As much of an Indians fanatic as I am, I wasn’t about to watch Scott Kazmir pitch at 3 a.m. on a tape delayed broadcast of Monday’s Cactus League game between the Angels and Indians. On a related note, I’m eternally grateful to the guy who invented DVR. There has been a lot of buzz about the southpaw who is trying to rectify his career after a severe velocity drop, among other things, sent him to the Atlantic League’s Sugar Land Skeeters in 2012.
After seeing Kazmir firsthand, I believe there’s cause for optimism with Kazmir. I’m not a scout, so my opinion should probably be taken with a grain of salt, but, guess what? Most people who write baseball articles are not scouts either. They’re people like me who watch a lot of baseball.
First, some background on Kazmir, who, once upon a time, was a very good pitcher in the Major Leagues. From 2005-2008, Kazmir won 45 games, had a 3.51 ERA and struck out 9.68 batters per nine innings. From 2009-2011, as Kazmir’s velocity dropped into the mid-80s, the high walk rate he used to be able to work around because of swing-and-miss stuff started to catch up with him. He pitched only 299 innings and posted a 5.41 ERA.
Rather than sulk and fall into oblivion, Kazmir focused on regaining lost velocity and cleaning up his delivery. In and of itself, that makes Kazmir easy to root for. Baseball-Reference lists Kazmir’s career earnings at $30.897M, so nobody would have faulted him for claiming arm trouble and calling it quits.
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