Kearns vies for playing time in crowded outfield
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
CINCINNATI | Austin Kearns barely dropped his bags in the clubhouse Wednesday when the whisperings began and the questions flew: Was he called up from Louisville so the Cincinnati Reds could showcase him for the Chicago Cubs?
Cubs General Manager Jim Hendry showed up at Great American Ball Park on Wednesday and Reds GM Jim O'Brien returned Thursday from Sarasota.
And Kearns was in Thursday's lineup.
Hendry and O'Brien chatted during Thursday's game, but it wasn't necessary for the Reds to showcase Kearns to Hendry. He loves Kearns, even after Kearns had three hits, including a two-run tie-breaking single.
Asked if the price went up on Kearns, Hendry smiled and said, "Who knows?"
On Wednesday, a rumor permeated the pressbox: Adam Dunn to the Cubs for outfielder Corey Patterson, pitcher Sergio Mitre and Rich Hill, arguably the top pitching prospect in minor-league ball.
Hendry heard the rumor and said, "Too steep. Never offered and never accepted."
It is no secret, though, that Hendry will take Kearns, Dunn or Wily Mo Pena if the Reds want to move one of the young outfielders. The Cubs are blessed with young pitching.
Meanwhile, Kearns is back in the same situation as before, vying for playing time with Pena, and manager Jerry Narron told him that.
Asked if it puts pressure on Kearns and Pena when they have to compete, Narron said, "No question about it. I'd love to tell them both they are going to play every day the rest of the year. With our situation, that isn't going to happen, even though both are very good major-league players. One needs to step up and show us."
Kearns agrees about the pressure points.
"It's all mental for me," he said. "It's all so much more magnified up here. If you don't produce, in our situation here, you don't play. I'm my own worst critic and that can hurt you."
In his first two at-bats against Greg Maddux, Kearns doubled and singled, a pretty good showcase, if that's what it was. But for Hendry to deal for him, he has to make certain the price is right.
No more blue
With the Milwaukee Brewers in town this weekend, the Cubs fans who took over Great American Ball Park are gone.
Ken Griffey Jr. was kidding Adam Dunn about tossing a baseball to a Cubs fan and Dunn said, "I only had about a one in 10 chance of hitting a Reds fan. It was all blue out there. They put all those Cubs fan in left field and, man, they were worse than the fans in Wrigley Field. They were all over me.
"Those same people who were wearing blue when the Cubs were in town will be back wearing red again," he added.
Mixing it up
It was a scheduled day off Thursday for third baseman Joe Randa, but not for first baseman Sean Casey.
"He fouled a ball off his right foot (Wednesday) and is limping around," manager Jerry Narron said. "We were going to give him a day off sometime soon, so it was best to do it now."
Casey did pinch-hit in the eighth inning Thursday and his batter's box dance, a ritual/rigamarole, caused Cubs pitcher Roberto Novoa to step off the rubber with the bases loaded, a balk that permitted the tying run to score.
Adam Dunn moved to first base, Austin Kearns was in right field and Wily Mo Pena was in left.
"We'll go a lot with matchups, although they don't mean much with less than 10 at-bats. Pena was 4 for 9 with two homers against Greg Maddux," Narron said.
He was correct about short data. Maddux struck out Pena on three pitches in his first at-bat.
A pitch for PT
Javier Valentin hit two home runs early in Thursday's game for the second time in a week and was nearly an afterthought in the team's 9-6 victory.
"I'm seeing the ball real good and I'm being patient," he said. "I was able to put my team on track today and that's good."
Said Narron, "Anybody have anything against Javy started tomorrow night? He is probably playing the best baseball of his career.
"I'll have to get him playing time and do with him and Jason LaRue what we'll do with Kearns and Pena."