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July 21, 2014 The Week in QuotesJuly 14-20, 2014
—Cardinals starting pitcher Adam Wainwright, after giving up a leadoff double to Derek Jeter in the first inning of the All-Star game. After a social media firestorm ensued from Wainwright’s comment, he apologized on-camera. (John Harper, New York Daily News)
“I told [Rasmus] I didn't appreciate it. You're up by two runs with two outs and you lay down a bunt. I don't think that's the way the game should be played.” —Rangers starting pitcher Colby Lewis, on Blue Jays outfielder Colby Rasmus bunting for a base hit against the shift with a two-run lead during the fifth inning of Saturday’s game. (Chris Toman, MLB.com) “Most recently, Mr. Rodriguez admitted that his advisers at Roc Nation, most specifically, Desiree Perez, instructed him ‘not to pay the invoices, and to make Gordon & Rees sue’ him.” —A statement by the law firm Gordon & Rees, in a complaint released Monday. Alex Rodriguez allegedly has $380,000 in outstanding legal fees. (Teri Thompson, Christian Red, Michael O’Keeffe, New York Daily News)
“I'm proud to be there and amongst good company. Carl was a great ambassador for the Rays, and is one of the guys that this franchise will always remember. I'm pretty much here for the rest of my career, so at some point I expected to be there, today being the day, it's a proud day.” —Rays third baseman Evan Longoria, after breaking the team record for doubles and tying the record for RBI. Both were previously held by current Dodgers outfielder Carl Crawford. (Marc Topkin, Tampa Bay Times)
“It was pretty majestic. Based on the sound, the follow through, and then the first glimpse of the ball leaving, it’s just the immediate relief to know this ball is going over the fence and you’ve got the lead. And then you just enjoy it. You enjoy the fact that he gets excited, the team gets excited, and you just want to see what happens from there.” —Red Sox bench coach Torey Lovullo, following first baseman Mike Napoli’s decisive home run on Saturday night. (John Wilcox, Boston Herald)
“Since June 1st, we’d scored fewer runs than anybody except for the Red Sox in the AL. Clearly offensively we haven’t played as well as we can. I’m optimistic that our (injured) guys have a chance to come back sooner than we all think. I got an update last night that Adam Lind and Edwin Encarnacion are really progressing well. Lind is out of his boot. They’re swinging off a tee. Lind is going to swing with a little more authority today, but again, after everything he’s done he’s got no symptoms at all, no pain. It’s obviously a great sign.” —Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos, on the impact currently injured players will have on the team’s offense when they return to play. (Richard Griffin, Toronto Star)
“I have a few things, and it's been cleaned up. You look at the numbers and you think maybe they knew what was coming at certain times. That can explain a few things here and there… I'm not saying I pitched the best, but it doesn't help when someone knows what's coming. It could be an issue. It's definitely cleaned up, so we'll find out.” —Rays pitcher Grant Balfour, who recently acknowledged that he has been unintentionally tipping his pitches. (Marc Topkin, Tampa Bay Times)
“Until we get to .500, you’re not exactly where you want to be at this juncture in the season. We’re not at .500, and frankly, we’re way below .500.” —Twins general manager Terry Ryan, on the team’s second-half outlook. The Twins were swept by the Rays in their first series back from last week’s All Star break. (Megan Ryan, Minneapolis Star Tribune)
“It was the freaking greatest effort. My heart sank down pretty deep. We got over there, and he got up right away. He’s a big, strong man. Thankfully, we’re very fortunate that he came out of that OK. You can’t fault him. You’re hoping it’s going to come back and stay in play. But his momentum and his focus on the ball carried him over.” —Cubs manager Rick Renteria, on first baseman Anthony Rizzo making an outstanding catch before falling into the opposing team’s dugout (Patrick Mooney, CSN Chicago)
"I think he's stood up a touch more to get on top of the baseball. Lowered his hands a little bit, probably more direct to the ball. He worked on that over the break. Looked good up there tonight.” —Nationals manager Matt Williams, on Bryce Harper making an adjustment to his batting stance (Dan Kolko, MASN Sports)
“We came out of the break and we are in first place and when we looked at our club this was a difficult decision for everyone. It was difficult not only because the quality of the person involved in Dan and the way he went about his business and how hard he works. But at the same time we feel like we need to give Fredi additional pieces to manage on that bench. This was, we felt, the appropriate time.” —Braves general manager Frank Wren, on releasing second baseman Dan Uggla (Chris Vivlamore, Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
"These type of tools, strength and all of the things I talked about, they're hard to find. I like guys that are two-way guys. I think those guys are athletic, I think they get to see the game from both perspectives." —Phillies director of player development Joe Jordan, on third round pick Aaron Brown, who pitched at Pepperdine University but is going to play center field in the minors (Max Cohen, Philadelphia Inquierer)
“All I did was play golf and sit by the pool. I play golf a lot, so it was nothing out of the ordinary there. I woke up Wednesday morning and said, 'Oh, this doesn't feel good.' I don't know what it was. I didn't go take BP or anything like that. I just woke up a little tight.” —Brewers relief pitcher Will Smith, on returning from the all-star break with pain in his back (Tom Haudricourt, Journal Sentinel)
“Do you know how humiliating and embarrassing it is to go through that? The worst thing for any professional athlete is to be embarrassed … I'd love to sit down and talk to Pedro about it. But that has to be his call. I would never cross the line and go to him and just start offering advice. That's not my place. I'm not sure what advice I could give anyone, anyway. I never did figure it out.” —Pirates broadcaster and former pitcher Steve Blass, on being able to identify with Pedro Alvarez’s current throwing problems (Ron Cook, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
“We felt less comfortable with last year's club, as silly as it sounds with the win-loss record. But we had a pretty glaring need in right field that we went out and addressed, and even at first base. … As we sit here right now, we have some internal options that if they step forward, we're going to get some quality production from them. But we'll still look to get better if there's an opportunity out there.” —Pirates general manager Neal Huntington, on his feelings about his team’s roster going into the second half (Stephen Pianovich, MLB.com)
“It’s frustrating, but we deserve it the way we’ve been playing. After losing two tough games, you think we’d come out with a little more intensity and energy. But we didn’t. That’s not how good teams play. We need to look in the mirror and figure it out.” —Royals outfielder Alex Gordon, after the Royals lost three straight to the Red Sox over the weekend. (Andy McCullough, Kansas City Star)
“We were rolling pretty well. I’m putting down signs. I’m the guide. If he doesn’t feel it, we go in a different direction. We just talk about it. It’s not a pride thing to shake off or to not throw whatever pitch. Our job is to get guys out. If he feels a certain pitch is going to get a guy out, then we’re going to throw it. He didn’t shake much today.” —Cardinals catcher George Kottaras, on catching Joe Kelly in his first start since being acquired by St. Louis (Joe Trezza, St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
"Having to lock in for the Derby made me feel better. I wasn't myself the last couple of weeks. The short time off and the Derby kind of helped me out. I think it will be all right." —Marlins outfielder Giancarlo Stanton, on homering twice after returning from the all-star break (Joe Frisaro, MLB.com) —Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun, on scoring from second base on a tapper back to the mound during Sunday’s game against the Nationals. (Adam McCalvey, MLB.com)
“The fifth was definitely a little rocky. I was getting behind guys. I think it’s something I’ll try to improve and get better each start. I think overall solid for a first start. I’m happy. It was a fun experience.” —Tigers pitcher Drew VerHagen, who made his major league debut on Saturday. VerHagen allowed three earned runs, all of which were plated in the fifth inning. (George Sippie, Detroit Free Press)
Chris Mosch is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @chris_mosch
3 comments have been left for this article.
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The Stanton quote was so impressive, it got listed twice?
Well, maybe it was worth repeating, at that.