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In Sports
Saturday Scorecard: Frustration Station
Outfielder Geoff Jenkins and the Brewers are getting frustrated by their slump.
By Drew Olson RSS Feed
Senior Editor

E-mail author | Author bio
More articles by Drew Olson

Published June 9, 2007 at 5:52 a.m.
Tags: saturday scorecard, drew olson, matt laporta, kevin barry, hank aaron, bradley center, ben sheets, hank aaron

Welcome to Saturday Scorecard, where we wrestle with the important questions of the day such as: "Who will be responsible for more hits this weekend, the Brewers' pitching staff or Phil Leotardo's crew on "The Sopranos?"

As we wait for the highly-anticipated final episode, we offer these notes for your viewing pleasure:

Off the rails: A month ago, the Brewers capped one of the more successful homestands in franchise history with a 9-1 record that pushed their overall mark to 24-10. Since then, they've dumped 18 of 27 games, including a 9-6 loss to dreadful Texas on Friday night.

Outside of Prince Fielder, who is tied for the major-league lead in homers, and right-hander Ben Sheets, a Dallas resident who will pitch an actual "home" game tonight, just about everyone on the club has seen his production sag during the skid. The Brewers have scored three runs or fewer in 15 of their last 23 games. Outside of Sheets, who has turned in seven consecutive "quality" starts, the pitching has been sporadic.

The only thing preventing a general panic is the generosity of the National League Central, where the 33-28 Brewers still enjoy a five-game lead and are the only team with a winning record.

Manager Ned Yost is coming under fire in some circles, but it should be noted that the Brewers have scored 273 runs this season and allowed 272. Based on the Bill James' "Pythagorean" theorem -- expected winning percentage = runs scored (squared) / runs scored (squared) + runs allowed (squared) -- the Brewers should be just about .500. The Cubs, who have out-scored opponents by a 278-247 margin, should be 33-26.

Although he isn't given to tirades and public displays of frustration, Yost may be tempted to tip over the clubhouse buffet if the level of play doesn't improve quickly. It can't help that the Rangers' starting rotation has a combined ERA of 7.00.

More exposure: With Fox picking up two upcoming Brewers games for national broadcasts (June 30 vs. the Cubs and July 21 against San Francisco), FSN Wisconsin will add a broadcast Aug. 2 against the Mets and WMLW will show the first game of a day-night doubleheader July 28 in St. Louis.

Memory lane: Prior to last night, the Brewers hadn't played Texas in nearly a decade. In the most recent meeting, Aug. 27, 1997 at County Stadium, the Rangers roughed up right-hander Steve Woodard en route to a 7-1 victory.

The Brewers, who finished third with a 78-83 mark that season, posted the following starting lineup that night against lefty Darren Oliver: 1, Fernando Vina, 2b; 2, Jose Valentin, ss; 3, Jack Voigt, lf; 4, Julio Franco, dh; 5, Jeff Cirillo, 3b; 6, Mark Loretta, 1b; 7, Jeromy Burnitz, rf; 8, Gerald Williams, cf; 9, Mike Matheny, c.

Voigt, a scrappy utility player who became a fan favorite thanks in part to Matt Vasgersian's dubbing him "Captain Jack," is currently the hitting coach for the Mets Class AAA team in New Orleans.

"I've always felt comfortable coming back to Milwaukee as a coach or a scout," Voigt said Friday from Des Moines. "I've always felt something inside that one day I'll be back there doing something for the Brewers. You never know."

Marking the spot: With help from UWM civil engineering professor Alan J. Horowitz and some senior students, the Brewers erected a monument to mark the landing spot of Hank Aaron's 755th home run. A plaque has been placed in the Brewers Lot 1, just beyond the left-field wall at Helfaer Field.

"I never dreamt that I would ever come back here after 30-something years and find the spot that the home run landed," Aaron, 73, said during the dedication ceremony. "This is truly a surprise, and I am so pleased."

Trivia buffs know that Aaron's final homer came July 20 off California right-hander Dick Drago. That's more than Hammerin' Hank remembers. "I just don't remember the incident, who was on base, or whether anybody was on base," Aaron said. "When you get to the end [of a career], you never know when this is going to be the last one."

Aaron sidestepped a question about San Francisco slugger Barry Bonds closing in on the record. "I don't have any thoughts about Barry Bonds," Aaron said. "I don't even know how to spell his name."

The plaque is located just behind a parking stall. We hope that fans know not to put a charcoal grill on it during a tailgate party.

"I don't think, if it had been hit on the road, that there'd be a plaque somewhere," said Aaron, who is expected to return to Milwaukee in August for a celebration to mark the 50th anniversary of the Braves' world championship.

"It's always a pleasure to be back here in Milwaukee."

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