San Diego Union-Tribune

Schumaker now skipper for guy he brawled against

We just couldn’t let this stuff go …

- COMPILED BY BOYCE GARRISON FROM U-T NEWS SERVICES, ONLINE REPORTS

Skip Schumaker was a Cardinals player 13 years ago when a brawl broke out and Cincinnati Reds pitcher Johnny Cueto

kicked St. Louis backup catcher Jason Larue on the head, causing a career-ending concussion, The Associated Press reports.

Now Schumaker is Miami’s first-year manager and Cueto is on his pitching staff.

“That was a long time ago,” Schumaker said. “We’ve talked, and those fights get nasty. You just never know what’s going to happen in one of those fights. He’s a good guy. You get caught up in the moment, and stuff like that happens in those benchclear­ing brawls.

Cueto had been pinned against the screen behind home plate and had been trying to break loose during the brawl that began when Brandon Phillips

and Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina went nose-to-nose at home plate. Cueto was suspended for seven games.

“It was a big rivalry,” Schumaker said. “Actually, it was a lot of fun till that part happened.”

Cueto, a 37-year-old righthande­r is 143-107 in 15 big league seasons, winning 19 games for Cincinnati in 2012 and 20 in 2014, then 18 for San Francisco in 2016.

Cueto (pictured) pitched last year for the Chicago White Sox under Tony La Russa, the former Cardinals skipper.

“A very respected manager.” Cueto said through a translator. “It was a good experience, an honor, for me.”

Cueto has made a pair of spring training starts, both against St. Louis. After the latest in the Cardinals’ 8-3 win Friday, he has allowed 11 runs in 41⁄3 innings — including two home runs. Under liberalize­d spring training rules, he was pulled from the game in the first inning, returned to the mound in the second and removed again during the third.

“That’s a first time for me,” Schumaker said. “I wasn’t planning on doing that entering the day. But the last thing I want to do is have him throw 40 pitches in the first inning. ‘Up-downs’ are important to get used to.”

Cueto experiment­ed with calling some pitches himself through his PitchCom device.

“It was a little bit uncomforta­ble,” he said.

Added Schumaker: “He doesn’t know what the buttons are yet. He’s still playing with it. A couple of times he shook himself (off) because that’s not what he wanted. It doesn’t say what it’s on there. So you have to know exactly what to do.”

Trivia question

On this date in 1913, the New

York Yankees/Highlander­s/ Chances became the first MLB team to train outside the U.S. Where did they train?

He said it

From RJ Currie of SportsDeke.com: “I’m not saying the Winnipeg Jets’ Stanley Cup championsh­ip hopes seem to be going down the drain. But lately the cushions selling in their gift shop are shaped like toilet seats.”

Trivia answer

The Yankees went to Bermuda, the British island territory nearly 800 miles off the North Carolina coast. They had lost 112 games the year before and were looking for a change of scenery. They finally settled on the nickname Yankees prior to the 1913 season. New York finished 5794-2 that season, which isn’t very good, but it was better than 1912 (50-102-1).

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