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The dog days of summer are the perfect time to hang out at the ballpark. And this summer, the Arizona Diamondbacks are making it affordable to head down to Chase Field…
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Jennifer Goldberg
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The dog days of summer are the perfect time to hang out at the ballpark. And this summer, the Arizona Diamondbacks are making it affordable to head down to Chase Field…
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Jennifer Goldberg
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Chase Field is Phoenix’s home for Major League Baseball, but this fall, it’ll host a different kind of competition. The inaugural Hondo Rodeo Fest, to be held Nov. 7 to 9, will offer attendees a blend of rodeo competition and country music entertainment…
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Jennifer Goldberg
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PHOENIX — The Rockies claim they don’t have a hangover from Thursday night’s 16-1 loss to the Diamondbacks, but there were lessons learned for starter Kyle Freeland.
Lesson No. 1: Find a way to throw a more effective changeup, which the left-hander hopes will be a big weapon for him this season.
To recap the season opener at Chase Field, Freeland was ripped for 10 runs on 10 hits in just 2 1/3 innings, including a two-run homer to Lourdes Gurriel in the first inning. The 10 runs Freeland surrendered were a career-high. The third inning was 34 minutes of batting practice for the D-backs, who sent 18 batters to the plate and scored 14 runs, the most in an inning on opening day for any team since 1900. Freeland was charged with eight runs in the inning, and rookie reliever Anthony Molina was charged with six.
Freeland acknowledged his poor pitch location but credited Arizona’s aggressive hitters.
“They put the ball in play,” Freeland said Thursday night. “That’s what hitters are paid to do — put the ball in play, create action on the basepaths — a lot of singles, and/or doubles, balls hit soft, seeing-eye ground balls. It was just everything that they were hitting.”
Before Friday’s game, manager Bud Black said that a video review of Freeland’s career-worst performance revealed some clues as to what went wrong.
“I suspected that there were some locations missed, and that was the case,” Black said. “If I was going to pick on any particular pitch, I would think that the changeup was a bit too hard. There were some 88 and 89 mph changeups. The (Christian) Walker double, 89. The (Ketel) Marte groundball up the middle that (shortstop) Ezequiel (Tovar) almost had, 88. During spring training, Kyle was trying to get the changeup down to 85-86.”
Freeland changed the grip on his changeup during the offseason and said during spring training that he was getting comfortable with the pitch. He admitted, however, that the changeup can be problematic for him.
“That changeup has always been a pitch that’s kind of been a bugaboo,” he said during camp. “You find it, then you lose it and you’re searching for it again. My confidence is definitely back on that pitch.”
Maybe so, but command of all of his pitches deserted him Thursday night.
“Last night, (there was a lot of) adrenaline, his arm felt good, an extra day’s rest — all of those things,” Black said. “The changeup was just coming in too hot. Too much velocity. And the location of all of his pitchers was not Kyle-like.”
Left-hander Austin Gomber, who’s scheduled to start against Arizona on Saturday, said putting too much weight on Freeland’s ugly outing would be a mistake.
“You have to have belief in yourself,” Gomber said. “If you don’t, you shouldn’t be here in the big leagues. There are bad days, we’ve all had them. Everybody is going to have the worst day of their career. That was Kyle’s.
“Kyle has the track record and the experience to bounce back from that game. I don’t care who you are, there are days when you are going to get your (butt) kicked. If one day is going to affect you that much or affect the way you go about your business, then this game’s not for you.
“This is my fourth year with Kyle. I’ve seen him have bad games and bounce back. Five days from now, he has a chance to be great. That’s one of the best parts of this game.”
Rockies LHP Austin Gomber (9-9, 5.50 ERA in 2023) at Diamondbacks LHP Tommy Henry (5-4, 4.15)
6:10 p.m. Saturday (MDT), Chase Field
TV: Rockies.TV (streaming); Comcast/Xfinity (channel 1262); DirecTV (683); Spectrum (130, 445, 305, 435 or 445, depending on region).
Radio: 850 AM/94.1 FM
Gomber got off to a bad start last season, going 0-4 with a 12.12 ERA over his first four games before he settled in and began pitching more effectively. The Rockies hope this is the year he puts together a season full of strong starts. The lefty had made 83 appearances (67 starts) since joining the Rockies in 2021 as part of the Nolan Arenado trade, going 23-25 with a 5.22 ERA. Gomber is 3-0 with a 5.35 ERA in 10 career games (six starts) against Arizona and his 1-0 with a 3.86 ERA in three career outings (two starts) at Chase Field.
Henry, who won a spot in Arizona’s rotation late in spring training, has only faced the Rockies twice, but he dominated them both times, going 2-0 with a 2.92 ERA. On May 31, 2023, he shut out Colorado for seven innings at Chase Field, yielding just two hits, striking out seven and walking two.
Sunday: Rockies RHP Ryan Feltner (2-4, 5.82) at Diamondbacks RHP Brandon Pfaadt (3-9, 5.72), 2:10 p.m.
Monday: Rockies RHP Dakota Hudson (6-3, 4.98) at Cubs LHP Shota Imanaga (7-5, 2.66 ERA, in Japan), 12:20 p.m.
Tuesday: Rockies LHP Kyle Freeland (0-1, 38.57 in 2024) at Cubs RHP Javier Assas (10-5, 3.05), 5:40 p.m.
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Patrick Saunders
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Another exciting Cactus League spring training season is in the books, and now it’s time to get serious. Thursday is the official Opening Day for Major League Baseball, and the Arizona Diamondbacks are kicking off a highly anticipated season with a four-game series against the Colorado Rockies…
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Jennifer Goldberg
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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Chances are the Rockies’ record won’t glitter this season, but their defense should be golden.
With Gold Glove winners in center field and at second base, Gold Glove finalists at shortstop and third, and potential sprinkled all around the field, Colorado should have one of the best defenses in the majors.
“I think we have a good shot at being the best of the best,” said second baseman Brendan Rodgers, who won a Gold Glove in 2022.
Manager Bud Black agrees.
“If you love the complete game of baseball, and defense is a big part of that, you’ll like watching us,” he said. “Every night, there is a chance to see a legit great play from talented defenders.”
The Rockies open their 2024 season Thursday night against the defending National League champion Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. The first pitch is scheduled for 7:10 p.m. (8:10 p.m. MDT).
Coming off a 103-loss season and having undergone only minor roster reconstruction during the offseason, the rebuilding Rockies are predicted by most pundits to have a sixth consecutive losing season and finish last in the National League West for a third straight year. Although the pitching might falter again, and offensive production remains a huge question mark, Colorado’s glovework could be “elite.”
“We have guys who know how to pick it and throw it and ultimately play elite all-around defense,” said left-hander Kyle Freeland, who’ll start the season-opener.
The Rockies’ words are not idle chatter around the batting cage.
Center fielder Brenton Doyle, Colorado’s human highlight film, won a Gold Glove as a rookie last season. He finished with 19 defensive runs saved, the sixth-most among all position players and the most of any center fielder in the majors.
Shortstop Ezequiel Tovar, who signed a seven-year, $65.3 million contract extension on Tuesday, was a Gold Glove finalist as a rookie last season. Third baseman Ryan McMahon has been a finalist for three years running, and his 17 defensive runs saved last season were the second-most among third basemen.
Left fielder Nolan Jones, playing his first full season as an outfielder, led the majors and set a franchise record with 19 outfield assists, surpassing Dante Bichette’s mark of 17 in 1999. Jones finished fourth in National League Rookie of the Year voting.
Black also tips his cap to catcher Elias Diaz and predicts that the Rockies should be OK at first base and right field.
“We have a catcher with a cannon, and his caught-stealing rate is solid,” Black said, referring to Diaz’s 29% rate, which ranked ninth in the majors last season. “First base, I think, can be very solid. KB (Kris Bryant) is a good athlete, (Elehuris) Montero is improving and (Michael) Toglia is an above-average defender at first. Right field should be fine.”
The Rockies better hope their confidence in their “D” is well-founded because their pitchers don’t strike out many hitters and must depend on groundball outs, especially at home.
As the late, great announcer Vin Scully once quipped: “You don’t need an official scorer at Coors Field. You need a certified public accountant.”
As a staff, the Rockies struck out 1,129 batters while walking 586. That was not a good ratio. The Ks were the fewest in the majors and the walks were eighth-most. According to Baseball Savant, Colorado pitchers allowed an 85.3 contact percentage on pitches in the strike zone, the highest mark in the majors.
“Not making routine defensive plays in the infield turns into long, stressful innings for our pitchers, and that’s not what we want,” Rodgers said. “We want our guys’ innings to be as quick and efficient as possible. If we don’t make the routine play, next thing you know, there is a blooper in that big outfield, or a big homer, and suddenly, we’re down three runs.”
Freeland, an athletic pitcher who would love to have a Gold Glove in his trophy case someday, is eager to see what the Rockies will do this year.
“In my opinion, it’s one of the best defenses in baseball,” he said. “We have to have that.”
The Rockies lost a franchise-record 103 games last season when their pitching and hitting tanked. Their defense, however, was solid. A closer look:
• After committing 100 errors in 2022, the Rockies made just 81 in 2023.
• The Rockies’ .986 team fielding percentage was tied for 12th in the majors and was the fifth-best in franchise history.
• Rockies outfielders recorded 38 assists, the most in the majors and the second-most in franchise history (48 in 1999).
• The 38 outfield assists were the most in the National League since the Reds recorded 40 in 2017.
• Colorado led the majors with 169 double plays, its most since turning 169 in 2017.
— Patrick Saunders, The Denver Post
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Patrick Saunders
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