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Baseball Primer Newsblog — The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand Thursday, May 01, 2008Yahoo: Andy Van Slyke talks slugging Bonds, coaching firstHere comes Van Slyke! Here’s the punch to the nose! He is...naff! Van Slyke wins! Van Slyke wins! Van Slyke wins! Van Slyke wins!...Van Slyke wins!
Repoz
Posted: May 01, 2008 at 10:31 PM | 7 comment(s)
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AVS: Absolutely. And I would tell him to hit 30 home runs — or else I'll punch him [laughs].
Hmm, how is Sheff's shoulder?
Jeez, just trolling until you got the hit you wanted, eh?
I've never played baseball beyond the little league level, but I'll take a shot at answering this perplexing question of why Barry Bonds chose to go with his own baseball instincts rather than trust Andy Van Slyke's amazing powers of intuition that just happen to match up with the success rate of random-ass guessing. Maybe, just maybe, Bonds felt that as the left fielder, he could get to anything hit in front of him and hold Bream at third Cabrera to a single, but that if he was too shallow, he might give up the for-sure game winning double. A fly-out just advances Bream to third, Bream might score on a single (but might not), but anything to the wall that Bonds doesn't catch scores Bream for sure.
Was it the right decision? In hindsight, no. But what, people thought that with the pennant on the line, Barry Bonds threw all baseball thought out the window and decided to just stick it to Van Slyke? Bonds may indeed be a [expletive deleted], but he does know baseball.
Hardly. There were two outs. Bonds shouldn't have been playing shallow for a potential play at the plate, he should have been playing wherever he could cover the most ground on a fly ball.
Ah, my mistake. Reviewing the Wikipedia recap, I missed that Brian Hunter popped out to short.
Still, with two outs, it makes even more sense for Bonds to play with the mind to give up the single in front of him in order to cover as much ground as possible.
Unintentionally hilarious.
That's Andy Van Slyke in a nutshell.
But guys, Bonds did throw Sid Bream out at the plate. The umpire just didn't want to play extra innings, and it was close, so...
At least that's how I remember it. It was a traumatic experience.
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