Saturday, July 7, 2007

VICTORY, ROCK CATS! SAVE, LEVY!

Everybody was drained.

The visiting Portland Sea Dogs had a 2 p.m. bus from their hotel in Southington with the knowledge that it was going to be a long, long day. A doubleheader that simply had to be played was slated to begin at 4:05 p.m. Rain was in the forecast.

Manager Arnie Beyeler was cordial but far from jovial after nearly 4 1/2 hours of baseball separated by 30 minutes of fireworks on a day where the start of the game was delayed by 2 hours, 26 minutes by a violent thunderstorm.

"We went down to the cage and took some swings down there," Beyeler uttered in the monotone you'd expect from a tired manager whose team lost two games and had a 4-hour bus trip on the docket that would begin after midnight. "We didn't do anything on the field.

"We knew it was going to rain and it was going to be bad so we didn't get here any sooner than we had to."

Mental fatigue is one thing, but consider the following tale of physical and mentral strain rolled into one that needs to be told.

The gallant association of Rock Cats tarp-pullers was instructed by budding meteorologist, bon vivant and team president Bill Dowling to get the infield covered. That amoeba-like blob percolating across his weather map with green on its perimeter, yellow at its core and angry red in its nucleus was bound to cause problems. The sun was shining but Dowling knew those clouds in the western sky were a threat to wipe away his expected sellout crowd.

The sky blackened. The wind kicked up. The temperature plummeted like the thermometer was taken out of an oven and plunged into ice water. The tarp people did their usual superb job with one glaring exception. They underestimated the powerful wind that was now peeling the tarp off the infield near the critical shortstop area. One torrent and the doubleheader with over 7,000 fans would be bogged down in two inches of infield mud.

Enter Rock Cats assistant general manager Evan Levy. Evan can be a demanding boss. He wants everything done to his level of perfection, but he sets an example through the meticulous execution of his responsibilities, and then some.

As the undulating canvas threatened to waft skyward, Levy tried to summon his crack crew but they had scattered to perform their usual day-fo-game tasks. He and three others took matters into their own hands. With the rain pounding him and wind nearly taking him off his feet, he held onto the tarp at shortstop, like a 19th century deckhand battling to keep his sails aloft and his ship from sinking.

The wind was so strong it blew the huge cyclinder -- that big pipe-like contraption that rolls up the tarp -- toward the middle of the infield. Completely soaked to the skin, Evan and his abbreviated crew pushed it back and secured it.

As is always the case when rain falls at a ridiculous pace, the New Britain Stadium outfield was inundated. There's nothing anybody, not even Evan, could do about that. But with the sun again shining and 7,109 folks clamoring for entertainment, the tarpers did their thing in reverse and revealed a perfectly dry infield.

After the game, Evan had to supervise a girl scouts sleepover. Obviously there were places he'd rather be -- at home in bed being his most likely choice.

The managers were tired, the players were tired, the tarpers were tired. Evan had to be close to the human brink of exhaustion.

Rock Cats reliever Tim Lahey notched the save in the first game. J.P. Martinez rescued the second. But for the first time in baseball history, someone saved two games with one dramatic effort. He'll be at the ballpark well in advance of today's 1 p.m. youth clinic if anybody wants to thank him.

CATS DEAL DOGS A DOUBLE DEFEAT

A rain delay pushed the first game of the Rock Cats' doubleheader with the Portland Sea Dogs up 2 hours, 26 minutes.

In their constant quest of pleasing the fans, they opted to treat fans to a belated Independence Day fireworks display between games, so the second game went deep into the night, deeper than our deadline would permit.

For those interested in the complete story that could not appear in Saturday's Herald, here are the details of a twinbill which carried the Rock Cats to within a game of the third-place Sea Dogs.

New Britain Rock Cats starter Ryan Mullins and leadoff hitter Brandon Roberts celebrated a day of Double-A firsts.

Mullins earned his first Eastern League win and Roberts slugged his first home run of the season Friday night to lead the Rock Cats to a 6-3 win over the Portland Sea Dogs in the first game of a doubleheader.

A botched pop-up by the Portland infield led to a 5-4 New Britain victory in the nightcap.

Mullins (1-2) yielded three runs on seven hits before tiring with one out in the sixth inning. Mullins had five quality starts in his first six outings but was unable to get the elusive victory.

“It feels good to get my first victory but I wish I could have gone deeper into the game,” said Mullins, a left-hander who was promoted to New Britain from Class-A Fort Myers May 29. “I’m getting better with all of my pitches and I’m starting to get into a groove.”

The Rock Cats (40-43) wasted little time in seizing the initiative off Portland starter T.J. Nall (3-11) when Roberts, with his family on hand from Florida, launched an arching fly ball that cleared the right-field wall with the count full.
“It was a fastball in,” Roberts said. “I just got lucky and squared it up.”


Portland right fielder Cory Keylor dropped Felix Molina’s warning-track with Brock Peterson aboard and nobody out, paving the way for an unearned run in the second inning. Korey Feiner tapped a grounder to short with the bases loaded and two out.

Nall retired the first two Rock Cats in the third inning but Peterson worked a walk and Molina smacked his fifth homer of the season well beyond the right-field wall to double New Britain’s advantage.

Portland (41-42) threatened to cut into the gap in the fourth but Mullins limited the damage. With the bases loaded and none out, a groundout by Jay Johnson scored a lone Sea Dogs run.

The Sea Dogs chased Mullins in the sixth. Jed Lowrie (2-for-3) doubled and scored on a one-out triple by Johnson. Johnson (1-for-3, 2 RBI) came in on Andrew Pinckney’s infield hit. Tim Lahey set down the next two hitters and retired Portland in order in the seventh to notch his fourth save.

In Game 2, Portland third baseman Pinckney dropped a pop fly 10 feet in front of home plate with the bases loaded and two out in the third inning, allowing the Rock Cats to score the two runs that made the difference.

“He’s got to make the play but he didn’t,” Portland manager Arnie Beyeler said. “It was his ball and he knows it.”

Johnson had two doubles and two RBI for the Sea Dogs, who dropped their first twinbill of the season.

Veteran knuckleballer Charlie Zink (8-3) yielded five runs (three earned) on six hits and three walks while striking out three.

“He struggles to throw when it’s humid out,” Beyeler said. “The knuckleball wasn’t working very well. He threw probably 10 good ones. … He battled and we got five good innings out of him, basically without any stuff.”

Moses had a two-run double in New Britain’s three-run first inning.

J.P. Martinez (2-4) retired nine of the 10 hitters he faced in relief of Rock Cats starter Josh Hill, six on strikeouts.The Rock Cats have swept four of their doubleheaders this season and split two.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

ADVERSITY RESHAPES SWARZAK'S GAME

The tiny sitting room with the cushy chairs adjacent to the Rock Cats clubhouse was quiet as Anthony Swarzak pondered what had transpired since he reported to spring training in March.

He was in great shape when he arrived in Fort Myers, eager to show the Minnesota Twins that he could follow the fast-path to big-league prosperity blazed by pitchers like Francisco Liriano, Matt Garza, Pat Neshek and Kevin Slowey.

Swarzak, 21, is entitled to have a little fun mixed in with the serious business of professional baseball, but he evidently crossed the line. When his time came to pee in the cup, he was a little concerned, but time passed, he reported to New Britain and he figured he was all set.

Not so. The Twins got the word in mid-April that Swarzak had failed his drug test, and it wasn’t his first offense. The penalty for messing up twice was a 50-game suspension. All his hopes and dreams passed before his eyes.

The initial shock wore off while Swarzak spent the rest of April and some of May hanging with the Rock Cats but unable to participate. When he reported to the Twins’ extended spring training program in Fort Myers, the hot sun bore down on him as he worked to stay in shape and fine-tune his mechanics.

“I realized I was taking the game for granted, just a little bit,” he said. “I really got that passion for the game, not that I lost it but I kind of put things in perspective. … I’m trying to make the best out of a bad situation.”

When the 50 games elapsed, Swarzak was dispatched across the parking lot at the Twins’ spring training complex to pitch for Fort Myers in the Class-A Florida State League. Returning to the scene where he had already started 37 games over the previous two seasons surely wasn’t what he wanted or expected on June 13, but he steadfastly refused to let that affect his focus.

Three starts, 15 2/3 innings and 18 strikeouts later, he was headed back to New Britain, where starting pitchers seemingly had forgotten that throwing strikes, trusting their stuff and challenging hitters are the keys to success. The time was ripe for Swarzak to make a dramatic entrance and show manager Riccardo Ingram what the Rock Cats had missed.

The results: two wins, 12 1/3 innings, 12 strikeouts and a 2.92 ERA.

“He seems to be a little more focused,” Ingram said. “He probably had a little bit of pressure on him from that situation and leading up to it. Obviously it’s going to affect you. … He had time to clear his head. He realizes the talent he has and doesn’t want to waste it. That’s what he’s shown the last two outings and hopefully he can continue.”

If he does, and he can somehow inspire his colleagues to follow suit, the Rock Cats’ quest for a winning season and some postseason fun aren’t yet out of reach. If he does, he will reshape how history reflects on a sobering 2007 season.

Sunday, July 1, 2007

GET WELL, PAUL; GOOD LUCK, STAN & JOHN

Sometimes the real world has the untimely habit of invading our fairy-tale sports domain.

Devout Rock Cats fans may notice that a man dressed in Twins blue and armed with a video camera can be seen switching between the first- and third-base sides to film the team's pitchers and hitters. He performs the duty out of the goodness of his own heart and for the benefit of Twins' player development and the players' future.

That man is Paul Dineen, and a more avid Rock Cats supporter you simply will not find.

Paul and his wife Merrilee were due at the home of Buddy and Lynne Robinson for a barbecue but he had to be rushed to the hospital Sunday morning and underwent brain surgery. As of Sunday night, the word was that Paul was resting comfortably, his foremost thoughts being that he doesn't want to miss the Rock Cats' next home game on Wednesday.

I'd like to join the folks who know, love or appreciate Paul in wishing him a speedy recovery. ...

The Cincinnati Reds fired manager Jerry Narron Sunday, surely a difficult decision for general manager Wayne Krivsky.

Krivsky, who was born and bred in New Canaan, was a long-time Twins exec before taking the Reds' post last year. Like most of Twins GM Terry Ryan's loyal people, Krivsky was a frequent visitor to New Britain Stadium and all the club's minor league venues.

Now I'm going to put two and two together, and while they may not equal four right away, here's some food for thought.

Krivsky had plenty of opportunities to see former Rock Cats managers John Russell and Stan Cliburn plying their trade over the years. While Peter Mackanin has been named Reds interim skipper, could Russell or Cliburn be in Krivsky's thoughts as he considers the future of his new club?

He couldn't go wrong with either ex-catcher.

Russell, 46, currently managing the Phillies' Triple-A squad in Ottawa, brings a quiet, cerebral approach to his job. His steady hand guided the Rock Cats to a fabulous season in 1998 which ended in the Eastern League finals.

Cliburn, 50, combines an uncanny knack for the game with an innate ability to handle ballplayers. He spent five years in New Britain before moving up to Triple-A Rochester last year.

Mackanin is a terrific guy who I got to know when he was scouting and I was the general manager in Glens Falls, N.Y. I'm sure he'll do fine at the helm in Cincy, but I can't help but thinking that either Russell or Cliburn would be a great choice. If it isn't in the cards this time, here's hoping that they get their chance someday soon.