Bradley-Marquez Wrapup And A Look Ahead in Boxing

Saturday night featured a fine matchup of counter punching specialists in Timothy Bradley and Juan Manuel Marquez.   Both had beaten Manny Pacquiao(one convincingly, the other controversially) and were looking to climb on top of the other.  Bradley is still on a respect retrieval tour after his embarrassing decision win over Pacquiao in 2012.  It’s no shame to him because the judges control who wins a decision in boxing but hearing Bradley say in this month’s 24/7 series on HBO that he won the fight only makes my blood boil.   Marquez left all controversy to the creeps when he knocked out Manny last December. He knocked him out cold in the 6th round of a fight that he was losing and getting battered in.  Yes, it is impossible to discuss these two fighters without mentioning Pacquaio because he the link in the chain that pulled them together on October 12th, 2013.  What happened?

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Bradley took the older fighter to school, turning JMM into the hunter and making the fight a tactical war of boxers and leaving the slug fest to the crazier folk.  Bradley didn’t waste any time trading with Marquez or walking into the trap that was set for Pacquaio with the SHOT in December.  Bradley kept a distance, hammered Marquez with his jab and won on 2 of the 3 cards.  Many boxing analysts had no problem with a judge at ringside scoring it for Marquez but I had it a clear win for Bradley, eight rounds to four.  This was a decisive victory for the undefeated fighter nicknamed Desert Storm(maybe because nothing really exciting used to be happen in his fights).  Lately, Bradley didn’t do much convincingly.

In March, Bradley wanted to prove that he could stand in the middle and dish with a monster, and he picked The Serbian Express Ruslan Provodnikov(look at his face in pictures, he’s a human pitbull) for the exchange.  Bradley was torpedoed and nearly destroyed.  He was knocked down twice and beaten up early but recovered and delivered punishment of his own and won a very close decision over the Russian beast.   The fight messed up Bradley and made him sit out for two months without boxing activity.   In a sitdown with HBO’s Max Kellerman, Provodnikov said after watching the fight that he indeed lost.  That’s a big thing to say for any fighter, especially when I hear Bradley tell the cameras he won a Pacquiao fight where he left in a wheelchair and barely put a mark on Manny’s face.  It means a lot when I have to hear Marquez after the fight last night say he was robbed again.   For any man who makes his living with his hands and fights for a career, to admit failure and loss is big in my book.

Marquez is at a crossroads.   He didn’t fight a horrible fight but lost cleanly and may be only marketable for a Pacquiao 5th fight.  It seems that only the Filipino champ brings out the best in him and other fighters, at least lately, only make him look older and slower.  Marquez last night looked like the guy who tried to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. years ago.  He couldn’t sit back and lay a trap for Bradley because he had to spend the majority of the fight avoiding stiff jabs and every time he moved in, Bradley was waiting for a combination.  In a game of counter punchers, one man will have to come forward and take a risk and force a big moment.  Every time JMM did, he was met with big blows.  Bradley won at ease and only truly lost 2-4 rounds in my opinion.   What does Marquez do next?  He either retires or takes a fifth fight with Pac man.  Does that fight carry weight or seem exciting? I think so and here is why.

These two guys always produce thrilling toe to toe bloody battles and if Marquez can swallow his pride and see the worth, he should take on Manny again.  Why not?  Pacquiao wants revenge for a punch he never saw coming in a fight he was winning.  Marquez wants to cap off his career and why not show it was no fluke that he knocked out his arch nemesis.   They have fought four times and here is how I have scored them.   Manny won the first one with his three knockouts and decent finish.  The second fight was a bloody draw in my opinion.  Each fighter pummeled each other.  The third fight was Marquez’s, even though he did take his foot off the gas pedal in the 12th round and may have lost the fight there.  The fourth was a clean cold knockout but for nearly 6 rounds a battle of wills that was tipping towards Pacquiao.  Why fight five times?  Because four times isn’t enough and this sport can use as many entertaining bouts as it can get.   If he doesn’t fight Pacquiao, here is my tip for Marquez.

Contact the Miguel Cotto camp.  Cotto is a proud Puerto Rican champion and just demolished Delvin Rodriguez in a credibility contest that saw the 32 year look better than ever.  While Canelo Alvarez or a rematch with Mayweather Jr or Pacquiao could be in Cotto’s view, a fight with Marquez wouldn’t be bad either.  Think about the matchup.   Cotto is a hunter in the ring and walks down opponents for better or worse.  He always brings the fight and every one of his bouts are entertaining.   He has a great record full of battles.  Marquez wants to retain some credibility and score another win before retiring or go into 5th fight with Pac Man with some confidence.  Take on Cotto.  A power puncher who pursues against a counter puncher who likes to set traps and return fire.  It could be a good fight.

Bradley will probably make an attempt to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. and that will end in a refusal on Floyd’s part or a routine Money Team shutout victory.   I don’t consider Bradley one of the best because he didn’t beat Pac, barely beat Provodnikov and scored a decision win over a 40 year old.   He is improving but not one of the best.  A smarter play for him would be waiting for Pacquiao to defeat Brandon Rios next month and then setting up a rematch with him.  Until he erases that black hole off his resume, Bradley isn’t one of the best to me.  No way.   Wait for Pac to drop Rios and set up a rematch Tim.  I am sure your head can see more rest from that March fight with the Russian.

Next week, Colorado champ Mike Alvarado takes on Provodnikov on HBO in a battle that should bring out the blood buckets and cold press clamps.   Alvarado engaged in two legendary wars with Rios and won the second match decisively   He takes on a guy who nearly knocked Bradley’s head off.  Expect war.   I will be wrapping my hands as I watch the fight.

After that fight, be sure to catch Legendary Nights: Ward and Gatti, which chronicles the amazing three fights between Mickey Ward and Arturo Gatti.   While their fights were mesmerizing and thrilling, their friendship afterwards provided the true narrative of this tale.  Must watch.

That’s all I got fight fans.  Thanks for staying.

-Dan L. Buffa

@buffa82 on twitter

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A Stream of Unfiltered Prose

Now that the Cards blog is out, the gym is done, food is down and the body has been rebooted, allow me to fire out a random dose of material.  I can spin yarn about a various amount of topics and dig a little deep when required so consider this your afternoon dose of Buffa.   First, a little baseball news.

*The decision to start Lance Lynn in Game 4 is peculiar and makes me question Mike Matheny’s motives for Shelby Miller in the NLCS.   Lynn threw 29 pitches last night in 2 innings and got the win and now will be asked to head back to the mound on Tuesday for Game 4 when Miller is completely rested and ready to roll.   Let’s look at it this way.  Lance Lynn has worked out of the pen and as we saw last night, can do well there.  Miller has never been asked to come out of the pen on a regular basis and is a much more effective starter.  When Lynn worked last night, I figured Miller was set for Game 4.   If this is an innings limit matter, save me the analysis.   Miller has plenty left in the gas tank and doesn’t need to be shut down or limited.  You see how that went for Strasburg after his Tommy John Surgery.   Why rest and limit young pitchers?  Michael Wacha seems to be doing just fine.  Is there a problem with Miller that we don’t know of or is Matheny showing tough love or what the hell is happening?   Lynn coming out in relief and starting four days later isn’t arm threatening but makes me wonder further about Miller’s status.  He pitched one inning in Game 2 against Pittsburgh a week ago and hasn’t pitched since.  Why do managers always like to play mind games and withhold reasons?  We’ve followed your team for 6 months and deserve a reason.  If Matheny is so loyal to his young players, what is wrong with Shelby Miller?  Don’t answer too quick.  Matheny takes his thoughts one word at a time.  I’ve supported Matheny and defended him for months.  Just want to know what’s going on in his head.

*Timothy Bradley and Juan Manuel Marquez, the last two men to beat Manny Pacquaio, step into the ring tonight to wage war on each other.  Classic boxing match between two guys on an emotional high but still seeking more.   Bradley won a ridiculous decision over Pacquiao but impressed me and fight pundits more when he survived a vicious battle with Russian power punching machine Ruslan Provodnikov.  After getting knocked down and wobbled, Bradley recovered, exchanged blows and fired at will and won a controversial decision.   We all know what Marquez did last.   A little less than a year ago, Marquez went toe to toe with long time nemesis Pac-Man and scored a one punch knockout win.   After three close fights, Marquez left nothing to chance and knocked out Pac cold with one punch.   He saved himself in that fight because Manny was bloodying Juan’s face and busted his nose open.   In my mind, those two men deserve to fight again because of how well Pacquaio was fighting before getting stupid and because they produce such great fights.  That’s for later discussion.   Who wins the fight tonight?  You have two counter punchers who have been to war and made it out alive.   Marquez is 40 years old but fighting like he’s 30.   Bradley is still undefeated(wrongfully) and hungry.   I am going with Marquez because he is too smart and so agile in the ring these days that I think he will be able to control the action in the ring.   Both men can dish and receive and keep coming but JMM is the better boxer and can bang in the middle if needed.  Bradley will be overly aggressive and try to hunt Marquez down and we know what happens there.   I don’t expect a knockout but I think Marquez wins on 2 cards and takes Bradley’s belt.  If Pacquiao defeats Brandon Rios next month, he more than likely gets the winner of this match.  This will be a spirited, action packed and entertaining fight tonight.

*I am eager to see Captain Phillips and will do so this coming week.   The true story starring Tom Hanks as a ship captain who sees his rig overtaken by Somali Pirates is supposed to be one of the better films of the year and I want to see what’s really there.  First, I will address something about the movie’s director, the great Paul Greengrass(who helmed the last two Bourne films), taking some liberty with the true story.   Certain ship mates of Phillips have come out and said the movie paints him as a hero too much.   Well, to that, I say this, loud and clear….IT’S A FREAKING MOVIE.  Make believe, full of actors and made with a budget.  Why do people fail to recognize that just because a film says based on a true story does it mean every little detail will be flushed out perfectly on the big screen.   It’s called creative freedom and a cinematic process of taking something real(actors, story) and turning it into a watchable film.   No one wants to watch something boring.  This is NOT a documentary with interviews and flashbacks(like a movie that opened this weekend called The Summit, about 18 mountain climbers taking on the K2 mountain).  It is a movie, pure and simple.   Phillips wrote a book about his experience and the movie takes its cue from that point of view.  If the crew doesn’t like it, they can get their own movie funded and produced.   Until then, I will watch and enjoy the captain’s version of the story and not worry about fact checking.

*The Blues are 3-0 but don’t get excited.  Chastise me for saying this but last season we opened fast out of the gate and then hit a brick wall.    I like this Blues team and I like Jaro Halak getting the reins this season in a walk year but I will not lose my view of the past.  You got a talented bunch of people here.   Tarasenko is back.   Alexander Steen and Chris Stewart.  David Backes already has two goals.   Alex Pietrangelo and Jay Bouwmeester are a solid defensive duo.   New guys Derek Roy and Brendan Morrow are fine veteran additions.   Brian Elliot is ready to go and will start soon.  Ken Hitchcock isn’t satisfied and who would be in their first full season?  My point is take it easy and go game to game.   Hockey is a brutally inconsistent game and can snap a good mood with one bad bounce.  A few quick thoughts on the Zig Zag Kings.

-I like Halak as the starter bc when healthy he is a great goaltender. Most shutouts, playoff able and a true gamer.

-The Bou-Pietro combo on defense is one of the best in the NHL. Smart stretch passer and a competent leader on the other side.

-When he is on, the baby jesus smooth hands of Chris Stewart are as efficient as any winger in the league.

-Big fan of Ryan Reaves. He can skate, play, exist on the ice for a role AND…pound the shit out of players.

-TJ Oshie is still a Blue because he’s cheap, versatile and is capable of wow plays and doesn’t flop like Perron.

The Blues are once again built to contend and are as talented up and down the roster as Chicago, who they beat in a brutal and exciting final second battle on Wednesday.   They can have a great regular season but won’t have everybody’s belief until they prove to be as strong in the playoffs.   Touche Note!

*This just in.  Hanley Rameriz is sitting out today due to his ribs being sore from Joe Kelly drilling him last night.   Oh poor little Hanley.  Roy Hobbs played with a bullet lodged in his rib cage in the Natural.   Come on baby Hanley.   I wonder if we can get Chris Carpenter to make him piss his pants again.  Skip Schumacher is in for Andre Ethier so the Dodgers look a little naked today.  Go Cards!

*Charlie Hunman, who is great on FX’s Sons of Anarchy as Jax Teller, has abruptly pulled out of Fifty Shades of Grey, a highly erotic and wildly popular sex novel that is being brought to the big screen.   The controversial role of Christian Grey, who liked to spice things up in the bedroom and started dating a young innocent woman, wasn’t for just ANY actor.   Hunman took it on, but dropped it today apparently due to his overloaded TV schedule.  He also could be doing Pacific Rim 2, a monster blockbuster which propelled his name this past summer above the ranks of television stars.   I like Charlie but find myself happy for him and his future for pulling out of a role that may have twisted his career up.  No offense to the guy who does play Grey, but he needs to be more of a nobody to fully inhabit the role.  Just my three cents.

*Music to listen to.   The Heavy, the British band that put out the well known and frequently used track, “How Do You Like Me Now”.   They have a solid collection of bluesy rocking tunes that carry a shade of pop and jazz.   Look for their song Short Change Hero.  Good stuff.

*The Rams scored an ugly layup victory over the hapless Jaguars on Sunday.   Great, now they must go on the road and deal with a pissed off Houston Texans team.   Good luck.  Another test for a team that is 2-3 yet showing as many signs of ugly as they do of progress.   What will Bradford do this week and if he is healthy I think Zac Stacy deserves 20 carries.  Against a bad defense, he rushed 14 times for 78 yards but shows more promise than Darryl Richardson.   The defense will need to find a way to stop Andre Johnson, who is a gametime decision but even at 75 percent a decent threat.

What else?  That’s all I got.  It’s almost time for Game 2 of the National League Championship series and for my Cardinals to go up 2-0 in the series before heading west.   It’s time to take in a little baseball.

Thanks for staying,

Dan Buffa

NLCS Game 1 Reveals The Flavor For The Series

Friday night revealed a Cardinals-Dodgers series flavor.  Think of throwing two different steaks on a grill and seeing which one can stand the burning charcoal beneath longer.  Certain things were revealed and confirmed last night.   Great pitching, timely hitting, brilliant bullpen work and an ability to take advantage of mistakes.Carlos Beltran

Let’s go back and do a little pre series hype and set up.  the Cards are matched up with an even strength team that is full of talent, carries no give and will produce one of the most thrilling series in a long time.  After the Pirates, there is no drop off in opposition for the Cards, gunning for their 4th World Series trip in the last 10 years.  The Dodgers are built by expensive parts and assembled to win a title.  They aren’t put together by home grown talent.  For the crowd preaching that LA bought themselves a pennant chase, that theory carries weight but won’t matter much if they walk away from this series with a World Series ticket.  We can cry all night about a loss there, but all you have at the end of the day is what you gave inside the series and not why you lost it.   Big budget team or not, the Dodgers are deadly up and down the order.  The Cardinals are a team that has slowly raised their payroll to 116 million(100 million below LA’s numbers) but combines home grown talent with acquired skill.   This makes for a matchup between two of baseball’s most storied franchises.   With the two best jerseys in the NL and 18 World Series titles between them, the Cards and Dodgers will create a classy clash of titans.

Now let’s look at Game 1.  The Cards won 3-2 in 13 innings and a tone was set in the process.   A few things that I take away.  Carlos Beltran was the MAN last night and he will get his space later but first let’s look at a few things.

*Clayton Kershaw can be the Cy Young award winner and MLB’s golden child, but he is also a man that suffered two defeats to the Cards this season.   Run support or not, the brilliant lefthander was beaten twice by our club.   The bigger threat to us appeared last night and that is Zach Greinke, the righthanded arm brought in to take the Dodgers rotation from pretty good to excellent.  He kept the Cards off balance for 8 innings and his only blemish was a 3 pitch sequence of hitters that included a Joe Kelly hit, Matt Carpenter walk and Carlos Beltran 2 run double.  Greinke will pitch again in LA in this series and more than likely in Game 5 on Wednesday against Kelly.  He is a man I feared more than Kershaw coming into this series.

*Hats off to Joe Kelly, who pitched a gritty 6 innings and allowed 2 runs.   Kelly got into plenty of trouble but had some gas left in the tank when he left the game and did his usual stressful pitching.  I don’t think he clicks in fully until there are men on the basepaths and like Allen Craig, he is at his best in the biggest situation.   If he fields a ground ball hit by Yasiel Puig cleanly, there is a chance that he could have a shutout heading into the 7th inning.    Kelly got the game 1 assignment and did very well.  Limited the damage and shined in the right moments.

*Jon Jay looked horrible at the plate and in the field.   He left runners on base and took a bad route to a ball hit in the 11th inning that almost gave the Dodgers a go ahead run.  There are days where I think Jay is a fine centerfielder and a great bargain player and then there are days where I think he doesn’t need to play every day.

*Nobody swings harder than Juan Uribe.  I bet he is the guy who jams debit cards into ATM machines, rips apart wrapping paper and violently punches in his pin number at area stores.  He is a deadly bat that has a truly violent swing and is a big time playoff performer.  He is a guy I fear as much as the other big bats in the lineup.

*The Cards bullpen slamming the door on the Dodgers and showing their strength in numbers.  For 7 innings, few hits were allowed and peace was kept.  Trevor Rosenthal pitched two solid innings as well as unwanted man Lance Lynn, who earned the victory with a scoreless yet far from perfect 12th and 13th innings.

*Yasiel Puig is a fine young talent but he can be solved with good pitching.   All night Cardinal pitcher busted him inside and didn’t let him get his arms extended and do any real damage.  A deadly bat that blew up in August yet cooled down slightly in September, Puig is a diamond talent but a player still building his baseball IQ.   He can get careless and swing wild and be fooled by a decent breaking pitch.   While I heavily anticipate his matchup with fireballer Rosenthal, I want to see Adam Wainwright carve Puig up.

*Adrian Gonzalez being pulled in the 8th inning wad a dicey call from Don Mattingly.  Dee Gordon can fly for sure but taking out a lethal bat in a one run game with a good chance for extras hurt the Dodgers.  Mike Matheny easily raised the right hand and passed the dangerous Hanley Rameriz twice afterwards and this decision played a role.   Gonzo’s sweeter than velvet swing is a big threat to a baseball club built on young pitching talent who pound a lot of fastballs into the zone.   Gordon was forced at second on a Puig ground ball and LA was weakened going forward.  This was huge.

*The throw from Beltran to Yadi Molina at home plate did nail Mark Ellis and there was a small tag applied.   He was out and when Ellis ran into Molina, his elbow brushed off Yadi’s glove.  Either way, there wasn’t enough conclusive evidence to reverse the call(for you 2014 replay honks) and The ump decided contact and the ball beating the runner was enough to punch out the runner.  That was huge and Beltran calling off Jon Jay was another reason why the savvy veteran is so important to the Cards.

Finally, let’s talk about Carlos Beltran.   He was a one man wrecking crew last night.   He drove in two runners off Greinke in the 3rd inning, threw out the runner at home plate in extras and slapped a game winning base hit in the 13th off Dodgers closer Kenley Jensen to seal the victory.   He has 34 RBI in his career in the postseason(ranks 5th all time) and more HR in the playoffs than Babe Ruth.  He is a smooth moving ageless wonder who is proving to be vital this postseason.  He is perfect for the #2 hole and shines there.  I expect his bat to be beastly the rest of the month.   Let’s table his offseason contract situation for now and simply enjoy his performance.

Game 2 is today with Michael Wacha facing off against Kershaw at 3pm St. Louis time.   I expect the young righty to keep the Dodgers off balance with his accurate heater and changeup.  This will be another close game where a big blast could decide the game.   If the Cards can manage to steal the first two games before heading to LA, it’s as tough as reinforced steel.  Getting a game one pitching duel is good enough.   The series will happen quick.   By the end of next Saturday, a Game 7 will conclude.   Will it need 7 games?  I prescribed it that much as the first game kicked off last night and can still see it going that way.   For now, enjoy the hours off before the nerves kick in this afternoon.   For die hard fans, these are the days we spend all season sweating to witness.   We are seasoned for this moment and ready to analyze.

Who takes Game 2?  No idea.  The Cards proved in Game 1 they can make up for a lack of payroll with a handsomely groomed farm system full of MLB ready talent.  Who wins the series?  A family or a group of mercenaries?

Thanks for staying,

Dan L. Buffa

The Ability to Adapt In A Rematch

imageedit_1_5523917824On Friday at Busch Stadium, Pittsburgh Pirates starter Gerrit Cole took the Cardinals to school for 6 innings.   Throwing 5 different pitches for strikes and having the ability to dial his fastball up to 99 mph, Cole kept our hitters off balance and could blow the heater past their bats.  The mid season addition to the Pirates staff and 1st round draft pick was pitching against the Cards for the first time and surely made an entrance.  Coupled with the collapse of the defense and Lance Lynn’s pitching ability, Cole flipped the momentum in the series over to the Pirates for the next two games.  After the Birds erupted for 9 runs in the first game, Cole shut them down and only allowed a solo home run to Yadi Molina.  That’s the narrative.  Here’s the question at the end of it.  Can the Cards adapt to Cole’s pitching or will they fall victim a second time?   Game 5 hangs on that question.

We all know Adam Wainwright will bring his A game and keep the game close for our lineup.   Waino is a veteran big game pitcher who can be hit early on but showed in September and last Thursday that the Pirates lineup doesn’t scare him that much.  However, if the bats can’t crack Cole, the evening could stretch into an uncomfortable affair.  The Pirates bullpen is just as willing as our young pen and their bats won’t make this game an easy out for the home team.  As much as Busch Stadium plays a part in the game, this game is decided by a ball and a bat and which jersey is more swift with those tools.   Waino will make it our game to lose but can we crack the safe of young gun Gerrit Cole?

Watching film will help but certain players need to step up and do what they do best.   The Cards hitters know how the man wants to attack them and have to be ready for that high octane fastball or his just as nasty changeup and slider.  The only difference in the lineup is Pete Kozma’s suddenly hot bat subbing in for Daniel Descalso at shortstop and in the 8 hole.

If I had to pick one man who could determine a breakout of this lineup tonight, it’s Matt Carpenter.  Since collecting his 199th hit against the Cubs on September 27th, the mesmerizing leadoff man has 1 hit since then and looks lost, adrift and out of rhythm at the plate.   This happened for a stretch in July as well.   Carpenter’s bat went cold and the offense went down right with his stick.   Where Carpenter goes, the rest of the lineup follows.  Simple leadoff man navigation.   I don’t care what he did during the regular season.   Doubles, hits, runs scored and all.   His only hit in this series is a scratch hit through the right side of the infield.   Carpenter is pulling his head out early at the plate and rolling over for weak grounders to second base or striking out on breaking pitches.   He isn’t working counts and not drawing walks.   It’s a bad time for the catalyst of your lineup to find a cold streak.   When he scores a run, the Cards are a great team.  When he doesn’t, the team is beatable.  Pitching does decide the fate of most games, but hitting is what wins you games.   At the core of this game, simplicity lurks.

Another person to remember is Molina.  He cranked a HR off Cole and was the only guy who took good swings against him in his at bats.   Expect him to be dangerous tonight.

For some reason, I expect one of the pitchers to get lit up tonight.   When a pitching duel is in the forecast, a romp is usually what arrives at the table.   Will the Pirates finally figure out Waino or will the Cards break through against Cole?  These are some of the great questions going into a winner take all game.   Which pitch decides the fate of a team’s entire season?   Which bullpen comes up big?   Each team has a deadly shutdown crew that has shown an ability to allow runs in this series?   Jason Grilli and Trevor Rosenthal have been great but Mark Melancon and Kevin Siegrist have been hit for key runs.

The hardest thing about tonight’s game is the evenness of the teams involved.   Each lineup has exploded in a game to win and used small ball to win a game.  Each pitcher has dominated the other lineup once in this series.  The hitters have shined and crashed to the ground.  Predicting sports is a field I have yet to break into and don’t really want to in the near future.   Let me just say this.  The lineup that executes tonight will be the team that moves on to the next round.   The pitchers carry the top billing in this game and the lineups have their work cut out for them.

Pitchers duel or offensive rampage?  After Michael Wacha’s dazzling postseason debut on Monday allowed the Cards to reach Game 5, they seem to have the momentum but Gerrit Cole stopped that party once in this series.   Can he do it again or will the Cards break his serve?

I love this game and I can’t wait for tonight.  The blood pressure will rise, the hands will tremble and the words in our head will gather up quick.  May the players feet be swift, their bats plentiful and their nerves clean and ready to roll.   Game 5 at Busch Stadium will leave no prisoners.

What team welcomes The Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday and what team packs their bags for the winter?   You never can tell.

Thanks for staying,

Dan Buffa

Slaying The Dragon in Pittsburgh

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With the series tied at a game apiece, The St. Louis Cardinals walk into the temple of doom in PNC Park today in Pittsburgh to attempt to slay the dragon that is Francisco Liriano. Every giant has a nemesis that’s hard to break than others. Muhammad Ali had Joe Fraizier. Mike Tyson had Evander Holyfield. Why use boxing references in a friendly game? When the playoffs begin, everything is a fight. The Cards have to find a way to beat this crafty lefty or they risk putting their 97 win season to rest without barely a whimper. It’s not time to panic ladies and gentlemen, but it’s okay to reach for the pain medication and talk to your priest. This was never going to be easy.

How do you beat man who dominated you during the regular season three separate nights? Watch more film, find a different approach at the plate or use a different bat and rub voodoo beads on it. There are several ideas but no true course of action. Cardinals starter Joe Kelly will bring his A game to Pittsburgh but can the bats support his methods? Will they wilt under the left-handed sun of Liriano’s changeup or rise up and stomp him in the first inning? If I knew the answer I’d tell you but this movie isn’t over yet and the script hasn’t even been finished. As die hard fans and bleeders for the game, we will just have to watch and see if Liriano’s 3-0 record and 0.75 ERA against the Cardinals is a thing of the past or a preview of the future. Let’s just hope for the best.

PNC Park will be rocking, with their fans pledging this two day period the ultimate sports holiday with the fate of their football team looming in the dungeon of the NFL and the hockey team just getting started.  For the first time in over 2 decades, the Pirates can clinch a chance to go to the National League Championship series.  It’s the Cardinals job to show up today and remind the Bucs who rules the Central and who has been to the postseason 10 times in the past 14 seasons.  In 2006 and 2011, the Cards were propelled by unexpected rookie contributions and a never say die will to survive in close games on the road, so they are built for this madness.   Remember Shea Stadium in 2006 against the Mets?  2011 with Chris Carpenter taking on his friend and foe Roy Halladay in high noon showdown for a chance to advance to the pennant?  The Cards have clinched big time series’ on the road and did the deed in hostile environments.   Areas unfit for a visiting team but tromped by the notion that when you are used to the playoff fever and have it running through your veins, settings don’t seem to matter.   What is the best way to quiet down a screaming crowd?   Take the field today and put up a 3 spot on the scoreboard.  Send Joe Kelly to the mound with a changeup that has befuddled the Pirates for the past two months.  Bat Yadi Molina in the cleanup spot and slide down the youthful power of Matt Adams to the sixth spot to load the guns.   Have young guns Kevin Siegrist and Trevor Rosenthal ready to light up home plate with 100 mph fastballs.   Don’t feed the Pirates team too many fastballs because they love them.

Why did Lance Lynn not do well in Game 2?  No matter how effective his curveball was, he kept going back to his fastball to finish off hitters and it was punished for big hits.   Why in the world do you throw Pedro Alvarez a fastball in the 3rd with a man on and the game only 1-0?  It makes no sense to feed that hound some bloody cheese there.  Pound him with the changeup and curve.  Don’t feed these big Pirate hitters heaters unless you can throw it past them.  Shelby Miller showed a shade of why he isn’t starting Game 4 when he allowed an eighth inning solo home run to Starlin Marte.  Miller relies on his fastball to get outs and the Pirates love fastballs.  Kelly is a guy who sets up his fastball with his changeup and keeps the hitters off balance.   Michael Wacha is the same way.   Set up your heater with your changeup and also have the ability to finish them off with your changeup if the situation calls for it.   In the playoffs, it’s about adjusting to what works and what doesn’t work.  Kelly and Wacha have the mindset and arsenal to get it done.  Lynn and Miller do not.  End of story.

Will the Cards get another game at Busch Stadium this year?   It’s so hard to make predictions in sports because anything can happen and expectations can easily be tromped.  The Cards need to at least do what the Bucs did at Busch over the weekend?  Win one game and bring it back home.  Don’t worry about Gerrit Cole’s and his evil rookie sharpness looming in Game 5.  You’ve seem him now and have tape to work off of.   He isn’t invincible.  He is young and talented yet beatable and hasn’t pitched a Game 5 winner take all before.  Another guy wearing Cardinal Red named Adam Wainwright has pitched in several of those games.    Yes, I am typing hopeful thoughts because at this point it’s important to remind fans that the series is tied 1-1 and up for grabs.  Forget the PNC Park madness and go out and play baseball.   Keep it simple.

I leave with these words.   Every day is another chance to turn it all around.   The Cards sucker punched the Pirates in Game 1 and they turned the tables in Game 2.  What does Game 3 have in store for the Postseason Kings(Cards) and the mad hatters in Pittsburgh?   Does Liriano dominate and sour the minds of Cards fans everywhere and send us prepping for a cold winter?  Do the Cards scrap, take a patient approach, find a way to hit his slider and score runs and get Joe Kelly up early?   You just don’t know or can tell what will happen next between these two teams.  That is what makes baseball great.  That is what makes October baseball legendary.  Unpredictable sporting events keep the blood flowing in a world where so many things can make your body go cold.

Go Cardinals!

Thanks for staying,

Dan Buffa

GRAVITY Review(Dose of Buffa Special)

QUICK SETUP-Sandra Bullock is Ryan Stone, a medical engineer working on a space shuttle captained by Matt Kowalski(George Clooney) who is one of those just about to retire easygoing storytellers that one would require while up in the stars working on machinery.   When a shattered Russian satellite collides with their shuttle, destroying everything and sending Stone and Kowalski into space attached to one another, they have to rely on his experience and her will to make it to safety.   In other words, to make it home.

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MY TAKE-There are few things scarier than being lost in space.  Suspended without hope and a leaking supply of oxygen while holding the best view of earth anyone will ever lay claim to.  Alfonso Cuaron’s stunning new film, Gravity, puts two people in the worst possible situation up in space.   Stranded without contact.   For 90 tightly wound minutes with a natural born suspense, the movie holds you in its grasp like a hostage to beautiful cinema.   You won’t see a more visually breathtaking movie this year and Cuaron’s film(which he co-wrote with his son Jonas), ranks as one of the year’s best by keeping things simple, moving and alert.

Bullock has never been better and puts in better work here than she did for her Oscar winning performance in The Blind Side.  It’s a personal, remarkably sound and heartfelt performance that sets Sandra up in Castaway mode for most of the film.   Clooney hasn’t been this good in years, creating this calm, comforting, and charming personality that doesn’t just keep Bullock’s Stone calm for the duration of his role, but he also puts the audience at ease.   From the beginning of his career, especially his work on ER, Clooney has the ability to be commanding and comforting with only a few lines of dialogue.  He makes you feel safe in the middle of this scary journey.  There is a scene near the end of the film between the two stars that hits home in every possible facet.  The writing, the contact between them and the length each have gone in this predicament.  It’s one of the best scenes of Clooney’s career and one that he can hold up as a wonderful work of art.  You will know it when you see it.

However, the film belongs to Bullock.  It’s her odyssey.  From the moment the movie starts and we see her wounded face carry more robot than blood flow, something is wrong there is a thorn sticking out of her side.  When we finally learn her backstory and why she is broken hearted, the story kicks up another notch.   The Cuaron’s know they don’t have to reinvent the way you develop character and plot threads here and add just enough punch to the story to make the situation carry a little drama as well as suspense.   Gravity is all about the predicament and how you manage to get out of it alive but by placing two well known movie stars in the situation, they give us faces that we identify with and can relate to.   This is a film where you need movie stars to carry the action but more importantly, you need actors who have skill and can act.   Bullock and Clooney deliver in a huge way.

Cuaron’s direction is flawless.   The film opens with a 13 minute uncut tracking shot that sets up the action and it’s a mesmerizing sequence.  Cuaron shot the film in separate rigs and used a wide range of technology but you always see his hand on the trigger during every shot of the film.   Used famously in Children of Men, Cuaron likes to set the camera up and let it go for a long uncut shot, making the experience all the more invigorating and spellbinding.  Here, it works to perfection also dare I say for the first time the use of 3D glasses actually enhances the film and doesn’t distract from it.

Gravity is worth anyone’s time.  For the casual film fan to the film-addict, this movie will grip you and not let go for hours after the film.   12 hours later, I am still thinking about it and it won’t leave anytime soon.   This is while playoff baseball fills my senses.  The movie is haunting, beautiful and poignant.  It is one of the year’s best and so tightly edited and told that if you never get a chance to actually go up in space, Cuaron’s movie will get you close enough to feel the adrenaline and despair.  It is the best movie about life in space that I have ever seen.

-Dan Buffa

Film-Addict Co-Creator and Staff Writer

@buffa82 on Twitter

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Cardinals-Pirates Series Preview

3624337106_1b0059a837_zPart of me wants to adopt Mike Matheny’s one game at a time mindset, but another part wants to think ahead and plan accordingly.  Today, the St. Louis Cardinals begin their launch for title #12 in 2013.  The battle starts with the Pittsburgh Pirates today at Busch Stadium in downtown St. Louis.   The Red Sea will be dominating 7th and Clark and turn the stadium into a bowl of red flavored passion.   There is nothing like playoff baseball in St. Louis.  As a Cards fan, we have come to expect it yearly.   October isn’t the time to start thinking about next year’s club, wonder who will play the outfield or watch baseball players develop sad faces.  In this town, we plan on contending for the championship every year and that is a proud feeling.   Against the home team lies a team who hasn’t tasted playoff atmosphere in 21 years, or when I was 10 years old.  The Pirates are hungry and arrogantly spanked the Reds in a wildcard game on Tuesday.   They won’t go quietly into the night and neither will our Cardinals.  I expect this series to go 5 games but this is the postseason and you simply never can tell.   Let’s run down my list of thoughts on the series.

*Adam Wainwright taking on A.J. Burnett in game 1 is ideal for the Cards.  Waino has been aces at home this month and Burnett got rocked for 8.10 ERA in this park during 2013.  A.J. likes to throw that first pitch fastball and it’s the Cards mission to jump all over it before he can work in his deadly slider.   Get to him early and do it brutally.   Waino’s main problem is the first inning at home and if he gets out of that unscathed, good things will come.  He only gets better as the game goes along, so its important to stake Big 50 to an early lead.

*The bullpen advantage slides into the Cards direction.   Mark Melancon was getting torched in the last couple weeks of the season as the Pirates closer and Jason Grilli has only been back for a couple weeks.  Their bullpen is strong but the Cards pen has been the backbone of this team’s 2013 surge.   When the rotation got weary, the bullpen saved the team.   When the bats went quiet, the last two men out of the pen closed the door.   You can’t find a better threesome in a bullpen than Seth Maness, Kevin Siegrist and Trevor Rosenthal.  Each bullpen is made up of young power arms but the Cards have the advantage.

*The Pirates have a stacked lineup, with Marlon Byrd and Justin Morneau added in the final month.   They also have Starlin Marte back in the leadoff spot, something the Cards didn’t have to face in September.  Marte is a table setter, Andrew McCutchen is a finisher and there the Cards pests in Pedro Alvarez and Neil Walker.   Right when you think it’s okay to breathe, you have seasoned catcher Russell Martin, who cranked two HR on Tuesday and has torched the Cards all year.  While their pitching was their strength for the majority of the season, the Bucs bats improved mightily in the last two months and outhomered the Cards 18-5 in their season series.  These guys can bring it and hit it deep.  A test for the Cards.

*Game 3 in Pittsburgh looms as the biggest matchup of the series to me because you have the Cards road warrior and PNC specialist Joe Kelly taking on a lefthander  in Francisco Liriano who has shredded our lineup 3 times this season.   The Cards have to manage to win at least of the opening 2 games at Busch if not both because when they deal with Liriano their backs better not be against the wall.  The best defense against the lefty is throwing our best road guy on the hill and Kelly was 5-1 with a 2.09 ERA on the road this season, and won two games in Pittsburgh.  Each of those wins came as stoppers, where Kelly halted a losing streak or avoided a sweep.  Game 2 between Lance Lynn and Gerrit Cole is big but the game of the series rests in Game 3.

*Sure, the Cards don’t play well in PNC Park, struggled against the Pirates in the second half and their park will be rocking but this is October baseball ladies and gents and the stage experience belongs to our Cards.   The Reds were a better matchup because they weren’t good enough to make the playoffs and the Pirates exposed that nerve on Tuesday.  You don’t whine about who is standing in front of you.  You simply take them down.   Every time I hear, “Oh no, PNC” I remind those people the playoffs are a stage where our young players and key veterans don’t wilt.  We rise to the occasion like Spartans.

*The weakest link on the Cards side is their bench.   With Allen Craig out and Matt Adams playing every day, there is no big bang off the bench for our team.  I had hoped Brock Petersen would show some power in his September callup but he barely hit the ball out of the infield.   This is an area where John Mozelaik could have improved at the trade deadline but decided not to thinking neither of his core guys would get hurt.   Craig went down and the bench was truly exposed.  The only thing you can do is use your speedy defensive minded second baseman, Kolten Wong, in the starting lineup and put Matt Carpenter at third.   When the game reaches the 7th inning, you can pinch hit struggling yet historically clutch David Freese for Wong.  Then, you have a guy who can come through in the late innings.  If not, your lethal bat is Shane Robinson.   You can have your best defensive 2B in Wong, who also gives you speed, in for the first 6-7 innings and then insert Freese when you need that big hit late in the game.  It’s not conventional but with this bench you have to go outside the box.  Freese’s late inning heroics are late game knocks and this will give you a chance to best utilize him.

*I don’t like Edward Mujica on the postseason roster but I understand it.   Mujica is a guy with a dead arm right now.  His splitter is flat and has been hammered and his straight heat isn’t doing much to fool hitters.   He is a big part of our 2013 surge, but at this point in the chase, YOU HAVE TO GO WITH THE PLAYERS WHO GIVE YOU THE BEST CHANCE TO WIN.  To me, Mujica isn’t as valuable right now as Sam Freeman or Tyler Lyons.  However, Matheny didn’t want to piss off his clubhouse by leaving a guy who had 37 saves on the bus, so there is that.   Let’s hope Chief has a little magic in store for the Red October.

*Mike Matheny and Clint Hurdle will have some interesting duels in this series.   A young manager who hands the reins of important games over to rookies against a man who also utilizes rookies but doesn’t shy away from experience either.   In my mind, two skippers who deserve Manager of the Year consideration.

*The biggest question is who starts Game 4 for the Cards?  In my opinion it should be Michael Wacha.   While Shelby Miller was great in September and pitched in last year’s playoffs, I firmly believe the matchup with the Pirates favors the kid in Wacha more.  He pitched 9 innings in a start and some relief work against the Pirates in September and the Bucs lineup had big problems with his changeup.   A lot of teams are going to find that over the top sledgehammer delivery of Wacha’s to be hard to contend with.   This is a tough spot for Matheny but you have to look at the numbers.  Miller was 0-4 against the Pirates in 2013.   Wacha was stellar against them, granted in a lot less innings.  Barring his bumpy start in Colorado, Wacha is a decent road pitcher and could be the equalizer in a pivotal Game 4 at PNC Park.  I saw the logic in starting Lance Lynn at home in Game 2 and would have approved of Miller there as well but you have to be smart when it comes to Game 4 in PNC.  Miller struggled there in 2013 and Wacha is an arm that the Pirates don’t know too well and couldn’t do much with when they did stand in against him.  That is being kept in secret probably due to Matheny and pitching coach Derek Lilliquist wanting to see how the first three games play out.  To me, my starter is picked out.  Start The Wacha.

The Cards are playing the bad guys in this series, trying to take down the league’s nation wide lovefest in the Pittsburgh Pirates.   Personally, anything that stops the saying “Bucktober” from gaining traction is good by me.   It’s the Rogues in Red’s job to sink the Pirates ship and if we can score this Game 1 win today, that is a big push towards securing a spot in the NLCS and possibly moving forward to the World Series.   However, I am desperately trying to stay in Matheny mode here and take it one game at a time.

Once again, ladies and gents, GO CARDS!  It’s time to chase history!

Thanks for staying,

Dan Buffa

A Review of DON JON

imageedit_7_2611860923Since a colleague of mine wrote an official review for the film on my site, film-addict.com, I get to come here and dish my take on the film.   There will be no rating, info or trailer.  Just the plot and my take on a new film.  A Dose of Buffa movie special if you will.   My review of Don Jon.   

QUICK SETUP-Jon(writer/director Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is the ultimate bachelor who holds certain things dear.  His home, car, family and church.   He is also a supreme Lothario and addicted to porn.   The entire film is based around his obsession with and need for porn.  He gets more escape out of it than he does with real women.  So when he meets the girl of his dreams in Barbara(Scarlett Johansson), everything he knows and abides to is suddenly put into question.   

BUFFA’S TAKE-It is hard to not admire the skill developed by Gordon-Levitt here as filmmaker and star.   With this fresh new comedy, he puts a microscope on what many men and women go through in their young lives.   An obsession with sex and a need to have it when they want it.  If they can’t have that, they replace it with pornography.   Framing it inside a very funny film is a credit to the filmmaker’s skill in structure.  

Gordon-Levitt’s protagonist, Jon, isn’t a bad man or evil by any means.   He loves his life, and that consists of areas where he holds the highest amount of control and doesn’t let many close enough to see his true dilemma.  Finding the passion he gets out of his porn in real women and making a life.  His friends think he is a killer ladies man.   Women find him irresistible.   His family is proud of him but also wants to see more stability.  Jon drives a muscle car, curses in traffic, sings in his car, dresses like he is auditioning for a role in Staying Alive and makes it all work because of his CONFIDENCE.  When he meets this beautiful yet controlling woman, his entire world is thrown to the wood chipper and he has to figure out if this is good for him.  Throw in Julianne Moore’s unexpected reality check for Jon and his world is suddenly activated with possibility.  

JGL’s film has a heavy amount of confidence and like its central character, is crafty enough to work in the filthy subplot of porn and testosterone lining of the story without turning off viewers.  If anything, Gordon-Levitt is mocking the people that rely on video strangers to make them happy while revealing that this is a very real ordeal.    That brand of filmmaking makes for an involving comedy that won’t reshape the ways movies are made but entertains you and shows you something honest inside 90 minutes.   The film doesn’t wear you down and made me laugh out loud a number of times.   From 3rd Rock From the Sun to Brick to Inception to 50/50 to this triple threat feature, Joseph Gordon-Levitt puts Hollywood on notice for inventive fresh filmmaking.   If you are tired of sequels, comic book films and far too serious theater tales, watch Don Jon and relax and revel in its simplicity and dirty intent.  You won’t find many movies whose protagonist curses at 3 people in traffic, masturbates 30 times in a week, and kisses his mother with that mouth that you want to root for so take advantage here.   There’s also funny bits where Jon mocks the intent of romantic comedies(found in Barbara’s obsession with them) and the cameos with well known movie stars creates laughs that aren’t expected.  

Tony Danza does some truly great work here as Jon’s dad, an older version of the young lady killer and there are hilarious scenes at the family dinner table.   Johansson is very good as the woman who cracks the ice in Jon’s world and adds attitude to the killer curves.   Scarlett doesn’t need to do a lot of acting but it’s a good thing she can pull it off.  Rob Brown, Brie Larson and Glenne Headly are fine in their supporting roles but this is Gordon-Levitt’s show after all.

Don Jon is 90 minutes full of finely tuned comedy.  I approve of this movie’s message.  

For more movie news, reviews and sophisticated take on the world of cinema, head over to my site, film-addict.com.  I hope you enjoyed this Dose of Buffa special movie review.

-Dan Buffa

@buffa82 on Twitter

Looking Back at the 2013 St. Louis Cardinals

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Before playoff action begins and the nerves really start to glisten and fry on the pan, let’s take a look back at the things that got the Cardinals to the playoffs.   Sometimes people overlook the 162 struggle that pushes a team into the wonderfully historical range of championship contention.    No offense to the NFL or NHL but baseball is a slow grind and isn’t easy to follow because it is slower than most sports and involves so many variables and ever changing attributes.  You have to be stone cold crazy to truly love a baseball team because things get dramatic and the stress levels reach a new height.   While others beg for action as soon as possible, I am happy to sit back, relax and bide my time before the playoff battles commence.  So, without further delay, let’s look back at 10 things that propelled the Cards this year.  Coming to you in an order that doesn’t hold any favorites and starting with….

1.  The emergence of Matt Carpenter.   Out of nowhere, a good utility guy in 2012 turned into a league wide known commodity in 2013.   One year did a lot of things for Carp Jr. and he won’t soon be forgotten.   You don’t break a Stan Musial record for single season doubles(55) and hide from St. Louis fans.  Carpenter was unbelievable this year.   He led the league in doubles, hits(199), runs scored(126) and multi-hit games.   Carpenter hit .318 and reloaded the lineup into a credible threat all year long.   For the first time in years, the team had a legit leadoff man and second baseman inside one ballplayer.  Matt Carpenter was the ultimate bargain in 2013, providing the Cards with a smart crafty player who delivered in a number of ways.

2.  Edward Mujica rescuing the closer position.    Sure, Eddie burned out in September but please don’t forget what he did before that.   He recorded 37 saves in 43 chances without a bit of experience in the closer role.   He came to the team in the middle of 2012 as a setup guy and when Mitchell Boggs fumbled the closer spot early in April, Mujica was given the ball and surprised everybody who watched this team.   National media had no idea who he was and hitters had no idea how to put their bat on his nasty splitter.  He didn’t allow walks and threw strikes, and while it came back to haunt him in the final month, Mujica’s work was amazing for 4 1/2 months.   Without him closing games, the Cards don’t win the central and may not be in the playoffs.  As the fans have realized the hard way, if you have no closer, you have little chance to succeed.   Thanks Chief!

3. Adam Wainwright reminded us why he is one of the best in baseball.   It’s hard to find one thing that is wrong about this guy.   He is a great ambassador of the game, does work in the community, keeps things light in the dugout and also happens to really love barbecue.   He did rock a weird mustache in 2010 but that’s old news.   Wainwright rebounded from a healing process in 2012(up and down season) into a Cy Young pitcher in 2013.   When Chris Carpenter went down for good, Waino took control of this team.  He pitched 241 innings, struck out 35 and only intentionally walked TWO guys all year.   He has no time for handing free passes to hitters but he surely isn’t going to do it on purpose.  He threw 5 complete games and had 2 shutouts.  His 19-9 record was accompanied by a 2.94 ERA.  His numbers are Cy Young caliber even if he won’t win the award.   Waino returned to greatness and pitched brilliantly in September when the club needed him most.   After two rough humanizing starts against Cincinnati, Waino finished with 5 quality starts and went 4-0 to finish the season.  Aces can get knocked down.   It’s important for them to get up in time to right the ship.  He takes the mound Thursday in Game 1.

4. Yadi Molina had another MVP caliber season.   If Carpenter’s season was a surprise, Molina just did his thing again.   He worked a pitching staff that included more than 12 rookies and anchored the defensive position like a vault does inside a bank.   Molina threw out more baserunners than his usual load and put on another clinic at the plate.  In 136 games, he hit .319, collected 44 doubles, 161 hits, and knocked in 80 runners.  In 505 at bats, he only struck out 55 times, or basically what Chris Davis does in a month.   Molina hit .333 against lefties and .315 against righties.   With runners in scoring position, he hit .373.   Molina is so good we take it for granted but he is truly the most valuable player on the Cards and arguably in the majors.   Without him in the lineup in the second half of August, the Cards were a completely different team and not a good one.

5. Matt Holliday maintained his model of consistency.   A .268 hitter at the beginning of September, Holliday enjoyed a red hot final month to finish with a .300 batting average.   His 22 home runs and 94 RBI aren’t earth shattering, but proved that this guy gives you the best bang for your buck at his position.   Look around the league and tell me 5 players who have a higher WAR(wins above replacement) than Holliday.   His defense is adequate but his hustle is genuine.   How many high priced hitters jog down the first base line.  Well, Holliday sprints down the line.  He takes out second basemen on potential DP balls.  He runs around third like the catcher is a would be tackler in football.  He plays baseball with reckless abandon and doesn’t leave much to chance.  He also provides the numbers that we have come to expect.  2013 didn’t represent a total drop for Holliday.  He hit .300 for the first time since 2010, scored more runs than he did in 2012 and lowered his strikeout total from 132 in 2012 to 86 this season.   When the weather gets hot, Holliday’s bat heats up.   In his last 10 games, Holliday hit .514 and drove in 12 runners.   He barely struck out in September.   For a guy who is rarely called clutch, he delivers the timely hits at the necessary hour.   He is the consistency that many players can’t reach.  Matt Holliday, in a simple manner, gets it done.

6. Who led the Cards in RBI in 2013 yet barely played in the final month?  Allen Craig.  He drove in 97 runners and hit .315 with 160 hits and 71 runs scored in only 134 games.  His most efficient stat.  Hitting with runners in scoring position.   Craig collected 83 of his 97 RBI with runners in scoring position and hit .454.   Ridiculous and also a reason to be a bit sad about his absence in the playoffs.   Surely, the Cards got help in that position in the form of Matt Adams(more on him in a bit) but it’s still a rough picture without the best clutch hitter in baseball.   Allen Craig is silky smooth under pressure and will hopefully be able to contribute in some manner in the playoffs.

7. Matt Adams was the resourceful charger on this team.  When something was needed, Adam provided it.   When Matt Holliday went down in July, Matt Adams got a chance to play.   When the team needed a pinch hitter in the late innings, Adams hit well over .300 in the role.   In September when Craig went down with a bad foot injury, Adams more than answered the call.  He bashed baseballs for the entire month.  In 296 at bats, Adams hit 17 home runs and knocked in 51.   He was deadly in September, hitting .315 with 8 HR and 15 RBI and slugging .609.   When the team needed him most, Adams delivered.  Think about what the big guy can do with 550 at bats.   Ridiculous.   His first base skills also improved over the course of the season.  You could see his range widening with each start and that just comes down to hard work and sessions with Jose Oquendo.  Adams presented GM John Mozelaik with an opportunity to not have to overextend in talks with Carlos Beltran after the season.   He showed the Cards what he could do after teasing the team in 2012.  In his last 10 games, Big Country Fried Steak Biff Whiskey Adams hit .368.   He deserves a full time spot in 2014 but what is this guy going to do in the playoffs?

8.  The Cards bullpen.  It’s hard to give space to each individual member of this young arsenal but let me try.    Trevor Rosenthal, Kevin Siegrist, and Seth Maness were sensational and became key assets down the stretch.   Rosenthal went from setup man to closer in the final week, closing three highly important games against the Nationals fierce lineup.   Trevor turned up the heat and delivered an all around solid season, striking out 108 batters in only 75.1 innings.   He allowed 6 HR and hitters could only scrap a .223 BA against.  Rosenthal is a guy who can do a number of things and figures to be the closer in the playoffs and to start the 2014 season.  This season, he told us he was for real.   Siegrist is the lefthanded smoking gun that caught MLB’s attention.  Whenever the Cards played on FOX or ESPN, the commentators were gushing over this kid.   He came out of nowhere, typical Cards rookie style, and delivered a nearly perfect 2013 season.  In 39.2 innings, he allowed TWO runs to score.  That’s it.  Two runners.   He struck out 50 and walked 18.  He has nasty stuff that starts with a 99 mph fastball and ends with a killer changeup.  He could be a reliever or starter in 2014 but this month he will make hitters weary.  Seth Maness was the double play ball machine.   Out of nowhere in June, this kid came up and was able to enter an inning and induce a double play grounder more than 15 times.  It was automatic and precise.  He gave up a ton of hits but he was at his best coming into a burning building and putting out a team’s fire and taking away their hope with one pitch.  These three guys fantastic this season.

9.  Joe Kelly and Michael Wacha restoring order to the rotation in August and September.  In his last 10 starts dating back to August 11th, Kelly was 7-2 with a 2.34 ERA.  He allowed a ton of baserunners, walked too many but had the ability to pitch out of jams and also pitch very well on the road.  His road warrior ability is a reason for him to be in the playoff rotation.   On the road in 2013, Kelly was 5-1 with a 2.07 ERA.  Wacha came up early in the season and impressed people but only during his second stint with the team did he truly open eyes.   After 4 sharp appearances out of the bullpen, Wacha was 2-1 in 5 starts and only allowed 6 earned runs in 31.1 innings.   His season ended in resounding fashion when he nearly no hit the Nationals, pitching 8.2 innings and showing dynamite control and command into the final batter.   Only a scrappy luck single took away a no hitter but when he walked off the mound for the Cards, we knew he belonged in this rotation for years to come.   Kelly and Wacha sealed the leak in the rotation.

10.  Mike Matheny’s work as a manager.   The second year skipper gets a lot of damage from his overextended loyalty to certain players(Mitchell Boggs in particular) but people often overlook what he has done in only 2 years.   Unlike the Dodgers, who had a 223 million payroll and no real competition in the West, Matheny and his club had to battle the two wild card team, PITT and CIN, for the entire 162 games.   This wasn’t like Freddy Gonzalez’s situation in Atlanta, where there wasn’t a threat after the All Star break to his team.  Matheny had to deal with injuries to several key players, including Chris Carpenter, Jason Motte, Rafael Furcal, Jaime Garcia and Allen Craig.   Matheny is a man that believe in his young players and set them loose in key spots.   He is a blunt speaker and a manager who rightfully preaches the importance of taking one game at a time.  When the team got knocked down in August after losing 4 of 5 to Pittsburgh, Matheny’s club didn’t wilt and die.   They fought back and a good portion of the credit goes to the man pulling the strings and making the moves.   For every bad situation with Boggs, there were 4 great moves made with other players.  He inserted Mujica into the closer role, didn’t hesitate in putting Matt Adams at first base, and handed the ball to Kelly and Wacha to save things.   When John Mozeliak didn’t make a move to help the team, Matheny used what he had to make it work.   He doesn’t always make great decisions but who does?   Tony La Russa is a hall of fame manager but he drove us as nuts as Matheny does.   Every manager makes moves that set off alarms but we aren’t in their shoes.  I think Matheny deserves consideration for manager of the year.

That’s it.  Play ball boys!  Let’s see how far this streaking team takes us into October.   2006’s team played bad in September and lit it up in the playoffs.   2011’s team played amazing baseball in September and continued in October.  You just never know and that is what makes this game great.   Personally, I think the Cards are a dangerous team with loads of depth.  Watch out everybody.  The Rogues in Red are coming through and remember, you must deal with them at Busch to get past them.   I will break down the Division Series round when I find out who the Cards play.  Until then, thanks for staying.

-DLB

PHOTO CREDIT-Getty Images

Cards Aim For Home Field Advantage

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Let me just start by saying starting Jake Westbrook is a bad idea today.   It’s a “thanks for your services” giveaway from the Cards but it comes at a bad time.   In this day and age, I would think 9 million dollars for pitching half a season in 2013 would suffice but what do I know about sports politics.   The Cards control their fate today in the quest for home field advantage and Westbrook’s troubled right arm stands in the way.  Sitting at 96-35, one game ahead of the Braves and in the top spot in the NL ranks.   We aren’t just leading in run differential and RISP production.  Once again, the Cardinals sit atop the league with the best record.   Why give that away so Westbrook can feel better about his self esteem?   I would rather get ahead 6-0 first like the past 2 games this weekend over the Cubs and then insert Jake Westbrook.   He won’t be on the postseason roster, or at least he shouldn’t be.  If you have Carlos Martinez and Tyler Lyons in your pen, why do you need to give a highly important charitable spot to an aging vet with nothing to offer?   That question can fit into today’s dynamic.  Why give Westbrook a start against the Cubs(looking to spoil things in a different way) when a win could secure us home field advantage?  Westbrook has been horrible.  He doesn’t deserve anything from the Cards but a paycheck, and even that’s a stretch!

Let’s recap the last two days.   The Cards win the NL Central on Friday behind a solid outing from Lance Lynn and hits from Yadi Molina and Matt Holliday.   They win Saturday behind another fine start from Adam Wainwright and an early onslaught of key hits.   The Cards are playing great baseball.  This is the same Cubs team who gave the Pirates a stiff run for a win last weekend so don’t take them lightly.  One would expect the Cards from late July would have found a way to give away a win or two this week.   They have not and have the chance to finish the home stand in shut out fashion.   They swept a great Nationals team and can erase the Cubs today.   97 wins sounds pretty enough but its all the more tasty because of what it can secure.

The 2nd half of the season has found this Redbirds team to be dominant at home.   Far more shakier on the road than in their comfy confines of Busch Stadium, the Cards would be smart to make sure they play as many games under the Arch as possible.  We are 53-27 at home this season, as opposed to 43-38 at home.   We have a 3.13 ERA at home, as opposed to a 3.77 ERA away from home.   In the second half of the season, the Cards are 26-11 at home and most of the losses came in a dreadful 7 game home stand against the Dodgers and Cubs.   Look at how far we have come in 2 months.   In September, the Cards are 12-2 at Busch.   Teams don’t fare well here unless we turn into a deli and start giving games away like scraps of meat to the poor.   It’s is important for the Cards to not slow down today and maintain that cocky confident pace of play.

Do you want to play 4 of 7 at Pittsburgh or Atlanta?   I don’t think so.   Score as many games as you can where you thrive the most.   Plot out your safest trek during the biggest moments of the season.  Forget the regular season after today.  Every playoff team starts fresh in October.   This Thursday, all bets are off.  The Cards will have home field in their divisional series.  Let’s make sure we get it in the pennant as well before the AL home field takes over in the world series but may give the Cards an advantage if Allen Craig can swing a bat and run the bases.

Today’s game doesn’t look too important to the casual baseball fan but to the die hard it resembles air traffic control in a storm.  Navigate that plane into the right runway.  Set it up for success.  If I sound emotional right now, blame the sport.  Baseball brings out the romantic in me.  This is the greatest time of the year.  For the 10th time in the past 14 years, the Cards will be in the postseason.   For the first time since 2009, we own a division title.  Let’s not stop there.  Let’s win today, bring the Dodgers to Busch on Thursday and bring down the Cy Young Award winner in Clayton Kershaw for the third time this season.   I have a feeling about this Cardinals team.   One of those feelings that only comes around a few times per season.  We are playing great at the right time.  Too bad the playoffs don’t start until Thursday.  I recommend simulated games until then.   I am saying “we” so much because I consider myself a part of this team in some crazy way.  I am there, every game, every pitch, hanging on the result like an apple hangs from a twig before falling to the grass.

Let’s get greedy and win the finale and finish with 97 wins and home field advantage throughout the playoffs.   In other words let’s make Brian McCann lose his shit again!

Go CARDS!

Thanks for staying,

Dan Buffa