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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, April 10, 2008
And, oddly, at the same time in the Phillie bullpen…Brad Lidge was seen twitchin’ n’ blinkin’ like Gerry Cooney encountering a jab.
Pujols and Backe exchanged words as the Astros exited the field during batting practice prior to the series finale at Minute Maid Park. Pujols stopped Backe as the two crossed paths near first base, and, according to Backe, expressed his dissatisfaction that Backe “kept pressing on” about an incident that happened during Tuesday’s game.
“[I was] coming off the field and he approached me,” Backe said. “I don’t know. It’s apparent that we don’t like each other. That’s OK. There’s plenty of people I don’t like in this game. It doesn’t matter. It’s baseball. It’s the way it goes. The competition between he and I just escalated and it’s OK. It’s no big deal. This is what makes it fun.”
...The bad blood between Backe and Pujols may go back several years. According to a source close to the team, Pujols took issue with the premature jubilation spilling over in the Astros’ dugout during Game 5 of the NLCS. Pujols won the game for the Cardinals with a three-run homer off Brad Lidge and later commented that Backe was “already popping the champagne” before the Astros had sealed the win.
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1. Phil Coorey. Posted: April 10, 2008 at 03:18 AM (#2737550)i had not heard that nickname-it is pretty good. i have always liked "The Great Pujois". It seemed appropriate, and it brought to mind Earnes hemingway and "The Great DiMaggio"-and that was before I checked Bas-Ref and saw that Albert's most similar by age was from 21-25 was Joe D.
I know most of the guys here get the reference but El Hombre means The Man, which links him to Musial. I just think that's really cool.
If they get into a duel, go Pujols!
You can apologize for things that aren't dirty. It looked like a clean play to me, Pujols could reach the plate, the catcher was clearly going to make a play - when a catcher wants to concede, he stands a few feet in front of the plate with his hands at his side, not a few incheds in front of the plate (his closest foot), crouched, ready to receive the ball. Pujols slid for the plate and clipped the catcher. What's the BFD? I think Backe and the Astros are just pissed because they suck. It's frustrating to suck the way they do.
But, you're correct; Pujols realized hard slides isn't really his game, so he'll just club you to death.
Well I guess we just see the play differently. I'm not one to get upset with a hard play at the plate when a play is actually being made. But that was clearly an uncontested play...the ball was still in the outfield...and Pujols had room to touch the plate. Sure the apology is fine. But LaRussa's quotes only add fuel to the fire.
I don't disagree with you on TLR. He usually shoots his mouth off too much.
He then smashed a folding chair over Cesar Izturis' back.
Not only do I don't disagree with Tricky Dick, I agree with him.
LaRussa is a Drama Queen. He'd be right at home in some ###### high-school-girl clique or some sorority.
I wish he'd be more like Bobby Cox and let his actions and the play on the field speak for itself without creating all this melodrama, week in, week out, every single season.
Please tell me he took him out for the season?
for the most part, I have had a couple of people in St Louis argue that it was possibly a dirty play, from my point of view it was a hard slide, not sure why Towles was where he was positioned for that play, as others have mentioned the play wasn't going to be close and positioning yourself for the catch makes you a target. The runner should have no clue where the ball is, once making the decision to score, he should have head down running full out to the plate not concerned with the ball, the catchers actions indicate where the ball is at, and the on deck guy indicates whether you slide or come in standing up. Albert didn't barrel Towles over, which is a play I hate in baseball but understand it's existence.
really? I guess it never really occurred to me that el hombre wasn't well known outside of St Louis, it's been his nickname pretty much since he came up. As mentioned it references Stans nickname while not co opting it (right Pudge Rodriguez??? :) )
Yep those record number of ejections indicates a guy full of no melodrama. I think a lot of the supposed melodrama following TLR around is due to writers and fans having a strong reaction to tlr and putting actions or context into his words which aren't really there.
When TLR says a comment like that, it's him trying to be political, when Bobby Cox says it dozens times a year in articles who's only purpose is to spread some coxian love, it's him being a genuinely humble guy. Gimme a break, he's playing the press just the same way and people don't get it.
Cox is a great manager, but to think he doesn't use psychological ploys to help his team and boost his own perception in baseball is nuts.
from this link
I didn't know that that happened, I don't remember anything being said about that during the broadcast (of course I was at a bar and couldn't hear much anyway) Sounds like an interesting way to cheat.
I never suggested that wasn't the case.
I'm talking about Tony's weekly appearance in the media where he's quoted making some contentious, confrontational, or antagonstic pronouncement. I guess Guillen in Chicago would be a similar example... as a fan of the team I could see that act growing tired quickly.
it wasn't a dirty slide. no high spikes, no pete rose hitting ray fosse crap
albert meant to take out towles, of course, but that is part of the game.
uncle is a darn good player. i hate him. he kills us.
brandon backe is one of those guys who is full of nervous energy and can't shut up and the fans love him. also, pitching two no run 8 inning games in the playoffs helps...
and i would guess backe is trying to stir up a moribund team. so props to him.
- grinning
but it look like he stired up uncle albert and not the stros - figgers.....
It's this sort of dissonance that makes him hard to like/root for (well that and the constant public brushback wars and the annoying haircut and and the too-cute over managing and the public and in-your-face friendship with, like, Bobby Knight--'cause you know they have being great genius coach-types in common, all of whichh speaks of a pretty healthy self-regard).
Bobby Cox, on the other hand, manages to pretty much stay in character, i.e. crusty old baseball coot.
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