Kuo's second win

http://picasaweb.google.com.tw/kenjishih/eCUfQF

整理致

作者 Chienning (Chienning)

看板 HCKuo

標題 [轉播] 四上 / 五上 時間 Wed May 7 12:36:55 2008

Top of 4th
1 out 2B: D. Wright, 1B: M. Alou

C. Delgado

78 Called Strike96 Swinging Strike96 Swinging Strike K!

A. Pagan9

6 Called Strike96 Swinging Strike97 Foul Tip K!

Top of 5th
B. Schneider

76 Called Strike96 Called Strike96 Swinging Strike K!

L. Castillo

96 Foul97 Ball (第一球壞球耶 ~)76 Called Strike? Hit By Pitch HBP (ouch...)

1B: L. Castillo

N. Figueroa

93 Ball93 Called Strike92 Ball94 Ball94 Ball BB ~

Coaching visit to mound ......
2B: L. Castillo, 1B: N. Figueroa

J. Reyes

96 Ball (喊暫停後回神了?)96 Ball96 Called Strike97 Called Strike97 Foul97 Foul

81 Ball in Dirt97 Foul96 Called Strike K!

2B: L. Castillo, 1B: N. Figueroa

R. Church

95 Ball97 Called Strike97 Ball97 Ball96 Swinging Strike97 Foul98 Called Strike K! 98 miles ......

Top of 6th
D. Wright

77 Ball95 Foul96 Swinging Strike97 Swinging Strike K!

M. Alou 97 in play, pops out to catcher in foul territory
C. Delgado

98 Called Strike96 Foul89 Swinging Strike K! (嚇到了吧, 誰說只有95+ miles)

Top of 7th
A. Pagan

93 Called Strike76 Ball95 in play, flies out to center fielder

B. Schneider

96 Foul86 Called Strike87 Swinging Strike K!

L. Castillo

95 Swinging Strike96 Called Strike98 in play, flies out to center fielder

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dodgers rally past Mets
Kuo fans eight in relief; DeWitt hits inside-the-park homer

By Ken Gurnick / MLB.com

LOS ANGELES --

Unhittable is a word too loosely thrown around to describe pitchers, but in the middle innings of Tuesday night's game, it described Hong-Chih Kuo and it was no exaggeration.


The Dodgers reliever, possessor of the electric yet brittle arm, won a game his team seemed destined to lose. He took over for Hiroki Kuroda with two on and two out trailing by a run in the fourth, and put down the inning by striking out Carlos Delgado and Angel Pagan on three pitches each.


When Blake DeWitt's two-run, inside-the-park homer gave the Dodgers the lead and an eventual 5-4 comeback decision over the Mets, it resulted in Kuo's second victory in a week, giving him four career wins, which equals the number of operations he's had on that left elbow.

Kuo struck out Brian Schneider leading off the fifth, caught Jose Reyes and Ryan Church looking that inning, then fanned three of the next five batters. His final line: 3 2/3 innings, eight strikeouts, no hits. His first 10 pitches were strikes. It took 11 batters and 45 pitches until a Met put a pitch into play in fair territory. Kuo's radar-gun readings topped at 98 mph and were consistently at 96.


Pitching coach Rick Honeycutt undercut the wow-factor when he said that the club had the Dodger Stadium radar gun re-calibrated this week and the readings went up, but Kuo's results were impressive enough.


"He came in and just threw fastballs and went after us," said Mets manager Willie Randolph. "He's what made the difference in the game. After they brought him in, he really kind of shut us down."


Kuo must like pitching against the Mets because three of his four career wins are against them. His maiden victory was Sept. 8, 2006, a gutsy six scoreless innings in raucous Shea Stadium against a powerhouse team. He tried to duplicate that win in Game 2 of the NL Division Series at Shea that year and was the losing pitcher, charged with two runs in 4 1/3 innings while the Dodgers were scratching out only one run off Tom Glavine in a 4-1 defeat.


Kuo made history that night for starting a postseason game with the fewest Major League wins (one). He beat the Mets again last year, when he also slugged his only Major League homer and did it with a flourish, flipping the bat like Reggie Jackson.


Excuse Kuo if the satisfaction occasionally shows, because nothing about his career has been ordinary. He was signed out of Taiwan for $1.25 million as a teenager, blew out his elbow in his first professional game after striking out seven of the 10 batters he faced and it's been a nightmare ride ever since, including the first five years he spent trying to get healthy, when he pitched a total of 42 1/3 innings (averaging less than nine innings a year).


He's nothing if not persistent. He signed in 1999, meaning he's been in the organization longer than any current active Dodger. That year, Kevin Malone was general manager, Davey Johnson the field manager and Gary Sheffield and Eric Karros hit 34 homers each.


Kuo's journey to the Major Leagues hit one pothole after another. He missed 2003 entirely, was taken off the Major League roster at one point and could have been selected by any club in the Rule 5 Draft. When his rehab stalled for the umpteenth time, he had to be talked out of quitting the game. He's has often credited Darren Dreifort (two Tommy John elbow reconstruction surgeries) and Eric Gagne (one) for their advice and counsel to keep him going.


Now, here he is, accepting of the relief role he previously said made him uncomfortable because it did not allow enough time to warm up his elbow.


"I've gotten used to it," he said. "I feel very comfortable right now."


So does manager Joe Torre, who in Kuo has a second left-hander who can pitch multiple innings and overpower left-handed hitters as well as right-handers.


"I really like him where he is," Torre said when asked if Kuo, who's already made three starts this year, might make more. "A weapon like that in the middle of the game -- as a starting pitcher, the thing is, he barely got to the fifth inning. Innings four to seven are so important."
Honeycutt said Kuo had been using too many off-speed pitches earlier this year.


"Maybe now he's just raring back and letting it go," he said. "Sometimes he likes to show he's a control guy. I haven't seen that look in his eye in a long time until tonight."


Kuo provided the bridge to the back end of the Dodgers bullpen, where Jonathan Broxton and Takashi Saito closed it out, but not without some drama.


Broxton allowed a two-out double to Ryan Church in the ninth, but caught David Wright looking at a 99-mph strike three and showed a rare display of emotion with a fist-pump. Saito allowed a pair of two-out singles in the ninth, then caught Luis Castillo looking at a strike-three slider for his fourth save.

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歡樂再補球評的說法,真歡樂

賽後球評一致讚揚郭泓志 還撥出他今天1-8K的超精華影片 夠難得啊呀~2008_05_06

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