Freel dealing with life on the bench
By Sean McClelland
Dayton Daily News
For Austin Kearns, whose turn it was to keep the bench warm Sunday, the truth hurts. The Reds have too many outfielders.
But things could be worse for Kearns. He could be Ryan Freel, who is strictly a utility player after playing every day last year.
Manager Dave Miley made a point Sunday of saying he needs to get Freel into the lineup one of these days. But it wasn't Sunday.
"He's the manager," Freel said. "He makes the lineup out. It's something you just deal with, I guess. I don't know, man. There's not a big role for me right now. I don't know what to say.
"Going from playing every day to not playing is different. Of course I'd like to be out there. It's a little different, but that's my job. It's a lot tougher, but somebody's got to be the utility guy."
Freel's opportunity last season arose mainly due to injuries to teammates. He responded with a .277 average and 37 stolen bases.
"I'm not waiting for anybody to get hurt," he said. "I don't want that to happen at all. Probably the way it's looking, this is going to be my role for the whole season. I don't see it changing."
Freel faces a court date next month in connection with his recent DUI arrest. He has registered a plea of not guilty.
"The fans were my main concern in this whole situation," he said. "They've been absolutely outstanding, very supportive. It's just something that time will heal."
Power outage
Including spring training, Sean Casey has gone 154 at-bats since his last home run, Sept. 17. It's been 93 at-bats, including spring training, since Ken Griffey Jr. went deep. "That hadn't crossed my mind," Miley said.
It took Casey awhile to get going last season but he finished with 24 homers, one shy of his career high. Griffey's longest homer drought at the start of a season is 20 games.
What was that?
Jason LaRue made the mistake of watching ESPN again.
"I don't like to watch it because 90 percent of the time I don't think those guys even believe what they're saying," he said.
This time, one of the talking heads suggested Gary Sheffield should receive a 10-game suspension for retaliating against a fan who clocked him in the face while trying to field a ball rolling into the right-field corner at Fenway Park. Said an incredulous LaRue, "He gets smoked in the face and he's the one who should pay the consequences?"