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04.09.2008 5:59 pm

Pujols, Towles collision sparks confrontation (UPDATE)

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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HOUSTON — While neither side apparently had much to say publicly after the game about Albert Pujols’ slide into home plate that upended catcher J. R. Towles in the eighth inning of Tuesday’s game, one person felt the need to address is privately.

Pujols called the Astros’ clubhouse after the game to talk with Towles about the play, the young catcher told a few other reporters and me this evening. Pujols at first declined to discuss the play, but moments after batting practice confirmed that he apologized.

As far as Towles and he are concerned, the collision happened and was over. Move on.

“I already apologized,” Pujols said.

Others must disagree.

As the Cardinals began batting practice, Houston pitcher Brandon Backe yelled at Pujols from the Astros’ side of the diamond. Manager Cecil Cooper had to get between the two players, and teammates ushered Backe from the field. The Astros clubhouse closed immediately after Backe left the field.

“It’s apparent we don’t like each other,” Backe said later, “and that’s OK.”

He also called Pujols’ apology to Towles enough.

“Everything is said and done,” Backe said.

Shortly after things simmered on the Astros side of the field, manager Tony La Russa and Houston catcher Brad Ausmus spoke for awhile. Then Ausmus went up and carried on a lengthy conversation with Pujols at first base. The topic was clear: how much of the plate Towles allowed Pujols to slide to and whether or not Pujols had another route to the plate other than through Towles.

“There was no problem with the slide, and I am surprised that they have this kind of reaction,” La Russa said. ”That’s what I’m saying.”

It’s the same questions asked of La Russa before the game.

In the eighth inning, Pujols scored from first base on Troy Glaus’ double. Pujols’ slide went through Towles’ legs and knocked the catcher down before the ball arrived. That collision came a day after Towles had to go up the line to catch a ball and crashed into Glaus.

“I thought Albert did him a favor by just sliding to his legs out,” La Russa told the media earlier this afternoon. “The kid is not giving anything to slide at, so that’s what we teach to slide and take the legs not (not the body). He’s going to get blasted one of these days.”

In their conversation after the game, Towles said Pujols expressed that he didn’t see any of the plate to slide to. Towles saw it differently. Though he understood why Pujols called.

“I accepted his apology,” Towles said. “I gave him enough of the plate. … I give runners the plate to keep everybody from getting hurt.”

-30-

103 comments

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If Albert had come in soft to one edge of the plate Towles could have blocked him, caught the ball , and tagged him. So Albert made the right play. If Towles felt that he needed a portion of the plate then he ftoo felt that there was a chance for a play. Branden Backe and this bunch are cry babies. No one was hurt, it was just baseball.

— jamborewe
7:04 pm April 9th, 2008

So the catcher got knocked over, so what, he’s a professional - take the hit and don’t whine about it.

How many times do hockey players get knocked over during a game. Ever see them whine about it?

geez

— Bob
7:13 pm April 9th, 2008

The plate was wide open and the therefore the slide was a bit dirty but not terrible. Duncan (on deck) gave Pujols the sign to get down at the last minute so Albert probably thought there would be a play on him and that he had a better chance to score by taking him out. Personally I think he has a better chance to score by sliding to the right and reaching with his hand. Considering he missed the plate on the first slide it definitely wasn’t a great play, but I don’t think he was trying to kill him.

— David
7:18 pm April 9th, 2008

The same people complaining about it being a dirty play would have been complaining if he hadn’t slid at all, and would be calling him lazy. To call this is dirty play, you obviously never played past 8th grade. He had no sight of the ball and to his knowledge there could have been a play at the plate, Duncan motioned for him to slide, and he slid into his feet…textbook slide in that situation, nothing else to say about it.

— Pat
7:28 pm April 9th, 2008

I can’t even believe this is an issue. Pujols did exactly what he’s supposed to do. Backe made it worse by starting something the next day at batting practice. I guess since he is a mediocre pitcher he needs to get his name in the news somehow.

— Brian Barnes
7:31 pm April 9th, 2008

what flavor tonighy gentlemen?? strawberry??

— e j m
7:53 pm April 9th, 2008

Ah, the lovely Post Dispatch believes in censorship!

— John
7:56 pm April 9th, 2008

This is baseball, not tee ball. Grow a set, you nancy boys caterwauling about a dirty play.

— middleagedude
8:01 pm April 9th, 2008

Also, who’s Brandon Backe???? Give me a break. This is what’s wrong with baseball - invasion of the pansy prima donas. You crowd the plate as a batter, you deserve a pitch by the ears. You block the plate as a catcher, you are gonna get pummeled by the runner. Just ask Yogi Berra, Mike Soscia or any of the old time catchers.

— middleagedude
8:05 pm April 9th, 2008

For all of those who are saying that it’s part of the game, or that the catcher had it coming for blocking the plate, READ some of the comments that state the catcher was clearly not blocking the plate. Not any part of it for that matter……it’s not like crowding the plate. If anything it looked like Pujols went out of his way to knock the kid down. He may not have been able to see the plate because it had dirt on it, or some other reason, etc., but he took the kid out. It was not a good, hard play. It wasn’t sliding into second base hard to try to break up the double play, so don’t make it sound like the kid had it coming. I’m not saying Pujols should get suspended; it sounds like he made it right by calling the catcher that night. But seriously, look at the tape before you continue worshiping your hero blindly.

— Chase
8:15 pm April 9th, 2008

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