Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Hold your horses on Homer
Paul Daugherty / Cincinnati Enquirer
There is a very good chance David "Homer" Bailey, who's working in Chattanooga, Tenn., has no idea we are obsessing over him up here. Yet we are, and every time he wins another start, throws another 98 mph fastball past another Double-A hitter for yet another strikeout, the obsession grows.
The kid just turned 20. Can we let him learn how to pitch before we ask him to save the Reds' season?
No, we cannot. Each day, there is some new Homer urging from someone who thinks Cincinnati's year will implode without a fifth starting pitcher.
Name the No. 5 guy on the Padres, Rockies, Giants, Astros and Braves and win fabulous prizes.
Reds general manager Wayne Krivsky has been clear about his intentions for Bailey. They involve having him learn his curveball and changeup so he can come at major-league hitters with something more than just pure flame. The kid hasn't passed physics, yet we'd like him to build a rocket.
And by the way, just because a pitcher throws 98 mph once or twice a game doesn't mean he has a 98-mph fastball.
"He's right on schedule," Krivsky said Tuesday. "The right place for him is where he is right now."
And do you really want a guy named Homer pitching in a pennant race at Great American Small Park? What's his other nickname - Tater?
Yet we persist. He can start until Brandon Claussen rejoins the rotation. He'll come up in September anyway - why not now? How 'bout one start? Just one start wouldn't hurt. Can he make one start, Wayne? Pretty please?
It's starting to sound like a Dr. Seuss book. Green Eggs and Homer.
Would you, could you for Joe Mays? Would you, could you in four days?
Sam I Am Krivsky: I would not start him on the road. I would not start him if it snowed.
There's another good reason not to bring up Bailey:
It doesn't work.
Name one pitcher not named Doc Gooden in the last 30 years who made his major-league debut at age 19 or 20 and had a career worth savoring. I can name a few who tried and failed:
David Clyde debuted in 1973 at age 18 with the Texas Rangers. He was 4-8 that year, 18-33 for his career. Clyde was set aside by the age of 24.
Todd Van Poppel was 19 in '91, when he pitched for Oakland. Van Poppel toppled - he won 40 games in 11 years.
Steve Avery was 3-11 pitching for Atlanta at age 20. Oakland's Big Three of a few years back - Barry
Zito, Mark Mulder and Tim Hudson - made their first big-league starts at ages 22, 22 and 23 respectively.
In fact, 21 seems the earliest age any successful starting pitcher has made his debut. Josh Beckett started four games for the Florida Marlins at 21. Dontrelle Willis burst on the scene at the same age. A.J. Burnett was 22. And so on. Even Gooden had just one winning season after the age of 26.
Would you, could you, in the 'pen?
Sam I Am Krivsky: I do not like him in the 'pen. I do not want to say it again.
The only problem with how Bailey is being groomed is this: Recently, he has been throwing way too many fastballs. In the Futures Game July 9, Bailey threw heat exclusively, 20-plus pitches. His Chattanooga starts also have been fastball-fests.
If you'd like him to develop quickly, make Bailey throw curveballs and changeups. You already know about the other pitch.
Bring up former Reds great Mario Soto from the Dominican Republic. Make Bailey his pet. Reds insiders in March said Soto was such a good teacher, he could be a major-league pitching coach. Put him on Homer's changeup.
Other than that, leave the kid alone. The Reds' chances of making the postseason do not ride on the arm of a barely 20-year-old. His future rides on the team's decisions, though. Only fools rush in.
"My mind isn't on him being here" was how Krivsky put it Tuesday.
I do not like him as an '06 Red. Get that through your stubborn head.