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Right-hander Jeff Suppan struggled in the Brewers' season opener. |
| By Drew Olson Senior Editor E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Drew Olson |
| Published April 8, 2009 at 5:21 a.m. |
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The first game of the Brewers' 2009 season echoed the final game of the 2008 campaign in that it left fans feeling dejected, deflated, depressed and angry at starting pitcher Jeff Suppan.
There is, of course, one major difference:
The Brewers won't have to wait six months for another chance.
When Suppan faltered against the Phillies Oct. 5 at Miller Park, the season was over. When he served up six runs over four rocky innings against the Giants on Tuesday afternoon at AT&T Park, things were just getting underway.
The Brewers lost the game, 10-6, snapping a string of five consecutive opening day victories. Right-hander Yovani Gallardo takes the mound tonight against Giants lefty Randy Johnson as the Milwaukee tries to give new manager Ken Macha his first victory.
Most national publications downplayed the Brewers' chances of returning to the playoffs this season, primarily because of skepticism about the quality and depth of their pitching staff.Suppan and friends did nothing to change those opinions on Tuesday.
The Brewers chased National League Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum off the mound after just three innings on Tuesday. They parlayed 10 hits, eight walks, two hit batters and four stolen bases into six runs.
It wasn't enough.
Suppan gave up a three-run triple to Travis Ishikawa on a badly-placed changeup in the first inning and served up a hanging slider in the fourth that Aaron Rowand belted for a two-run homer.
Just as many Brewers fans began to wonder "why isn't Seth McClung starting instead of Suppan, the tall redhead replaced the veteran in the fifth and gave up an ugly run on three hits and a walk. McClung redeemed himself with a clean sixth inning, but Dave Bush -- who was pitching to sharpen up for a start Saturday against the Cubs -- gave up a solo homer in a three-run seventh. Jorge Julio allowed a solo shot in the eighth, capping a shaky day for Milwaukee hurlers in Billy Castro's first game as pitching coach.
While Suppan helped the cause with a two-out, RBI double off Lincecum, his failure to hold the lead and work past the fourth raises red flags among a fan base that has forgotten his flawless August.
Because he doesn't possess the "blow it past them" velocity of a younger pitcher, Suppan has almost no margin for error on the mound. He always works with a lot of men on base, but sometimes makes pitches to get out of jams. That wasn't the case Tuesday, though, and he saw his opening day record drop to 0-2 with a 8.55 ERA in four opening day starts. (The first three came in Kansas City from 2000-02).
With the victory, the Giants -- pegged as a strong pitching team with offensive limitations -- erased a couple of statistical quirks from last season.
A year ago, the Giants did not reach double digits on the scoreboard until their 53rd game. This year, they did it in their first. San Francisco also beat the Brewers, who won all six meetings between the teams in 2008 by a combined score of 49-18.
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10 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by sandstorm on April 9, 2009 at 4:41 p.m. (report)
i don't get it rabid. why do you think i'm selfish? because i don't boo? that makes sense. and what does mac and cheese or American Idol have to do with my love of baseball? does liking or not liking a certain food or TV show make anyone more or less intelligent about a sport? seriously. with your logic there's probably a seat in the home clubhouse at Wrigley for you rabid.
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Posted by rabid652 on April 9, 2009 at 3:48 p.m. (report)
Yeah...great philosphy, Sandstorm. I hope you're not as selfish as that. By the way, for someone who spends way too much time watching American Idol and arguing about mac and cheese (if my memory is correct), you really should be more carefull about who you try to talk baseball with.
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Posted by sandstorm on April 9, 2009 at 3:44 p.m. (report)
seriously, who is serving the cub juice (Old Style?) around here this week? "Sabathia, CC" was neither mediocre or a free agent.
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Posted by WestSideWillie on April 9, 2009 at 2:10 p.m. (report)
Just another example of the Brewers having to OVERPAY for a mediocre free agent. Who wants to play in Milwaukee? Outside of Craig Counsell. Brewers have to overpay mediocre free agents huge sums of money to consider Milwaukee otherwise they are gone (See Hammonds, Jeffrey and Sabathia, CC).Jeff is a 500 pitcher, 128W-124L who Doug Melvin had to over pay. At least this was his decision, unlike the 10 million for Eric Gagne who the owner remembered as CyYoung and the Brewers got Cy Old.
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Posted by sandstorm on April 8, 2009 at 5:49 p.m. (report)
if it doesn't help why do it? you'd cash the check rabid, if they paid you. i certainly wouldn't boo you for winning the lottery and i wouldn't boo you for cashing those checks as long as you were putting in some effort. and they didn't trade for Suppan OR Gagne. you two gentlemen are making Cub fans look like Peter effing Gammons the way you understand the game.
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