Family means most to Yost
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
CINCINNATI | In this one, the Cincinnati Reds lost out to paternal loyalty, although Milwaukee manager Ned Yost III said he had zero to do with it.
The Reds were interested in catcher Ned Yost IV, a fifth-year senior at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, but he signed with his dad's Brewers last week.
Because Yost is a fifth-year senior, he didn't have to wait for the June amateur draft to sign. He was hitting .413 with 11 homers and 42 RBIs at UW-Oshkosh, by gosh, with a .500 on-base average, 60 runs scored, 15 doubles and 26 walks.
"It had nothing to do with me," said Daddy Yost. "He earned his way here, and the Brewers have been watching him for five years."
Yost said his son signed for, "A cheeseburger and french fries." Heck, the Reds would have thrown in a medium-sized diet soda.
Give Castro a hand
The Minnesota Twins are discovering what Cincinnati fans always knew — infielder Juan Castro has the softest hands this side of the Pilsbury doughboy commercial, and what he does on defense is a baseball ballet.
Castro has been the Twins starting shortstop the past two weeks and is hitting a respectable .273. His agility on defense makes him good enough to form the Rudolph Nureyev, Mikael Barishnikov & Juan Castro Trio.
"He fits into our mold here," said manager Ron Gardenhire. "He catches the ball."
And throws it. And sometimes hits it.
Pitchers Incorporated
The Atlanta Braves, a.k.a Pitchers Incorporated, just keep filling the holes from within. When starter John Thomson went down for at least two months, the Braves called up Kyle Davies from Triple-A Richmond.
In his first two major-league starts, the 21-year-old right-hander has not allowed a run over 10 1/3 innings and is 2-0.
How do they do it?
A humble Guillen
Former Reds outfielder Jose Guillen, not always a stand-up guy, was beating himself up after his Washington Nationals lost five of six, including three straight to the Reds, even though Guillen hit two homers in a 12-3 loss.
"I'm sick, sick, sick, sick," said Guillen. "I want to throw up. I don't think I should be hitting third. I should be hitting ninth, behind the pitcher. Seriously, it makes me sick."
The entire team made interim general manager Jim Bowden ill. After the three straight losses to the Reds, he made nine roster moves, eclipsing his personal record three years ago when he was GM of the Reds and made seven roster moves — between games of a doubleheader in Puerto Rico against the Montreal Expos, now the Washington Nationals.
Don't talk, throw
Just how effective are clubhouse meetings? They are a bust in Oakland. After catcher Jason Kendall called a players-only meeting before a game against Tampa Bay, the Devil Rays scored 10 runs in the first inning.
"I guess you could say the meeting didn't work," said third baseman Eric Chavez.
Maybe Kendall should work more on his throws than his rhetoric.
He has thrown out only one of the last 30 base stealers, and opponents have stolen 38 against him this season, most in the majors. He probably wouldn't be good at talking about it, either.
Money ball
The St. Louis Cardinals are 19-4 against National League Central foes. Why are they so far in front that last-place Houston is closer to second place than second-place Milwaukee is to first place?
One reason might be that the St. Louis payroll is from $5 million to $55 million more than the other five teams in the division.
And, of course, they have a genius as a manager.