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04.10.2008 3:17 pm

Houston Flap Wrap; “Being Professional”

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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SOME AIRPORT — Not since Oliver Perez and the Great Bat Flip has a pitcher irked Albert Pujols in the way Brandon Backe must have before Wednesday night’s game at Minute Maid Park.

As mentioned in the paper and many other places, the simmering feud between Backe and Pujols pre-dates his slide through catcher J.R. Towles on Tuesday. It goes back to the 2004 NLCS and Backe’s grand debut and it spiked a year later when Pujols sent a certain homer into the Houston night and delayed Backe & Co.’s champagne celebration.

No need to rehash what happened Wednesday — and the two home runs that followed — when it’s all over the paper today, and also in the Houston Chronicle from Joseph Duarte and over at MLB.com from Matthew Leach and Alyson Footer, as well.

But there was a final coda on the spat.

While Backe declined to comment over in the Astros’ clubhouse after the game, Pujols also said he did want to comment on Backe’s direct comments to press. Yet, in his no comment, there was a comment. It spoke directly to Backe’s assertion that Pujols’ slide — which upended Towles at home plate Tuesday in the eighth inning — was “not professional.”

Charged words.

Charged words that manager Tony La Russa pushed back on by calling Pujols a “fierce competitor” and a “complete professional” before launching into a description of his “cheerleading” in the dugout “even when he’s 0-for-4″. Charged words that when asked about Pujols had his no-comment comment, that hinted he’d heard that accusation before.

“No matter who gets me mad or who does not, I’m going to go out there and play the game the right way,” he said. “Let him talk however he wants to talk. I don’t have any comment. This is being professional, what I’m doing. Not talking in the paper. That’s professional.”

***

Pujols frustrations were percolating before, as one friend of mine called it, “Slidegate.”  Pujols told as after the game that he came to the ballpark early to work in the cage and watch some video. He believes he isolated a fault in his swing that began during the Washington series and he wanted to work quickly to correct it. He called Wednesday’s game good because he went out there and tried what he worked on — and had success with it.

“Obviously I didn’t have a home run (in the first eight games),” he said. “Didn’t have the RBIs. But I was getting on base and the guys behind me were driving me in. Obviously, I chased some bad pitch out of the strike zone. Like everybody else. I’m human. I’m not a robot. And I’m human and I’m going to make a mistake and chase a pitch. Things like that happen for a reason, so you can learn from it.”

***

There was a track record for Pujols having struggled against the three pitchers who Houston threw out there during this past series. That was covered in the P-D’s new daily newsletter that went out Wednesday.

***

So about that sixth inning: The game was delayed because home plate umpire Joe West wanted Houston to change the sign behind home plate. Apparently, it was white when the Cardinals were in the field and a darker color when Houston was in the field. La Russa said West had asked them to change it several times. To start the sixth, West asked starter Braden Looper if it was bothering him — if he could see the ball on a comebacker. Looper said it was fine.

He then promptly fielded a groundball with no problem.

However, second baseman Adam Kennedy said he couldn’t see that same grounder at all, not coming out of the white background. That convinced West it had to be changed. Said La Russa: “Don’t mess with Joe West.”

***

Add Signgate and Slidegate to the growing number of ‘gates in the rivalry between Houston and the Cardinals. And also add a couple new names: Kyle McClellan and Miguel Tejada. What a home debut Tejada had in the first games of his career against the career. He won the home fans over at the expense of the Cardinals and their rookie reliever. Then a few nights later, McClellan leveled the ledger by getting Tejada to popup with the tying run on base.

Remains to be seen how good either of these teams will be. But their series will be.

-30-

12 comments

Comments are closed.

Bob Gibson needs to set up a training camp on baseball etiquette. Maybe that will eliminate controversies like this…

— CowboyB
3:34 pm April 10th, 2008

DG,

Your newsletter says Jose Molina is playing for the Giants, but it should be Bengie. Jose is with the Yankees.

— Mark
4:32 pm April 10th, 2008

Let’s see, the Astros come up to St. Louis at the end of the month. If Backe is starting, do you think he’ll cause this to flare back up?

— Jon
4:33 pm April 10th, 2008

Hey whatever stokes Albert. If it takes another 7 years and 21 wins… I’m fine with that….

— allen
4:44 pm April 10th, 2008

Mark,

Thanks. Was able to fix it quickly, with help. Can I call in a Molina Mulligan?

dg
-30-

— Derrick Goold
6:30 pm April 10th, 2008

Gibby teaching baseball etiquette? If Towles was even standing in the batter’s box, much less a corner of the plate, Hoot would have flattened him. Then he would have plunked Towles the next time he came to bat. And he wouldn’t have called to apologe later.

Good times.

— MoCrash
6:56 am April 11th, 2008

It amazes me the number of Cardinals fans that are calling Albert out for being a cheap shot artist and for playing the game hard. Sure, he could have avoided taking the Towles out with his slide. OK we all get that. But it is Houston, Towles completely blocked the plate on a similar play in the previous game. If you are a catcher, you will get run into. If you don’t want to, stay away from the plate. Towles could have easily taken one step forward to field the ball since there would be no play at the plate. If nothing else, it sends a message that we are going to be coming hard to the plate. Who knows, it could effect what Towles does in the future against us and work to our advantage.

Also, anyone else see Glaus’ collision with Towles and think to themselves if that was Rolen he would be out for the season with some injury after that play?

— Chris
8:36 am April 11th, 2008

Let’s turn this animal around and stroke it in the other direction. Forget Backe, forget Towles and forget Houston. The Cardinals have a division to win and they are going to take that hill behind their star player, Albert Pujols. Whether it was necessary or not, Albert sent a message that the Cardinals are going to play hard-nosed baseball this season. I would bet that his teammates received that message loud and clear. At that same time, perhaps he quieted some of the sentiment that he is a coddled player.

Stick to your guns, Albert.

- Bob Totterer

— Bob Totterer
9:59 am April 11th, 2008

I enjoyed what MoCrash had to say about Bob Gibson.

Chris and Mr. Totterer are dead right about Albert playing hard. But there’s another point. Towles was at least partly blocking the plate, and Albert was sliding into home with a throw on the way. The ball was a split-second late, so there was no play, but in the act of sliding, Albert couldn’t know that. He had no choice but to take down Towles for the possibility that he would be trying to put on a tag.

When I was a kid, reading everything about baseball history I could get my hands on, one of my absolute favorite stories ever was about Ty Cobb sitting on the top steps of the dugout before games with a file, sharpening the spikes on his shoes. There are conflicting accounts as to whether this is an apocryphal legend (possibly encouraged by Cobb after his retirement) or a well-documented practice. It’s a great story, either way. I would encourage Albert to try filing his spikes on the dugout steps when Houston comes to town in a couple weeks.

— Fuhrig
10:41 am April 11th, 2008

Collisions at the plate are part of the game. They’re not holding a f—— tea party out there.
And who is Brandon Backe? I checked his numbers and as far as I can tell the most noteworthy thing he’s done in 3 years is argue with Pujols.

— Keith
1:43 pm April 11th, 2008

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