Homer drought doesn't worry Griffey
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
CHICAGO | ESPN sent a camera crew to Wrigley Field to do the What's Wrong With Ken Griffey Jr. Story. Why no home runs?
It airs Sunday, but it won't have comments from Griffey, who avoids ESPN like The Fugitive, Dr. Richard Kimble, avoided Marshal Samuel Gerard.
"There is no chance of that," Griffey said of him appearing on camera to talk.
The count is 73 at-bats without a home run this season, but a cursory check of the scorebook reveals that Griffey has hit eight balls five feet or closer to walls. And he has seven doubles.
He had a bases loaded double and four RBIs Tuesday and two singles Wednesday.
"It has just been a matter of hitting most balls too high or hitting them too low (for doubles)," he said. "It is just one little adjustment here or there. I'll get it."
Griffey wonders if anybody realizes he is coming off rare surgery, three screws re-attaching his hamstring to the bone?
"Nobody else has had this done," he said. "Who do I talk to about it? Nobody. I can't ask people about it. Every team has a bunch of pitchers who have undergone Tommy John surgery and they can compare notes and talk about it with each other."
Griffey has not backed off defensively, either, and made a rolling catch against the Cubs Tuesday.
"My teammates gave me a 9.5 on the catch, but only a 4.7 on my dismount," he said. "They gave me an overall 7.7."
When it was mentioned that Sean Casey hasn't homered this year, either, but ESPN wasn't asking about him, Griffey said, "Wait until he reaches 200 (career homers) . . . then they'll ask."
Easy way out
Adam Dunn hit a home run Tuesday and on the next pitch Cubs pitcher Carlos Zambrano hit Austin Kearns in the left buttock.
"If Zambrano had that kind of control all night he wouldn't have given up six runs," Dunn said. "He didn't want out there any more. He had enough. So he took the easy way out."
Zambrano was ejected, but later denied he hit Kearns on purpose, blaming a blister and adding that he likes Kearns and shook hands with him the day before.
"Not true," said Kearns. "Never happened. I can't tell you the last time I talked to him. He must be mistaking me for somebody else.
"The catcher (Mike Barrett) told the umpire Zambrano was just trying to throw inside," said Kearns. "If he is trying to throw inside, he does it with sinkers, not a four-seam fastball straight at me."
A fall for Graves
Closer Danny Graves continues to be entertaining — and not just because of his ninth-inning escape acts.
On Tuesday, Graves delivered a pitch and fell to the ground.
"Never done that before," he said. "Just wanted to add some more excitement for the Wrigley fans. I turned my ankle and down I went.
"I rolled real good, though, didn't I?" he said. "Every time I pitch these days, I entertain. Why? Don't know. It's the same thing as to why I fell. Don't know."
Sickness: round two
The flu-like and sinus-like infections that have ravaged the Reds roster since the first week of spring training not only continues, it is visiting some players for the second time.
Relief pitcher Kent Mercker was stretched out on a training table during batting practice Wednesday and said, "My second time with it. I head feels like a beach ball and my gums and teeth hurt. We need to find out who the host monkey is and cane him."
Mercker, like so many of the Reds this season, took his medication and played. After Joe Valentine gave up a three-run homer to Derrek Lee in the seventh inning, Mercker arrived to get the final two outs.