guide to the NLDS
/It's amazing to think of all the hate I have pumped out into the world this week, that there are still three teams left to come to the razor's edge of libeling.
Read MoreIt's amazing to think of all the hate I have pumped out into the world this week, that there are still three teams left to come to the razor's edge of libeling.
Read MoreSick of reading what other people think is going to happen this season?
Yes? Oh, well this is awkward...
Read MoreWhile Rick Hahn has made it clear he's not eager to part with shortstop Alexei Ramirez, speculation persist, as recently the Los Angeles Dodgers joined the New York Yankees and New York Mets as a team rumored to have interest in acquiring the shortstop who has been a stalwart for the Sox for the last seven seasons.
Read MoreI don't understand what John Danks is doing. And I am becoming increasingly of the opinion that I do not want to. Squinting at an illusion forever seems like a good way to make it go away. Danks' stuff hasn't found great newfound life. His control has improved but he walked three batters Thursday. He's just unhittable now, and the more people stay ignorant as to why, the better.
Behind Danks' one run allowed over 7.1 innings, the Sox were able to skip their way out of Chavez Ravine with a series victory, despite having two solo home runs as their only offense.
Read MoreJohn Danks is on something like a roll. He's sopped up 15 innings in his last two starts, allowing just two runs while striking out eight over a single walk. Opponents hit .200/.228/.327 against him in those outings, in contrast to the .864 OPS opponents have on him for the month. To prove it's still him, the Sox lost both games.
This is the equivalent of threading on the first try twice in a row. It's impressive and worthy of praise, but doesn't suddenly change the practice into a high-percentage activity. Danks is still going to be challenged to get through the Dodgers lineup because his margin for error is slim.
Read MoreHector Noesi tried his best to turn Tuesday's game against the Dodgers into a big pile of terrible, but a little bit of luck couple with Jose Abreu doing his thing proved enough in a 4-1 victory.
Read MoreI don't care about Hector Noesi's success as much as Jose Quintana's. I don't care as much about this game as the thrill of flipping a Clayton Kershaw perfecto into a Jose Abreu triumph, and I cannot possibly have my defensive expectation trashed by an outfield with Dayan Viciedo and Adam Dunn in it. There are no walls to break down tonight.
Do your worst, baseball!!
Read MoreFor large portions of Monday night's game, the starting pitching was sharp enough to make innings feel like victory laps. After three innings, Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw was cruising on the way to his inevitable perfect game. He only threw 21 pitches for nine outs, the Sox looked like crap. It was happening.
But after Gordon Beckham broke up his perfecto with a sharp single to right-center, and Jose Abreu announced his return by whipping a high slider over the left field wall to give the Sox a seemingly massive 2-0 lead, Jose Quintana was marching toward his glorious triumph over the odds. That lasted until the bottom of the sixth, when the White Sox defense got a hold of the game, and they hit a hell of a lot harder than Abreu.
Two physical errors of the statistically quantifiable kind, one mental error that it's up to us amateur historians to chronicle, a Justin Turner bloop/pop-up base hit, and five unearned runs later, and the Dodgers were on a victory lap of their own, honored with a 5-2 win for being the team that was less dead set on losing.
After entering the sixth with just two hits allowed, Quintana set himself up for a bit of doom by letting Kershaw spray a single into left, but worked his way back from a 3-0 count to strike out the purposely passive Chone Figgins, then seemed to overcame Gordon Beckham inexplicably whiffing on a Matt Kemp inning-ending double play ball by striking out NL MVP frontrunner Yasiel Puig, and getting Hanley Ramirez to slap a bouncer over to Conor Gillaspie at third.
Then, the rain came.
Gillaspie should have stepped on the third base bag. It was an easy force play that was there for him, especially with Kershaw being the runner on second. But, BUT!--I can understand him throwing over. Throwing to first is a so much more common action, that if an infielder is just acting out of routine and locked in, I'm a little hesitant to fault them for going with it.
Conor was not locked in on this throw. He rarely is and he certainly wasn't tonight. Instead he double-clutched, and as he had been doing throughout the evening, tried to nervously edge himself closer before releasing--that he got closer to the bag makes him not recognizing the force play look worse--and uncorked something like a splitter to Jose Abreu that bounced at the lip of the infield dirt and squirted past.
Torturously, while Gillaspie's error was emblematic of the collapse, it didn't end the misery. An Adrian Gonzalez infield single off Quintana's glove that Beckham nearly retrieved in time actually tied the game, and the flare from Turner broke it open. Drew Butera hitting an RBI single off Quintana, only adding another dollup to the sadness, managed to not even being one of the top-five upsetting moments of the night. Quintana's ERA dropped to 3.31 for the year by being otherwise dominant, so he has that.
Besides That Abreu Dinger, the Sox spent most of their time being liquefied by eight innings of Kershaw and a Kenley Jansen save, probably the two arms in baseball most deservings of a shrug when they decapitate your lineup.
Team Record: 29-30
Next Game: Tomorrow at 9:10 p.m. CT at Los Angeles on WGN
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Jose Abreu's much ballyhooed return to the White Sox lineup after a two-week absence brought on by janketty ankles, comes not a moment too soon. The White Sox are set to face an absolute death-thresher of a left-handed starter who threatens to neutralize the two best hitters in their lineup, and possibly Adam Eaton too.
Remember how much fun it was to watch Chris Sale slice and dice the Padres? Think of how they felt! Now prepare to feel that way. Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw currently has a 3.57 ERA in his injury-shortened beginning to 2014, which is a mystery in and of itself, since he's recorded more strikeouts (46) than baserunners allowed (43) in 36 innings.
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