I thought I was watching a pitchers' duel today, as expected, but then a game of "any lead you can blow, I can blow better" broke out. By the final innings of the game, it didn't even seem like anyone wanted to win. Alas, the Angels proved victorious and won their second series of the season against the best team in baseball.
Angels 6, Indians 5
I'm going to try not to get off on too much of a diatribe here, but if Scioscia lost patience so quickly with Rodney's rough start to the season as a closer, how long will it be before he loses patience with him as set-up man?
For those of you not keeping score at home, Fraudney has now allowed runs in five of his last seven appearances and he was lucky to not end up the Halo A-Hole tonight. To put it mildly, he has been awful and probably doesn't even deserve to be on the active roster, much less pitching in the late innings of close games, yet it doesn't sound as if Scioscia is even considering a switch.
I can see why that is, but I don't like it. When Fraudney got fired from the closer job, it was done so quickly because Walden was waiting in the wings. Now though, there is no heir apparent to the righty-setup man role. It should be Kevin Jepsen, but he still is getting knocked around in Triple-A. It could have been Michael Kohn, but he's still in the minors (though looking pretty good) and has a long road ahead of him to earn back Scioscia's trust, much less get promoted again. That really just leaves Rich Thompson, who I like very much, but it is probably too much too soon for him in the eyes of Sosh.
If Fraudney continues to let leads slip away, Scioscia might just have to bit the bullet and make a change though, even if he doesn't like his alternatives.