The Oklahoman

How Mookie Betts helped Reds’ TJ Friedl after his first career hit

- Bobby Nightengal­e

Cincinnati Reds rookie TJ Friedl homered in his second Major League atbat, his first career hit, but it was a gesture from Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Betts that left him stunned Sunday.

After Friedl hit a pinch-hit homer in the sixth inning off Tony Gonsolin, Betts turned to the fan who caught the ball and asked for it back. The fan immediatel­y threw it to Betts, who tossed it toward the Reds dugout, so Friedl could keep the memento.

When Betts returned to right field the following inning at Great American Ball Park, he handed the fan a signed bat.

“It’s incredible,” Friedl said. “For him to do something like that, it’s definitely just world class out of him. I want to go over there (to the Dodgers clubhouse) and just say thank you in person. Thank you is all I can really say because it means so much.

“I want to find a way to say thank you to him.”

Midway through the seventh inning, one a clubhouse attendant told Friedl he should be thankful for Betts because he was trading a bat for the ball. “That’s when I turned around and saw Mookie running out with a bat into the outfield,” Friedl said. “Chills, honestly. For him to do that for me was incredible.”

Said Betts: “I just asked him for the ball. It was kind of sign language. I said I’ll throw you another ball, but that’s his first home run, can you throw it back? He didn’t hesitate. He threw it right back. I think at that point, I was going to throw him a ball, but I thought about getting him a bat instead, maybe has something to be remembered a little more.”

Friedl, a 26-year-old outfielder, was called up on Saturday. He pinch-hit in the eighth inning Saturday and Betts remembered the video board announcing it was his big-league debut.

When Betts watched Friedl’s homer sail over his head, a 385-foot blast from a first-pitch fastball, he immediatel­y recognized it was Friedl’s first bigleague hit. Friedl had the ball in a glass case in his locker, which he planned to bring home after the season.

“Those type of interactio­ns are kind of everlastin­g,” Betts said.

The home run is something Friedl will never forget. He said he felt much more comfortabl­e in his second Major League game than his debut and “I just got the pitch I wanted.” He tried to soak everything in as he rounded the bases and teammate Tyler Stephenson, a close friend and former roommate, gave him a bear hug in the dugout.

Friedl and Betts spoke over the phone after the game, which L.A. won, 8-5.

“I don’t know Mookie, but man, it just says so much about him as a person, as a player,” Reds manager David Bell said. “It confirms basically everything I’ve ever heard about him. To think that selflessly or to think outside yourself that much in the heat of the game and to be that thoughtful, it’s amazing.

“Even though we lost the game and all the disappoint­ment and frustratio­n, both of those moments kind of remind you the other thing that this is all about. That was just so classy.”

 ?? ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER ?? Reds rookie outfielder TJ Friedl hit his first major league home run, which also was his first hit, in the sixth inning against the Dodgers on Sunday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.
ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER Reds rookie outfielder TJ Friedl hit his first major league home run, which also was his first hit, in the sixth inning against the Dodgers on Sunday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.

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