Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
05.07.2008 1:24 pm

In the throws of Ankiel

DENVER — Even after the game, in the Cardinals clubhouse, there was quiet discussion about which of Rick Ankiel’s two lightning bolts from deep center field to third base were the best.

The first one beat one of the fastest runners in baseball by at least a stride to third base. The second, well, it, Larry Walker joked, traveled further from the outfield than Ankiel’s home run had traveled over the outfield in that same inning. Some of the names dropped in the conversations were grandiose arms such as Bo Jackson and, more than once, Roberto Clemente.

Leave it to Tony La Russa to find a compromise.

What was most incredible about the throws wasn’t anything about them individually, but that he made two of them — in the same game.

“I was pumped,” Ankiel said. “You don’t make throws like that all the time, no matter how many times you practice. For me, it was better than the home run. Those throws just don’t happen all the time.”

But they have happened before for Ankiel.

The throw Ankiel made to beat Willy Taveras to third base Tuesday night reminded me of another throw Ankiel made in the early stages of his reinvention. It was back in 2005, while Ankiel was with Double-A Springfield, and … well, this was the lede I wrote back then:

***

It took one start in center field and one dart from that treasured arm for Rick Ankiel to show why he remains one of the most enticing and enigmatic talents the Cardinals have, no matter his position.

Ankiel made his first professional start in center field Sunday, and just two innings into a Class AA game he made a play to help determine the outcome. With runners on second and third, a Corpus Christi hitter lofted a fly ball to center. As Springfield Cardinals manager Chris Maloney tells it, Ankiel had a bead on the ball, shifted naturally when the ball zigged, but instinctively kept his footing so that he’d come at the ball, snare it and be in position to throw.

Ankiel’s bee-line strike arrived at third base a step before runner Charlton Jimerson, who had 39 stolen bases last season in Class AA. The Cardinals won 2-1 in the 10th inning. If Jimerson had reached third and scored, Maloney said, the Cardinals would have lost.

*** 

Video of Ankiel’s throws against the Rockies are available over at MLB.com’s vast highlight collection. They are equally uncanny on third, fourth, seventh viewing. It’s like Ryan Ludwick described as he neared Ankiel on the eighth-inning throw that pegged Omar Quintanilla at third base: As the ball bounced up against the wall, Ludwick knew Ankiel had the better chance to make a play — not that Ludwick believed there was a play to be made. Ludwick started screaming “3! 3! 3!”

“Honestly, I thought he had no shot to throw him out,” Ludwick said later. “Best throw I’ve seen in my life. He just picked it up, turned and fired. And it was right on the money. Can’t make a better throw than that.”

Said Walker: “He was 3-foot-2. That’s how he looked. That’s how far away he was.”

“I saw him rounding for third and thought if I could get off a good, clean throw, you never know what could happen,” Ankiel said. “Maybe he trips.”

The two outfield assists were Ankiel’s fourth and fifth of his career (he had three in 2007). It was the first two-assist game for a Cardinals outfielder since Chris Duncan’s last August in Pittsburgh. Colorado manager Clint Hurdle swatted away a post-game question that wondered if it was bad base-running or incredible throws that led to the two third outs at third base. La Russa agreed that word is already out about Ankiel’s arm — is there a better one in the National League? a better one for a center fielder in the majors? — but that tonight he’d try to take the same bases against Ankiel. He’d test him on both plays. Again. Because what are the chances.

“I don’t believe he did it,” La Russa said. ”One, everybody on our side had never seen anything like it. Two? That just doesn’t happen. Who could believe it?”

Since major-league baseball came to this region — just a few years after Joey Meyer pelted Mile High Stadium with moonshots — the jab at altitude baseball was that the home runs soared here, that the ball carried farther in the thin air. Asked if the same thing goes for throws from center, Ankiel said:

“It might. For me, it was just get off a good throw, give it a shot, and let it eat.”

-30-

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (4 votes, average: 3 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...
21 comments

Comments are closed.

Ankiel made two good throws, but I thought both of the tags by Glaus were high, and the runner should have been called safe both times. That’s what I saw…

— corpustiger
4:40 pm May 7th, 2008

The amazing thing is that five years ago he couldn’t have thrown strikes like those over home plate from 60 feet six inches away!

— Ed Gerard
4:46 pm May 7th, 2008

Corpustiger: I wonder why the two runners, the 3rd base coach, and the manager didn’t complain about the out calls either time. With vision like yours, maybe you should be calling balls and strikes (and hearing the boos).

— Larry Stout
4:49 pm May 7th, 2008

amazing throws by mr. ankiel…still in awe of them…especially the second one..he was just a few steps from the warning track with that throw and threw a head high throw to glaus..very impressive stuff ..ankiel is an amazing talent

— sadsushi
5:41 pm May 7th, 2008

my favorite part of the scene was each of the baserunners after the tag turning a little bit to look out to center. Surely they were thinking “what the ***” did he throw with? A bazooka?

— paul schoaff
6:59 pm May 7th, 2008

I also wanted to ask if anyone remembers Pete Whisenant. I never saw him throw from right field, but Harrry Carrry said he had a fantastic arm.

— paul schoaff
7:01 pm May 7th, 2008

Spent some of the time here before the game asking players and other folk who were the best outfield arms they ever saw. Wait, not just “best”, but elite, with the followup question being if Ankiel will/does belong in the same class. Some candidates:

– Roberto Clemente (of course)
– Bo Jackson
– Jose Guillen
– Jim Edmonds, for strength aided by accuracy (Brad Hawpe came up in the same discussion because he was taking BP)
– Dwight Evans
– Cesar Geronimo
– Andre Dawson
– Larry Walker, though he insists otherwise
– Ichiro Suzuki

Others?

dg
-30-

— Derrick Goold
8:21 pm May 7th, 2008

Also amazing - the accuracy…Glaus barely had to move on those 2 throws…just bent over to apply the tag…incredible

— MJ
8:47 pm May 7th, 2008

I think Vladimir Guerrero belongs on that list and so does Mark Whiten. I remember he once threw home on the fly from deep center on a sacrifice fly. Didn’t get the runner, but it was incredible. One of the only non-plays I have ever seen make sportscenter’s top 10.

— Joel
1:13 am May 8th, 2008

wow. Not much else to say. Simply an amazing arm and the accuracy is even more stunning. And, then to have two of them…almost unbelievable. Good thing there’s videotape to prove it really happened. The legend of Ankiel begins…

— JR
9:06 am May 8th, 2008

Pages: « 1 [2] 3 » Show All