Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
08.06.2008 2:20 am

GM says Cards “Can’t Just Keep Giving Games Away Like That.”

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  • Email this
  • Print this

DOWNTOWN — Had one groundball turned out differently, had it not slipped through his hands as rapidly and frustratingly as the save did a few moments later, maybe the questions would have been different.

But Tuesday is another blown save for the Cardinals’ bullpen — No. 27, for those keeping score — and means another inquisition for the club’s closer, Jason Isringhausen.

Isringhausen entered his second save opportunity since returning to the role with a three-run lead and the bases empty after Andruw Jones’ solo home run to open the ninth. No need to repeat the play by play here. (Senior baseball writer Joe Strauss has it covered in the game story.) With the bases loaded, James Loney hit a dribbler down the first base line. There was a clear play at first base, but Isringhausen mishandled the ball. A run scored. The bases remained loaded. There was still one out.

That grounder goes differently, and GM John Mozeliak may not be meeting with manager Tony La Russa and pitching coach Dave Duncan today to discuss the recurring concerns about how the Cardinals are going to close games.

Isringhausen declined to talk to the media after the 6-4 victory.

Mozeliak did. In a brief, but telling, interview — from which the end quote in Strauss’ game story came — Mozeliak said the team “can’t just keep giving games away like that.”

The transcript of his late-night Q & A with a handful of media:

Q: Mo, what was your take on what you saw in the ninth inning tonight?

Mozeliak: It was disappointing. Obviously to get a game pitched so well up until the ninth and to have the outcome go the way it did, in terms of a home run, hit, walk — it was tough. I think it’s something that Tony, Dunc and I will talk about tomorrow, strategize and see what makes the most sense. You can’t just keep giving games away like that.

We’re not in a situation where we can go out and necessarily find somebody to close. We’re very supportive of Izzy, and we’ve stood by him. but at some point we have to get some results.

Q: Would rookie Chris Perez be considered as an option?

Mozeliak: Everything is an option right now. We have to be open-minded and just try to make the best decision for this club. You look at how (Chris Carpenter) pitched today and how outstanding he was. He gave this team more than a chance to win. And it got down to the ninth and we just couldn’t put it away.

For many reasons, the ninth inning has become a quagmire for the Cardinals this season, not the least of which is the kind of games this team has been prone to play — and there’s every reason to believe will continue to play. Having a runner on base for Ryan Ludwick’s home run Tuesday night is the difference between that win and the Cardinals’ 42nd one-run ball game of the season. That leads the majors, and is already five more than the Cardinals had total last season.

The Cardinals 21 one-run wins are the fourth-most in the majors, second in the National League.

But in a tightly bunched wild card race and an NL Central division stacked with three contenders for playoff berths, the more glaring wins are the ones the Cardinals haven’t cinched of late. The most blown saves in the majors is one thing — because Ryan Franklin got tagged with a blown save Tuesday that was hardly his doing. The more telling stat is the Cardinals have now led 64 of their of their 115 games after the seventh inning.

They have lost 12 of those games.

After a game that was almost No. 13, Mozeliak said another audit is needed.

Q: Are you going to discuss (how to use the current) roster differently, or are you going to look at doing something roster-wise?

Mozeliak: I just want to listen to Tony and Dunc and hear what all of our available options are. Someone brought up Chris Perez. What may be the kind of change in strategy which might be a different formula that might work? We’re not going to be able to go out and necessarily trade for someone to be that closer. Izzy may get that opportunity. That’s for Tony and Dunc to let me know. I’m not ruling that out at all right now.

I think right now people are answering things with more emotion than real thought. It’s just something that regardless of how you look at it’s a frustrating situation when you can think of how we’ve lost a lot of these games late in the game. A lot of them come to mind. It’s unfortunate.

-30-

106 comments

Comments are closed.

FIND A NEW CLOSER IZZY HAS LOST HIS TOUCH….IF THE CARDS ARE TO CONTEND WITH CHICAGO AND MILWAKUKE GET A NEW CLOSER OR CONTINUED TO FALL BACK IN THE RACE BY GIVING AWAY GAMES IN THE NINTH SINCE NO TRADE IS AN OPTION TRY THE YOUNG GUYS IN THE BULLPEN YOU’LL NEVER KNOW…….I KNOW LARUSSA AND IZZY ARE TIGHT…….IF THATS THE CASE BUY TWO ROCKING CHAIRS

— Leroy L
5:02 am August 6th, 2008

Chris Perez is a closer, that’s his mentality. You put a closer in the game in the 7th or 8th and it’s not the same. He is a finisher…he gets pumped up for that role. In college, Chris had a 94-95mph fastball in the 7th/8th innings. In the 9th…96-98mph. Do your homework Mo, the kid can bring it. Who cares if he walks a guy here and there, he’s striking out more than he’s walking and nobody wants to dig in against him. He’s a bulldog.

— CardFan
6:23 am August 6th, 2008

It’s clear to me that LaRussa and Duncan have lost their objectivity where Isringhausen is concerned. It’s inconceivable that they continue to send him out there in late inning game situations, to watch him throw away these much needed victories time and time again. They continue to make excuses for him, repeatedly saying if he could just make this one little adjustment, or if he could just get a few good outings under his belt and regain his confidence, then everything would be OK, but in the final analysis, it doesn’t really matter what his problem is. Results are what matters, and if Izzy’s performances up to this point are not proof enough to LaRussa and Duncan that he can no longer produce those results, then Mozeliak and the front office have to step in and remove the temptation. Release him. Anything to keep LaRussa and Duncan from giving him an endless series of opportunities to get back on track, only to see those oportunities turn into an endless series of blown saves and heart-breaking losses.

Loyalty is fine at family reunions and in army barracks, but in professional sports, if you can’t do the job, management has to find someone who can. Or at least try something new.

— Bernie
6:23 am August 6th, 2008

It’s sad and painful to watch night after night. I’d hate to see Wainwright have to go shore up the leak in that part of the ship when he is a bonafide top of rotation starter that would help plug a hole in that area. But something has to be done in hole number nine because the hole is a gaping one and the water coming in will soon be to much to SAVE the ship.

— drelboc
6:32 am August 6th, 2008

I said it before and I will say it again “You will not win the World Series with Izzy as your closer”

— bstaro
6:39 am August 6th, 2008

When is enough enough????? We wouldn’t have won in 2006 with Izzy in the closer role and we won’t be winning this year with him in the closer role. Why can’t the Cardinal brass see things as clearly as we the fans? Izzy should do all of us a favor and hang it up. Imagine where we would be in the standings if we had won just half of the blown saves. It’s absolutely disgusting. To be a starter and give it your all only to have the bullpen blow it for you has to be very frustrating. Please, Please let Izzy go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

— Charlie Ferguson
6:41 am August 6th, 2008

I like Izzy as a person, but he needs to be released.

— Chris C
7:06 am August 6th, 2008

Agree totally with Bernie’s comments on loyalty. It seems they are trying to nurse him along to get his 300th save as a Cardinal. I think he needs 7 or 8 to get to that level. But–the way he’s going, he will blow 5 or 6 times that many games to get there. The Cardinal organization has an obligation to the fans to put the best possible product on the field. They clearly are not doing that. We still have a shot if they will just do something to fix the bullpen problems. The best way to start is give Izzy his walking papers.

— Charlie
7:08 am August 6th, 2008

For many fans, it more-than-obvious back in May that Isinghausen doesn’t have it anymore…..and yet this fiasco is still going on in August! What it does it take to him out of there and for Cards’ FO to go out and get another reliever?

— Craig Connell
7:23 am August 6th, 2008

There are three options for the cardinals at closer–Wainwright, Preze, and Looper.

— jim
7:28 am August 6th, 2008

Pages: « 1 [2] 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 » Show All