Category Archives: Clay Buchholz

Back for more

For a number of reasons, I put this blog on hold for a while, like the entire 2009 season and the first 4 months of 2010. But today, July 29th, 2010, I feel like starting back up again. Welcome to “The Quality Starts Report, The 2nd Generation”.

What to do now? Well, lets take a snapshot of the league leaders in Quality Starts (QS).

Individual Leaders thru July 28:

  1. Josh Johnson, FLA – 19 QS in 21 starts
  2. Adam Wainwright, STL and Felix Hernandez, SEA – 18 QS in 22 starts
  3. CC Sabathia, NYY; Tim Hudson, ATL; Roy Halladay, PHI; Jared Weaver, LAA – 17 QS each

Impressive list. Josh Johnson has been lights out all season, with a 1.72 ERA.

Team Leaders thru July 28:

  1. Chicago Cubs 63
  2. St. Louis Cardinals 62
  3. San Francisco Giants 62
  4. Tampa Bay Rays 62
  5. Chicago White Sox and Oakland A’s 61

The Rays and White Sox are both playoff contenders in the AL, while St. Louis is tied for the lead in the Central and the Giants are in front of the NL Wild Card race.

The NYY are tied for 9th with 58 QS and have the league’s best record. The three worst teams in the league, Washington, Pittsburgh, and Baltimore, are all at the bottom of the list with 43.

What about the Red Sox? Tied for 9th overall in the league in total QS. Six starters have recorded quality starts this season.

  • John Lackey (14 QS in 21 starts)
  • Jon Lester (13 QS in 20)
  • Clay Buchholz (10 QS in 17)
  • Tim Wakefield (9 QS in 16)
  • Daisuke Matsuzaka (8 QS in 14)
  • Josh Beckett (4 QS in 10)

Felix Doubront (3 starts) and Scott Atchison (1 start) did not reach the quality start level.

Last Game: #102

Josh Beckett threw 7 innings, allowing only 3 earned runs, in his second start back from the disabled list. This was his first QS since April 26th.

So, hey, that is where we are right now…. good, maybe even, a quality start to the re-launch of the site.

At the All-Star Break

Sorry about the lack of daily coverage lately. Life has been a little hectic and has thrown some surprises my way recently. The least significant of these surprises is the galactic failure of my television to function. That makes watching games a little tricky. Any how – here is how the Sox look at the All-Star break.

The Sox are 57-40 overall, in 1st place in the AL East by a half game over the Rays, courtesy of last night’s win over the Orioles. On the hill, the starting pitching has done well, posting 53 QS and winning 35 of them. The Sox are 22-22 in games in which a starter does not throw a quality start.

Opponents have hurled 42 QS against the Sox, going 26-16 in these starts. If you do the math, that means the Sox are 41-14 when the opponent’s starting pitcher does not go quality. That right there, my friend is some statistical information for you. Looking a little deeper, when the Sox and their opposition each have starters who go quality, the Sox have struggled, going only 12-16. When the Sox have a QS and their foes do not, they are 23-2! When neither starter has a quality start, the Sox are 18-12.

Lesson here: when the Sox get some quality, and the opponents don’t, the Sox win. If neither gets quality, the Sox do pretty well.

Mid-season individual performances

Beckett 17 GS – 11 QS
Buchholz 9 – 3
Colon 6 -2
Lester 20 – 11
Masterson 9 – 5
Matsuzaka 16 – 7
Pauley 1 – 0
Wakefield 19 – 14

Beckett, Lester and Wakefield have performed well, all with over 50% of their starts being QS. Wake is among the league leaders in the category. Dice-K has a great record, and the Sox are 13-3 in his 16 starts, but only 7 QS to his credit. I worry about him burning out in the fall because of too many pitches and too many hard innings. Masterson has been a surprise, 5 QS in 9 starts and has been a boost to the club. Colon has been adequate (2 QS in 6 starts). Clay Buchholz has also been somewhat of a disappointment. All the talent in the world, we keep hearing, but he has not had enough quality starts to really show us that he has it figured out yet.

’08 Game 48: Another Masterson Performance

Rookie Justin Masterson walked off the Fenway mound during the seventh inning, leading 2-0, and guaranteed that his performance would make it to the quality start column. Two times out in the bigs, two quality starts for the big sinkerballer. His stuff was good last night, better to righties than lefties. He did allow only 3 hits in his 6 1/3 innings of work, which means his two-start total is 5 hits allowed in 13 1/3 IP. Pretty good start to a career.

Here’s the QS Bottom-Line:

Game 48 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
JM#63 6.1 3 1 1 3 5 0 91-55 1.46

The End Result:
Two games against the Royals and only 1 run allowed in total, and only 5 hits. Masterson does get sent back to the minors, but now he will be in Pawtucket, as he moves a little bit closer to The Show. I personally am looking forward to adding Masterson to the rotation in the next year or so. His stuff is in such contrast to the other Sox starters, and I’d like the team to be able to continue to mix it up on the opposition during a seris.

Red Sox Record: 29-19
Total Quality Starts: 25
Record in QS games: 17-8

KC starter Gil Meche also gave his team a quality start (7 IP, 2 ER). In 14 of the Red Sox games so far this season, both starters have had quality starts, and the Sox are 7-7 in those games. Opposing pitchers have only made 19 quality starts against the Sox to date (40% of games). Opposing teams are 3-2 when their pitcher throws a QS and the Sox start does not and are 7-7 when both do (overall: 10-9).

A Look Ahead:

I will be at Fenway tonight, enjoying the season debut of former Cy Young winner, Bartolo Colon, he who is rotund. This will be Colon’s regular season Red Sox debut as well. If Colon can give the Sox some quality starts, that would be outstanding. Buchholz is on the DL for at least another week. Colon, right now, has a chance to stake a claim to a rotation spot. So, in addition to there being a lot of him to see, we could see a lot of Bartolo.

’08 Game 29: Another Walk-off Win

I forgot to mention in yesterday’s post that JL #31′s quality start was the fifth in five games for the Sox. Finally, some consistency comes to the rotation at the end of April. Dice-K upped the streak to 6 and helped the Sox finish the month of April with a 16-8 record. Dice-K, stratched from his last start because of the flu, looked strong in this one. He tossed seven innings, giving up only 2 hits and 2 walks, and no runs. This last number was pretty important, as again the Sox offense sputtered.

Game 29 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
DM #18 7.0 2 0 0 2 4 0 111-69 2.52

The End Result:
Quality start for Dice-K, and one for McGowan of the Jays as well. This is the 13th quality start thrown by an opposing pitcher this year, and the 5th in the last 6 games. The Sox bats are not lengthening at bats, being patient, and getting starters out of games early. That has been the formula, and they are just not executing in the batters box lately. The saving grace for the Sox has been the starters in the last turn of the rotation. Masterson, Wakefield, Buchholz, Beckett, Lester, and Dice-K have each hit the quality start barrier in the past week.

Red Sox Record: 17-12
Total Quality Starts: 16
Record in QS games: 10-6

A Look Ahead:

The Sox go for the sweep with Wakefield on the bump tonight. Can Wakefield get the QS streak to 7? Can the Sox bats solve Aj Burnett? Good questions. First game of May – tonight at Fenway, 7:05 PM first pitch.

’08 Games 25-27: Sox dropped at the Trop

Well, this past weekend in Tampa was certainly an unique one for the Boston Red Sox. Three quality starts and three losses. Ouch! On the back of losing the last 2 at home to the Halos, the Sox have now lost five in a row. They were 15-7 at the start of this stretch, now only 15-12 and are in a three-way tie for first place in the AL East. When you toss 3 quality starts in a series and get swept, you gotta look at the offense and the bullpen for some answers. At great issue this weekend was the lineup, generating only 5 runs in the 3 games. Yikes! Give credit to the Rays starters, who also collected 2 quality starts, for getting the job done. Only Matt Garza of the six starters in the sweep did not get a quality start, falling one inning short of the definition.

My thoughts, lets put this quick trip to Tampa behind us as quickly as possible and look ahead to the chance for redemption next weekend back in the Fens.

Here’s the QS Bottom-Line:
Game 25 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
TW #49 6.0 6 4 3 5 1 0 113-70 4.06
Game 26 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
CB #61 8.0 3 2 2 2 9 1 113-76 4.08
Game 27 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
JB #19 7.0 4 2 1 1 13 1 107-70 4.10

The End Result:
Sox have now dropped 5 in a row, despite 4 straight quality starts. So much for the quality starts equals wins theory. If the offense can get going soon while the pitching is going good, that would help. Hello, lineup? Where are you?

That being said, I like what I saw from Buchholz and Beckett. Definitely this was Buchholz’s best outing this season, eight strong innings, although you’d have to wish he’d get one pitch back, the one that Iwamura deposited into the bleachers. That was the ballgame on Saturday night. Beckett just got outhurled by the Rays’ ace James Shields.

Red Sox Record: 15-12
Total Quality Starts: 14
Record in QS games: 8-6

A Look Ahead:

The Sox return home to face the Blue Jays and the Rays this coming week. Good news that they are at home, as the Sox have already been swept in 2 series against the Jays/Rays on the road. Going in to the homestand, the Sox have a season-long streak of 4 straight quality starts.

’08 Game 24: Masterson Debuts Well, Sox Still Lose

Justin Masterson - Major League Debut.The surprise of surprises came today in a last minute ticket offer to my wife and we got to see the major league debut of young Justin Masterson. The sinkerballer pitched well, going six innings and giving up only 1 earned run, a homer by Mike Napoli in the fifth. He allowed only 2 hits and walked 4. A solid outing for a rookie, we’ll give him a B+.

Interesting personal fact – the last time a Sox starter made his big league debut at Fenway was Clay Buchholz last August. This start was also against the LAA. And my wife and I were also in attendance. Pretty cool.

The bullpen gets an F! The rotation produces a quality start, and the bullpen just squandered it away. Four relievers allowed 6 runs in 3 innings. Yikes. That was ugly. The Sox lost, even though a majestic bomb by Big Papi in the ninth did make the final score interesting, 7-5 Halos. And as we feared, the Sox lose their first home series of the season.

Here’s the QS Bottom-Line:
Game 24 IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-ST ERA
JM#63 6.0 2 1 1 4 4 1 95-58 1.50

The End Result:
Sox lose for the second night in a row and now have to head to the Trop to face the Devil Rays. They have not lost two straight games since Toronto on April 5 and 6, 17 games ago. Short losing streaks certainly are a good sign. During those 17 games, the Sox starters produced 7 quality starts, not an outstanding number. You would have to say it has been the offense carrying the load during this stretch of 12-5 baseball, scoring 105 runs (6.2 per game).

Red Sox Record: 15-9
Total Quality Starts: 10
Record in QS games: 8-3

A Look Ahead:

Down in the Trop, Matt Garza will face Wake in the opener, followed by Buchholz v. Edwin Jackson. Not 100% sure who will start on Sunday for the Sox, it could be Beckett, and he would face James Shields. Sox can increase their lead in the East with a series win on the road.

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