USA TODAY US Edition

Cole, Bauer can’t stop hating each other

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer won’t bother to sugarcoat it: They can’t stand each other.

These two celebrated pitchers, former teammates at UCLA, still don’t talk to each other.

They refuse to even speak about each other.

They won’t even look at each other. Now, they’ll have no choice.

For the first time in their profession­al careers, they’re scheduled to square off Sunday when the Houston Astros play the Cleveland Indians at Progressiv­e Field.

Who knows, maybe when the game ends, they’ll exchange pleasantri­es, complement each ther and finally end this nine-year cold war?

Or maybe not.

“I would have to say the odds of the earth burning up are better than that,” Cal State-Fullerton coach Rick Vanderhook, a former UCLA assistant, told USA TODAY. “That’s not going to happen. It’s just not. They are opposites, just such complete opposites.

“Bauer was the professor. He did analytical stuff, trying to see how many revolution­s the ball had, before they started paying these guys all this money to do analytics.

“Gerrit was the bear, would just come out trying to throw 100 mph on every pitch. And you don’t ever want to poke the bear.”

There’s no known specific incident that triggered their feud when they were All-Americans at UCLA. Cole pitched every Friday night, reserved for the team’s ace. Bauer pitched on Saturdays. As juniors in 2011, they became the first collegiate pitchers from the same team to be picked first and third in the June amateur draft.

“They were not friends, but you’ve got to think they respected one another,” Vanderhook said. “Really, I think they made each other great by always trying to outdo each other. Whatever Gerrit would do on Friday, Trevor would try to outdo on Saturday.

“I can’t wait to see them go against each other now.”

The difference in Cole’s and Bauer’s personalit­ies is even more pronounced today. Cole regards himself as a traditiona­l old school pitcher, even at 27. Bauer is constantly tinkering in the pitcher’s lab, either on his own or at Driveline Baseball, the Seattle-area training facility that strives to build harder-throwing pitchers.

Cole, married to the former Amy Crawford, sister of Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford, prefers a relaxing day at the beach with family. Bauer’s lone-wolf mentality and affinity for developing and flying drones is well-documented.

Cole doesn’t bother with social media, letting his wife handle the family Twitter account. Bauer makes it part of his everyday life and is unafraid to express his beliefs, no matter who he offends.

Bauer stirred up a Twitter war three weeks ago when he coyly accused the Astros of doctoring baseballs, believing pine tar was the secret ingredient behind their historic success the first two months of the season.

The Astros were furious, prompting Cleveland manager Terry Francona to apologize. When Cole’s teammates explored why Bauer would even raise the issue, they learned all about baseball’s Hatfield-McCoy feud, believing the allegation­s were intended simply to tear down Cole’s success.

One Astros starter, speaking to USA TODAY on condition of anonymity because he promised Cole he would not comment publicly, attributes Bauer’s claims as “all jealousy” stemming from their collegiate days.

“Now,” the Astros pitcher says, “it’s just killing him to see Cole having such a great year.”

Well, considerin­g the way both are pitching these days, they could become teammates again in two months with selections to the All-Star Game, requiring them to share the same clubhouse. Can you say, awkward?

“They were never the best of friends,” UCLA coach John Savage says, “but I don’t think one guy sat there hoping the other guy would fail when he pitched. They were both Bruins and respected the profession and the program.”

Cole, acquired in January from Pittsburgh, is having the kind of season Cy Youngs are made of, going 5-1 with a 1.86 ERA, striking out a major league-leading 101 batters in 672⁄ innings.

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Bauer, who had his finest season last year — 17-9 with a 4.19 ERA — has kicked it up another notch this season. He’s 4-3 with a 2.35 ERA, striking out 73 in 65 innings, averaging a career-low 7.2 hits per nine innings.

“He’s certainly as good as I’ve seen him since he left UCLA,” said pitching guru Alan Jaeger, who has mentored Bauer since he was in ninth grade, predicting he would be a multiple Cy Young Award winner. “His stuff is electric now. The life on his fastball is probably as good as I’ve seen. He has that reverse slider going.”

Cole was taken first in the draft and received an $8 million signing bonus, the largest given to an amateur at the time.

Bauer, selected two picks later by Arizona, received a $3.4 million signing bonus. He was traded a year later to Cleveland in what could be described as a clash of personalit­ies.

“I keep up with Cole, and I know that he’s killing it,” said Cody Decker, 31, now a first baseman with Class AAA Reno in the Diamondbac­ks organizati­on who led the Pac-10 with 21 homers playing in 2009 with Cole and Bauer. “I like him a lot. But I can’t tell you I know Bauer. I spoke with Bauer one time, and I said, ‘I’ll never do that again. I’m good. I got my fill for a lifetime.’ ”

Decker knows the Cole-Bauer duel might garner more attention for UCLA than Josh Rosen’s selection in the recent NFL draft.

Why, even Cleveland rookie starter Adam Plutko, who toyed with a no-hitter until the seventh inning in Cleveland’s 1-0 victory Wednesday over the Cubs, can weigh in on the family feud. He was the Sunday pitcher in Cole’s and Bauer’s final season, two years later leading UCLA to the NCAA title.

“I think we’re all going to be checking that game out now,” Decker says. “If nothing else, it’s a fantastic, can’t-miss recruiting tool for UCLA. It’s going to have everyone talking.”

Well, except for the two guys who want to bury each other, leaving their own legacy on this hostility.

“If you put these two guys in a room playing checkers,” Vanderhook says, “they’re going to bitch and moan at each other and pop off the whole time. So I can just imagine Sunday.

“I’ll tell you what, I’m going to be home with a Coors Light and enjoy every pitch.”

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Trevor Bauer, left, is 4-3 and Gerrit Cole is 5-1 this season.
USA TODAY SPORTS Trevor Bauer, left, is 4-3 and Gerrit Cole is 5-1 this season.
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