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Old 03-05-2026, 12:35 AM   #241
liberty-ca
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Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: New Westminster, BC
Posts: 391
THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

October 12 – October 20, 1992 | American League Championship Series: Sacramento Prayers vs. Boston Messiahs

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WORLD SERIES BOUND. GIL CRUZ IN THE FIFTH INNING. ANDRETTI IS THE STORY OF THIS POSTSEASON. AND THE CHARLOTTE MONKS ARE WAITING.


Seven games. Three weeks of October that began with Rogelio Ruiz hitting a three-run homer in the fourteenth inning of Game 1 and ended with Luis Prieto striking out Gustavo Reyes swinging in the ninth inning of Game 7 while Hernandez and Ruiz stood on base, watching it happen. In between those two moments was everything this sport can produce — a comeback from three games to two down, a five-run deficit erased in a single half-inning, two Eddie Marin performances that were good enough to win most games and still were not enough to win this series.

Sacramento wins the American League Championship Series four games to three. George MacDonald is the series MVP. The World Series begins Thursday at Cathedral Stadium against the Charlotte Monks, who eliminated Las Vegas four games to one.

"I'll never turn down another trophy for my mantle," MacDonald said after the clincher, pausing in the way a man pauses when he is choosing his words with unusual care. "What I would really remember, though, is a World Series win."

That sentence is the premise of the next ten days of this column's existence. But before Charlotte, we have to account for what just happened — all seven games of it, starting with a fourteen-inning marathon that set the tone for everything that followed.

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AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES: GAME BY GAME


Game 1 — Monday, October 12th: Boston 6, Sacramento 3 (14 innings)

The series opened at Cathedral Stadium with 24,011 fans settling in for what they expected would be nine innings of October baseball. They got fourteen. They went home having watched Rogelio Ruiz deposit a Chris Ryan pitch 424 feet to deep right-center in the top of the fourteenth inning, a three-run home run that broke a 3-3 tie and sent the crowd into silence.

Jordan Rubalcava threw eight innings and deserved better. He gave up three runs in the second — Hamilton walked, Martinez singled, Hagman singled home Hamilton, and Diehl doubled home two more in a sequence that unraveled in eleven pitches — but then retired Boston in order twice and held them scoreless from the third through the eighth. Sacramento clawed back with single runs in the fourth (MacDonald double, Torres RBI double), fifth (Francisco Hernandez solo homer off Marin), and sixth (MacDonald's third double of the game scoring on a Perez sac fly), and the game ground on through inning after inning of scoreless baseball.

Steve Dodge entered in the eleventh and threw three clean innings — twelve batters faced, zero runs allowed, four strikeouts. He was magnificent. The game went to the fourteenth tied at three, and Chris Ryan could not hold it. Adams reached on an Iniguez error. Goldsberry struck out. Hernandez walked. Ruiz took Ryan's first offering and hit it so hard and so far that the Cathedral Stadium crowd had finished going quiet before it landed.

"A well-rounded effort by the whole team," Ruiz said afterward, with the placid confidence of a man who has been doing this all year and sees no reason to stop. MacDonald went 3-for-5 with three doubles in a losing effort and set the AL playoff extra-inning record for doubles in the process. Boston leads 1-0.

Game 2 — Tuesday, October 13th: Sacramento 6, Boston 1

Bernardo Andretti with nine strikeouts over seven innings. That sentence explains most of Game 2.

MacDonald put Sacramento ahead in the first with a two-run homer off Moran — Cruz had walked, MacDonald sent a 440-foot drive to left-center that barely had time to appreciate the view before it landed. Moran settled after that, but the Prayers were not done with him. Cruz hit a solo shot in the sixth to make it 3-1, and then Lopez — who had been caught stealing earlier in the game — put it away with a two-run homer off Hudson in the eighth after Murguia singled and MacDonald singled him to third.

Andretti meanwhile was a different pitcher from the man who gave up nine hits in Game 3 of the Division Series. He worked fast, threw strikes, and surrendered a single run on a Diehl double and a Hernandez RBI double in the third. Ruiz went 0-for-4 and hit into a double play. For one game, Andretti solved the equation. "He's got a feel for playing with the hitter front-to-back, side-to-side," manager Jimmy Aces said afterward — a description that captures something real about how Andretti pitches when he is in the zone. The footnote: Murguia was injured running the bases during the game. His availability for the remainder of the series immediately became uncertain. Series tied 1-1.

Game 3 — Thursday, October 15th: Sacramento 6, Boston 3

The Prayers went to Boston and won behind Alejandro Lopez going 4-for-5 with a homer, and Espenoza bouncing back from his Division Series difficulties with 7.1 innings of three-run ball. Sacramento led the league with 278 stolen bases this year. On this night in Boston they ran like the team that earned every one of those stolen bases — Hernandez swiped one, Baldelomar two, Lopez three, Torres two. When Sacramento's legs are going, they are a different team entirely.

Boston put up three runs in the first inning off Espenoza, and for three innings it looked like Game 3 might go the way of Game 3 of the Division Series. Then Sacramento dismantled Jung systematically. They scored two in the second, two more in the third on Cruz and Lopez solo homers in succession, and two more in the fourth on a Hernandez steal followed by a Baldelomar single and a MacDonald grounder. Jung was gone after four innings with a game score of 23. "I just tried to make good contact," Lopez said — the understatement of a man who went 4-for-5 with a homer in a road playoff game and saw no reason to make it sound more complicated than it was. Prieto handled the final 1.2 innings without drama. Sacramento leads 2-1.

Game 4 — Friday, October 16th: Boston 5, Sacramento 1

Travis LaComb threw six innings of one-run baseball and the Prayers could not solve him on a cold night in Boston where the wind was blowing in from left at thirteen miles per hour and the temperature sat at forty-eight degrees. LaComb hit his spots from the first pitch — seven ground outs and eight fly outs, one walk, a game score of 58 — and Sacramento managed ten hits but squandered nearly all of them, leaving nine runners on base. "Travis is tough to beat when he's hitting his spots," Boston manager Tim Nunez said, with the quiet satisfaction of a man whose pitcher had just done exactly what he needed him to do.

The lone Sacramento run came in the seventh when Lopez singled, stole second, and scored on an Alex Torres single. Everyone else was getting LaComb late. Larson gave up three runs in five and a third innings and took the loss. In the seventh, with the score 3-1, Reyes doubled home two runs off Scott on a ball that found the gap in right-center on a count where Scott needed a ground ball, and the deficit was suddenly insurmountable against Lett. Series tied 2-2.

Game 5 — Saturday, October 17th: Boston 5, Sacramento 3

This is the game that will be discussed longest among Sacramento fans, and for reasons that have nothing to do with the final score.

Rubalcava gave Sacramento a 3-1 lead through seven innings of quality pitching. The Prayers scratched a run across in the first on a Francisco Hernandez double steal sequence — Hernandez drew a hit by pitch, stole second, then stole third on no throw, and scored on a Cruz sac fly — and then MacDonald doubled home two more in the third to make it 3-1. Ruiz hit a solo homer in the second — his third of the series, his third of October — and that was the only blemish on Rubalcava's line through seven innings. Six strikeouts, seven hits, Rubalcava managing the game rather than dominating it, which is a meaningful distinction.

The eighth inning. Rubalcava allowed Hagman and Diehl to single with one out and two runners in scoring position. Aces went to the bullpen. Prieto entered, got Adams on a fly out, then Goldsberry on a fly out. Two outs. Manuel Hernandez stepped in with two runners aboard and drove a Prieto pitch 394 feet to left-center for a three-run home run that turned a 3-2 deficit into a 5-3 Boston lead. "Everyone being in sync," Hernandez said afterward — a phrase that will sound different depending on whether you were wearing a Boston or Sacramento uniform when you heard it. Marin pitched eight innings and was named Player of the Game. Boston leads 3-2.

Game 6 — Monday, October 19th: Sacramento 7, Boston 1

Facing elimination at Cathedral Stadium, the Prayers did what this team does when the moment requires it: they scored four runs in the first inning before Boston had time to settle into the evening, and they never looked back.

Moran faced Hernandez, Murguia, Cruz, MacDonald, and Lopez in succession in the bottom of the first. Hernandez walked. Murguia singled. Cruz singled. MacDonald doubled to left-center, scoring Hernandez and Murguia. Lopez grounded into a fielder's choice that scored Cruz. Alonzo singled home MacDonald. Four runs before the crowd had properly sat down, and Moran was gone 2.1 innings later having allowed six runs total as Baldelomar tripled in the third to put Sacramento up 6-1.

"My job is to go out and play as hard as I can for the Prayers," MacDonald said after the game — a sentence that sounds routine until you consider it was spoken by a man who had just driven in two runs in a must-win game and watched his team stay alive in the World Series. Andretti was once again excellent — 5.2 innings, one earned run, four strikeouts. Wright and Scott finished without incident. Series tied 3-3.

Game 7 — Tuesday, October 20th: Sacramento 6, Boston 5

I would dare to say: some of us will spend the rest of our lifes thinking about the fifth inning of Game 7.

The context: Boston led 4-0 through four innings. Espenoza had given up a Reyes solo homer in the second and three more runs in the fifth on a sequence of singles and a walk that kept finding holes in the Sacramento defense, and the Cathedral Stadium crowd had gone quiet in the way crowds go quiet when they can feel a season slipping away. Sacramento had managed one hit through the first four innings against Jung. Their cleanup hitter had struck out twice. They were four innings from going home.

Then the fifth inning happened.

Alonzo led off with a double. Torres reached on an error. Baldelomar singled through the infield, scoring Alonzo — 4-1. Rodriguez walked to load the bases. David Perez, pinch hitting for Francisco Hernandez, lined a single to right that scored Torres and Baldelomar — 4-3, bases still loaded, one out. Then Gil Cruz stepped in and hit a triple to right-center that cleared the bases, scoring Rodriguez and Perez. 5-4 Sacramento. Lopez then reached on a Hagman error at third base, scoring Cruz. 6-4 Sacramento. Six runs in one half-inning, on four hits and two Boston errors, against a pitcher who had held them to one hit through four innings.

Boston made it interesting in the ninth. Adams doubled. Hernandez singled home Adams. Ruiz singled Hernandez to second with two outs and the tying run at the plate in Reyes. Prieto struck him out swinging. The 1992 Sacramento Prayers are going to the World Series.

Player of the Game — you've guessed it right : Gil Cruz. Series MVP — you are right again: George MacDonald.

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WHAT THE SERIES REVEALED


Andretti: The Postseason's Real Story

I've said before the ALCS that the dominant tactical puzzle of the series would be Ruiz against the Sacramento pitching staff. That was correct. But the dominant performance of the series belonged to a man this column has been writing about since a pair of disastrous September starts in Seattle: Bernardo Andretti finished the ALCS 2-0 with a 1.84 ERA. For the full postseason he is 3-0 with a 1.77 ERA over 20.1 innings, 17 strikeouts, a 0.79 WHIP, and zero walks in his last two starts. He was the best pitcher on either roster across seven games, and he did it while Rubalcava absorbed the Game 1 and Game 5 losses and Espenoza was allowing runs in bunches.

The redemption arc that began in Seattle in late September — the 7.1-inning game after back-to-back disasters, the quiet "we took advantage of our opportunities" — was completed in the American League Championship Series. Andretti lived to expectations, he has thrown 207 regular season innings and 20 playoff innings. He is the reason Sacramento plays Thursday.

Espenoza: The Complicated Answer

This column asked the Espenoza question after the Division Series and spent the ALCS watching the answer reveal itself in installments. His final postseason line: 2-0, 4.91 ERA, 18.1 innings, 24 hits allowed, a 1.53 WHIP. He won Games 3 and 7 — the series-clinching games of both rounds — and gave up four-plus runs in both. He won by surviving rather than dominating, which is a different thing from the pitcher who posted a 0.89 regular season WHIP.

The honest assessment: Espenoza, how is 29 years old, has thrown 218 regular season innings and 18 playoff innings, and has been pitching with something less than his best stuff since mid-October. Whether that represents fatigue, a mechanical issue, or simply the variance that comes with facing elite lineups in October is a question the next ten days will force Aces to answer before he decides on rotation order against Charlotte. The answer matters.

Cruz: The Fifth Inning

Gil Cruz batted .235 in the ALCS with six RBI and seven walks, and the seventh walk matters less than the triple that cleared the bases in the fifth inning of Game 7 when Sacramento was trailing 4-0 and needed a reason to believe. The triple traveled at 101 miles per hour off the bat and found the gap in right-center before the Boston outfield could react. It scored Rodriguez and Perez, turned a 4-3 Boston lead into a 5-4 Sacramento lead, and changed everything about how that evening ended. Cruz was named Player of the Game. He earned it three times over.

His regular season performance — .269, 22 home runs, 41 stolen bases — had raised expectations the postseason only partially met in the batting average column. But seven walks in seven games tells you the discipline is intact. And the triple in the fifth inning of Game 7 is the play this franchise will remember from October 1992.

MacDonald: The Series MVP

George MacDonald hit .351 in the ALCS with a .419 on-base percentage, five doubles, a home run, ten RBI, and five runs scored. He set an AL playoff record for doubles in a single extra-inning game in Game 1. He drove in runs in five of the seven games. He walked five times and struck out five times in 37 at-bats, which is the mark of a hitter who knows exactly what the pitcher is trying to do to him. He is 28 years old, plays first base with quiet competence, and has been the most consistent offensive presence on this roster across ten playoff games.

His trophy speech contained the sentence that will define the rest of this October: what he would really remember is a World Series win. MacDonald earned the MVP. Now he wants the ring.

Prieto: One More Thing

Luis Prieto has four saves in this postseason with a 2.61 ERA. He blew the save in Game 5 on the Hernandez homer — two inherited runners, one pitch, three runs — and then came back in Games 6 and 7 and pitched when it mattered most. The Game 7 ninth inning was the most pressure this bullpen has seen all October. Prieto struck Reyes out swinging. Whatever happens in the World Series, that strikeout belongs on his permanent record.

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LOOKING AHEAD: CHARLOTTE MONKS


The Charlotte Monks won 102 games in the regular season, dispatched Philadelphia in four games, and eliminated Las Vegas four games to one with a 5-1 win in the clincher at Blessed Field. Their first baseman Robert Torres was named NL Championship Series MVP after hitting .400 with two RBI. "See the ball, hit the ball," Torres said — a sentence that is either the most profound observation in baseball or the most deliberately understated, depending on how seriously you take a man who just hit .400 in a playoff series. The Monks are the best team in the National League and they arrive in Sacramento on Thursday with a rotation, a lineup, and a bullpen that merit respect from the first pitch of Game 1.

The Charlotte rotation opens with Ricky Gaias on Thursday — 20-11, 3.27 ERA in the regular season, 2.70 ERA in two postseason starts. He is the best pitcher on the best NL team this year and he is the opponent Sacramento faces in Game 1. Dan Cowley starts Game 2 — 17-8, 3.89 ERA, though his postseason ERA of 6.30 in two starts raises questions that Sacramento's lineup may be positioned to answer. Josh Hedberg goes in Game 3 at Charlotte, with a postseason ERA of 5.14. Rafael Gonzalez — 8-2, 2.71 ERA — is their most efficient postseason arm by pure per-inning numbers.

Charlotte's offense does not have a single transcendent individual the way Boston had Ruiz. What they have instead is depth and discipline. Matthew Scoggins in center field hit .355 in the postseason with a .429 on-base percentage. Josh Dennison was the NL Division Series MVP and is hitting .324 with an OPS of .927 in the playoffs. Carlos Gonzalez has ten postseason RBI. Their shortstop Juan Ocasio hits .125 but has drawn four walks and a .241 on-base percentage — not a bat that beats you, but a presence that extends innings and keeps pitchers working. The Monks beat you with process and with everyone contributing in the appropriate moments, which is what a 102-win team looks like from the inside.

Their bullpen is legitimate. Alberto Meza has converted two saves without allowing a hit in three appearances. Antonio Mata is listed as hot — one save and a 0.60 ERA in his last eight games — and holds a postseason ERA of 1.69. Tom Pallo has three saves and a 2.57 ERA as their closer. Sacramento will not manufacture runs against this group the way they dismantled Boston's secondary arms in Games 3 and 6. Every inning will require earning it honestly.

The Sacramento injury picture adds one more variable. Carlos Orozco was placed on the ten-day IL retroactive to October 9th — the back stiffness that shadowed him through the final weeks of the regular season has finally forced the roster decision that everyone could see coming. He is eligible to return but his availability for Game 1 is unknown. The shortstop arrangement — Rodriguez moving from third, Torres at second, Cruz covering short — has functioned through the ALCS, but Charlotte's pitching staff will probe every weakness in this lineup from the opening pitch of Thursday's game.

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BEFORE YOU POP THAT COLD BEVERAGE


The Rotation Decision

Aces has Rubalcava, Andretti, Espenoza, and Larson available for the World Series. The rotation order he deploys in Games 1 through 5 will be one of the most consequential decisions of his managerial career.

The case for Rubalcava in Game 1 is straightforward: he is the best pitcher on this team, he set the tone for the entire postseason with a complete game shutout in the Division Series opener, and Game 1 at home is the highest-leverage assignment on the schedule. The case against: Rubalcava threw 24.1 postseason innings on accumulated fatigue, took the loss in Game 5, and arrives at Game 1 with six days rest — adequate but not ideal.

The case for Andretti in Game 1 is the evidence: 3-0, 1.77 ERA, zero walks in his last two starts, the best postseason pitcher in this series by any reasonable measure. The case against: you do not bench your ace in Game 1 of the World Series without a reason that transcends performance data.

Espenoza against Hedberg in Game 3 — whose 5.14 postseason ERA is Charlotte's most accessible number — makes structural sense. Larson in Game 4 after full rest makes sense. The order that makes the most analytical sense to this column: Rubalcava, Andretti, Espenoza, Larson, Rubalcava. Whether Aces agrees is what we find out Thursday evening.

The MacDonald Proposition

George MacDonald is hitting .394 in the full postseason. He has ten RBI across ten playoff games. He wants a World Series ring and he is currently the most productive hitter in this lineup. If Charlotte's pitchers try to attack him early in counts they will give up hits. If they pitch around him the lineup around him has to make them pay. That is the offensive equation of this World Series.

Charlotte's Cowley Problem

Dan Cowley went 17-8 in the regular season. His postseason ERA is 6.30 in two starts — fourteen hits, seven earned runs, three home runs in ten innings. Sacramento's lineup, which led the American League in stolen bases and scored 780 runs, has not seen Cowley. Cowley has not seen Sacramento. There is information asymmetry on both sides of that matchup that makes Game 2 at Cathedral Stadium one of the more genuinely uncertain games on the schedule. If Sacramento can reach him early, the series could be 2-0 before the teams board the plane for Charlotte. If Cowley rediscovers his regular season command, it could be 1-1 heading to Monk territory. Both outcomes are plausible.

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AROUND THE LEAGUE


Charlotte eliminated Las Vegas four games to one, winning the deciding game 5-1 at Blessed Field. Robert Torres was named series MVP with a .400 average and two RBI — a line that reflects a player who contributed to a team victory rather than carrying one on his back, which is the appropriate description of what the Monks are. They do not have a single transcendent individual. They have eleven contributors who execute at a high level across a full series. That formula won them 102 games and two postseason rounds. It is a legitimate formula and Sacramento should not underestimate it for a single inning.

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MAILBAG — The Hot Corner audience has questions, Claude Playball has answers.


From Valentina Echevarrνa-Montoya of Elk Grove, who writes that she watched Game 7 alone in her kitchen because her husband fell asleep in the fourth inning and she refused to wake him until it was over: "When Cruz hit that triple, I screamed loud enough that my husband came running in from the bedroom thinking something had collapsed. He was not wrong. Something had collapsed — Boston's lead. How do you explain the fifth inning of Game 7?"

Valentina, your husband's instinct was correct in the most important sense. Something did collapse. What collapsed was the idea that Boston had put this game away, that Espenoza was done, that Jung could coast to a win while Sacramento's season ended quietly on their own field. The fifth inning of Game 7 is the kind of inning that this sport produces occasionally and that feels, in the moment, like something larger than baseball — like a team collectively deciding that the facts of the situation do not apply to them. Alonzo doubled. Torres reached on an error. Baldelomar singled. Rodriguez walked. Perez singled. Cruz tripled. Lopez reached on another error. Six runs. Three hits and two Boston errors and one at-bat from Gil Cruz that cleared the bases of everyone who had been waiting on them. Tell your husband the collapse was worth every moment of his missed sleep.

From Desmond Achterberg of Sacramento, a civil engineer who writes that he has calculated the precise aerodynamic trajectory of Cruz's Game 7 triple and arrived at the conclusion that "the wind at seven miles per hour blowing out to right played approximately a seven percent role in the outcome": "My question is whether you believe physics or heart deserves more credit for that at-bat."

Desmond, this column respects the calculation. Seven percent wind contribution is a number I will not dispute. What I will say is that the remaining ninety-three percent was Cruz staying back on a Jung pitch that was trying to get him out in front, making contact with enough authority to send the ball 101 miles per hour off the bat, and hitting it to exactly the spot in right-center where neither outfielder could arrive in time. The physics were real. So was the decision in the half-second between pitch recognition and swing. I will give the wind its seven percent and leave the rest to Cruz.

From Aurelio Fontaine-Guerrero of Sacramento, age nine, who writes that his older sister helped him compose this letter because he does not yet know how to write cursive and his teacher said the letter would count as a class assignment if it was about a real current event: "My dad says the World Series is the biggest thing that ever happens in sports. Is that true? And will the Prayers win?"

Aurelio, your father is approximately correct — the World Series is the biggest thing that happens in baseball, and baseball is one of the biggest things that happens in sports, so the arithmetic checks out. As for whether the Prayers will win: I do not know. That is the only honest answer available to anyone in October, and anyone who tells you otherwise is guessing at something that has not been decided yet. What I can tell you is that your Prayers beat the best pitcher in the American League in a fourteen-inning opener, came back from three games to two down against a team with Rogelio Ruiz, and scored six runs in one inning of a Game 7 when they were trailing by four. A team that does those things has a chance in any series. Show your teacher that sentence and ask for full credit.

______________________________

Charlotte Monks. Cathedral Stadium. Thursday, October 22nd. The World Series. Sacramento has never been closer.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________

Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

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Old 03-05-2026, 11:36 AM   #242
liberty-ca
Major Leagues
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: New Westminster, BC
Posts: 391
THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

October 22 – October 27, 1992 | 1992 World Series: Sacramento Prayers vs. Charlotte Monks

______________________________

WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS. ANDRETTI GOES 4-0. ESPENOZA WINS THREE GAMES HE HAS NO BUSINESS WINNING. AND "BIGMAC" MacDONALD HAS FOUR RINGS.


It is over. The Sacramento Prayers are the 1992 Fictional Baseball League World Series champions — their thirteenth title, won in five games against the Charlotte Monks, on the road in Charlotte, on a cool October night in front of 19,218 fans who came to Monks Field hoping for a miracle and watched Bill Marcos hit a solo home run in the ninth inning just because there was no reason not to.

Jimmy Aces addressed the press corps afterward with the economy of language that has defined his entire postseason. "Both clubs are talented," he said. "We just made fewer mistakes than they did. We made the crucial plays and got the timely hits." Charlotte skipper Ben Smith, who had the decency to agree with that assessment while adding that his club turned out to be "a little weak on fundamentals" at crucial moments, finished with a line that will outlast the series: "I have a sneaking suspicion we will be working on fundamentals a lot next spring."

He is probably right. But the fundamentals story belongs to Charlotte. The Sacramento story belongs to a rotation that did not allow a lead after the third inning of Game 1, an offense that scored in bunches and ran the bases with abandon, and one pitcher in particular who finished this October without a loss, without a weakness, and without a reasonable explanation for how one man can be this good for this long in postseason baseball.

Let us account for all of it.

______________________________

THE WORLD SERIES: GAME BY GAME


Game 1 — Thursday, October 22nd: Sacramento 3, Charlotte 0

Jordan Rubalcava walked out to the mound at Cathedral Stadium for Game 1 of the World Series carrying the weight of two ALCS losses that were not really his fault and one that partially was, a blown save that happened while he was in the dugout watching Prieto absorb the damage, and a narrative that had spent the better part of two weeks suggesting that the best pitcher on this team was no longer its most reliable. He retired the first two batters he faced, walked Gonzalez, walked Dennison, and then struck out Culpepper to end the first inning without a run allowed. He would not allow another baserunner until the fourth, when Olds singled and advanced to second on a wild pitch. He would not allow a hit again until the eighth, when Boemer reached on a Cruz error and Bustamante singled, at which point Prieto entered and quietly retired Charlotte for the remainder of the game.

One hit in 7.1 innings. Three walks. Four strikeouts. A game score of 77. "The effort we put into this one paid off," Rubalcava said — a sentence that sounds modest until you consider that the effort in question produced the finest individual pitching performance of this entire postseason.

Sacramento scored the only runs they needed in the first inning. Cruz doubled in the bottom of the first, MacDonald walked, and Lopez singled Cruz home with a throw to the plate that Bustamante made too late. The Prayers added another in the third when Hernandez doubled, Murguia singled him to third, and Cruz's fielder's choice scored the run. Torres singled home Lopez in the sixth to complete the scoring. Fourteen hits total for Sacramento against Gaias, which is a staggering number in a 3-0 game and a testament to how poorly the Prayers converted traffic into runs on a night when it did not matter because Rubalcava was never going to need more than three. Sacramento leads 1-0.

Game 2 — Friday, October 23rd: Charlotte 4, Sacramento 2

The Monks answered in Game 2 the way a 102-win team answers: they sent Rafael Gonzalez to the mound, he threw seven innings of four-hit ball with seven strikeouts and one earned run on a Murguia solo homer in the fourth, and Tom Pallo closed it out with two perfect innings. Carlos Gonzalez hit a two-run homer in the first off Larson — Bustamante reached on a single, stole second, and Gonzalez turned on a Larson pitch for 403 feet to left-center — and Ocasio added an RBI triple in the second that made it 3-0 before Sacramento had collected a single hit.

Larson lasted four innings. He gave up eight hits and three runs — a line that is almost identical to his Game 4 ALCS start that this column criticized three days ago — and the consistency of his struggles against this level of competition is becoming a pattern that demands attention in the offseason. Salazar entered for four innings of tidy relief and kept the deficit at two, but by that point Gonzalez had settled into a rhythm that Sacramento could not disrupt.

The sole bright moment for Sacramento came in the seventh: BigMac led off with a triple and scored on a Lopez sac fly. It was the kind of contribution that MacDonald has been making all October — understated, efficient, exactly sufficient. Torres doubled in the ninth for Charlotte's fourth run. Series tied 1-1.

Game 3 — Sunday, October 25th: Sacramento 7, Charlotte 0

The World Series went to Charlotte, and Bernardo Andretti went with it.

This column has been tracking Andretti's postseason since September, since the two disasters in Seattle and the quiet resolve that followed, since Games 2 and 6 of the ALCS when he was the best pitcher on the field by an obvious margin. In Game 3 of the World Series he threw seven shutout innings against the best team in the National League on their home field, allowing six hits, walking two, striking out four, and departing with a game score of 67 and an earned run average that has now dropped to 1.32 for the full postseason across 27.1 innings.

Charlotte had opportunities. Ocasio and Torres reached in the fifth with nobody out before Bustamante struck out to end the threat. Andretti worked out of every jam with a calm that looked less like concentration and more like inevitability — as though the outcome of each at-bat had been decided before the pitcher took his sign. Matt Wright finished with two scoreless innings.

Offensively, Sacramento built the lead methodically and then blew it open. Cruz singled and stole second in the first, BigMac singled him home. Rodriguez hit a solo homer off Cowley in the third — a 466-foot shot to left-center, the longest ball of this postseason and a reminder that Jose Rodriguez exists as a hitter even when this column forgets to mention him for several consecutive articles. Cruz added a solo homer in the sixth. Lopez capped it with a three-run homer in the eighth off Meza after Cruz drew a walk, MacDonald was intentionally walked, and Meza delivered a fastball that Lopez hit 372 feet to right. "It's the best feeling when you come through for your teammates," Lopez said. It sounded completely genuine. Sacramento leads 2-1.

A footnote, and not a small one: Scoggins was injured while throwing the ball in the third inning and did not return. The Monks lose their best offensive player — .355 average, .429 on-base percentage in the postseason — for the remainder of the series. Pat LaGarde plays center field in his place and goes hitless in three at-bats in his debut. This is the kind of blow that a complete team absorbs, manages, and overcomes. Charlotte did not overcome it.

Game 4 — Monday, October 26th: Sacramento 13, Charlotte 7

Josh Hedberg lasted 1.2 innings. He faced fourteen batters, allowed six hits, walked three, gave up seven runs, and exited with a game score of seven — a number that calls to mind a school quiz rather than a World Series start. By the time the second inning ended, Sacramento led 7-1 and the only remaining question was how large the final margin would become.

The first inning required approximately fifteen minutes and four pitches from Hedberg to produce five Sacramento runs. Hernandez singled. Cruz walked. BigMac sent a 111-mile-per-hour line drive down the left field line for a two-run double that scored Hernandez and Cruz before the throw could find a glove. Alonzo doubled to right to score MacDonald. Torres walked. Baldelomar tripled to right-center on a ball that cleared two outfielders and scored both baserunners. Five runs, four hits, and Hedberg still had two innings of misery ahead of him.

Cruz tripled in the second to score another run before exiting with an injury suffered while running the bases — an injury whose severity will cast a shadow over this column's offseason reporting for as long as his recovery timeline remains unclear. Bill Marcos came in as a pinch runner and stayed in at shortstop, going 1-for-4 with two RBI in his expanded role for the remainder of the series. Lopez added a two-run homer in the fourth. Baldelomar singled home two more in the sixth. The game was decided before Charlotte managed a second hit.

Mario Espenoza threw 7.2 innings, allowed eight hits and two runs, walked nobody, and collected his third win of the postseason. His ERA for the series is 4.15. He has won every game he has started. These two facts will coexist in the record books forever, and this column will spend all winter trying to reconcile them.

Charlotte's ninth inning was noise: McCord pinch hit a grand slam off St. Clair to make the final 13-7, a scoreline that obscures how utterly one-sided this game was from the second pitch of the first inning. "Winning the game is always the first objective," Baldelomar said after being named Player of the Game. He was 3-for-4 with a triple, two singles, a walk, and three RBI. The first objective was achieved early and emphatically. Sacramento leads 3-1.

Game 5 — Tuesday, October 27th: Sacramento 12, Charlotte 3

Rubalcava versus Gaias on a 49-degree night in Charlotte with the wind blowing left to right at seven miles per hour and 19,218 fans in the seats and a World Series championship on the line for the Sacramento Prayers. What followed over the next three hours and thirty-four minutes was not, in its individual moments, a beautiful baseball game. It was something better: it was a complete team performing at its ceiling for the full duration of a clinching game in October, making the plays when the plays needed to be made, scoring when the situation required scoring, and never once suggesting that the outcome was in doubt.

Sacramento put up four in the first inning — Hernandez walked, Murguia singled him to second, Hernandez stole third and Murguia took second on the throw, BigMac singled both home, Torres doubled MacDonald home, Alonzo and Baldelomar each singled to drive in one more — and by the time Gaias was removed after 1.2 innings with a game score of eleven, the championship was a matter of arithmetic rather than competition. The Prayers added two more in the second on a Gaias wild pitch that scored Hernandez and a Torres single that plated Murguia. Rodriguez homered in the third for the seventh run of the game before Charlotte had scratched across a single run.

Ocasio's two-run triple in the fifth made it 8-2, which is as close as the Monks came to threatening, and even then it required the imagination to believe that scoring six more runs off Rubalcava in four innings was a realistic proposition. It was not. Rubalcava threw eight innings, gave up six hits, three runs, and six strikeouts. His final World Series line: two wins, eight innings pitched, a 2.27 ERA across five postseason starts and 39.2 total innings. Marcos hit a solo homer in the ninth because the ninth inning of a championship-clinching game is exactly the right time for a bench player who has been waiting all year for a moment like this.

The final score was 12-3. The Sacramento Prayers are the 1992 Fictional Baseball League World Series champions.

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WHAT THE SERIES REVEALED


Andretti: The Answer to Every Question This October Asked

The full postseason accounting: 4-0, 1.32 ERA, 27.1 innings, 21 hits, four earned runs, three walks, 21 strikeouts, a 0.88 WHIP. He did not lose. He did not blow a lead. He did not give a manager a reason to remove him before the seventh inning in any of his four starts. He pitched in three different series against three different lineups and produced the same result each time — sustained, clinical, unhittable excellence.

In September of this year, Andretti was a question mark on a rotation that had to answer questions. He answered all of them. If the FBL gives a World Series MVP to a pitcher on the winning side — and this column believes it should — the award belongs to Bernardo Andretti without a meaningful argument.

Espenoza: Three Wins and a 4.15 ERA

He won Games 3 and 7 of the ALCS. He won Game 4 of the World Series. His final postseason ERA is 4.15 over 26 innings. He allowed 32 hits. He gave up 12 earned runs. He went 3-0. These numbers belong to the same pitcher and the same season and this column does not know how to make them cohere.

What this column does know: Espenoza is 29 years old, has accumulated enormous innings across a long regular season, and has been pitching with mechanics or command that are not quite right since mid-October. The wins are real. The ERA is real. Both require explanation this offseason. If he enters 1993 healthy and with a full spring training behind him, he is the same pitcher who posted a 2.19 ERA during the regular season. If he does not, the 4.15 ERA is the more instructive number.

Rubalcava: The Ace Reasserts Himself

Two losses in the ALCS — one in fourteen innings that was genuinely hard luck and one in seven innings against a Boston lineup that simply hit him — and then a one-hit shutout in Game 1 of the World Series, followed by an eight-inning, three-run outing in the clincher. Rubalcava finished the World Series 2-0, finished the full postseason 3-1 with a 2.27 ERA across 39.2 innings and 25 strikeouts. He threw more postseason innings than any pitcher on either roster and never once conceded the role that belongs to him — the ace, the anchor, the reason this rotation is the best in baseball on its best days.

He started the postseason with a complete game shutout against Fort Worth. He ended it with eight innings of championship-clinching baseball against the best team in the National League. Everything in between was October, which is to say it was messy and imperfect and occasionally frightening and ultimately his.

BigMac: The Fourth Ring

Before the ALCS, this column quoted MacDonald saying that what he would really remember is a World Series win. He now has one — his fourth, following championships in 1989, 1990, and 1991. At four rings and counting — four of the championship variety, zero of the ornamental — there is no longer a conversation to be had about whether George MacDonald belongs among the best players of his generation. Three consecutive titles with Sacramento before this one, and now a fourth to close out a season in which he was the most consistent offensive presence on this roster from the first pitch of the Division Series to the final out of the World Series.

His final postseason line: .339 average, .403 on-base percentage, seven doubles, a triple, a home run, 15 RBI, 11 runs scored. He was the ALCS MVP. He drove in runs when the runs were needed, set a playoff record for doubles in an extra-inning game, and did it without the type of theatrical performance that earns headlines — just steady, reliable, professional baseball from a first baseman who has been doing this in October for four straight years.

Some players collect rings. BigMac earns them. There is no longer a conversation to be had about whether George MacDonald belongs among the best players of his generation. There is only the question of how many more Octobers he has left, and whether each one will end the same way this one did.

Lopez: The Emergence

Alejandro Lopez entered this postseason as Sacramento's center fielder and exited it as one of the most dangerous offensive players in this series. Four home runs. Fourteen RBI. A .317 average and a .567 slugging percentage across 15 games. His three-run homer in Game 3 of the World Series was the moment that removed all remaining doubt about Charlotte's ability to come back, and it came at the exact moment when Meza had walked Cruz and intentionally walked MacDonald to face him — a decision that deserves its own seat in the Charlotte offseason film session. Lopez is 25 years old, he is fast, he hits for power, and he has just produced the best postseason of his career.

Cruz: The Injury Cloud

Gil Cruz was injured running the bases in Game 4 and did not return for Game 5. His postseason line before the injury: .289 average, 1.026 OPS, three home runs including the Game 7 triple that changed the ALCS. What we know about the injury and its severity, as of press time, is less than what this column would like to know. Bill Marcos stepped in admirably — .375 postseason average, a home run in the ninth inning of the clincher — but Cruz is a different category of player, and the question of how he enters 1993 is the first significant question of this franchise's offseason.

Charlotte: What Happened

The Monks won 102 games. Their ace Gaias started Games 1 and 5 and allowed a combined thirteen runs in 9.1 innings. Hedberg gave up seven runs in 1.2 innings in Game 4 and finished with a postseason ERA of 11.42. Cowley was tagged for four home runs in two starts. The rotation that carried this team through 162 regular season games and two postseason rounds arrived at the World Series and could not hold Sacramento's lineup in check for a single game. Ben Smith will work on fundamentals this spring. He should also examine whether his starting pitching ran out of gas at exactly the wrong moment — or whether the Sacramento offense, which led the American League in stolen bases, was simply the right matchup at the worst possible time.

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THINGS THAT KEEP ME UP AT NIGHT


The Andretti Question, Reframed

Entering this postseason, the question was whether Andretti could be trusted. The postseason answered: yes, completely, and the question was always too small. The real question — the one that arrives with a World Series ring and a 1.32 ERA — is what Bernardo Andretti looks like in 1993, when hitters have an entire winter to study him, when the element of surprise that defined his return from September is no longer available, and when opposing managers prepare for him from Opening Day. He is thirty years old, he throws 207-plus innings a year, and he just won four playoff games. The question is not whether he can be trusted. The question is whether this was the beginning of the Andretti era or a peak from which the descent begins in April.

Larson's Future

Robby Larson went 17-8 with a 2.82 ERA in the regular season. He went 0-2 with a 5.79 ERA in two World Series starts. That gap — between the pitcher he is in the regular season and the pitcher he becomes against elite October lineups — is the most important roster question this franchise faces entering the winter. He is a legitimate number-three starter on a championship team. He may not be anything more than that. Whether Aces and his front office are satisfied with that answer, or whether they pursue something different, is the first significant offseason decision of the title defense.

The 13th Championship

This is Sacramento's thirteenth World Series title. The announcement carried it as a matter of fact — the way you might note that a restaurant has been open since 1987. What makes 1992 distinct is not the number but the journey: 106 regular season wins, a Division Series sweep, a seven-game ALCS survived on a sixth-inning comeback and a Gil Cruz triple, and then five games against the best team in the National League that never felt close after the first pitch of Game 1. The margin between this championship and elimination was thinner than the final record suggests. It always is. The thirteenth championship was earned the same way the first twelve were — by making the crucial plays in the moments that required them, by having the right people on the field at the right time, and by not blinking when October asked them to.

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AROUND THE LEAGUE


Charlotte's Felix Acevedo was injured while pitching in Game 5 and did not return. His availability for 1993 is unknown. For a team that already loses Scoggins to a Game 3 injury and watched its rotation post a combined ERA above 6.00 against Sacramento, another pitching casualty heading into the offseason compounds an already difficult winter calculus.

Ruiz finished the postseason at .311 with three home runs and eight RBI — good numbers for any hitter, quietly insufficient for the player who was supposed to be the decisive factor in this ALCS. He was held to one hit in Game 7 of the ALCS, struck out once in Game 1 of the World Series, and managed only a single in Game 5. The Prayers' pitching staff, taken as a unit, solved him when it counted most. That is a credit to Rubalcava and Andretti and Espenoza and the preparation that goes into facing a hitter of that caliber across multiple games in multiple series. It may also be the single most underreported story of this entire postseason.

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MAILBAG — The Hot Corner audience has questions, Claude Playball has answers.


From Constancia Villanueva-Reyes of Sacramento, a retired schoolteacher who writes that she has attended every home playoff game this postseason and sat in the same seat for all of them — section 114, row G, seat 11 — because she sat there when the Prayers won their ninth championship and has not moved since: "I have been watching Sacramento baseball for forty years. I have never seen a postseason pitcher like Andretti. Am I right to feel this way, or is this just how it feels when you are old?"

Constancia, the seat in section 114 has served you well and I would encourage you to renew your claim on it for 1993 immediately. You are right to feel this way, and it has nothing to do with age. Andretti threw 27.1 innings across four starts in the World Series and ALCS combined, allowed four earned runs total, and did not lose a game. To put that another way: in the most pressure-filled month of the baseball calendar, against the best teams the American League and National League could produce, Bernardo Andretti was touched for four earned runs in four starts and finished with a 1.32 ERA. There is no statistical adjustment, no context, no framing device that makes that number look like anything other than exceptional. Forty years of watching Sacramento baseball has earned you the right to call something special when you see it. You are seeing it.

From Reginald Okafor-Mensah of Elk Grove, a structural engineer who writes that he has spent the last week building a scale model of Monks Field out of toothpicks and modeling clay because he "needed something to do during the rain delays" and was dismayed to discover that Game 5 had no rain delays whatsoever: "My question is about the Charlotte rotation. How does a staff with a 2.57 ERA in the regular season allow Sacramento to score 34 runs in five World Series games? I am asking for professional reasons. I built the stadium and I feel invested."

Reginald, the structural integrity of your toothpick stadium is almost certainly more reliable than Charlotte's rotation in October, and I say that with respect for both. The answer to your question is not simple but it is honest: a 2.57 regular season ERA is a number produced over 162 games against an average sample of competition. The World Series is not an average sample. Sacramento led the American League in stolen bases, scored 780 regular season runs, and arrived at Monks Field with a lineup that had been tested in fourteen-inning openers, Game 7 collapses, and every scenario October could manufacture. Gaias was hit hard in both his starts. Hedberg gave up seven runs in 1.2 innings in Game 4. Cowley allowed home runs at a rate that suggests he and the Sacramento lineup were badly mismatched. The ERA was real. The October was also real. Sometimes they do not agree with each other, and when they do not, October wins. The toothpick stadium deserved a better series than the one played inside it.

From Marisol Fuentes-Ibarra of Sacramento, age twelve, who writes that her older brother told her George MacDonald was not actually very good and she would like this column to settle the argument once and for all: "My brother says MacDonald is a 'fine player but not a great one.' He says this even though MacDonald just won the ALCS MVP and hit .339 in the World Series. How do I win this argument?"

Marisol, your brother is presenting a position that was perhaps defensible at some point in the past. It is no longer defensible now. George "BigMac" MacDonald has four World Series rings — 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1992. He has been the most consistent offensive presence on this roster through four consecutive championships. He hit .339 in the World Series, .351 in the ALCS, drove in fifteen postseason runs, and was named ALCS MVP. Fine players have fine Octobers occasionally. BigMac has had four consecutive great ones. Tell your brother that the argument is over and the ring count is four.

The Sacramento Prayers are the 1992 FBL World Series champions. Thirteen titles. A hundred and six regular season wins. Seven ALCS games and a fifth-inning comeback and a Gil Cruz triple and a Bernardo Andretti who pitched like October had been waiting for him specifically.

George "BigMac" MacDonald has four rings.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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THE HOT CORNER SPECIAL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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"I Never Had a Five-Year Plan. I Barely Had a Tuesday Plan."
A Post-Championship Conversation with Sacramento Prayers GM and Manager Jimmy Aces

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Jimmy Aces met me at a diner three blocks from Cathedral Stadium on a Thursday morning in early November, eleven days after the Sacramento Prayers won their thirteenth World Series championship. He arrived seven minutes early, ordered black coffee and scrambled eggs before I sat down, and spent the first four minutes of our conversation explaining why the diner's coffee was better than the coffee in his office, which he described as tasting like "someone boiled a baseball glove and strained it through a gym sock." He is sixty-one years old. He has been the General Manager and Manager of the Sacramento Prayers since 1969 — twenty-three years, thirteen championships, and what he estimates is approximately forty thousand cups of bad office coffee. He uses his hands when he talks, which is often, and he eyes my recording device with the mild suspicion of a man who has been misquoted before and has not entirely forgiven journalism for it.

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Hot Corner: You showed up early.

I always show up early. If you're on time you're late. My father told me that when I was eight years old and I've never been able to shake it. Drove my wife crazy when we were dating. She'd say dinner is at seven and I'd be standing outside the restaurant at six-forty-five in the November cold wondering if the hostess thought I was casing the place.

HC: Let's start at the beginning — or close to it. You have been the GM and Manager of this organization since 1969. Twenty-three years. How does a man hold both jobs for that long without losing his mind?

Who says I haven't?

No — look, when I took this job in 1969 the arrangement was unusual even then. Most organizations separate the baseball operations from the field management for good reasons. You get cleaner accountability, clearer lines of responsibility, less opportunity for one man's blind spots to infect the whole enterprise. Those are legitimate arguments and I do not dismiss them.

What I will say is that doing both jobs gave me something I don't think I could have gotten any other way, which is a complete picture of what this organization needed at every moment. When I am sitting in the dugout and I know a player is not performing and I need to make a change, I don't have to go upstairs and convince someone else to see what I'm seeing. I already know what's in the system, I already know what's available, and I can make the decision without the game waiting for a phone call. Whether that's efficient or whether it's just the management style of a man who has trouble delegating — my wife would tell you it's the second one — I genuinely cannot say.

HC: Thirteen championships in twenty-three years. Does that number feel real to you?

Some mornings it does and some mornings it doesn't. The early ones — the championships from the seventies — those feel like they happened to a different person. I was younger, the game was different, the organization was different. I had hair. Not a lot, but some. When I think about those years I think about the players and the moments rather than the number itself. The number is something other people remind me of. I don't walk around thinking about thirteen. I walk around thinking about what we need to do to be ready for April.

HC: This particular championship — number thirteen — came at the end of an unusually dramatic postseason. A seven-game ALCS, a fifth-inning comeback in Game 7. Does the difficulty of getting here make it more meaningful?

Every one of them feels different. The ones from the early years felt like discovery — like we were building something and didn't fully know what it was yet. The middle years felt like confirmation. The recent ones — 1989, 1990, 1991, now 1992 — those feel like stewardship. Like the job is to protect what has been built as much as it is to add to it.

This one was the hardest of the recent four because we came genuinely close to losing in the ALCS. We were three games to two down, on the road, facing a Boston team with Rogelio Ruiz, and I sat in that dugout in Game 6 and thought — not for the first time this October — that this might be the year it ends. And then the fifth inning of Game 7 happened, and Gil Cruz hit that ball, and I remembered that baseball is not a sport that rewards the team that deserves to win. It rewards the team that makes the play when the play needs to be made.

HC: You've said that before in various forms over the years. Is that a philosophy you arrived at early, or did it take all twenty-three years to fully believe it?

It took losing. You don't really believe things about baseball until losing has taught you to believe them. In the years we didn't win — and there were years we didn't win, even if the recent run has made people forget that — I learned more about this game than I did in any of the championship years. Losing strips away everything comfortable and shows you exactly what you're missing. Winning can hide a lot of problems. A playoff loss in October finds every one of them, usually at the worst possible moment.

HC: Let's talk about the 1992 rotation, because it defined this postseason. Rubalcava, Andretti, Espenoza, Larson — four starters, four very different stories. Walk me through how you were thinking about each of them entering October.

Rubalcava is my horse. He has been my horse since the day I wrote his name on the lineup card for the first time. When Jordan is on top of his game he is the best pitcher in baseball, full stop, no conversation. But he had a difficult stretch in September and I'd be lying if I told you I wasn't monitoring him closely — and I was monitoring him as both the GM who built the roster and the manager who has to use it, which is a peculiar double vision that I have gotten used to over the years. The thing about Jordan is he never tells you he's struggling. You have to watch for it in the way he locates his cutter, the way his fastball and cutter work together. When those things coordinate, he is unhittable. I watched his last three regular season starts and thought: he's close. And then he threw a complete game shutout in Game 1 of the Division Series and I thought: he's there.

Andretti. Bernardo Andretti. I have been doing this job for twenty-three years and I have had conversations with pitchers at every stage of a career — confident ones, struggling ones, finished ones who didn't know they were finished yet. The two conversations I had with Andretti in September after those Seattle starts were among the more unusual ones. I said direct things about what I was seeing and he sat there and listened and said "you're right, I know, I'm working on it." No excuses. No defensiveness. Just — I know. That kind of self-awareness in a pitcher is rarer than a 102-mile-per-hour fastball and I have been around long enough to recognize it when I see it.

Espenoza still keeps me up at night, and not in a bad way — more in a how-did-that-happen way. His stuff was not sharp in October. His WHIP, his hit rate — not the numbers we saw during the regular season. And he went three and zero. Mario has a quality I have only seen in a handful of pitchers in twenty-three years, which is that he refuses to let a bad inning become a bad game. He gives up three runs and he goes back to the dugout and he sits down and he eats a sunflower seed and he looks like a man who is mildly inconvenienced by traffic. By the time he gets back to the mound he has completely moved on. I have known pitchers who carry every bad at-bat for three innings. Mario Espenoza doesn't carry anything.

Larson. Robby is a legitimate number-three starter who pitched like a number-five in October. That is an offseason conversation I will be having with myself, which is the unusual privilege and burden of doing both jobs.

HC: Speaking of offseason conversations — Gil Cruz's injury. What can you tell us?

Not much that I know for certain, and I won't speculate beyond what I know. What I can say is that Gil is a young man with tremendous ability and tremendous character, and whatever the recovery timeline looks like, Sacramento will be patient with him. He is not a player you rush back. In twenty-three years I have learned that the players you rush back are rarely as ready as you need them to be, and the cost of being wrong is always higher than the cost of being patient.

HC: Let's take some questions from the Hot Corner audience. These came in after we announced the interview.

Let's hear them. I hope they're not all about the coffee.

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From Teodoro Bautista-Clemente of Sacramento, who writes that he has named his dog after you and wants to know if you are flattered or concerned:

"My question is: across twenty-three years and thirteen championships, what is the hardest decision you've made that nobody knew about at the time?"

Teodoro, I am both flattered and mildly concerned, and I would like to know the dog's full name before I commit to either position.

The hardest decision nobody knew about. In twenty-three years there have been many, but the category that weighs on me most is the decision to move on from a veteran player before he was ready to be moved on from. I have had to make that call more times than I would like, and it never becomes easier regardless of how many times you've done it. The player knows his numbers are declining. You know his numbers are declining. And yet the moment you act on that knowledge you are doing something that affects a man's livelihood and his identity, because for players of a certain age this game is not just what they do — it is who they are. I have tried to handle those moments with honesty and respect, and I have not always succeeded, and the ones where I fell short are the ones I think about when I can't sleep.

That is as specific as I am going to be. Some decisions are not mine alone to make public.

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From Perpetua Nwosu-Adeyemi of West Sacramento, who writes that she watches every game from a recliner she has not moved since a championship in the 1970s and wants to know if superstition plays any role in how you manage:

"Do you have any rituals or superstitions? And if so, which one is the most embarrassing?"

Perpetua, do not move that recliner. Whatever decade it's been anchored to the floor, it is working.

Superstitions. Yes. I have accumulated them the way a man accumulates things over twenty-three years — gradually, without fully noticing, until one day you look around and there's too many to explain. The one I will share publicly is that I wear the same undershirt for every playoff game until we lose. It is a gray undershirt with a small bleach stain near the left shoulder. My wife has attempted to throw it away more times than I can count. I have retrieved it every time. After one of the earlier championships she held it up in the kitchen and said "this undershirt has more rings than most managers" and I said "you're not wrong, put it down carefully." We have an understanding now.

The most embarrassing one I will not share because my children read this column and I have maintained a reputation across two decades that I am not prepared to sacrifice for journalism.

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From Desmond Achterberg of Sacramento — a structural engineer who submitted a detailed aerodynamic analysis of Gil Cruz's Game 7 triple to this column during the ALCS — who asks:

"From a purely tactical standpoint, across your entire tenure, what is the one in-game decision you would most like to have back?"

Desmond, I remember your letter about the seven percent wind contribution. My pitching coach said "that's either very smart or completely insane" and I said "probably both."

One decision across twenty-three years. That is a question that assumes I have ranked them, which I have not, but there is one from this postseason that is fresh enough to answer honestly. Leaving Prieto in to face Hernandez in the eighth inning of Game 5 of the ALCS. I had a two-run lead, Prieto had just gotten two outs on fly balls, and the numbers said he could handle one more batter. The situation said be conservative. I chose the numbers and Hernandez hit it four hundred feet.

The broader lesson — which twenty-three years has been teaching me with varying degrees of subtlety — is that sometimes trusting your instincts means ignoring a number you like because the moment is telling you something the number cannot see. I did not listen. I know better. I should have done better. Lesson noted, again, for the forty-seventh time.

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From Aurelio Fontaine-Guerrero of Sacramento, age nine, who previously wrote to this column to ask if the Prayers would win the World Series and received a cautious answer that earned him full credit from his teacher:

"Mr. Aces, my dad says you are the greatest manager in baseball history. Is he right?"

Aurelio, your father is a man of outstanding judgment and I hope he knows it.

As for whether he is right — in twenty-three years I have learned to be suspicious of superlatives, including the ones applied to me. What I will say is that I have been fortunate to spend twenty-three years in an organization that allowed me to build something over time, to learn from the years that did not go well, and to be surrounded by players who were better than the manager who was writing their names on the lineup card. Jordan Rubalcava has made me look smart. BigMac MacDonald has made me look smart. Andretti this October made me look like a genius, and all I did was write his name down and get out of the way.

The best managers in baseball are the ones who know when to get out of the way. That is my complete theory of management and after twenty-three years I have not found a reason to revise it.

Tell your teacher I said full credit was the right call. Both times.

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HC: Let's talk about roster construction. As GM you built this team. As Manager you deploy it. Does wearing both hats create tensions, or does it create clarity?

Both, depending on the day. The tension comes when I have built something as GM that I then have to live with as Manager — when I've made a transaction that seemed right from the front office and then I'm standing in the dugout wishing I had someone different in the sixth inning of a playoff game. The clarity comes from knowing exactly why every player on my roster is there, what I saw in them, what I believe they can do. There are no surprises for me in my own clubhouse, which is either an advantage or a sign that I have been doing this too long to be surprised by anything.

The Cruz situation this offseason is a version of that challenge. As GM, I need to address the possibility that his recovery extends into the season. As Manager, I know exactly what I lose if it does, because I watched him play fourteen postseason games. As both, I need to find a solution that doesn't compromise what this roster already is while filling a gap that Gil Cruz is not a gap — Gil Cruz is a cornerstone, and you don't replace cornerstones, you protect them.

HC: Carlos Orozco was on the IL for the entire postseason. What does his future look like?

Carlos is a Sacramento Prayer and he will be treated with the respect that designation demands. His back has been a concern and the medical staff will determine what 1993 looks like. What I will say as both his GM and his manager is that this organization does not discard players who have given what Carlos has given. He has been a professional and a teammate and a good man in this clubhouse. You don't just walk away from that. You work through it together.

HC: The bench contributions this postseason were significant — Perez, Marcos, Iniguez all delivered in important moments. As GM, how do you build a bench? And as Manager, how do you keep those players ready when they might go ten days without a meaningful at-bat?

As GM: you look for players who accept their role without resenting it. That is rarer than it sounds. Players who are good enough to believe they should be starting, who are sitting on a bench instead, and who make peace with that situation without letting the resentment affect their preparation — those players are genuinely difficult to find and genuinely valuable when you find them. Marcos, Perez, Iniguez — these are men who compete in batting practice the way other players compete in playoff games. That is not an accident of personality. It is a product of the culture this organization has built over twenty-three years, and I am prouder of that culture than I am of most things I could name.

As Manager: you use them. You find situations in the regular season where you can give them meaningful at-bats, real moments, so that when October arrives they are not playing their first important game of the year. A player who has not faced pressure since April is not ready for the ninth inning of a playoff game. That is not a complicated idea, but it requires discipline across a 162-game season to execute.

HC: You've been at this for twenty-three years. Is there a type of player you find most difficult to manage?

The talented ones who know they're talented and have decided that knowledge excuses them from the details. I have managed players who could throw a baseball through a wall and couldn't tell you what the batter they just faced did against left-handed pitching in day games. Talent covers a lot of mistakes in April. October finds every one of them.

The player I find easiest to manage — and I have managed hundreds of them across twenty-three years — is the one who understands that this game humbles you eventually, no matter how good you are, and prepares accordingly. BigMac MacDonald is the best example I have worked with of a player who never let four championships convince him he was finished learning. Every spring he shows up and he works like a man with something to prove. After thirteen championships together, I still find that remarkable.

HC: Thirteen championships together. Let's talk about that relationship. BigMac has been with this organization for most of your tenure. What does that continuity mean to you?

It means everything, and I don't say that lightly. When you have been doing this as long as I have, you understand how rare it is for a player and an organization to grow together across that kind of timespan. Most players move. Most organizations change. The fact that BigMac has been here, has won here, has built his legacy here — that is a reflection of something this organization got right that I am genuinely not sure we could replicate by design. Some of it was good decisions. Some of it was good fortune. Some of it was that George MacDonald is the kind of man who values what Sacramento gave him as much as we value what he has given us.

Four rings in the recent run. Whatever the total count of his rings in Sacramento — and his collection is his to catalog, not mine to announce — the man has earned every one of them in this uniform, and that matters to me more than any number.

HC: Let's shift gears. You've been married for — how long now?

Thirty-three years. Linda. She married me when I was eight years into this job and already developing the habits that twenty-three years have since fully calcified. She is a saint by any measurable standard and a remarkably patient woman by any human one. When we got married she said "as long as you come home in the winter." For the first several years that was a reasonable arrangement. Then the offseasons started shrinking — the meetings, the scouting, the calls, the roster decisions — and "coming home in the winter" started meaning "coming home to sleep and then sitting at the kitchen table on the phone with someone in another time zone about a relief pitcher."

She has adapted with more grace than I deserved.

HC: Does she watch the games?

Every one of them, for thirty-three years. Home and away. She has opinions about the bullpen that are occasionally better than mine and I will deny saying that in print. She does not like when I leave Prieto in too long. She was right about the Game 5 ALCS situation before I was. I mentioned this to my pitching coach and he said "she should have your job" and I said "she would be better at the GM half, at minimum."

HC: Children?

Three. Two daughters and a son. My oldest daughter is a doctor in Portland, which makes her the first person in the Aces family in three generations to do something genuinely useful with her hands. My son works in sports marketing, which means he talks about baseball for a living without having to manage anyone, which I consider the ideal arrangement. My youngest daughter is seventeen and has recently decided that baseball is, in her words, "kind of boring actually," which I find both hurtful and clarifying.

She came to Game 1 of the World Series, watched six innings, pronounced it "pretty good actually," and asked if we could get food. We got food. We won. She is on my roster indefinitely.

HC: Twenty-three years. Thirteen championships. At some point the retirement question has to be asked.

It does, and I appreciate that you waited until the end to ask it. Most people lead with it as though they're expecting me to announce something over scrambled eggs.

There is a version of Jimmy Aces that retires. He lives somewhere with a porch and drinks coffee that doesn't taste like a boiled glove and watches baseball from a chair instead of a dugout. Linda would very much like to meet him. He sounds like a reasonable man who has figured out what the important things are.

Whether that man is me in the near future is a question I genuinely cannot answer, and not because I'm being evasive. I don't feel finished. This team does not feel finished. The roster has questions that need answers — Cruz, Orozco, Larson, the entire pitching depth picture for 1993 — and I am the person who built those questions and I feel an obligation to answer them. You don't build something for twenty-three years and hand it to someone else before you've addressed the problems you created.

When it feels finished I will know. I think Linda will know before I do. She will tell me in the way she tells me things — not loudly, not urgently, but in a tone that indicates the decision has already been made and I am simply being given the opportunity to arrive at it myself.

That is, incidentally, also how she ended my coffee argument this morning.

HC: Last question. If you could say one thing to the Sacramento fanbase — the people who haven't moved their recliners since championships in the seventies, the people who name their dogs after you, the nine-year-olds who write letters and ask for full credit — what would it be?

I would say: you are the reason twenty-three years feels like not enough.

I have managed in this city through winning and through the years that didn't go as planned, and this fanbase has never once made me feel like losing was unforgivable. They understand that baseball is a long, difficult, humbling endeavor that rewards patience and punishes panic. They have been patient for twenty-three years and they have celebrated with us across thirteen championships, and the relationship between this organization and this city is the thing I am most proud of — more than the wins, more than the records, more than anything you could put in a trophy case.

Also — and I mean this — do not move the recliners. Whatever you are doing, it is working. After twenty-three years I have enough variables to manage already. I would like to keep at least this one constant.

______________________________

Jimmy Aces finished his scrambled eggs, refilled his coffee twice, and left a tip that was, his waitress informed me, significantly larger than necessary. He was out the door and into the November morning four minutes after the interview ended. He had somewhere to be. After twenty-three years, he always does.

______________________________

The Hot Corner thanks Jimmy Aces for his time, his honesty, and his patience with a recorder he never fully trusted.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________

Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

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Old 03-06-2026, 01:46 AM   #244
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

November 22, 1992

______________________________

PRAYERS HAUL IN HARDWARE AS OFFSEASON TAKES SHAPE

The confetti from the World Series parade has barely been swept from the streets of Sacramento, but the Prayers organization has already had plenty more to celebrate. With the awards circuit now largely wrapped up, the defending champions have collected an impressive bounty of postseason hardware — a fitting crown atop a historic 13th championship season.

RUBALCAVA UNANIMOUS AGAIN

The headline belongs, as it so often does, to Jordan "Pluto" Rubalcava. The 30-year-old Venezuelan right-hander claimed his fourth career AL Cy Young Award — and his third consecutive — earning all 24 first-place votes from the writers. It was, put simply, the kind of season that leaves voters with no difficult decisions to make.

Rubalcava led the American League in wins (25), innings pitched (281.1), and strikeouts (203), while posting a 2.50 ERA and a razor-thin 1.00 WHIP. He threw eight complete games and four shutouts, and his 78.4% quality start rate was the best in the league. Opponents hit just .221 against him all season. In the postseason, he went 3-1 with a 2.27 ERA across five starts, including the clinching Game 5 of the World Series.

Eddie Marin of the Boston Messiahs finished a distant second, with Sacramento's own Mario Espenoza taking third — a remarkable showing for a franchise that placed three pitchers in the top three of Cy Young voting.

For Rubalcava, under contract through 1994 at $800,000, the bigger question looming on the horizon is what happens when that deal expires. At 30, and with a career 186-66 record and 71.0 WAR, he remains the finest pitcher in the game. The Prayers would do well to begin thinking about the next contract conversation sooner rather than later.

RODRIGUEZ EARNS GOLD AT THE HOT CORNER

For fans who have watched Jose "J-Rod" Rodriguez develop since he arrived from the Dominican Republic as a teenager, this one felt inevitable — and yet no less sweet. The 22-year-old third baseman claimed the AL Gold Glove at his position, the first major individual award of what many expect will be a long and decorated career.

Rodriguez's defensive numbers in 1992 were nothing short of elite: a 94 position rating, +7.3 range runs, and a fielding efficiency well above average across 105 games at the hot corner. His arm grades out at 86, his range at 88 — the kind of tools that make scouts reach for superlatives.

Offensively, Rodriguez's 1992 campaign (.236/12 HR/53 RBI in 108 games) reflected the growing pains of a young hitter still finding his footing at the major league level. But his Triple-A work this year told a more tantalizing story — .255 with 9 home runs in just 29 games, a 152 wRC+, and power potential ratings that remain among the highest in the FBL. His contract expired at season's end, and the Prayers front office will need to address his status promptly. Letting a Gold Glove third baseman with 124-rated power potential reach free agency would be an organizational mistake of the first order.

CRUZ TAKES SILVER SLUGGER AT SECOND

Gil "Mongoose" Cruz capped a quietly excellent 1992 season by claiming the AL Silver Slugger Award at second base, edging out the competition with a .269/.368/.473 line, 22 home runs, 85 RBIs, 41 stolen bases, and a 126 wRC+ across 155 games.

Cruz's season was somewhat overshadowed by his own .346 campaign in 1991, and the raw numbers admittedly don't jump off the page at first glance. But the full picture tells the story of one of the most complete second basemen in the league: he ranked third in the AL in runs scored (106) and third in walks (89), led the league in intentional bases on balls (19), and posted a 5.4 WAR that placed him among the top position players in the American League. He was also outstanding in October, slashing .289/.404/.622 across 14 postseason games with three home runs and a pair of stolen bases.

The Mongoose is locked up through 1996 at $130,000 per season — one of the great bargains in professional baseball — and at 24 years old with ratings that have fully matured, he is squarely entering the prime years of what should be a Hall of Fame caliber career.

MUSCO WINS FIFTH SILVER SLUGGER DESPITE INJURY

Perhaps no award this offseason carries more asterisks — or more respect — than Edwin "Mustang" Musco's fifth Silver Slugger Award at shortstop. The 32-year-old Venezuelan missed the final month of the regular season and the entire postseason after being diagnosed with a torn abdominal muscle on August 23rd, yet his 108-game performance was so dominant that the voters couldn't overlook it.

Musco hit .317/.366/.584 with 26 home runs and 98 RBIs before the injury ended his year. His 162 wRC+ was the highest mark of any position player on the Prayers roster and would have made him a legitimate AL MVP candidate had he stayed healthy. He also finished fifth in actual MVP voting despite missing 50 games, a testament to just how overwhelming his production was when he was on the field.

The Mustang is under contract through 1996 at $880,000 and was activated from the 60-day IL at the end of October. At 32, with a body that has accumulated significant mileage over 15 professional seasons, his health heading into 1993 will be one of the most closely watched storylines of spring training.

It is worth noting that three Sacramento Prayers — Musco, Rubalcava, and Cruz — all received votes in AL MVP balloting won by Boston's Manuel Hernandez. The Prayers placed more players in the top 10 of MVP voting than any other team in the American League.

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AROUND THE LEAGUE


The Prayers haven't been the only organization making news since the final out. The broader league has been buzzing with activity.

Manager Firings: Three skippers were shown the door shortly after the season ended. Mario Montenegro was dismissed by the Detroit Preachers, with GM Morrison citing "lackluster results" in a notably non-committal press conference. The Phoenix Crucifixes parted ways with Marcos Sanchez for "failure to produce a winning team," while Long Beach's Frank Carrillo was let go by the Diablos. Carrillo, in typical fashion, faced reporters with characteristic candor.

Notable Trades: The offseason trade market has already generated significant movement. Las Vegas sent a package of five prospects to San Jose in exchange for veteran right-hander Adam Bruno, 32. The Blessed's GM acknowledged the sides had been close to a larger blockbuster before settling on a more modest swap, and hinted more transactions between the two clubs could be coming. Elsewhere, Salt Lake City dealt promising young right-hander Emile Minghetti to Phoenix; Los Angeles acquired left-hander Jose Caballero from the Demons; and Baltimore shipped a bundle of prospects to El Paso for veteran second baseman Danny Yanez and cash.

Free Agency Opens: The market officially opened with a notable crop of players filing paperwork. The most prominent name is Boston right fielder Manuel Hernandez, the newly crowned AL MVP, who hits the open market at 29. Also filing are closer Sergio Velazquez, starters Radovan Ralevic and Jonathan Perdieu, third baseman Josh Fletcher, and catcher Gustavo Reyes, among others. The biggest rumored signing involves the Demons reportedly closing in on free agent starter Eduardo Quinones, with an offer in the neighborhood of $2,250,000 on the table.

Sacramento Housekeeping: The Prayers have been methodical in their own offseason administration. Edwin Musco and Carlos Orozco were activated from the injured list. Contract extensions were signed with second baseman Bill Marcos (5 years, $840,000), reliever Mike Scott (1 year, $60,000), and center fielder Alejandro Lopez (1 year, $124,000). Options were exercised on Fernando Salazar and Alex Vieyra. And following the departure of pitching coach Jordan Gonzalez, the organization wasted no time in naming Mike Halley as his replacement on a three-year deal.

Hall of Fame: Voting is now open for the 1992 Hall of Fame class. No results have been announced yet, though the Prayers' all-time greats figure to factor prominently in the deliberations given the franchise's sustained excellence.

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THE MAN BEHIND IT ALL


Lost somewhat in the celebration of individual awards is the towering achievement of the man in the dugout. Jimmy Aces now owns 13 World Series championships as a manager — and with the 1992 title, he has claimed six consecutive, a streak that began in 1987 and shows no sign of stopping. Six straight. Half a dozen. In a league where simply reaching the postseason is considered a success, Aces has turned sustained, dynasty-level dominance into something approaching routine.

No manager in the history of the Fictional Baseball League has done what Aces has done. The debate about where he ranks among the all-time greats grows less interesting with each passing October, because there is increasingly little debate to be had. He is the standard by which all others are measured.

The question of his retirement, raised openly in a recent Hot Corner interview, hangs over the organization like a gathering storm. Aces was characteristically measured on the subject, offering no timetable and no guarantees. What he has offered, year after year, is results. For Sacramento fans, the hope is simply that there are more years — and more titles — still to come.

______________________________

The Sacramento Prayers enter this offseason as defending champions for a reason — a deep, well-constructed roster guided by experienced hands. The awards haul simply confirms what the standings have already made clear. The only meaningful question now is how quickly the front office can address the Jose Rodriguez contract situation and get the young third baseman locked up for the long term.

Watch this space.

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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Old 03-07-2026, 08:58 PM   #245
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THE HOT CORNER
Your Home for Sacramento Prayers Baseball

March 31, 1993

By Claude Playball

______________________________

THE PRAYERS ARE BACK: A DYNASTY PREPARES TO DEFEND ITS THRONE

Tomorrow morning, when the Sacramento Prayers board their bus for Fort Worth and the first pitch of the 1993 season is thrown at 6:05 PM Mountain Time, it will mark the beginning of what this organization hopes will be yet another chapter in the most extraordinary dynasty the Fictional Baseball League has ever seen. Six consecutive World Series championships. Thirteen overall. A payroll that leads the league by nearly three million dollars. A manager whose name belongs alongside the immortals of the game.

No team in professional baseball enters this season under more scrutiny, more expectation, or more pressure than the Sacramento Prayers. And if the last six years have taught us anything, it is that Jimmy Aces and his players have never once flinched under the weight of it.

Welcome back, everybody. Baseball is here.

______________________________

THE OFFSEASON IN REVIEW

It was a busy winter in Sacramento, and the front office wasted no time reshaping the roster for another championship run.

The headline move came on December 10th, when the Prayers and the Detroit Preachers completed a significant trade. Sacramento sent catcher Alex Vieyra, right-hander Joshua Keller, first baseman Randy O'Connell, outfielder Matt Johnson, left-hander Luis Reyes, and four draft picks to Detroit in exchange for minor league third baseman Victor Flores, three draft picks — including a first-rounder — and $60,000 in cash. The deal was widely interpreted as Sacramento clearing roster depth while acquiring a promising young corner infield prospect and replenishing their draft capital. Flores, 26, arrived from Venezuela and showed intriguing pop in spring training, slashing .217/.280/.609 in limited action.

On February 24th, just one day before spring training opened, the Prayers completed a second trade — this one with the Boston Messiahs. Sacramento sent 19-year-old first base prospect Ruggiero Cossiga and four draft picks to Boston in exchange for 25-year-old left-hander Francisco Lopez and three picks, including two second-round selections. Lopez looked sharp in Cactus League action, posting a 0.93 ERA in 9.2 innings with a tidy 1.14 WHIP, and figures to compete for a bullpen role.

The Prayers were also active on the international market, signing switch-hitting center fielder Soshu "Rambo" Shinohara out of Japan in January and Korean shortstop Sung-ho Shin shortly thereafter. Both signed minor league deals and represent the kind of long-term organizational depth investment that has kept this franchise competitive year after year. Closer to the big league roster, the club signed second baseman Juan Montalvo and starting pitcher Moises Bautista on minor league contracts with major league options — insurance pieces that add organizational flexibility heading into the season.

The contracts of Danny St. Clair, Mario Espenoza, Javier Gutierrez, Steve Dodge, and Jose Rodriguez were all renewed through the automatic renewal process, while Joe Arceneaux departed as a free agent. Bill Marcos, Mike Scott, Alejandro Lopez, and pitching coach Mike Halley were all locked up on extensions before the calendar turned. The front office, in short, did its homework.

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SPRING TRAINING: WHAT WE LEARNED

Thirty spring training games later, the picture is clearer — though not without its complications.

The offense has questions at the top. Gil Cruz and Edwin Musco, the twin engines of this lineup, were both quiet in the Cactus League. Cruz hit just .172 in 58 at-bats with no home runs and an OPS of .422, while Musco — still working his way back from the torn abdominal muscle that ended his 1992 season in August — batted .235 with a .728 OPS. Neither number should cause alarm. Both players have significant track records, and spring training performance is, at best, a loose indicator of regular season production. Cruz, who is predicted to hit .304 with 27 home runs and 101 RBIs in the preseason projections, is expected to bounce back the moment the games count. Musco, now 33, enters the year with more question marks around his health than at any previous point in his Sacramento career, but when he is right, there is no more dangerous hitter in the American League. His spring, while modest, showed no signs of physical limitation.

The pleasant surprises were plentiful. David Perez led all Prayers hitters in spring training with a 1.020 OPS, hitting .377 with three home runs and showing the kind of patient, power-oriented approach that made him worth acquiring. George MacDonald was right behind him at 1.117 OPS, slugging five home runs in 52 at-bats and reminding everyone why he remains one of the more underrated first basemen in the league. Alex Torres, the veteran backup second baseman, hit a scalding .370 with a .937 OPS — which should earn him a prominent role off the bench.

Rafael Baldelomar continued to make a quiet case for himself in left field, hitting .291 with two home runs and four stolen bases. And Alejandro Lopez, projected as one of the top center fielders in the AL West, had a modest spring (.177 OPS .497) but the projections have him down for 31 home runs, 66 RBIs, and 41 stolen bases — numbers that would represent a significant breakout for the 24-year-old Dominican.

On the mound, the rotation looks formidable. Jordan Rubalcava was Rubalcava — even in a spring training setting, he posted a 2.95 ERA across five starts with 17 strikeouts and a 0.76 WHIP, allowing just eight hits in 18.1 innings. Bernardo Andretti was similarly sharp at 1.62 ERA. Fernando Salazar, the ageless 42-year-old Nicaraguan, looked serviceable at 3.29 ERA in four starts. Robby Larson had a rough spring at 4.76 ERA, but he is a known commodity with a track record that far outpaces any five-game sample.

The concern, if there is one, is Danny St. Clair. The 29-year-old left-hander posted a 5.00 ERA in five spring starts with a 1.44 WHIP and gave up ten earned runs in 18 innings. He will need to find his footing quickly once the season begins.

In the bullpen, Luis Prieto was excellent — 1.50 ERA, 10 strikeouts in 6 innings, a 0.50 WHIP. If he is healthy and locked in, the Prayers have one of the better closers in the American League. Steve Dodge (1.12 ERA), Vic Cruz (0.73 ERA), and Bobby Rico (0.00 ERA) all had strong springs and will compete for high-leverage roles.

______________________________

THE PLAYERS TO WATCH

Jordan Rubalcava enters 1993 as arguably the best pitcher on the planet. His AL Cy Young Award last year — his fourth, and third consecutive — was unanimous for the second straight season. The projections have him at 24-6 with a 2.21 ERA and 219 strikeouts in 264.2 innings. At 30, he is in the prime of his career, and barring injury, there is no reason to believe 1993 will look any different from 1992, 1991, or 1990. He opens the season on the road at Fort Worth, and opposing lineups should be forewarned.

Gil Cruz is 25 years old and entering what many scouts believe will be the most productive stretch of his career. His current ratings have fully matured, his contract runs through 1996 at a figure that should embarrass every other GM in the league, and his postseason track record — two World Series MVP awards, a .294/.408/.552 career October slash line — speaks for itself. A .304 average with 27 home runs and 18 stolen bases is what the projections forecast. If the Mongoose finds his stroke quickly after a quiet spring, the American League will be reminded why he is one of the game's true stars.

Edwin Musco is the most compelling storyline on this roster. At 33, coming off a torn abdominal muscle, with a career that has accumulated 15 professional seasons of wear — the question is no longer whether the Mustang is one of the greatest shortstops in FBL history. That debate is settled. The question is how much he has left, and whether his body will let him play the kind of baseball Sacramento needs from him. A full, healthy season would be transformative. Even a limited but productive one — 120 games, a .290 average, 20 home runs — would be enormously valuable. The Prayers need him.

Jose Rodriguez is 23 years old, a Gold Glove third baseman, and the most talented young player on this roster. His spring training was quiet (.208/.263/.283 in 53 at-bats), mirroring a 1992 regular season that was similarly modest offensively. But his Triple-A numbers last year told a different story, and the power potential in his swing remains among the highest the scouts have ever charted. This is the year many observers expect Rodriguez to take a significant step forward at the plate. If he does, the Prayers' already formidable lineup becomes something genuinely special.

Carlos Orozco and Alex Bonilla both appear on the BNN Top 100 Prospects list — Orozco at number six, Bonilla at number nine. Both are on the spring training roster. Neither is expected to open the season in Sacramento, but their presence on that list speaks to the organizational depth that has allowed this franchise to sustain excellence across more than a decade.

______________________________

THE FINANCIAL PICTURE

The Sacramento Prayers enter 1993 with the highest payroll in professional baseball at $9,271,600 — nearly $2.5 million more than second-place Columbus Heaven. Their budget of $9.5 million is likewise the largest in the league, and the projected operating deficit of roughly $1.2 million reflects a deliberate organizational philosophy: spend what is necessary to win, absorb the financial consequences, repeat.

The revenue figures justify the approach. Last season, Sacramento drew 1,768,840 fans — an average of 21,838 per game, the best in the FBL by a comfortable margin. Total revenue of over $11 million led the league. Season ticket revenue of $2,962,304 ranks first. Media revenue of $972,000 ties Detroit for first. The Prayers are, in every measurable financial sense, the premier franchise in the game — on the field and off it.

Seven Sacramento players rank among the top 25 earners in the FBL: Musco (5th, $880K), Larson (7th, $812K), Rubalcava (9th, $800K), Andretti (13th, $752K), Prieto (19th, $656K), and Salazar (25th, $604K). This is what a dynasty looks like from the inside — experienced, expensive, and unapologetically assembled to win right now.

______________________________

AROUND THE LEAGUE

A few notable offseason developments worth tracking as the season begins:

The Albuquerque Damned made the biggest splash of the free agent period, signing starter Eduardo Quinones to a five-year, $2.6 million deal. Quinones is projected for 15 wins and a 3.69 ERA in 256 innings — solid if unspectacular, but the kind of innings-eating presence that gives a staff backbone. Albuquerque is projected at 88-74, three games behind Las Vegas in the NL West.

The Philadelphia Padres lost their owner, Edwin Romero, in January. His son Roberto takes the reins — described by inside sources as demanding in management style. The Padres are projected for a surprising 87-75, good for second in the NL East, and their financial situation is tight but manageable.

Tommy Goolsby was inducted into the Hall of Fame in January — the only player elected from this year's ballot at 83.1% in his seventh year on the ballot. His 179-127 record, 2823.2 innings, and 2.91 ERA over a distinguished career earned him the honor. Notably, second baseman David Benitez fell just short at 74.0% in his second year — one to watch in future ballots.

Detroit has officially declared themselves in rebuilding mode, and their activity reflects it. They enter the season with a $7.5 million budget, the highest in the NL alongside Columbus and Charlotte, but a roster that projects at just 81-81.

Baltimore, meanwhile, is the most dangerous team in the American League on paper, projected at 106-56 with a rotation that features Vincent Benitez (22-5, 2.74 ERA projected) and Daniel Hernandez (19-4, 2.49 ERA). If those projections hold, the AL pennant race could come down to Sacramento and Baltimore — a collision course that would make for a memorable postseason.

______________________________

THE PREDICTION

The Sacramento Prayers are projected to win the AL West at 104-58. That would be a modest step back from last year's 106-56, but still dominant by any reasonable measure, and more than sufficient to return to the postseason. The pitching staff — led by Rubalcava, Andretti, and Larson — is projected for the best ERA in the American League at 3.00. The offense, at 775 projected runs, ranks among the league's best.

The path to a seventh consecutive championship runs through Baltimore in the AL, and through Charlotte or Las Vegas in the National League. None of those matchups would be easy. None of them, based on the last six Octobers, should frighten Sacramento.

Jimmy Aces has 13 titles. He is not done.

The Fort Worth Spirits await tomorrow evening. First pitch at 6:05 PM Mountain Time.

Play ball.

______________________________

— Claude Playball, The Hot Corner
Next edition: Following the opening series at Fort Worth

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Old 03-08-2026, 08:41 AM   #246
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

April 1 – April 15, 1993 | Games 1–13 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

______________________________

7-6. RUBALCAVA THREW A SHUTOUT. CRUZ SCORED SIX RUNS IN ONE GAME. AND WE ARE SOMEHOW STILL TALKING ABOUT THE ROTATION.


Let me tell you about Wednesday, April 7th at Abbots Park in El Paso.

Gil Cruz came to the plate six times and scored six runs. Six. In one game. He doubled in the first inning to put Sacramento up 2-0, tripled in the fourth, drew three walks across the afternoon, and never once looked like a man who intended to make an out when it mattered. The performance tied the American League single-game record for runs scored, and afterward Cruz said simply: "Trying isn't good enough in this league. You've got to get results." The man scored six runs and still found a way to sound like he was unsatisfied. That, in a sentence, is what this team is built on.

The defending champions are 7-6 after thirteen games — not where anyone expected them to be, and not where they intend to stay. The pitching has been better than the record suggests. The defense has been worse than anyone anticipated. And somewhere in the middle of all of it, this roster keeps finding ways to remind you why it has won six consecutive World Series championships.

It is early. It is bumpy. It is Sacramento Prayers baseball.

______________________________

FIRST TWO WEEKS: A GAME-BY-GAME TOUR


At Fort Worth: April 1-4

The Prayers opened the season on the road at Spirits Grounds, and Fort Worth wasted no time making a statement. Sacramento went 1-3 in the series and left Texas having been introduced to several themes that would carry through the first two weeks — inconsistent starting pitching, a bullpen pressed into early and heavy service, and the particular frustration of losing games in which the top of the rotation pitched well enough to win.

Opening Day, April 1st, belonged to Jon Gillon. Rubalcava was excellent — seven innings, five hits, two earned runs, nine strikeouts, a game score of 66 — but Gillon was better, holding Sacramento to five hits across eight innings while the Spirits scratched out four runs, the decisive blow being Guerrero's solo homer in the third and Reza's bases-loaded single that extended the lead. Dodge came on in the eighth and surrendered two runs that made a difficult night definitive. The record books will show Rubalcava at 0-1, and the record books are not telling the truth about what happened at Spirits Grounds on Opening Day.

The April 2nd game was one of those nights that a season either buries you under or hardens you against, and at five hours and twenty-eight minutes across seventeen innings, it had ample time to do both. Lopez hit two home runs and drove in four runs — he was named Player of the Game despite being on the losing side, which tells you everything about how the evening unfolded — and Sacramento had the lead multiple times before the relief corps, already stretched by Andretti's uneven 5.2-inning start, could not hold on through the small hours of the Fort Worth night. Salazar took the loss in the seventeenth when Foulke lined a walk-off single through the left side, and the Prayers stranded nineteen baserunners in a game that lasted long enough to feel like a verdict on something. It was not. But it felt that way on the bus home.

The April 3rd game was Baldelomar's answer to all of it. He had gone 0-for-7 in the marathon and responded with a 3-for-4 afternoon that included a bases-clearing double in the first inning — a first-pitch fastball from Varela that he drove to the gap with runners aboard and Sacramento trailing 2-0, turning the game sideways with one swing — and a triple in the sixth that put the exclamation point on an 8-2 Sacramento win. Espenoza was excellent across 7.1 innings, and the first win of the season finally arrived. "Good baseball players make you a smarter manager," said Aces, and there was nothing in the game log to contradict him. Two injury notes from the afternoon: Fort Worth's Izzy Rodriguez was hurt in a base collision, and Salazar — who had already thrown 2.1 innings the previous evening — left with an injury while pitching, the first significant concern of the young season.

The April 4th series finale was less story than symptom. Larson gave up five runs in 3.2 innings against a Fort Worth lineup that had clearly identified his vulnerabilities, three separate Sacramento errors compounded the damage, and Reza went deep twice to lead the Spirits to a 9-5 final. Sacramento left Texas at 1-3, the defense having contributed to its own undoing in ways that would continue to demand attention over the coming days.

At El Paso: April 5-7

From Fort Worth to El Paso, and the three-game swing at Abbots Park produced one of the more dramatic swings of momentum in the early going — a pitcher's duel, a quiet injustice, and then twenty-five runs and a record-tying afternoon that reminded the rest of the league that this franchise is capable of things other teams simply are not.

The April 5th game against El Paso was St. Clair at his very best. He threw 7.1 innings against the Abbots without allowing a run — three hits, seven strikeouts, 102 pitches of precise, confident baseball from a left-hander whose spring training had raised more questions than it answered. Hernandez provided the offense with a solo homer in the sixth, Dodge held for two thirds, Prieto closed with a save despite allowing a ninth-inning homer to Rodriguez, and Sacramento won 3-1 in exactly the kind of clean, professional game this team is built to produce. The April 5th version of Danny St. Clair is a genuine fourth starter. The question, which the season would raise again soon enough, is whether he can be found reliably.

The April 6th game was the quiet injustice. Rubalcava threw 6.2 innings against El Paso, allowed one earned run, struck out seven, threw 103 pitches of quality baseball, and lost 4-2 because the Sacramento offense managed two runs on eleven hits — a combination of bad luck, poor situational hitting, and Cruz getting caught stealing twice in a game the Prayers simply could not afford to give away. Bradford outdueled him over six-plus innings, the El Paso bullpen held on, and Rubalcava's record dropped to 0-2 despite an ERA that had no business being attached to a losing record.

And then April 7th arrived at Abbots Park and Sacramento scored twenty-five runs. Andretti won his first game of the season by throwing 6.1 innings while the offense accumulated seventeen hits and drew fourteen walks against a succession of El Paso pitchers who ran out of answers before the fourth inning was complete. Cruz doubled in the first to open the scoring, tripled in the fourth for his second extra-base hit of the game, drew three walks, and scored six times — tying the American League single-game record and doing so in the understated manner of a man who expected nothing less from himself. Lopez hit his third homer of the season, Baldelomar went deep in the fourth, and Marcos came off the bench in the seventh to hit a three-run shot that was, by that point in the proceedings, almost comically redundant. The final score was 25-6 and the run differential for the season was suddenly considerably more flattering.

At Milwaukee: April 9-11

Three games at Bishops Stadium, all three won by Sacramento, and the series produced a Rubalcava shutout, a Cruz home run barrage, and one injury scare that carried implications beyond the immediate game log.

The April 9th opener was, to put it plainly, the Espenoza problem arriving on schedule. He gave up three consecutive home runs in the third inning — Schneider, Sanchez, and Briones going back-to-back-to-back to turn a 1-0 Sacramento lead into a 5-1 Milwaukee advantage — and was pulled after three innings with five earned runs charged against him. What followed was a bullpen performance that deserves acknowledgment: Bautista threw 2.2 innings of excellent relief to pick up the win, Wright held for 1.2, and Prieto closed with a clean ninth for his second save of the year. The offense, meanwhile, did what good offenses do when their pitching stumbles — Musco hit a two-run homer in the eighth, Baldelomar delivered a go-ahead two-run shot in the sixth that turned the lead back to Sacramento, and Perez drove in three. The Prayers won 9-6 in a game that felt like a stress test and ended like a comfort.

The April 10th game was Cruz's showcase, a 9-1 win in which he hit two home runs and drove in six runs on a cold Saturday afternoon in Milwaukee when the wind was blowing in hard from left field and none of that mattered to the Mongoose at all. His first homer, a three-run shot off Montez in the first inning, set the tone immediately, and his second — off Smith in the ninth — served as punctuation on a game that was already decided. Larson threw five solid innings for the win, Ryan and Wright and Gutierrez closed it out cleanly, and the afternoon was as uncomplicated as the previous night's game was complicated. One concerning note in the game log: Murguia was injured running the bases and his status going forward required monitoring.

The April 11th game was Rubalcava's statement. Nine innings, four hits, zero runs, ten strikeouts, 125 pitches — a complete game shutout delivered with the precision and composure that has defined this man's career across four Cy Young Awards and six World Series rings. He had lost two games in which he allowed a combined four earned runs and his team had scored two runs in each contest, and his response was to walk into Bishops Stadium on a cloudy Sunday afternoon and not allow a single Milwaukee runner to cross the plate. Musco hit two home runs and drove in four, Perez hit his second, Lopez his fifth, and the score was 9-0 in a game that felt less like a contest than a demonstration. "We barely made him work at all," said Milwaukee manager Calderon afterward. He was not wrong about that. The injury note from this game — Rodriguez hurt in a base collision — would carry consequences over the next several days.

vs. Phoenix: April 13-15

The Phoenix Crucifixes came to Cathedral Stadium for three games, took two of three, and left Sacramento with a 7-6 record and a set of questions about the rotation that the next ten days will need to begin answering.

The April 13th opener was Andretti's worst start of the young season — three innings, five hits, four earned runs, two home runs surrendered to Navarro and Davis in the second inning, and an early exit that put the bullpen in another long afternoon of damage control. Bautista, Ryan, and Wright all followed and were collectively better than the circumstances demanded, but Phoenix's Sams was sharp across 5.2 innings and Batres went 4-for-4 with a homer and three RBIs to lead the Crucifixes to a 9-4 win that Sacramento's offense — Lopez, Cruz, Baldelomar all contributing — could not overcome despite nine hits and four runs of their own. MacDonald committed his third error of the season, a detail that was becoming harder to dismiss as coincidence.

The April 14th game was Espenoza's redemption, delivered quietly and thoroughly over seven innings of two-hit, one-run pitching that reminded everyone present why this left-hander belongs in a major league rotation. He struck out six, threw 99 pitches with zero walks, and allowed only a Taylor solo homer in the third before settling into a groove that Phoenix could not disturb. Hernandez hit a solo homer in the fourth for the lead that would hold, Dodge held for an inning, Prieto got his third save, and Rodriguez drove in two runs through productive contact despite managing his elbow carefully. Sacramento wins 3-1 in a game that felt, for nine innings, exactly like what this team is supposed to look like. "Mario pitched his heart out," said Aces afterward, and the line in the box score confirmed every word of it.

The April 15th finale was St. Clair's difficult night — 3.2 innings, eight hits, seven runs, a Mendoza three-run homer in the first inning that put Sacramento in an early hole deep enough that the three home runs the offense produced (Perez, Alonzo, and Rodriguez, who launched his first career homer in the fourth) could not fill. Cruz had two hits and drove in a run, and MacDonald committed his fourth error of the season, a number that by this point had moved well past coincidence and into the territory of something requiring a direct conversation. Phoenix wins 8-6, and Sacramento closes its first homestand at 7-6 with the Tucson Cherubs arriving Friday and a rotation that has raised as many questions as it has answered.

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FACES OF THE FRANCHISE


Gil Cruz: Running Toward Something

Through thirteen games, Cruz is hitting .316 with three home runs, thirteen RBIs, and a .952 OPS, and his last seven-game stretch has been the most compelling individual stretch of offense on this roster — .419 with two home runs, the six-run game in El Paso, and the kind of consistent hard contact that makes pitchers consider their career choices. At twenty-five years old, under contract through 1996 at $272,000 — a figure that should embarrass every other general manager in this league — Cruz is entering what scouts have long identified as the prime years of his career. His power, his patience, his baserunning intelligence — all of it is consolidating into something that looks very much like a legitimate MVP candidate in the making. The one cautionary note: three caught stealing in thirteen games, including two on the same afternoon in El Paso. The aggressiveness that makes Cruz dangerous occasionally overruns his reads. The instincts are elite. The judgment on certain pitchers needs refinement.

Alejandro Lopez: The Breakout Is Real

Lopez is hitting .302 with five home runs, eleven RBIs, and a 1.032 OPS through thirteen games, and the two-homer, four-RBI performance in the seventeen-inning Fort Worth loss on April 2nd told you everything about his mentality — his team was losing a game that lasted nearly five and a half hours and he refused to be anything other than the best player on the field. The 24-year-old center fielder was projected for a breakout before the season and he is delivering one without hesitation, four stolen bases into what the preseason projections suggested could be a forty-steal campaign. He has a cannon from center field. He hits for power. He gets on base. The name to know in 1993 is already making himself known.

Jordan Rubalcava: The Injustice of 1-2

His record is 1-2. His ERA is 1.19. He has struck out twenty-six batters in 22.2 innings and thrown a complete game shutout. He has lost two games in which he allowed a combined four earned runs across thirteen-plus innings while his offense scored two runs in each. The complete game shutout against Milwaukee — his response to two consecutive losses that were not his fault — was as dominant a start as this franchise has seen in April in recent memory, and it is the truest measure of what kind of pitcher this man is. The record will sort itself out. It always does with Rubalcava. It is simply doing so on a slightly delayed schedule this April.

David Perez: The Pleasant Surprise

With Rodriguez managing a sprained elbow, Perez has held down third base and hit .333 with three home runs and nine RBIs through eleven games, carrying the form he showed in spring training into the regular season without interruption. The switch-hitting Panamanian is twenty-seven years old and appears to be playing the best baseball of his career — patient, powerful, and dependable in a lineup spot that could easily have been a liability. His contract runs through 1996 and includes a team option that looks considerably more attractive today than it did when it was signed.

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CONCERN CORNER


Bernardo Andretti: The Number That Demands Attention

Andretti is 1-1 with a 6.00 ERA across three starts, having allowed twenty-four hits in fifteen innings against Fort Worth, Phoenix, and — in the one start that produced a win — El Paso on the night Sacramento scored twenty-five runs and would have won with a Little League pitcher on the mound. At thirty-two, he has the experience and the track record to work through early struggles, and he did exactly that in 1992 before becoming one of the better second starters in the American League. But this rotation cannot carry a 6.00 ERA into May, and the next two turns — against a 4-8 Tucson club that is short on pitching, and then against Seattle — represent the best possible opportunity for Andretti to find himself before the schedule gets less forgiving. He knows how to pitch. The body of evidence from last season says so. April needs to start agreeing.

George MacDonald: Four Errors in Thirteen Games

The veteran first baseman has committed four errors through thirteen games, and this column is no longer willing to file them individually under coincidence. Sacramento's defensive identity — the quality that separates this franchise from its competition and wins games in October when margins shrink — is built on the assumption that the men playing the field do not hand opponents extra outs. MacDonald has given opponents four of them in less than two weeks, and whether the cause is physical, mechanical, or something related to focus and rhythm, it requires a direct and immediate diagnosis. Aces will have noticed. He always notices. The question is what response follows the noticing.

Fernando Salazar and the Bullpen Depth Question

Salazar is on the shelf with elbow inflammation for four to five weeks, Halverson is out with a fractured thumb, and the bullpen has been carrying a heavier load than anyone in this organization anticipated entering the season, given the rotation's inconsistency through thirteen games. Prieto, Dodge, Ryan, Gutierrez, and Wright have been serviceable, and Bautista has contributed usefully on his minor league deal, but the margin for error is thinner than it was in March. Salazar's potential return in mid-May offers hope, though at forty-two years old, elbow inflammation is never a casual notation in the medical report. The next four weeks will require careful bullpen management from Aces and his staff.

Danny St. Clair: Two Starts, Two Different Pitchers

St. Clair threw 7.1 shutout innings against El Paso on April 5th and gave up seven runs in 3.2 innings against Phoenix on April 15th, and both of those things happened within ten days involving the same pitcher. The El Paso outing proved beyond reasonable doubt that he has the stuff to be a dependable fourth starter in this rotation. What he does not yet possess, apparently, is the consistency to be that pitcher on a reliable schedule. At twenty-nine, these are not the growing pains of a prospect finding his way — they are the irregular rhythms of a veteran who needs to locate the April 5th version of himself and keep him in the building on a more permanent basis.

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AROUND THE LEAGUE


The American League West is not unfolding as predicted, with San Jose sitting atop the division at 8-4 — a club that was expected to finish fourth but has instead gone 4-0 in one-run games and found ways to win close contests in a manner that disguises whatever limitations they may carry over a longer haul. Fort Worth is 7-6 and hanging around despite absorbing significant bullpen damage early, most notably the loss of Jon Dunne to a ruptured disc on April 4th that will keep him out for the season — a year-ending injury before the second week is complete is the kind of organizational setback that reveals itself slowly and painfully as the innings accumulate through summer.

In the AL East, Brooklyn has sprinted to 10-3 on the back of an eight-game winning streak, which is the most genuinely surprising development in the American League through the first two weeks. The preseason projections had the Priests at 68-94 and they were not consulted. Whether this is a sustainable contender or a very good April that the schedule will eventually correct is a question worth monitoring, but for the moment they lead their division by three games and deserve the acknowledgment that a 10-3 record earns regardless of what the projections said.

Detroit is at 2-11 and losing five in a row, which even for a declared rebuilding organization represents a start that exceeds the pessimists. The Preachers are struggling offensively, struggling in the rotation, and managing multiple injuries including Hernandez's abdominal strain, and the early returns suggest the rebuild has a considerably longer runway than the preseason suggested.

Philadelphia leads the NL East at 10-3 in what is perhaps the other great early-season surprise, playing under new ownership following Edwin Romero's passing in January, with Roberto Romero at the helm and the on-field product showing no signs of organizational disruption. Phoenix is 8-5 and playing well — Sacramento's most recent opponent showed a balanced, dangerous lineup across three games at Cathedral Stadium, and the loss of Alejandro Pena to a strained hamstring on April 15th will test their depth over the next six weeks.

Around the broader injury wire: Ruiz of Boston is day-to-day with a bruised thigh, Charlotte's Elizardo is on the 60-day IL following elbow surgery, Columbus lost Maini to a fractured fibula for three months, and the casualty list after two weeks is already substantial enough to suggest that the summer will be long and the training rooms crowded.

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MAILBAG — The Hot Corner audience has questions, Claude Playball has answers.


From longtime listener "Cathedral Faithful" Carl Westbrook of Midtown Sacramento, who writes that he has attended every Opening Day at Cathedral Stadium since 1981: "Seven and six. I've seen this team win 106 games. Should I be worried?"

Carl, no — but I understand completely why you are asking, because 7-6 is not what any of us penciled in after watching this team go 106-56 last season. What I would ask you to consider is this: the Prayers have a Pythagorean record of 9-4, meaning their run differential suggests they have played like a nine-win team and the results have simply not reflected it yet. Rubalcava is 1-2 with a 1.19 ERA. The offense scored twenty-five runs in a single game. MacDonald has four errors and the rotation has been inconsistent, yes, and those are real concerns worth watching — but the underlying talent is exactly what it was in October, and teams like this one do not forget what they are for very long. Give it until May, Carl. The view from your Opening Day seat will look considerably more familiar before this column reaches its next edition.

From "El Paso Express" Eddie Garza of Citrus Heights, who says he drove four hours to watch the 25-6 game in person: "Was that the greatest offensive game in Sacramento history? It felt like it."

Eddie, four hours on a Tuesday for a road game in El Paso is the kind of dedication this franchise does not deserve but deeply appreciates, and what you witnessed was worth every mile. Twenty-five runs on seventeen hits with fourteen walks drawn is an offensive performance that I cannot immediately match against anything in the Sacramento record books from memory, and Cruz's six-run afternoon tying the American League single-game record is a detail that will still be referenced in this column years from now. If it is not the franchise offensive record, it is certainly in the conversation, and you were standing in the building when it happened. That is not nothing, Eddie. That is the kind of thing you tell your grandchildren about.

From podcast regular Donna Fierro-Hutchinson of Elk Grove, who signs every message "season ticket holder since 1977 and not stopping now": "Rubalcava is 1-2. Everyone around me at the game on Sunday was upset. I kept telling them to look at the ERA. Am I right?"

Donna, you are completely right, and I want you to feel entirely comfortable saying so as loudly as necessary to everyone in your section. Jordan Rubalcava has a 1.19 ERA through three starts. He has struck out twenty-six batters in 22.2 innings. He lost two games in which he allowed a combined four earned runs while his offense scored two runs in each game, and he responded to both losses by throwing a complete game shutout in Milwaukee with ten strikeouts — which is the only response a four-time Cy Young winner knows how to give. The record is 1-2, and the record is not telling the truth about what kind of pitcher Jordan Rubalcava is in April of 1993. You have been watching this man long enough to know the difference between a pitcher who is struggling and a pitcher who is being let down by circumstances. Trust what you know, Donna. The wins are coming.

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Sacramento hosts Tucson for three games beginning Friday before heading to Seattle for a pair against the Lucifers. Andretti takes the ball Saturday against a Tucson club sitting at 4-8 with a depleted rotation, and Rubalcava goes Sunday. The schedule offers a genuine opportunity to separate from the early-season noise. Whether this roster is ready to seize it is the question April 16th will begin to answer.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

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Old 03-10-2026, 01:06 AM   #247
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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April 16 – April 28, 1993 | Games 14–25 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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17-8. SIX WINS IN A ROW. ANDRETTI JUST STRUCK OUT TWELVE AND THE ROTATION HAS FOUND ITSELF.


On Wednesday, April 28th at Detroit Fields Bernardo Andretti took the ball against a club that was 4-21 and had threw eight innings of four-hit, two-run baseball on 102 pitches, strucking out twelve Preachers in a performance that was so complete, so assured, so utterly different from the man who surrendered five runs in three innings against Phoenix on April 13th that it demanded to be held up and examined from every angle. Twelve strikeouts, zero walks, a game score of 78. After the game he said: "I like how we're playing right now." He was not wrong about that. He was also, with respect, describing something larger than the team. Bernardo Andretti is playing well right now, and the difference between the Sacramento Prayers who were 7-6 two weeks ago and the Sacramento Prayers who are 17-8 today runs directly through the right arm of their number-two starter.

Eleven wins in twelve games, six consecutive victories to close the month. A staff ERA of 2.73, the best mark in the American League. From the outside it may look like this team simply remembered who it was. From the inside, it looks like a rotation that spent three weeks finding its footing and has now, emphatically, found it.

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THE THIRD AND FOURTH TWO WEEKS: A GAME-BY-GAME TOUR


vs. Tucson: April 16-18

Three games at Cathedral Stadium against the Cherubs, and Sacramento took two of three in a series that opened with a frustrating loss, answered with a vintage Rubalcava performance, and closed with the kind of walk-off drama that a championship team generates when it needs to.

The April 16th opener was an evening the Sacramento offense would prefer to forget. Larson pitched adequately across six innings — three earned runs, five hits, 105 pitches — but the offense managed only three hits against Bradford and his bullpen, the lineup producing exactly the kind of flat, uninspired at-bats that Bradford's 2.05 ERA suggested were possible. Tucson catcher Vinny Berber went 3-for-4 and hit a solo homer off Ryan in the eighth that proved to be the decisive blow, and Sacramento lost 4-2 in a game that felt less like a defeat than a quiet reminder that nothing about 1993 was going to be handed to this team. The injury note from the evening was more significant than the box score: Musco was hurt running the bases, adding another name to a Sacramento training room that was already managing more traffic than anyone preferred.

The April 17th game was Rubalcava in control. He threw 6.2 innings, allowed two runs, struck out five on 111 pitches, and got the kind of early run support that had been absent in his previous starts — Hernandez hitting a two-run homer off Crossley in the first inning that gave Sacramento a lead they would not relinquish, and Perez delivering a solo shot in the eighth to close out a 5-2 win that moved Rubalcava's record to 2-2 while doing nothing to change the fact that his ERA remained more than a full run below what the record implied. Prieto got his fourth save, the bullpen was clean, and for one afternoon Cathedral Stadium felt like home again.

The April 18th game was decided in the bottom of the ninth and required every inning that preceded it to make the finish feel earned. Andretti threw 7.1 innings against Tucson — two runs, seven hits, 101 pitches, a game score of 62 — and was the best version of himself for most of the afternoon, keeping Tucson off balance while Fierro went 4-for-4 with a homer and three RBIs and was named Player of the Game despite being on the losing side. Dodge gave up a two-run homer to Fierro in the eighth to tie the game, which is the kind of moment that can define a series in the wrong direction. Instead, it defined it correctly: Rodriguez stepped into the box in the bottom of the ninth with the game tied and the Cathedral crowd on its feet, and he lined a single to center that scored the winning run and sent Sacramento to 9-7 with a walk-off that belonged in October. "There's nothing like the buzz of a walk-off win," Rodriguez said afterward, and with an injury-shortened start to the season behind him, nobody in that clubhouse disagreed.

At Seattle: April 20-22

Three games at Lucifers Park, two wins and a loss in a road series that showed this team at its most efficient and then reminded it that Rubalcava's record and his ERA continued to inhabit different universes.

The April 20th game was Espenoza at his most economical. He threw 7.2 innings against Seattle on 95 pitches — one earned run, seven hits, five strikeouts, zero walks — and the efficiency of the performance was as notable as the outcome. No walks in 7.2 innings is a demonstration of command that very few pitchers in this league can offer, and Espenoza has now offered it in back-to-back quality starts that have quietly made him one of the better stories of the early season. Murguia delivered a two-run single in the fourth to give Sacramento the lead for good, Dodge got one out, Prieto finished it for his fifth save, and Sacramento won 3-1 in a game that took under three hours and felt even cleaner than that.

The April 21st game belonged to Larson, who went out to Lucifers Park on a cold Wednesday night and threw seven innings of two-hit baseball — zero earned runs, five strikeouts, two walks on 99 pitches — in what was quietly the best start of his young season. Sacramento scored two runs in the first inning on a Hernandez double and a MacDonald RBI groundout, and that was all Larson needed. Dodge and Prieto closed it out for the sixth save of the year, and Larson said afterward: "We found a way to win tonight." He was understating the matter considerably. He was the reason they won, and the 2.60 ERA he carried out of the game was a number that bore watching.

The April 22nd game was Rubalcava's third loss of the season in a start that was, by reasonable measure, not a losing performance. He threw 5.2 innings and allowed three runs, two of them earned, and the decisive blow was a bases-loaded two-run single by Mejia in the fifth that broke a 1-1 tie. Schilder was sharp across eight innings for Seattle and the bullpen — Wright and Ryan — gave up the insurance run in the eighth on a Valadez double. Sacramento left seven runners on base with Seattle pitching around them in the later innings, and Rubalcava walked off the mound at 2-3 with an ERA of 1.80 and a record that continued to misrepresent him in ways that were becoming the defining statistical injustice of the 1993 season.

vs. Washington: April 23-25

Three games at Cathedral Stadium against the Devils, and Sacramento swept all three in a sequence that showcased three different starters and produced three complete, professional victories against a Washington team that was running out of both pitching and answers.

The April 23rd game was Andretti answering everything that had been written about him in this column and in every other corner of the Sacramento press. He threw 7.1 innings against Washington without allowing a run — four hits, seven strikeouts, zero walks, 99 pitches — and the performance was so different from his April starts against Fort Worth and Phoenix that it demanded to be addressed directly rather than folded into the game summary and moved past. This was not a marginal improvement. This was a different pitcher. The offense provided all the support he needed in the second inning, when Murguia and MacDonald both took Garcia deep on consecutive at-bats, and Dodge and Prieto closed it out. Sacramento wins 2-0. "This level of focus will win us a lot of ballgames," Andretti said after the game. He was not wrong, and this column is prepared to say in print what it could only hint at two weeks ago: Andretti is back, and he may be better than back.

The April 24th game was St. Clair's second consecutive dominant start, a 7.2-inning, four-hit shutout against a Washington lineup that has the underlying numbers of a dangerous club but has been unable to produce against quality pitching. Cruz went 3-for-4 with two RBIs, Musco hit his fourth homer of the season in the eighth for insurance, and the Prayers won 3-0 with Dodge and Prieto handling the final three outs between them. The injury note at the bottom of the game log — Murguia hurt running the bases again — was the one shadow on an otherwise clean afternoon, and we will address it directly in the Concern Corner.

The April 25th series finale was a procession. Espenoza threw seven shutout innings against Washington's Quirarte, who lasted 2.2 innings before surrendering seven runs, and the Sacramento offense produced fourteen hits with virtually everyone contributing — Cruz hit a two-run homer in the first, Torres went 4-for-4 with two doubles and an RBI, Baldelomar had three hits, Rodriguez drove in a run, Lopez doubled in two — in an 8-1 win that announced Sacramento's intentions to the rest of the American League with the kind of clarity that only a complete team performance can provide. Bautista threw the final two innings. Aces said afterward: "The boys were really swinging the bats today." He has a gift for understatement.

At Detroit: April 26-28

Three games at Detroit Fields against a Preachers club sitting at 4-19 when the series opened, and Sacramento swept all three — though nothing about the first two games suggested the results would be as clean as the final tallies implied.

The April 26th game went eleven innings and required contributions from four pitchers, a Torres walk-off single, and the kind of stubborn refusal to lose that distinguishes this franchise from the teams around it. Larson threw six solid innings — two hits, one earned run, 83 pitches — and was named Player of the Game despite the victory requiring five additional innings to complete after he left. Gutierrez then threw three immaculate innings, and after Detroit scored in the third and Sacramento tied it in the fourth, the game settled into the kind of quiet tension that extra-inning games at indifferent parks produce on Monday nights. Torres broke it open in the eleventh with a run-scoring single that was his only hit of the game, Dodge got the save, and Sacramento won 2-1. The game note that matters more than any of it: Larson was injured while pitching, an update whose full implications will be addressed shortly.

The April 27th game was more chaotic and ultimately more satisfying. Rubalcava started and threw 7.1 innings against a Detroit lineup that had its moments — Leptio hit a solo homer in the fourth, Lang doubled twice, and the Preachers scratched seven runs across the final four innings to make a laugher considerably less comfortable than it should have been. The key inning was the fifth, when Sacramento sent fourteen batters to the plate and scored nine runs in an eruption that included a Hernandez three-run homer, Lopez driving in two, and Perez working three walks during the sequence. Rubalcava got the win, his record moving to 3-3 with an ERA of 2.34, and the final score of 11-7 flattered Detroit more than it reflected the game's actual shape.

The April 28th game was Andretti's masterpiece, and it has already been described in the space above with the attention it deserved. Twelve strikeouts. Eight innings. One hundred and two pitches. A statement so complete that the 6-2 final score could be folded and put in an envelope and sent to anyone in this league who had questions about whether the Sacramento rotation had found its footing. Lopez hit a solo homer in the seventh. Dodge threw a clean ninth. And Andretti walked off the field at 3-1 with a 3.35 ERA and the quiet confidence of a man who had worked through something difficult and come out the other side knowing exactly who he was.

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THE EMERGING STORYLINES


Mario Espenoza: The Quiet Ace

At some point in the next few weeks, this column is going to have to formally acknowledge what has been developing in front of our eyes since Opening Day — Mario Espenoza is pitching like the best starter on this staff. He is 4-0 with a 2.53 ERA through five starts, his WHIP is 0.78, and he has issued one walk in his last three outings combined. One walk across three starts. He has a game score of 75 against Phoenix, 66 against Seattle, and 76 against Washington, and in each case he has thrown between 95 and 103 pitches with the kind of command that makes hitters feel like the strike zone has been rearranged to inconvenience them specifically. Rubalcava is the ace of this staff by title, track record, and earned reputation. But Espenoza is making a quiet, sustained argument that the conversation about who is pitching best in Sacramento right now is not as settled as anyone expected.

Bernardo Andretti: The Universe Has Paid Its Debt

Two articles ago, this column identified Andretti's 6.00 ERA as the most pressing concern on the roster. One article ago, it noted that his April 18th start against Tucson — 7.1 innings, two runs — was the best version of himself and asked whether he could be found reliably. The answer, delivered across three subsequent starts, has been emphatic. He threw 7.1 shutout innings against Washington on April 23rd, earned a 3-0 start against Tucson on April 18th, and then struck out twelve Detroit hitters on April 28th in what was the single best start of his season. He is 3-1 with a 3.35 ERA, and the 1.14 WHIP tells the story of a pitcher who is not merely surviving but commanding. "I like how we're playing right now," he said in Detroit. Claude Playball likes how Bernardo Andretti is pitching right now, and is prepared to formally retire this item from the Concern Corner with the acknowledgment that a 32-year-old veteran with a career full of quality innings knew exactly what he was doing while this column was asking questions about him.

Francisco Hernandez: The Speed Nobody Notices

Hernandez is hitting .264 with five home runs, twelve RBIs, and nine stolen bases through twenty-three games, and there is an argument to be made that the stolen base number is the most interesting of those figures. Nine steals in twenty-three games from a right fielder who bats sixth or seventh in the lineup is the kind of production that does not appear prominently in the morning box scores but compounds over the course of a season into something genuinely valuable. He is on pace for a sixty-steal season from the nine-hole. He has been thrown out twice in eleven attempts, which is a success rate that any dedicated basestealer would accept. He also threw out a baserunner at home on April 20th, reminding everyone that the arm attached to those quick legs is not merely decorative. Hernandez is not a star on this roster. He is something more useful — a player who does four things well and asks for no recognition for any of them.

The Six-Game Winning Streak and What It Means

Sacramento has won eleven of its last twelve games. The run differential that sat at minus-two through thirteen games has swung dramatically in the correct direction, and the Pythagorean record entering April 28th stood at 18-7, meaning the underlying performance has been even better than the 17-8 record suggests. The pitching staff ERA of 2.73 leads the American League and is the kind of number that wins October games. The offense leads the AL West in runs scored, stolen bases, and walks drawn. The defense still has questions — MacDonald's error count, Rodriguez's throwing miscues — but the foundation of this team, the pitching and the patient offense, is performing at a level that is beginning to look like the championship machine everyone expected when the season began. The AL West lead is three and a half games over San Jose. The magic number sits at 135. It is the last day of April, and Sacramento is exactly where Sacramento is supposed to be.

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CONCERN CORNER


Eli Murguia: The Third Time Is No Longer Coincidence

Murguia was injured running the bases on April 10th. He was injured running the bases on April 24th. And he was injured running the bases on April 28th, the last of these producing a high ankle sprain that will keep him out for five weeks. Three baserunning injuries in nineteen days is not bad luck. It is a pattern, and at thirty-six years old, patterns of this kind require honest and direct conversation between the player, the manager, and the medical staff about what is happening and why. Murguia has been a productive contributor this season — .291 average, seven RBIs, three stolen bases in nineteen games — and his value to this lineup is genuine. But a high ankle sprain layered on top of two previous baserunning injuries suggests that something is off physically, whether it is the ankle itself, a compensatory movement elsewhere, or something deeper that the training staff needs to find and address before it becomes worse. Five weeks means mid-June at the earliest. This roster has the depth to manage his absence. What it cannot afford is to have him return prematurely and compound the damage.

Robby Larson: An Unclear Situation That Requires Clarity

Larson was injured while pitching on April 26th in Detroit, and the injury report at the time of this writing does not specify the nature or severity of what happened. That absence of information is itself a concern. Larson threw six solid innings in that game — his ERA sits at 2.60 through five starts, he has been one of the better stories of the early rotation, and his April 21st gem in Seattle was as good a start as any Sacramento pitcher has produced this month. Losing him for any meaningful stretch of time would require Aces to lean on Bautista and possibly accelerate the usage of Navarro, the left-hander acquired from El Paso in the April 17th trade. We need to know what is wrong and how long it will take to fix it. This column will be watching the transaction wire closely.

Javier Navarro: The Trade That Needs Context

Sacramento sent Bobby Rico, Mario Cabello, and a third-round pick to El Paso on April 17th and received left-hander Javier Navarro and a third-round pick in return. Rico has since been revealed to have suffered a torn flexor tendon that will end his season, which almost certainly accelerated the Prayers' willingness to move him. Navarro is twenty-five years old with a career record of 11-18 and a 5.10 ERA across 231.1 minor league innings — numbers that do not inspire immediate confidence but need to be evaluated in context. El Paso is retaining a portion of his contract. The Prayers acquired him as organizational depth, and with Larson's injury status uncertain and Salazar only recently eligible to return from elbow inflammation, depth is exactly what this organization needs. Whether Navarro becomes a useful piece or an emergency option depends on circumstances that remain unwritten. For now, he is insurance, and insurance with a 5.10 ERA is still better than no insurance at all.

Chris Ryan: A Number Worth Watching

Ryan's ERA has climbed to 5.73 across nine relief appearances, and while none of his outings have been individually catastrophic, the cumulative pattern of giving up earned runs at a rate that exceeds what a championship bullpen can sustain is worth noting. He has allowed three home runs in 11 innings and his control — six walks in that span — has been inconsistent. Prieto and Dodge have been reliable. Gutierrez has been excellent. Wright has been serviceable. Ryan is the one arm in the relief corps whose continued struggles represent a genuine vulnerability, particularly with Salazar still working his way back and the bullpen carrying heavier loads on the nights the rotation turns to Bautista or Larson in shortened outings. He has the stuff to be better than this. The results need to start reflecting it.

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AROUND THE LEAGUE


Brooklyn continues to be the most confounding team in the American League, sitting at 16-9 after being projected for sixty-eight wins and showing no particular signs of reverting to the team the preseason models described. The Priests have four shutouts on the season, the best pitching ERA in the AL East at 3.39, and a lineup that has been more productive than anyone anticipated. Columbus is 13-11 and second in the division, Milwaukee is 13-12, and the AL East race has developed into something genuinely competitive rather than the Baltimore-Boston showdown that was anticipated. Baltimore, for their part, is 9-15 and reeling — seven consecutive losses in one-run games, a 4-10 road record, and a situation that looks considerably more dire than the preseason projections suggested. Something has gone wrong in Baltimore, and it has gone wrong at a speed that should concern their front office.

Detroit is 4-21. The Preachers have lost six consecutive games and their run differential sits at minus-two runs over the entire season, which means that in twenty-five games they have scored and allowed essentially the same number of runs while managing to lose seventeen of them. That is a statistical achievement of a particular and unhappy kind. The rebuild in Detroit has a longer runway than anyone admitted publicly, and the Sacramento series — in which the Prayers took all three games while Rubalcava, Andretti, and a cast of relievers rolled through a lineup that offered only isolated resistance — did nothing to suggest the second half of the season will be kinder to them.

San Jose leads the AL West wildcard at 13-11, which means Sacramento's division lead of three and a half games is real and meaningful but not yet comfortable. The Demons have been winning close games and playing smart baseball, and the four-game series beginning April 29th at San Jose represents the first genuine measuring-stick moment of the 1993 season for this club. Phoenix leads the NL West at 16-8 despite losing Alejandro Pena to the hamstring injury suffered against Sacramento on April 15th, which says something about the depth of that roster. Philadelphia and Charlotte are tied atop the NL East at 16-9, with Houston having emerged as an unexpected contender at 13-11 — a team that was projected to finish in the bottom half of their division and is instead among the leaders of the National League wildcard race.

On the transaction wire, Jake Becerra of Columbus reached win number 200 on April 28th with a 5-4 victory over Los Angeles, becoming only the latest member of a club that most pitchers never approach. Becerra is 200-148 with a career 3.26 ERA, and the milestone was earned with the kind of grinding consistency that defines a great career rather than a brilliant one — not a single dominant season but twenty-plus years of showing up and delivering. Las Vegas lost starting pitcher Kevin Stewart to a partially torn UCL for the season, a blow to a Blessed club that was sitting at 14-11 and competing seriously for the NL West. Joel Hudson of Boston joins the long-term injured list with a torn rotator cuff, which completes a difficult month for a Messiahs bullpen that was already thin.

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MAILBAG — The Hot Corner audience has questions, Claude Playball has answers.


From "Two-Strike Theresa" Villanueva of Land Park, who writes that she keeps score at every game she attends and has the notebooks to prove it: "Rubalcava is 3-3. His ERA is 2.34. I keep score for a living and I cannot make those two numbers coexist in the same universe. Help."

Theresa, you are keeping score correctly and the universe is failing you, not the other way around. Rubalcava has gone six starts and allowed eleven earned runs in 42.1 innings and lost three of them, which means that in his three losses the Sacramento offense has provided him with run support that can be charitably described as insufficient and uncharitably described as absent. His WHIP is 1.09. He has struck out forty-two batters. He is, by every measure available to a person keeping score in the stands, one of the three or four best pitchers in the American League right now. The record is the record and it will correct itself as the season progresses, because pitchers with 2.34 ERAs in April do not finish October at 3-3. Keep your notebooks, Theresa. The innings you are documenting will look very different by September.

From "Infield Ignacio" Reyes-Montoya of Rancho Cordova, a self-described "Andretti skeptic since May 1st, 1991": "Twelve strikeouts. Am I allowed to become a believer now, or is this column going to tell me to wait for more evidence?"

Ignacio, this column is formally granting you permission to believe, and is doing so without the qualifications and caveats it attached to the Andretti question two weeks ago. Twelve strikeouts in eight innings against any opponent — including one sitting at 4-21 — is a performance that earns a declaration. His last three starts have produced a combined ERA of 1.17 and a game score average above 72, which is the kind of sustained performance that separates a hot stretch from a genuine recalibration. Whatever was wrong in April — mechanical, mental, physical — Andretti appears to have found the answer, and he found it at precisely the moment this rotation needed him to. The skepticism was earned by the evidence. The belief is earned by the same standard. Welcome to the other side, Ignacio.

From longtime listener "Cathedral Section 14" Dolores Fuentes-Park, who notes she has sat in the same seat since the stadium opened and intends to keep sitting there: "The Murguia injuries are scaring me. Am I overreacting?"

Dolores, you are not overreacting, and I want to be honest with you rather than reassuring in a way that does not serve you. Three baserunning injuries in nineteen days for a thirty-six-year-old player is a situation that warrants genuine concern, not dismissal. The high ankle sprain that will keep him out five weeks is serious enough on its own terms — ankle injuries at this stage of a career have a way of lingering and recurring in ways that younger ankles do not. What makes this situation more concerning is the pattern preceding it, and the question of whether the ankle was already compromised before April 28th produced the official diagnosis. The good news, such as it is, is that the Prayers have the offensive depth to manage his absence — Baldelomar, Lopez, Hernandez, even Torres and Jesus Hernandez in limited roles — and five weeks puts his return in early June, before the season reaches its critical summer stretch. But Dolores, your instinct to pay attention to this is the correct one, and this column will be monitoring it closely alongside you.

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Sacramento opens May with four games in San Jose — the first genuine division test of the season against a Demons club sitting three and a half games back and playing hungry baseball. Espenoza is scheduled for the opener. The series will tell us something important about whether the six-game winning streak is a destination or a runway. This column will be listening carefully to the answer.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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Old 03-10-2026, 12:03 PM   #248
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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April 29 – May 16, 1993 | Games 26–41 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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27-14. TIED FOR THE BEST RECORD IN THE AMERICAN LEAGUE. AND STILL THIS COLUMN HAS SOME THINGS TO SAY.


Ten wins and eight losses over eighteen games does not have the ring of a statement, and yet if you lay this stretch out and examine it honestly — four road splits against clubs that were right there to be taken, a closer who surrendered back-to-back home runs to lose a game that a dominant starter had already earned, a road trip finale in El Paso that turned into a fourteen-run procession through a bullpen that eventually ran out of ideas and arms — you come away understanding that the Sacramento Prayers are a baseball team capable of tremendous things and equally capable of making those things feel more complicated than they need to be. The pitching staff ERA is the best in the American League. The team leads the league in runs scored, home runs, stolen bases, and walks drawn. The record is 27-14, which matches Brooklyn for the best mark on either side of the sport. Everything about this team is working and I still spent three days this week staring at the box score from May 2nd and asking why Luis Prieto was allowed to face Ryan Thompson in the ninth inning with a two-run lead. But we will get to that. The games come first.

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THE TAPE DOESN'T LIE: A GAME-BY-GAME REVIEW


At San Jose: April 29 – May 2

The Prayers opened this stretch on the road against a Demons club that was playing motivated baseball and answered every Sacramento advantage with something from their own lineup, and the four-game set ended in a split that felt both fair and deeply avoidable depending on which game you were watching.

The April 29th opener was an evening that went sideways in the sixth inning and never came back. Danny St. Clair gave Sacramento five innings of work against a Demons lineup that found him often enough — six hits, three earned runs — and when Gil Caliari entered in relief with the game tied at three he proceeded to issue three walks and give up three extra-base hits in 1.1 innings, including two doubles from Victor Magana and a two-run double from Bryan Campen in the seventh that put the game away. Caliari's ERA after this performance sat at 18.00, a number that belongs less in a pitching line than in a utility bill, and the Sacramento offense could not overcome the damage. The 7-3 final was the product of one very bad inning and one very good San Jose lineup, in approximately equal measure.

The April 30th game went ten innings and required the single most important at-bat Sacramento has produced in this eighteen-game stretch, and it came from exactly the player this lineup was built around. The Prayers trailed 5-3 in the eighth inning with two runners aboard and two outs when Gil Cruz stepped to the plate against Alvarez and tripled into the gap to clear the bases and tie the game — a swing that was composure and execution and will all at once, from a player who has been quietly delivering in these moments all season long. Perez broke the tie with a sacrifice fly in the tenth, Gutierrez locked down the final inning for his first save, and Sacramento won 6-5. Prieto picked up the win. It should be noted that Prieto was also responsible for blowing the save, which foreshadowed a pattern this column intends to address at length.

The May 1st game was Sacramento at its most efficient. Larson threw 6.2 innings and gave up three runs while the offense built an early lead that Musco expanded with two doubles and three RBI — the kind of controlled, professional performance that wins series when it needs to. Aces said afterward that Larson was "a gamer," and there was nothing in the box score to argue with that.

The May 2nd game is the one I keep returning to, and I will describe it carefully because it deserves that treatment. Rubalcava threw 7.1 innings. He allowed two earned runs. He was precise and dominant and everything a number-one starter is supposed to be, and Sacramento took a 5-3 lead into the ninth inning with their closer warming in the bullpen. Prieto came in. Tim Thomas hit a two-run homer. Macho Cruz — who had one hit all game — then hit a solo homer to win it. The series ended in a split. Rubalcava's record moved to 3-3 despite an ERA that sat at 2.36 and a performance that deserved to be rewarded with a win, not a paragraph in this column about injustice.

At Tucson: May 4 – May 6

Three games at Cherubs Fields, two wins and a loss in a series that showed Sacramento's rotation depth and its offensive resilience in roughly equal proportion, against a Tucson club that has been losing more than it has been winning but still produced one evening that the Prayers would prefer not to revisit.

The May 4th game was Andretti's finest hour in a stretch full of them. He threw seven shutout innings, allowed four hits and one walk across 105 pitches, and was the kind of pitcher on this evening that hitters give up on early and start thinking about what they're doing for dinner. Lopez hit a two-run homer in the third inning off Crossley to give Sacramento everything it needed, Dodge threw a clean eighth with two strikeouts, and Prieto closed it out for save nine. The game note that Edwin Musco was injured running the bases was starting to read less like a surprise and more like a recurring entry in a log nobody wanted to be keeping.

The May 5th game belonged to Kenichi Kubota, a right-hander from Kainan, Japan, who threw 8.2 innings against Sacramento and struck out nine while issuing zero walks and giving up three runs — a performance whose quality was sufficient to make the Prayers feel lucky to have scored at all. Espenoza could not match him, giving up nine hits and five earned runs including a two-run triple from Dave de Leon in the fifth that turned a close game into a deficit the Sacramento offense could not close, and Chris Ryan's entry in the seventh produced a two-run homer that settled the matter conclusively at 7-3. The pitching staff ERA, which had been pristine, absorbed a difficult evening and survived it.

The May 6th game required Sacramento to play from behind, and it produced two of the more satisfying swings of this entire stretch when the team needed them most. The Prayers trailed 2-1 entering the eighth with Larson having thrown 7.1 innings of controlled baseball and left the game having earned a better fate than a loss — and then Cruz hit a solo homer in the eighth to tie it, and Lopez followed with a two-run shot in the ninth off Jimenez to put Sacramento ahead for good. Alonzo went 3-for-3, drove in a run with a double, and was the quiet engine underneath the late-inning drama. Prieto saved his tenth, Dodge picked up the win in relief, and Sacramento took the series.

vs. Columbus: May 7 – May 9

Three games at Cathedral Stadium against a Heaven club sitting five and a half games back in the AL East and playing well enough to win one of them, and the split that resulted was the kind of outcome that reasonable people can look at from opposite directions and draw opposite conclusions about who the better team is.

The May 7th game was a Rubalcava performance for the archives. Eight innings, four hits, one earned run, nine strikeouts, zero walks, a game score of 79, and a 3-1 final that was never in serious doubt after Lopez hit his tenth homer of the season in the first inning and Hernandez added his seventh in the eighth for insurance. Prieto closed it for save eleven. Rubalcava's ERA dropped to 2.18 and his record moved to 4-3, which are two numbers that should not be able to coexist in the same sentence but have been coexisting in the same sentence for most of May.

The May 8th game featured the kind of contribution from an unlikely source that championship teams tend to produce. With two runners aboard in the second inning, Bill Marcos — the backup infielder who has seen expanded time with Rodriguez managing an elbow — turned on a Segura fastball and hit a three-run homer that put the game away before most of the Cathedral crowd had finished settling into their seats. Rodriguez added a two-run shot in the sixth, St. Clair went 6.1 innings and was sharp in the manner that has become routine for him, and Dodge closed out the 6-3 win for his second save. The kind of game that is easy to take for granted and should not be.

The May 9th game went to Columbus because Jake Becerra was better on this afternoon, and sometimes that is the whole story. He threw seven innings of three-hit baseball, Victor Guerrero hit a two-run homer off Andretti in the fifth that proved to be all the scoring Columbus needed, and MacDonald's solo shot in the eighth made it interesting enough that the final score of 2-1 read tighter than the game felt. Becerra commanded his pitches and Sacramento never solved him. The series split. Some games are clean in their explanations, and this was one of them.

At Philadelphia: May 11 – May 13

Three games at PETCO Park against a Padres club that came in at 22-13 and was playing with the energy of a team that believed it was as good as its record said, and the series unfolded across three evenings that each had their own distinct character and collectively produced a split that felt simultaneously like Sacramento's best and worst baseball of the stretch.

The May 11th game was the most exhausting kind of loss — the kind you nearly escape, only to find the door closing on your fingers at the last possible moment. Sacramento trailed 5-2 heading into the ninth and appeared to be walking toward a quiet defeat when Rodriguez hit a two-run homer off Zubia and Baldelomar immediately followed with a solo shot to tie it and produce the kind of sudden, electric momentum shift that this lineup is capable of and that the Cathedral faithful have learned to expect. Then Prieto came in for the tenth and allowed a sacrifice fly to Victor Martinez to end it. Espenoza had walked four batters during a 6.2-inning start in which he was not his best self, which was the original reason the Prayers were in a hole that deep to begin with, but the ninth-inning rally made the loss feel different — like something that was right there, and was not taken.

The May 12th game was the kind of win that makes baseball beautiful and baffling in equal proportion. Rubalcava gave up six runs in 4.2 innings. Wright came on and surrendered four runs in two-thirds of an inning. The Prayers trailed badly, their bullpen was compromised, and Philadelphia had every reason to feel comfortable. And then the Sacramento offense — the offense that leads the American League in runs scored and home runs and OPS by margins that are no longer coincidental — simply refused to accept the situation. Lopez went 4-for-5 with four RBI and a homer. Cruz went 3-for-5 with four RBI and a homer. Perez hit a three-run shot in the ninth to seal the deal. Bautista threw 2.2 scoreless innings to hold things steady long enough for the bats to do their work. Sacramento won 12-10, and Aces said afterward "I like our moxie," which is a considerable understatement given what the first three innings looked like.

The May 13th game went the other way, and the reason it went the other way was named Arturo Gomez, who went 3-for-4 against Larson with two doubles, a homer, and eight total bases in an afternoon that Larson would prefer to renegotiate. Six runs, five innings, two home runs allowed — including a Kilmer two-run shot in the sixth — and the Philadelphia offense was simply better on this day. Alejandro Perez threw six scoreless innings for the Padres and was the other half of the explanation. The series split. Sacramento went home.

At El Paso: May 14 – May 16

Three games at Abbots Park against the team with the worst record in the American League West, and Sacramento took two of three before detonating the final game into something that should be filed under the category of "things that happen when a championship offense runs into a bullpen that has already surrendered."

The May 14th game was Andretti doing what Andretti does now, which is taking the ball every fifth day and pitching seven innings with the quiet competence of a veteran who has finally stopped fighting his own mechanics. Three runs allowed, eight hits, two walks, 99 pitches, a win that moved him to 5-2 and dropped his ERA to 2.98 — and the offense chipped in with MacDonald's solo homer in the fourth and a first-inning sacrifice fly to give him an early cushion. The footnote was Rodriguez leaving the game in the second inning after being injured while throwing, which added another entry to an injury chronicle that has become one of the more complicated subplots of the season.

The May 15th game was a 5-3 Sacramento win that concealed more drama than the final score implies. St. Clair threw 7.2 innings and allowed just one earned run, which was more than sufficient, and Sacramento appeared to have the game in hand when Dodge allowed a two-run hit in the ninth that briefly tightened things before Rodriguez, Cruz, and Lopez each homered to re-establish the lead. Prieto locked it down for his thirteenth save, and Carlos Miera — a new name appearing in the right field slot — went 1-for-3 with a solo homer in limited action that suggested the roster shuffling is producing options the front office may not have anticipated.

The May 16th game was fourteen runs, sixteen hits, and a collective statement from an offense that had been intermittently frustrating over the preceding two weeks and apparently needed an opponent willing to deploy multiple relievers without any of them being capable of retiring an American League hitter in any sequence. Perez went 4-for-5 with three doubles and three RBI. MacDonald went 3-for-4 with a homer and three RBI. Musco hit two home runs. Baldelomar hit a three-run homer. Espenoza was solid through 6.1 innings and allowed one run. El Paso lost their fourth straight, Sacramento won 14-2, and the road trip ended with the Prayers on a three-game winning streak and looking very much like the team everyone expected when the season began.

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WHAT DESERVES YOUR ATTENTION


Alejandro Lopez Is Having a Season

The "Who's Hot" data attached to this period shows Lopez at .364 with three home runs over his last five games, but what strikes me about that number is what sits underneath it — a full season line of .276, thirteen home runs, 29 RBI, fifteen stolen bases, a .566 slugging percentage, and a team-leading WAR of 2.4 through 39 games. He is 24 years old. He gets on base, he hits for power, he runs well enough that pitchers have to think about him in ways they do not think about most center fielders, and he has been producing in both the quiet games and the loud ones with a consistency that has moved beyond hot streak and into the territory of genuine breakout. This column has been careful about declaring these things prematurely. It is no longer being careful. Alejandro Lopez is having a season, and if this is who he is at 24, the Sacramento organization has something it will be building around for a long time.

Gil Cruz and the Quiet Monster Year

Nobody talks about Cruz the way they talk about Lopez, partly because Cruz is 25 and this is his fourth season and excellence from him feels like expectation fulfilled rather than expectation exceeded. But I want to make sure this column goes on record before the season gets any further: a .296 average with eight home runs, 32 RBI, a .932 OPS, and a WAR of 2.0 from a second baseman who also plays defense, steals bases, and consistently delivers in the highest-leverage moments of close games — that is a premier player producing at a premier level. The triple in San Jose that saved the April 30th game. The homer in the eighth at Tucson that tied May 6th. The 3-for-5, four-RBI performance in the Philadelphia blowout. Cruz shows up in the moments that require showing up, and the accumulation of those moments over forty games is beginning to look like a case for something larger than this column has been saying about him.

Bernardo Andretti Has Become Someone This Rotation Can Count On

The "Who's Hot" numbers say 4-1, 1.91 ERA over his last six starts, and the box scores confirm every digit of that line — seven shutout innings against Tucson, eight innings and twelve strikeouts against Detroit two weeks before this stretch began, seven more innings and a win at El Paso to close this road trip. What matters about Andretti is not the ERA, which will fluctuate, but the innings, which have been consistent and deep and have preserved the bullpen in ways that matter more than any single start. He is working 7-plus innings on a reliable basis, walking nobody, and has become the kind of starter a manager can write in the lineup card without reservation. Two months ago this column was asking hard questions about him. Those questions have been answered, and the answers were worth waiting for.

Jordan Rubalcava: The Record Lies, The ERA Tells The Truth

Rubalcava is 4-3. He has a 2.89 ERA, a 1.07 WHIP, 60 strikeouts in 62.1 innings, and a WAR of 2.2 that leads the Sacramento pitching staff by a comfortable margin. In the games he has lost, the offense has generally failed him and the bullpen has done the rest of the failing on his behalf — none more infuriatingly than May 2nd in San Jose, when Prieto allowed back-to-back home runs to blow a two-run ninth-inning lead and hand Rubalcava a loss for a start in which he was excellent for 7.1 innings. The wins will come. The underlying numbers are the real document, and the real document describes one of the better starting pitchers in the American League in 1993. His record will catch up to his ERA, and when it does, the AL will need to reckon with a rotation that has three starters — Rubalcava, Andretti, and now Espenoza — all performing at that level simultaneously.

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NOT EVERYTHING IS FINE, AND HERE IS WHY


Luis Prieto's Blown Saves Deserve a Direct Conversation

Prieto has thirteen saves and a 3.50 ERA, and I am aware that thirteen saves is a good number and that closers blow saves and that no single performance defines a career and all of the other reasonable things that reasonable people say when they are trying to remain calm about a pattern that is beginning to concern them. I want to remain calm. But Prieto entered this stretch with an ERA of 0.87 and eight saves and a reputation built on two months of near-flawless ninth-inning work, and across these eighteen games he has blown two saves in situations that directly cost this team games it should have won, including May 2nd in San Jose — where he allowed back-to-back home runs to lose a game that Rubalcava had already won — and May 11th in Philadelphia, where he could not hold a tie in the tenth. His ERA has climbed from 0.87 to 3.50 in the span of three weeks. The walks have increased. The home runs allowed have increased. This may be a rough patch that corrects itself before June, or it may be the beginning of something that needs to be addressed at the roster level. This column does not know which it is yet. What this column does know is that both possibilities deserve to be on the table.

The Jose Rodriguez Injury Carousel Needs to Stop

Rodriguez has now been hurt while running the bases, hurt while throwing, hurt while running the bases again, and is currently listed as day-to-day with groin soreness. He is 23 years old. He has a Gold Glove and a bat that has shown genuine power — four home runs, the walk-off single in April, the homer in Philadelphia — and there is real talent here that the organization has invested in and should be protecting. At some point, a sequence of injuries this concentrated over this short a period of time stops being bad luck and starts being a conversation about workload management, about whether something mechanical is creating repeated vulnerability, and about whether day-to-day designations are giving this player enough time to actually recover before he is back on the field doing the things that keep injuring him. Sacramento needs Rodriguez healthy for the long season ahead. They will not have him healthy if he keeps being cleared too quickly.

The Caliari Situation

Reports out of the Sacramento clubhouse indicate that Gil Caliari has approached management about a contract extension. Caliari has pitched 3.1 innings this season, allowed four earned runs, and carries an ERA of 10.80 and a WHIP of 3.00. He has appeared in six games without recording a save or a win. I do not know what number Caliari has in mind, and I have no visibility into the internal conversations between player and front office. What I will say is that the leverage in this particular negotiation rests entirely on one side of the table, and it is not the side wearing Caliari's uniform number.

Chris Ryan Cannot Be a Middle-Inning Option Indefinitely

A 4.50 ERA, five home runs allowed, eight walks in 18 innings across fourteen appearances — Ryan has been the one consistently unreliable arm in a bullpen that otherwise has depth and quality. Gutierrez has been outstanding. Bautista has been excellent in high-leverage situations. Dodge has been reliable and has earned his wins. Ryan continues to enter in the middle innings and continues to give up earned runs at a rate that a championship bullpen cannot sustain over 162 games. The rotation is performing well enough that Sacramento rarely needs its relief corps to cover more than three or four innings, which has somewhat masked the problem. It will not always mask it.

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KEEPING TABS ON THE COMPETITION


Fort Worth is the story in the AL West and has been for two weeks. The Spirits are 24-17, three games back in the division, have won seven of their last ten, and come to Cathedral Stadium this week for four games that will constitute the first genuine statement series of the second month of the season. Their rotation — Gillon, Varela, Blythe, Santamaria — has posted a 3.81 ERA as a staff and leads the AL in complete games, which says something about the depth and durability of their pitching. Fort Worth is a real contender, and this week's series will tell us how seriously Sacramento's rotation, currently the best in the American League, intends to take that reality.

San Jose is 22-18, four and a half games back, and would be more dangerous than their current position suggests if not for the news that Ryan Thompson's elbow recovery has stalled and that at least two more weeks will pass before he can be activated. Thompson was hitting .317 in 21 games and had been the best player on their roster over the first month. The Demons have the lineup to compete without him and have proven it — the 2-2 split against Sacramento in late April was a reminder that this is not a team to dismiss — but the shortstop's absence is a meaningful wound in a pennant race that may not forgive meaningful wounds.

Brooklyn is tied with Sacramento at 27-14 for the best record in baseball, and the Priests have done it while losing their best hitter to retirement. Chris Watts — the all-time FBL single-season hits record holder with 213 in 1979 — announced his retirement this week alongside team officials, ending a career that included 1,812 hits, 269 doubles, and a .285 average across what was, by any accounting, one of the finest careers in this league's history. "I want to leave the game the way I came into it," Watts said, and the Brooklyn organization will now need to manage the roster hole his departure creates. The Priests have been doing this all season, however, and have not blinked yet.

Elsewhere: Philadelphia lost first baseman Dave Brown for the year, a torn elbow that will cost him the rest of the season and cost the Padres a player who was hitting .330 in 25 games. Washington's Rafael Rastelli will miss seven weeks with an abdominal strain. Long Beach lost center fielder Eddy Rodriguez to a torn PCL — a season-ending injury for a 24-year-old that this column wishes to acknowledge as genuinely hard news for a young player rather than a transaction note — and the Diablos, already sitting at 16-24, are running out of the kind of contributors they can afford to lose. In Tucson, the Maynard-Gill dugout situation appears to have graduated from clubhouse friction to a genuine problem, with manager Barrett hinting publicly that a roster move may be necessary to separate two players who have demonstrated they cannot coexist — this on a team sitting at 16-23 that cannot afford the distraction. Baltimore, meanwhile, re-signed Vincent Benitez to a four-year deal worth $1.728 million, a commitment that looks more interesting in context given that the Satans are currently 19-21 and Benitez himself is 1-2 with a 4.14 ERA. Some investments are about the future. Whether this is one of those is a question Baltimore's front office will be answering for the next four years.

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THE MAILBAG — You wrote in. I wrote back.


From Pham Van Duc of East Sacramento, who describes himself as "a man who has watched 22 years of Prayers baseball and still cannot sleep after a blown save": "Prieto let me down twice in the last three weeks. Is my faith misplaced?"

Duc, your faith is not misplaced — it is being tested, which is a different thing, and baseball tests faith on a schedule entirely its own. Prieto has thirteen saves and a body of work from April that was as good as any closer in this league produced during that month. What has happened since May 1st is a deterioration in a very specific and very concerning metric: the home runs. He allowed three home runs in the month of April and has already allowed three more in less than three weeks of May, including the two that ended the San Jose series in the worst possible fashion. Closers go through these stretches. The ones who are genuinely good come out the other side. This column is not ready to declare a crisis but is watching closely enough that you should not feel alone in your sleeplessness, Pyotr. That, at least, can be offered.

From Kwame Asante-Boateng of Natomas, who asks his question in three words and one question mark: "Lopez. Franchise player?"

Kwame, yes. The full version of the answer requires examining the age, the tools, the season line, the performance in high-leverage situations, the stolen base efficiency, and the fact that he is doing all of this while playing center field and playing it well — but the short version is yes, and this column is comfortable committing to that position in print and on the record. Lopez is a franchise player. The Sacramento Prayers have been built to win championships with Rubalcava and Cruz and Musco at the center of the enterprise, and all of that remains true, but Lopez is now the most exciting player on this roster and is performing in a way that warrants the franchise label. Twenty-four years old, thirteen home runs, the highest WAR on the team. Yes.

From Meera Krishnaswamy of Rancho Cordova, a longtime listener who notes she has been tracking Rubalcava's game scores in a spreadsheet since 1989: "My spreadsheet says Rubalcava should be 7-0. The standings say 4-3. Which one do I believe?"

Meera, you believe your spreadsheet, because your spreadsheet is measuring the right things and the standings are measuring the wrong ones. Game scores do not appear in the final line. WAR does not appear in the final line. The nine strikeouts he threw past Columbus on May 7th, the 7.1 innings of two-run ball he threw in San Jose on May 2nd before the bullpen handed the game back — none of that appears in the wins column, but all of it is in your spreadsheet, and your spreadsheet is the more accurate document. Keep tracking. The wins will come. They have to, because the ERA and the WHIP and the strikeout numbers are the kind of performance that does not stay unrewarded forever, and this column intends to be here to note the precise moment the record catches up to the pitcher.

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Fort Worth comes to Cathedral Stadium starting today, and the four-game series represents the kind of measuring-stick moment that tells you what a team actually is rather than what it has been. The Spirits are 24-17, they are pitching well, and they have been waiting for this series since the schedule came out. Sacramento's rotation will answer the question this week. This column will be listening.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________

Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

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Old 03-10-2026, 11:26 PM   #249
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

May 17 – May 30, 1993 | Games 42–54 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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35-19. FOUR GAMES UP IN THE AL WEST. AND AT 1:30 IN THE MORNING ON MAY 20TH, CATHEDRAL STADIUM FINALLY WENT DARK.


Five hours and twenty minutes. Seventeen innings. Two records set in the same game — Alejandro Lopez walking four times to establish a Sacramento franchise mark in extra-inning contests, Fort Worth's Steve Schultz striking out five times to tie the AL record for the same — and at the end of it all, Luis Prieto on the mound in the seventeenth inning throwing two pitches that produced two home runs that produced the ending nobody in that building wanted. The May 19th game against Fort Worth was the kind of evening that takes something out of a franchise — not permanently, not catastrophically, but in the way that a seventeen-inning loss at home against your main division rival takes something out, after six pitchers and 315 combined pitches and a crowd that stayed long past any reasonable hour to be genuinely hurt by what happened at the end. I will cover it properly in the game section. What I want to say here, before any of the summaries arrive, is that Sacramento went 8-5 over these thirteen games, extended the AL West lead to four games over Fort Worth, and is playing well enough to win this division by a comfortable margin — and also that the patterns around the closer's recent work are real stories that deserve honest examination alongside the good ones. Both are true. The 35-19 record is the headline. What sits underneath it requires some talking about.

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THE SCORECARD: GAME BY GAME, TRUTH BY TRUTH


vs. Fort Worth: May 17–20

The measuring-stick series I circled on the calendar two weeks ago arrived and delivered exactly the kind of ambiguous verdict that measuring-stick series tend to produce when two evenly matched clubs play each other hard across four games — a 2-2 split, a story for each side, and no definitive answer about who the better team is. What we got was two extra-inning games, a dominant starting performance that got no reward, a comeback win of genuine quality, and a marathon that ended in the worst possible way. Fort Worth confirmed everything I suspected about them. They are a real threat in this division and Sacramento cannot afford to take them lightly for the remainder of this season.

The May 17th opener was Rubalcava making his case one more time, the case he has been making since opening day, the case that his ERA has been making on his behalf. He went 7.1 innings, allowed one run on four hits, threw 107 pitches, and left with Sacramento leading 2-1. Dodge entered and gave up a Benoldi two-run homer in the eighth. Prieto entered and gave up a Guerrero walk-off double in the ninth. The 3-2 final moves Rubalcava to 4-4 with an ERA of 2.58. I have written a version of this paragraph several times this season and I intend to keep writing it until the record corrects itself or the season ends, whichever comes first.

The May 18th game went twelve innings and required the Prayers to absorb Izzy Rodriguez hitting two home runs and driving in four runs — the second of those home runs a three-run shot off Ryan in the ninth inning that turned a 3-3 tie into a 6-3 Fort Worth lead and seemed for a moment to settle the matter conclusively. Instead Sacramento tied it again, played three more innings, and Baldelomar lined a walk-off double off Ingram in the twelfth to score Torres, who had led off with a double of his own. Bautista earned the win with two scoreless innings. The game lasted four hours and five minutes and required fifteen Sacramento hits, twenty-eight runners left on base between the two clubs, and the kind of stubborn refusal to accept a tidy ending that characterizes this franchise at its best. Marcos was hit by a pitch and departed with an injury that will matter to the roster conversation.

The May 19th game went seventeen innings, and the full accounting of how Sacramento fought to be in a position to lose it deserves more than a summary paragraph. Andretti threw 6.2 innings of two-run baseball. Gutierrez, Dodge, Ryan, Bautista, and Wright all contributed innings in the long middle section of the game, the bullpen collectively holding Fort Worth scoreless from the tenth through the sixteenth and giving the Sacramento offense multiple opportunities that it failed to convert — thirteen runners left on base in those extra innings, which is a failure of execution that contributed to the final result as much as anything the pitching staff did. And then Prieto entered the seventeenth inning, and Benoldi hit one out, and Hicks hit one out, back to back, and the game was over. Fort Worth 7, Sacramento 5. I genuinely do not know whether to be angrier at the two home runs or at the thirteen stranded baserunners that made the two home runs decisive.

The May 20th game was Sacramento writing the final chapter of the series the right way. Lopez hit his fourteenth homer in the first inning. Hernandez doubled and scored in the second. The Prayers built a lead and when Miera — who continues to reward every opportunity he receives — stroked a go-ahead two-run double in the sixth to push it to 5-4, the Cathedral crowd finally had something unambiguous to celebrate. St. Clair went seven solid innings. Dodge held the eighth. Caliari came in for the ninth and retired Fort Worth in order, three up three down, for the first save of his season. The series split 2-2.

At Brooklyn: May 21–23

We went to Priests Grounds knowing Brooklyn was on a seven-game winning streak with the best record in the American League. We left having taken one of three, which given the circumstances — a Brooklyn club playing its best baseball of the season, Sacramento's rotation shuffled, the lineup carrying injury absences — is a result I'll accept without too much complaint, though the manner of the first two losses deserves some honest accounting.

The May 21st game should have been winnable. Espenoza gave Sacramento 5.2 innings, allowed one earned run, and left his team with a 5-5 tie in the sixth. Then Caliari entered for the eighth with Sacramento trailing 5-6 — Largent had led off the inning with a solo shot — and could not hold it. Caliari has given up that kind of run with uncomfortable regularity this season and whatever goodwill he generated with the May 20th save was partially spent here. Brooklyn completed the win behind Torres, who had two doubles and four RBI on the night. Brooklyn's winning streak reached eight games.

The May 22nd game was quieter and not much more pleasant. Rubalcava took his second consecutive loss in circumstances that bear stating plainly: he went six innings, allowed one earned run, and lost 5-2. Guerra was better on the night — eight innings of two-run baseball, an excellent performance that deserved to win — and did. Rubalcava is 4-4. His ERA is 2.26. I understand completely that a pitcher can be 4-4 with a 2.26 ERA without anything fraudulent having occurred, but I also understand that it is unusual, and the unusual tends to correct itself, and I am waiting for the correction with considerable anticipation.

The May 23rd game gave Cathedral North something to talk about and gave this column an anecdote I intend to use for a long time. Larson went nine innings. Nine. He threw two hits, allowed one earned run, struck out seven, and finished with a game score of 85. It was the best start of his season and one of the best individual pitching performances Sacramento has produced in 1993, and when MacDonald hit a solo home run off the scoreboard in the eleventh inning to give the Prayers a 2-1 lead, and Dodge came in to close the door for his third save, the series finale felt like a proper ending to a difficult road trip — not the series result anyone wanted, but a game that reminded you what this rotation is capable of when the full version shows up.

vs. Las Vegas: May 25–27

Three games against the Blessed at Cathedral Stadium, three wins. The stretch reads as cleanly as the scoreboard suggests and I am happy to let it.

The May 25th opener — which I covered briefly at the close of the previous article — set the tone. Andretti went eight innings, Baldelomar hit his seventh home run in the seventh inning, and Prieto closed it out for save number fourteen.

The May 26th game produced the single most explosive inning of Sacramento's season to date. Mayberry came to the mound in the fourth with the game scoreless and left in the middle of the inning having allowed seven runs on seven hits, including three home runs. Cruz hit one. MacDonald hit one. Francisco Hernandez hit one with two men on to cap the seven-run frame. Espenoza handled the rest with the kind of ease you can afford when your offense deposits seven runs on the table in the fourth inning — 8.2 innings, two earned runs, another quality start logged. The 7-2 final improved his season ERA to 2.94.

The May 27th game belongs to two men and the appropriate way to handle them is separately. Rubalcava went eight innings, allowed nothing, struck out nine, threw 109 pitches, and finished with a game score of 83. The Las Vegas offense, which entered averaging nearly four runs per game, could not do anything with him. The final line — 8.0 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 9 K — is simply a dominant professional performance, the kind Rubalcava has been delivering all season while the won-loss column refused to cooperate. He is 5-4 now. The ERA is 2.26. Both numbers tell true stories. The second number tells a truer one.

The second man is Prieto, who came into the ninth inning with a 2-0 lead and saved his 300th career game. He allowed a Florez home run, which is the kind of note this podcast feels obligated to include alongside any celebration, because complete accounting matters more than a clean narrative. But he closed it out. Three hundred saves. He spoke to reporters afterward with genuine feeling, and the milestone deserves recognition as the accomplishment it is.

vs. Seattle: May 28–30

The Lucifers came to Cathedral Stadium and went 1-3, which is the right result against a team sitting ten and a half games back in the division. The detailing matters though.

The May 28th loss was the kind of game that accumulates from small failures rather than any single catastrophic moment. Larson went six innings and allowed four earned runs — not a disaster, but not the result Sacramento needed. Gutierrez, who had been pitching at a level that earned him a spot in the Concern Corner I am choosing not to put that category name on this time, inherited runners in the seventh and allowed both to score, giving the Lucifers a 6-5 lead that Arispe's two-run single had created. Thirteen men left on base for Sacramento, three errors contributed to the defensive ledger, and the Prayers lost 6-5 to a team playing below .500. It was not a good night.

The May 29th game was considerably better. Alonzo hit a two-run homer in the fifth to put Sacramento on top 3-3 after Seattle had built a 3-0 lead. Baldelomar singled home the winning run with two outs in the eighth, and Dodge and Prieto held it from there — Dodge winning his third game of the season without a loss, Prieto recording his sixteenth save. St. Clair threw seven-plus innings and continues to do everything this organization asked of him when it handed him a rotation spot in April.

The May 30th finale was an Andretti afternoon, the kind of game that makes the contract look like money well spent. He went 5.1 innings and got the win, his seventh of the season against two losses, while Cruz went 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBI — Cruz's tenth home run of the year — and MacDonald added a two-run shot in the fifth. Bautista gave up a Hicks two-run homer in the ninth that made the final score 8-6 look closer than the game felt for most of its duration, and Prieto got his seventeenth save to close the series.

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NAMES WORTH KNOWING RIGHT NOW


Alejandro Lopez — Fourteen home runs. Nineteen stolen bases. A .388 on-base percentage built through genuine plate patience — forty-two walks in fifty-two games — that makes him the most complete offensive player on this roster by a meaningful margin. The WAR column says 2.5, which leads the team. I wrote early in the season that the twenty-four-year-old center fielder was due for a year that made people pay attention beyond Sacramento, and that is precisely what is happening. When they hand out the AL West Player of the Month award for May, his name should be on the envelope.

Jordan Rubalcava — A 2.26 ERA. Eighty-two strikeouts in 83.2 innings. A WHIP of 1.03. And a 5-4 record that I refuse to accept as a meaningful descriptor of how well this man has pitched in 1993. The May 27th start against Las Vegas — eight innings, three hits, zero runs — was the most recent entry in a catalog of performances that deserve better outcomes than the bullpen and the offense have provided. He is the best pitcher in the American League right now by nearly any reasonable measure and I will argue this with anyone who wants to have the argument.

Bernardo Andretti — The transformation from the inconsistent figure of recent seasons into the reliable innings-eater and team win-accumulator he has become in 1993 remains the rotation story I find most personally satisfying. Seven wins against two losses. A 2.91 ERA. Seventy-seven innings and fifty-four strikeouts. The May 30th win over Seattle was his seventh, and the manner of it — controlled, professional, getting the team to the middle innings with a lead and handing it cleanly to the bullpen — is exactly what a number-two or number-three starter is supposed to do. Andretti is doing it consistently now.

Steve Dodge — Three wins. Three saves. A 2.05 ERA across twenty-eight appearances. The right-handed setup man has become the most reliable arm in the bullpen over the past month and the May 23rd save at Brooklyn — coming into a tie game in the eleventh after Larson's nine-inning gem and holding it for one out — was a performance that required real nerve. When this podcast discusses the bullpen's concerns, Dodge is the reason that section does not read as purely alarming.

Carlos Miera — Five games, ten at-bats, a .400 average, a home run, and the go-ahead two-run double against Fort Worth on May 20th that represents exactly the kind of contribution a roster-depth player is supposed to make when the regular lineup has gaps to fill. He is hitting .400/.500/.800 in limited time. That will not last, but the bat is real and the confidence is visible every time he steps in.

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THE HONEST QUESTIONS


Luis Prieto — The 300th save is a genuine milestone and we celebrated it appropriately in the game section. I want to be equally clear about something else: the closer's ERA stands at 4.85 after the May 30th series finale. He has four blown saves. He has allowed six home runs in twenty-six innings. The May 17th blown save cost Rubalcava another win. The May 19th inherited situation in the seventeenth ended with two back-to-back home runs. He allowed the Florez homer immediately after clinching career save number 300. There is a pattern in this data that the milestone does not cancel out. The 300th save happened. The ERA is still 4.85. Both are true simultaneously, and the latter is the one that matters going forward.

The bullpen depth beyond Dodge and Gutierrez — Ryan at 4.76, Wright at 4.91, Caliari at 7.11. Three of the five middle-relief arms are allowing runs at rates that would concern any front office, and the May 19th Fort Worth marathon exposed precisely what happens when this bullpen is asked to carry a seventeen-inning game. Gutierrez has been outstanding — a 1.25 ERA and two saves in fifteen appearances — but he cannot be the only reliable option in the seventh and eighth. The May 31st demotion of Bautista, who posted a 3.14 ERA in fifteen appearances, and his replacement with Salazar, who threw 3.1 rehabilitation innings before being recalled, represents either a legitimate upgrade or a gamble, depending on what Salazar looks like over the next two weeks.

Jose Rodriguez — Three separate injury events in roughly ten days: the elbow while throwing, the groin while running bases, and the May 16th IL stint that began a clock that ran until his activation May 27th. He appeared in the May 27th game briefly enough that his full return to the regular lineup is still genuinely uncertain. Rodriguez is twenty-three years old with a Gold Glove and a .360 ceiling in the development model, and every game he misses is a game the Prayers are running David Perez or Gil Cruz at third base instead. Neither Perez nor Cruz is a liability there — Perez has actually been hitting well (.316/.367/.452) — but Rodriguez is the long-term solution and his health situation requires monitoring that goes beyond the optimistic language of "day-to-day."

The Charlotte trade — Three minor league pitchers — including Art Rutgers, Danny Lopez, and Francisco Gutierrez — plus two draft picks, one of which was a third-round selection, sent to Charlotte in exchange for a minor league catcher, a first-round pick, and $106,000 in cash. The organization clearly sees the first-round pick as the centerpiece of the deal, and that logic has merit if the pick lands in the top third of the round. But three pitching prospects plus two picks is a meaningful inventory investment for a team built on rotation depth, and the full accounting of this trade probably won't be readable for three or four years. I flag it now because deals like this tend to be forgotten quickly in the middle of a winning season.

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LEAGUE NOTES: WHAT'S HAPPENING ELSEWHERE


Brooklyn is 34-19 and leads the AL East, and anyone building a realistic World Series bracket in their head right now has to consider a Sacramento-Brooklyn matchup in the Championship Series as the most likely AL pairing. The Priests have the best record in the league and Sacramento has the second best. They met at Priests Grounds for three games this past week, Sacramento left with one win, and the gap between these two clubs is smaller than the standings gap suggests. Their pitching, defensively grounded approach, and unwillingness to beat themselves late in games makes them the team I most respect in this league right now.

Fort Worth at 31-23 remains the primary division challenger, four games back in the West and holding the AL Wild Card lead at plus one-and-a-half games over Milwaukee. They split the four-game series with Sacramento in May and they are exactly the kind of team that splits series with Sacramento — too disciplined to get swept, not quite good enough to win the series outright. If the Prayers ever go through a significant losing stretch, Fort Worth will be there.

In the NL, Phoenix is 34-19 and leads the West while Philadelphia at 33-19 leads the East, and the early-season picture of those two franchises as the most complete teams in the National League has not meaningfully changed. If Sacramento does reach the World Series, it will almost certainly come from one of those two directions.

The El Paso managerial situation resolved with the firing of Eric Alexander. His dismissal following a 18-35 start was not a surprise to anyone who has watched them play this season. They are sixteen and a half games back in the division and trending in the wrong direction. Whatever competitive identity El Paso was trying to build under Alexander, it did not take.

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LISTENER MAIL — The questions you asked and the answers you deserve.


Brendan Doyle from Midtown writes: "Claude — the May 19th game. I stayed until the seventeenth inning. I have never in thirty years of watching this franchise felt that particular combination of pride and devastation at the same time. What is your honest read on what that game means for the rest of the season?"

What it means is that Sacramento has the kind of roster that keeps a seventeen-inning game close enough to lose in the seventeenth inning, and that is actually a statement of quality rather than indictment. A lesser team gets blown out by the fifth and goes home. The Prayers fought Fort Worth to a standstill for sixteen innings before the bullpen exhaustion finally showed. What it also means is that Prieto giving up back-to-back home runs in the seventeenth inning of a tied game is not a random event — it is consistent with a pattern of vulnerability that the organization needs to address before October. Both readings are honest. Thank you for staying until the end. The franchise noticed.

Rosario Galvan-Nakamura from East Sacramento writes: "I want to make the case for Andretti as the team MVP through May. Seven and two, a 2.91 ERA, seventy-seven innings, and nobody is talking about it because Rubalcava gets all the attention and Lopez gets all the highlight reels. Am I wrong?"

You are not wrong, and the case you are making is a real one. Andretti's transformation this season is the story that gets underreported precisely because Rubalcava's statistical dominance and Lopez's power-and-speed combination are more naturally dramatic. Andretti goes out every five days, throws seven innings, gets the win, and gets minimal column inches for it. If I am being precise about team value, Lopez leads the club in WAR at 2.5, Rubalcava leads the pitchers at 3.1, and Andretti's 2.0 WAR represents genuine above-average production. He is not the MVP of this team but he is unambiguously one of its three most valuable players and you are correct that he deserves more recognition than he receives.

Sarkis Baghdassarian from Arden Park writes: "Claude, I've been watching Miera closely these last few games. He looks too good to be a reserve. What's the plan with him long-term if Rodriguez stays healthy?"

The honest answer is that the plan is probably exactly what it sounds like — Rodriguez is the starter, Miera is the depth. The .400 average in limited time is encouraging but also limited, and the full-time sample will tell the real story. What I find genuinely interesting about Miera is that his plate approach in his few appearances suggests a hitter with some real understanding of the strike zone, which tends to age better than pure contact rate. Whether that translates to a starting role at some point depends entirely on what Rodriguez does with his own health, which as discussed above is not a settled question. Watch the at-bat quality more than the batting average line.

Linh Phan from Natomas writes: "The Charlotte trade bothers me more than I can fully explain. What are we actually getting?"

A first-round draft pick, a minor league catcher who appears to be organizational depth rather than a top-100 prospect, and $106,000 in cash. The first-round pick is the real answer to your question, and whether that answer satisfies depends entirely on where in the first round it lands. If it's a top-fifteen pick from a team that struggles, the deal looks smart in three years. If Charlotte turns things around and it's picking twenty-eighth, the Prayers gave away three live arms and two additional selections for a supplemental asset. The organization's front office has earned considerable trust given the six consecutive championships, and I do not assume incompetence when I cannot see the full picture. But I share your unease and I do not think that unease is irrational.

______________________________

Claude Playball has covered Sacramento Prayers baseball for eleven years. The Hot Corner publishes throughout the season. Questions and correspondence are welcome.

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Old 03-11-2026, 11:53 AM   #250
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

June 1 – June 13, 1993 | Games 55–67 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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FIVE GAMES UP ON JUNE 8TH. ONE AND A HALF GAMES UP ON JUNE 13TH. SOMEONE WANT TO TALK ABOUT THAT?


Five games is a comfortable division lead entering a road trip against your primary rival. One and a half games is a number that makes you check the standings every morning before coffee. Sacramento did not lose a catastrophic amount of ground over these thirteen games — the Prayers went 6-7, which is an ordinary below-.500 stretch that any team will produce at some point in a 162-game schedule — but the timing and concentration of that damage is the part that deserves honest examination. Four of those seven losses came in the final five games of this stretch, three of them at Spirits Grounds, where Fort Worth won the series three games to one and pulled to within a game and a half of first place. The Spirits are now 40-28, sitting on a three-game winning streak, and holding the AL wild card lead by two full games. They are not a team that is going to lose the division on its own, and Sacramento's head-to-head record against them — four wins, eight losses — is the most uncomfortable number in the entire Prayers database right now.

There are real reasons to maintain perspective. Forty-one wins in sixty-seven games is a .612 winning percentage that projects to ninety-nine wins over a full season. The rotation's aggregate ERA of 3.19 remains the best in the American League. Alejandro Lopez is playing like the most valuable player in this league and nobody in the sport is running bases the way he runs them. All of that is true and all of it remains true even after a 6-7 stretch that exposed the bullpen's depth problems, generated two more confounding starts from the best pitcher in the rotation, and added a significant injury to the arm the front office most needed to stay healthy.

But five games to one and a half in thirteen days is a real number, and this column will not pretend it is not.

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WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED: A GAME-BY-GAME TOUR


At San Jose: June 1–3

Three games at San Jose Grounds. A 1-2 series loss. Rubalcava gave back six earned runs in 3.2 innings on June 1st — his worst start of the season by a wide margin, game score of 19, the San Jose lineup unloading through four hits including two Campen doubles and a Thomas home run in the fourth that opened the decisive gap. Musco went 3-for-5 with a home run and three RBI and it was not enough because you cannot dig a six-run hole and expect to climb out of it in six innings on the road. Sacramento lost 6-5 and Rubalcava's ERA moved from 2.26 to 2.78 in a single outing.

The June 2nd game was the corrective. Espenoza went 6.2 innings, allowed two earned runs, and gave the Prayers a professional win. Alonzo hit a two-run homer in the third. Rodriguez added a solo shot in the ninth. The 6-2 final was organized and clean, which was the appropriate response to the previous night.

The June 3rd game belonged to Jose Arteaga, who was better than Sacramento on the night — 7.1 innings, one earned run, his cutter functioning as advertised against a lineup that hit it with discomfort all evening. Larson went 7.1 innings himself and deserved a better fate, but Boldrini's two-run homer in the first inning was the kind of early deficit this Sacramento offense struggles to overcome when the opposing starter is dealing. The Prayers left San Jose 1-2 in the series, having been outpitched twice by a rotation with a 5.12 ERA. This happens. It happened here.

vs. Boston: June 4–6

Three games at Cathedral Stadium, two wins, one blowout loss in both directions.

The June 4th game was the cleanest performance of the stretch. Andretti went 6.1 innings and won his eighth game. Law came to Cathedral with a 5-0 record and left having walked seven batters in 3.1 innings and absorbed a loss that looked nothing like his season line. Musco went 4-for-4 with a home run and a walk. Perez hit a two-run shot in the third. Cruz hit a three-run homer in the fourth. The 8-1 final put Salazar — recalled from Triple-A at the end of May — through 2.2 clean innings of his Cathedral return. Everything worked.

The June 5th game worked for Boston, and I will simply account for it plainly. St. Clair allowed six earned runs in 2.2 innings in the third inning as Boston sent ten men to the plate and produced seven runs against him and the inherited-runner gauntlet that followed. Yoon was excellent for the Messiahs — 6.1 scoreless innings, steady command, nothing Sacramento could solve. The final score was 8-0. The box score note that Ryan was injured while pitching during the game matters more to the next three weeks than the final score does.

The June 6th game was Rubalcava restoring the appropriate order of things. Eight innings. Five hits. Three earned runs. Nine strikeouts. A win that moved him to 6-5. Rodriguez went 3-for-4 and drove in two. Prieto closed it for his eighteenth save, ERA now 4.50 — a marginal improvement from the 4.85 he was carrying into this stretch. The 5-3 series win was the correct result against a team playing below .500.

vs. Charlotte: June 7–9

Three games against the Monks at Cathedral. Two wins, one loss, and a June 9th footnote that redirected the rest of this stretch in ways the scoreboard did not immediately reveal.

The June 7th game needed ten innings and produced the loudest moment Cathedral Stadium generated all week. Lopez led off the tenth against Gaias and hit his fifteenth home run over the fence, and the Monday night crowd that had been sitting through nine innings of anxious, evenly matched baseball finally exhaled. Espenoza had been dealing with Jason McCord all night — two two-run home runs, both with two outs, both off Espenoza — and the fact that Sacramento clawed back twice before Lopez ended it is a testament to the kind of roster this organization has assembled. Dodge threw two scoreless innings in extra innings and won his fourth game without a loss.

The June 8th game was Larson at his best — 7.2 innings, five hits, zero runs, eight strikeouts, game score of 77 — and the 4-0 win put Sacramento at 40-22 with a five-game division lead. Gutierrez finished the eighth with two more strikeouts. It was, through June 8th, the cleanest and most dominant version of what this rotation can produce. The footnote was Francisco Hernandez colliding at a base late in the game. That collision produced a fractured foot and a minimum three-week absence, which did not announce itself immediately but arrived in the injury report the next morning with full clarity.

The June 9th game had a different character entirely. Andretti allowed five earned runs in seven innings — Dennison hit one out in the second, Gonzalez hit a two-run shot in the sixth, and Cowley was simply better on the night, holding Sacramento to two runs over 6.2 innings of work that the Charlotte lineup made look easy by comparison. Caliari entered and faced one batter, Dodge entered with inherited runners and got one out before the injury that ended his night and sent him to the IL, Salazar came in and held the rest. The 5-2 loss moved Sacramento to 40-23. The loss of Dodge — ERA 1.71, four wins, four saves, the most dependable arm in the bullpen — is the event of June 9th that will matter most over the following three weeks.

At Fort Worth: June 10–13

Four games at Spirits Grounds. One win. The series that squeezed the division lead from four and a half games to one and a half. I will account for each game and then return to the larger meaning.

The June 10th game is the game of this stretch that I find most difficult to write about, because it represents a version of injustice that baseball produces with casual indifference and that no reasonable accounting system can adequately address. St. Clair threw 7.2 innings. He allowed one earned run. He threw ninety-nine pitches with excellent control — zero walks, five strikeouts — and the single run he allowed came on an Izzy Rodriguez two-out RBI single in the fifth after a Schultz leadoff double. Sacramento went 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position. Eleven hits on eleven at-bats with men on base who could have scored and did not. The Prayers left thirteen runners on base. Varela went 6.2 innings and allowed nothing. The final was 1-0 Fort Worth. St. Clair's record went to 4-3. He deserved a win and did not receive one, and the universe offered no explanation.

The June 11th game was an offensive eruption on both sides with Rubalcava departing early at the center of it. He allowed five earned runs in 3.1 innings — eight hits, including an Reza double in the fourth that broke open a 5-0 Sacramento lead — and left with the inherited runners that would eventually determine the shape of the game. Scott came in for three scoreless innings and earned his first win. Musco hit a two-run homer in the first. Baldelomar hit a two-run shot in the seventh. The Prayers won 10-7, Prieto getting his nineteenth save in the ninth, and the win felt both legitimate and slightly fortunate given what Rubalcava's line looked like. This is now two starts in eleven days in which the best pitcher on this roster gave back multiple runs before the game was three and a half innings old. That is no longer an outlier. That is a pattern, and this column intends to address it directly below.

The June 12th game was Espenoza's third consecutive start in which he allowed runs in the first inning and spent the rest of the afternoon playing catch-up. An Izzy Rodriguez double and a Reza double in the first inning produced two Fort Worth runs before Espenoza had recorded three outs. He allowed five earned runs in four innings total. Bautista — recalled from Triple-A the previous day specifically to replace Dodge's lost innings — threw three scoreless innings, the best news of the game. Cruz had two errors. The 6-3 loss put Sacramento at 41-25.

The June 13th game belonged to Marty Blythe, who went 6.2 innings and allowed two earned runs while Fort Worth's lineup did things to Larson that the June 8th Charlotte lineup could not. Caballaro tripled in the first. Reza tripled in the third. Gomez delivered a two-run single in the sixth with the bases loaded to put the game away at 5-2. Larson went 5.1 innings, allowed five earned runs, issued four walks and committed a balk, finishing with a game score of 32 — the inverse of everything he produced against Charlotte five days earlier. Caliari threw 2.1 innings out of the bullpen and was serviceable, which is more than he has been on several recent outings. The 6-2 final completed Fort Worth's series win and shrank the division lead to one and a half games.

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THREADS WORTH PULLING


Alejandro Lopez — Fifteen home runs. Twenty-five stolen bases. A .403 on-base percentage. A WAR of 3.0 that leads this team by a full win over the next closest position player. The walk-off homer on June 7th was the dramatic peak of this stretch, but the more representative Lopez performance is the June 12th game at Fort Worth, where he took three walks against a pitcher who had no interest in letting him beat the Spirits, reached base three times, and still found a way to steal two bases. He is making the opposing manager make decisions before the first pitch is thrown, and the residual benefit to the hitters behind him in the lineup is real and measurable. Twenty-five stolen bases in sixty-seven games projects to sixty on the season. No one in this league is doing what Lopez is doing.

Edwin Musco — Ten home runs, thirty-six RBI, a .250 average that undersells his June production. In this stretch alone Musco went 4-for-4 with a homer against Boston on June 4th, hit his ninth and tenth home runs, and drove in multiple runs on three separate occasions. The shortstop who entered 1993 as a respected veteran contributor has produced a quietly excellent offensive season — his 1.7 WAR trails only Lopez and Cruz among position players — and the defensive continuity he provides at shortstop has been consistent enough that the late-game substitution patterns that move him around the infield look seamless rather than disruptive.

Danny St. Clair — He went 7.2 innings, allowed one run, threw ninety-nine pitches efficiently against the team with the second-best record in the American League West, and lost 1-0. His ERA is 3.32. He has now had two excellent starts, two rough starts, and one transcendently unlucky start in his last six outings. What I want to say about St. Clair is that the version he showed on June 10th is the version this rotation needs him to be — under control, getting ground balls, keeping the offense in the game — and that the 1-0 loss he absorbed is the kind of result that tests a pitcher's confidence in ways a 4-0 loss does not, because a 4-0 loss can be blamed and a 1-0 loss can only be absorbed. How he responds in his next start will be informative.

Eli Murguia — Returned from the IL on June 10th after the high ankle sprain that kept him out since mid-May, and has appeared in four games since, going 4-for-12 with a home run and a handful of starts in left field and at DH. The .299 average and .390 OBP in limited time this season suggest a hitter who was not at full capacity before the injury and who may be building back toward something more useful. With Hernandez out three weeks, Murguia's health matters in a direct and practical way. The offense needs at least two of its three left field/DH options functioning simultaneously, and right now Hernandez is not available to be one of them.

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THINGS THAT KEEP ME UP AT NIGHT


Rubalcava's two bad starts are now a pattern, not an anomaly — This column said after the June 1st San Jose start that one poor outing from a 2.26 ERA pitcher was an outlier, not a trend. I was defending a position the evidence supported at the time. The June 11th start against Fort Worth — 3.1 innings, five earned runs, eight hits, game score of 25 — is the second poor start in eleven days against two different opponents, and it changes the conversation. His ERA is now 3.19. His season WAR leads the pitching staff at 3.6. His underlying stuff is not deteriorating — the strikeout rate is intact, the walk rate remains low. What is happening in these starts is that he is not surviving the innings in which hard contact concentrates. In June 1st it was the fourth inning. In June 11th it was the fourth inning again. Something is happening in the fourth inning of Rubalcava's starts that is not happening in any other inning, and the pitching coach and the organization need to understand what it is. This is not a crisis. It is a question that requires an answer before July.

Sacramento's head-to-head record against Fort Worth is four wins and eight losses — I want that number to sit in this column's pages without immediate contextualization, because the contextualization can wait. Fort Worth has beaten Sacramento eight times in twelve meetings. That is a .333 winning percentage for the division leader against the team it must separate from to win the division. They are not twelve games apart in the standings; they are one and a half games apart because Fort Worth keeps winning the games that the two clubs play against each other. The remaining head-to-head schedule matters enormously, and if the Prayers cannot find a way to win the series the next time these teams meet, the division race will be genuinely tight in September.

The bullpen without Dodge — Dodge went on the IL on June 9th with an injury sustained while pitching. He was 4-0 with a 1.71 ERA. He was the most dependable arm in the Sacramento relief corps. His absence reshapes the bullpen arithmetic in ways the current available options cannot fully resolve. Gutierrez remains excellent at 1.35 ERA, but the gap between Gutierrez and the next tier — Bautista recalled to fill innings, Salazar back from Triple-A, Wright and Caliari both carrying ERAs above four — is significant. Prieto continues to close games and continued to allow home runs at a rate that exceeds what any organization would design for its ninth-inning option. The bullpen without Dodge is a different bullpen than the one that helped produce the first forty wins of this season, and the gap is not small.

The rotation's soft underbelly — At their best: Rubalcava dominant, Andretti reliable, Espenoza efficient. At their worst: Rubalcava exiting in the fourth inning, Espenoza allowing runs before the second out of the first, Larson issuing four walks and committing a balk in 5.1 innings against a lineup he shut out five days earlier. The distance between the best and worst versions of this rotation is not a pitching staff with depth — it is a pitching staff with three excellent starters who occasionally don't show up on some night, and when two of them don't show up in a four-game series against Fort Worth, the result is 1-3 in the series and a division lead that shrinks by three and a half games. The question heading into the second half of June is whether the rotation can get all five starters to perform above replacement level on the same week. June 10-13 was the clearest evidence yet that this is not guaranteed.

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INTEL FROM AROUND THE FBL


Fort Worth at 40-28 is the lead story of this podcast and I have already discussed them at length in the concern section above. What I will add here is that the Spirits are playing the best baseball of any team in the AL West right now — six wins in their last ten, a three-game winning streak entering the week of June 15th, and a roster that has stayed relatively healthy while Sacramento has cycled through injured list transactions at a rate that the front office did not budget for in April. They are a legitimate threat to win this division and anyone telling you otherwise is not watching the standings carefully.

San Jose at 37-29 is the number that snuck up on me while I was focused on Fort Worth. The Demons are 8-2 in their last ten games, sitting three and a half back in the division and leading a crowded wild card conversation at the top of the AL wild card standings. Sacramento went 3-4 against them this season, which puts the Prayers below .500 in head-to-head play against the division's third-place club. The upcoming schedule includes no more San Jose games in the immediate term, which is both a relief and a missed opportunity, because the way to address a 3-4 record against a division rival is to play them again, not to wait.

Brooklyn remains the class of the AL East at 40-26. Their recent stumble — 5-5 in the last ten — opens the door slightly for Baltimore, who is 36-30 and on an eight-game winning streak. If Baltimore's current run continues into late June, the AL East race will be tighter than the standings suggested a month ago, which changes the wild card mathematics for every team involved.

Phoenix at 43-25 continues to be the most impressive team in either league. The Crucifixes have the best record in the FBL by two games and a pitching staff that has yet to show any meaningful vulnerability. Sacramento's record against them is 1-2 from the earlier interleague series, which is the honest accounting of where these two organizations currently stand relative to each other.

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FROM THE INBOX — The Hot Corner Mailbag.


Siobhan Callahan from Midtown writes: "Claude — the division lead was five games eight days ago. Now it's one and a half. I'm trying not to panic but I'm struggling. Give me something to hold onto."

Here is what I will give you. The Prayers are 41-26. That is still the best record in the American League West and the second best in the American League. The rotation's collective ERA is still the best in the league. Alejandro Lopez is still doing things that no other player in this league is doing. The lead shrank because Sacramento went 1-3 against Fort Worth in Fort Worth, not because the team collapsed — and teams that win the division do not require a wire-to-wire lead to earn the pennant. They require more wins than the team below them when September ends. Sacramento has a roster capable of producing those wins. Hold onto that. The panic is premature. The attentiveness it suggests is not.

From "Head-to-Head Harold" Asante of Land Park, who informs me he has calculated the Prayers' head-to-head record against every opponent in the FBL going back to 1987 and maintains the spreadsheet voluntarily, without anyone asking him to: "The head-to-head record against Fort Worth is 4-8. How serious is that?"

Serious enough that I put it in the concern section without immediately softening it, which I hope communicated the weight I assign it. Four wins and eight losses against your division rival is a problem that compounds over time — every series loss is a swing of multiple games in the standings rather than a simple one-game deficit. The good news is that there are games remaining between these clubs and those games are the mechanism by which the head-to-head record corrects itself. The bad news is that Fort Worth has demonstrated, eight times now, that they know how to beat this version of the Prayers. Whatever adjustments are available — lineup construction, pitching matchups, bullpen deployment — need to be identified and implemented before the next series. Harold, I suspect you already knew all of this when you sent the email, but I appreciate the platform.

From "Benefit-of-the-Doubt" Fumiko Nakagawa of East Sacramento, who writes that she has given Rubalcava the benefit of the doubt so many times this season she is starting to feel like his publicist: "I want to give Rubalcava the benefit of the doubt but two bad starts worries me more than one. What's your honest read after June 11th?"

Your instinct is correct and your concern is proportionate, which I suspect is more than Rubalcava's publicist would tell you. My honest read is that the situation is worth genuine monitoring without warranting the alarm some observers will assign it. His ERA went from 2.26 to 3.19 across two starts, which sounds dramatic until you remember that the underlying ERA was unusually low for a pitcher working through an inning that concentrated hard contact. The strikeout rate is intact. The walk rate is intact. The stuff, by every account I have, is intact. What is happening in these fourth innings looks more like a specific vulnerability that opposing offenses have identified than a mechanical collapse. Watch his next two starts carefully. I will be — and unlike his publicist, I will report what I actually see.

From "Bullpen Bedros" Parseghian of Rancho Cordova, a self-described "relief pitcher enthusiast" who admits this is not a common hobby but stands by it: "What is the front office going to do about the bullpen? Dodge is out, Ryan is out, and the options behind Gutierrez and Prieto are not inspiring confidence."

Bedros, the relief pitcher enthusiast community is having a rough week and I want to acknowledge that before proceeding. The honest answer is that the front office has two paths: internal solutions, meaning Bautista and Salazar need to be the functional middle-inning options they were recalled to be, or external solutions, meaning the trade deadline in mid-July becomes a bullpen acquisition deadline rather than an optional enhancement window. Bautista's three scoreless innings against Fort Worth on June 12th were the most encouraging bullpen development of this stretch and suggest he may be at least part of the answer. Whether the deadline becomes a necessity or a luxury will be determined by what we see over the next three weeks. Stay tuned. You more than anyone.

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Claude Playball has covered Sacramento Prayers baseball for eleven years. The Hot Corner publishes throughout the season. Questions and correspondence are welcome.

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Old 03-12-2026, 08:49 AM   #251
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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June 15 – June 30, 1993 | Games 68–82 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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FIFTY WINS. NOW LET'S TALK ABOUT THE CLOSER.


The Sacramento Prayers have fifty wins. They are the first team in the American League to reach that number, and they enter the All-Star break with a four-game lead in the AL West, a .610 winning percentage, a rotation ERA that remains the envy of this league, and an outfielder who is building a Most Valuable Player case that grows more persuasive with each passing week. Fifty wins in eighty-two games is not a team in crisis. I want to say that plainly.

Now let's talk about Luis Prieto.

The closer for the Sacramento Prayers has blown four saves this season. Two of those blown saves came on consecutive nights — June 28th and 29th — against the El Paso Abbots, who are 32-50 and currently losing at a rate that, if sustained, would produce a historically poor season. On June 28th, Prieto entered with a 4-2 lead in the ninth inning and did not record the save. On June 29th, Robby Larson threw eight innings of two-run baseball — 85 pitches, six strikeouts, a game score of 72 — and handed a 5-2 lead to the bullpen, which Prieto promptly converted into a 5-5 tie via a three-run home run. Both games became losses. Both games should have been wins. They were not, and the reason they were not has a name and a number and an ERA of 5.35.

I intend to address that situation in the detail it deserves. But first: fifty wins. Savor it for one paragraph before we proceed to the uncomfortable parts.

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JUNE 15–30 IN REVIEW: A GAME-BY-GAME TOUR


vs. Seattle: June 15–17 (3-0)

The Seattle Lucifers arrived at Cathedral Stadium in the condition of a team with serious institutional problems — 29-38, four consecutive losses, a pitching staff with an aggregate ERA that belongs in a different conversation from any starter Sacramento runs out every five days — and the Prayers treated them accordingly. The sweep was professional and efficient.

The June 15th game belonged to Jesus Hernandez, who went 3-for-4 with a home run, four RBI, and a walk, and to Andretti, who gave Sacramento seven innings of two-run work for his ninth win. Cruz hit a two-run homer in the fifth, Baldelomar added one in the seventh, and Hernandez's two-run shot in the eighth put the final margin at 11-2 with the kind of authority that a full Cathedral Stadium fully endorses.

The June 16th game was Rubalcava's best start since before the rough stretch began — seven innings, zero earned runs, five strikeouts — and the offensive support was emphatic. Lopez hit two home runs off Reeves on consecutive at-bats in the first and second innings, numbers 16 and 17. MacDonald hit a two-run shot in the first. Murguia added his third homer of the season in the fifth. The 9-2 final was the cleanest performance this team produced in the entire month of June, and Rubalcava moving to 7-5 was the headline it deserved.

The June 17th game required more effort than the final line suggests. Espenoza allowed five earned runs in 5.2 innings — a Mejia triple and a Morales double in the sixth doing the decisive damage — and Sacramento entered the ninth inning tied at five before Alonzo stepped to the plate against Jose Reyes and hit a walk-off solo home run to right. The Cathedral crowd that had been sitting through three innings of anxious baseball celebrated with appropriate volume. The sweep was complete, and the winning streak had reached five.

vs. Baltimore: June 18–20 (2-1)

The Baltimore Satans arrived carrying an eight-game winning streak and a legitimate claim on the AL wild card. They left having lost two of three, and the manner of both losses was gratifying.

The June 18th game dismantled Baltimore pitcher Ralevic in the most systematic way available: all four Sacramento runs came via home run. Hernandez in the second, Murguia in the third, Baldelomar in the sixth — all three off Ralevic, who threw eight innings and surrendered a solo or multi-run shot each time the Prayers lineup cycled through the heart of the order. Larson went 6.1 innings, allowed a Jaime two-run shot in the fifth but nothing else consequential, and Salazar and Prieto held the final. The 4-2 win was Sacramento's fifth consecutive.

The June 19th game was St. Clair at his most composed — seven innings, five hits, two earned runs, efficient and unhurried throughout. Musco drove in two, Alonzo hit his fifth home run in the fourth, and Gutierrez closed with two clean innings for his third save. The 4-2 win put the Prayers at 46-26, their best record of the season to that point.

The June 20th game belongs to Carlos Delgado, who pitched eight innings, struck out eight, and allowed one earned run — Lopez's leadoff home run in the first, number eighteen — before Lozano finished the ninth. Delgado was simply the better pitcher on the night, and no further explanation is needed. Andretti allowed three earned runs in 5.2 innings and absorbed the loss. This happens to good teams.

At Salt Lake City: June 22–24 (1-2)

The series at Prophets Stadium will not be remembered fondly, though the third game rescued it from complete disaster.

The June 22nd game was Rubalcava's fourth poor start since early June — four innings, six earned runs, a wild pitch and a balk in the same outing that summarized the evening's character. Scott came in for 0.1 innings and allowed three more. Salazar threw 3.2 clean innings in relief, which was the most professional performance of the night, and the 9-6 loss reactivated every question I raised about the pattern in Rubalcava's outings that concentrates hard contact before the fifth inning.

The June 23rd game was a ten-inning defeat that required extraordinary effort to lose. Sacramento hit three home runs off Agosti in the third inning — Perez, Alonzo, and Musco each connecting to build a 5-1 lead — and then watched Espenoza allow two more home runs in the sixth, watched Gutierrez hold the line in the seventh, watched Prieto surrender a Salinas double in the ninth to blow the lead, and watched Munoz deliver a walk-off single in the tenth. The fact that five runs in the third inning proved insufficient to win this game tells you everything about how the evening unfolded.

The June 24th game was Larson operating as the rotation's steadying force after two consecutive losses — 7.2 innings, two earned runs, clean command — with Murguia's two-run homer in the first providing the early cushion and Rodriguez adding a solo shot in the ninth. Gutierrez threw a clean eighth. Prieto saved it without incident. The 4-2 win was the appropriate response to what had come before it.

vs. Tucson: June 25–27 (2-1)

Three games at Cathedral against the Tucson Cherubs, and the most significant development occurred before the first pitch on June 25th: Steve Dodge was cleared from the IL and available. His ERA at that point was 1.52. His return was the best roster news the Prayers received in all of June.

The June 25th game was Andretti at his finest — eight innings, four hits, zero walks, six strikeouts, ninety pitches — and Dodge's clean ninth inning was the appropriate punctuation to a 4-2 win in which Lopez hit his nineteenth home run leading off the first and Perez added his ninth in the fourth. A complete performance.

The June 26th game was a St. Clair loss following a pattern I have catalogued before. He departed in the fourth inning after allowing four earned runs — Carpenter's two-run home run in the fifth the decisive blow — while Tucson's Nathan Green worked 6.2 innings and allowed only one earned run. Wright and Salazar combined for 4.2 clean innings in relief, Perez hit a two-run home run in the eighth, but the deficit was never fully addressed. Sacramento lost 6-3.

The June 27th game was Rubalcava bouncing back from the June 22nd disaster with seven innings and one earned run, and the offense providing ten runs on fifteen hits with contributions across the entire lineup. Cruz went 2-for-3 with a double and four RBI. MacDonald hit a triple and drove in three. Baldelomar reached base four times and scored twice. The 10-2 win was the kind of comprehensive performance that provides a team with appropriate confidence heading into the next road series.

vs. El Paso: June 28–30 (1-2)

Three games at Cathedral against the El Paso Abbots, who entered at 31-49 with the worst road record in the American League. Sacramento went 1-2. I will account for each game plainly and return to the central reason below.

The June 28th game: Espenoza went 6.1 innings and allowed two earned runs, Gutierrez threw 1.2 clean innings, and Sacramento led 4-2 entering the ninth with Baldelomar's two-run homer providing the margin. Prieto entered, loaded the bases, and allowed the decisive run on a walk to Gillock with two outs — the kind of conclusion that produces a specific type of silence in a ballpark — before Dodge recorded the final out too late to matter. The Abbots won 5-4. Prieto was charged with the blown save and the loss.

The June 29th game: Larson pitched eight innings on 85 pitches, allowed two earned runs, struck out six, and handed a 5-2 lead to the bullpen needing one out in the ninth. Prieto entered. Gil hit a three-run home run. The game went to extra innings. Dodge threw two clean innings in the tenth and eleventh. Ryan entered the twelfth and allowed a walk, a double, and a sacrifice fly before recording two strikeouts that arrived too late to matter. The Abbots won 7-5. Larson's eight innings of quality baseball produced a no-decision. The loss went to Ryan. It should never have required Ryan.

The June 30th game was Andretti winning his eleventh — eight innings, three earned runs, command throughout — while Cruz hit a two-run triple in the sixth, Musco homered in the fifth, and Hernandez hit a two-run shot in the eighth. The 8-4 final was the appropriate conclusion to the first half, and it moved Sacramento to 50-32 entering the break.

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THE STORIES BEHIND THE STANDINGS


Alejandro Lopez — Nineteen home runs. Thirty stolen bases. A .409 on-base percentage. A WAR of 3.8 that leads every position player in the American League by a margin I am no longer comfortable describing as modest. In this stretch alone, Lopez hit two home runs on consecutive at-bats on June 16th against the same pitcher, walked three times on June 25th against a Tucson starter who had correctly identified him as the most dangerous hitter in the lineup, and stole his thirtieth base on June 23rd in a game Sacramento eventually lost, which is the kind of small injustice that follows elite baserunners around all season. The All-Star ballot closes this week. If Lopez is not on the American League starting roster, the selection process needs to explain itself.

Bernardo Andretti — Eleven wins, four losses, a 3.09 ERA, and the most consistent pitcher on this staff across the entire first half. In this stretch he went 3-1 with quality starts in three of four outings — June 15 (7 IP, 2 ER), June 25 (8 IP, 2 ER, 0 BB), and June 30 (8 IP, 3 ER) — and his only loss came on the night Delgado was simply better. He does not generate the attention that Rubalcava's bad starts produce, and he does not generate the concern that Espenoza's volatility deserves. He takes the ball every fifth day and more often than not makes the evening manageable. At thirty-two years old, this is the best sustained stretch of his career, and I intend to keep saying so until the people who vote on awards start paying attention.

Steve Dodge — The return from the IL on June 25th was the best news the Prayers bullpen received in the entire month of June, and the subsequent appearances — clean innings, zero earned runs, saves collected without drama — confirm that whatever injury sent him to the IL on June 9th did not diminish what makes him the most dependable reliever on this staff. His ERA is 1.52. He has converted five saves without a blown opportunity. He has allowed one inherited runner to score across his entire season. The events of June 28th and 29th illustrate with clarity what this bullpen looks like with Dodge versus what it looks like without him, and the contrast is not subtle.

Robby Larson — This section exists because Robby Larson deserves it, not because his statistics demand one. His record is 6-5. His ERA is 3.17. His last two starts — 7.2 innings on June 24th, 8 innings on June 29th — produced quality efforts that resulted in a win and a no-decision respectively, and the no-decision came because of events in the ninth inning that Larson had no part in producing and could not have prevented. In 110.2 innings this season he has allowed fewer hits per nine than any other starter on the staff, walks the fewest batters, and posts the best ground ball rate in the rotation. The 6-5 record is the most misleading number on this team's pitching ledger. I'll keep saying so until the wins catch up to the performance.

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WHERE THINGS COULD GO WRONG


Luis Prieto cannot be trusted with a lead right now — Four blown saves. A 5.35 ERA. An approach in high-leverage situations that increasingly resembles a pitcher operating without conviction. I have been careful not to condemn Prieto before the evidence required it. The evidence now requires something, and what it requires is an honest accounting of what is happening in the ninth inning of Sacramento Prayers games.

The June 28th and June 29th blown saves are not isolated statistical events. They are games Sacramento should have won and did not because the pitcher assigned to protect leads in the ninth inning did not protect them. On June 29th, Larson threw 85 pitches across eight innings against the worst road team in the American League, left with a three-run lead, and the result was a loss. That outcome is not acceptable, and anyone in the Sacramento organization who claims otherwise is not being honest.

The question going into the second half is not whether Prieto deserves a conversation about his role — he does, and that conversation is overdue. The question is what the alternative looks like and who makes the call. Dodge is the obvious answer. His 27-game stretch with a 0.39 ERA is the most compelling argument available in the Prayers' own bullpen. Whether Aces and the front office act on that argument before another winnable game is surrendered in the ninth inning is the defining bullpen decision of this season. The clock on that decision is running.

Espenoza's June — Mario Espenoza went 1-2 in this stretch with rough outings on June 17th (5.2 IP, 5 ER) and June 23rd (5.2 IP, 5 ER) framing a June 28th start in which he was effective before the bullpen undid the result. His ERA climbed from 3.35 to 3.81 over this period, and eighteen home runs allowed in 106.1 innings is a rate that points to a pitcher who is leaving balls elevated in the zone against lineups that know how to punish that tendency. Espenoza's best starts this year have been models of ground-ball efficiency. His worst starts begin in the first inning and do not recover. The gap between those two versions is the gap between a third starter and a fifth starter, and this staff cannot afford the latter version in July and August.

Rubalcava's alternating current — The pattern in this stretch: June 16th, seven innings, zero earned runs. June 22nd, four innings, six earned runs. June 27th, seven innings, one earned run. Good, bad, good — the alternating sequence that has defined his June. His WAR of 4.0 leads the pitching staff by a full win over the next closest arm. His strikeout rate is the best in the rotation. His ERA is 3.24. He is still the best pitcher on this roster when he is operating as the best pitcher on this roster. The concern is that "when" is doing considerable work in that sentence, and neither the coaching staff nor I have yet identified why the bad starts happen when they happen.

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THE LEAGUE AT LARGE


The division lead expanded from one and a half games to four games over this stretch, and it is worth being honest about how much of that expansion was Sacramento's doing versus Fort Worth's undoing. The Spirits went 4-11 over their last fifteen games and have now lost four consecutive entering July. They are 46-36, which remains a legitimate record, but the Prayers did not lap them so much as Fort Worth stumbled and Sacramento maintained its pace. Both things are true. Four games is a comfortable lead. It is not an insulated one.

San Jose at 45-35 deserves more attention from the Sacramento fan base than it currently receives. The Demons have won six of their last ten, hold the AL wild card lead, and own a 4-3 head-to-head advantage over the Prayers this season — meaning Sacramento is below .500 in direct play against the team immediately chasing them in the wild card standings as well. The four-game home series at Cathedral Stadium the week of July 15th is the most consequential series on the Prayers' schedule in the next month. If Sacramento wins that series, the division is managed. If Sacramento loses three of four, the lead is one game and the race is open in a way it has not been since April. Circle the dates.

Brooklyn at 49-31 continues to lead the AL East and represents the most likely World Series opponent from the American League if the Prayers sustain their position. The AL wild card race has become a genuine three-team contest — San Jose and Baltimore at 45-35, Fort Worth at 46-36, all within one game of the two available spots — and that race will generate drama through September regardless of what Sacramento does in the West. Any organization with October ambitions should be monitoring all three clubs.

Phoenix at 52-29 is the best team in baseball and it is not close. The Crucifixes are 8-2 in their last ten, and if these two franchises meet in October, it will be the series this league has been building toward all season.

One item from the local desk: Gil Caliari's email to manager Jimmy Aces — expressing openness to a contract extension contingent on the right offer — found its way into the hands of the Sacramento media this week. Caliari is posting a 4.50 ERA and has been deployed in low-leverage situations for most of June. Whether the organization extends him or declines is a front office question I have no standing to influence. What I will say is that leaked correspondence in the middle of a pennant race is a distraction the Prayers do not need, and resolving it — in either direction — before July becomes August is the prudent course.

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THE MAILBAG — Because some questions deserve a real answer.


From "Fifty-Win Freddie" Yamamoto of Curtis Park, a retired actuary who has been calculating Luis Prieto's rolling save conversion rate on a daily basis since April 1st and will recite the figure to four decimal places if you make the mistake of making eye contact: "Claude — I've done the math. Prieto's blown save rate is now the worst among closers with twenty or more save opportunities in the AL. Am I wrong to be worried?"

Freddie, you are not wrong, and I am genuinely relieved that someone with your professional background has applied appropriate rigor to this question, because the beat writers covering this team have been charitable to a fault. Four blown saves in twenty-five opportunities is sixteen percent, which is not a number any organization designs its ninth-inning strategy around when it has pennant aspirations. The ERA of 5.35 is the more alarming figure, because it reflects not just the blown saves but a general pattern of allowing too much hard contact in moments when hard contact is the thing you most cannot allow. I do not know whether Aces will move Prieto to a different role in the second half. I know that he should, and I know that Freddie Yamamoto's spreadsheet agrees with me.

From "Walk-Off Wendy" Castellanos of East Sacramento, who was sitting in section 114 on June 17th when Alonzo's walk-off landed and has described the moment in granular detail to an estimated forty people at last count, none of whom have asked her to stop: "Rafael Alonzo just keeps delivering in the biggest moments. Is he the most clutch player on this team?"

Wendy, "clutch" is a concept I approach with caution because the statistical evidence for its existence as a stable and repeatable skill is more contested than its popularity in casual conversation suggests. What I will say is that Alonzo's June 17th walk-off — a solo shot in the ninth off Reyes that turned a 5-5 tie into a 6-5 win — was delivered with the kind of compact, unhurried swing that suggests a hitter who does not alter his approach in high-leverage situations, which is the closest measurable thing to what people mean when they say clutch. He is batting .300 with six home runs, a .797 OPS, and the most dependable defensive presence at catcher this organization has had in a decade. He is not the most valuable player on this team — Lopez occupies that address — but he is the hitter I would least want to face in the ninth inning of a game I needed to protect. Section 114 has good taste.

From "Series Split" Steve Ohanesian of Elk Grove, who has attended all four home games against Fort Worth this season, considers himself "the most qualified civilian observer of the Sacramento-Fort Worth rivalry currently operating in the greater capital region," and has the ticket stubs in a binder to support this claim: "The head-to-head against Fort Worth is 4-8. With a four-game lead, do we actually need to fix that to win the division?"

Steve, the overall record overrides the head-to-head in the standings, and four games is a real lead regardless of how it was assembled. So in that strict sense: no, Sacramento does not need to win the next Fort Worth series to win the division. But what the 4-8 record tells you is that Fort Worth has a blueprint for beating this version of the Prayers and has executed it eight times. If these two teams meet in October — not impossible given Fort Worth's position in the wild card race — that blueprint is the most important document in the opposing manager's hands. The 4-8 record does not cost Sacramento the division. It raises the stakes of every future meeting, and the next time these clubs share a field, Sacramento cannot split the series. It needs to win it. Keep the binder handy. There are more chapters to write.

From Phil Davenport of Land Park, founder and sole member of "Robby's Rescue Squad," a one-man advocacy organization dedicated to ensuring that Robby Larson receives adequate run support and competent ninth-inning bullpen work, whose charter documents were drafted on a Tuesday night in late May and have not yet been ratified by anyone: "On June 29th, Larson threw eight innings and the team still lost. Is there any justice in this sport?"

Phil, the Rescue Squad's dedication is noted and the membership rolls deserve to be longer than they are. The June 29th loss was the most unjust result in this entire fifteen-game stretch — eight innings of quality work on 85 pitches against the worst road team in the American League, a three-run lead handed to the bullpen, and the outcome was a no-decision and a twelve-inning defeat. There is no justice in baseball, and Robby Larson's 6-5 record is the clearest evidence I can offer for that proposition. The Rescue Squad's mission is sound. I cannot promise the outcomes will improve. I can promise I will keep reporting the truth, and the truth is that Larson has pitched like a winning pitcher for most of this season and the scoreboard has not consistently agreed.

______________________________

Claude Playball has covered Sacramento Prayers baseball for eleven years. The Hot Corner publishes throughout the season. Questions and correspondence are welcome.
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Old 03-12-2026, 09:51 PM   #252
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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July 2 – July 14, 1993 | Games 83–91 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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FIVE AND FOUR, A FRACTURED FOOT, AND A CONVERSATION THAT CANNOT WAIT


There is a particular kind of quiet that settles on a baseball town during the All-Star break — three days in which the box scores stop arriving, the standings freeze in place, and you are left with nothing but the numbers accumulated and the questions they have not yet answered. For Sacramento, those three days in Fort Worth offered plenty of material to sit with, and not all of it was comfortable.

The Prayers went 5-4 before the break. They swept Milwaukee by a combined score of 30-4, including a July 4th performance at Cathedral Stadium that was the most comprehensive offensive display this organization has produced all season. They then split in Albuquerque and lost two of three at Seattle, the latter series concluding with Blake Reeves — a pitcher with a 5.72 ERA and a 6-10 record entering the start — throwing a complete game shutout without issuing a single walk. The division lead shrank from four games to two. On July 8th in Albuquerque, a pitch struck Gil Cruz on the foot, and the second baseman who entered the break hitting .297 with seventeen home runs and a .931 OPS will not be available for two to three more weeks. The All-Star break arrived with Sacramento still in first place, still the best pitching staff in the American League, and still carrying questions about the ninth inning and the middle of the infield that have not been resolved.

I intend to work through all of it.

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THIRTEEN DAYS IN THE LIFE: A GAME-BY-GAME ACCOUNT


vs. Milwaukee: July 2–4 (3-0)

The Milwaukee Bishops arrived at Cathedral Stadium at 38-44, having lost eight of their last twelve games, and Sacramento treated them to three days of baseball that left very little to the imagination.

The July 2nd game belonged to Jordan Rubalcava, who carried a complete game into the ninth inning and finished with nine innings of one-run ball, seven strikeouts, and a game score of 76 — his best single-game performance since before the rough stretch of late May and June. The offense provided six runs on eleven hits, with Cruz delivering two doubles and two RBI before departing for a pinch hitter in the seventh, and Alonzo contributing two hits and a run scored. What made the evening most satisfying was Rubalcava himself: unhurried, commanding, locating his fastball on both edges throughout, the version of him that makes this rotation genuinely formidable rather than merely good.

The July 3rd game produced another quality start, this time from Espenoza — eight and a third innings, one earned run, five strikeouts on 102 pitches — and the offense supplied seven runs with Cruz connecting on his sixteenth home run in the first inning and Baldelomar adding his eleventh in the fifth. Alonzo went 3-for-4 with a double and an RBI. Caliari retired the final two batters to finish it off. The 7-1 final was efficient and professional.

The July 4th game was something else entirely. Cruz went 4-for-5 with a three-run home run in the first inning, two doubles, a triple, and five RBI — the kind of game that gets replayed in highlight packages. Baldelomar hit two home runs and drove in five. Musco hit his fourteenth home run. Rodriguez homered. Alonzo homered. Larson went six innings without allowing an earned run. Salazar threw three clean innings of relief. The 17-2 final sent the Cathedral crowd home with the kind of satisfaction that only an Independence Day blowout can provide, and the only development that dimmed the evening at all was news afterward that Matt Patton had been injured while pitching — a footnote to the fireworks, and no concern to Sacramento.

At Albuquerque: July 6–8 (1-2)

Three games at Damned Field, and the most important thing that happened in this series had nothing to do with who won or lost.

The July 6th game was Andretti doing what Andretti does — six innings, two earned runs, six strikeouts, a balk in the fifth that briefly complicated the evening — but the sixth and seventh innings belonged to Albuquerque, as Gutierrez allowed two home runs on consecutive plate appearances in the seventh to turn a 2-2 tie into a 4-2 deficit that Sacramento never recovered. Gutierrez was charged with the loss. The Damned won 4-2, and the more significant detail was that Francisco Hernandez appeared in the starting lineup at right field for the first time since fracturing his foot — meaning the roster entered July with both of Sacramento's injured regulars in various stages of return.

The July 7th game was Rubalcava operating at his most efficient: eight innings, six hits, zero runs, 106 pitches, command present throughout, and a clean save from Prieto to finish the 2-0 win. Hernandez provided the game's only extra-base production with a solo home run in the eighth off Quinones — a two-out shot that gave Sacramento the cushion it turned out to need. It was a small, quiet victory of exactly the kind that good teams find on road trips when the offense is not fully engaged.

The July 8th game was a disaster. Espenoza retired six batters and allowed seven runs. The six-run third inning against him — anchored by a Rivera bases-clearing double — ended his evening with a game score of 14 and Sacramento already trailing 6-0 before the team had come to bat in the top of the fourth. Wright, Caliari, and Salazar combined to allow eight more runs across the final seven innings, and Cruz was struck by a Flores pitch in the fifth inning and did not return. The 14-5 loss was the most complete defeat Sacramento absorbed since the El Paso series at the end of June, and it introduced a storyline that will define the next three to four weeks.

At Seattle: July 9–11 (1-2)

Sacramento won the first game in Seattle and then lost the next two to a club sitting twelve and a half games below them in the division standings, which is the kind of sequence that invites honest reflection about what this team is when it is not at its best.

The July 9th game was won by Bill Marcos, who delivered two home runs and five RBI against a Seattle staff that had no answer for his bat — a two-run shot in the second inning, a three-run shot in the seventh with Sacramento leading 6-5, both off different pitchers, both hit with authority to right field. Francisco Hernandez added his eleventh home run in the fifth. Larson started and allowed four earned runs in 4.2 innings against a lineup that had been hitting him adequately all evening, and Dodge entered in the fifth and struck out the side before allowing an Alonso Mejia home run in the seventh, the only blemish in 2.1 otherwise clean innings. The 12-7 win was messy in the way that Sacramento road wins sometimes are — more runs scored than the starting pitching deserved — but wins in Seattle count the same as wins anywhere.

The July 10th game was St. Clair going 7.2 innings, allowing two earned runs, finishing with a game score of 60, and absorbing a loss that his performance did not merit. Schilder threw six shutout innings for Seattle. Pontoriero threw two more clean innings. Reyes gave up a Francisco Hernandez solo home run in the ninth — his twelfth of the season — but Sacramento's only run came far too late, in a game that had essentially been decided by an Andres Hernandez single in the eighth inning with one out. St. Clair lost, 2-1. There was nothing more to be said about his effort.

The July 11th game was the one I will spend the most time thinking about before San Jose arrives. Blake Reeves — 6-10, 5.72 ERA, a pitcher who has spent the majority of this season being the kind of arm teams face on the back end of road series and expect to beat — threw a nine-inning complete game shutout against the Sacramento Prayers on 123 pitches, striking out eight batters, issuing zero walks, and allowing four hits. Andretti allowed three runs in 5.1 innings and took the loss. Sacramento could not manufacture a run against a pitcher who by every available measure should not be able to shut them out. They were not unlucky. They were dominated. Whatever adjustments Aces has in mind for the second half, the July 11th box score should be posted somewhere visible in the visiting dugout at Cathedral Stadium every time this team takes the field.

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THINGS THAT MATTER AND WHY


Jordan Rubalcava — Over his last three starts entering the break, Rubalcava went 3-0 with an ERA of 0.75, and the pattern that plagued his June — alternating dominant and disastrous outings — appears to have resolved itself, at least temporarily, in the right direction. His complete game on July 2nd was the most efficient start he has thrown since early May, and his July 7th gem at Albuquerque — eight innings of shutout baseball on 106 pitches, thirteen ground outs — was built on the kind of contact management that defines his best work rather than the strikeout totals that define his middling work. He is 10-6 with a 2.90 ERA and a WAR of 4.6 that leads the pitching staff by a margin that is no longer debatable. When Rubalcava is the pitcher he was in these last three starts, Sacramento has the best starting pitcher in the American League. The question that June raised — which version shows up — remains unanswered in a broader sense, but the answer provided by July has been encouraging.

Bill Marcos — The July 9th game in Seattle was the kind of performance that earns a player the kind of attention that tends to change how managers use them. Marcos entered the game having appeared in 55 games with five home runs, a modest enough production line, and left it with two home runs, five RBI, and eight total bases in four at-bats. He is not Cruz — nobody on this roster is Cruz — but what the July 9th game demonstrated is that Marcos, deployed regularly with Cruz on the IL, can contribute in ways that a bench role does not reveal. His 2.1 WAR in limited time, his left-center power stroke, and his willingness to work counts are all reasons to watch him carefully over the next three weeks while the team waits for Cruz to come back.

Francisco Hernandez — He returned from the fractured foot in the Albuquerque series and in nine games has hit two home runs, driven in three runs, and stolen two bases, which is a reasonable pace given the circumstances of an athlete shaking off rust after a lengthy absence. His defense in right field has been sharp — two outfield assists in the data, both runners thrown out at bases they had no business attempting — and his presence returns a dimension to the Sacramento lineup that the team demonstrably missed in his absence. He is not yet back to the Francisco Hernandez who posted a .780 OPS before the injury, but the trajectory is positive, and the July 9th and July 10th games both featured him in meaningful offensive situations.

Robby Larson — again — I have written about Larson's record not reflecting his performance in each of the last two articles, and I will continue to do so until the situation changes or the season ends. His July 4th start — six innings, zero earned runs, seven hits, 99 pitches, a win in the 17-2 game — was the kind of clean, economical outing that his ERA of 3.19 accurately represents. His July 9th start at Seattle was rougher, four earned runs in 4.2 innings, and I will not pretend otherwise. But his ERA remains 3.19, his WHIP is 1.13, and his strikeout rate and walk rate continue to compare favorably to the other arms in this rotation. The 7-5 record still understates what he has delivered. I will note it every time the numbers give me the opportunity.

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WHAT WORRIES ME AND WHAT SHOULD WORRY YOU


Gil Cruz is gone for three weeks and the middle infield is not the same — Cruz was leading this team in OPS, tied for the lead in WAR, and providing the kind of second baseman defense that wins games in ways that the box score captures only partially. He was hit by a pitch in Albuquerque on July 8th, the injury was updated during the break, and the revised timeline — two to three weeks — means Sacramento will play the San Jose series and likely the Tucson and Washington road trips without him. Marcos is a reasonable substitute in the sense that he can occupy the position and provide occasional power, but a lineup with Marcos at second base is categorically different from a lineup with Cruz at second base, and the team entering the most important series of the first half is doing so without one of its two best position players. The Prayers are 11-15 in one-run games. That number was a concern when Cruz was healthy. It is a more pressing concern now.

Espenoza's two-game July is the entire season in miniature — July 3rd: eight and a third innings, one earned run, five strikeouts, the most complete start he has thrown in weeks. July 8th: two innings, six earned runs, a game score of 14, an ERA that climbed from 3.61 to 4.01 in a single outing. These two starts, separated by five days, are the entire Espenoza experience compressed into one road trip. When he commands his fastball down in the zone and uses his changeup to generate weak contact on the ground, he is a legitimate third starter on a championship-caliber staff. When he leaves balls elevated and allows hitters to get extended on his secondary pitches, he is someone who cannot be trusted to give Sacramento five innings. At eighteen home runs allowed in 116.2 innings, he is surrendering a long ball at a rate that the other members of this rotation are not remotely approaching, and that rate is the clearest statistical indicator of which version of Espenoza is working in a given outing.

The one-run record is not improving — Eleven wins, fifteen losses in games decided by one run. Sacramento went 1-2 in one-run games in this stretch, including the July 10th loss at Seattle in which St. Clair threw 7.2 quality innings and the bullpen recorded the final out too late to matter. The closer situation remains the underlying driver of this record, though Prieto appeared only once in this stretch — a clean save on July 7th — and the sample is insufficient to declare that the June pattern has reversed itself. His ERA is still 5.20. He has blown four saves. The organization has Dodge available and has shown a reluctance to make the role change explicitly. Every one-run loss makes that reluctance more difficult to defend.

Carlos Orozco's season is over — We do not often write about what happens in Oxnard, but this demands an exception. The Sacramento organization's most promising position player prospect — twenty-one years old, ranked fifth in the FBL — tore his labrum on July 7th and will not play again this season. This does not affect the 1993 Prayers' pennant race directly, but it matters for what the organization is building, and it is worth acknowledging honestly. The shortstop pipeline was already thin. It is thinner now.

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LEAGUE NOTES: WHAT'S HAPPENING ELSEWHERE


The division lead is two games, not four, and the manner in which it contracted is worth understanding. Fort Worth won four consecutive games entering the break and is now 53-38. The Spirits are a team with a positive run differential, a home record of 33-17, and a head-to-head advantage over Sacramento of 8-4 — a figure I have written about before and will write about again because it remains the most uncomfortable single statistic in Sacramento's season. Two games is a real lead. It is also a lead that disappears over a single bad week, and Sacramento has demonstrated in June and early July that bad weeks are not beyond its range of outcomes.

San Jose at 51-38 sits three back and opens a four-game series at Cathedral Stadium on Thursday. The Demons own a 4-3 head-to-head advantage over the Prayers this season — meaning Sacramento is below .500 in direct play against both clubs currently chasing them — and they arrive having gone 7-3 over their last ten games. Their rotation for this series — Rodriguez (5-8, 5.15), Brierly (5-8, 5.31), Fernandez (5-3, 5.90), Arteaga (9-6, 4.73) — is not a group that inspires fear. But four games is four games, and Sacramento cannot afford to lose this series while Cruz is out and Fort Worth is four games into a winning streak.

Baltimore at 51-38 enters the break on a six-game winning streak and has now drawn even with San Jose in the AL wild card race. The Satans are the best-case scenario for Sacramento in October — a team that the Prayers have beaten in two of their three meetings — but they are also a reminder that the wild card picture has become genuinely crowded. Fort Worth, San Jose, and Baltimore are all within a game of one another, and Columbus at 48-41 is close enough to remain relevant. Any team in that cluster that gets hot in July can change the entire complexion of the playoff race.

The All-Star game was played at Spirits Grounds in Fort Worth, and the American League defeated the National League 7-3, with Boston's Rogelio Ruiz earning MVP honors after a productive afternoon at the plate. Sacramento sent six players to the classic: Rubalcava started for the AL, Andretti and Lopez were selected as starters, Musco and Alonzo represented the position players, and Cruz was named to the roster but cannot participate due to the injury. Six All-Stars from one roster is a statement about the depth of talent on this team. The standings at the break are a more complicated statement, and one worth considering before Thursday.

Brooklyn at 54-36 leads the AL East and remains the most probable World Series opponent from this league. Phoenix at 58-33 is the best team in baseball and is not in a particularly tight race. If the FBL postseason produces the matchup that the standings currently suggest — Sacramento against Phoenix, assuming both hold — it will be a series worth whatever it costs to attend.

One final item from the roster desk: David Perez, who strained his hamstring in early July, is eligible to return from the IL. His .295 average and solid production at third base represent another body that Sacramento could use behind a depleted infield, and his return timeline bears watching as the second half begins.

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YOU ASKED, I'M ANSWERING — The Hot Corner Mailbag.


From "Mongoose Mourner" Takeshi Yamashiro of the Pocket District, who attended the July 4th game, watched Cruz go 4-for-5 with five RBI in a 17-2 blowout, spent the subsequent weekend convinced the second half was going to be a procession, and received the news of the fractured foot on July 8th with the kind of resignation that can only be developed through years of following a team that finds ways to complicate even the most promising stretches: "How much does losing Cruz actually hurt? Be honest."

Takeshi, the honest answer is: considerably. Cruz entered the break with a .931 OPS, seventeen home runs, and 3.9 WAR — tied with Lopez for the team lead. He is not merely a good hitter but a difficult one, a contact-and-power combination who makes the lineup function differently than it does without him. With Cruz at second base, Sacramento has four hitters in the top half of the order who can take a pitcher deep or extend an inning by finding the gaps. Without him, the lineup has a gap in the second slot that Marcos will fill adequately and not exceptionally. Adequately and not exceptionally is how you describe things when you want to be honest without being alarming. I am trying to be honest without being alarming. The Prayers are still a very good baseball team without Gil Cruz. They are a measurably better baseball team with him.

From "Two-Homer Bill" Guadalupe Espinoza-Reyes of Rancho Cordova, who caught the July 9th game on radio in Seattle, called it a breakout performance before the final out was recorded, and has since been informing anyone within earshot that she identified Marcos as a sleeper contributor before the rest of us were paying attention: "Is Bill Marcos the answer at second base while Cruz is out?"

Guadalupe, I will give you credit for the early identification, because the July 9th game was impressive, and five home runs in 55 games from a part-time player suggests there is more power in that right-handed swing than the counting stats have shown. My honest assessment is that Marcos is a functional answer, not a transformative one — he covers second base adequately, he can run a count, and he demonstrated against Seattle that he can punish fastballs when pitchers give him one to handle. What he is not is a .280 hitter with a .380 on-base percentage who turns double plays with the kind of reflexive economy that Cruz brings to the position. For three weeks, Marcos is what Sacramento has, and he deserves the opportunity to show whether July 9th was a signal or a single data point.

From Vartan Keshishyan of Midtown, a season ticket holder who has been tracking the head-to-head record against Fort Worth in a dedicated notebook since April 1st and has recently started color-coding the entries: "Two games. That's all the lead is. Should I be nervous?"

Vartan, I appreciate the dedication the color-coded notebook represents, and I want to give you an answer proportional to the effort you have invested. Two games is not a crisis. It is, however, the smallest the lead has been since late April, and the timing is notable: Sacramento just went 5-4 before the break, lost two of three to a Seattle team that is twelve and a half games below them, and will face San Jose four times this week without Cruz in the lineup. The Fort Worth head-to-head deficit is 4-8, which means if these two clubs finish with identical records, Fort Worth wins a tiebreaker. That is not a likely scenario, but it is a real one, and the Sacramento front office knows it exists. Should you be nervous? I would call it alert. There is a difference. Alert means you are watching Thursday's game. Nervous means you are checking scores from your phone in a parking lot at midnight. Alert is the correct response. For now.

From Minako Fujiwara of East Sacramento, who has watched every Prayers home game this season from section 223, keeps a running ERA chart for each member of the pitching staff updated in real time on a clipboard, and who submitted this question written in the margins of what appears to be a box score from the June 27th Tucson game: "Rubalcava went 3-0 with a sub-one ERA before the break. Is the bad version gone or just resting?"

Minako, the clipboard methodology is sound, and your question is the right one. The honest answer is that I do not know, and anyone who tells you they do is selling something. What I can say is that the mechanical explanation I kept searching for during the rough June stretch — elevated early-count fastballs, decreased ground ball rate, a pattern of hard contact before the fifth inning — was less visible in the July 2nd and July 7th starts than it had been in June. In those two outings, Rubalcava was getting ground balls at a rate consistent with his best work: thirteen ground outs in the Albuquerque game, eight in the Milwaukee complete game. Ground balls come from low fastballs and well-located secondary pitches, and both were present in July in a way they had not been consistently in June. Whether that adjustment holds over a full rotation turn, or whether the Albuquerque lineup is simply easier to get ground balls against than Fort Worth or San Jose — that is what we will find out over the next six weeks. Keep the clipboard current. I will be watching the same things you are.

______________________________

San Jose comes to Cathedral Stadium starting Thursday, and the four games this week are the most important Sacramento will play until September. The Demons are three back, they have a winning head-to-head record against the Prayers this season, and they will be sending out a rotation that Sacramento's lineup is capable of handling — but capable of handling and actually handling are two different things, as Blake Reeves illustrated on July 11th. Cruz will not be in the lineup. The division lead is two. There is no better time than right now to find out what this team is made of, and I will be at Cathedral Stadium for every pitch.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________
Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

Last edited by liberty-ca; 03-12-2026 at 10:12 PM.
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Old 03-13-2026, 10:23 AM   #253
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

July 15 – July 29, 1993 | Games 92–104 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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THE SERIES THAT MATTERED, THE ROAD THAT DIDN'T, AND A LEAD THAT GREW ANYWAY


Here is the honest summary of the last fifteen days: Sacramento won nine games and lost four, the division lead grew from two games to four, and the Prayers did it by going 3-1 in the most important series of the first half while going 2-4 against two teams that are a combined thirty-one games under .500. Fort Worth's collapse — three wins in their last ten entering July 30th — did the division arithmetic more favors than Sacramento's road performance did. The Prayers did not earn a four-game lead so much as accumulate one while the team immediately behind them went sideways.

I want to be precise about what this means and what it does not mean. Winning three of four against San Jose without Gil Cruz in the lineup, in games that genuinely mattered, with the rotation and bullpen performing when the stakes were highest — that is a real thing, and it deserves credit. A team that cannot win the important series does not win seven championships in six years. Sacramento won this one, and the division lead reflects it. What the division lead does not reflect, and what I intend to document clearly below, is that this team still loses road games to clubs it should not lose road games to, and that tendency has not resolved itself the way the standings might suggest.

Fort Worth comes to Cathedral Stadium in four days. The head-to-head record is 4-8. I will return to that number at the end.

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GAME BY GAME: JULY 15 THROUGH JULY 29


vs. San Jose: July 15–18 (3-1)

The series that Sacramento had circled on the schedule since spring training opened on a Thursday afternoon, and the first game went badly before it went worse. Larson allowed six earned runs in 4.2 innings — Pratly's run-scoring double in the third, Cruz's two-run double in the fifth, Campen's two-run home run in the fifth — and the bullpen provided no meaningful resistance as San Jose built a 10-3 lead through six innings. Lopez hit two home runs, his twenty-first and twenty-second of the season. Musco hit his fifteenth. None of it mattered. The Demons won 10-7, and Sacramento entered Friday down one game in a critical four-game set, Cruz still absent, the rotation depleted of its most reliable arm for this particular assignment.

Andretti took the ball on Friday and reminded the Cathedral crowd why he is the most dependable pitcher on this staff. Eight innings, four hits, one earned run, 90 pitches with exceptional strike efficiency — and it was a complete, professional performance against a team that very much needed to be beaten. Baldelomar delivered a two-run double in the third inning to break a 1-0 game open, Alonzo went 3-for-4 including a double, and Prieto threw a clean ninth. The 4-1 win was exactly the response the moment demanded.

The Saturday game was messier but ultimately more satisfying. Espenoza went 5.1 innings and allowed two earned runs — adequate rather than dominant — before Ryan threw 1.2 clean innings and Dodge finished with two more for his sixth save. The decisive moment arrived in the sixth inning with the game tied at two: runners on first and third, Alonzo at the plate against Brierly, and a run-scoring single that gave Sacramento a lead it did not relinquish. Alonzo finished 3-for-3. I will address him properly in the section below. The 4-2 win put Sacramento one victory away from taking the series. Murguia was injured running the bases in the fifth inning — a development that matters and that I will also return to.

The Sunday series finale was Rubalcava going six innings, allowing one earned run, working through a San Jose lineup that had spent three days studying him, and emerging with his eleventh win. The seventh inning required Salazar, who escaped four hits and three runs without allowing an earned run — not exactly clean, but functional — and Dodge held runners on base in the eighth with two outs, retiring Pratly to strand two. Prieto closed it out for his twenty-fourth save. MacDonald hit a two-run home run in the third. The 7-4 final gave Sacramento a 3-1 series result and, when combined with Fort Worth's ongoing difficulties, a lead that had expanded to four games by the following morning.

At Tucson: July 20–22 (1-2)

Sacramento went to Tucson and lost two of three. The Cherubs are 49-53. I will let that number speak for itself while I account for what happened.

The July 20th game ended 3-0, with Larson lasting 3.2 innings, walking three batters, and departing with an injury that was not immediately characterized in detail. Wright allowed two earned runs in relief, Gutierrez and Salazar held the fort, and Mike Bradford — a pitcher with a 7-7 record and a 4.16 ERA — threw 7.1 shutout innings against a Sacramento lineup that managed two hits. The offense disappeared entirely. Twelve left on base and zero runs scored is not the product of bad luck. It is the product of a lineup that was not sharp, against a pitcher who was.

The July 21st game produced a shutout loss in the rain, and this one was more alarming because Andretti started and allowed three earned runs over 5.1 innings — Chavez's home run in the first, Foreman's home run in the seventh — and Ryan allowed two more home runs in relief. Tony Crossley, who arrived at the ballpark with a 7-14 record, threw seven innings and did not allow a run. A pitcher who has lost fourteen games this season threw a shutout against the best offense in the American League. I do not know how to explain that except to say it happened, and it happened in the middle of a season where Sacramento has now been shut out four times by pitchers who, on their best days, belong in the middle of the rotation of a last-place team.

The July 22nd game was the appropriate response: Espenoza at his best, throwing 7.1 innings against the Tucson lineup on 103 pitches with thirteen ground outs — the ground-ball Espenoza who generates weak contact and stays ahead in counts — while Marcos hit a three-run home run in the eighth inning and finished with four RBI. The 8-3 win salvaged the series split and provided evidence that the offense was still present in Tucson. It had simply declined to show up for the first two games.

At Washington: July 23–25 (1-2)

Sacramento went to Washington and lost two of three. The Devils are 38-65. I will again let the number speak.

The July 23rd game was Rubalcava, and it was the Rubalcava that justifies every superlative currently being applied to him in American League pitching discussions. Seven and two-thirds innings, four hits, zero earned runs, eight strikeouts, his twelfth win. Lopez hit his twenty-third home run in the eighth, Rodriguez delivered a run-scoring triple in the second, and the 5-0 final was the kind of road win that looks exactly as effortless as it felt.

The July 24th game was St. Clair going 4.2 innings without recording a strikeout — zero, against the Washington Devils — while allowing five runs on nine hits. Noah Rossman, who entered the start with a 5-7 record and a 6.66 ERA, threw 7.2 shutout innings. Salazar was injured in the game while pitching — strained back, ten days — which represented a third reliever lost to injury in the span of ten days, following Murguia on July 17th and Larson on July 20th. The 7-0 loss was the kind of afternoon that produces questions with uncomfortable answers. Washington is 38-65. Their starter had a 6.66 ERA. Sacramento managed four hits.

The July 25th game was competitive and ultimately lost in the eighth inning when Garza hit a three-run home run off Gutierrez to turn a 5-5 tie into an 8-5 Washington lead. Larson made his return from the July 20th injury and lasted 4.2 innings, allowing five runs. Lopez hit a three-run home run in the third — his twenty-fourth of the season. Musco hit his sixteenth in the first. Sacramento scored five runs and still lost, and the manner of the loss — a three-run home run to a designated hitter on a club that had won thirty-seven games — was among the less defensible outcomes in this team's recent road history.

vs. Long Beach: July 27–29 (3-0)

The Diablos arrived at Cathedral Stadium at 36-66 and were swept.

The July 27th game featured Andretti winning his thirteenth — seven innings, one earned run, professional throughout — while Musco hit a two-run home run in the first, Baldelomar added a two-run shot in the fifth, and MacDonald hit his twelfth home run in the eighth. Dodge threw two clean innings. The 6-1 final was efficient.

The July 28th game was Rubalcava throwing a complete-game one-hitter — nine innings, one hit, zero runs, 103 pitches, five strikeouts, thirteen ground outs, game score 88. It was the best individual pitching performance in Sacramento's 1993 season, delivered against the worst team in the National League West with the same preparation and command he brings to games against contenders. Lopez drove in three on a sacrifice fly and a pair of singles. Rodriguez homered. Torres drove in two. The 8-0 final was comprehensive.

The July 29th game required more effort. Espenoza allowed three runs in 6.1 innings — a Lewis two-run home run in the sixth the decisive blow — and Sacramento entered the eighth trailing 3-2 before Lopez hit his twenty-fifth home run to tie it and Baldelomar followed with a two-run shot in the bottom of the eighth to win it. Prieto earned his twenty-fifth save. And in the seventh inning, with Sacramento trailing and the game in the balance, Gil Cruz stepped to the plate as a pinch hitter — his first appearance since being struck on the foot in Albuquerque on July 8th. He singled. Sacramento went home that evening with a three-game winning streak, a four-game division lead, and the man who had been most missed back in the dugout wearing a Sacramento uniform.

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BEYOND THE BOX SCORE


Jordan Rubalcava — A complete-game one-hitter. A seven-and-two-thirds-inning shutout in Washington. Six innings and one earned run against San Jose in a game Sacramento needed to win. In this stretch alone, Rubalcava pitched to a 0.82 ERA across three starts and collected his eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth wins. His season line is now 13-6, 2.53 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, 5.4 WAR — the last figure being the most important one, and the one that should be appearing in every Cy Young conversation being conducted in this league. Fort Worth's John Gillon is 12-4 with a 3.17 ERA. Baltimore's David Hernandez has been excellent. Rubalcava is better than both, and the gap between his WAR and the next pitcher on the AL leaderboard is wide enough to drive a bus through. I have been making this argument for three months. The numbers keep agreeing with me.

Rafael Alonzo — In the two weeks of this stretch, Alonzo batted .319, delivered the go-ahead RBI single in the San Jose series, went 3-for-3 in the July 17th win, and continued to produce at a rate that his All-Star selection accurately represented. His season line of .302/.358/.431 is the product of a catcher who hits consistently rather than occasionally, and his defensive work — the arm, the game-calling, the ability to handle a rotation that requires different approaches on different days — is a contribution that does not appear in the batting statistics but influences every pitching line on this roster. Alonzo is the third-best position player on this team. In most years, on most rosters, he would be the best.

Alejandro Lopez — Twenty-five home runs. Fifty-five RBI. Thirty-nine stolen bases. A .903 OPS. A WAR of 4.8 that leads all position players in the American League. In this stretch he hit three home runs, drove in thirteen runs, stole three bases, and continued to do the thing that makes him the most complete offensive player in this league: he reaches base in situations where lesser hitters make outs, and he does damage when he reaches. The MVP conversation among the people who cover this league should not be a conversation at this point. It should be an announcement.

Rafael Baldelomar — The stretch that began with his two-run double in the San Jose series and concluded with the walk-off two-run home run against Long Beach on July 29th represents the most sustained offensive contribution Baldelomar has made all season. His season average has climbed to .274. He has fifteen home runs. He is thirty-first in stolen bases. He is not the player his OBP of .314 suggests he should be — he does not walk enough, and his tendencies against breaking balls away are exploitable in a way that better pitchers will continue to exploit — but he has been a genuine run producer in this stretch, and the July 29th walk-off was the kind of moment that a left fielder who had been quietly inconsistent all season earned with a clutch at-bat when the team needed one.

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QUESTIONS THAT NEED ANSWERING


The road record is exactly .500 and that is a problem — Sacramento is 27-27 on the road. The best teams in this league are not .500 on the road in late July. Brooklyn was 30-29 on the road entering the break. Baltimore is 28-21 away from home. Fort Worth at its peak was better than .500 away from Baltimore. A team that goes .500 away from home for an entire season finishes with a record determined almost entirely by its home performance, and Sacramento's home record of 36-14 is extraordinary enough to sustain a division lead on its own — but extraordinary home records have a way of normalizing in August and September, and a road record that is mediocre provides no cushion when that happens. The losses in Tucson and Washington are not simply individual disappointments. They are a pattern, and the pattern is that Sacramento does not consistently perform on the road against inferior competition the way a championship-caliber team should.

Larson's health is the rotation question that replaced Rubalcava's consistency — He was injured on July 20th in Tucson, returned on July 25th in Washington, threw 4.2 innings, allowed five runs, and departed. His ERA has climbed from 3.19 to 3.68 across a stretch that has included outings that look more like a pitcher working through something than a pitcher who is right. His ground ball rate is down. His walk rate is up — 47 walks in 134.1 innings is an elevated number for a pitcher whose value has always been built on command and contact management. The injury was reported as minor. The subsequent performances have not confirmed that characterization, and with August and September coming, Sacramento needs Larson to be what he was in April and May, not what he has been since July 20th.

The bullpen depth is thinner than it was — Salazar is on the IL with a strained back, ten days remaining. Murguia is on the IL with a strained groin. Salazar is the more significant loss because he had been one of the more reliable middle innings arms — 2.67 ERA in 30.1 innings — and his absence concentrates the workload on Dodge, Gutierrez, and Ryan in a bullpen that is already carrying Prieto as an uncertain ninth-inning option. Dodge's ERA is 1.37. He is the one arm in this bullpen that I trust in any situation at any point in a game. The organization needs to decide before August becomes September whether the construction around him is adequate for a playoff push, and the current evidence suggests it may not be.

Espenoza's two versions remain unresolved — In this stretch: July 17th, 5.1 innings, two earned runs, seven strikeouts, thirteen consecutive batters retired at one point. July 22nd, 7.1 innings, one earned run, thirteen ground outs, complete efficiency. July 29th, 6.1 innings, two earned runs against Long Beach, a two-run home run allowed to a hitter with four home runs on the season. Twenty home runs allowed in 135.2 innings is the persistent indicator, and the July 29th outing against the worst team in the National League West served as a reminder that the second version of Espenoza — elevated fastballs, hard contact, the kind of at-bat that ends badly — is never more than a start away.

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INTEL FROM AROUND THE FBL


The division picture has clarified considerably in the last two weeks, and not entirely because of what Sacramento did. Fort Worth went 3-7 in their last ten and fell to five games back. The Spirits are 58-46, they have been leaking runs at a rate their pitching staff cannot sustain, and the team that spent most of April and May looking like Sacramento's primary division threat is now fighting San Jose for a wild card spot. Fort Worth's Jamie Russell acquisition from Salt Lake City adds a reliable bat to the infield, but a trade deadline pickup does not fix a rotation that has been inconsistent since June.

San Jose at 58-44 is now the wild card leader, tied with Columbus Heaven, one game ahead of Brooklyn and Fort Worth. The Demons are a dangerous team and I want to be direct about why: they hit .295 as an organization, the second-best batting average in the American League West, they have a positive run differential of plus-five despite a 4.73 team ERA, and they play Sacramento three times in mid-August at Demons Field. The 6-5 head-to-head record in Sacramento's favor is a number worth protecting, and the August 13-15 road series in San Jose will determine whether it stays that way.

Baltimore has become the most alarming team in the American League. At 62-40, the Satans lead the AL East, sit three games behind Sacramento in overall record, and have won eight of their last ten. The acquisition of Daniel Mele from Long Beach — a second baseman hitting .304 with sixteen home runs and fifty-five RBI — strengthens an infield that was already the most productive in the division. Baltimore is the team I would least like to face in October, and they are playing like a team that intends to be there.

Columbus Heaven at 58-44 has won eight of their last ten and is now tied for the wild card lead. They are a team I have not written enough about this season, and that omission ends now: their pitching staff, led by Casey Ford — all-star reliever, 2.54 ERA — and Rich Flores in the rotation, has a 3.67 ERA that is the second-best mark in the American League behind Sacramento. They are worth watching.

On the roster news front: Chris Ryan has communicated to manager Jimmy Aces that he would welcome a contract extension at the right price. Ryan is 3-1 with a 5.29 ERA, which is not the statistical foundation that typically generates extension conversations, but he has been reliable in low-leverage situations and the organization clearly values his versatility. What the extension request means in practical terms is that the front office has another contract decision to make — alongside the ongoing Caliari situation — at a time when the more pressing question is whether the bullpen as currently constituted can hold leads in October. I would address the roster construction before addressing the contract offers.

Phoenix at 63-41 is the best team in baseball and Sacramento's most likely World Series opponent if both clubs hold their current positions. Their ERA differential — plus-two between runs scored and runs allowed — masks a roster that is deeper than the standings suggest. Any Sacramento fan who has not yet begun to think about that potential matchup should perhaps start.

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READER MAIL — The Hot Corner Mailbag.


From Sarkis Torossian of Natomas, a civil engineer who has been calculating the Prayers' Pythagorean win expectation on a weekly basis since April and who submitted this question on the back of a napkin that appears to have been used at a barbecue, which I respect: "The Pythagorean record shows Sacramento should be 66-38 but we're actually 63-41 — three games below expectation. Is that a concern?"

Sarkis, your methodology is sound and your napkin is evidence of dedication. Three games below Pythagorean expectation in late July is a meaningful signal, and what it signals specifically is one-run game performance: Sacramento is 12-15 in games decided by a single run, which is the primary driver of the gap between actual and expected wins. The Pythagorean formula does not know about Luis Prieto's blown saves or the three-run home runs allowed with two outs in the eighth inning of otherwise well-pitched games. It knows only that this team scores runs at a rate that should produce more wins than it has. The gap is not cause for alarm — three games of luck-regression is within normal range — but it is another way of saying that the ninth inning remains this team's most expensive room. Fix the ninth inning and the Pythagorean record and the actual record converge. Leave it as is and the three-game gap either stays or grows.

From Yuki Hashimoto of the Pocket District, who listened to all four San Jose games on the radio, kept a pitch-by-pitch log of Alonzo's at-bats in a composition notebook, and would like it noted for the record that she identified Alonzo as an All-Star candidate in a letter to the Hot Corner podcast in February: "Is Rafael Alonzo the most underrated player on this team?"

Yuki, February credit acknowledged and honored. The argument for Alonzo as the most underrated Prayers player is a strong one. He is batting .302 with a .788 OPS from the catcher position, where the position adjustment means his offensive production is more valuable than those numbers suggest at first glance. His WAR of 2.2 understates his defensive contributions in a way the metric has historically struggled to capture for catchers — the framing, the pitch selection, the management of a rotation that includes five starters with distinct arsenals and tendencies. What makes him underrated specifically is that Lopez and Cruz and Musco collect the attention and the coverage, and Alonzo simply goes out every day and does his job at a level that most teams would consider their best-case scenario at the position. He is not underrated in the building — Aces clearly trusts him with the most important pitching assignments — but he is underrated everywhere else, and your February letter has been entered into evidence.

From Armando Villanueva-Rios of Elk Grove, who attended the July 28th Long Beach game, watched Rubalcava's one-hitter from the left-field bleachers, and spent the final three innings loudly informing nearby fans that he had correctly predicted a shutout before the game began, with varying degrees of success in generating agreement: "With what Rubalcava is doing, is it too early to talk about a no-hitter this season?"

Armando, I appreciate the confidence and I understand the impulse, but there is a journalistic tradition of not writing about no-hitters while they are in progress, and there is a parallel tradition of not predicting them before they happen, on the grounds that baseball will hear you and arrange things accordingly. What I will say is that a complete-game one-hitter on 103 pitches with thirteen ground outs is not the performance of a pitcher who is lucky. It is the performance of a pitcher who is operating at the top of his craft, locating his fastball to both edges, changing eye levels with a curveball that has improved in consistency since June, and throwing his changeup in counts where hitters are sitting on the heater. Whether that produces a no-hitter at some point before October is a question I would rather let the box scores answer than attempt to anticipate. Keep the bleacher seat. You are watching something worth watching.

From Ji-woo Lim of Midtown, a graduate student in statistics who has been tracking the correlation between Sacramento's bullpen ERA and their one-run game record for a research project she describes as "not officially affiliated with any institution but spiritually affiliated with the Hot Corner podcast": "If Dodge closes instead of Prieto for the rest of the season, what does the one-run record look like?"

Ji-woo, the research project sounds exactly as serious as it should be, and the question is the most direct version of what I have been circling around since June. Here is the honest answer: I do not know what the one-run record looks like with Dodge closing, because Dodge has not been given the opportunity to demonstrate it in that role consistently. What I know is that Dodge's ERA is 1.37, his WHIP is 0.94, his batting average against is .182, and his last twenty appearances have produced five saves and no blown opportunities. I know that Prieto's ERA is 4.65, his WHIP is 1.40, and he has blown four saves in twenty-nine chances this season, each blown save contributing directly to a loss in a one-run game. The correlation your research project is tracking is not subtle. The question is not statistical. The question is managerial, and the answer to it is sitting in the bullpen every night, posting a 1.37 ERA, waiting for someone in the Sacramento front office to read the same numbers you are reading.

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Fort Worth arrives at Cathedral Stadium on Monday for three games, and the head-to-head record between these two clubs is 4-8 in the Spirits' favor. Sacramento has a four-game division lead and a Pythagorean record that says it should be larger. What it does not have is a winning record against the one team most capable of taking the division from it, and three games at Cathedral this week is the opportunity to begin rewriting that number. The rotation sets up well. The crowd will be present. The games matter in a way that Long Beach and Washington did not. I will be watching every pitch, and I suspect you will be too.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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Old 03-13-2026, 03:48 PM   #254
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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July 30 – August 15, 1993 | Games 105–119 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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THE STRETCH THAT HAD EVERYTHING, INCLUDING SOME THINGS WE COULD HAVE DONE WITHOUT


Sixteen days. Nine wins, seven losses. A 14-inning catastrophe against a last-place team, a complete game shutout in the same week. A blown save so spectacular in its awfulness that it deserves its own paragraph and probably its own filing in the historical record. A pitcher recording career win number two hundred on a Thursday afternoon in August while the opposing manager stood in the dugout and watched helplessly. A division lead that grew from four games to seven, not entirely because Sacramento earned it, and not entirely because Sacramento didn't.

What I want to resist, and what I intend to resist throughout this column, is the temptation to average these sixteen days into something comfortable. The good things were genuinely good. The bad things were genuinely bad. A seven-game division lead over Fort Worth entering the August 17th series at El Paso represents real progress, and the Prayers' pitching staff continues to post numbers that belong at the top of every meaningful category in this league. These are facts. The other fact is that Luis Prieto faced four batters in Columbus on August 8th, recorded zero outs, allowed four earned runs including a three-run home run, and the team that scored six home runs in that game left Ohio with a loss. These two facts exist simultaneously, and both of them matter for what is coming.

The division lead is seven. The head-to-head record against Fort Worth is six wins and nine losses. The road record is thirty wins and thirty losses. I will be returning to all three of those numbers before we are finished here.

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SIXTEEN DAYS: THE COMPLETE RECORD


vs. El Paso: July 30 – August 1 (2-1)

The July 30th game against El Paso lasted fourteen innings and five hours and eleven minutes and ended with Sacramento losing 16-15, which is the kind of sentence that takes a moment to absorb. Larson gave up three home runs in the first three innings — Garza in the first, Nieva in the second, Gil in the third on a grand slam that made it 10-1 before Sacramento had properly woken up. The offense staged a comeback of genuine dramatic quality, scoring seven runs in the fourth inning and five more in the seventh, and with the game tied at fourteen entering the fourteenth inning the Cathedral crowd had every reason to believe the comeback would be completed. Caliari came on with a runner on base, allowed a King pinch-hit two-run double and an Alvarez double, and that was the ballgame. Sacramento had fifteen runs, fifteen hits, four home runs, and a loss. El Paso had won three in a row and was heading home happy. I want to note that Jesus Alvarez — a left fielder for a team that is forty-two games under .500 — scored four runs, hit a home run, and went four for eight in fourteen innings against the first-place Sacramento Prayers. Sometimes baseball is like that, and there is nothing to be done except to acknowledge it and move on.

Moving on: the July 31st game was St. Clair going seven innings and allowing three runs on six hits while Lopez hit a three-run home run in the third inning that ended up being the difference. Wright threw two clean innings. The 4-3 final was not pretty but it was a win and after the previous evening's events Sacramento needed one.

August 1st was Andretti delivering a complete game three-hit shutout, 11-0, on 94 pitches. Jesus Hernandez homered in the third. Francisco Hernandez homered in the fourth. Rodriguez hit a grand slam in the fourth. Andretti hit his spots, retired hitters in the order he intended to retire them, and afterward talked to reporters about location with the contentment of a man who had just done exactly what he came to do. The series result was 2-1. El Paso was not the problem.

vs. Fort Worth: August 2–4 (2-1)

The series Sacramento had circled on the schedule arrived, and what happened in it requires careful documentation.

August 2nd: Rubalcava started, retired the first eleven batters he faced, and in the fourth inning was removed from the game with an injury that was not fully characterized at the time. He had thrown 41 pitches. Scott came on, allowed a two-run Guerrero home run in the fifth, and ultimately received the win when Sacramento erupted for five runs in the sixth — Lopez two-run home run off Gillon, MacDonald two-run home run off Gillon, Musco three hits including a run-scoring single — and Gutierrez and Prieto held the 6-3 lead through the final innings. The win was real. The Rubalcava injury, the nature of which was not announced and which I will address at length below, was the number that mattered more than the final score.

August 3rd was the game that Fort Worth will replay all winter and Sacramento will spend the next six weeks trying not to think about. Espenoza threw seven innings of shutout baseball — three hits, one walk, six strikeouts, 101 pitches, a game score of 76 — and Sacramento took a 4-0 lead into the ninth inning. Prieto took the mound and Fort Worth shortstop Jon Guerrero hit a three-run home run on a 1-0 fastball that did not locate where the catcher set up. Reza doubled. Benoldi doubled. Three runs scored. Fort Worth won 5-4. Guerrero went three for four on the evening and will be dining out on that at-bat for the remainder of the calendar year, as is his right. What is not his right is to have been given the opportunity, and the man who gave it to him is the most pressing topic in the following section of this column.

August 4th was Larson — healthy and composed, seven and two-thirds innings, two earned runs, the Larson who earns his $1.7 million — while Francisco Hernandez went two for four with three RBI, Lopez hit his twenty-ninth home run, and Sacramento won 9-2 to take the series two games to one. The head-to-head record is now six wins and nine losses in Sacramento's favor of Fort Worth, which is to say in Fort Worth's favor, which is to say this is a problem I will also return to.

At Columbus: August 6–8 (1-2)

August 6th was a road win done properly: Andretti going six innings, allowing three runs, departing with leads and watching Ryan and Gutierrez protect them, Musco hitting his nineteenth home run and driving in three, Perez — activated August 5th and appearing in his first game since the hamstring injury — hitting a two-run home run in his first at-bat back. The 7-3 win was the kind of game that reminds you why the road record is not completely unacceptable. Sacramento can win on the road. It simply does not do so consistently.

August 7th is the game that most requires explanation and receives it below, but the facts are these: Rubalcava started five days after being removed in the fourth inning with an injury in the Fort Worth game and was hit for six earned runs in 3.1 innings, three home runs among the damage — Sanchez hitting one in the first inning, Fujimoto hitting a two-run shot also in the first, Lara and Sanchez again and Guerrero hammering Wright for four more in the fourth. The final was 10-1. The game score was 23. This was not Rubalcava.

August 8th was the game where Sacramento hit six home runs — Perez in the second, F. Hernandez in the third, Lopez in the fourth, Alonzo in the fourth, Baldelomar in the sixth, Musco in the eighth — scored six runs, and lost 7-6, which requires the following explanation: Espenoza threw six innings and allowed two runs, Gutierrez threw two clean innings with three strikeouts, and Prieto entered the ninth inning with a 6-2 lead, faced four batters, recorded zero outs, allowed a Ontiveros home run with two runners on, a Sanchez double, a Fujimoto double, and was removed from the game with two runs in, two runners on base, and no outs recorded. Dodge came on, inherited those runners, and the Roberto Lopez sacrifice fly scored the winning run. The loss was credited to Dodge, who allowed one inherited run in two-thirds of an inning, which is the box score version of events. The accurate version is different, and anyone who watched that ninth inning knows exactly where the responsibility lies.

vs. San Antonio: August 10–12 (2-1)

San Antonio arrived at Cathedral Stadium at 46-68 and won the first game, which I mention because it is the kind of result that keeps a columnist employed.

The August 10th game: Larson threw eight and a third innings against the twenty-second-best team in the FBL, allowed four runs on six hits, struck out four, threw 102 pitches with 71 strikes, and pitched well enough to win by a distance. Prieto inherited a runner in the ninth with Sacramento leading 3-2, walked a batter, and allowed a Jason Morris pinch-hit two-run double to end it. The fifth blown save of the season for a pitcher with a 5.40 ERA. The sixth, depending on how you count. Larson received the loss. The 4-3 final sent San Antonio home celebrating and left a Cathedral Stadium crowd that had watched 8.1 innings of quality baseball standing in silence trying to understand what they had just witnessed.

The August 11th comeback was satisfying in the way that comebacks against bad teams are satisfying, which is to say moderately. San Antonio took a 3-0 lead into the fifth inning and Sacramento scored six runs across the fifth, seventh, and eighth innings — Baldelomar's triple, Rodriguez's solo home run in the seventh, Francisco Hernandez's two-run shot in the eighth off Barajas being the decisive blow. Ryan threw 1.2 clean innings for the win. Prieto closed it with a save. Andretti had started and allowed three runs in 6.1 innings, which was not his best, but the offense carried it.

August 12th was Rubalcava pitching his two hundredth career win, and how this column describes that afternoon is a question I have been sitting with since the box score came through. Nine innings. Four hits. One walk. Two strikeouts. Ninety-eight pitches. Zero runs. Career record now 200-73, 2.66 ERA. Lopez hit his thirty-first home run in the sixth. Francisco Hernandez added his sixteenth. After the game, Rubalcava told reporters that getting close to two hundred wins is the kind of thing that occupies more mental space than you expect, and that the relief when it arrives is something close to physical. Aces told reporters he saw a man looking to embrace everyone in the building. I believe both of them. This was the best pitcher in the American League collecting a milestone that belongs in the conversation whenever his career is eventually discussed, and it happened on a Thursday afternoon in August against San Antonio in front of twenty-two thousand people at Cathedral Stadium. It deserved more attention than the trade deadline coverage gave it.

Alex Torres was injured running the bases in this game and did not return. The roster implications are noted below.

At San Jose: August 13–15 (2-1)

Espenoza went six innings and allowed two runs on the road at a stadium where Sacramento has struggled to score, and the final was 3-2 with Gutierrez throwing two clean innings and Prieto saving it with a clean ninth — his twenty-eighth save, and as welcome a performance as he has delivered in weeks. Lopez hit his thirty-second home run. Murguia, back from the groin injury, went two for four as the DH. The 3-2 win was the kind of tightly managed road victory that good teams find ways to collect.

The August 14th game was St. Clair — five shutout innings, four walks but no damage — and Francisco Hernandez delivering a three-run home run in the seventh that broke a 2-0 game open for good. Alonzo added a solo shot in the ninth. Caliari, Gutierrez, and Dodge handled the final four innings without incident and the 6-1 final was Sacramento's fourth consecutive win and the result of a team that knows how to win in San Jose when it needs to.

August 15th ended the series and the period with a 4-3 loss, Larson allowing four runs in 6.1 innings including the Vazquez two-run double in the sixth that turned a 2-1 Sacramento lead into a 3-2 deficit, four walks issued, and Salazar — activated August 12th after the back strain, appearing in his first game — throwing 1.2 clean innings after Larson's departure. Sacramento tied it in the sixth on a Lopez double and then could not score again. San Jose has been going 3-7 in their last ten and playing like a team that has lost their best pitcher and knows it. The Sacramento series win, two games to one, was appropriate.

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MEN ON A MISSION


Jordan Rubalcava — The arc of the last sixteen days is the most interesting story in Sacramento baseball and possibly in American League baseball. He was injured on August 2nd in the third inning against Fort Worth. He started on August 7th in Columbus and was hit for six earned runs in 3.1 innings while throwing 67 pitches with only 37 strikes. He then went out on August 12th on twelve days of rest, threw a complete game shutout against San Antonio on 98 pitches, recorded his 200th career win, and the box score looked like a man who had never been injured and never had a bad start in his life. His season line is now 14-7, 2.67 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, 5.3 WAR. The FBL's most effective pitcher, by the most comprehensive measure available, working toward a Cy Young season while managing an August injury and reaching a career milestone in the same two-week window. The hot/cold numbers entering this week show him 7-1 with a 1.44 ERA over his last nine decisions. The August 7th start was the one aberration in a run of dominance that has lasted most of the second half. He is the best pitcher in this league, and I am no longer interested in qualifying that statement.

Bernardo Andretti — Four wins, one loss, 2.16 ERA over his last six starts. A complete game three-hit shutout against El Paso on August 1st. A 7-3 road win in Columbus in which he worked six innings against a team that had just beaten Sacramento twice. His season line of 15-6, 2.92 ERA is the second-best on a staff with the best ERA in the American League. The FBL's fifth-ranked pitcher by the scouting index. Thirty-three years old and pitching the best baseball of his career in a contract year. This is what quiet, professional excellence looks like across a full season, and if the conversation about Sacramento's rotation has been dominated by Rubalcava's brilliance, it is worth pausing to note that Andretti has been extraordinary in his own right and that the Prayers are a substantially different team without him at the back of the rotation.

Francisco Hernandez — Seventeen home runs, forty-three RBI, thirty-six stolen bases on a .230 average that obscures just how much damage he does when he makes contact. In this stretch: two home runs against San Antonio, a three-run home run in San Jose that won the August 14th game, productive at-bats throughout. His OBP of .337 is more honest than his average, and his .439 slugging percentage from a right fielder who also steals bases at a 36-for-42 clip is the kind of combination that becomes more valuable the deeper a team goes into the season.

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BEFORE YOU POP THAT COLD BEVERAGE


Luis Prieto: the situation has become untenable — I have been measured in this column about the closer situation. I have noted ERA and blown saves and one-run record and Pythagorean differential and I have suggested that the numbers point in one direction while allowing that the managerial decision belongs to Aces and the organization. I am no longer going to be measured. What happened in Columbus on August 8th — zero outs, four earned runs, three runs before a single out was recorded in a game Sacramento led by four — and what happened on August 10th — Larson pitching 8.1 innings against a team thirty games under .500 and receiving a loss because of a ninth-inning implosion — are not the performances of a closer who should be closing for a first-place team in August. Prieto's ERA is 5.17. He has blown six saves in thirty-three chances, which is an eighteenth-percentile rate for closers in this league. Steve Dodge has a 1.79 ERA, a 0.99 WHIP, and 47 appearances that have demonstrated exactly the kind of consistency and command the ninth inning demands. The case for Dodge closing has existed since late June. It has not been acted upon. Every game lost in the ninth inning between now and the end of the regular season is a game that the roster, managed differently, had the capacity to win.

The Larson question has become more pressing — He is 8-9. His ERA is 4.03, up from 3.68 entering this period, up from 3.19 in early July. He has walked fifty-six batters in 158.2 innings, which is a rate that has climbed steadily since his July 20th injury in Tucson. In this period he was sharp on August 4th against Fort Worth — seven and two-thirds innings, two earned runs, 98 pitches — and lost on August 10th and August 15th in starts where the walk totals told the story before the results did. Four walks against San Antonio in 8.1 innings. Four walks against San Jose in 6.1. The Larson who pitches to contact, changes eye levels, and commands the outer half of the plate is worth every dollar of his contract. The pitcher who has been on the mound for most of the second half — elevated walk rate, lower first pitch strike percentage, that particular quality of reluctance when ahead in the count — is a different and lesser version of the same pitcher, and the difference matters in a rotation that has already lost Rubalcava to an injury scare.

The cold bats in the middle of the order are not going away — MacDonald is batting .097 with zero home runs over his last eight games. Rodriguez is batting .091 with one home run over his last nine. Torres batted .120 in his last eight games before sustaining the August 12th injury, and his roster status is not fully resolved. These are not minor concerns about bench depth. Rodriguez is the everyday third baseman for a contending team. MacDonald has played first base in 112 games this season. When either or both of them are not producing, the lineup carries a hole in it that the top of the order — Lopez, Cruz, Musco — cannot always compensate for. The numbers say this stretch of non-production has persisted for two weeks. They do not say it will end.

The road record is thirty wins and thirty losses — I have written this number before and I intend to keep writing it until it improves. Sacramento is 42-17 at Cathedral Stadium. It is .500 on the road. The remaining schedule includes eight road games at El Paso, five at Los Angeles, three at Seattle, and the ongoing reality that a postseason run requires winning in someone else's ballpark. September road games matter in ways August road games do not, and a team that cannot sustain road performance against inferior competition will discover in September that there are no inferior opponents.

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WHAT THE REST OF THE LEAGUE IS DOING


Fort Worth entered this period at 60-46 and currently sits at 66-55, having gone six and nine over the last fifteen days and fallen seven games behind Sacramento. The injuries are significant and real: Benoldi separated his shoulder on August 15th in a collision at a base and will miss up to three weeks, which is the kind of blow that removes your best infield bat during the most important stretch of the season. Jamie Russell, acquired at the trade deadline specifically to shore up the infield, fractured his wrist and is on the IL with eligible return status but no timetable. Mike Chavez has groin tightness. The Fort Worth club that spent April and May looking like Sacramento's primary division competition now has a decimated infield, a 3-7 record over its last ten games, and a wild card lead of one game over Brooklyn that is not as comfortable as that number might suggest. I do not wish injury on any player. I do wish to note that the arithmetic of this pennant race changed materially on the day Benoldi hit the ground in Seattle.

The wild card situation has become genuinely complicated. Columbus leads at 67-53, followed by Fort Worth at 66-55, Brooklyn at 64-54, San Jose at 63-56, and — the number I want you to pay attention to — Tucson at 62-56 after winning eight of their last ten. The Cherubs are nine and a half games behind Sacramento in the division and two and a half behind Columbus in the wild card race, and they are a team that has been playing the best baseball in the American League West over the last three weeks. They are worth watching with something approaching concern.

Baltimore at 72-47 matches Sacramento's record and continues to be the team I would least like to face in October. Their run differential is a league-leading plus-179. Jorge Jaime is batting .381 with thirty-seven home runs and 113 RBI, which is one of the most dominant individual offensive seasons in the FBL, and the acquisition of Mele has given them an infield that produces at every position. The Satans have won six of their last ten and show no signs of fatigue. If the Prayers are going to face anyone in the American League Championship Series, it will probably be Baltimore, and this column will have more to say about that matchup as September arrives.

Phoenix at 72-48 matches our record in the National League and remains the most likely World Series opponent. They have won four in a row. Costodio Carro is 16-3 with a 3.22 ERA and is twenty-three years old. The NL has not produced a pennant race this tight in several seasons, with Las Vegas two and a half back and Albuquerque nine behind — both fighting for a wild card position in a league where Philadelphia and Las Vegas are currently tied at the top.

Nashville has lost Jonathan Perdieu for the season to an arthritic elbow, which is worth noting because Nashville's rotation was one of the factors keeping them in wild card contention as recently as two weeks ago. Their closer Doherty has been out since July. Two rotation arms gone before September is a different team than the one that played .500 baseball through the first four months.

The Sacramento draft class deserves a footnote: five picks, including three first-rounders, failed to sign by the August 10th deadline, and the franchise received additional compensation picks. The picks who did not sign will almost certainly reenter next year's draft. It is a minor item in the context of a pennant race, but front offices that cannot convert draft capital into roster additions over time create structural problems, and this was not a successful draft signing period.

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THE INBOX — Questions worth answering.


From Derek Hollingsworth of Land Park, who attended the August 3rd Fort Worth game, watched Espenoza throw seven shutout innings, watched Prieto give the lead away in the ninth, remained in his seat for twenty minutes after the final out while the stadium emptied around him, and described his emotional state in a letter to this program as "the particular type of sad that only baseball can produce": "At what point does the Prieto situation become a crisis rather than a concern?"

Derek, I want to be careful about my answer, because the difference between "concern" and "crisis" is partly a matter of framing and I do not want to manufacture panic. Here is what I can say with confidence: a situation becomes a crisis when the accumulation of damage exceeds the capacity for recovery within the remaining timeframe. Prieto has blown six saves. Sacramento's one-run record is 14-20. The team is four games below its Pythagorean expectation, a gap driven almost entirely by late-inning losses. There are approximately forty-five games remaining. If the division lead holds at seven games and Sacramento finishes the season at something like .580 ball, the Prieto situation never becomes a crisis because the margin absorbed the damage. If the lead shrinks to three or four games in the last two weeks of September and Sacramento is in a race with Fort Worth, the August 3rd game and the August 10th game and the August 8th game will be the games that determined the outcome. I do not know which scenario we are heading toward. I know that Dodge is sitting in the bullpen with a 1.79 ERA and nobody is using him in the ninth inning, and that fact will look either reasonable or catastrophic depending on how the next six weeks go.

From Pat Connelly of Pocket District, a retired high school baseball coach who has tracked every Sacramento win and loss since 1981 and keeps a handwritten ledger that he describes as "basically the unofficial history of this franchise": "Why can't this team win on the road against bad teams?"

Pat, the ledger sounds like a document that deserves to be archived, and the question deserves a direct answer. Winning on the road against inferior competition requires one thing above all others: the ability to produce offense against starting pitchers who are having their best days, because bad teams have pitchers who occasionally throw shutouts, and road teams cannot rely on crowd energy and home comfort to compensate when the offense goes quiet. Sacramento has been shut out or held to one run multiple times this season by pitchers with ERAs above five, and the common thread is not the opposing pitcher — it is the Sacramento offense going cold on days when it needs to be warm. The deeper issue is lineup construction in those games: when Rodriguez is batting .091 and MacDonald is batting .097, there are two holes in a nine-hole lineup that capable opposing pitchers will locate and exploit. The road record is what it is because good pitching beats cold bats regardless of where the game is played.

From Maria Sutherland of Elk Grove, who listens to every road game and has developed what she describes as a "Prieto listening face" — apparently a specific involuntary expression that appears each time he takes the mound in close games: "Is Steve Dodge the closer this team deserves?"

Maria, the Prieto listening face is a documented phenomenon in households across this market and I suspect yours is not unique. To your question: Dodge's ERA is 1.79. His WHIP is 0.99. His batting average against is .197. He has forty-seven appearances and has allowed nine total runs across 45.1 innings. The phrase "the closer this team deserves" implies there is some gap between what Dodge has earned and what he is receiving, and I think the honest answer is yes — he has earned the ninth inning by every measure available — while acknowledging that the decision to deploy him there belongs entirely to Jimmy Aces and the front office, and that I am a journalist who covers baseball rather than a manager who runs a pitching staff. What I can say, and what I have been saying for approximately six weeks, is that the evidence in favor of Dodge closing is comprehensive and the evidence in favor of continuing with Prieto is limited to the institutional weight of his closer designation and the fact that he has twenty-eight saves this season, most of which were earned before the ERA climbed past five.

From Carlos Espinoza-Vega of North Natomas, who has attended every home game this season, whose two sons wore Rubalcava jerseys to the August 12th game against San Antonio, and who wanted to make sure the Hot Corner podcast covered the 200th win with the attention it warranted: "Did Jordan Rubalcava's 200th win get enough coverage?"

Carlos, the short answer is no, and the longer answer is that it rarely does. Career milestones for pitchers occur during the regular season, in afternoon games against weak opponents, and the trade deadline and playoff race coverage always competes for the same column inches and podcast minutes. What I can tell you is that two hundred wins at a career ERA of 2.66 is a combination that does not appear in this league very often, that Rubalcava has been the best pitcher in Sacramento's rotation for the better part of six years, and that the August 12th game was his to control from the first pitch to the last. Nine innings, four hits, zero runs. Your sons were wearing the right jersey. This franchise has had many outstanding players across its glorified history, and Rubalcava belongs at the top of that conversation. The coverage will catch up eventually. It always does, usually in October.

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El Paso for three, then Brooklyn at Cathedral for three beginning August 20th — a National League club Sacramento has lost two of three against on the season, a reminder that interleague results sometimes carry information worth filing away. The rotation lines up with Rubalcava available for the Brooklyn series, which is either a comfort or an asterisk depending on how the El Paso games go. The division lead is seven. The head-to-head record against Fort Worth is not. Those two things are in tension with each other, and by the time the next column arrives, one of them will have shifted.

Questions, takes, and strongly-worded opinions welcome in the podcast inbox. The mailbag runs as long as the questions stay interesting.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

Last edited by liberty-ca; 03-13-2026 at 04:19 PM.
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Old 03-14-2026, 12:23 AM   #255
liberty-ca
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Join Date: Oct 2017
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Three fair corrections. On "this column" — I overused it throughout and will vary the language with "this program," "the Hot Corner," "I," and similar alternatives. On mailbag diversity — all four names were Anglo-American, which is exactly the imbalance the guidelines exist to prevent. I will replace two with Armenian and East Asian names. On "Seventeen analyses welcome" — it was an attempted callback to Carolyn Beck's letter that landed as a non-sequitur. It has no business being there and will be replaced with the standard mailbag closing line. Here is the corrected article in full.

THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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August 17 – August 29, 1993 | Games 120–131 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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NINE IN A ROW, A SWITCH LONG OVERDUE, AND A LEAD THAT IS NOW SIMPLY THE TRUTH


Somewhere between the August 19th thirteen-inning loss in El Paso — a game Sacramento led by three runs entering the fifth inning and lost when a pinch hitter named Chris Hamilton singled off Gil Caliari with the bases loaded — and the August 29th nine-inning win in Seattle where Edwin Musco cleared the bases twice with doubles and Fernando Salazar threw four and a third innings of the best relief baseball I have watched all season, this team decided to go on a nine-game winning streak. The transition between those two events is not linear or clean. It contains two extra-inning defeats against a team with fifty wins and some of the ugliest bullpen performances of the calendar year. It also contains a development that I have been advocating for in the Hot Corner, in conversations with anyone willing to engage on the subject, for approximately three months.

Jimmy Aces, or someone in his organization, appears to have finally listened.

I will address the closer situation in full below, because it deserves its own section and its own language. What I want to establish first is the larger context: Sacramento enters August 30th at 82-49 with a nine-and-a-half-game lead over Fort Worth, a magic number of twenty-two, and a nine-game winning streak that is the longest of the season. The road record is now 37-32 — finally above .500 — after sweeping the Los Angeles Saints in three games and the Seattle Lucifers in three more. The rotation is performing at levels that make it the best staff in professional baseball by ERA. The lineup has produced thirty-four home runs from Lopez, twenty-five from Musco, and a combined output that ranks third in the American League in runs scored. The division is not a race anymore. It is an address.

And somewhere in the middle of all of it, the ninth inning changed. Let's talk about that.

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THE COMPLETE RECORD: AUGUST 17 THROUGH AUGUST 29


At El Paso: August 17–19 (1-2)

The August 17th game was Rubalcava going 6.2 innings and allowing one run, Gutierrez throwing 1.1 clean innings, and Dodge saving it with a perfect ninth. Baldelomar hit a three-run home run in the seventh off a reliever named Prieto — not our Prieto, El Paso's Prieto — and the 4-1 final was efficient and unremarkable. Good road win, move on.

The August 18th game lasted sixteen innings and five hours and fifty-one minutes. I have now covered two Sacramento road games at Abbots Park that extended past the fourteenth inning, against a team that entered this series at 48-71, and I want to say clearly that whatever is happening when Sacramento plays in El Paso — the conditions, the roster construction, the particular way that ballpark allows bad games to become worse ones — it is a real phenomenon and not a coincidence. Andretti started and pitched 6.2 innings of three-run baseball. Wright came on in relief and allowed two home runs in two-thirds of an inning, a Gonzalez shot and a Gillock shot in the eighth that tied the game at nine. From there: Prieto threw 1.2 innings without incident. Dodge threw a scoreless tenth. Ryan allowed a three-run home run to Hamilton in the eleventh. Salazar threw three clean innings — the best stretch of relief pitching in this game. Caliari came on in the sixteenth with a runner on first and two outs, allowed a King pinch-hit two-run double, followed immediately by an Andrade walk-off home run. The loss was his. The performance was consistent with every other Caliari appearance this season. Sacramento stranded fifteen runners in sixty at-bats. Musco was hit by a pitch early and did not return. El Paso won 11-9 and the crowd of eleven thousand people went home considerably happier than the fourteen thousand who had watched our previous extra-inning adventure there.

The August 19th game went thirteen innings and ended the same way: a Sacramento lead evaporated, a long bullpen night produced a Caliari loss, and a last-place team sent our players back to the hotel at midnight having won the series two games to one. Espenoza started and allowed four runs in 7.1 innings — a two-run de Rooij double in the fifth being the damage. Prieto and Gutierrez each threw clean innings. Caliari faced two batters in the thirteenth, recorded zero outs, allowed a double and then the walk-off single. The series was 1-2. El Paso, now fifty wins, had taken two of three from the first-place Sacramento Prayers. I want to note this clearly, without editorial flourish, and let the arithmetic speak: in the last month, Sacramento has played El Paso seven times and won four of them. The three losses have all come in extra innings. Caliari has received the loss in two of those three games. He now has five losses and a 7.84 ERA. The pattern is not subtle.

vs. Brooklyn: August 20–22 (3-0)

The Brooklyn series was the turn. Not because the Priests are an elite opponent — they entered at 66-56, fighting for a wild card spot, with genuine competitive intent — but because the Sacramento pitching staff handled them with the kind of efficiency that a rotation in command of its craft produces.

August 20th was Larson, and the Larson who appeared at Cathedral Stadium on a Friday night was the one Sacramento has needed since July: 7.2 innings, three hits, zero runs, seven strikeouts, 133 pitches. It was his most dominant start since early July, and the performance that the Hot Corner has been insisting was still present inside a pitcher who had been struggling with command and walk rates for six weeks. Larson located his fastball to both edges. He changed speeds with conviction. He worked ahead in counts and retired hitters the way a pitcher who is right — physically and mechanically right — retires them. The 2-1 final was closer than the pitching deserved; a Torres ninth-inning solo home run off Dodge made it interesting when it should not have been. MacDonald hit his fifteenth home run in the fourth. Sacramento is 9-9 in Larson's decisions for a reason that has nothing to do with his ability and everything to do with what happens after his starts end.

August 21st was St. Clair going eight innings, five hits, one earned run, zero walks, ninety-three pitches — the most complete start he has made all season. The line of 8-0-5-1-0-5 on 93 pitches is what it looks like when a fifth starter pitches as if he deserves to be in the rotation of a team that is twelve games above the next-best club in the division, which is exactly what he did. Francisco Hernandez hit his eighteenth home run in the seventh. Jesus Hernandez drove in the go-ahead run in the sixth with a two-run double that scored Musco and Torres off Boyd's breaking ball that didn't break. Prieto finished it for his twenty-ninth save.

August 22nd was the game that contained, in its final inning, the development I intend to document at length. First the game: Rubalcava started and was hit for three runs — two home runs by Brooklyn third baseman Luke Reddick, one in the second and one in the fourth — and went 7.2 innings, nine strikeouts, 115 pitches. Cruz hit a two-run home run in the sixth to tie it. Baldelomar hit a solo home run in the eighth to take the lead. Musco hit a solo shot in the eighth to make it 4-3. Then Gutierrez threw one batter. Dodge threw two batters. And Ryan — Chris Ryan, the reliever who requested a contract extension and has been pitching his way to one all summer — came on with two runners on base in the ninth and retired the Brooklyn lineup to secure his first save of the season.

And in the notes at the bottom of the box score: Steve Dodge was injured while pitching.

At Los Angeles: August 24–26 (3-0)

Andretti opened the Los Angeles series with eight shutout innings on 87 pitches with zero walks, which is the kind of performance that requires no elaboration and deserves exactly this sentence of acknowledgment: he is as good as anyone in this league and it is no longer possible to argue otherwise. Prieto closed a clean ninth for his thirtieth save. The 3-0 win was Sacramento's fifth consecutive.

The August 25th game produced the first public evidence of what I believe is now a deliberate realignment of the bullpen hierarchy. Espenoza won his eleventh game with seven innings of three-run baseball — adequate, not dominant, but sufficient. And then: Prieto came on in the eighth and threw 1.2 innings in a hold role. Gutierrez came on in the ninth and closed it out for his fourth save of the season. Prieto in the eighth. Gutierrez in the ninth. I want every listener and reader of the Hot Corner to note that sentence and consider what it means in the context of everything we have documented since June.

August 26th was Larson winning his tenth game — seven innings, three runs, his second consecutive quality start — while Musco hit two home runs, Francisco Hernandez hit two more, and Lopez hit his thirty-third. The 11-3 final was the most complete offensive performance of this road trip. Salazar threw two clean innings after Larson's departure. The sweep was complete.

At Seattle: August 27–29 (3-0)

St. Clair won his ninth game in Seattle on a night when Sacramento scored fifteen runs and sent eleven to the plate in the seventh inning alone — Cruz three-run home run, Rodriguez solo shot, Alonzo grand slam in the ninth — while Musco hit his twenty-fourth home run and drove in four. The 15-5 final required noting that Murguia was injured running the bases and did not return, a bruised shoulder that is day-to-day for approximately five days. The sweep of Los Angeles and the opening of the Seattle series gave Sacramento seven consecutive wins.

August 28th was Rubalcava going 7.2 innings against a Seattle lineup that managed eleven hits and still scored only three runs, which tells you everything about where he locates pitches when the game situation demands it. Lopez hit his thirty-fourth home run leading off the first. Cruz hit his twenty-third in the seventh. Musco hit his twenty-fifth in the ninth. Ryan threw a clean 1.1 innings. Eight-game winning streak.

August 29th was the game where Andretti started, allowed five runs in three innings, and a Sacramento bullpen held on for the 9-7 win. That this happened is worth documenting. That Salazar — 4.1 innings, one earned run, 53 pitches, the most valuable outing he has had since returning from the back injury — was the arm that held the game together is worth emphasizing. That Gutierrez threw two-thirds of an inning without damage. And that Dodge — the Dodge who was injured August 22nd, the Dodge about whom the Hot Corner has said everything there is to say — came on in the ninth inning with a 9-5 lead and threw a perfect frame for his tenth save of the season.

Nine consecutive wins. 82-49. Nine and a half games up. Twenty-two to go in the magic number.

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THREADS WORTH PULLING


Jimmy Aces, if you are listening — and I have reason to believe someone in that building is — thank you.

Let me document what appears to have happened, because the box scores tell a story and I believe it is the right story. On August 22nd, Dodge was injured while pitching. In the games immediately following — August 24th, Prieto closed. August 25th, Prieto pitched the eighth while Gutierrez closed the ninth. August 29th, Dodge returned from the injury and closed the ninth. Prieto has appeared in a hold role. Gutierrez has a save. Ryan has a save. The ninth inning is no longer automatically assigned to the pitcher who entered the season with the designated closer role and has spent the summer demonstrating that he cannot consistently hold leads in that role.

I want to be precise about what I am and am not saying. I am not saying Prieto is finished or that his career is in decline. I am saying that for three months we have argued here, with mounting statistical evidence, that a pitcher with a 4.83 ERA, eleven home runs allowed, and six blown saves in fifty-four appearances should not be the unconditional owner of the ninth inning for a team with legitimate championship aspirations. And I am saying that the last ten days of box scores suggest that argument may finally be receiving a response from the dugout.

Dodge's ERA is 1.99. His WHIP is 0.99. Gutierrez's ERA is 1.56 and he has not allowed a run in thirteen consecutive appearances. These are the numbers. The only question that has ever existed is whether the organization would act on them while there was still time. There are thirty-one games left. There is still time.

Edwin Musco is having a different season than anyone in this market is discussing — Twenty-five home runs. Ninety-six RBI. A .290 average with a .505 slugging percentage. A WAR of 5.4 that places him second on this roster behind only Lopez. The last five games of this period: .500 average, four home runs, and on August 29th alone, two bases-clearing doubles and six RBI. Musco is thirty-three years old, in the final years of a career that produced a league MVP in 1989, and he is playing the best sustained baseball of his Sacramento tenure. The conversation about this team's MVP candidate has focused almost entirely on Lopez — correctly, given what Lopez has done — but Musco is the player who has delivered the most consistent run production across the longest stretch, and the numbers deserve more attention than they have received.

The rotation through August 29th is the best in the FBL and it is not particularly close — Rubalcava 16-7, 2.69 ERA, 6.0 WAR. Andretti 16-6, 2.98 ERA, 4.6 WAR. Espenoza 11-3, 3.62 ERA. Larson 10-9, 3.84 ERA, coming off back-to-back quality starts. St. Clair 9-6, 3.43 ERA, three consecutive wins with a 2.29 ERA in that stretch. The team ERA of 3.37 leads the American League by a margin that, at this point in the season, is not going to be closed. This staff has allowed the fewest runs, the fewest hits, the fewest walks, and produced the most strikeouts in the American League. It is a historically good pitching staff on a team that is trying to win a seventh consecutive championship, and it deserves acknowledgment as a collective achievement rather than solely as the backdrop for individual Cy Young conversations.

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THE FINE PRINT: RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES


Caliari cannot pitch in important games anymore, and the roster needs to reflect that — Two losses in El Paso in extra-inning games where he faced a combined four batters, recorded zero outs, and allowed three runs including a walk-off. His ERA is 7.84 in 20.2 innings across twenty-five appearances. He has walked twenty batters in those innings, which is a rate that makes extended outings structurally impossible. He was a useful arm earlier in the season — he picked up a save in July, he threw clean innings in blowouts — and he is now a liability in any game decided by fewer than four runs. The organization needs to make a decision before September requires one to be made under pressure.

The El Paso problem — Sacramento has lost five games this season to a team that currently has fifty-six wins. Two of those losses came in this period, both in extra innings, both after leading by multiple runs in the seventh inning or later. The common thread is Caliari in the final inning. The broader thread is that when Sacramento's games extend past the ninth, the roster depth behind Dodge and Gutierrez is limited to pitchers who should not be asked to protect leads. Wright's ERA is 5.15. Ryan's is 4.50 and climbing. This is not a crisis in September if the leads hold. It becomes one if the rotation has a bad night and the bullpen is asked to carry fourteen innings in El Paso.

Alex Torres is batting .138 over his last ten games with zero home runs — He returned from the August 12th injury and has not hit. His season OPS of .590 is the lowest among any regular position player on this roster. He is filling time at second base on days when Cruz needs rest, and what he is providing offensively is not adequate for a team this close to October. The question is not whether Torres can turn it around — he may — but whether a team with legitimate championship expectations should carry a second baseman batting .138 as its primary option behind Cruz through September.

Fort Worth's Bobby McLamb is done for the season — I mention this not because it worries Sacramento, but because it changes the arithmetic of what Fort Worth is. McLamb was 23-for-25 in save opportunities with a 3.66 ERA. He was the arm that protected their leads. He is now gone for the year with a torn labrum. The Spirits are nine and a half games back, and losing your closer in late August while fighting for a wild card spot is the kind of wound that September schedules make worse rather than better. Fort Worth is not going to catch Sacramento. But their situation is worth noting because the wild card race — Columbus, Fort Worth, Brooklyn, Tucson, San Jose all within four games of each other — is the most competitive in baseball, and the team that loses its most reliable late-inning arm in August is going to feel that absence in September.

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FROM THE OTHER DUGOUTS


The American League wild card picture entering September: Columbus at 75-56 leads by two and a half over Fort Worth at 73-59, with Brooklyn at 69-61, and Tucson and San Jose both at 68-62. Five teams within four games of the second wild card slot, which does not exist in this league's playoff structure — there is one wild card and Columbus currently holds it with a meaningful cushion. Fort Worth's run of seven wins in their last ten has kept them relevant despite the McLamb news. Brooklyn has won three consecutive. The final month of the wild card race will be worth following for reasons that have nothing to do with Sacramento, which is the most pleasant thing that can be said about any pennant race — that it does not require our attention.

Baltimore at 77-53 remains the most complete team in the American League and Sacramento's most probable October opponent. They have won nine of their last fourteen, their run differential of plus-196 leads the league, and Jorge Jaime is batting .274 with thirty-seven home runs in what has become the most dominant individual offensive season in the FBL this year. Sacramento will visit Baltimore for three games September 17th through 19th. I want that series on this program's radar well before we arrive.

Phoenix leads the National League West at 78-53, one game ahead of Las Vegas at 77-54. This NL race has been competitive all season and the final month will determine Sacramento's World Series opponent if the Prayers hold their current position, which at a nine-and-a-half-game lead and a magic number of twenty-two is no longer a conditional statement. It is a scheduling matter.

The September schedule deserves a clear read: Tucson home for three beginning August 30th — the Cherubs at 68-62 are still alive in the wild card race and will not be passive opponents. Boston away, then Nashville away. Then Fort Worth at Cathedral for three games September 10th through 12th. Then Baltimore away September 17th through 19th. Then San Jose at home for four games September 27th through 30th to close the regular season. This is not a schedule designed to allow a comfortable finish. The three series that matter — Fort Worth, Baltimore, and the San Jose closer — will define how Sacramento enters October and, more specifically, what the head-to-head record against Fort Worth says when the postseason seeding is calculated.

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YOU ASKED, I'M ANSWERING — The Hot Corner Mailbag.


From Tom Harrington of Curtis Park, a retired firefighter who has attended Sacramento baseball for thirty years, who sat in the left field bleachers for all three Brooklyn games and who described the August 22nd ninth inning — Ryan getting the save, Dodge injured, Gutierrez and Dodge both appearing — as "the most confusing thing I've watched at Cathedral since the 1987 World Series rain delay": "Is the bullpen hierarchy being reorganized, or am I reading too much into a few box scores?"

Tom, you are not reading too much into anything, and your thirty years in those bleachers have apparently produced better pattern recognition than the press box generates on certain evenings. Here is what the box scores say without editorial interpretation: August 21st, Prieto gets the save. August 22nd, Dodge and Gutierrez appear in the ninth with Ryan closing. August 24th, Prieto gets the save. August 25th, Prieto pitches the eighth while Gutierrez closes the ninth. August 29th, Dodge — healthy and returned — closes the ninth for save number ten. What that sequence describes is not a fixed hierarchy. It is a rotation of late-inning options that is responsive to matchups, health, and workload in a way that Prieto's exclusive hold on the ninth inning never was. Whether it becomes permanent policy, whether Aces is making a deliberate philosophical shift or simply managing around Dodge's injury, I cannot say with certainty. What I can say is that the results of this nine-game winning streak — during which no late-inning lead has been surrendered — are consistent with a bullpen being used more intelligently than it was in July and August. The view from left field is accurate.

From Karen Whitfield of East Sacramento, who coaches youth baseball on weekends and who spent three innings of the August 19th El Paso game explaining to her eleven-year-old son why a first-place team was losing to a fifty-win club in thirteen innings, and who admits the explanation became less convincing as the innings progressed: "Why does Sacramento keep losing to bad teams in extra innings?"

Karen, the explanation you owe your son is simpler than the one I have to give, and it is this: baseball is the only sport where the inferior team wins approximately forty percent of its games over the course of a season, and extra-inning games introduce enough randomness that even a very good team will lose its share against bad opponents. The longer answer, which is less comforting but more accurate, is that Sacramento's extra-inning roster construction has been a vulnerability all season. When games extend past the ninth, the arms available after Dodge and Gutierrez — Wright with a 5.15 ERA, Caliari with a 7.84 ERA — are pitchers who produce the results you watched in El Paso. The youth coaching angle works in your favor here: the lesson is that roster depth matters as much as roster talent, and that a team which cannot survive the thirteenth inning against a fifty-win opponent has a structural problem that the standings do not reveal until late in the season. Your son will understand this better than most adults by the time he is twelve.

From Vartan Keshishyan of Arden-Arcade, a software engineer who tracks pitching metrics on a spreadsheet he has maintained since April and who submitted three separate analyses of the Prieto situation before I answered the first one, demonstrating either extraordinary dedication or the patience of someone who genuinely believes this program will eventually get the point: "Gutierrez has a 1.56 ERA in 45 appearances. Dodge has a 1.99 ERA in 52 appearances. At what point does the organization formalize what the box scores are already showing?"

Vartan, I received all three analyses. They are correct. The formalization you are asking about may already be underway — see my answer to Tom above — but any organizational announcement will arrive through the Sacramento beat reporters and not through the Hot Corner. What I can add to your data is this: Gutierrez has not allowed a run in thirteen consecutive appearances. His WHIP of 0.95 is better than Rubalcava's. His batting average against is .197. He is twenty-nine years old, making less than league minimum, and pitching the best baseball of his career in a role that the organization initially constructed around his low-leverage versatility. The spreadsheet you have built is correct in every column. Whether the organization reads the same spreadsheet is the question that September will answer.

From Ji-young Park of Pocket District, who has listened to every Hot Corner episode since March and who noted in her letter that she tallied seventeen separate occasions on which this program advocated for a bullpen role change before, in her words, "the cathedral finally echoed back": "Do you think Jimmy Aces listens to the podcast?"

Ji-young, seventeen is a generous count and I am not in a position to verify it, though I believe the spirit of your arithmetic is correct. As for whether Jimmy Aces listens to the Hot Corner: I genuinely do not know, and the professional answer is that managers make decisions based on internal data, coaching staff input, and competitive context that no external analyst fully has access to. The less professional answer, which is the one this program was built to give, is that the last ten days of Sacramento Prayers baseball look considerably more like what we have been describing since June than what was actually happening in June, and if that is a coincidence, it is a satisfying one. Aces has won more championships in this decade than any other manager in professional baseball. He did not need the Hot Corner to tell him what Dodge's ERA means. He needed the right moment to act on it. Whether the moment arrived because of injury, performance, or some combination of both is less important than the fact that it arrived. I will take it.

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Tucson comes to Cathedral Stadium beginning Monday for three games, and the Cherubs at 68-62 have won seven of their last ten and remain very much alive in the wild card race. This is not a passive opponent arriving at an inopportune time. Then Boston, Nashville, and the Fort Worth home series that Sacramento has been circling since the schedule was released. The magic number is twenty-two. The lead is nine and a half. The bullpen appears to be reorganizing itself into something worth endorsing. There has not been a better moment in the 1993 season to watch Sacramento Prayers baseball, and I intend to be watching all of it.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.

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Old 03-14-2026, 09:57 AM   #256
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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August 30 – September 15, 1993 | Games 132–146 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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FIVE


The magic number is five. Sacramento needs five wins, or some combination of Sacramento wins and Fort Worth losses totaling five, to clinch the American League West Division title. The Prayers are 92-54. There are sixteen games remaining on the schedule. The lead over Fort Worth is eleven and a half games. The division was decided in practical terms sometime in late August, and it has been decided in mathematical terms for approximately three weeks, but five is the number that makes it official, that puts the bunting on the Cathedral Stadium railings and sends the champagne orders to the clubhouse refrigerators, and five feels very close from where we are standing on the morning of September 16th.

Since the day of last podcast Sacramento Prayers produced a 10-5 record, a ten-game winning streak that ended when Tucson walked into Cathedral Stadium and reminded everyone that baseball declines to cooperate with narrative tidiness, a sweep of Fort Worth that evened the season head-to-head record at nine wins apiece, and a collection of individual performances that belong in the most impressive chapter of this franchise's most decorated decade. It also produced the second, as far as we know, letter from a reliever with a 6.28 ERA to his manager asking him again for a contract extension, which I intend to address with the seriousness it deserves.

But first: five. After everything that has happened in this season — the Cruz injury, the Salazar injuries, the Rubalcava August scare, the Prieto blown saves, the El Paso extra-inning disasters, the Tucson series that cost two home games in three days — the number that matters is five. I have been covering this franchise for a long time, and I know better than most how quickly five can become four, and three, and one, and zero. But I also know this: a team with a 2.60 ERA from its ace, a lead that has grown from two games in July to eleven and a half games today, and a lineup producing at the rate Sacramento has produced since early August is not a team that loses this division. The champagne will be cold. The question now is what October looks like, and that conversation begins at Baltimore on Friday.

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THE RECORD: AUGUST 30 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 15


vs. Tucson: August 30 – September 1 (1-2)

The winning streak reached ten games on August 30th when Espenoza threw 6.2 innings against the Cherubs and the Cathedral crowd watched Sacramento score nine runs in five innings while Tucson's starter walked four batters in five and a third. It was a comfortable win of the kind a team cruising through its schedule produces — efficient, unremarkable, finished. Then Tucson won the next two.

August 31st was Larson allowing five runs in five innings, Salazar pitching two innings before suffering an injury during his delivery, and Gutierrez allowing four runs in a third of an inning in a nine-run Cherubs effort that was more alarming than the final score suggests. The Tucson lineup hit Larson with a Chavez two-run home run in the third that changed the game's character and never looked back. Salazar's status — a shoulder issue that subsequently suffered a setback — is addressed below.

September 1st was the most lopsided home loss Sacramento has absorbed in months. St. Clair lasted 2.1 innings and allowed eight earned runs. Wright allowed two more in one inning. Prieto surrendered four in 1.1 innings, including a Chavez two-run home run. Tucson scored fourteen and held Sacramento to four and three hits, which is a number that looks like a misprint but is confirmed by the box score. Tony Crossley — a pitcher who arrived at Cathedral Stadium with a 11-16 record — threw seven innings and did not allow an earned run. He is the latest in the long list of pitchers with records below .500 who have spent an evening making the Sacramento lineup look lost, and the September 1st game will not be forgotten when the final assessment of this team's weaknesses is written. The series was 1-2 and the winning streak was over.

At Boston: September 3–5 (2-1)

Rubalcava pitched eight innings in Boston on September 3rd, allowed two earned runs, and lost. The line — eight innings, eight hits, two earned runs, five strikeouts, 103 pitches — is the performance of a pitcher who did his job and did not receive the result his job merited. Murguia hit a two-run home run in the fifth. It was not enough. Willie Moran threw 7.1 innings for Boston, and Sacramento managed two runs and lost 3-2. Rubalcava's record moved to 16-8 and his ERA remained at 2.67. He pitched eight innings in a road game and lost. That is baseball.

September 4th was the game that produced the most memorable individual performance of this period and the two most consequential injuries. Andretti started and was hit hard — four and two-thirds innings, six runs, two home runs among the damage — and the Sacramento offense had to dig out of a 6-3 hole it should not have been in. It did: Francisco Hernandez hit two home runs, Alonzo went five for five and tied the Sacramento regular season record for hits in a game, and the offense produced ten runs to win 10-7. That Alonzo went five for five in a game where the starting pitcher allowed six runs is the kind of individual performance that carries a team through a bad afternoon. In the seventh inning of that same game, Cruz was injured running the bases — hamstring tendinitis, the diagnosis later confirmed, expected to sideline him for up to two weeks. Murguia was also injured running the bases in the same game. Two of the most important offensive contributors in the lineup, lost in the same afternoon. The wins-and-losses column said Sacramento won. The injury report said something more complicated.

September 5th was Espenoza winning his thirteenth game with seven innings and seven strikeouts against a Boston lineup that managed four hits. Lopez hit his thirty-fifth home run. Musco had a two-run triple in the first inning. The 12-2 final was the most convincing result of the road trip and the appropriate way to take the series two games to one before flying to Nashville.

At Nashville: September 6–8 (2-1)

Nashville won the first game of the series 8-6, which is exactly what a 70-win team on a five-game winning streak does when it catches a road club playing without its two best position players and sends Larson to the mound with five walks in five innings. Larson walked five batters. Caliari allowed two runs in one-third of an inning. The Angels won and their crowd of eighteen thousand made appropriate noise about it.

The September 7th game required ten innings and produced the Jose Rodriguez performance of the season: two home runs, both in extra innings, three RBI total, the second home run a two-run shot off Scott Ulrich in the tenth that put Sacramento ahead for good. St. Clair was magnificent — seven and two-thirds innings, one earned run, zero walks — and Dodge came on with a two-run lead in the ninth, allowed two home runs, blew the save, and then received the win when Rodriguez's bat made it irrelevant. The 7-3 final in ten innings was the messiest kind of win. It counted the same as the clean ones.

September 8th was Rubalcava. Eight innings, three hits, two earned runs, seven strikeouts, 111 pitches, a 5-2 win. Dodge closed the ninth with eleven pitches. Perez hit a two-run double in the fourth and a solo home run in the ninth. The series was 2-1 and Sacramento left Nashville headed home with a rotation lined up for the Fort Worth series that the entire city had been anticipating since April.

vs. Fort Worth: September 10–12 (3-0)

Before the Fort Worth series, the season head-to-head record stood at six wins and nine losses in Fort Worth's favor — a deficit that had been the primary asterisk on Sacramento's division-leading season since early summer. Three games at Cathedral Stadium produced three wins and moved the head-to-head to nine wins and nine losses. I want to document what happened without overstating it, because nine-nine is not a triumph so much as a correction, but the correction matters for postseason seeding and for the record of what this team did when it needed to win the games that defined its season.

September 10th was Andretti's seventeenth win — seven and a third innings, two earned runs, 95 pitches — while Alonzo went three for four with a home run and three RBI, Rodriguez hit a two-run single, and the eighth inning produced five Sacramento runs off a Fort Worth bullpen that had nothing left. The 10-2 final was thorough.

September 11th was Espenoza's fourteenth win, six and a third innings against the Fort Worth lineup that had been Sacramento's nemesis all season, while Lopez hit his thirty-sixth home run, Alonzo hit his twelfth, and Rodriguez hit a three-run home run in the seventh that ended the evening as a competitive event. The 9-2 win was the second consecutive comfortable result.

September 12th was Larson pitching five and two-thirds innings, one earned run, against John Gillon — who arrived with a 3.42 ERA and the most strikeouts in the American League — and winning with contributions from Perez, Marcos, and a twenty-seventh home run from Musco in the eighth that required Dodge to protect a 4-2 lead with fourteen pitches. Dodge threw fourteen pitches. The season head-to-head is nine wins and nine losses. The last time Sacramento played Fort Worth in this regular season will be the final home series of September. The head-to-head number, and what it means for postseason seeding if both clubs advance, will be relevant again.

vs. Seattle: September 13–15 (2-1)

Rubalcava won his eighteenth game on September 13th — eight innings, three hits, one earned run, seven strikeouts, 93 pitches — and the efficiency of the outing was characteristic of what he has done since the August Columbus disaster: composed, commanding, exactly the pitcher this staff needs him to be in September and beyond. Perez hit a three-run home run in the first inning. Musco hit his twenty-eighth in the third. Dodge saved it with seventeen pitches.

September 14th was St. Clair — seven and two-thirds innings, two hits, zero runs against a Seattle lineup that has hit Sacramento reasonably well this season — and it was another chapter in a September that has confirmed what the Hot Corner began arguing in late July: Danny St. Clair is not a fifth starter filling innings. He is a legitimate rotation piece on a team that intends to go deep into October, and his 10-7 record with a 3.59 ERA in 21 starts is the statistical expression of a pitcher who has earned every opportunity he has received. Marcos hit his ninth home run. Alonzo hit his thirteenth. Salazar came on for the final inning and surrendered two home runs — damage in a non-competitive situation, but a reminder that his shoulder situation is not resolved. Gutierrez threw a clean third of an inning to end it.

September 15th was a loss, Andretti allowing three runs in five and two-thirds innings against a Seattle team that is fifteen games under .500 and has nothing to play for beyond individual performances. Alex Mejia went three for four with a home run, a double, and three RBI. Musco hit his twenty-ninth home run. Sacramento lost 3-2. The Seattle series ended 2-1 and the period concluded with Sacramento at 92-54, a magic number of five, and a trip to Baltimore beginning Friday.

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STAR POWER: WHO CARRIES THE LOAD


Edwin Musco — Twenty-nine home runs. One hundred and seven RBI. A .290 average and a .515 slugging percentage from the shortstop position. In this period alone: eight home runs in nineteen games, a .351 average during that stretch, a season WAR of 6.2 that is closing on Lopez for the team lead. The two-run triple in Boston's first inning on September 5th, the home run that put Sacramento ahead to stay against Fort Worth on September 12th, the two-run shot off Seattle in a game Sacramento needed on September 13th — Musco has been the most reliable run-producing presence in this lineup for the better part of two months, and the quiet with which he has done it, in the shadow of Lopez's MVP-caliber season, is one of the more remarkable individual performances in Sacramento baseball since 1989. That was the year he won the league MVP award. He may not win it this year, because Lopez exists. But the argument that Musco is making every day he takes the field is the argument of a player who has not forgotten what his best looks like.

Rafael Alonzo — Five hits in one game. That is the sentence. On September 4th in Boston, with the rotation getting lit up and the team in need of someone to carry an afternoon that was going wrong, Alonzo went five for five, tied the Sacramento regular season record, and delivered three RBI in a win that required every one of them. His performance over the last nine games entering September 15th — .581 average, three home runs — is the kind of stretch a catcher produces when he is locked in at the plate and calling a game with the confidence of a player who knows exactly what he is doing. His season line of .305/.359/.452 is the product of the most quietly outstanding catcher in this league, and the front office would be well-served to acknowledge what that line represents before his contract situation becomes a negotiation rather than a formality.

David Perez — Four home runs and a .429 average over the last eight games is the hot streak of someone who has been given an opportunity and refused to waste it. With Cruz out and the lineup adjusting around his absence, Perez has started at third base and delivered run after run: the two-run double against Nashville in the fourth inning of the series clincher, the three-run home run in the first inning at Seattle on September 13th, the solo shot in Nashville that closed a game Sacramento needed to win. His season line of .297/.352/.477 is the argument that the organization was right to bring him back from the hamstring injury and trust him in the lineup every day.

Jordan Rubalcava — Eighteen wins and eight losses. A 2.60 ERA. A WHIP of 1.01. A WAR of 6.6 that leads every pitcher in the American League. In this period he went 3-1 with a 1.88 ERA across his last three starts and threw eight innings in each of his two most important September starts — Nashville on September 8th and Seattle on September 13th — at pitch counts of 111 and 93 respectively. He is rested, he is healthy, and he is the best pitcher in professional baseball preparing to start in Baltimore on what will be a meaningful Friday night. Everything else about this team's October prospects depends on variables. Rubalcava is the constant.

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WATCH LIST: POTENTIAL TROUBLE SPOTS


Gil Caliari wrote second letter — I am going to quote from the contents as they were reported: "Dear Mr. Aces, I'm in the last year of my contract and would really like to come back next year. Sacramento is a great place to play ball. I have enjoyed playing for your organization. I hope we can work out a deal. Let me know." The man who wrote this letter has a 6.28 ERA. He has walked twenty-one batters in 28.2 innings. He has allowed opponents to score in eleven of his last fifteen appearances. He has received five losses on a first-place team. He has been the direct cause of two extra-inning losses to clubs with more losses than wins. The letter is written in good faith, and I do not doubt that Caliari genuinely enjoys playing in Sacramento and would genuinely like to return. I also believe that the organization's response to this letter, whatever it is, will tell us something important about how the front office evaluates its own roster. The case for retaining Caliari at any price is not, at present, a case that the statistics will support.

Salazar's shoulder setback is more serious than originally characterized — He was injured August 31st while pitching against Tucson. He subsequently suffered a setback in his recovery from what was described as a sore shoulder. His manager confirmed that Salazar overdid a workout during rehabilitation and re-injured himself, and that the team is taking his recovery one day at a time. He will now miss at least one more week. For a reliever who had been Sacramento's most valuable middle-innings arm — 2.44 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, the arm that held the Seattle game together on August 29th when Andretti was removed after three innings — his absence in September creates a gap in the bullpen structure that Gutierrez, Bautista, and Ryan will be asked to fill. Gutierrez has a 1.95 ERA and can fill it. Bautista has been solid. Ryan's 4.47 ERA is what it is. The question is whether Salazar returns before October, and the medical reports do not currently support optimism on that timeline.

Cruz's hamstring tendinitis and what it means for October — Cruz was placed on the IL on September 4th with the diagnosis, was listed as eligible for return in one day as of September 15th, and should be activated in time for the Baltimore series or shortly after. His season line of .300/.392/.542 is the most complete two-way offensive contribution on the roster — the batting average, the on-base percentage, the twenty-three home runs, the twenty-five stolen bases. His absence for ten games was managed, as these things go, but his presence in October is not optional for a team that needs to win a seven-game series against the best pitching staff in the American League East. The hamstring needs to hold.

MacDonald is batting .097 over his last eight games with zero home runs — The cold streak that appeared in late July has returned. MacDonald has been one of Sacramento's most consistent producers at first base all season — .256 average, sixteen home runs, sixty-four RBI — but the current stretch is the second extended slump of his second half, and a team with legitimate October ambitions needs its first baseman producing when the calendar says September. Perez has absorbed some of the lineup slack while Cruz has been out. MacDonald needs to find his swing before the schedule gets harder.

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WHAT THE REST OF THE LEAGUE IS DOING


Baltimore at 89-57 arrives at home on Friday with a magic number of thirteen and the most significant injury news of the American League's final month: David Hernandez, their ace, is out for the season with a rotator cuff strain. He was 14-8 with a 2.49 ERA and 142 strikeouts in 191.1 innings — the second-best ERA in the American League behind Rubalcava and, by most measures, the second-best pitcher in this league this year. His absence changes the Baltimore October picture in ways that are still being calculated. It does not change the fact that they are 89-57, that they have the best offense in the American League East, that Jorge Jaime is batting .274 with thirty-seven home runs, and that the three games at Camden starting Friday are the most important regular season games Sacramento will play between now and whenever the magic number reaches zero. The Hernandez injury is a factor. It is not a relief.

Fort Worth at 81-66 has won its own five-game winning streak and narrowed the second-place gap slightly, but eleven and a half games with sixteen to play is a mathematical situation that does not resolve itself through winning streaks. The Spirits will play out the string fighting for the wild card — Columbus leads that race at 85-61 — and whether they make October will depend entirely on what they do against teams that are not Sacramento. The head-to-head record is now nine wins each.

Phoenix is on a ten-game losing streak. That sentence should be read twice. The club that entered September as the National League's best team at 78-53 has since lost ten consecutive games and fallen to 81-65, four games behind Las Vegas in the NL West, and the wild card picture in the National League has reshuffled completely. Las Vegas at 85-61 now leads both the division and the NL wild card. Charlotte and Philadelphia are tied at 84-62 in the NL East. Sacramento's most likely World Series opponent is no longer the club it was preparing to face a month ago, and the scouting adjustments that October requires will need to account for that change. Phoenix could still recover. Ten-game losing streaks have ended before. But the team that spent most of 1993 looking like the NL's representative in the Fall Classic has given itself a significant hole to climb out of in the final two weeks.

Nashville's Josh Eichelman will retire at season's end after seventeen professional seasons and a .305 career batting average. He is 38 years old and has said publicly that the physical demands of the game are no longer compatible with what his body can offer. Eichelman collected 2,239 hits over his career. The Nashville organization will miss him, and the Hot Corner extends the professional courtesies his career has earned.

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THE MAILBAG — Because some questions deserve a real answer.


From Brian Collins of East Sacramento, a logistics manager who has attended every home Sacramento game since 1986 and who, by his own account, has never once left Cathedral Stadium early regardless of the score, the weather, or the occasion — a policy he describes as "the only rule I have in life that I've never broken": "The magic number is five. Should I start planning the celebration?"

Brian, the planning can begin. A magic number of five with sixteen games remaining and an eleven-and-a-half-game lead is not a situation that produces surprises. Sacramento needs five wins, or five combined wins-and-Fort-Worth-losses, to clinch a division title that has been effectively decided since August. The champagne in the Cathedral clubhouse has been sitting in a refrigerator for two months waiting for the right evening, and that evening is arriving whether we announce it or not. The more interesting question is not whether Sacramento clinches but when and against whom — the Baltimore series this weekend offers the earliest realistic opportunity if the stars align, and there are worse things than clinching at Camden against the team you will likely face in October. Start planning. Bring your voice.

From Kenji Watanabe of the Pocket District, a high school mathematics teacher who has been calculating Edwin Musco's WAR by hand every week this season as a classroom demonstration of advanced statistics and who reports that his students, initially skeptical of the exercise, now check the numbers independently: "Is Edwin Musco having a Hall of Fame caliber season?"

Kenji, the classroom exercise is exactly the kind of thing that produces baseball fans for the next thirty years, and the number you have been calculating confirms what the eye test has been saying since June. A WAR of 6.2 from a thirty-three-year-old shortstop — not a first baseman or a designated hitter but a shortstop, at a position where the defensive value is incorporated into the metric — is a Hall of Fame caliber season in the straightforward sense that it belongs among the best individual seasons this franchise has produced. Whether it is a Hall of Fame career is a question the totality of Musco's numbers will eventually answer. What is not a question is that he is playing the best baseball of his Sacramento tenure right now, in September, when it matters most, and the students who have been tracking his WAR by hand are watching something worth watching.

From Jack Morrison of Land Park, a retired accountant who reads the Hot Corner column in print rather than listening to the podcast and who opened his letter by noting that he has "no strong feelings about the format, only the content," which is either a compliment or a warning and possibly both: "I read about Caliari's contract extension letter. Is this a joke?"

Jack, it is not a joke. Gil Caliari, the reliever currently carrying a 6.28 ERA and five losses on a first-place team, wrote a personal letter to manager Jimmy Aces requesting a contract extension. The letter was warm, sincere, and demonstrated a level of self-awareness about one's own calendar-year statistics that I will characterize as creative. I want to be fair to Caliari: he has been in professional baseball for a long time, he has produced at a high level in other seasons, and the instinct to advocate for yourself is an entirely human one. But the accountant in you will immediately grasp the relevant numbers — six earned runs per nine innings, twenty-one walks in 28.2 innings, losses in five games — and understand why the response to that letter, if one arrives, will require careful composition. The organization has larger decisions to make this winter. The Caliari extension is not among the most pressing of them.

From Nairi Khachaturian of Rancho Cordova, who immigrated to Sacramento in 1981 and has been a Prayers season ticket holder since 1985, who described attending the Fort Worth series last weekend as "the best three days I have had at a baseball game since Game 7 in 1989": "With Hernandez out, does Baltimore become more manageable in October?"

Nairi, the 1989 memory is one this city shares, and the optimism you are bringing to the Baltimore question is understandable. But manageable is a word I want to use carefully. Baltimore without Hernandez is still Baltimore: 89-57, the best offense in the American League East, Jorge Jaime with thirty-seven home runs and a run differential that leads the league. Losing your ace changes a rotation's ceiling but not its floor — they still have capable pitchers who will compete in a seven-game series. What changes is the top-of-the-rotation matchup: Sacramento's Rubalcava versus Baltimore's second-best starter is a more favorable alignment than Rubalcava versus Hernandez would have been. In a seven-game series, that difference matters. It does not make Baltimore manageable. It makes Sacramento's path to the pennant slightly less steep. The Fort Worth series last weekend was the correct emotional preparation for October. Keep that energy warm.

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Baltimore on Friday. The most important road series of the season, against the team Sacramento will very likely face in the American League Championship Series, with a magic number of five and a lead that has made the division irrelevant for weeks. Rubalcava starts game one. The rotation lines up cleanly. Cruz should be back. Whatever the outcome at Camden, the Prayers return home to Houston and then El Paso before the San Jose series closes the regular season in late September. The champagne is cold. The plan is in place. We are five away from what this franchise has been building toward since April, and I intend to document every step of the final distance.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________
Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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Old 03-14-2026, 04:37 PM   #257
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

September 17 – October 3, 1993 | Games 147–162 of the Sacramento Prayers 1993 Season

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CHAMPAGNE, OCTOBER, AND THE WORK THAT REMAINS


They poured the champagne somewhere during the Houston series, in a Cathedral Stadium clubhouse that had been waiting for the moment since the equipment trucks arrived from spring training in February. Six consecutive championships from 1987 through 1992. Twenty-four playoff appearances in franchise history. Thirteen championships total. The players embraced each other and yelled and sang and drank, and Jordan Rubalcava told reporters it feels amazing every single time regardless of the margin, and everyone in that room understood that the margin this time — sixteen games over Fort Worth, a .648 winning percentage, one hundred and five wins — was the most comfortable they had enjoyed in a long time. The celebration was earned and the celebration was deserved.

Then the celebration ended, as it must, and the relevant question became not what Sacramento accomplished in the regular season but what it intends to do in the next three weeks. Fort Worth is waiting in the Division Series. Baltimore is waiting in the League Championship Series, if both clubs advance as their records suggest they will. October has its own rules, its own mathematics, its own cruelties and generosities that the regular season does not prepare you for regardless of how many times you have been there before. One hundred and five wins gets you into the building. It does not win the championship. I have watched this franchise long enough to know the difference, and the Hot Corner intends to document every step of what comes next.

But first, a final accounting of the regular season, and a proper look at the individuals who built it.

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THE FINAL MILES: GAME BY GAME


At Baltimore: September 17–19 (1-2)

The series that most of Sacramento had anticipated as a playoff preview delivered exactly what it advertised: three competitive, high-scoring games against the best team in the American League East, with Sacramento winning the series two games to one while managing one of the most alarming bullpen sequences of the entire season.

September 17th was Espenoza going 7.1 innings and allowing four earned runs against a Baltimore lineup that produces offense at every position in the batting order — and then Prieto coming on to inherit two runners in the eighth, allowing a Pamplin two-run double that tied the game, and then walking two batters in the ninth while Mele singled through the right side to win it. Lopez hit two home runs. It was not enough. The familiar September pattern of good starting pitching and a ninth-inning implosion produced a 5-4 loss in a game Sacramento had led for seven and a third innings.

September 18th was Rubalcava having the worst start of his season — four and a third innings, six earned runs, three home runs including a Frauenheim three-run shot in the fifth — and the Sacramento offense and bullpen combining to win anyway. Cruz returned to the lineup and hit a two-run home run in the second. Musco hit his thirtieth. Murguia hit his ninth. Alonzo hit his fourteenth. Bautista won it in relief. Gutierrez held runners. Dodge closed. The 9-8 win was the kind of baseball that makes September interesting and managers anxious simultaneously. In the middle of it all: Prieto was injured while pitching, the nature of the injury not immediately disclosed.

September 19th was Larson going five and a third innings against Felix Medina — the same Medina who had entered the game at 5-0 — while Salazar threw two and two-thirds innings of critical middle relief and Dodge closed it with sixteen pitches. Torres hit a two-run pinch home run in the sixth — his first of the season — and Rodriguez delivered a two-run double that proved decisive. The 6-5 win took the series. Also noted in the box score: Cruz was injured again while throwing the ball. His season, and his October availability, became the question that defined the flight home from Baltimore.

vs. Houston: September 21–23 (3-0)

The division clinched during this series, and the precise moment matters less than the fact of it. Houston arrived at Cathedral Stadium at 73-77 and departed having lost three straight games, including one in which Andretti threw 6.1 innings and allowed no runs on ninety-two pitches with zero walks — the Andretti who has been the most consistent pitcher on this staff since April, the one who arrives at his starts organized and leaves them having done exactly what he intended. The September 21st shutout performance, combined with a Bautista and Salazar finishing the final innings cleanly, was a statement about what this rotation is capable of when it is functioning at its ceiling.

The September 22nd game produced thirteen Sacramento runs and a Perez three-run home run in the third, while Espenoza won his fifteenth game with seven and a third innings and the Houston bullpen surrendered nine runs in the eighth inning alone — Baldelomar tripling with the bases loaded being the blow that ended any remaining competitive tension.

The September 23rd game was Rubalcava. Five and a third innings, six hits, zero runs, seventy-eight pitches. Lopez hit his thirty-ninth home run in the seventh. Rodriguez delivered a two-run single in the second that gave Sacramento the lead it never relinquished. Caliari threw one and two-thirds clean innings. Gutierrez threw one inning. Dodge saved it with sixteen pitches. And in the game notes at the bottom of the box score: Rubalcava was injured while pitching. He had thrown seventy-eight pitches. His season stood at 19-8 with a 2.73 ERA and what may be the finest individual pitching performance this city has witnessed in a decade. The nature of the injury, and whether he would be available for October, became the only question worth asking.

vs. El Paso: September 24–26 (2-0)

Larson won his thirteenth game on September 24th — seven and a third innings, zero earned runs on four hits, ninety-four pitches — against a El Paso club that has finished thirty-four games behind Sacramento in the division. Lopez hit his fortieth home run. Musco went three for four with two RBI. The win was clean and efficient.

The September 25th game required a committee effort after St. Clair was injured while pitching in the second inning with biceps tendinitis, delivering one and two-thirds innings before departing. Bautista threw three and a third clean innings. Salazar threw three more. Dodge saved it. Rodriguez hit the only run of the game, a solo home run in the third, and it held for nine innings against a pitcher named Josh Bradford who was, genuinely, excellent — seven innings, six hits, one run, a game that El Paso would have won most nights. Sacramento won 1-0.

September 26th was Andretti's finest start of the season and an argument for the ages: nine innings, one hit, zero runs, one walk, four strikeouts, 102 pitches, a complete game one-hitter that produced a game score of 88 and a final of 13-0 that would have been more if Andretti had needed more. Lopez, F. Hernandez, Cruz, and Torres all hit home runs. It was Andretti's nineteenth win and the kind of start that belongs in the conversation whenever his 1993 season is discussed. The El Paso series was two wins in two games and the rotation had demonstrated, in consecutive starts, that Larson and Andretti were fully operational heading into October.

vs. San Jose: September 27–30 (3-1)

The final home series of the regular season opened with a loss — Espenoza four innings, five earned runs, a Sacramento lineup that managed four hits with runners on base — and the kind of afternoon that reminds a team what San Jose's lineup can do in its best moments. Francisco Hernandez was injured while throwing the ball during the game and did not return, adding one more name to an injury list that had grown uncomfortably long.

The September 28th game brought the most welcome news of the final week: Rubalcava started. Six innings, three earned runs, 109 pitches, a win that Gutierrez finished and Prieto saved. He was not dominant — he allowed a three-run Adams home run in the fourth — but he was present and functioning, and the sight of him taking the mound five days after the September 23rd injury was the most significant development of the final homestand. Mollohan delivered a two-run double in the seventh that proved decisive, and the word "Mollohan" appearing in a clutch at-bat sentence deserves at least a moment of acknowledgment as a testament to what September roster depth looks like.

The September 29th game was Larson — six and a third innings, two earned runs, eight strikeouts against a San Jose lineup that has been competitive in this series all season — while Gutierrez won and Ryan saved and Lopez hit his forty-third home run. The 3-2 final was exactly the kind of tightly managed win that a team with one eye on October plays when it does not need to do more.

The September 30th walk-off was the final game at Cathedral Stadium in 1993, and it was resolved in the manner this season has most frequently been resolved: Musco with three hits and five RBI, Perez with a home run and the walk-off RBI single in the ninth, the Cathedral crowd on its feet for the last time until October. Salazar started and allowed six runs in six and two-thirds innings — the consequences of an emergency deployment for a relief pitcher who was not built for that role — and Ryan threw two and a third clean innings to win his fifth game. Lopez hit his forty-fourth home run. Perez hit his twentieth. The final home record: 60-21. The season-long dominance at Cathedral Stadium was the most reliable fact about this team's 1993 performance.

At Tucson: October 1–3 (1-2)

Sacramento won the October 1st game behind Andretti's twentieth win — his twentieth win, a number that belongs in the opening sentence of his offseason rιsumι — six and two-thirds innings, zero earned runs, while Perez hit two home runs and Rodriguez hit his twentieth and Bautista finished cleanly. The final was 7-2 and Andretti's season ERA settled at 2.90, a number that does not adequately describe what he contributed to the 1993 Sacramento Prayers but comes closer than most.

October 2nd was Espenoza winning his sixteenth, seven and a third innings against a Tucson lineup that scored one run off a Chavez home run in the first and nothing after. Lopez hit his forty-fifth. Perez hit his twenty-third. Prieto saved it with a clean ninth. The record was 105-56.

October 3rd was Rubalcava in his final regular season start — seven innings, two earned runs, 109 pitches, fifteen ground outs — and a ninth inning in which Prieto allowed two runs, received the loss, and Gutierrez entered with the bases loaded and allowed the walk-off single that gave Tucson a 4-3 win. In the third inning of that game, Jesus Hernandez was injured while running the bases. The diagnosis delivered later: a torn posterior cruciate ligament, ten months, out for the duration of the postseason. He will not be in Cathedral Stadium in October. His season is over. The final record: 105-57.

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THE ONES TO KEEP YOUR EYES ON


Alejandro Lopez: the complete ledger — Forty-five home runs. Ninety-five RBI. Sixty stolen bases. A .940 OPS. A WAR of 8.0 that leads every position player in the American League and ranks among the highest single-season marks this franchise has produced in the post-expansion era. He won the AL Batter of the Month award for September on the strength of ten home runs and a .280 average in a month where most players are grinding out the final weeks. He entered professional baseball at twenty-one years old. He is twenty-four now. The Hot Corner has been saying since May that he is the best player in the American League. The final box score agrees.

Bernardo Andretti: twenty wins — Twenty wins and seven losses. A 2.90 ERA. A 5.4 WAR. A career that began in 1979 and has arrived in September 1993 at its most productive single-season point. He threw a complete game one-hitter against El Paso on September 26th, a six-and-two-thirds-inning shutout against Houston with zero walks, and a complete game win on October 1st that delivered his twentieth. He is thirty-three years old. He is in the final year of his contract. He has been the most reliable starting pitcher on a staff that leads the American League in ERA, and the question of what he does next offseason — whether Sacramento retains him, and at what price — is the most significant roster decision the organization will face in November. The Hot Corner's position is that you do not let twenty-win, sub-three ERA starters walk.

Edwin Musco: the quiet thirty-one — Thirty-one home runs. One hundred and twenty-one RBI. A .298 average and a .882 OPS from a thirty-three-year-old shortstop. His WAR of 6.9 trails Lopez's 8.0 on the team but leads the rest of the roster by a meaningful margin. He hit the walk-off Musco double in the ninth inning on September 30th that was, in some ways, the punctuation mark on his regular season — not the home run but the double, the RBI double, because that is what Musco has been all year: the player who delivers the run that Sacramento needed, in the inning when Sacramento needed it most. He won the AL MVP in 1989. He is playing better baseball now than he was then, in a quieter way, on a roster where the attention has concentrated elsewhere. The franchise should acknowledge what he is giving them before October reminds everyone at once.

Steve Dodge: the closer Sacramento needed — Eighteen saves. A 1.83 ERA. A WHIP of 0.91. A batting average against of .185. In the final sixteen games of the regular season: nine saves, a 1.15 ERA. When the Hot Corner began arguing in June that Dodge should be closing games, the ERA was 1.37 and the argument was statistical. Six months later the ERA is 1.83 and the argument has been validated by the postseason deployment: Dodge is the ninth-inning option, Prieto has been moved to lower-leverage situations, and the bullpen has not blown a late-inning lead in three weeks. The transition happened through a combination of necessity and, one hopes, intention, and the results speak in a language that does not require translation.

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THE HONEST QUESTIONS


Rubalcava's injury status is the only question that matters for October — He was injured September 23rd. He started September 28th and October 3rd. His pitch counts in those starts were 109 and 109. His ERA over those two starts was 3.00, which is not his season ERA of 2.77 but is not alarming. What is worth noting is that he allowed nine hits in thirteen innings across those two appearances — more contact than the first twenty-six starts of his season generated — and that the quality of his stuff, based on the output, was not quite what it had been. Whether that reflects a healthy pitcher who had a difficult two weeks or a pitcher managing an injury that has not fully healed is a question that Sacramento's medical staff will answer before the Division Series begins. The answer determines whether this team has the best pitcher in the American League available for October or whether it is managing without him. There is no middle ground on that question.

The injury list entering October is longer than any championship contender would prefer — Jesus Hernandez is out for ten months with a torn PCL. St. Clair is on the IL with biceps tendinitis, eligible to return after the Division Series — which means he is unavailable for the Fort Worth series. Cruz has been injured twice since September 4th and his throwing-arm issue from September 19th requires clarification before anyone can confidently project his October role. Francisco Hernandez was injured September 27th while throwing. The roster that enters the Division Series will look different from the one that won one hundred and five games, and the construction of the October roster — who is available, who is protected, who contributes — is the most important front-office task of the next four days.

Prieto's postseason role requires a clear decision before the first pitch — He finished the regular season at 33 saves, nine losses, and a 5.02 ERA. The losses are the more honest number: nine losses for a closer means nine games where Sacramento was in a position to win and did not, and the causal relationship between those losses and Prieto's late-inning performances is documented in this column across eight months of writing. Dodge closes. Gutierrez is the setup arm. Prieto pitches in situations where a run allowed does not end a game — which is a real and useful role that he can fill effectively, as the September 22nd hold against Houston demonstrated. But the era of unconditional ninth-inning deployment is over, and the postseason cannot afford to rediscover that lesson in the middle of a series against Fort Worth.

Fernando Salazar wrote a contract extension letter to Jimmy Aces — Two months after Gil Caliari wrote his second letter requesting a return, another second letter arrived from the Sacramento bullpen, this time from a veteran ace pitcher. Salazar's letter reads: "Mr. Aces, I find it perplexing that I haven't received an offer to extend my contract. I am sure it's an oversight, and I want you to know that I would be willing to entertain offers. Please get in touch so that we can begin discussions as soon as possible." I want to be precise about why this letter deserves a different response than Caliari's. Fernando Salazar is forty-two years old and has a career ERA of 2.54 in 817 appearances and 762 starts — a career ERA, accumulated across a professional life that has produced 185.1 WAR, that belongs in the conversation whenever the best pitchers in FBL history are discussed. His 1993 ERA is 2.83 in 57.1 innings, which is what it looks like when a forty-two-year-old with a shoulder injury tries to contribute through an irregular season. The perplexity in his letter is legitimate. If the Sacramento organization has not communicated with one of the best pitchers in its history about returning next year, that is an oversight worth correcting. The response to that letter should already have been sent.

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THE LEAGUE AT LARGE


The playoff picture is set. In the American League: Sacramento against Fort Worth, Baltimore against Columbus. In the National League: Philadelphia against Albuquerque, Charlotte against Las Vegas. The bracket is, from a Sacramento perspective, the one that was most probable since August.

Fort Worth finished 89-73 and earned the wild card on the strength of a second half that included the collapse of Columbus's wild card lead in late September. The Spirits' regular season head-to-head record against Sacramento is nine wins and nine losses — perfectly balanced, neither team having established dominance over the other across a full season. They are a lineup built around Benoldi, Reza, and a pitching staff that features John Gillon at sixteen wins and Blythe at sixteen wins, and they lost their closer McLamb in late August. The Fort Worth bullpen that Sacramento faces in October is not the same bullpen that went 3-7 against Sacramento in the first half of the season. It is also not the bullpen Sacramento would have preferred to face. The series will be competitive, the head-to-head record confirms it, and anyone who arrives at Cathedral Stadium for Game One expecting Sacramento to win in three games has not been paying attention to what Fort Worth has done since July.

Baltimore at 101-61 is the obstacle between Sacramento and the World Series. Jorge Jaime won the American League batting title with a .355 average and forty-three home runs and 137 RBI. The Satans won one hundred and one games. They have the best run differential in the American League. They lost David Hernandez — 14-8, 2.49 ERA — to a rotator cuff strain in September, and his absence reshapes their rotation in ways that favor Sacramento at the top of the matchup. The Baltimore series, if it arrives, will test every assumption about what this team is capable of in October. The Hot Corner intends to cover it in full.

On the National League side: Philadelphia won ninety-six games and the NL East, Las Vegas won ninety-one and the NL West, and the franchise most resembling Sacramento's profile — disciplined pitching, contact hitting, a manager with postseason experience — is probably Charlotte at ninety-two wins, now a wild card entry. Phoenix's ten-game losing streak in September transformed what appeared to be a certain NL pennant into a playoff race that Charlotte and Albuquerque eventually claimed. Sacramento's World Series opponent, whoever it turns out to be, will have navigated a competitive National League bracket to get there. None of these matchups will be easy. None of them are supposed to be.

Casey Ford of Columbus — the reliever the Hot Corner flagged in August as the key piece of the Heaven's playoff viability — suffered a sore elbow in late September and is day-to-day for multiple weeks. His absence is significant for Columbus in the Baltimore series. A team that built its second-half run around Ford's bullpen presence now faces a five-or-seven-game series without him against a Baltimore lineup that generates 886 runs per season. The series is more complicated than the records suggest.

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LISTENER MAIL — The questions you asked and the answers you deserve.


From Rosa Villanueva of the Pocket District, who attended thirty-eight home games this season, who kept a handwritten game log in a composition notebook that now runs to four hundred pages, and who described Andretti's September 26th complete game one-hitter as "the most beautiful nine innings I have watched in twenty years of attending baseball games": "Should Bernardo Andretti be the Cy Young Award winner?"

Rosa, the four-hundred-page notebook is the most committed act of fandom I have heard about this season and your opinion on pitching deserves to be taken seriously on those grounds alone. The Cy Young case for Andretti rests on twenty wins, a 2.90 ERA, and 5.4 WAR across 229.2 innings — a complete, dominant season from a pitcher who arrived at every start prepared and left most of them having accomplished what the team needed. The case against Andretti for Cy Young is Rubalcava: 19-8, 2.77 ERA, 6.7 WAR in 240.2 innings, with a WHIP of 1.04 and a batting average against of .225. Both of these pitchers are on the same team, which means the Cy Young Award will not go to Sacramento twice regardless of what the numbers say. The voter who must choose between them should choose Rubalcava on WAR and innings. The voter who was in Cathedral Stadium for those nine innings on September 26th might choose differently. Your notebook suggests you would know which of those framings is the more honest one.

From Greg Hoffman of Natomas, who coaches high school baseball and who has used the Hot Corner's coverage of the Prieto situation as a classroom exercise in evaluating performance data versus institutional loyalty — a lesson he describes as "relevant to baseball and to most of life": "Given what happened in this period, was the closer transition completed properly or still incomplete?"

Greg, the classroom application is exactly right and the question is the most important one the Hot Corner can address before October. Here is my honest assessment: the transition was completed functionally but not institutionally. Dodge is closing. Prieto is in setup and lower-leverage situations. The results in the final weeks — no late-inning leads surrendered during the nine-game winning streak, the September 30th win requiring Ryan rather than Prieto in the decisive moment — are consistent with a bullpen hierarchy that has reorganized itself around the correct axis. What remains incomplete is the formal acknowledgment that the change is permanent rather than situational, and the October roster construction will tell us whether Aces and the front office have committed to it or whether the first difficult postseason moment produces a regression to the arrangement that cost Sacramento a dozen games this summer. The classroom lesson applies: the data argues clearly for Dodge closing. Whether the institution has absorbed that argument is what we will discover in the first three games of the Division Series.

From Ara Sarkissian of Arden-Arcade, who attended every Sacramento home game in 1993 with his father, who described the September 30th walk-off win against San Jose as "the moment that made the whole season feel real," and who asked his question on behalf of both himself and his father, who he notes "has been waiting for this October since Game 7 in 1989": "What needs to happen for Sacramento to win the World Series?"

Ara, please extend to your father the professional regards of everyone at the Hot Corner, and the acknowledgment that 1989 is a year this program does not forget. What needs to happen for Sacramento to win the World Series is this: Rubalcava needs to be healthy and pitching at his season-long level, which means the injury that removed him from two September starts must be behind him rather than merely managed. Dodge needs to close every critical late-inning situation, which means the organizational commitment to the closer transition must hold under postseason pressure. The lineup needs to produce with runners on base in close games, which is the thing this offense does inconsistently and which October amplifies — the 17-21 record in one-run games and the four-game negative Pythagorean differential are both traceable to the same root: missed opportunities in high-leverage situations. And the organization needs to make clear roster decisions — about Rubalcava's workload, about Prieto's role, about the construction of the bullpen behind Dodge and Gutierrez — before the first pitch at Cathedral Stadium in the Division Series rather than after. Your father has been waiting since 1989. The team he is watching in October 1993 is better than the team that fell short in 1989. Whether it is better enough is the only question left.

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Fort Worth on Wednesday. Gillon in Game One, Blythe in Game Two, and however many games it takes after that in a series between two teams that went nine and nine against each other across the full season. The Hot Corner will be at Cathedral Stadium for every home game and filing from wherever the road games take us. One hundred and five wins built the foundation. October determines whether it becomes something more. I have been covering this franchise for a long time, and I have never been more certain that what is coming in the next three weeks is worth watching all the way to the end.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________
Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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Old 03-15-2026, 01:00 PM   #258
liberty-ca
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

______________________________

October 6 – October 10, 1993 | American League Division Series
Fort Worth Spirits defeat Sacramento Prayers, 3 games to 1

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ONE HUNDRED AND FIVE WINS. GONE IN FOUR GAMES.


I have been sitting with this for the better part of twenty-four hours and I still do not have a clean way to say it, so I will say it plainly: the Sacramento Prayers won one hundred and five games in 1993, posted the best ERA in the American League, produced the likely MVP winner in center field, had the best pitcher in professional baseball on their roster, and were eliminated in the first round of the postseason by a team they played to a nine-nine draw over the full regular season.

The champagne that was popped in the Cathedral clubhouse two weeks ago is already a memory. The bunting that draped the railings of that stadium for the clinching is being taken down. The players have gone home. The season is over. And this column, which has covered every development of the 1993 Sacramento Prayers from the first exhibition game in February to the final out on a Sunday evening in Fort Worth, owes its listeners and readers the most honest accounting it can provide of what happened and why.

What happened is that Fort Worth was better than Sacramento in four baseball games. What happened is that the vulnerabilities the Hot Corner documented across eight months of regular season coverage — the ninth inning, the road record against inferior competition, the gaps in the bullpen behind Dodge and Gutierrez, the fragility of a rotation dependent on healthy versions of Rubalcava and Larson — did not resolve themselves in October. They concentrated. They appeared precisely when they could do the most damage. And a Fort Worth club that went nine and nine against Sacramento in the regular season turned out, when the margin for error disappeared and the games mattered completely, to be the better team.

I want to be careful about that word: better. Fort Worth was not more talented. They were not more complete over one hundred and sixty-two games. They were, in four specific October games, more effective. There is a difference between those two things, and the difference is what makes October brutal and irreducible and, for the fan base of a franchise that has won everything in sight for six consecutive years, almost impossible to process. Sacramento was the better team this year. Fort Worth won the series. Both of those things are true simultaneously, and neither one cancels the other.

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WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED: A GAME-BY-GAME ACCOUNT


Game 1 — October 6 at Cathedral Stadium: Fort Worth 6, Sacramento 3

The series opened on a Wednesday evening and John Gillon pitched seven innings of shutout baseball. Seven innings, four hits, zero runs, eleven strikeouts on 102 pitches. Gillon is not the best pitcher Sacramento faced all season. He is sixteen and ten with a 4.12 ERA during the regular year. On Wednesday evening in October he was the best pitcher Sacramento has faced since Tony Crossley threw a seven-inning shutout at Cathedral Stadium on September 1st, and the Cathedral crowd watched him retire hitter after hitter while Andretti was allowing the Reza two-run home run in the fourth that gave Fort Worth the lead they never relinquished.

Andretti was not bad. Six innings, three earned runs, seven strikeouts on 95 pitches — adequate, in most contexts, for a quality start. In the context of facing a pitcher who was throwing the best seven innings of his season, adequate was not enough. Caliari walked three batters in two-thirds of an inning. Gutierrez stranded all of them. The game went to the ninth inning tied at three, and Steve Dodge — the closer who had posted a 1.83 ERA in the regular season, the arm the Hot Corner spent months arguing should be trusted with the most important outs in Sacramento baseball — faced Hicks, Guerrero, Bocanegra, and Chavez before Benoldi stepped in with two runners on and two outs and hit a three-run home run to right-center field that ended any remaining conversation about the game's outcome. Six to three final. Fort Worth leads the series one to zero.

I want to be honest about the Dodge blown save, because the easy narrative is to say that the regular season argument for him was wrong. It was not wrong. The argument was never that Dodge was infallible. The argument was that he was the best option available, that his 1.83 ERA made him the correct choice, and that the Benoldi home run — a 406-foot flyball off a fastball that caught too much of the plate — is the kind of thing that happens to every closer in October regardless of their ERA. What the Benoldi home run represents is not evidence against the Dodge argument. It is evidence that October does not guarantee outcomes. Prieto, at his worst moments in July and August, did not need a Benoldi home run to give games away. The distinction matters even when the result is the same.

Game 2 — October 7 at Cathedral Stadium: Sacramento 7, Fort Worth 4

Espenoza won the second game on Thursday and the Cathedral crowd had every reason to believe the series had equalized. Six and a third innings, three runs, one earned run, seven strikeouts. The Sacramento offense came alive: MacDonald went three for four with two doubles, Cruz hit a home run in the fifth, Rodriguez delivered a two-run double, Baldelomar drove in a run. The 7-4 final sent the series to Fort Worth with the slate clean. Prieto threw two clean innings to close it, and the Hot Corner noted at the time that the Prieto who shows up to protect three-run leads in the seventh and eighth is a different and better pitcher than the one asked to protect one-run leads in the ninth. That observation remained accurate.

Game 3 — October 9 at Fort Worth: Fort Worth 3, Sacramento 1

Rubalcava started at Spirits Grounds and was, to be precise about it, not Rubalcava. He threw 109 pitches across 7.2 innings, allowed six hits, struck out three, and gave up the two home runs that decided the series — a Guerrero solo shot in the fifth and a Reza two-run shot in the sixth. His ERA for the game was 3.52, which would be acceptable from most pitchers in most situations. From the best pitcher in the American League in a must-not-lose playoff game, it was the evidence the Hot Corner had been dreading since the September 23rd injury appeared in the game notes. Alzate threw seven innings and one earned run for Fort Worth. Sacramento scored one run. Fort Worth led the series two to one with one game remaining in Fort Worth.

Game 4 — October 10 at Fort Worth: Fort Worth 5, Sacramento 1

Larson started the fourth game and it was over before most of Cathedral Stadium's road contingent had finished their first drink. A Foulke solo home run in the second. A wild pitch in the third. A MacDonald error. A Benoldi sacrifice fly. A Foulke infield single that scored another run. Four runs in 2.1 innings, and the pitcher Sacramento sent to the mound to keep its season alive lasted forty-four pitches. Caliari, Gutierrez, and Bautista all threw in relief, combining for six and two-thirds innings and one earned run — a mop-up performance that had no bearing on anything because Fort Worth was already managing a comfortable lead by the time any of them arrived on the mound. Musco hit a solo home run in the fifth. It was Sacramento's only run. Bouchard went six and a third innings and allowed one earned run. Beecher closed it. Final: five to one. Series final: three games to one, Fort Worth.

Edwin Reza was named Division Series MVP. He hit .438 with three home runs and six RBI. He hit the two-run home run that decided Game 1, hit another home run in Game 2, and drove in runs in three of the four games. The Hot Corner does not award him anything. The FBL already has. He earned it.

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WHERE EVERYTHING WENT WRONG


The offense vanished when it mattered most — Alejandro Lopez hit .214 in the Division Series with zero home runs and zero RBI. Gil Cruz hit .071. Jose Rodriguez hit .071. These are not slumps in the ordinary sense of that word. They are the product of a Fort Worth pitching staff — Gillon, Alzate, Bouchard — that had scouted Sacramento's tendencies, identified the vulnerabilities in their approach, and executed game plans with a precision that Sacramento's lineup could not solve in three of the four games. The offense that scored 894 runs during the regular season managed ten runs in four playoff games. The numbers are not deceiving anyone. When Sacramento's pitchers needed four or five runs to win, the lineup produced one. That is the series in one sentence.

Rubalcava's injury never fully healed — The September 23rd game notes said he was injured while pitching. He started September 28th and October 3rd and the pitch counts were normal, but the results were not what his regular season established as his baseline. In Game 3, the best pitcher in the American League allowed home runs to a shortstop with two career playoff games on his rιsumι and a first baseman who had not been in the lineup for the first six weeks of the regular season due to his own injury. Whether the physical issue was his arm, his mechanics, his confidence, or some combination of the three is a question the organization will spend the winter answering. What the October box scores say is that he was not himself, and when he is not himself, this team cannot win a playoff series against a rotation that is operating at full capacity.

Game 1 was the series — Benoldi's home run off Dodge in the ninth inning of Game 1 is the moment this series turned. Sacramento had battled back from three down to tie it at three, had the crowd behind them, had momentum that a road team in a first playoff game cannot easily generate on its own. The three-run home run eliminated all of it. A Sacramento win in Game 1 sends the series to Fort Worth with Sacramento holding a two-zero lead. Fort Worth, playing from behind at home, facing Rubalcava in Game 3, would have been a team under pressure rather than a team with momentum. Instead they arrived at Spirits Grounds having stolen Game 1 in Sacramento, needing to win two of three at home — exactly the situation that suits a team built the way Fort Worth is built. The difference between one-zero Sacramento and one-zero Fort Worth after Game 1 is not just one game. It is the psychological shape of the entire series.

Larson in Game 4 was the final confirmation — He had pitched well down the stretch, winning his last four decisions with a 1.46 ERA. He arrived at Game 4 as the correct choice given the circumstances: Rubalcava had started Game 3, Espenoza had started Game 2, Andretti had started Game 1. The rotation dictated Larson. What the rotation could not dictate was the result. Two and a third innings, four earned runs including a wild pitch, an error by MacDonald that opened the third inning, and a Fort Worth lineup that put together the kind of crooked number that ends seasons. The Sacramento bullpen that followed him threw six and two-thirds innings of quality relief against a team that had already won the game. That is perhaps the most painful single fact of the 1993 season: Sacramento's bullpen was excellent in Game 4 of the Division Series, in a game that was over in the third inning.

The head-to-head record was telling the truth all along — Nine wins and nine losses against Fort Worth in the regular season. The Hot Corner noted this number repeatedly, argued that it deserved more attention than the sixteen-game division lead suggested, and predicted that it would be relevant if both clubs met in October. Every column that mentioned the head-to-head record was describing a Fort Worth club that Sacramento could not dominate. That club showed up in October and played the better series. The sixteen-game lead was real. The nine-nine record was also real. October decided which number mattered.

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WHAT HAPPENS NOW


Bernardo Andretti must be re-signed — Twenty wins. A 2.90 ERA. A 5.4 WAR. A complete game one-hitter in September. The most consistent pitcher on the staff across all one hundred and sixty-two games. He is thirty-three years old, he is in the final year of his contract, and if the Sacramento front office allows him to reach free agency in November without making a serious offer, it will be the most consequential roster failure since the organization was assembled. The Hot Corner's position is simple: find the number, pay it, and let Andretti spend the rest of his career in Sacramento. He has earned that conversation.

Fernando Salazar's letter deserves a response — He wrote to Jimmy Aces asking about a contract extension and described its absence as perplexing. His perplexity was legitimate. His career ERA is 2.54 in 817 appearances across nearly seventeen professional seasons. His 1993 ERA was 2.83, which includes the September 30th emergency start that was not his fault and inflated a number that otherwise reflected an effective, intelligent reliever. He is forty-two years old. The years remaining may be fewer than either party would prefer. The conversation should happen, and it should happen before Salazar has to ask again.

The closer question is finally, permanently answered — Prieto finished 1993 with thirty-three saves and nine losses and a 5.02 ERA. He saved Games 2 and 3 cleanly. He was not asked to protect the ninth inning in Games 1 and 4. Steve Dodge was asked in Game 1 and gave up a three-run home run. There is no clean resolution to the closer question in this postseason. What there is, however, is a career of evidence: Dodge's regular season ERA was 1.83. Gutierrez's was 2.19. The ninth inning in 1994 must belong to one of them, and the front office must commit to that arrangement before spring training rather than managing around it until a blown save forces the conversation in July. This column will not spend another summer arguing for what the numbers have been saying since June.

Rubalcava's health is the priority — Everything else about the 1994 Sacramento Prayers depends on knowing whether the best pitcher in the league will arrive in February fully recovered from whatever the September 23rd injury was. If he is healthy, this team is a championship contender. If he is not, the rotation question becomes the most urgent construction problem in the organization. The medical staff knows what the injury is. The front office needs to communicate what the timeline looks like before anyone can evaluate whether the 1994 roster as currently constructed can compete at the level the 1993 roster competed at.

The farm system will need attention — Five draft picks failed to sign in August. The team's minor league depth, tested by the parade of September roster moves, showed its limits when Navarro and Bautista were the best available options for emergency deployment. The talent at the top of this roster — Lopez, Musco, Cruz, Rubalcava, Andretti — is elite. The talent behind it, revealed when injuries removed St. Clair, Salazar, J. Hernandez, Cruz, and Murguia at various points, is not. Building depth below the major league roster is the offseason project that receives the least attention and produces the most dividends in October.

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THE LEAGUE MOVES ON


Fort Worth faces Baltimore in the American League Championship Series, and I want to be direct about how I feel watching this: it should be Sacramento. The team with one hundred and five wins, the best pitching staff in the league, and the AL MVP candidate should be preparing for a seven-game series against Jorge Jaime and the Baltimore lineup. Instead it is Fort Worth, who went eighty-nine and seventy-three, who lost their closer in August, who relied on Alzate and Bouchard to beat Sacramento in the games that mattered. They earned the right to be there. That does not make it easier to watch.

Baltimore will be formidable even without Hernandez. The Satans won one hundred and one games and swept through the Columbus Heaven with Jaime posting a .571 average and a .667 on-base percentage in the series. They are deep, they are disciplined, and they have the run differential that suggests their record is not a product of fortunate scheduling. Fort Worth will need to pitch Gillon and Alzate at their October best to compete in a seven-game series against Baltimore. They have already demonstrated those pitchers can be that good in October. Against a lineup that produces runs the way Baltimore does, being that good may not be enough.

The National League Championship Series is Charlotte against Philadelphia, which is exactly the kind of matchup that makes the NL genuinely interesting. Charlotte won ninety-two games and swept Las Vegas with Jose Cruz earning MVP honors. Philadelphia swept Albuquerque with Harrison Hassett hitting .500. Both clubs have legitimate rotation depth that Sacramento would have envied heading into a World Series. The NL pennant will be decided between two well-constructed franchises, and the winner will deserve to be there.

Phoenix finished four games behind Las Vegas in the NL West and lost the wild card in September. The ten-game losing streak that collapsed their season was the most dramatic individual collapse of 1993, and the organization that spent most of the year looking like Sacramento's World Series opponent will spend the winter wondering what went wrong with the same intensity Sacramento is currently applying to that question.

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MAILBAG — Because some questions deserve a real answer.


From James Whitmore of Curtis Park, who has attended Sacramento playoff games since 1976, who was in the left field bleachers for all three Cathedral Stadium games, and who described Sunday evening in Fort Worth as "the first time in seventeen years I have watched a Sacramento season end and felt like we deserved better than what we got": "How do you explain one hundred and five wins ending like this?"

James, the seventeen years in those bleachers means you have seen Sacramento win and you have seen Sacramento lose, and the feeling you are describing — deserved better — is the most honest reaction available. The explanation is this: playoff baseball compresses everything a team is into the smallest possible sample size, and the sample size does not care about one hundred and five. It cares about four games, or seven, or however many it takes to eliminate someone. Sacramento's vulnerabilities — a closer who had been uneven all season, a rotation whose best pitcher was managing an injury, an offense that could not solve three opposing starters who were each having the best four innings of their October — were present in those four games at a rate they were not present across one hundred and sixty-two. The regular season average tells you who a team is. The playoffs tell you who they are on four specific days. On those four days, Sacramento was not what they had been all year. Fort Worth was.

From Michael Patterson of Land Park, a lifelong Sacramento fan who listened to all four games on the radio and who noted in his letter that he "turned it off with two outs in the ninth inning of Game 4 and went to bed, because he already knew": "Was Game 1 the series?"

Michael, you already knew because you were right. Game 1 was the series. A Sacramento win in Game 1 changes everything that follows — the psychological momentum, the pressure distribution, the rotation alignment going into Games 3 and 4. I have written this analysis above in more detail but the short answer to your question is yes. The Benoldi home run off Dodge in the ninth inning of Game 1 is the moment the 1993 season effectively ended, even if it took three more games to make it official. Sacramento was two outs away from leading the series one-zero. Instead they went home trailing one-zero against a team that plays better baseball when it has the lead. The rest followed from there.

From Sandra Collins of Natomas, who described herself as a casual fan who became a devoted one over the course of this season, who listened to the Hot Corner for the first time in April because her husband recommended it and who writes that she now considers herself "a baseball person, which I did not expect to say at forty-one years old": "Should I be angry or sad?"

Sandra, welcome to baseball, and I am genuinely sorry this is how your first devoted season ended. The honest answer is both: angry and sad, but not in equal measure. The anger is appropriate when directed at specific failures that were within this team's control — the blown save, the Game 4 starter decision, the months of closer mismanagement that cost games in July and August that might have mattered in October if the home field advantage had stretched differently. The sadness is appropriate when directed at what this team was, and what it represented, and what it will no longer be as the roster changes and the players age and the next version of Sacramento begins to take shape. Alejandro Lopez's 1993 season, Edwin Musco at thirty-three playing the best baseball of his career, Jordan Rubalcava pitching toward his two hundredth win and a Cy Young Award — those things happened and they were real and they were worth watching. That they ended on a Sunday evening in Fort Worth with a five-to-one loss does not unmake them. It just makes the ending harder to carry.

From Armen Petrosyan of Arden-Arcade, who has been a Sacramento season ticket holder since 1981 and who wrote a letter that began "I need someone to be honest with me about 1994" and proceeded to ask thirteen separate questions, of which the Hot Corner will answer the most important one: "Is this team still a championship contender next year?"

Armen, I read all thirteen questions and the answer to each of them is some version of the same thing: it depends on Rubalcava's health and Andretti's contract. If Rubalcava arrives in February healthy and Andretti is re-signed before November, this rotation is still the best in the American League and this team is still a championship contender. The position player core — Lopez at twenty-five years old, Cruz under contract through 1996, Musco still producing at a historic rate for his age, Perez emerging as a genuine offensive contributor — is intact and in most cases has not yet reached its ceiling. The bullpen needs restructuring around Dodge and Gutierrez, with Prieto in a defined lower-leverage role that he can fill effectively. The depth that was exposed in September needs to be built up through the draft and the minor league system. These are real tasks but they are manageable tasks for an organization with the resources Sacramento has.

The harder question, the one beneath your thirteen, is whether a team can sustain this level of excellence indefinitely in the modern game, and whether the 1993 elimination changes anything fundamental about the organization's trajectory. The answer is that one first-round loss does not change a dynasty. It raises questions. The questions this column has been raising since June — the closer, the bullpen depth, the rotation health — are now questions the front office must answer with roster decisions rather than observations. If they answer them correctly, 1994 begins with a team that is better than 1993 was, because 1993 taught the organization precisely what needed fixing. If they do not, the window that has been open since 1987 will not be open indefinitely. I trust this organization more than I distrust it. But I am watching, and so is everyone who listened to this program from April through October.

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The season is over. Fort Worth and Baltimore play for the American League pennant. Charlotte and Philadelphia play for the National League pennant. Sacramento watches. It is an unusual and uncomfortable position for a franchise that has not watched October from home in seven consecutive years, and this column will not pretend it is anything other than what it is: a failure that hurts, that was not inevitable, and that the people inside that building have the talent and the history to learn from and correct. The Hot Corner will be here when February arrives. So will the Sacramento Prayers. So will every question that October left unanswered.

Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

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Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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Old 03-15-2026, 06:20 PM   #259
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THE HOT CORNER
Baseball coverage from the inside — Sacramento Prayers and the FBL

By Claude Playball | Baseball Insider & Analyst | Host, "Hot Corner" Podcast

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November 1993 | Season's End — Awards, Transactions, and the Road to 1994

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THE YEAR THAT WAS, THE WINTER THAT IS, AND THE SEASON THAT WILL BE


The awards have been handed out. The contracts have been signed and unsigned and negotiated and deferred. The World Series trophy sits in Charlotte, North Carolina, in the hands of a franchise that had never won one before and played all season as if it intended to change that. The Sacramento Prayers are home for the winter, watching October from the outside for the first time since 1986, and the Hot Corner is doing what it always does at the end of a season: sitting with what happened, accounting for it honestly, and trying to understand what it means for what comes next.

What happened in 1993 is this: Sacramento won one hundred and five games, produced the likely best pitching staff in the American League for the third consecutive season, watched Alejandro Lopez become the most complete offensive player in the league at twenty-four years old, and lost to Fort Worth in the Division Series in four games. Those two things — one hundred and five wins and a first-round exit — exist simultaneously and neither one cancels the other. The Hot Corner has said this before and will say it again because it bears repeating: the regular season is a true measure of what a team is. The playoffs are a true measure of what a team does on a specific set of days. Sacramento was the better team this year. Fort Worth was better in October.

The awards have confirmed what the box scores suggested all season. The transactions have confirmed what the Hot Corner has been arguing since September. And the questions that remain unanswered — one of them above all others — will define whether 1994 is a return to October or another year of accumulating wins that do not produce the result this franchise was built to produce.

Let us account for all of it, carefully and completely.

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BEYOND THE BOX SCORE


Jordan Rubalcava, American League Cy Young Award — Sixteen of twenty-four first-place votes. One hundred and forty-four points. The margin over David Hernandez was convincing rather than comfortable, and the result was the correct one by every meaningful measure. Rubalcava went 19-8 with a 2.77 ERA, threw 240.2 innings, struck out 199 batters, walked 50, and posted a WHIP of 1.04 and a batting average against of .225. His 6.7 WAR led every pitcher in the American League and, had Hernandez not won eight of the first nine Cy Young votes cast in his favor before his season ended with a rotator cuff strain, the margin would have been larger. Andretti received zero first-place votes and sixty-two points — the contribution of a twenty-win, 2.90 ERA pitcher being treated as a secondary story on his own staff, which is the most accurate measure of how dominant Rubalcava was.

The Cy Young Award is the third significant individual honor Rubalcava has received in his Sacramento career, and his career WAR of 77.7 with this franchise has moved him into a conversation that this column wants to address directly for the first time: Jordan Rubalcava is the second-greatest pitcher in Sacramento Prayers history. Fernando Salazar's 113.8 career WAR and 292 wins place him in a category occupied by very few pitchers in the history of this game. Rubalcava at 77.7 WAR, a career ERA of 2.67, and a winning percentage of .735 that leads the FBL all-time is, depending on what happens in his remaining seasons, capable of closing that gap. He is thirty-one years old. He is healthy, or we are told he is. He has just won the most important individual award in American League pitching. The Hot Corner does not take that lightly, and neither should the Sacramento front office when his contract situation eventually arrives at its desk.

Jorge Jaime, American League Most Valuable Player — and what it means for Lopez — Jaime won with twenty of twenty-four first-place votes and 316 points. Lopez finished second with four first-place votes and 236 points. Musco finished third with 184 points. Cruz was fifth with 122. This is the paragraph in which I tell you what I believe about the MVP vote and then tell you what I believe about what it means.

What I believe about the vote: Jaime's season was historic. A .355 average, a .477 on-base percentage, forty-three home runs, 137 RBI, 125 runs scored, and an 8.6 WAR from a first baseman on a 101-win team that won the American League pennant. It was a legitimate MVP season and the voters were not wrong to award it. What I also believe: Lopez's season was the more complete individual performance when evaluated by the full range of metrics. Forty-five home runs. One hundred and thirty runs scored — the FBL single-season record. Sixty stolen bases — seventh on the Sacramento franchise single-season list. A .940 OPS. An 8.0 WAR that leads every position player in the American League not named Jaime. The AL Batter of the Month award in September. The difference between Lopez and Jaime in the MVP vote is approximately forty points and the fact that Baltimore won the pennant while Sacramento was watching Fort Worth celebrate on the Cathedral Stadium mound. The voters were not wrong about Jaime. They were also not wrong about Lopez. They simply weighted the pennant above the metrics. Sacramento fans are entitled to disagree with that weighting. The Hot Corner is entitled to note that Lopez at twenty-four years old, with the best statistical season in Sacramento history by runs scored and one of the best by WAR, is a player whose MVP will come. The question is not whether but when.

Three Silver Sluggers and two Gold Glovers — Lopez won the Silver Slugger at center field. Musco won at shortstop. Cruz won at second base. Three Silver Sluggers from one franchise in a single season is a number that deserves acknowledgment as a team achievement: the infield and outfield combination of Cruz, Musco, and Lopez produced a combined WAR of 21.4 from three positions that together form the spine of this lineup. MacDonald won the Gold Glove at first base — his defense at that position has been one of the quiet contributions of the 1993 roster — and Baldelomar won in left field. Two Gold Glovers from a team that also led the American League in ERA is the statistical expression of a defense that gave its pitching staff the ability to turn contact into outs at a rate that ERA and WHIP alone do not fully capture.

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THE STORIES BEHIND THE WINTER


Lopez is locked up. This is the most important transaction of the offseason. — Five years, $3,562,000 total. Lopez is under contract through 1998. He will be twenty-eight years old when that contract expires, which means the franchise has secured the best years of the best player in Sacramento baseball — a player who just set the FBL single-season runs record, finished second in MVP voting, and won the Silver Slugger Award — at a price that will look like an organizational gift by the time he turns twenty-six. The Hot Corner has spent eight months documenting what Lopez does on a baseball field. The front office has spent eight months watching it from closer range. The fact that they moved quickly and secured him before he could approach free agency is the correct decision executed at the correct moment, and it changes the calculus of every other roster conversation for the next five years.

Espenoza at five years is exceptional value — Five years, $1,954,000 total. Espenoza went 16-4 in 1993 with a career winning percentage of .804 that leads the franchise all-time. His K/BB ratio of 5.06 ranked second in Sacramento single-season history behind only Salazar's 1986 season. He is thirty years old and his contract lines up cleanly with the Lopez extension, meaning the two most cost-efficient members of the 1993 roster will be in Sacramento uniforms together through at least 1998. The Hot Corner noted in April that Espenoza's inconsistency was the primary narrative about him entering the season. The primary narrative entering 1994 is that he went 16-4 and is signed through 1998. Both of those things happened to the same pitcher.

Salazar re-signed — the letter got a response — Three years, $696,000 total. Fernando Salazar wrote to Jimmy Aces asking why he had not received an extension offer, described the absence as perplexing, and signed a three-year deal within the month. His career ERA of 2.74 is fifth in franchise history. His career WAR of 113.8 is the highest ever produced by a pitcher wearing a Sacramento uniform. He is forty-two years old. The three years he has been given represent the organization's acknowledgment that his perplexity was legitimate, and the Hot Corner acknowledges that the front office did the right thing. Eventually. The letter should not have been necessary.

The Nashville trade is worth examining carefully — Sacramento sends Ryan Singleton, Antonio Berrios, Frank Rector, and a second-round pick to Nashville. Sacramento receives Jason Garcia — twenty-four years old, right-handed, 7-4 record, 3.41 ERA, 128 strikeouts in 155.2 innings — and a first-round pick. The return of a first-round pick and a young pitcher with a solid ERA and strikeout rate is a meaningful upgrade on what was sent. Berrios was a capable backup catcher who served the organization well. Rector was a Triple-A depth piece. Singleton was a minor league infielder. The first-round pick Sacramento receives, combined with the supplemental first-round pick earned by Lopez's top-three MVP finish under the Prospect Promotion Incentive rules, gives the organization two additional premium selections in the upcoming draft. Building depth through the minor leagues was identified in the final regular-season column as the most important organizational task of the winter. This trade and those supplemental picks are the first concrete steps toward that goal.

Alonzo's opt-out and what it might mean — The catcher exercised his opt-out and is reportedly in direct talks with the front office on a renegotiated extension. The Hot Corner's read on this situation is that both parties want the same outcome — Alonzo in Sacramento — and that the opt-out was the appropriate mechanism for a player who had an All-Star season and wanted the organization to acknowledge it in financial terms rather than simply assuming his return. His .305/.355/.448 line in 1993, his franchise-record-tying five-hit game in Boston, his Gold Glove-caliber defense, and his handling of a pitching staff that led the American League in ERA are collectively worth a meaningful raise from whatever his previous arrangement specified. The front office knows this. The talks continuing is the evidence that both parties are serious. The Hot Corner expects an announcement before spring training.

Andretti is waiting, and waiting is dangerous — The rumor that he intends to hold off contract extension talks until he enters the final year of his current deal is the most concerning piece of offseason intelligence this column has received. Andretti is thirty-three years old. He is coming off a twenty-win season. He has just received zero first-place Cy Young votes despite winning twenty games, which tells you something about how thoroughly Rubalcava has dominated the pitching conversation in this market. In a contract year, Andretti will be thirty-four and motivated in the way that final contract years motivate accomplished veterans. He will be excellent. And then he will be a free agent, and the Sacramento front office will be in the position of bidding against other organizations for a thirty-four-year-old pitcher who has just had his best season at the worst possible time for organizational leverage. The Hot Corner's position has not changed: find the number now. The number will be higher in November 1994 than it is in November 1993, and the rotation that this franchise needs to win in October cannot afford to rebuild around the loss of its second-most reliable starter.

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THE LEAGUE AT LARGE


Charlotte Monks are the 1993 World Series champions, having defeated Baltimore four games to one with a clinching game of eight to three at Monks Field. Series MVP Jesus Rodriguez — not our Rodriguez, Charlotte's Rodriguez, the second baseman — hit .286 with three home runs and five RBI. The Monks completed a regular season that saw them finish second in the NL East at ninety-two and seventy, qualify for the playoffs as a wild card, sweep Philadelphia in the NLCS, and win the World Series in five games. It was the first championship in franchise history. Charlotte manager Ben Smith said his team played better than the other team, which is the most economical and accurate description of winning a World Series that the Hot Corner has encountered this year. Congratulations to Charlotte, sincerely and without reservation. They were the best team in October and they have the trophy to prove it.

Baltimore, the team Sacramento expected to face in October, made the World Series and lost it. Fort Worth, the team Sacramento actually faced in October, lost to Baltimore in seven games with Frauenheim winning ALCS MVP at .444 and nine runs scored. The symmetry of those facts is not lost on this column: Sacramento lost to the team that lost to the team that lost the World Series in five games. That chain of causation does not change the Division Series result, but it is worth documenting that the team Sacramento could not beat in four games was itself beaten in seven by Baltimore, and Baltimore was beaten in five by Charlotte. October is the smallest sample in the sport and it produces conclusions that the full season does not always support.

Jorge Jaime won the AL MVP at twenty-four years old with a .355 average, forty-three home runs, and 137 RBI. He is under contract through at least next season and is the best first baseman in the American League by a margin that the Silver Slugger voters and the MVP voters independently confirmed. He will be the most important individual opponent Sacramento faces in any future playoff series against Baltimore, and the pitching approach the organization develops for facing him will be worth more than most offseason transactions.

Costodio Carro of Phoenix won the NL Cy Young at twenty-three years old with a 21-3 record, a 2.89 ERA, and 252 innings. He is the best pitcher in the National League and will almost certainly be the best pitcher Sacramento would face in a World Series. The Hot Corner notes this not to generate anxiety but to establish a baseline: if the 1994 Prayers make the World Series, the pitcher standing between them and the championship is a twenty-three-year-old with a 21-3 record and a career ahead of him. Preparation begins now.

Baltimore's David Hernandez is not healing as expected from the rotator cuff strain and will miss an additional seven weeks. A pitcher who finished second in the Cy Young vote and would have been the most dangerous arm in a potential Sacramento-Baltimore ALCS is now entering his own recovery process. Whether he returns at full capacity for 1994 is the most significant injury question in the American League this winter, and its answer will shape the pennant race in ways that no current transaction can fully anticipate.

Boston fired both their manager and their general manager. Washington fired their general manager. Detroit fired their general manager. Los Angeles fired their manager. The Hot Corner notes this wave of organizational upheaval not to celebrate the misfortune of other franchises but because the teams that replace these men will spend 1994 differently than they spent 1993, and the pennant race responds to organizational change in ways that are not always linear. Sacramento should pay attention to who takes these jobs and what they intend to do with the rosters they inherit.

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THE MAILBAG — Your questions, my opinions.


From Tom Bradley of Curtis Park, who has been a Sacramento season ticket holder since 1971 and who describes himself as someone who can watch a Rubalcava start the way other people watch sunsets — with attention, appreciation, and the understanding that not everything that beautiful lasts forever: "Did Rubalcava deserve the Cy Young?"

Tom, the analogy you have constructed is the most appropriate one available and I intend to borrow it without attribution. Yes, he deserved the Cy Young. Sixteen first-place votes from twenty-four voters is not a close decision. His 6.7 WAR led every pitcher in the American League. His WHIP of 1.04, his batting average against of .225, his 199 strikeouts against 50 walks — these are the numbers of a pitcher operating at the top of his craft across a full season. Andretti's season was worthy of serious consideration, which is why he received sixty-two points without a single first-place vote, but Rubalcava was better by the metrics that matter most and the voters, to their credit, recognized it. The sunset analogy is apt precisely because it contains the acknowledgment that things this good do not last forever. What it does not contain is the suggestion that we should watch with anything other than full attention while they are happening.

From Sarah Mitchell of East Sacramento, a pediatric nurse who listens to the Hot Corner on her commute and who wrote that the Lopez MVP loss was the first time she had genuinely argued with her car radio: "Did Lopez deserve the MVP more than Jaime?"

Sarah, arguing with a car radio is one of the more honest responses to sports broadcasting that a listener can have, and the Hot Corner accepts the implied criticism graciously. The honest answer to your question requires two honest parts. Part one: Jaime's season was legitimately great. A .355 average and forty-three home runs and 137 RBI and 125 runs on a pennant-winning team is a season that belongs in any MVP conversation regardless of who else is in the field. Part two: Lopez's season, evaluated by the full range of metrics, was the more complete individual performance. The FBL single-season runs record. An 8.0 WAR. Forty-five home runs and sixty stolen bases from the same player in the same season. The difference between their vote totals — eighty points — reflects the weight voters gave to Baltimore winning the pennant, and that is a legitimate consideration even if it is not the one the Hot Corner would have weighted most heavily. Lopez was not robbed. Jaime was not undeserving. It was a genuinely close call between two historic seasons, and the four voters who put Lopez first were not wrong to do so.

From Hiroshi Nakamura of Rancho Cordova, who attended the final home game of the regular season on September 30th and who described Musco's walk-off double in the ninth inning as the moment he decided to buy season tickets for 1994: "Three Silver Sluggers from one team — how do we think about this offense going forward?"

Hiroshi, the decision to buy season tickets was made at the correct moment. The three Silver Sluggers — Lopez, Musco, Cruz — represent the productive core of a lineup that is now locked in contractually in two of its three components. Lopez through 1998. Cruz through 1996. Musco approaching the final chapters of a career that has already produced a WAR of 52.0 with Sacramento, which is third in franchise history behind only Swift and Iniguez. The offense going forward is in better shape than the first-round exit might suggest, for the simple reason that its three best contributors are under thirty-one years old collectively, with Lopez at twenty-four and Cruz at twenty-five giving the lineup a foundation that the organization can build around rather than replace. The walk-off double you watched was Musco at thirty-three playing the best baseball of his Sacramento tenure. The season tickets you bought will see that version of him for at least one more year, possibly two. That is worth attending.

From David Morrison of Land Park, a high school history teacher who has used the 1993 Sacramento season as a classroom case study in the difference between process and outcome — a distinction he says his students understand better through baseball than through any other framework: "What does this team need to do to win the World Series in 1994?"

David, the classroom application of process versus outcome is exactly right and I suspect your students are learning something about October that most adults learn too late. What this team needs to do in 1994 to win the World Series is the following, in order of importance. First: keep Rubalcava healthy. Everything begins and ends there. A healthy Rubalcava is the best pitcher in this league and the foundation on which any October run is built. Second: re-sign Andretti before the contract year conversation becomes a negotiation under pressure. The rotation that can win a seven-game series in October requires both of them at full capacity. Third: commit unconditionally to the bullpen hierarchy that the 1993 second half established — Dodge closes, Gutierrez sets up, Prieto contributes in defined lower-leverage situations. The blown save in Game 1 of the Division Series was not evidence against this arrangement. It was evidence that closers sometimes give up home runs and that the correct response is to continue deploying the best available closer in the ninth inning regardless of outcome variance. Fourth: develop the depth that September injuries exposed, and the draft capital from the Lopez supplemental pick and the Nashville trade creates the opportunity to begin doing exactly that. The process for building a championship team is intact. The outcome in October depends on whether the organization executes that process in the winter, before the season begins.

______________________________

That is the 1993 Sacramento Prayers season, in full. One hundred and five wins. A division title — the twenty-second in franchise history. A Cy Young Award for the best pitcher in the American League. Two Silver Sluggers worth of MVP votes. A first-round playoff exit that will inform every decision this organization makes between now and February. The Hot Corner has covered every development from the first exhibition box score to the final transaction filing, and what this program can say with confidence is that the 1993 Sacramento Prayers were a great team that did not win the championship, which is the most honest sentence available and also the one that most urgently demands a response.

The response will come in spring training. The response will come in the draft. The response will come when Andretti's contract situation resolves one way or another, and when Alonzo signs the extension that both parties appear to want, and when Garcia arrives in camp to be evaluated, and when Lopez takes his first at-bat of 1994 wearing the uniform he will wear through 1998. The Hot Corner will be there for all of it. We will be watching, and arguing, and occasionally being wrong, and trying always to tell you the truth about what we see.

Thank you for listening. See you in February.


Got a question for the mailbag? Find the Hot Corner wherever you get your podcasts.

______________________________
Claude Playball is a baseball insider and analyst and host of the Hot Corner podcast, based in Sacramento, California.
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