Enrique Burgos picks up save; AJ Ramos’s job is safe

May 19, 2015

Miami Marlins – After taking the job, Marlins GM-turned-manager Dan Jennings declared A.J. Ramos the stopper for the floundering Fish, and his hold on the job got even tighter as the game progressed. After pitching the 9th inning in a tie game, he watched as Steve Cishek took yet another loss, giving up the game-winning run in the top of the 13th.

Hierarchy remains: Ramos | Dunn | Morris.

Arizona Diamondbacks – In the same game, Addison Reed pitched the 12th inning and picked up the win, as Enrique Burgos grabbed his first save of the year pitching a scoreless 13th. De facto closer Brad Ziegler had kept the game scoreless by pitching two perfect innings (3 Ks) in the 10th and 11th.

Updated hierarchy: *Ziegler | Burgos | Reed.
* = closer-by-committee

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Enrique Burgos/Oliver Perez, Arizona Diamondbacks – Brad Ziegler has thrown 43 pitches over the last three days, including 27 yesterday, while Addison Reed has also seen a lot of work in that span, amassing 52 pitches thrown. The committee is wide open tonight.
2. Kevin Siegrist/Seth Maness, St. Louis Cardinals – Trevor Rosenthal has pitched in three straight and four of five.

Shawn Tolleson has early edge in Rangers committee

May 18, 2015

Texas Rangers – After a pre game news conference where Jeff Banister said that the Rangers “can’t stay status quo” in regards to the late innings, Shawn Tolleson was given the keys to the ninth inning. It wasn’t a save situation because the Rangers scored a run in the bottom of the 8th, but Tolleson had been warming beforehand. In post game interviews, Banister spoke as if this situation will be a committee going forward, something that was echoed by Tolleson. But with Tolleson getting the first crack at the 9th inning and pitching well, we think he’s the favorite to see more opportunities in the near future.

Updated hierarchy: *Tolleson | Feliz | Scheppers.
* = closer-by-committee

Los Angeles Dodgers – It didn’t take long for Kenley Jansen to return to his full-time closer position, and Sunday’s 1-0 game gave a good look at how the rest of the bullpen will be employed. The Dodgers went to Yimi Garcia in the 7th and Chris Hatcher in the 8th before Jansen got his first save, and we’ll position the new asterisk-free hierarchy in the same fashion.

Updated hierarchy: Jansen | Hatcher | Garcia.

Miami Marlins – The Marlins fired Mike Redmond on Sunday after the team was 2-hit by Shelby Miller. Though A.J. Ramos’s role shouldn’t be affected too much, this wasn’t the most settled bullpen, and it’s possible that the new skipper — due to be announced this morning — will have a different idea about how to employ his best reliever. We’ll follow the situation.

Hierarchy remains: Ramos | Dunn | Morris.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Chad Qualls, Houston Astros – Luke Gregerson has thrown 45 pitches over the last two days.
2. Seth Maness/Kevin Siegrist, St. Louis Cardinals – Trevor Rosenthal has pitched in back to back games and three of four, throwing 57 pitches in the process.

Shawn Tolleson gets 9th inning in Texas

May 17, 2015

Texas Rangers – After a pre game news conference where Jeff Banister said that the Rangers “can’t stay status quo” in regards to the late innings, Shawn Tolleson was given the keys to the ninth inning. It wasn’t a save situation because the Rangers scored a run in the bottom of the 8th, but Tolleson had been warming beforehand. In post game interviews, Banister spoke as if this situation will be a committee going forward, something that was echoed by Tolleson. But with Tolleson getting the first crack at the 9th inning and pitching well, we think he’s the favorite to see more opportunities in the near future.

Updated hierarchy: *Tolleson | Feliz | Scheppers.
* = closer-by-committee

Travis Wood picks up save for Cubs

May 17, 2015

Chicago Cubs – Travis Wood recorded his first career save on Saturday.  With the Cubs bullpen struggling, they announced that Wood will move to the bullpen.  With Wood recording a save in his first appearance, he will likely factor into the Cubs’ late inning bullpen plans.

Updated hierarchy: Rondon | Strop | Wood.

St. Louis Cardinals — Kevin Siegrist pitched a scoreless 8th in a tie game yesterday to lower his ERA to just a touch over 1.00.  Seth Maness, on the other hand, gave up 4 runs in his appearance on Friday to raise his ERA to over 5.00.  Siegrist has been consistently pitching in the 7th and or 8th inning, and could close for the Cardinals when Rosenthal is unavailable.

Updated hierarchy: Rosenthal | Siegrist | Maness.

Los Angeles Dodgers — Kenley Jansen is supposed to be eased back into the closers’ role but that might not end up happening.  After Friday’s outing, Jansen said he feels ready to close games.  Manager Don Mattingly also said that Jansen didn’t look rusty at all.  In other Dodgers’ bullpen news, Sergio Santos followed Jansen’s four strikeout inning on Friday with one of his own last night.

Hierarchy remains: *Jansen | Garcia | Hatcher.
* closer-by-committee

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Jim Johnson, Atlanta Braves – Jason Grilli has pitched in two in a row, including a 27 pitch outing yesterday
2. Bryan Shaw, Cleveland Indians – Cody Allen has pitched in two straight and three of the last four.

Brad Ziegler at the head of a crowded Arizona committee picture

May 16, 2015

Arizona Diamondbacks — We warned you in Thursday night’s Hot Seat column that Addison Reed was in grave danger of losing his job; not 15 hours later, he was relegated to the fabled “low-pressure role,” to deal with his (mechanical) issues and get more “regular work.” Skipper Chip Hale mentioned Brad Ziegler by name as a potential replacement, but since he doesn’t want Ziegler’s impressive grounder-summoning skills to go to waste if they’re needed before the ninth, he’s keeping his options open. And as we also mentioned last night, those alternate options are likely to include rookie Enrique Burgos, who’s talented but mostly untested above A ball, and erstwhile starter Daniel Hudson, whose use is limited by his injury history. David Hernandez also lurks as an option, if he can successfully return from his own Tommy John surgery. Although Oliver Perez was getting high-leverage looks in front of Reed as a LOOGY, we think he’s fourth chair in this committee.

Updated hierarchy: *Ziegler | Burgos | Hudson.
* closer-by-committee

Los Angeles Dodgers — Kenley Jansen is just showing off. Activated from the DL on Friday afternoon, he came on in the eighth with the Dodgers up two, and proceeded to strike out four batters in one inning, on only 14 pitches. Don Mattingly called on lefty Adam Liberatore for the platoon advantage in the ensuing save situation; when he put two men on, Juan Nicasio entered to earn the save. The asterisk remains with Kenley for now, but its days are numbered.

Updated hierarchy: *Jansen | Garcia | Hatcher.
* closer-by-committee

Chicago White Sox — Chicago had Thursday off, but it was Zach Duke, not David Robertson, called on for the save late Friday night, with Zach Putnam warming behind him. Duke escaped when the tying run became the final out, in a classic 8-6-3-5-2 rundown after a double. After early speculation about a possible injury, Robin Ventura explained that he wanted another day of rest for Robertson, who made four appearances in the five days prior (70 pitches).

Hierarchy remains: Robertson | Duke | Jennings.

Minnesota Twins – Blaine Boyer has overcome a rocky start to take on a vital set-up role for Minnesota in Casey Fien’s absence. Boyer, who is 33 and was out of baseball in 2012, hasn’t been scored on since April 12 (13 appearances). Brian Duensing slides out of the hierarchy; he has struggled immensely in six games since returning from the disabled list (3 ER, 13 baserunners in 3.1 innings).

Updated hierarchy: Perkins | Boyer | Thompson.

Philadelphia Phillies — As semi-foretold by yesterday’s Vulture Save Watch, Luis Garcia earned his first big league save, striking out two in two innings of clutch relief.

Hierarchy remains: Papelbon | Giles | Garcia.

Washington Nationals — When A.J. Cole is inducted into the Hall of Fame in July 2039, alongside a surprisingly spry, 98-year-old Pete Rose, last night — an otherwise meaningless, three-inning save in a 10-0 Nats blowout — will be remembered as the magic moment when it all began.

Hierarchy remains: Storen | Barrett | Roark.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Zac Rosscup/Phil Coke, Chicago Cubs — Hector Rondon has pitched in three straight games (42 pitches), and Pedro Strop has gone in two straight and threw 25 pitches on Friday. Rosscup is somewhat better rested, but if the Cubs are desperate, Phil Coke has at least one save in each of the last six years.
2. Jake McGee, Tampa Bay Rays — McGee and Brad Boxberger could share the closer role.
3. Joe Smith, Los Angeles Angels — Huston Street has pitched on three of the last four days.