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Tales from the Seattle Mariners Dugout

Page 15

by Kirby Arnold


  “I had a good bead on it,” Cameron said. “I snow-coned it in my glove and brought it back over the fence. It felt like it happened in slow motion, where I was able to catch the ball and see it slipping out of my glove, and then pop it back in there.”

  Better than saving a run against the Yankees, that magnificent leap became the moment Mariners fans accepted Cameron. As he jogged back to the dugout after the third out, the crowd at Safeco Field gave him a long, loud standing ovation.

  “I got chills,” Cameron said. “It was a special moment for me. That catch allowed the city to feel comfortable with the type of player they had. I’d made those catches all the time in Chicago and Cincinnati. But the fact that I was able to do it here kind of allowed people to feel comfortable with me.”

  From an unknown replacement for Griffey, Cameron became the perfect man to patrol the vast center field at the Mariners’ new outdoor ballpark, Safeco Field. With deep gaps and heavy marine air, there aren’t many no-doubt-about-it home runs at Safeco. High fly balls tend to hang for the outfielders to catch, but it takes speed and a no-fear approach to succeed.

  Cameron made every kind of catch—with body-slams into the padding, leaps above the wall, and dives to the turf on bloops in the gaps—and his career flourished in Seattle. He won Gold Glove awards in 2001 and 2003 and, despite his tendency to strike out, he served as a force in the middle of the Mariners’ batting order during their playoff runs in 2000 and 2001. His 25 home runs and 110 RBIs in 2001 were career highs.

  “I was a good player when I got to Seattle,” Cameron said. “After I got here, I started to really grasp what kind of player I was. What helped was that we had the type of players to allow me to flourish the way I wanted to.”

  If the catch of Jeter’s ball in 2000 was the moment Cameron became known as a bona fide replacement for Griffey, his offensive performance on May 2, 2002, served notice to the kind of hitter he was. He hit four home runs that night against the White Sox in Comiskey Park, becoming one of 18 in major-league history to do it.

  For one night, he’d accomplished something even the great Griffey hadn’t.

  “I’ve had an asterisk by my name as the guy traded for Ken Griffey Jr.,” Cameron said that night. “Now maybe I’ll have another asterisk.”

  Alex Rodriguez: From Most Valuable to Most Vilified

  The first day he pulled on a Mariners uniform, Alex Rodriguez made an impression, not only with his bat or his glove.

  It was the spring of 1994, and Rodriguez, baseball’s first overall draft pick in 1993, worked out for a day with the big-league club.

  “The one thing that caught my eye was his eagerness to learn,” said John McLaren, the Mariners’ bullpen coach then. “He asked a lot of questions and he left a nice impression that he really, really enjoyed playing the game of baseball.”

  Only a few months later, Rodriguez was in the majors. He’d progressed through the Class-A and Double-A levels quickly and manager Lou Piniella called him up just before the All-Star break. At 18, he became baseball’s youngest major leaguer since Jose Rijo with the Yankees at 18 in 1984.

  “You could tell he had a world of talent,” McLaren said.

  Being so young, Rodriguez struggled. He batted just .204 in 17 games before the Mariners sent him back to the minors in 1994, and the next year, after spending the first month at the Triple-A level, Rodriguez batted .232 with five home runs and 19 RBIs in 48 games with the Mariners.

  “He was a baby-faced kid then,” McLaren said. “You could see that he was bug-eyed that first year, looking at players like Ken Griffey Jr., who he idolized, and Randy Johnson, Jay Buhner, and Edgar Martinez. Kenny talked with him about handling the pressures of being a star, and all of those guys helped him become the player he is.”

  Rodriguez experienced an adjustment period, albeit a short one.

  Like many young players, he loved to pull the ball, and the Mariners knew he would struggle if he didn’t hit to all fields. Piniella and hitting coach Lee Elia worked with Rodriguez, teaching him to stay inside the ball and drive it to right-center field.

  Edgar Martinez congratulates Alex Rodriguez at the plate after A-Rod’s home run. Photo by Justin Best/The Herald of Everett, Washington

  The results were almost immediate. In 1996, Rodriguez hit 35 home runs and drove in 123, led the league with a .358 batting average, made the All-Star team, and won the Player of the Year award.

  “He learned how to hit in a hurry,” McLaren said. “You knew the natural talent was there, and Lee Elia and Lou Piniella were the ones who shaped this kid.”

  Rodriguez’s numbers fell off in 1997—23 homers, 84 RBIs, and a .300 average—but in 1998 he produced the best all-around year of his Mariners career. Rodriguez hit 42 home runs, drove in 124, and stole 46 bases, making him the third player in history, at the time, to hit at least 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in the same season. (Jose Canseco did it in 1988 and Barry Bonds in 1996. Alfonso Soriano became the fourth in 2006.)

  As much as Rodriguez meant to the Mariners’ lineup, fans who looked at the future of the team began to worry. Griffey would be eligible for free agency after the 1999 season and Rodriguez the following year. Offers by the Mariners to both players in 1999 went nowhere, and Griffey was traded to the Reds the next offseason.

  Rodriguez’s free-agent season was next, in 2000, and despite hitting 41 homers and driving in 132 runs to help return the Mariners to the playoffs, his future became a frequent topic of concern.

  Rodriguez said all the right things to ease the fans’ fear of his possible departure. He said the most important criteria for his next team would be its ability to win a championship. The Mariners, who’d taken the Yankees to six games in the 2000 ALCS, seemed as close as any team to that.

  The Mariners had understood from Rodriguez’s agent, Scott Boras, that he didn’t want to be tied to an ultra-long contract. They offered him five years at $95 million, and Rodriguez barely sniffed at it.

  The New York Mets courted Rodriguez and then backed away, but Texas Rangers owner Tom Hicks made an offer that Rodriguez couldn’t shun—$252 million over 10 years. Rodriguez took it, and Mariners fans became livid.

  They never forgave Rodriguez for making such a big deal of his desire to sign with a winning team. The Rangers, with a pitching staff that was in shambles, were many years from being competitive.

  Many newspapers used the term “Pay-Rod” in their headlines after he signed the deal. The Everett Herald ran a “Pay-Rod Meter” on its website, showing Rodriguez’s salary total climbing by the second.

  Rodriguez never came close to the championship he said he wanted. While the Mariners charged toward a record-tying 116 victories in 2001, the Rangers finished last in the American League West with a 73–69 record, 43 games behind the first-place Ms. The Rangers’ 5.71 team ERA was the worst in baseball that year.

  When Rodriguez returned with the Rangers to Safeco Field, Mariners fans booed him viciously every time he came to bat or fielded a ball. Some fans threw wads of bills that fluttered from the upper deck. Before his first at-bat after returning as a Ranger, Rodriguez stood in the on-deck circle unaware that a fan in the front row was using a fishing pole to dangle a dollar bill over his head.

  “Alex set down some criteria for what he wanted, but when Tom Hicks came with all that money, the criteria crumbled,” McLaren said. “I’ve been an Alex Rodriguez fan and I always will be. It’s a shame that so many people look to pick on the guy, but it goes with the territory.”

  Mariners Y2K: Return to the Postseason, Without Griffey

  If the difficult 1999 season proved anything, it’s that the Mariners needed to play a different style of baseball at Safeco Field than they played in the Kingdome.

  Mariners fans heckle Alex Rodriguez after he signed with the Texas Rangers. Photo by Stephanie S. Cordle/The Herald of Everett, Washington

  In the dome, they could sneak a couple of runners on base and wait for a three-run homer. At the new ballpa
rk, where the outfield gaps were big and the cool marine air from nearby Puget Sound turned long balls into outs at the warning track, it would take pitching, defense, and a small-ball attack to win.

  Manager Lou Piniella had cried for a more athletic lineup, and when the Mariners got together for spring training in 2000, he had it.

  Mike Cameron brought speed, decent power, and a solid glove. The Mariners signed first baseman John Olerud, the former batting champion who grew up in nearby Bellevue, Washington, hoping he could take advantage of Safeco Field’s vast spaces and spray the ball to all fields. They added veteran Mark McLemore, an infielder/outfielder who gave Piniella both versatility and speed off the bench, and added 18-year veteran Stan Javier, who could handle the bat in any situation and provide leadership in the clubhouse.

  Aaron Sele, another home-state player who grew up in Poulsbo, Washington, signed as a free agent and joined a starting rotation that included Freddy Garcia, Jamie Moyer, Paul Abbott, and John Halama.

  The Mariners strengthened the bullpen, one of the club’s biggest concerns, by signing Kazuhiro Sasaki, Japan’s all-time saves leader, who replaced Jose Mesa at closer. They also acquired hard-throwing Arthur Rhodes, a left-handed relief specialist.

  After a 79-victory season in 1999 that left them in third place, Piniella was asked midway through spring training if the 2000 Mariners could win more than 85 games.

  “Oh please,” he said. “Let’s not get too carried away.”

  After all, the Mariners were trying to move on without Ken Griffey Jr.

  They didn’t come close to winning 85. They won 91.

  A 19–8 record in June propelled the Mariners into first place, one-half game ahead of Oakland, and they steadily increased the margin as the summer went on. By August 11, they led by seven games over the A’s.

  “We played good ball that year,” pitching coach Bryan Price said. “But when we would lose a few games, we’d start to think, ‘Hey, maybe we’re not as good as we thought we were.’”

  Catcher Dan Wilson and closer Kazuhiro Sasaki. Photo by Justin Best/The Herald of Everett, Washington

  The Mariners lost more than a few in August and September, and the A’s overtook them for the division lead by winning nine of their final 11 games. The late-season fade forced the Mariners to win their final two games just to reach the postseason as the American League wild-card. team. They beat the Angels 21–9 and 5–2, sending them to Chicago for a first-round series against the White Sox.

  Piniella did some of his finest managing in that series.

  In Game 1, the Mariners and White Sox took a 4–4 tie into extra innings before Mike Cameron singled to lead off the 10th inning against Chicago closer Keith Foulke. Alex Rodriguez flied to left for the first out and, with the dangerous Edgar Martinez hitting, Foulke made numerous throws to first base to keep Cameron close.

  Suddenly, Piniella called time out and walked onto the field, not to argue with an umpire but to talk with his baserunner.

  “I’d never in my life seen a manager do that,” Price said. “You see them go out and talk to a pitcher, but never to a baserunner. I didn’t even know it was legal to do that. At first I thought Cameron was injured.”

  Piniella met Cameron near the first-base coaches’ box and whispered something into his ear, then walked back to the dugout. Cameron went back to the bag, smiling.

  Piniella, famous for knowing opposing personnel as well as his own, had tipped off Cameron on when it would be best to steal.

  “He said if the catcher set up outside, it would be a pitch I could run on, so go,” Cameron said. “I mean, the guy calls time out and tells me how to steal a base. Unbelievable.”

  Cameron stole the base, and Martinez followed with a two-run homer off Foulke. John Olerud, the next hitter, also homered to give the Mariners a 7–4 lead, and closer Kazuhiro Sasaki finished off the White Sox in the bottom of the 10th to notch the Game 1 victory.

  The next night, Paul Abbott limited the White Sox to two runs in 5 ⅔ innings and the Mariners’ bullpen—Arthur Rhodes, Jose Mesa, and Kazuhiro Sasaki—held Chicago hitless over the final 3 ⅓ innings for a 5–2 victory.

  With a chance to clinch the series at home, the Mariners started Aaron Sele in Game 3, and he stifled the White Sox on three hits and a run in 7⅓ innings. Chicago starter James Baldwin was nearly as effective, holding the Mariners to three hits and a run in six innings.

  With the score tied 1–1, Olerud led off the bottom of the ninth with a wicked smash back to the mound, hitting White Sox reliever Kelly Wunsch in the stomach. Olerud reached second when Wunsch, injured, threw the ball away at first base.

  Foulke replaced Wunsch on the mound, and Piniella inserted pinch-runner Rickey Henderson, the aging speedster who’d stolen 31 bases for the Mariners after they signed him in late May. Stan Javier dropped a sacrifice bunt that moved Henderson to third with one out, and the White Sox walked David Bell.

  Piniella then sent Carlos Guillen to pinch-hit for catcher Joe Oliver and, like his advice to Cameron that helped win Game 1, the Mariners’ skipper made a call that won the series.

  “Carlos, I want you to bunt the ball, and I want you to take it right to Frank Thomas at first base,” Piniella told Guillen before he walked into the on-deck circle. “He can’t throw a lick, and if you get that ball down, we’re going to the American League finals.”

  Bench coach John McLaren marveled.

  “It was like George Allen designing a play for the Washington Redskins,” McLaren said. “Lou is so good at that.”

  Foulke threw a first-pitch fastball but Guillen didn’t bunt. He took a mighty swing and fouled the ball to the backstop.

  In the dugout, Piniella was livid.

  “Lou turned to me and said, ‘What did we just tell this guy?’” McLaren said. “Lou was really steamed and he kept going on about it. He hadn’t finished his next sentence and I looked up, and there was the most perfect bunt you’ve ever seen. I ran out of the dugout to celebrate, and Lou was still down there talking to himself.”

  Just as Piniella had wanted, Guillen pushed a perfect bunt toward Thomas, and Henderson scored the winning run to clinch the series.

  End of story? Hardly. Four months later, when the Mariners were taking batting practice during a spring training workout, McLaren had a question for Guillen.

  “Carlos, I never asked you this after the game, but do you remember when you bunted to Frank Thomas to win that game?” McLaren asked. “What happened on the pitch before that? Why did you swing?”

  “Oh, I just did that on my own,” Guillen said.

  McLaren later told that to Piniella, who lost his cool again.

  “Lou, forget about it,” McLaren said. “It’s over. We won the game.”

  Mariners Lose Their Yankees Weapon

  The Mariners had to wait for their next opponent after sweeping the White Sox. The Yankees and A’s took their first-round series to the limit, with the Yankees winning Game 5 to set up a Seattle-New York showdown to determine which team would play in the World Series.

  During the four-day break between series, the Mariners scheduled a simulated game for left-handed starter Jamie Moyer. He hadn’t pitched in the White Sox series because of tightness in the back of his shoulder, but the time off allowed him to recover, and he felt good.

  Moyer’s return was seen as a big edge for the Mariners if they were to face the left-handed-heavy Yankees lineup. During the regular season, Moyer was 2–0 against the Yankees with a 1.35 earned run average.

  On October 7, one day after the Mariners clinched their series over the White Sox, Moyer took the mound for a 60-pitch simulated game. Through those 60 pitches, Mover’s shoulder felt fine, and he clearly was ready to face either the A’s or the Yankees, whichever team won the other series.

  Then he decided to throw a 61st pitch in order to work from the other side of the rubber against a left-handed hitter. Backup catcher Chris Widger, a right-handed hitter, turned around and batted left-han
ded. He said it was the first time he’d stood on that side of the plate since he was in high school.

  Moyer then threw a pitch that may have altered the outcome of the Mariners’ next series.

  Widger slapped a grounder back to the mound, and the ball skipped off the grass and struck Moyer square on his left knee. It fractured his kneecap and ended his postseason before it started. Moyer was devastated.

  “It’s very frustrating,” he said, tears in his eyes and his voice cracking as he met the media. “I still don’t believe it’s over.”

  The Mariners, despite going 6–3 against the Yankees in the regular season, knew beating the Yankees would be an immense challenge, and without Moyer they lost a huge edge.

  “I’m pretty sure it would have been a different series with him,” center fielder Mike Cameron said. “He’d always done well against the Yankees, and he was the one guy who could neutralize the left-handed bats that they had—Paul O’Neill, David Justice, and Tino Martinez.”

  Those three hitters hurt the Mariners in the series. O’Neill batted .250 but had five RBIs in the six games. Martinez hit .320 with a home run. Justice batted .231 but hit two home runs and drove in eight runs.

  No blow was bigger for the Yankees than Justice’s three-run homer in the seventh inning of Game 6. The Mariners led 4–3 at the time and were in position to force a deciding Game 7 the next night.

  Instead, Justice crushed a pitch from Arthur Rhodes into the upper deck at Yankee Stadium, and the Yankees went on to win 9–7 and clinch the series.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  The Japanese Connection

  WHEN SPRING TRAINING BEGAN IN 2001, Lou Piniella was worried. When was this new guy, Ichiro Suzuki, going to start pounding the baseball?

  The Mariners had lost free agent Alex Rodriguez and desperately needed to replace his 41 home runs and 132 RBIs entering the 2001 season. One answer was Suzuki, the seven-time Pacific League batting champion in Japan who had signed with the Mariners to become the major leagues’ first Japanese position player.

 

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