Reds notebook
Junior honored to join elite
By John Erardi
Enquirer staff writer
Ken Griffey Jr. isn't one to talk about his home runs, but when the sluggers he has tied on the all-time list are Ted Williams and Willie McCovey, well, an exception is in order.
Griffey Jr. hit his 521st career home run Sunday.
"I've tied his (Williams') number, but I don't belong in the same breath as him," Griffey said. "He served our country (as a fighter pilot in World War II and the Korean War)."
Williams lost about five years in his prime to the wars. Griffey has lost almost as much to injuries, but is now looking more like the slugger who hit 40 homers for the Reds when they first got him in 2000.
Griffey's 20th homer of the season Sunday came in the Reds' six-run sixth inning. It was his third homer in as many games and it was the ninth straight time the Reds have won when he has homered.
The three homers have all been laser jobs, typical of many of Griffey's 521. Williams had a slightly more uppercut swing, and it produced more moons shots than Griffey hits.
Griffey recalls talking to Williams several years ago - "I didn't have even 500 (career) hits yet," Junior said - and Williams suggested that Griffey get some lift into his swing by going with a slight upper-cut. It was one of Williams' favorite topics.
"It was at an All-Star game," Griffey remembered. "I was about 22. Tony Gwynn and (Williams) started talking. (Williams) was backstage during some awards ceremony and I happened to go by and he said, 'Hey, let me talk to you!'
"And I almost missed my next award, because I was backstage talking to him. Certain guys I just look at and say, 'Ok, this isn't a time for me to say anything. I'm just going to listen.' "
What about McCovey? Griffey said he talked to the former Giants slugger near the batting cage on a recent Reds road trip to San Francisco.
"I talked to him for about an hour," Griffey said. "I like that. Other ballclubs have their guys come in . . . Their (former players) feel welcome in the ballpark, in (the clubhouse). San Francisco has Willie Mays and Willie McCovey. St. Louis has Stan (Musial).
"Part of the tradition is allowing these guys to come back and share their experience with us - and (not just the Hall of Famers)."
Former slugger Frank Howard was one of Griffey's coaches in Seattle early in Griffey's career.
"I took fly balls from Frank," Griffey recalled. "That's the year I started wearing a cup. He'd hit rockets all day. I said, 'Frank, you ever get tired?' He said 'Naw, I don't get tired son, just a little sleepy.'"
As Griffey was holding forth with a group of writers in front of his locker Sunday after the game, Sean Casey passed by. Casey had hit his fourth home run of the season Sunday. Casey shouted in jest to Griffey: "Seriously, (do an even) longer interview why don't you?"
Griffey reminded the writers that at one time earlier this season, he and Casey were "on the same program."
The same program?
"Yeah, I hit one (home run) in April," Griffey deadpanned.
QUEEN CITY: Cincinnati is ranked the fourth best baseball city in America by Houston Chronicle columnist and baseball guru Richard Justice.
In the three categories he utilizes - fans, ballpark and passion - Cincinnati gets a 7, 9 and 6, respectively.
Justice: "Cincinnati is one of those cities where baseball is and always will be No. 1. They come out in decent numbers to see bad teams. If the Reds ever got good again, they'd pack the joint."
Justice ranks Boston No. 1, giving it perfect 10s in all three categories. St. Louis ranks second with 24 points, New York third with 23 and Chicago fifth with 19.
The worst baseball city, says Justice, is Tampa-St. Pete, with 0 total points.
The final four bottom feeders are Atlanta, 7 (1 for fans, 1 for passion); Miami, 8; Pittsburgh, 9 (7 for ballpark), and Phoenix, 12.