Showing posts with label Kei Igawa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kei Igawa. Show all posts

Saturday, May 10, 2008

If We Knew This, Why Didn't Brian Cashman?

On Wednesday, we wrote that Kei Igawa's numbers in the Minor Leagues were not important. What would be indicative of his play in the Majors would be how he was pitching each hitter, how he was getting to that ERA. With the high curveball and the high and away fastball, he would be unable to produce in the Major Leagues. Well, we were right. Three innings, six runs and 11 hits later, Igawa looks worse than he did last year. How did Brian Cashman and Joe Girardi not know this? The Tigers hit .550 off him last night. Who's the fat toad now?


- D. Spell

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

O-Kei, Not This Guy, Again

So you've got Wang on Wednesday, Moose on Thursday and what? Kei Igawa on Friday? Igawa will be called up before Friday's game to pitch against the Detroit Tigers in a 7:05 game. I will never understand this move. The $46 million is 3-3 with a 3.86 ERA at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes Barre. A 3.68 ERA in a league where Darrell Rasner is 4-0 with a 0.87 ERA and Ian Kennedy just threw 7+ innings of shutout, 1-hit ball leaves me very unimpressed. What leaves me even more unimpressed is the four walks in seven innings that he had in his last outing.
I didn't understand the Igawa signing when it happened and I don't understand it now. It was completely reactionary. Someone in the Yankees' organization said, "The Red Sox went out and bought themselves a Japanese pitcher. Now, we must do the same." The only problem was that their scouting on him was horribly off. If you look at his numbers and see that he led the league in his final year in Japan with 194 strikeouts, you might be impressed. However, most of those strikeouts came on high curveballs, his forte across the Pacific. The problem here is that he continues to throw that high curveball to get strike three and high curveball in Japanese translates to hanging curveball and English. Major League hitters are too good to let a curveball up in the zone go by them. Igawa's curve was good enough that the Japanese hitters had trouble with it, however, more sophisticated and talented hitters, like most Major Leaguers, will not ever be fooled by that pitch.
This is why his 3.86 ERA in the minors should be looked past. In the Minor Leagues, you have to look at how a pitcher has compiled his ERA, not what the exact number is. The way he has pitched will not yield the same result in the Majors as it has in the Minors, because Minor League hitters do miss that high curveball. When he pitches on Saturday, watch for the high curve and the fastball drifting high and away from righties off the plate. If he manages to get another start, I would be shocked.

- D. Spell