No off day means I am rushing to file this one in, though we're close enough where we need to step back and look at different contexts than just the equivalent of 3-4 series. That said, I think we all pretty much know what's up with this mediocre team, and it seems like the rain delay will get me some cover to slap this together before Skenes' first pitch.
Starting record: 27-32
Record over stretch: 7-5
Ending record: 34-37
Frustrations with some games aside, it was still a pretty successful stretch. It didn't do a ton in terms of separating us from other competition, but that battle is going to have to be fought against division opponents and by maintaining the 7-5 type of play, or really a game or two better, over longer stretches than 12 games.
Getting the series W against the Cardinals would have been very clutch, and missing out on a sweep due to bad bats and a bad Jones start against a weak team is another opportunity blown, though not as bad as the whole stretch of games where we blew similar opportunities a lot more often.
Still, I think the overall trend is encouraging, as 8-4 felt extremely bold and 6-6 probably would have been somehow palatable with facing the Dodgers
Looking ahead: 3 vs. CIN, 3 vs. TB (6 home) + 3 vs. CIN, 3 vs. ATL (6 road)
Time to play the Reds. Chances are, this upcoming stretch of games could be more impactful within the division, as we seek to avoid sinking too far down below the Brewers. The Brewers have a pretty easy schedule over the next few weeks, so it is going to be difficult to keep pace, but any decent performance is going to see us keep a foot close to one of the wild card spots, which is probably the realistic best case scenario. IMO the Brewers will need to go on a longish losing streak for the division to get more competitive again.
We need 8-4 this time. We have to show that we are better than the Reds (realistically a toss up, both have upside but serious warts), and the Rays are having a down year. The Braves lost Acuna and now Harris will be out, so if we get ok pitching matchups there, it shouldn't be what it usually is to face them by a long shot.
I think what 8-4 gets you is a toehold into one of the actual WC spots, which doesn't matter all that much with so many teams congregated around the same record. The Braves have a 3.5 game lead which feels like it may evaporate over the remainder of the month.
Fittingly, it starts with Skenes tonight. It would be really nice to see a healthy Cruz capitalize on the direction he was headed in- starting to hit the ball hart but a bit unlucky. The offense still feels too much like it's hot and cold even if the results over about a month have been consistent. Skenes today and Keller for game 3, you need to take this series and then figure out how to do the same vs an inferior Rays.
Again rushing here, even with the off day yesterday, but filing this one just to get it in.
Starting record: 34-37
Record over stretch: 6-6
Ending record: 40-43
Fairly simple story: we took both series vs. the Reds and lost both of the other winnable series, against the Rays and Braves. We wasted both of Skenes' starts over this stretch, during which he pitched 13 innings and allowed 2 runs, both on solo shots to start the game, while striking out 17 and further staking his claim to rookie of the year. Perhaps the only bright spot in terms of him personally from the team is that we did enough not to saddle him with losses, though it's not like pitcher losses really matter.
Otherwise, we are doing enough to keep pace with most everyone, but it's a razor thin margin and we are comfortably behind the Brewers now.
I think it's a little easy to dismiss the larger picture and say we are still in it. We're blowing a lot of winnable games, and the root cause of that is that we're a mediocre team in a sea of mediocre teams. If we had managed 2 more wins in this stretch, it wouldn't dramatically change the outlook, but it would put us neck and neck with the Cardinals as we head into this stretch.
Looking ahead: 3 vs. STL, 3 vs. NYM (6 home) + 3 vs. MIL, 3 vs. CHW (6 road)
The stage is still set for an important stretch of 12 games before the all star break. We've got Keller on the mound for a crucial series tonight, and then presumably Skenes starting the Mets series with Keller on Sunday. Combine that with these first 6 coming at home, and you need to start 4-2.
Milwaukee won't be an easy matchup, but unless Skenes is skipped, he should pitch in that series and they are a team that you can beat if you pitch well.
Optimism for more than .500 is pretty baseless at this point, given the offensive woes that always pop their head up in conjunction with at least some shakiness (especially relative to the offense) in the Jones and Falter rotation spots, to say nothing of Perez who got totally shelled and lost the game before we had a chance. That said, you pretty much need over .500 in this stretch of games, to the tun of 7-5 even if that's not really much for a team perpetually 2-3 games under .500 at best.
Having a bad White Sox team (though certainly one that is capable of winning) as the final series provides some relief, and some "flex", if it can be put that way, since a team that executes and fires on all cylinders should be able to sweep them. Teams who have swept them in the past two months or so are the Yankees, Brewers, Dodgers, Orioles, and Blue Jays, and the only team in that group I would put as our peers are the Blue Jays.
Still, 7-5 is a pretty middling baseline, given that it's attainable by winning and avoiding sweeps. I get the feeling that this Cardinals series will really set the tone. At minimum I would love to see us get them and then get some revenge against the Mets, going 4-2 or better, and maybe catch the Brewers sleeping before the break. We haven't seen this team truly put together a consistent winning stretch for 10-12 games, but if they can show something like 8-4 or even (in the most delusionaly optimistic lens possible) 9-3, then that would at least put some more pressure on the front office to put up or shut up.
At the end of the day, I will say 7-5 here at bare minimum, with 8-4 as more realistically the kind of stretch that's needed headed to the break. I'm not holding my breath that that actually happens, since it's felt like we would held in the opposite direction so many times but we've always managed to avoid that too.