By
Steve Kallas (posted by Rick Morris)
THE
LUCKIEST MAN IN ST. LOUIS
Jose
Oquendo is the St. Louis Cardinal’s third base coach. Bottom of the fourth, Cards up 2-0, Yadier
Molina (a slow but good base runner on second), nobody out. Jon Jay hits a slow single up the middle and
Molina busts it around third and is then held up by Oquendo.
Jacoby
Ellsbury concedes the run, lobbing the ball into the shortstop. But Molina doesn’t score. In fact, Oquendo comes so close to touching
Molina that Red Sox manager John Farrell comes out to ask the ump if Molina
could be called out (Oquendo doesn’t touch Molina so no call.).
Generally,
with nobody out and the bases loaded, you are inclined not to send the
runner. In fact, Tim McCarver told us
that “the reason” Oquendo did not send Molina was because there was nobody out.
But
that is certainly not an absolute.
Especially where, as here, you clearly had a slow single to center and
Ellsbury didn’t even think about throwing home.
A
gigantic mistake which would be remembered for a long time if the Red Sox won.
This
writer spoke with Dan Gray, a brilliant baseball mind who played in the Dodgers
organization for five years and now manages (and coaches third) for an
excellent travel team at Pro Swing out of Mt. Kisco, New York. Gray said, “On that play, you generally
wouldn’t send the runner, but where it’s a slow single up the middle, you have
eight, nine and one coming up in a National League ballpark, well, it would
have been the right move to send Molina, who would have made it easily.”
Jake
Peavy pitched out of the jam.
Fortunately
for Jose Oquendo, Cardinals 5, Red Sox 4.
BAD
GAME FOR JOHN FARRELL
Farrell’s
biggest mistake, in this writer’s opinion, was not appealing the final play of
the game (Allen Craig never touched home) or, at a minimum, protesting the game
(which would have been denied).
Apparently nobody on the Red Sox side saw that Craig missed home. A play for the ages. And how Farrell didn’t walk Jon Jay (just
prior to the crazy ending) with first base open and poor hitting Pete Kozma up
next was a total mystery.
Having
said that, it would have been nice to see Will Middlebrooks, just in the game,
protecting the line at third in a 2-2 game in the bottom of the seventh (you
know, that’s what was routinely done in baseball for decades) with runners on
first and second. Matt Holliday hits a
rocket to third that Middlebrooks can’t stop.
If he’s guarding the line, it’s a double play, maybe a triple play. But somehow, today, managers don’t do this as
much as they did for decades in major league baseball.
Throughout
the day, and even before, everybody discussed what a weapon Farrell would have
on the bench with Mike Napoli, since Big Papi was going to play first
base. Yet when Brandon Workman, in the
top of the NINTH, came to the plate, Farrell let him hit. Where was Napoli? On the bench in a tie game on the road.
A
gigantic mistake made worse when Workman pitched to only two batters in the
ninth. While Farrell admitted after the
game that he made a mistake by not double-switching when he brought Workman in
in the eighth inning, he still could have given Napoli a shot to win it in the
ninth.
When
you lose the game and your best weapon off the bench is still on the bench,
well, that’s a disaster.
BAD
GAME FOR McCARVER AND BUCK
Yeah,
it’s been a tough postseason for this duo.
After never mentioning the huge mistake that Victor Martinez made in
that Dustin Pedroia-started magical double play against Detroit (they put all
of the blame on Prince Fielder), it got worse in Game 3 of the World Series.
While
McCarver told us that Oquendo held up Molina because there was nobody out, the
play called for a much deeper analysis, especially when Ellsbury lobbed the
ball in.
There
was a bizarre exchange between the two in the top of the ninth, when Buck said
something like “you couldn’t even begin to recap all that has happened” which
was met by McCarver saying, “I wouldn’t want to so I’m not going to” and “No,
I’m not analyzing.” OK, maybe that was a
joke.
But
when Workman came to bat in the top of the ninth (for his first major league at
bat) with Napoli on the bench, no
mention was made of this non-change. In
fact, McCarver and Buck actually joked about Workman’s chances (“slim” and
“slimmer”). Maybe trying to help them
out, the director (or whoever the person is who puts up the cuts on TV)
actually showed a picture of Napoli in the dugout.
To
no avail, as neither broadcaster got the hint.
It wasn’t until after the next commercial break, when they must have
been verbally told of the non-Napoli at bat, that it was even mentioned.
On
the final, wacky play, when, breaking it down, McCarver told us that
Saltalamacchia made “a great play,” presumably by tagging Craig at the
plate. While it was a good play, Daniel
Nava made one of the greatest back-up plays in the history of baseball (maybe
only Derek Jeter’s back-up cut-off play (you know, the “Flip” play) to get
Jeremy Giambi at home in the playoffs against Oakland was better). Nava’s name was never mentioned in terms of
what he had done.
Stunning
stuff.
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