Dayton Daily News

Garrett’s stuff could make him a closer one day

- Hal McCoy Covering the Reds

Hall of Fame baseball writer Hal McCoy knows a thing or two about our nation’s pastime. Tap into that knowledge by sending an email to halmccoy1@hotmail.com.

Q: When Pete Rose passes through the pearly gates, might A. Bartlett Giamatti welcome him with open arms for his posthumous reinstatem­ent? — DAVE, MIAMISBURG/CENTERVILL­E/BEAVERCREE­K A: Heavenly events are above my earthly existence. I do know, though, that baseball exists in heaven. Two elderly gentlemen, huge baseball fans, told each other that the first one to die would somehow get in touch with the other to reveal if there was baseball in heaven. One died and appeared in the other’s bedroom to give him the news. He said, “I have good news and bad news. The good news is that there is baseball in heaven. That bad news is that you’re scheduled to pitch tomorrow.”

Q: Can you see Amir Garret growing into the Reds’ closer? — JOHN, OXFORD

A: He couldn’t grow much more and fit on the mound. Garrett, a former college basketball player, is 6-foot-5 and 230 pounds. It looks as if his wing span reaches halfway home when he delivers a pitch. And the Pittsburgh Pirates know he isn’t much afraid of anything. For sure Garrett’s 98-mph fastball and cliff-diving slider is deluxe closer stuff. It is just a matter of need for the Reds.

Q: There are runners on third and first with one out. The batter hits a ground ball to shortstop and he gets the force out at second. If the runner on third crosses home plate before the throw to first gets the third out, does the run count? — FRED, DAYTON

A: No. The double play is continuous action and a run can’t score on the third out. It’s the same as if there were two outs and a runner on third and the batter hit a deep fly to left. Even though the runner on third crossed home plate before the ball was caught, the run does not count. It was the third out.

Q: The sleeveless pinstriped uniforms the Reds wore recently had a black band encircling the left sleeve. Why? — GREG, BEAVERCREE­K

A: Those were 1961 throwback uniforms. The team’s owner, Powel Crosley Jr., died during spring training of 1961 and the black bands were in his memory. Crosley Field is named after him. And you are real, real old (like me) if you remember the Crosley automobile. It was slightly smaller than a Volkswagen Beetle, a subcompact, that the Crosley family developed, manufactur­ed and sold between 1939 and 1952.

Q: If catchers are really calling the pitches, what are all the signs from the manager to the catcher before every pitch? — GERALD, LEBANON

A: There is only one person who “calls” pitches. That’s the pitcher himself. Catchers put down the signals, but the pitcher either agrees or shakes him off. A pitcher should never throw a pitch he isn’t confident in throwing. The manager is giving defensive signals to everybody and a lot of that nose-tapping, ear-tugging, jersey-rubbing is decoy stuff, no signal at all.

Q: Can you see any pitcher ever touching Nolan Ryan’s 222 complete games? — BRIAN, BELBROOK

A: Two hundred and twenty-two complete games? I can’t see any pitcher winning 222 games. Starting pitchers are programmed and trained to go five innings And so many times the game is decided after the fifth and the starting pitcher gets a no-decision. I can see some modern-day pitcher finishing with 222 no-decisions.

Q: In the 150 years of profession­al baseball, what person do you wish you could have interviewe­d? — KOZ, SPRINGFIEL­D

A: I would have sat down with the guy in the skimmer hat and the camel’s hair coat, told him, “Please put down that hot dog and that beer, and let’s talk, Mr. Ruth.” I have read at least four books written about Babe Ruth and they all portray him differentl­y. I’d like to see for myself over a long steak dinner and, of course, an expensive cigar.

Q: True or false, the last time the Cleveland Indians had a Cuban right fielder was in the movie Major League.

A: Ah, Pedro Serrano. Now the Tribe has Yasiel Puig and they have more in common than their heritage. Both kissed their bats. But I checked Puig’s locker and didn’t find any doll named Jobu. And so far Puig hasn’t stopped running the bases to pick up a bird he injured with a line drive. But stay tuned. To be honest, the Indians once had a Cuban outfielder named Minnie Minoso, but that was in the 1950s, before the movie.

 ?? FILE ?? A question about Pete Rose going to heaven reminds Hal McCoy of a joke about a man who gets there and promises to tell his friend if he found baseball there. “I have good news and bad news,” the man in heaven says. “The good news is there is baseball in heaven. The bad news is that you’re scheduled to pitch tomorrow.”
FILE A question about Pete Rose going to heaven reminds Hal McCoy of a joke about a man who gets there and promises to tell his friend if he found baseball there. “I have good news and bad news,” the man in heaven says. “The good news is there is baseball in heaven. The bad news is that you’re scheduled to pitch tomorrow.”
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