Everett hurt in Stros win

Stros shortstop Adam Everett suffered a broken bone in his left wrist as the Stros beat the Expos 4-0 Friday night behind Roy O’s nifty five-hitter.
Everett was hit by a pitch from Claudio Vargas in the fourth inning that broke the ulnar bone. He will be sidelined for at least a month and, if he needs surgery, will be lost for the rest of season.
After having -13 RCAA/.700 OPS in 2003 (RCAA explained here), his first year as a starter, Everett is off to a .385 SLG, .317 OBA, .703 OPS, -13 RCAA start in his first 102 games. He has a .681 career OPS, compared to his league average of .774, and -34 RCAA in 279 games.
Consequently, although you will hear wailing from the Stros management and the mainstream media about what a huge loss Everett is to the club, the reality is much less dramatic. Everett is an above-average fielder and a below average fielder whose production can be replaced rather easily. Indeed, even though Viz does not field as well as Everett, he has hit much better than Everett this season, so playing him instead of Everett is about a wash in the big scheme of things.
Oswalt (12-8) struck out eight and walked one in hurling his second shutout of the season and the third of his career. Oswalt has now won four straight decisions overall and improved to a rather incredible 9-0 against the Expos in 13 career starts. Oswalt’s complete game was a timely tonic for the Stros’ bullpen, which sorely needed some rest after virtually every relief pitcher in sight was used during yesterday’s game against the Braves.
Bags and JK drove in two runs each for Houston, and Bags hit a solo homer in the second inning that tied him with Frank Thomas for 30th on the career home run list at 436. Lance Berkman made it a short night for Expos starter Rocky Biddle by nailing him with a vicious line drive that careened all the way back across the first-base line. Biddle left the game with a bruised ankle and relatively good fortune that his injury was not much worse. In other statistical news, Bidg was hit by a pitch for the 13th time this season and raised his career total to 255, the most by far among active National League players.
Andy Pettitte tries to coax a few innings out of his sore left elbow in the Saturday game of the series, and the Stros are preparing for a big crowd on Sunday as the Rocket goes for win number 13.

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