Felger: Get ready for Andrew Bailey to be shoved down your throat
The Boston Red Sox opened their 2024 season against the Seattle Mariners with a split of a four-game series. One of the bright spots for the Red Sox was their starting pitching, which on paper is one of their weakest areas. On Monday’s Felger and Mazz, Felger gave his thoughts on how new pitching coach Andrew Bailey and how he thinks Red Sox fans will be shoving him in our faces all season long.
Is Andrew Bailey the Red Sox pitching savior?
Felger: I think Andrew Bailey, this new pitching coach, get ready to be sick to death of listening to guys like Milliken and the Red Sox people shove Andrew Bailey down your throat. Get ready for it.
Mazz: Yeah, I hope it works. And I say, hope it works. The starters, one third of their pitches were fastballs.
Felger: I mean, it was a completely different approach. It was a noticeable approach. Again what Mazz is talking about, they were throwing all junk, all off-speed stuff until Whitlock made an adjustment in like the third inning yesterday and then started throwing more fastballs. But either way, the weakness of the team, the part of the team that we thought was going to fall apart, all performed, all delivered, there is a distinct approach. Guys are throwing new pitches, including the bullet slider, the gyro slider, whatever! We saw that yesterday and it’s like, get ready for Andrew Bailey to be shoved down your throat as like some sort of miracle worker savior. And that’s already starting to bug me. But oh, by the way, you did see results from it this weekend, didn’t you?
Mazz: Yes.
Felger: I like the hesitation in your voice. Yes, but….
Mazz: You think he can pitch while you’re doing that? And when I say that.
Felger: Whitlock, you mean?
Mazz: All of them? That’s a lot of torque on those arms that have injury history. A lot of torque, a lot of torque. I don’t know if it can hold up. My hope is that that this was a one series thing, because Sean McAdam had an item today that they deemed Seattle to be a good fastball hitting team so they did the opposite. Fine. Good. I’m okay with that if it’s a series to series thing. If you’re going to do it all year, you think Tanner Houck’s arm is going to hold up doing that, or Garrett Whitlock’s arm is going to hold up, alright, or any of the rest of them. Bello? I have my doubts. And by the way, Bello’s best pitch is a two seam fastball. Ditto for Whitlock. So now you’re going to go the whole year and throw it one third of the time?
Felger: Well just watching that game early it felt like Whitlock was at 85 miles an hour the whole day. Until again he started throwing more fastballs a little bit later to get strikeouts.
Mazz: He also threw 61 pitches in the first three innings.
Felger: I think it was 49 in the first two.
Mazz: So you’re not going anywhere doing that.