Sunday's MLB Preview

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LOKI
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Sunday's MLB Preview

And so Interleague play marches on into Sunday?s lineup. Diving right into the 15-game fray is a highly touted pitchers duel between the Mets? Johan Santana and Yankees starter, A.J. Burnett.

Mets at Yankees ? 1:05 p.m. EDT

Every time the Mets? Johan Santana (8-3, 2.39 ERA) takes his turn in the rotation either bettors cringe at the inflated money line figure or backers hope to collect on the club?s inadequacies. In eight wins this season, profits have stayed above the $100 dollar mark (on a $100 bet), currently staying put at +181. But there has been some reason for concern. Santana was tagged for five earned runs in his last appearance as a $1.48 favorite against division rival, Philadelphia. Despite the win, Santana has now surrendered an average of 3.7 runs per game in the last three compared to the unstoppable, 1.1 runs per game allowed in the first nine starts.

As for the Yankees? A.J. Burnett (4-3, 4.89), a 2.2 inning, 84 pitch outing against the Red Sox on Tuesday was embarrassing from a performance standpoint and frustrating for those backing New York. In his last six outings, Burnett is 2-3 in the record books. And the results haven?t been spectacular in Yankee Stadium where the 10-year vet is just 1-1 in his last six home starts. We?re talking about a starting pitcher who?s been listed as a favorite of minus-160 or more six times in the last 10 and who?s been posted in the minus-200 range three times this season. But at the end of the day, backers should consider themselves lucky that the money line figure is still in the black at plus-88 before heading into Sunday?s contest.

Take into account that the Yankees have been demoralized against southpaw pitching recently. In just the last 10 games, the Pinstripes are batting .183, scoring 4.4 runs per nine innings. This pales in comparison to the same team that ranks fourth best in the league, scoring 99 runs and batting .296 versus lefties on the season. But overall, the Yanks are swinging under the radar these days, totaling a .222 BA from both sides of the plate.

And so the ?under? is 4-1-1 in the Yankees last six. The Mets compliment this angle by going 4-2 on the ?under? in their last six road games.

Boston at Philadelphia ? 1:35 p.m. EDT

Opening books as a $1.35 visiting favorite, Boston is now in the AL East drivers? seat. Why? After sweeping the Yanks in Fenway for the seventh straight ?W? against their rival in series play, taking nine of the last 11 and receiving magnificent pitching in the last 10 games (2.49 ERA), the Red Sox are riding a wave of momentum.

Boston?s Josh Beckett (7-2, 3.77) has thrown two shutouts in his last two starts and three in the last four outings. And if that?s not impressive enough then how about allowing one hit in the 7-0 shutout win against the Yankees on Tuesday and two hits surrendered in the 10-5 whooping against Detroit last week? All in all, Becket has given up 15 hits in the last five games (three hits per game!). And the best part of all; books have set his price to over minus-150 just twice in the last nine starts. There is some value to be had.


Now Philly is no slouch. But when paired up against the Red Sox, the results have been less then flattering. The Phillies are 3-14 in their last 17 head-to-head games and 1-6 in the last seven games alone.

Keeping up with current times has Philadelphia batting .236 in the last 10. A 6-4 ?under? record has been the result of the offensive problems coupled with a pitching staff actually bucking the seasonal trend. To be more clear, the Phillies? starting staff owns a 5.69 ERA. But in just the last 10 days, that same staff (including the pen) has improved drastically, tossing a 2.75 ERA.

Reliever turned starter, J.A. Happ (4-0, 2.98) will look to continue the team?s success off the mound. Happ did fumble somewhat in his last start against the Mets (giving up six hits and four runs in 5.1 innings) but the no decision kept the slingers? record at a perfect 4-0.

Boston enters Sunday?s throw down garnering an impressive 22-6-2 ?under? record in its last 30 games, an 8-2 performance in the last 10 road games and again, hitting the ?under? eight times in its last 11 interleague contests. For the Phillies, the ?under? has been red hot at 14-3-1 in the last 18 interleague games, 9-3 in their last 12 as an underdog and 14-5-1 in their last 20. All roads are pointing to another ?under? play despite books lowering that figure to nine runs.

Extra Innings

-- ESPN Sunday Night Baseball will get underway at 8:05 p.m. EDT. Cleveland and St. Louis are the two teams scheduled to take the field with most books listing the Indians as $1.06 home favorites.

-- Cliff Lee (3-6, 3.17) will represent the left-handed arm for the Tribe. Allowing 1.9 runs per game in his last 10 starts should have paved the way for a much better record then 2-4 but at the same token the offense has only supplied support of 3.7 runs per game.

-- The ?under? is 7-3 in Lee?s last 10 starts despite hitting the ?over? in the last two games. In the last six home starts, Lee is 5-1 on the ?under?. When coming off a no decision in the last eight games (overlapping into games played in the 2008 season), Lee is 5-3 on the ?under?.

-- The Indians as a team are 8-2-1 on the ?under? in their last 11 interleague games and 9-4 in the record books in their last 13 home games.

-- The Cardinals are looking to Chris Carpenter (4-0, 1.23) for the win. Coming back to baseball after tearing his oblique in April, Carpenter hasn?t missed a beat. On June 4 against Cincinnati, the right-hander recorded his 26th career complete game. On the season, Carpenter hasn?t surrendered more then three runs in any one outing. This is a guy who?s already thrown four games without giving up a run and is in control of a devastating 0.70 WHIP on the season. The ?under? is 4-2-1 in his last seven thanks to the holding off the bats in opposing lineups.

-- The problem with backing St. Louis is its 2-6 performance in the last eight. During the six defeats, the Cards have been responsible for scoring 2.5 runs per game. Despite this an abnormality is occurring. For batters who have logged in over 20 plate appearances, St. Louis? batting order has come together for a .301 BA. This includes Colby Rasmus? BA of .469 and Rick Ankiel socking the ball for a .326 BA. The drastic reduction comes from the team swinging at flies, going for a .219 BA in the last seven defeats.

-- The Cards are 2-7 in their last nine head-to-head games.
 

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LOKI
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Sunday's streaking and slumping starting pitchers

Sunday's streaking and slumping starting pitchers

Sunday's streaking and slumping starting pitchers

Streaking

Josh Johnson (Florida Marlins)

He'll be opposed by Florida's Josh Johnson (5-1, 2.73), who's looking for his third win in four starts and is among the NL leaders in ERA.

The right-hander outpitched Roy Halladay with 5 2-3 innings of one-run ball to win his only start against Toronto 4-1 on June 18, 2006. He'll face a struggling Blue Jays lineup, as manager Cito Gaston has been forced to make changes with his team's batting average dipping from .292 to .278 over the last 24 games.

Josh Beckett (Boston Red Sox)

Beckett (7-2, 3.77 ERA) hasn't allowed an earned run in his last two starts.

Beckett allowed only an infield hit while striking out eight in six innings of a 7-0 win over the New York Yankees on Tuesday. He's given up five runs - one earned - and struck out 30 while going 3-0 over his last four starts.

"He's been rolling," third baseman Mike Lowell told the Red Sox's official Web site. "He's answered the bell - what you come to expect out of an ace. That, and some."

The right-hander is 5-0 with a 1.70 ERA in his last seven starts after going 2-2 with a 7.22 ERA in his first five.

"It's a work in progress," Beckett said. "We're taking care of stuff we need to take care of."

Beckett has taken care of the Phillies in his career, going 8-3 with a 3.79 ERA in 16 starts. He's won his last three versus Philadelphia but faces the club for the first time since 2006.

Slumping

Billy Buckner (Arizona Diamondbacks)

Billy Buckner (2-2, 6.75) will take the mound for Arizona hoping to bounce back from his worst start of the season.

After going 2-1 with a 2.95 ERA in his first three games since being moved into the rotation, the right-hander was tagged for career highs of eight runs and 13 hits in a 9-4 loss to San Francisco on Tuesday.

Buckner, who has a 12.27 ERA in five games - two starts - at home this year, has never faced the Astros.

Dontrelle Willis (Detroit Tigers)

The Tigers will turn to Dontrelle Willis (1-3, 6.60), who is looking to get his first victory since yielding one hit in 6 1-3 innings of a 4-0 win over Texas on May 19.

The left-hander, on the disabled list with an anxiety disorder until last month, hasn't come close to that since, going 0-3 with an 8.53 ERA and 16 walks in 19 innings over four starts.

Willis, though, showed some improvement while laboring through five innings Tuesday, allowing three runs and five hits with five walks on 105 pitches in a 7-6, 10-inning win over the Chicago White Sox.

"I've got to take my hat off to him," Tigers manager Jim Leyland told the team's official Web site. "This guy competes so hard. It's kind of a tough situation to manage right now. He wouldn't come out. I couldn't tell you how happy I was with the way he competed. I think the guys love him. I think they appreciate the way he goes about his business."

Willis is 2-4 with a 2.96 ERA in eight starts against the Pirates, whom he hasn't faced since 2007 while pitching for the Florida Marlins.
 

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Ballpark beat: AT&T Park

Ballpark beat: AT&T Park

Ballpark beat: AT&T Park

You might have a hard time convincing those who had to face Barry Bonds, but AT&T Park has historically been a safe place for pitchers.

The first privately financed Major League ballpark since 1962, the home of the San Francisco Giants has been somewhat of a haven for hurlers since it opened in 2000.

Despite a right field corner of just 309 feet that Bonds often exploited during his quest for the all-time home run record, the outfield brick wall is 24 feet high - a nod to former Giants great Willie Mays, who wore No. 24 - and sharply angles outward to a challenging distance of 421 feet in right-center field.

This area is known as "Triples Alley" and has an impact on the number and type of extra-base hits over the course of a season. In a three-year span from 2004-06, AT&T Park was 22nd in homer home-road differential at minus 18.7 per season. And last year, the venue was last in homers per game at 1.48.

AT&T Park has consistently ranked in the bottom third of the major leagues in home run rate among all ballparks. In 2007, AT&T Park was 24th in home run rate, but sixth in triples and 10th in doubles. Last year, it was 13th in home run rate - its best showing ever - while ranking second in triples and third in two-base hits.

This year, AT&T Park's home run rate of .617 is dead last but ranks ninth in triples and 10th in doubles. (Home run rate is the number of homers hit by both teams in home games divided by the number of homers hit by both teams in road games.)

Ironically, the venue has become less favorable to the pitcher since 2005, when Bonds began a string of three injury-shortened campaigns to end his career. AT&T Park's run rate has moved from 21st in 2005 to 16th in 2006 to 17th in 2007 to 11th in 2008. It ranks 12th this season.

Obviously, other factors were involved, such as San Francisco's pitching staff and the quality of hitters in its lineup. But it seems off that the dropoff by one of the game's greatest run producers led to an increase in run production in his home park.

This is all well and good and makes for interesting discussion. But the bigger question is whether AT&T Park has an established scoring trend that can help the bettor.

The over is 12-12-2 in games at AT&T Park this year, a nice resting point for a ballpark that has been on the seesaw the last several seasons. The over was 43-36-2 last year but 34-44-3 in 2007. It was 41-36-4 in 2006 but 33-42-6 in 2005.

There's less fluctuation but no more of a trend when the Giants hit the road. Over the last three-plus seasons, the over is 129-135-10 when San Francisco is the visitor.

The only discernible trend is the one we have illustrated regarding AT&T Park: The Giants play in significantly lower-scoring games when at home.

This year, San Francisco's home games average 8.096 runs while its road games average 8.172, a difference of 0.076 per game. The differential was .377 in 2008, .327 in 2007 and .487 in 2006.

The latter represents nearly one-half run per game, a hefty difference that - based on the over-under records - the handicappers obviously have taken into account.

The conclusion is that totals bets at AT&T Park are very much like homers to right-center field: There's no gimmes.
 

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LOKI
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Hot lines: Sunday's best MLB bets

Hot lines: Sunday's best MLB bets

Hot lines: Sunday's best MLB bets

Boston Red Sox at Philadelphia Phillies (+119, 9)

Josh Beckett might be the last person the Philadelphia Phillies want to see on the mound Sunday.

Looking for a sixth straight winning decision, Beckett tries to help the Boston Red Sox record a sixth consecutive victory and a series sweep of the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park.

As if Philadelphia (35-25) hasn't endured enough in this set, it must face Beckett (7-2, 3.77 ERA), who hasn't allowed an earned run in his last two starts. The reigning World Series champion Phillies haven't been swept in a three-game series this season.

After a 5-2, 13-inning victory in Friday's series opener between these division leaders, Boston (38-24) won 11-6 on Saturday.

The Red Sox are 22-14 versus the Phillies and have won 10 of their last 12 at Philadelphia. Boston has also won 10 of its last 12 overall, and its six straight victories away from home are its most since a seven-game run from June 12-26, 2005.

Pick: Boston -127

St. Louis Cardinals at Cleveland Indians (-106, 7.5)

On Sunday night in Cleveland, the pitcher with the best interleague winning percentage will square off with the hitter with the best average in interleague play. The other starter is also a former Cy Young Award winner.

There will be plenty of intrigue when the Indians send Cliff Lee to the mound to face Albert Pujols, Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals.

Lee (3-6, 3.17 ERA) has already doubled his loss total from last year's Cy Young Award-winning season, but the Indians usually don't lose when he faces the NL. He is 11-2 with a 3.42 ERA in 19 career interleague outings, and that .846 winning percentage is the best for any pitcher with at least 12 decisions.

Cleveland (28-36) is 14-5 in the left-hander's interleague starts, and Lee is 5-0 with a 3.62 ERA in eight career home starts versus NL foes. He has faced the Cardinals (34-29) once, earning a 10-3 road win on June 26, 2006, by giving up two runs over six innings.

That marks the only time Lee has pitched to Pujols, who went 1 for 2 with a walk. The St. Louis superstar is the all-time leader in interleague batting average at .355 (155 for 437) with 30 homers and 100 RBIs.

"He's a special player," Cleveland manager Eric Wedge said. "He's probably the best hitter in the game right now. That's not something you say very lightly."

Wedge is speaking from experience after the Indians failed to contain Pujols on Saturday when he recorded his 27th multihomer game and fourth this season with two solo shots in a 3-1 victory. The reigning NL MVP also homered Friday night and is 7 for 16 with four homers and six RBIs in his last four games after breaking an 0-for-14 streak.

Pick: St. Louis -102
 
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