Tuesday, July 24, 2007 - Posts

July 24: White Sox 8, Tigers 7

I'm not going to speak for White Sox fans on the whole, but when people ask me why on Earth I still watch this team, I'm going to point to this game.

Through five innings, the Sox had nothing.  They trailed 7-1, were outhit 11-2, and Detroit hitters pounded mistakes and did enough with good pitches to chase Gavin Floyd after 4 2/3 innings.  Coming off a game in which they had one hit off Tiger relievers, there wasn't much hope.

They cut it to 7-3 after Tadahito Iguchi homered and Rob Mackowiak flared a single off Macay McBride (who I thought was black before tonight), but the thought of a comeback didn't kick in until Jim Thome crushed a three-run homer to cut it to a one-run game.

The Sox finally achieved the unthinkable and took the lead in the eighth when Rob Mackowiak smoked a ball that Sean Casey couldn't handle for a double.

Now, here's where the unthinkable events start:

1) Josh Fields started his at-bat swinging at a ball and missing badly on a bunt attempt, leading me to believe he'd strand Mack at second.  However, he hung in there and chopped a ball to short high enough to get Mack to third.

2) Scott Podsednik, hitless in his first six at-bats since coming off the disabled list, lined a single through center to score Mack. 

3) Then he stole second.

4) Then Juan Uribe drew a walk even though he swung at a ball.

5) Then Carlos Guillen botched a would-be double play ball off the bat of A.J. Pierzynski, scoring Pods and moving Uribe to third.

6-1 billion million) All the while, Boone Logan, Ehren Wassermann, Ryan Bukvich and Matt Thornton didn't allow a single run to score despite looking typically shaky.

Jerry Owens ushered in a return to normalcy when he short-armed a suicide squeeze attempt, hanging Uribe out to dry.  When Thornton started off the ninth by allowing a single to Sean Casey, it seemed all too familiar.

Jenks would once again shut the door, picking up saves in both halves of the doubleheader.  Mike Hessman popped out on a high fastball, and then after pinch-running Brandon Inge stole second, he was caught off second when Mike Rabelo lined out to Iguchi, ending the game and capping off the remarkable comeback.

Gavin Floyd was spared two losses in two starts.  He'll be an interesting project for Don Cooper.  He has the pitches -- the fastball has some movement and his curveball made a few Tigers flinch.  However, it seemed like Tigers hitters had a head start on his attempts at jamming them with a fastball.  I don't often buy the pitch-tipping excuse, but there might be something iffy with Floyd's delivery.

Of course, that doesn't excuse the slider he hung to Hessman, which nearly landed on the concourse when it finally came down.

The other half of the starting battery, Toby Hall, had a rough night as well.  He was knocked out with a mild concussion after Carlos Guillen hit him with his follow through, but even if he could remember the events preceding it, he wouldn't want to.  First, he ripped a foul ball to the left side and hit a fan.  Then he couldn't throw out a runner because he had trouble getting his feet out from under him after popping out of the crouch.  When he did single, he was doubled off inexplicably on a soft Jerry Owens liner to short.

Record: 45-55 | Box score | Play-by-play

July 24: White Sox 5, Tigers 3

If the Sox could've put this kind of offensive output behind White Sox starters like they did in this game, the Sox wouldn't be in this deep of a hole.  And the thing is, they didn't really do all that much.

Javier Vazquez didn't falter much in this outstanding start, but when he did, the Sox picked him up.  His roughest inning was the first, when Curtis Granderson hit a single, but with Jermaine Dye chasing it, turned into a double.  He advanced to third on a fly to right and scored on a grounder two batters later.

Nevertheless, Sox hitters picked him up when Paul Konerko hit a grounder to third weak enough to avoid the double play and drive in Alex Cintron, and A.J. Pierzynski followed with an RBI double.

When Vazquez allowed a homer to Ivan Rodriguez, Josh Fields homered right back in the bottom of the inning (his second straight game with one).  When Granderson homered in the sixth, Konerko broke his hitless streak with a three-run homer.

That would be enough for Javy, who brought his great fastball today.  I saw readings as high as 95, and not only was he spotting it on the outside corner to right-handers, but when coupled with a changeup that was moving almost like a screwball, they didn't stand a chance.  Javy only allowed four hits over eight innings, and Bobby Jenks closed it out with a perfect ninth.

Jim Thome had a tremendous game, going 3-for-3 with two runs scored and a walk.  Also worth noting is a Jerry Owens double, snapping a streak of 121 at-bats without an extra-base hit.

Record: 44-55 | Box score | Play-by-play