Slumping Sox bolster efforts to pry Griffey
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
PITTSBURGH | Chicago radio and television stations reported Saturday that the Chicago White Sox have turned the heat up on the Cincinnati Reds to trade them Ken Griffey Jr., as if they held blow torches under General Manager Dan O'Brien's feet so he would say, "Yes, yes. Oh, yes, please take Griffey off our hands."
One radio station said the trade was done and all it needed was Griffey's OK, as is necessary.
What else is there to talk about on a rainy day when your team is in the tank, losing six of its last 10 and watching its American League Central lead shrivel from 14 games to eight?
When Reds manager Jerry Narron heard the report that the temperature is up in Chicago, he smiled and said, "I'll bet it is."
Of course, he meant the heat is on White Sox management to put a tourniquet on the losing and because Griffey is unstitching baseballs every day.
Chicago did call again this week, begging for a mercy trade to save them. Again they were refused, even though they offered to take on more of Griffey's salary.
Griffey saw the media approaching Saturday, held up his hands and said without being asked, "I'm not going to Chicago. I'm in Pittsburgh with the Cincinnati Reds, and that's where I'm staying."
Asked how he knew the question, he said, "The only time you guys make a beeline to me these days is to ask about a trade or if I'm Star of the Game."
As usual, Griffey treated it with humor. "I'm not talking about this without the presence of my attorney," he said with a laugh. "The ballclub has not made a formal offer to me, so there is nothing to say. Will I accept a trade? I haven't talked to anybody on the club about it."
There are four days left before this goofiness goes away, because if the White Sox don't get Griffey by Sept. 1, he won't be eligible for the postseason.
Dunn creeping close
Griffey hit two home runs Friday night, but the one Adam Dunn hit drew the oohs and aahs, even though Griffey's first homer went 417 feet to center and Dunn's 411 feet to right.
But it wasn't the distances, it was where they landed. Dunn's left the ballpark, cleared the bleachers and landed on a grassy knoll on the banks of the Allegheny River.
"That is one strong human," Griffey said of the 6-foot-6, 270-pound Dunn. "He's always going to hit them farther than me."
That brings up another subject involving Griffey and Dunn. In his first five years in the majors, Griffey hit 162 homers. This is Dunn's fifth season and he has 153, with 33 games left to play.
"Yeah, and I only played 66 games my first year," Dunn said to Griffey. "And you were concentrating on baseball before I ever played it. But, really, who cares? Who really cares? You'll probably still be playing after I retire."
Said Griffey, "Hey, I was 18 my first year and weighed about 195."
Pitching equals wins
After Friday's game, Reds starting pitchers were 12-4 with a 2.86 ERA the last 19 games, punctuating Narron's mantra that good pitching equals victories.
"If you pitch well all year, you are going to go into September every year in contention," he said. "Offensive teams are exciting, some people think, but all you have to do is go down the pitching statistics and you'll see who is in contention."
Freel staying home
Ryan Freel is eligible to come off the disabled list Wednesday, but it isn't expected to join the team in Houston. Freel had knee surgery Aug. 18, and he is throwing and hitting, "But his sore quadriceps is holding him up more than the knee, and while he is anxious to get back at it, I don't think he'll join us on this trip," Narron said.