PHOENIX -- So, upon entering the Phillies' clubhouse after last night's 6-4 loss, one of the first people I saw as I walked toward Charlie Manuel's office was Ryan Howard.
Well, I only saw his back.
While most of the Phillies were quietly eating dinner or making their way to and/or from the shower, Howard was sitting on a chair, facing his locker, and fiddling with his cell phone. When we reporters walked out of Manuel's office a few minutes later, he still was in the same position. These seemingly are stressful times for Howard, who struck out again in a pinch-hit appearance last night and is batting .168. Since his game-winning homer last Thursday night at the Bank, he's 1-for-16 with eight strikeouts.
And although he picked up two RBIs and hit several balls hard Monday night, I thought his pre-game comments yesterday about how he judges himself relative to how others judge him revealed something about his state of mind lately: "To me, it's all about seeing the ball and having good at-bats," Howard said. "To everyone else, it's about results. That's how it is in the media and everywhere else. So that's that. People see what they want to see. There's a lot of stuff that you don't see, other stuff that's going on. I try to do what I can to help the team win in whatever ways I can."
OK, what do you make of that?
***
When it came to the four-pitch, bases-loaded walk he issued to D-backs pitcher Randy Johnson (a .126 career hitter) in the five-run fourth inning last night, Adam Eaton didn't mince words.
"To walk the pitcher on four pitches is pretty pathetic," he said. "I [bleeped] up. I don't think Arizona beat us. I think I beat ourselves."
Here's a sobering stat for the Phillies: Eaton's ERA in his first three starts was 4.12. His ERA in his last four starts is 7.23.
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Depending on where you live, your paper may have included this early-edition story on Carlos Ruiz, who suddenly has seven hits in his last 16 at-bats after batting .188 at the start of last week. The difference: Manuel said Ruiz is using his hips and legs more, instead of trying to swing only with his upper body.
***
Kyle Kendrick goes to the mound today, and he says he's trying to be more like Brandon Webb. Who isn't? Webb, who starts tomorrow for the D-backs, may be the best pitcher in baseball right now (he's 7-0 with a 2.49 ERA). Like Kendrick, Webb is a sinker-ball pitcher. But Webb also has a nasty changeup, and Kendrick, who is trying to develop that pitch, said yesterday he was planning to ask Webb for pointers. Good idea.
More later from Chase Field.
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
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1 comment:
A lot of stuff you don't see? After 3 Ks last night, he may need to see a bit more. Not many $10 million sluggers take their teams to success with a .163 average. Maybe he's trying to strike out 10 million times?
He's off to a good start.
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