Rubin: Wild-card losses were tale of two closers
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[October 06, 2016]
By Roger Rubin, The Sports Xchange
NEW YORK -- Two nights. Two superior
closers. Two losses.
And it was two very different stories as closers were the story of
the 2016 wild-card round.
No one is going second-guess New York Mets manager Terry Collins
about using closer Jeurys Familia in a ninth-inning tie Wednesday
night. It was the right thing to do even though the righty gave up
the three-run homer to Conor Gillaspie that sent the San Francisco
Giants to a 3-0 National League wild-card victory at Citi Field and
to a meeting with the Chicago Cubs in the NL Division Series.
Baltimore Orioles manager Buck Showalter was second guessed all day
after he didn't use his biggest weapon -- closer Zach Britton -- in
what became a 5-2, 11-inning loss to the Blue Jays in the American
League wild-card game on Tuesday night in Toronto.
Britton was the best closer in the American League, but Showalter
didn't want to use him until the Orioles had a lead, a lead they
never got. Ubaldo Jimenez pitched the 11th and surrendered Edwin
Encarnacion's walk-off, three-run shot.
The feeling here is that Showalter made the wrong decision, though
it was a tougher one because the Orioles were the visiting team.
Still, right decision or wrong, it didn't work out for either
Showalter or Collins.
Britton didn't get his shot. Familia, likewise probably the best
reliever in his league, got his shot and failed.
In the final analysis, the staggering Giants ended up advancing
because of another phenomenal postseason performance by Madison
Bumgarner: a four-hit shutout. At 8-3 with one save and a 1.94 ERA
in 15 playoff appearances (13 starts), the lefty is one of the
game's most impressive postseason pitchers.
And the surging Mets? They got seven innings of brilliant two-hit
shutout ball from Noah Syndergaard but are done after their top
players all season -- Familia, and also Yoenis Cespedes -- didn't
come through.
Cespedes was flagging late in the season. He finished with a .280
average, 30 homers and 86 RBIs. Over the final 18 games of the
season, though, he hit .203 with one homer and eight RBIs.
On Wednesday night, Cespedes was 0-for-4 with two strikeouts. Twice
he came up with a runner on base but didn't even advance him. With
one on and one out in the fourth, he struck out on a Bumgarner pitch
in the dirt. With one on and one out in the sixth, he fanned on a
terrible swing at a pitch up and out of the strike zone.
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Collins took nothing away from Bumgarner, but said he was surprised
Cespedes didn't deliver.
"(Cespedes is) a great talent -- I thought we needed him tonight,
that we needed him bad and that he was ready for it," Collins said.
"He was all fired up, and you know the old adage: good pitching
beats good hitting. Tonight, (Bumgarner) was better."
For Familia, this is a second straight disappointing October ending
after a great season. He saved 43 games in 2015 but blew three saves
in the five-game World Series loss to the Royals. He set a franchise
record with 51 saves this season and allowed only one home run, and
then he gave up the home run that ended the Mets' season.
"For me, that was in the past. I was just trying to be like always,"
Familia said of his World Series struggles. "I was trying to make
quality pitches and trying to be too perfect. When (Gillaspie) hit
that ball, it took my heart. That was it. That was the game."
Collins said he is going to "be careful" but will address the
October shortcomings with Familia.
"In any circumstances like that, the first thought is you let your
teammates down when all you did all year long was pick them up,"
Collins said. "But in the postseason, when you give it up and you
lose, it can be really hard on you."
Collins might have made it even more difficult for Familia in this
game by working him so hard during the regular season. The manager
admitted as much, and it is the place where he could get
second-guessed.
Familia appeared in 78 games, more than any other closer in
baseball. In the second half of September, he had an ERA that was a
run higher than it was for the first 23 weeks of the season, and he
converted just three of his final five saves. He had just three
blown saves in his first 51 opportunities.
"He was the guy I wanted out there in the ninth inning," Collins
said. "We'll try to do a better job to make sure he's a little more
rested going into the postseason."
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