Dunn's bat finally sparks Boone ... until it breaks
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
CINCINNATI | Aaron Boone needs to lose 37 pounds to hit his weight, but instead of contacting the Atkins people or Richard Simmons, Boone figures it is easier to add points to his .167 batting average.
Cincinnati Reds outfielder Adam Dunn tried to do his part for his friend and former teammate, who now plays third base for the Cleveland Indians.
Dunn sent him a bat. When Boone played for the Reds, he constantly rummaged through Dunn's locker and stole his bats, "Then he would break them and return them," Dunn said.
When Dunn saw how low Boone's batting average was a week ago, he sent Boone a bat.
"I sent it to him because I knew it would work," said Dunn. "It has a lot of hits in it, all my bats do. I leave 'em in there."
It did work. Boone's average climbed from .118 to .163, "But then he broke the bat," Dunn said. "And he isn't getting any this weekend, not until Sunday night."
Boone follows the plight of the Reds and said before Friday's game, after having lunch during the day with Dunn and Sean Casey, "I follow the Reds and I know it has been tough times for them, and it surprises me.
"I hope we can add to their misery for three more days and then they can turn it around," said Boone, who was traded by the Reds to the New York Yankees in July 2003. "Playing here was a fun time for me, and this is the first time I've been back. It's very nostalgic.
"I can relate to their troubles, though, because I've been through my own sufferings. My bat's broken. But the one Dunn sent me got me a few hits, got me hot," he said.
Pena still hurts
The long, long disablement of outfielder Wily Mo Pena continues. He was eligible to come off the disabled list on Wednesday, but still feels tightness in his left quadriceps.
"I feel it a little bit when I run hard, like I would run in a game," he said. "I want to be 100 percent when I play. I don't know when that will be."
Pena performed agility drills for Mann before Friday's game and said, "I felt good. I did a lot of work while the team was on the road, worked hard, but when I ran, I felt it and I had to back down some.
"They told me it would take a long time (to get healthy)," he added. "But it surprises me it is taking this long."
Freel and easy
Ryan Freel wasn't in Friday's lineup because of a tender back, but he was available to pinch-hit or pinch-run. Second base was manned by rookie William Bergolla.
Asked with the dismissal of D'Angelo Jimenez if Freel inherits second base, manager Dave Miley said, "Freel can play the outfield, too. It is important for us to take a look at Bergolla and give him an opportunity."
Freel tweaked his back sliding into second base Tuesday in New York. When Miley and trainer Mark Mann ran out, Freel said, "Hey, I'm OK. I'll show you. I'm gonna steal third base."
On the next pitch, he stole third.
"I was tricking them," said Freel. "But my back did tighten up later."