Login  | Free Registration
Sunday, 4/21/2024
GEICO 500 - FoxSheet

You are viewing a condensed version of this FoxSheet. Login as a FoxSheets Subscriber to view the full sheet.
Not a member? Subscribe today and start taking advantage of our premium information, including the Game Estimator™, the Super Situations ™, the Power Trends ™, and many more features.
MLB : ATS Matchup
Wednesday 7/1/2015Line$ LineOU LineScore
CLEVELAND  CARRASCO )
 
TAMPA BAY  COLOME )
-1.5  +100

+1.5  -120
-145

+135

7un
 
8
Final
1

CLEVELAND (35 - 41) at TAMPA BAY (42 - 37)
View Previous GameView Next Game
Wednesday, 7/1/2015 7:10 PM
CARLOS CARRASCO (R) vs. ALEX COLOME (R)
Board OpeningLatest
 LineTotalLineTotal
917CLEVELAND-110Ov 7,-120-125Ov 7,-105
918TAMPA BAY+100Un 7,+100+115Un 7,-115
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
CLEVELAND - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games35-41-15.435-394.00.2520.3250.3910.7164.40.2500.3090.4050.714
Road Games20-18+1.313-233.90.2460.3110.3890.7013.50.2280.2900.3710.661
vs Right-handed Starters23-22-5.721-224.20.2570.3360.3970.7334.40.2520.3060.4090.715
Past 7 Games3-4-1.24-33.90.2730.3280.4290.7574.00.1980.2470.4010.648
Dome Games2-0+2.12-06.50.2780.3420.5000.8421.50.0860.1170.1900.306
Night Games21-25-9.419-263.80.2450.3130.3890.7024.20.2430.3010.3980.698
CLEVELAND - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games4.00.2520.3257625576451439650.3912922755303857066447141
Road Games3.90.2460.311381294318595390.3891411232592426933213122
Righty Starters4.20.2570.336451512389918350.3971781783182735331293923
CLEVELAND - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.221.294223.31048020424852316-916576.2%
Road Games3.401.289903434779391043-410190.9%

TAMPA BAY - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games42-37+3.832-433.60.2430.2990.3830.6823.50.2330.2940.3650.660
Home Games20-23-722-183.60.2460.3040.3830.6874.10.2420.3020.3860.688
vs Right-handed Starters27-29-2.925-303.50.2390.2930.3700.6643.70.2300.2960.3690.666
Past 7 Games2-5-4.23-32.40.2030.2520.3330.5853.90.2110.2680.3800.648
Dome Games21-24-7.222-203.50.2420.2980.3750.6734.00.2390.3000.3800.680
Night Games31-26+5.423-303.80.2400.3000.3810.6813.70.2410.3030.3760.680
TAMPA BAY - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games3.60.2430.29979262963812217710.3832712126285751765384947
Home Games3.60.2460.304431396344648370.3831461153483427833232733
Righty Starters3.50.2390.2935618804509113430.3701801444503236244273537
TAMPA BAY - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.771.302267.31171122433510525814-1434782.9%
Home Games4.501.311148777414224521568-716480%
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
CLEVELAND - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
6/17/2015MARCUM(R)CHICAGO CUBSWADA(L)0-17L-1308 unO4411850
6/18/2015SALAZAR(R)CHICAGO CUBSHAMMEL(R)4-3W-1457.5 ovU861770
6/19/2015CARRASCO(R)TAMPA BAYKARNS(R)1-4L-1657 unU7701151
6/20/2015KLUBER(R)TAMPA BAYRAMIREZ(L)1-4L-1807 ovU681651
6/21/2015ANDERSON(R)TAMPA BAYCOLOME(R)1-0W-1158 ovU340780
6/22/2015BAUER(R)DETROITRYAN(L)5-8L-1409 unO95013101
6/23/2015SALAZAR(R)DETROITPRICE(L)3-7L-1157 unO1281951
6/24/2015CARRASCO(R)DETROITFARMER(R)8-2W-2008 unO13110520
6/26/2015KLUBER(R)@ BALTIMORECHEN(L)3-4L-1107.5 unU10901070
6/28/2015BAUER(R)@ BALTIMOREJIMENEZ(R)0-4L1208.5 unU460630
6/28/2015MURATA(R)@ BALTIMORETILLMAN(R)0-8L1259 unU871850
6/29/2015ANDERSON(R)@ TAMPA BAYKARNS(R)7-1W1107 unO1391311
6/30/2015SALAZAR(R)@ TAMPA BAYRAMIREZ(L)6-2W-1357 unO741231
7/1/2015CARRASCO(R)@ TAMPA BAYCOLOME(R) 
7/2/2015KLUBER(R)@ TAMPA BAYMOORE(L) 
7/3/2015BAUER(R)@ PITTSBURGHMORTON(R) 
7/4/2015ANDERSON(R)@ PITTSBURGHLOCKE(L) 
7/5/2015SALAZAR(R)@ PITTSBURGHCOLE(R) 
7/6/2015CARRASCO(R)HOUSTONKEUCHEL(L) 
7/7/2015KLUBER(R)HOUSTONVELASQUEZ(R) 
7/8/2015 HOUSTON  

TAMPA BAY - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
6/17/2015GELTZ(R)@ WASHINGTONZIMMERMANN(R)5-0W1407.5 unU1270243
6/18/2015ARCHER(R)@ WASHINGTONFISTER(R)5-3W-1157 unO127012103
6/19/2015KARNS(R)@ CLEVELANDCARRASCO(R)4-1W1557 unU1151770
6/20/2015RAMIREZ(L)@ CLEVELANDKLUBER(R)4-1W1707 ovU651681
6/21/2015COLOME(R)@ CLEVELANDANDERSON(R)0-1L1058 ovU780340
6/22/2015ANDRIESE(R)TORONTOHUTCHISON(R)5-8L-1257 ovO151411140
6/23/2015ARCHER(R)TORONTODICKEY(R)4-3W-1607 unP981431
6/24/2015KARNS(R)TORONTOESTRADA(R)0-1L-1157.5 unU470681
6/26/2015COLOME(R)BOSTONPORCELLO(R)3-4L-1157.5 unU12801080
6/27/2015ANDRIESE(R)BOSTONMILEY(L)4-1W-1107.5 unU750320
6/28/2015ARCHER(R)BOSTONMASTERSON(R)3-5L-1756.5 ovO1090841
6/29/2015KARNS(R)CLEVELANDANDERSON(R)1-7L-1207 unO3111391
6/30/2015RAMIREZ(L)CLEVELANDSALAZAR(R)2-6L+1257 unO231741
7/1/2015COLOME(R)CLEVELANDCARRASCO(R) 
7/2/2015MOORE(L)CLEVELANDKLUBER(R) 
7/3/2015ARCHER(R)@ NY YANKEESTANAKA(R) 
7/4/2015KARNS(R)@ NY YANKEESPINEDA(R) 
7/5/2015RAMIREZ(L)@ NY YANKEESSABATHIA(L) 
7/6/2015ODORIZZI(R)@ KANSAS CITYVOLQUEZ(R) 
7/7/2015MOORE(L)@ KANSAS CITYYOUNG(R) 
7/8/2015 @ KANSAS CITY  
KEY GAME INFORMATION
CLEVELAND: CLEVELAND (AP) - While their AL Central rivals jockeyed during the offseason, one trying to outdo the other to improve their chances of winning a World Series title, the Indians watched.
That was the plan.
No, they didn't make any blockbuster trades, sign a big-name, big-ticket free agent or overhaul their roster with new faces. The Indians, who somehow stayed in contention last season until the waning days of September, didn't feel the need to make radical changes. It wasn't necessary.
The pieces are in place for Cleveland to have a special 2015 season.
''The team knows it,'' said second baseman Jason Kipnis. ''We got two winning seasons in a row. We had an 85-win season when we had about three guys playing good. The possibilities are there, the potential is there. That whole last year we never had more than a seven-game winning streak, never really got hot.
''We got the same corps. Same group of guys. We kind of want another chance at this again - and we're getting another chance.''
The Indians return virtually the same team that went 85-77 last season, finishing third behind division champion Detroit and wild-card winner Kansas City, which ended a postseason drought dating to 1985, won the pennant and pushed San Francisco to seven games in the World Series.
Watching the Royals inspired the Indians. And as he prepares for his third season in Cleveland, manager Terry Francona senses a different drive in his players.
They're hungry.
''Our veteran guys are trying to get better,'' he said. ''Our younger guys are excited to prove what they can do. I didn't see anybody just kind of go home and want to kind of keep the status quo. We're all excited about that.''
Francona said they're upping expectations both on performance and results.
''They're kind of at a stage where they're embracing trying to see if we can go up against some of these teams and, not only maybe hold our own, but maybe do a little more than that,'' Francona said.
There's no denying Francona's magical touch. The man who helped end Boston's supposed baseball curse, who got the Indians to the postseason in 2013, has an uncanny ability to convince players buy in to his program and get them to believe they can overcome any obstacles: injuries, payroll, low expectations, the Tigers lineup.
This spring, Francona didn't have to sell the Indians, who haven't won a World Series since 1948, on the idea they can compete. They already know that. Now it's a matter of taking the next step.
''When guys believe they can do it, and then they start to do it, then you see the confidence take over and guys take off, and you can accomplish a lot,'' he said. ''That's part of the fun of the season, to see how good you can get. I'd rather enjoy, as much as we can, the journey.''
---
KLUBER UBER ALLES
All Corey Kluber did in his first major-league season was win 18 games, re-write some record books, dominate almost every time he pitched and win the AL Cy Young.
The 28-year-old could do it again.
Seemingly programmed because of his consistent performances and composed demeanor, Kluber gives the Indians a long-needed and legitimate No. 1 starter capable of winning every time he gets the ball. He scares opponents and makes his teammates better.
The Indians have discussed a long-term contract extension for the right-hander, who isn't even eligible for arbitration.
---
YOUR TABLE, MR. BRANTLEY
Michael Brantley just might be baseball's most unassuming star, and he plans to keep it that way. The 27-year-old's breakout 2014 season - he batted .327 with 20 homers, 97 RBIs and a third-place finish in MVP voting - was followed by obligatory can-he-do-it-again questions.
Francona thinks Brantley might be poised for bigger things. The spotlight will find Brantley, but he's not craving it.
''He's so consistent at a high level that I don't see that going away,'' he said. ''He's so confident in what he's doing that I think he enjoys playing the game and the other things that come with it, I think he could take it or leave it. He has a really good understanding of who he is.''
---
BETTER BE BETTER
For the Indians to get where they want, Kipnis (.240), CF Michael Bourn (106 games) and DH Nick Swisher (offseason knee surgeries) need to bounce back and produce more than they did in `14.
No position player is more important than Kipnis, a 2013 All-Star who was injured most of last season.
''He can affect the game so many ways - steal a base, get a bunt down, hit a ball in the gap,'' Francona said.
TAMPA BAY: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) - A year after being a trendy preseason pick to contend for the World Series, the Tampa Bay Rays are back in a familiar role as underdogs.
''That's good. ... We like that,'' three-time All-Star third baseman Evan Longoria said, noting the team has a history of flourishing most when little is expected from outside the organization.
''I just think it's going to be a really good year,'' the club's career home run and RBIs leader said. ''We've got a young team, a bunch of guys eager to learn and get out there and win games. I'm really looking forward to that.''
Former manager Joe Maddon - and his often unconventional way of doing things - is gone.
So is Andrew Friedman, the young executive who was architect of the teams that made the playoffs four of the past seven seasons.
The roster has a much different look, too, with 10 key players from a year ago either traded or released this winter.
''The end result is a club that we have optimism about, a club that we're excited about, that we think can compete for a playoff spot. And, that's what we want,'' team president of baseball operations Matt Silverman said.
''Every year, we want to come into camp believing our team can play meaningful games in September and have a chance to go to the playoffs, and even beyond,'' Silverman added. ''We have that - and at the same time, we've reloaded our minor league system, added some players who impact us this year, might impact us in the future, and we're better off because of that.''
Shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera, catcher Rene Rivera, outfielder Steven Souza Jr., and pitchers Kevin Jepsen, Ernesto Frieri and Burch Smith are offseason acquisitions who could figure in the team's success - or failure.
Smith and two other young starters - Matt Andriese and Nathan Karns - figure to begin the season in the rotation because of injuries to Alex Cobb, Drew Smyly, and Matt Moore.
The hope is the rest of the projected rotation, Chris Archer and Jake Odorizzi, can help the Rays stay afloat until they can get back to full strength.
''If you've got starting pitching, you've got a leg up on going into the season,'' rookie manager Kevin Cash said. ''We're very fortunate with the pitchers we have - starters and relievers.''
Cobb, sidelined by a forearm strain during spring training, believes the team will thrive as underdogs.
''We're not going to get bullied. A lot of people are picking us at the bottom, and we're going to embrace that and have each other's backs,'' the right-hander said.
''Any time anybody calls you out in your profession and makes you feel like you're not as good as you know you are, there's always something to prove,'' Cobb said. ''I don't feel like we need to have extra motivation. It's just going to be that much sweeter when we go out there and perform well.''
A look at the keys to the Rays' season:
WHO WILL LEAD?: Pitching and defense were staples during six consecutive winning seasons that produced four playoff berths and one trip to the World Series. The Rays slipped to 77-85 a year ago, their first losing record since 2007. They're banking on Cash, who has no previous managerial experience, being the right fit to restore winning ways. At 37, he's the youngest current manager or head coach in the four major professional sports.
BETTER LONGO: Longoria played in every game in 2014 for the first time in his career, however he hit a disappointing .253 with 22 homers and 91 RBIs. He's moving into the cleanup spot after batting third most of his career, and knows he has to be more consistent if the Rays - last in the AL in runs scored a year ago - are going to have a chance to be better offensively.
BEHIND THE PLATE: Catcher Ryan Hanigan was traded and backup Jose Molina was released this winter. The three-team deal that sent Wil Myers to San Diego and brought Souza to Tampa Bay from Washington, also landed Rivera from the Padres.
The Rays believe he's an upgrade defensively, as well as offensively.
Rivera posted career highs with a .252 batting average, 11 homers and 44 RBI's in 103 games last season. Still, the 31-year-old catcher stresses his job is to provide solid direction behind the plate.
''I want to help my pitching staff first. I think that's what the game is all about. If you pitch well, you're going to win some games,'' Rivera said. ''If I get a hit here, a hit there and help us win some games, that's even better.''
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER AL PREVIEW (CLEVELAND-TAMPA BAY) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Indians-Rays Preview* ======================

By KEVIN CHROUST STATS Writer

Cleveland (34-41) at Tampa Bay (42-36), 7:10 p.m. EDT

Carlos Carrasco faced Tampa Bay less than two weeks ago and was about as hittable as he's been all season.

The way the Rays are batting entering Wednesday night's game at Tropicana Field, it looks as though the Cleveland Indians right-hander might have a decent shot at getting back at them and becoming the third AL pitcher to reach 10 wins.

After Tuesday's 6-2 victory, Cleveland (35-41) has taken the first two of the four-game set and three straight over Tampa Bay (42-37).

The Rays have scored three runs while batting .132 in those games, and the first four in the order - Kevin Kiermaier, Grady Sizemore, Evan Longoria and David DeJesus - are a combined 2 for 29 to open this series. Tampa Bay has also dropped seven of nine while scoring 2.4 runs per game.

"We'll get out of this funk," manager Kevin Cash said. "The bats, they're going to come alive. We're in one of those ruts."

It's also been a simple matter of location for Tampa Bay, which is 21-25 at Tropicana compared to 21-12 on the road.

Jason Kipnis continued to be a menace to Rays pitching with a home run. The second baseman, who's batting an MLB-leading .397 since the start of May, is 10 for 19 in the season series.

Carrasco (9-6, 4.16 ERA) is coming off one of his better starts, limiting Detroit to two runs and five hits in eight innings of last Wednesday's 8-2 home win. The right-hander came away with the decision to improve to 5-2 with a 3.38 ERA in his last seven starts after beginning the season 4-4 with a 4.98 mark through eight.

At least in the latest start, he credited the success to using more of the plate.

"I think it was important to throw inside," Carrasco told MLB's official website. "That's what I did from the beginning of the inning to the last one. I think that's more important to start throwing inside so all of the pitches down and away, they can't get."

The previous one came June 19 against Tampa Bay and Carrasco was stuck with the decision in a 4-1 loss after giving up three runs and a season high-matching 10 hits in 6 2-3 innings. Joey Butler and former Cleveland shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera both homered off Carrasco and are 2 for 3 against him.

In the time Carrasco has racked up five wins, Alex Colome has zero. The right-hander is 0-2 with a 4.30 ERA in his last seven starts. The team has lost all seven, though Colome (3-3, 4.50) has at times deserved better with three runs and five hits allowed in 13 innings over his last two starts.

That was certainly the case in a 1-0 loss in Cleveland on June 21 in which Colome gave up a hit in seven scoreless innings for his longest and best start of the year.

He's 1-0 without allowing a run in 13 1-3 innings of two career starts against the Indians while holding Carlos Santana (0 for 6), Mike Aviles (0 for 4), David Murphy (0 for 4) and Yan Gomes (0 for 3 with three strikeouts) hitless.

Control, however, is becoming more of an issue. Colome gave up three runs and four hits with five walks in six innings of Friday's 4-3 home loss to Boston. He didn't receive the decision, though he's walked at least two batters in each start on the winless stretch for a rate of 4.78 per nine innings after posting a 1.11 over his first five.


Last Updated: 4/19/2024 4:27:10 AM EST.


You are viewing a condensed version of this FoxSheet. Login as a FoxSheets Subscriber to view the full sheet.
Not a member? Subscribe today and start taking advantage of our premium information, including the Game Estimator™, the Super Situations ™, the Power Trends ™, and many more features.