1) Luke Hochevar: 93 strikes. 10 strikes swinging. 9 on sliders (4 in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 3 in 7th) and 1 on a curveball (5th).
- He comes from a high 3/4 release. His fastball has good run and sink and is more of a late action pitch. His slider is a 2-7 pitch with good bite that he started on the outside corner and let the Astros flail at it. He starts his windup with the back of his left foot up and his right foot is already turned. His curveball is a 12-6 pitch with good depth that he didn't start using until the 2nd time through the order. For a pitcher who relies on a sinker, the lack of swing and misses has to be concerning. His upside is that of a # 3 starter.
1st: FB (90-93), SL (83)
2nd: FB (91-94), SL (83-86)
3rd: FB (91-93), SL (83-85)
4th: FB (90-93), SL (83-85), CB (73-74)
5th: FB (92-94), SL (83-86), CB (75-76)
6th: FB (91-93), SL (83-84), CB (76)
7th: FB (91-93), SL (82-85), CB (75)
2) Roy Oswalt: 106 pitches. 13 strikes swinging. 8 on Fastballs (2 in 2nd, 3 in 5th, 3 in 6th), 3 on Curveballs (3rd, 2 in 4th) and 2 on Sliders (4th, 6th)
- Roy is a 6-0 190 pound righty. The 31 year old has a medium frame that can add a little more muscle. He comes from an over the top release. His fastball is a 4-seam with some run in on righties and it flashes some sink, though he will also throw a harder one that is straight. His curveball is a 12-5 with solid depth and he throws it all over the place velocity wise. His curveball looks like a fastball out of his hand until it breaks downward. His slider is a sharp 2-7 with good bite. His change has some fade and sink, but is his 4th pitch. Ace stuff still, but his pitch counts have been high both games I have seen him this year, making him more of a very strong # 2.
1st: FB (91-95), CB (71-72)
2nd: FB (93-95), CB (70-80)
3rd: FB (93-94), CB (64-77), SL (85)
4th: FB (93-96), CB (68-72), SL (84-85)
5th: FB (92-94), CB (70-71), SL (83), CU (81)
6th: FB (90-96), CB (65-78), SL (84-86)
3) Chris Sampson: 9 pitches. 0 strikes swinging.
- He came from a high 3/4 release and showed a 2-seam fastball with some run and sink, a 12-6 curve with good depth and a 2-7 slider with good bite. Swingman.
7th: FB (89-90), SL (83), CB (77-78)
4) Latroy Hawkins: 7 pitches. 0 strikes swinging
- He came from an over the top release and showed a straight 4-seam fastball, big breaking 12-6 curve and a straight change that may have been a spinning slider (I don't study pitches as much in scores as I do in charts). He is back to the old Minnesota Hawkins and Ed Wade got a lot of grief for this deal at the time, but it looks good (the player they dealt, Matt Cusick, is hitting .266-.350-.379 in High A)
8th: FB (94-95), CB (80-81), CU (87)
5) Kyle Farnsworth: 3 pitches. 0 strikes swinging.
- He came from a 3/4 release and showed a fastball with some run in on righties and a cutter with solid cut. He left the game with an apparent groin injury and he went to the ground immediately.
8th: FB (96-97), Cut (90)
6) Jamey Wright: 18 pitches. 0 strikes swinging.
- He came from a high 3/4 release and probably wasn't fully loose when he decide to start pitching. His fastball is a 2-seam with some run in on righties and some sink. His curveball is a big breaking 12-6 with good depth.
8th: FB (88-94), CB (78-80)
7) Jose Valverde: 24 pitches. 1 strike swinging. Fastball
- Valverde comes from a 3/4 release and showed a fastball with good run in on righties and a split with solid dive. He also threw a 2-7 slider with good bite. It is possible some of these mile per hours for his sliders were splitters, as they can look similar when you aren't paying great attention to the pitch.
9th: FB (94-98), SL (85-87), Split (84-87)
8) Roman Colon: 14 pitches. 3 strikes swinging. Splitter and 2 Sliders
- He came from an over the top release and showed a 4-seam fastball with a little late run, a sharp 1-7 slider with good bite and a split that had some dive. His stuff hasn't ever been a question and now that he can just focus on short spurts, he should fulfill his potential and flashes the ability to be a late inning reliever.
9th: FB (93-95), SL (80-84), Split (89)
9) Tim Byrdak: 16 pitches. 3 strikes swinging. Fastball, Slider, Changeup.
- He came from a high 3/4 release. Another guy whose changeup and slider could be different. His change is a straight change that he will throw to lefties, his slider is a 10-5 with okay bite and his fastball is a straight 4-seam. Maybe a 2nd lefty, I have never been enamored with his stuff.
10th: FB (88-91), SL (82-85), CU (84)
10) Joakim Soria: 22 pitches. 1 strike swinging. Changeup.
- He came from a 3/4 release with a fastball that had some run in on righties, thought it could straighten out. His change has good fade and sink and he will throw it to righties and is his best off-speed offering. His curve is a 12-6 with good depth and his slider is a 2-7 pitch with solid bite.
10th: FB (90-92), CU (84-86), CB (70), SL (79)
11) Jeff Fulchino: 23 pitches. 0 strikes swinging.
- He came from an over the top release and showed a fastball with some run and sink, a split with good dive and a 2-7 slider with solid bite.
11th: FB (91-95), SL (79-84), Split (85-87)
12) John Bale: 12 pitches. 1 strike swinging. Curveball.
- He came from a high 3/4 release and showed a straight 4-seam fastball, a straight change with some late sink and an 11-5 curve with good depth and bite. Interesting that he was the choice over Juan Cruz to save the game and this was his 1st big league save.
11th: FB (91-92), CB (73-74), CU (82)
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