Odds of being attacked by a shark marlin: 1 in 11.5 million.
Read More...Pierre’s clout came leading off the bottom of the first for the Miami Marlins against the Cincinnati Reds.
Pierre’s homer was his first since June 23. He whooped when the ball went over the fence down the right-field line.
“I don’t know how to react to those things, so it’s just a spur-of-the-moment deal,” Pierre told reporters of his homer reaction. “That’s about the only time you’ll see me smiling on the baseball field.”
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1. Jose Can Still Seabiscuit posted on March 05, 2013 at 12:37 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Well, there was nothing preventing the Diamondbacks from playing the game with DH rules then opting not to use one. It would put them at a competitive disadvantage, sure, but I can't see why they'd care about that in a ST game.
That said, if its home team picks its home team picks, get Choo his ABs next time your home.
This would be the typical move by anyone with typical professional courtesy. Just a dick move to deny the other team the use of the DH in a freaking Spring Training game if they need it to get a guy some ABs.
Maybe nobody thought of that.
Agreed. Gibson would seem to care a bit much for this game, or is just trying to raise Baker's ire. Baker, however should have just taken the high ground, shaken his hand and walked off the bigger man.
It looks like McCarthy did indeed get one AB and grounded out on the first pitch.
This was a Spring Training game, right? Why is Baker so upset?
Because it was a spring training game, so there was no reason for Gibson to refuse Baker's request.
Probably because Dusty, having managed in the NL for 20 years, knows there's absolutely no upside for the home manager to reject the request, and doing so is, as Dan notes, just dickish.
Look at this sitaution here: The Diamondbacks cited reason for not wanting the DH was to get McCarthy some looks at live pitching. Fine. But if you opt to use the DH, rather than not, you could get McCarthy two or three at bats instead of just the one he was almost certain to get by playing under NL rules.
If you use the DH, you can start someone in the DH hole, then lift him for McCarthy at some point in the game, letting McCarthy get some ABs. Then, instead of letting McCarthy pitch the first 2 innings, you designate him to pitch the last two (and you can ensure 8-9 are the last two by telling Dusty that you'll agree to the DH rule if he agrees to end the game after the ninth inning), removing the DH from your lineup when you shift your DH to a field position. Everyone wins.
Gibson didn't just limit Dusty's options, he limited his own.
By the 8th inning, the Reds might be fielding an AA line-up. That's why you seldom see a team use its closer in the 9th inning in early ST -- more often than not they follow the starter to pitch against the other team's better players. Seem like Baker could have alleviated some of the difficulty by pinch hitting for the pitcher. Much about nothing.
If that's important to you, then you simply opt not to use a DH yourself. But there's no non-spite based reason to turn down a request from the visiting team in Spring Training. You can criticize Baker for the handshake snub, but Gibson was undeniably in the wrong here.
Gibson had options (as stated above by simply opting to use DH but have McCarthy hit anyways)
Dusty had options (Shake his hand and/or have Choo PH)
They're both childish pricks.
I wouldn't shake my hands with Moises Alou either, though maybe this is your point.
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