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Post by AztecBill on May 2, 2013 9:09:03 GMT -8
Erlin got called upon again and pitched a scoreless inning. Two ground ball outs and a strikeout. 12 pitches with 9 strikes.
Brad Boxberger recalled from Tucson and Erlin returned. Erlin is the youngest player on that team.
It is nice that he got to redeem himself. It would be tough getting one chance and having failure.
Here is how one Padre minor league writer saw his debut:
Finally saw the Robbie Erlin inning. Really weird and fun to watch. Far from himself. Didn't have feel for anything. Debuts are the best.
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2013 22:12:09 GMT -8
Erlin sent back down to the minors. He appeared in 2 games and gave up 2 earned runs. Pretty lame of the Padres to demote him considering what a small sample size they had to analyze.
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Post by I Enjoy Aztecs Basketball on May 5, 2013 21:21:26 GMT -8
Erlin sent back down to the minors. He appeared in 2 games and gave up 2 earned runs. Pretty lame of the Padres to demote him considering what a small sample size they had to analyze. Ohhhhh. You're just a troll. That's a relief.
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Post by AztecBill on May 6, 2013 9:54:44 GMT -8
Erlin sent back down to the minors. He appeared in 2 games and gave up 2 earned runs. Pretty lame of the Padres to demote him considering what a small sample size they had to analyze. He was called up to fill the role he played. Nothing lame about it. It is good for a young pitcher to get a feel of the show before he is promoted to assume a starting role. It will help him in the long run. Not only now by giving him a better feel for what he needs to work on but in the future when he is called upon. This short trip will make his next promotion not as gut wrenching. He started Yesterday for Tucson 5 Innings 2 Hits 0 Walks 0 Runs 3 Strikouts 1 WIN His little foray into the big leagues didn't seem to hurt him much. Nothing lame about it.
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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2013 11:16:18 GMT -8
Erlin sent back down to the minors. He appeared in 2 games and gave up 2 earned runs. Pretty lame of the Padres to demote him considering what a small sample size they had to analyze. He was called up to fill the role he played. Nothing lame about it. It is good for a young pitcher to get a feel of the show before he is promoted to assume a starting role. It will help him in the long run. Not only now by giving him a better feel for what he needs to work on but in the future when he is called upon. This short trip will make his next promotion not as gut wrenching. He started Yesterday for Tucson 5 Innings 2 Hits 0 Walks 0 Runs 3 Strikouts 1 WIN His little foray into the big leagues didn't seem to hurt him much. Nothing lame about it. SSS
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Post by AztecBill on May 6, 2013 11:28:29 GMT -8
He was called up to fill the role he played. Nothing lame about it. It is good for a young pitcher to get a feel of the show before he is promoted to assume a starting role. It will help him in the long run. Not only now by giving him a better feel for what he needs to work on but in the future when he is called upon. This short trip will make his next promotion not as gut wrenching. He started Yesterday for Tucson 5 Innings 2 Hits 0 Walks 0 Runs 3 Strikouts 1 WIN His little foray into the big leagues didn't seem to hurt him much. Nothing lame about it. SSS You are learning. If my point was that it proved he was that good that would have been a good point.
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Post by AztecBill on May 6, 2013 13:52:36 GMT -8
You are learning. If my point was that it proved he was that good that would have been a good point. Bill, I'm asking you because you'd seem to know best. It seems to me that AA ball is tougher than AAA. Am I right? If so, they should be sending these "prospects" back to double-A. The reason I ask is because it seems like over the last few years the biggest stars have basically jumped AAA, going straight to the bigs from AA. Maybe I just notice these "class jumps" more nowadays because there's so much more media today than there was even a couple decades ago. The Padres "AAA" and the Pacific Coast League in general is a big hitters league. It is sometimes hard to fairly judge both hitting and pitching talent in that league. "AA" is more fair. Young players who break into the majors at 22 and 23 years of age often never get to "AAA". The players who make the majors at those ages are often the stars of the future. "AAA" usually has older prospects (James Darnell) and spare parts (Tim Stauffer) . They typically don't have the players that will be the big stars. Players that make the majors at 25 or 26 are in "AAA" Erlin is an exception at 22, he could still be in "AA" - which is more age appropriate. I don't know if that answers your question or not...it is what I know.
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Post by AztecBill on May 14, 2013 12:42:09 GMT -8
Since Erlin moved back to "AAA" he has pitched 10.2 innings giving up 1 run. Lowering his ERA to 3.00.
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Post by Deleted on May 14, 2013 13:10:55 GMT -8
Since Erlin moved back to "AAA" he has pitched 10.2 innings giving up 1 run. Lowering his ERA to 3.00. SSS
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Post by AztecBill on May 14, 2013 13:25:20 GMT -8
Since Erlin moved back to "AAA" he has pitched 10.2 innings giving up 1 run. Lowering his ERA to 3.00. SSS It shows your SSS was just that. Now this not quite so S a SS shows a lot better numbers. If you were concerned with 13 innings of 4.72 ERA, does 23 innings at 3.00 make you feel better about him or have you learned the SSS lesson?
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Post by AztecBill on Jun 3, 2013 14:53:07 GMT -8
Robby Erlin gets called up again and the Padres get their first win of the season with that spot (Richard's spot) in the rotation starting.
6.2 innings 2 Runs
That reduces his overall 2013 MLB ERA to 4.15. His 2013 "AAA" ERA in 8 starts is 3.79.
He was recalled because Richard pitched 2 innings in the Padres 17 inning win. Erlin is now back in "AAA".
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