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08.06.2008 2:20 am

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

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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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.

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106 comments

Comments are closed.

Tom writes:

How in the world does Izzy put five runners on base, give up the three runs that ties the game and gets “credit” for a Hold, while Franklin gets both batters out that he faces and gets the blown save. Way to go Tony. Pulled Izzy just in time to not have his record spoiled with another blown save.

And the only way I can respond is:

Exactly. Bingo. No idea. A complete and utter failure of a statistic.

dg
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— Derrick Goold
11:02 am August 6th, 2008

T-ball has and always will be a west coast manager. He does not understand the fans of St. Louis. The fans here have policed the bad players, always have and always will. When a Cardinal player starts thinking he is above the game, his time has come, or in general just no good, Cardinal fans assist the management in letting them know the players time has come to part ways. Tony seems to have never understood that or imbraced the pulse of how baseball smart most Cardinal fans are.

We all know what Izzy has contibuted to the organization, many fans appreciate his efforts on and off the field. But come on,… please someone, anyone,… sit Izzy down and tell him his time has come to call it quits. Baseball stats over the history of the game list thousands of players that have come close to 300-400-500 homeruns, 2,000-3,0000 hits, etc. etc. etc…it is sad he came close to number and fall short of it, but if it means watching the Cardinals lose 20 games they should have won just so he can reach a number,… no thanks! And if thats the case lets lose with a young guy verse a old guy, it certainly couldn’t be any worse at this point.

— James
11:05 am August 6th, 2008

P.S. Kudos to all. It took less than 10 comments on the All-Star Logo entry for someone to fire off the first curse word. Here, where emotions are really running high on something that, oh, matters in the standings, nary a curse word in the first 62 comments. (Applause.)

— Derrick Goold
11:06 am August 6th, 2008

Should have gotten a closer in trade before trade deadline. We all knew it but they didnt wish to give away prospects to do this so here we are with another blown save and more questions than answers! The management apparently is banking on Wainwright coming back to close..why else would they stick with Franklin and Izzy (God love him but he is KILLIN us!)

— Robert
11:22 am August 6th, 2008

One other comment (not izzy related) To the broadcaster last night that mentioned that A. Miles is not a 5 tool player really doesn’t understand Cardinal baseball. Miles comes prepared, ready to play, hustles, never gives up on a plate appearence, and plays within his talent level. A. Miles is the new Cardinal secret weapon. He may fade like many other bench players over the years but his time his here and now,… adding another player to steal time from him is just plain crazy! Kudo’s to the management on another quailty pick up.

— James
11:27 am August 6th, 2008

I’m not even a Cardinal fan and I find the GM pissed about blown saves hilarious. Obviously it was a problem before the trade deadline and the bum failed to make any sort of move to shore it up. Can’t complain if you didn’t even try to fix it.

— Kirk
11:28 am August 6th, 2008

Derrick: Why not move Looper to closer…a role in which he’s been successful in his career..and replace him with Wainright in the rotation? Looper knows what it takes to be successful as a closer and clearly is a team player since he agreed to try being a starting pitcher. Are Tony and Dunc just too stubborn to consider this an option?

— EdaFan
11:39 am August 6th, 2008

EdaFan,

Looper would resist that move. First, he enjoys starting. Second, he’s about to be a free agent at the end of the season — and may want some guarantee in exchange for moving, though I’m not sure how much leverage he has in that regard. (Free agency cuts both ways in this argument.) Third, the Cardinals asked him to radically change his career with the leap-of-faith into the rotation and he’s pitched well enough there to be given the the respect that change earned.

Clearly, there’s a debate to be had between what is better for the Cardinals Wainwright starter/Looper closer vs. Looper starter/Wainwright closer. Not saying those are the only options on the table — because there has been no indication Looper is being talked about internally as a candidate — but they are certainly two worth discussing.

dg

— Derrick Goold
11:52 am August 6th, 2008

i guess wainwright who has been out and hasn’t thrown a pitch for about two months is going to be able to go out and throw 7-8 innings right out the gate after he’s finished his rehab in a week and a half or two…and will save some of those extra innings from the bullpen so the cards will have a more rested pen to still send out izzy or franklin to blow the game in the ninth

remind me how many wins do the cardinals have and how many blown saves and you think wainwright would be more important to the rotation…our rag tag bunch of starter has statistically been one of the better rotations in the league… lohse, looper, wellemeyer, piniero and now carpenter…

if perez can handle the closing duties i’m all for it BUT if the cardinals still need to fill the closers role when wainwright comes back(assuming he’s healthy and able to throw all his pitches) the end game is where he needs to be. wainwright has done it before and was good…who would you rather have close wainwright, looper, pineiro or wellemeyer if one has to be the odd man out of the rotation and the other tried out in the closers role?

looper can go 7 innings…how long before wainwright can.

wainwright will do what ever the cards ask to improve the teams chances of winning and he knows the cards will put him back in the rotation next season.

— oz70
11:59 am August 6th, 2008

AS a true Cardianl Fan, I feel Izzy still has what it takes to be the closer. His pitches look much better than before. I have faith in him. I think we all need to have faith in him. He can get the job done. He is a Cardinal and deserves our support and not our critism. How can we critize someone, when we do not have the ability to do his job. And i beleive he will get the job done. And if he does it will change the whole face of the bull pen and we will be a better team. I would bring Perez up for insurance. And Wainright must start if we are going to win it all.

— True Cards Fan
12:03 pm August 6th, 2008

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