April 12, 201214 yr For those who are concerned about JJ due to his 2 rough starts, consider this... The league worst ERA among all starting pitchers is owned by none other than Tim Lincecum (12.91). JJ should be able to iron things out in his next start at home against the Cubs...
April 12, 201214 yr He supposedly changed his offseason workout routine. I wonder if that is having an effect?
April 12, 201214 yr I'm officially hitting the panic button with JJ...he hasn't thrown a pitch aboe 94 MPH all season long...
April 12, 201214 yr Where's ol' Admin B been? We really haven't heard to much from him. I figured he would be commenting on JJ's struggles at some point
April 12, 201214 yr Give it a rest. He's working his way back after surgery and it'll likely be a month before he touches 98 on the radar gun. Last night was cold and dank....not the kind of weather for JJ to push things. The only thing I'm the slightest bit concerned is that ball that caromed off him in the third inning, after which he lost it. I just hope he wasn't dumb and didn't say anything to the trainer if that area was bothering him.
April 12, 201214 yr Give it a rest. He's working his way back after surgery and it'll likely be a month before he touches 98 on the radar gun. Last night was cold and dank....not the kind of weather for JJ to push things. The only thing I'm the slightest bit concerned is that ball that caromed off him in the third inning, after which he lost it. I just hope he wasn't dumb and didn't say anything to the trainer if that area was bothering him. Did he actually get surgery, though? I've never gotten that confirmed ...
April 12, 201214 yr I wouldn't start to be worried for at least another five starts, but it's not out of the question to assume that something might be wrong with him. The way the Marlins handled him last season (at least publicly) seemed pretty sketchy to me. They kept reassuring that everyone that there was no major structural damage and yet he pretty much missed the entire year. They also kept teasing with possible returns (first it was July, then August, then September), but ended up shutting him down. It's still a little early, but to confidently say that there is nothing to be concerned about is pretty silly.
April 12, 201214 yr His velocity seems fine. Just isn't locating his pitches with good precision. This is wrong. Now is this decline in velocity permanent? Maybe not. We'll see after a couple of more starts. But his fastball didn't have the bite it usually does.
April 17, 201214 yr Maybe this little thing will make all the difference. South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com Tap is back: Johnson corrects timing mechanism Josh Johnson (0-2, 8.38) corrected a flaw in his timing mechanism that he believes was at the root of his early issues. By Juan C. Rodriguez, Sun Sentinel 5:43 PM EDT, April 16, 2012 Here was the conundrum facing Josh Johnson: Physically, he felt great even though his stat lines screamed lousy. Nothing hurt, but something wasn't quite right and precluding him from achieving free and easy. The tap. The tap! It's such a subtle part of his delivery that Johnson didn't even realize he'd abandoned it. Before he throws, Johnson taps the ball into his glove. For some inexplicable reason he stopped doing it. "It's frustrating because I didn't catch it before, but that's part of it," Johnson said. "Sometimes you miss some things and you have to work through some stuff and battle through it. The bullpen session [last week] was a lot better. Everything was just easier. Everything just happened instead of me forcing it to happen." Friday, Johnson was already on the field playing catch, reminding himself to get his hands started, when pitching coach Randy St. Claire approached him. He saw the same thing on video and pointed it out. Could it be that simple? Does the missing tap explain 0-2, an 8.38 ERA and less zip on the fastball? Johnson thinks so. "That had a lot to do with it, with not feeling quite there," Johnson said. "Everything feels good, but not quite there. The ball is just a hair up, maybe an inch or so. That's why balls are getting through instead of being a little bit softer groundballs. "I'm getting the groundballs I need. I'm not really getting ahead, but that was a big part of it. It's one of those things I don't realize that I do…I was taking the ball straight out of the glove and going straight from there, which is starting and stopping straight from nothing and going…It's been tough to get that rhythm. Hopefully that will kick start me." Through two outings Johnson has allowed a .488 batting average on balls in play. That's astronomically high and suggests plenty of bad luck. From 2009-'11, his BABIP was .290, .297 and .239, respectively, according to Fangraphs. Johnson was right in that he's generating enough grounders. His groundball rate is 51.2 percent. Last season it was 51.0 percent. One number that's eyebrow-raising is his line drive percentage. It's up to 36.6 percent compared to 14.8 percent in 2011 and 20.6 percent in 2010. Catcher John Buck isn't alarmed, saying: "He wasn't leaving his stuff up. He's wasn't hanging it. They just happen to hit it through the cracks. Nobody really put good swings on him. It was the last little oomph, 96 or 97 compared to 93. It is that little added bit to where the jam job maybe blows up the guy's bat or the slider has a little more bite to it. "There is that last little bit to come before he is the old Josh Johnson. I feel even now, not the first game but the second outing, he pitched good enough to win. He just didn't have luck on his side and we didn't put any runs up for him." Johnson expressed zero concern about sitting at 91-93 miles per hour with his fastball instead of his usual 94-96. Through two starts, Fangraphs has Johnson's average heater at 92.7 mph. Each of the last three seasons that figure registered between 94.0 and 94.9. "I think that timing [mechanism] had something to do with it," Johnson said. "I wasn't really unsure when I was pitching, but it didn't feel right, that feeling of everything working and in sync was just off." Added Buck: "The first thing you back off when things aren't there is your velocity because you'd rather locate. [Hitters] were able to fight and stay in the count more. It was there occasionally. It's sputtering to show up…He's too hard of a worker and too good. It's two games. When he's 15-2 in September we'll all laugh at this." jcrodriguez@tribune.com or @JCRMarlinsbeat on Twitter.
April 17, 201214 yr Give it a rest. He's working his way back after surgery and it'll likely be a month before he touches 98 on the radar gun. Last night was cold and dank....not the kind of weather for JJ to push things. The only thing I'm the slightest bit concerned is that ball that caromed off him in the third inning, after which he lost it. I just hope he wasn't dumb and didn't say anything to the trainer if that area was bothering him. Did he actually get surgery, though? I've never gotten that confirmed ... I asked this a few weeks ago, no one seems to know, which is odd for a such an important part of the team. If he didn't have surgery and is coming back struggling it's much more concerning.
April 17, 201214 yr Anyone old enough to remember Steve Blass who pitch for the Pirates, for a season nobody can touch him, great world series next season could not get anyone out, had to retire from baseball.
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