July 22nd, 2010
For the first time since June 28th, when Fort Myers was 3-2 to start the second half, the club is back above .500. Now at 13-12, they sit just three games back of St. Lucie, and are alive and kicking the FSL South race. The Miracle have won 9 of their last 12, and have been playing so well that they could have conceivably won all 12 of those games.
What has been the key for the team to turn things around in the second half after losing nine of ten games a few weeks ago? Pitching.
Both the Miracle starting staff, and even recently the bullpen, have been outstanding. In their last 13 games, going back to a 7-6 loss against St. Lucie, the Miracle starting staff has been the best in the league. And this is without perhaps their best pitcher, Liam Hendriks, who went down with an appendectomy. Unfortunately Fort Myers has also lost Bobby Lanigan, who was promoted to Double-A, but there are still plenty of quality arms in this rotation.
Let’s take a closer look at the starting pitching during this stretch:
7/8 vs. St. Lucie (L) – Bobby Lanigan – 6IP, 1ER
7/9 vs. St. Lucie

– Dan Osterbrock – 6IP,
0ER
7/10 vs. Jupiter

– Michael Tarsi – 5IP,
0ER (1-0 shutout win)
7/11 vs. Jupiter (L) – Bruce Pugh – 2.2IP, 4ER
7/12 vs. Jupiter

– Santos Arias – 9IP, 2ER
7/14 vs. Daytona

– Bobby Lanigan – 6IP,
0ER
7/15 vs. Daytona (L) – Dan Osterbrock – 4.2IP, 4ER
7/16 vs. Daytona

– Bruce Pugh – 6IP, 2ER
7/17 vs. Daytona

– Santos Arias – 5IP,
0ER
7/18 vs. Lakeland

– Michael Tarsi – 6IP,
0ER (1-0 shutout win)
7/19 vs. Lakeland (L) – Matt Williams – 5IP, 0H, 0ER (first start since 2008)
7/20 vs. Lakeland

– Dan Osterbrock – 8IP, 1ER
7/21 vs. Lakeland

– Kane Holbrooks – 5IP, 4ER (FSL debut, had no hitter through 4IP)
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During the stretch – 74.1IP, 18 ER = 2.18 starters ERA
So of the last 13 games, Miracle starters have tossed shutouts in almost half (6). They’ve allowed two earned runs or less in 10 of the last 13. That’s going to win you a ton of ballgames.
How does the bullpen stack up during that stretch – let’s go with the last 12 games instead of 13 because they allowed 6 runs in that July 8th game against St. Lucie….since then…
7/9 vs. St. Lucie – 3IP, ER (Joe Testa)
7/10 vs. Jupiter – 4IP, 0ER (Steve Blevins)
7/11 vs. Jupiter – 6.1IP, 0ER (3.1 Dakota Watts, 1.0 Shooter Hunt, 2.0 Michael Allen)
7/12 vs. Jupiter – Arias Complete Game – 0IP
7/14 vs. Daytona – 3IP, 2ER (Matt Williams)
7/15 vs. Daytona – 3.1IP, 0ER (2.1Testa, 1.0 Blevins)
7/16 vs. Daytona – 3IP, 1ER (1.0 Tarsi (ER), 1.0 Hunt, 1.0 Allen)
7/17 vs. Daytona – 4IP, 4ER (2.0 Watts (4ER), 2.0 Testa)
7/18 vs. Lakeland – 3IP, 0ER (2.1 Blevins, 0.2 Allen)
7/19 vs. Lakeland – 4IP, ER (0.1 Hunt (ER), 2.2 Watts, 1.0 Allen)
7/20 vs. Lakeland – 3IP, 0ER (Testa)
7/21 vs. Lakeland – 4IP, 0ER (0.2 Hunt, 3.1 Blevins)
———————————-
40.2 IP, 7ER = 1.56 bullpen ERA
That’s a lot of zeros.
Since they blew a five run lead on the 8th, the bullpen has not blown a single game, and have a minuscule 1.56 ERA. Compare that to the bullpen’s full season ERA of 4.31 — big difference.
Guys really on a roll:
Allen – 4.2IP, 2H, 0ER, 5K
Blevins – 11.2IP, 11H, 0ER, 5K
Testa – 10.1IP, 11H, ER, 12K
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Let’s not forgot about the offense though. The pitching has carried this team, but the lineup has been getting it done. Including last Monday’s 7-2 win over Jupiter, the Miracle have scored 51 runs in their last 9 games, and that included only three runs being scored in the first three games against Lakeland. That’s an average of 5.7 runs per game. Compare that to the season average of 3.7 runs per game. It doesn’t seem like a lot, but the extra two runs are crucial. In games where the Miracle score three runs or less, their record is 14-39. Four runs or more? 27-15.
Who’s leading the charge? You have to start with University of Minnesota product Nate Hanson. Heading into his third at-bat in the series against Daytona, Hanson was 3 for his last 20. Since then, he’s 11-for-28 (.393), with three home run’s (including two 3-run bombs), and 11 RBI’s. Hanson has been the hero in the last two series. Against Daytona, he clubbed a monster 3-run homer with the Miracle trailing 2-1 in the sixth inning of game three. Then added a solo shot in the 8th inning of that game. The next night he whacked another three-run bomb to give him a team-leading 7 on the year. He had 3 last year in Low-A. Oh, did I mention he had the game-winning hit in Tuesday’s 2-1 11th inning walk-off victory? Talk about being locked in. He’s on fire — somebody get a bucket of water.
Before that game against Jupiter, the Miracle were dead last in the league in home run’s with only 24. Well, there still tied for last, but at least they have 32 now after an 8 home run week. In addition to Hanson’s three, Drew Thompson had two, and Deibinson Romero, Brian Dozier, and Evan Bigley all had one.
No one else’s production stands out quite as much as Hanson’s in the last week or so — but that’s just fine. More importantly, scoring has been a team effort. That’s how you win long stretches of games. With the whole lineup contributing. Last night’s monster 13-4 win over Lakeland was a classic example. Every player, 1-thru-9, had at least one hit in the game, and eight of nine had at least one RBI.
Now that’s what I’m talking about.
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Let’s hope both the Miracle pitching and offense continues on this roll. This is the time of year to start getting hot. If the team can carry this type of play for another fews weeks, they could really sneak up on this division. Larry Benesse, who’s in his 12th season as the Miracle trainer, told me the other day that the final two weeks of July is where teams make or break their season.
Another week like the last week and the Miracle might not be sneaking up on the division, they may very well be in the conversation. And that’s all you can ask for this time of year…