Albuquerque Journal

All of a sudden, an avalanche of losses

Rockies need veteran arms to help team remain a serious division threat

- BY WOODY PAIGE THE GAZETTE (COLORADO SPRINGS)

Over the past weekend, while driving north near Raton Pass and the New Mexico-Colorado border, I abruptly became aware of a colossal mound of boulders spilled onto Interstate 25.

The unsightly mess reminded me of the local baseball team’s current plight.

WARNING: ROXSLIDE!

The Colorado Rockies have hit a major bump in the road.

On June 10 the Rox led the National League West by 2½ games over the Dodgers and three over the Diamondbac­ks.

But after getting swept in San Francisco this week to extend Colorado’s losing streak to eight games, the Rockies have gone from the team with the best record in the league to a club on a slippery slope.

The Rox still are in excellent position to make the postseason, but not in such a great place to win the NL West for the first time in the franchise’s quarter-century existence.

And the Cubs are objects closer than they appear in the Rockies’ rearview mirror.

The gap-toothed Alfred E. Neuman would smile and say: “What, Me Worry?”

But there is fretting.

The Colorado Department of Transporta­tion is calling the repairs to I-25 “Rockfall Mitigation,” and contractor “Rock Solid Solutions” has been hired to clear the road and the mountainsi­de. But the work won’t be done until mid-August. The baseball team needs mitigation from its rockfall and rock-solid solutions before the end of July.

What are the Rockies’ problems? Pitching, pitching and pitching. Hitting throughout the lineup. Defense in right field. And Injuries.

The rookies in the rotation are struggling. The middle relief continues to slog. And the back of the bullpen, except for closer Greg Holland, is scuffling.

That disintegra­tion by Adam Ottovino on Sunday — when he allowed five runs on four wild pitches — was excruciati­ng to watch. Imagine how he must have felt. “It was pathetic,” the reliever said afterward. At least, “Otto” was honest.

However, he is not alone. Manager Bud Black has been tormented by his starters, who had been so effective for the first 2½ months. The twin Tylers, Chatwood and Anderson, are now 9-13, and Anderson has returned to the disabled list. Kyle Freeland lost a couple of starts, and the earned-run averages of Antonio Senzatela, German Marquez and Jeff Hoffman have risen above 4.00 while the three failed to go seven innings or win. Senzatela — an All-Star candidate until a week ago — has been moved to the bullpen, apparently to preserve his arm and his honor.

The league and, particular­ly, the division are beginning to catch up with these first-year guys.

Jon Gray to the rescue? The Rockies’ ace in the hole returns this week, but, then, he was 0-0 after three starts at season’s outset.

The relief corps has lost its core. Even though Holland has converted 25 of 26 saves, with a 1.61 ERA, the Rox are having troubles taking the lead to him in the ninth.

Just when Carlos Gonzalez was finding an improved groove, he goes on the DL with a sore shoulder. Cargo has played stellar defense despite his hitting woes. But his replacemen­t, Raimel Tapia, is playing right field as if he’s wearing oven mitts on both hands.

Should panic set in? Absolutely not.

But the picnic is over before the Fourth of July, and the Rockies have to make moves. As I’ve maintained all season, they must have a veteran, stabilizin­g arm in the rotation, and another seasoned reliever. And they can’t wait for another month. They should take action by the All-Star break.

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