Hillman Fired After Zack Wins
It looked like Zack Greinke was headed for an 0-5 record when the Royals fell behind 3-0 early Thursday afternoon, but they stormed back to take a 6-3 lead and for once the bullpen avoided imploding (although they gave it their best shot). Greinke won his first game, improving to 1-4 with a 2.73 ERA, but literally minutes after Joakim Soria recorded the final out the Royals fired manager Trey Hillman.
Hillman showed an amazing level of poise and class in the press conference afterward, revealing that general manager Dayton Moore actually fired him Thursday morning while giving him the option to remain on the job for one final game. He left on a high note, but with a 152-207 overall record and 59-109 mark since last year's surprising start Hillman deserved to be let go even if Moore should shoulder far more of the blame in general.
Interim manager Ned Yost's six-season track record with the Brewers suggests he'll be more willing to turn the team over to young guys, although how much of the misguided reliance on veteran mediocrity is traced to Hillman rather than Moore is up for debate. Either way it'll be hard for the Royals to be any worse and if Yost finds a way to support Greinke, better utilize Soria, and reassimilate Alex Gordon the switch will be a success.
While the Royals' hugely disappointing GM fires the one guy keeping all the pressure off his shoulders, here are some other notes from around baseball ...
* Jonathan Sanchez tossed eight innings of one-run ball Thursday, handing out just one walk for the second straight start, yet still took a loss thanks to Mat Latos' near-perfect game. Latos was flawless aside from an Eli Whiteside infield single in the sixth inning that he almost made a play on, striking out six and walking none in the 106-pitch gem. Better yet, Latos drove in the only run of the game with a single in the fifth frame.
While not a particularly well-known prospect, Latos' top-notch velocity and great minor league numbers combined with the Padres' pitcher-friendly ballpark made him one of my favorite sleeper picks heading into the season. In other words, this isn't a fluke. As a fly-ball pitcher Petco Park is the perfect home for Latos, who had a 2.49 ERA and 216 strikeouts over 185 innings in the minors despite reaching San Diego at age 21.
* Brad Lidge received some positive news Thursday, as an MRI exam on his sore and surgically repaired elbow revealed inflammation rather than structural damage. He's officially day-to-day and could be available this weekend, with Jose Contreras closing until Lidge returns. Obviously that all but shuts Contreras' window for fantasy value, but with Ryan Madson out for two months and Lidge shaky he may be called on again.
* Your mission, should you choose to accept it: Follow me on Twitter.
AL Quick Hits: Still struggling to return from Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, Jarrod Saltalamacchia is now having trouble simply throwing the ball back to the pitcher at Triple-A ... Felix Hernandez rebounded from back-to-back poor outings with seven innings of one-run ball Thursday, but the bullpen blew a four-run lead ... Nelson Cruz (hamstring) is due back from the disabled list Friday, with the Rangers clearing room by waving Ryan Garko ... Alfredo Simon picked up his fifth save Thursday when Corey Patterson threw the tying run out at the plate to end the game ... Grady Sizemore went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts Thursday, giving him a 34/9 K/BB ratio and zero homers in 30 games ... CC Sabathia gave up back-to-back homers Thursday and has now allowed seven homers in the past five starts ... Jim Johnson has been advised to rest for 8-10 weeks with an elbow tear that may require surgery ... Ben Sheets allowed one run in six innings Thursday, striking out eight for the second straight start ... If the whole NFL thing doesn't work out, Tim Tebow might have a future in baseball.
NL Quick Hits: Huston Street (shoulder) tossed a scoreless inning Thursday in his first rehab appearance at Double-A and said afterward he's "dangerously close" to returning ... Johan Santana and Josh Johnson both got no-decisions Thursday for matching each other with seven innings of one-run ball ... Out since last June following shoulder surgery, Chien-Ming Wang is targeting July 1 for his return ... Roy Oswalt joined Lance Berkman in saying Thursday that he'd be open to a trade from the struggling Astros ... Mark DeRosa (wrist) will be placed on the disabled list if he's not ready to rejoin the lineup by Sunday ... Bud Norris came into Thursday's game with a 7.52 ERA, but continued to own the Cardinals with eight innings of one-run ball ... Carlos Beltran (knee) has reported no problems after finally beginning a running program this week ... Troy Tulowitzki (quadriceps) had two hits in his return to the lineup Thursday ... Modern players just don't try to break each others' arms nearly as much as the old days.
It looked like Zack Greinke was headed for an 0-5 record when the Royals fell behind 3-0 early Thursday afternoon, but they stormed back to take a 6-3 lead and for once the bullpen avoided imploding (although they gave it their best shot). Greinke won his first game, improving to 1-4 with a 2.73 ERA, but literally minutes after Joakim Soria recorded the final out the Royals fired manager Trey Hillman.
Hillman showed an amazing level of poise and class in the press conference afterward, revealing that general manager Dayton Moore actually fired him Thursday morning while giving him the option to remain on the job for one final game. He left on a high note, but with a 152-207 overall record and 59-109 mark since last year's surprising start Hillman deserved to be let go even if Moore should shoulder far more of the blame in general.
Interim manager Ned Yost's six-season track record with the Brewers suggests he'll be more willing to turn the team over to young guys, although how much of the misguided reliance on veteran mediocrity is traced to Hillman rather than Moore is up for debate. Either way it'll be hard for the Royals to be any worse and if Yost finds a way to support Greinke, better utilize Soria, and reassimilate Alex Gordon the switch will be a success.
While the Royals' hugely disappointing GM fires the one guy keeping all the pressure off his shoulders, here are some other notes from around baseball ...
* Jonathan Sanchez tossed eight innings of one-run ball Thursday, handing out just one walk for the second straight start, yet still took a loss thanks to Mat Latos' near-perfect game. Latos was flawless aside from an Eli Whiteside infield single in the sixth inning that he almost made a play on, striking out six and walking none in the 106-pitch gem. Better yet, Latos drove in the only run of the game with a single in the fifth frame.
While not a particularly well-known prospect, Latos' top-notch velocity and great minor league numbers combined with the Padres' pitcher-friendly ballpark made him one of my favorite sleeper picks heading into the season. In other words, this isn't a fluke. As a fly-ball pitcher Petco Park is the perfect home for Latos, who had a 2.49 ERA and 216 strikeouts over 185 innings in the minors despite reaching San Diego at age 21.
* Brad Lidge received some positive news Thursday, as an MRI exam on his sore and surgically repaired elbow revealed inflammation rather than structural damage. He's officially day-to-day and could be available this weekend, with Jose Contreras closing until Lidge returns. Obviously that all but shuts Contreras' window for fantasy value, but with Ryan Madson out for two months and Lidge shaky he may be called on again.
* Your mission, should you choose to accept it: Follow me on Twitter.
AL Quick Hits: Still struggling to return from Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, Jarrod Saltalamacchia is now having trouble simply throwing the ball back to the pitcher at Triple-A ... Felix Hernandez rebounded from back-to-back poor outings with seven innings of one-run ball Thursday, but the bullpen blew a four-run lead ... Nelson Cruz (hamstring) is due back from the disabled list Friday, with the Rangers clearing room by waving Ryan Garko ... Alfredo Simon picked up his fifth save Thursday when Corey Patterson threw the tying run out at the plate to end the game ... Grady Sizemore went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts Thursday, giving him a 34/9 K/BB ratio and zero homers in 30 games ... CC Sabathia gave up back-to-back homers Thursday and has now allowed seven homers in the past five starts ... Jim Johnson has been advised to rest for 8-10 weeks with an elbow tear that may require surgery ... Ben Sheets allowed one run in six innings Thursday, striking out eight for the second straight start ... If the whole NFL thing doesn't work out, Tim Tebow might have a future in baseball.
NL Quick Hits: Huston Street (shoulder) tossed a scoreless inning Thursday in his first rehab appearance at Double-A and said afterward he's "dangerously close" to returning ... Johan Santana and Josh Johnson both got no-decisions Thursday for matching each other with seven innings of one-run ball ... Out since last June following shoulder surgery, Chien-Ming Wang is targeting July 1 for his return ... Roy Oswalt joined Lance Berkman in saying Thursday that he'd be open to a trade from the struggling Astros ... Mark DeRosa (wrist) will be placed on the disabled list if he's not ready to rejoin the lineup by Sunday ... Bud Norris came into Thursday's game with a 7.52 ERA, but continued to own the Cardinals with eight innings of one-run ball ... Carlos Beltran (knee) has reported no problems after finally beginning a running program this week ... Troy Tulowitzki (quadriceps) had two hits in his return to the lineup Thursday ... Modern players just don't try to break each others' arms nearly as much as the old days.