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Series Preview: Diamondbacks v. Giants
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Diamondbacks Notes: April 18, 2009
* ARI @ SF, GAMES 1 & 2 - Diamondbacks Nation feels for Dan Haren. In his three starts, he has allowed a total of 4 ER on 12 H and 3 BB with 17 K. To show for his efforts, Haren has a record of 0-3 after losing to the Giants by a 2-0 score on Friday night.
Haren (6 IP, 5 H, ER, 0 BB, 6 K) was sharp in Game 1 of the series, but the Snakes could get nothing going off San Francisco lefty Jonathan Sanchez (6.2 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 4 BB, 4 K). Only Felipe Lopez (2/4, 2B) and Justin Upton (1/4, 2B) posed any real threat.
The clubs locked up in a pitching duel again on Saturday afternoon. In Game 2, the previous night's result was reversed: a Snakes lefty defeated the Giants ace.
Doug Davis went eight innings and pitched out of trouble several times to earn the win against a suddenly in-form Tim Lincecum. Lincecum went eight innings with 13 K before the Giants called on Brian Wilson to pitch the ninth. Chris B. Young started his at-bat with two strikes, then worked the count full before...
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Series Preview: Diamondbacks @ Giants
* PREVIEW: ARI @ SF - There are just two teams in the National League off to a poorer start than the Diamondbacks (3-6). The first is the dysfunctional Washington Nationals (1-7) franchise; the other is the San Francisco Giants (2-7). The Snakes will have wait until May to sink their fangs into the Nats, but as Arizona embarks on its first road trip of the season, the NL West-rival Giants look like a feast of kangaroo rats.
The Diamondbacks just completed a three-series home-stand that ought to have been a springboard into contention, but was more akin to a backyard trampoline accident. San Francisco fared even worse over their first nine games. After winning a home set with the Brewers, they were swept on a six-game trip through San Diego and Los Angeles. Thanks to the Giants, the Diamondbacks are not the doormats of the division.
How brutal has San Francisco been? For a sample, consider the probable starting pitchers for this weekend.
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Diamondbacks Notes: April 14, 2009
* DO SNAKES HAVE BUTTS? - If they do, they're getting sore from yet another spanking by a visiting opponent. On Monday night it was the Cardinals who opened a three-game series by beating the Diamondbacks 2-1 at Chase Field. Starter Doug Davis pitched well and deep into the contest to finish with a line of 8 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, BB, 5 K. He took his second loss of the season despite surrendering only a pair of runs on solo homers, including a blast by monster slugger Albert Pujols.
As you can tell from the final score, pitching was not the problem for the Diamondbacks yesterday. Rather, it was the offense that failed to do its part. Arizona's bats scratched out a single run on Chad Tracy's RBI double in the fourth. Conor Jackson, who doesn't get a lot of attention for his base-running, raced around from 1B for the run. (It was the second such tally by Jackson on the season; he scored from 1B on a Chris Snyder double on Opening Day.) Monday's weak out-put continues a troubling pattern...
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Series Preview: Diamondbacks v. Cardinals
* PREVIEW: ARI v. STL - The Diamondbacks (2-4) have had a disappointing start to the season, dropping back-to-back series with division rivals Colorado and Los Angeles. Arizona will have to improve its home-cooking to prevent falling further off the pace with the NL Central-leading St. Louis Cardinals (5-2) coming to town for a three-game series.
Notwithstanding their fine record (compiled against the lowly Pirates and Astros), the Cardinals do have some questions of their own, primarily on the pitching staff. Against the Snakes, St. Louis is slated to throw a so-so trio of starters: converted reliever Todd Wellemeyer, Tommy John-returnee Chris Carpenter, and the unimpressive Joel Pineiro. Only Carpenter has ever been the type to strike fear into the hearts of opposing batters; it will take more than a win over the lowly Pirates to persuade us he's back. Wellemeyer and Pineiro are the sort of classic cast-offs with which pitching coach Dave Duncan likes to work.
Duncan asks his...
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