Each candidate capable to close
02/21/2008 6:37 PM ET
Each candidate capable to close
Howry, Marmol and Wood all want job in friendly competition
By Carrie Muskat / MLB.com
MESA, Ariz. -- Flip a coin. Put their names in a hat. Draw straws. Do rock,
paper, scissors. Somehow, the Cubs have to pick a closer.
They could let it play out this spring and see how Bob Howry, Kerry Wood and
Carlos Marmol do. The trio of contenders threw to batters on Thursday, and
all looked good.
"Whether it's Kerry, whether it's Howry, whether it's Marmol, these guys are
all capable of doing it," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said.
Which makes who will be the closer the hot topic of Spring Training, even if
the players don't think it is.
"I don't feel like it's competition," Marmol said. "We're trying to help the
team."
The three are doing their best to downplay what can best be described as a
friendly battle for the job. Howry may not have invited Wood to his golf
tournament this offseason, but that wasn't because of the competition for the
job. Wood peeked in on Howry's session with beat writers to goad him about
how he did Thursday.
"I thought I had a little bit more on the fastball," Howry said, jokingly,
"but you might have had a better slider."
OK, let's be serious.
"The competition is good," Wood said. "We have three guys down there who can
do it. Lou and the upper management will make the best decision to help this
team win and put the best guy out there. Whoever we're getting the ball to,
or whoever's getting the ball to them is just as important."
Howry got off to a slow start last season, compiling a 4.68 ERA in the first
half compared to a 1.85 ERA in the second. Wood has to show his right
shoulder is durable enough to handle the job. And Marmol has had one-half
season in the big leagues and is lacking experience.
"I'd rather have a healthy Kerry Wood than rush him to be the closer come
April 1," Piniella said. "That's a determination that's easy to make. Bob
last year struggled for a month or five weeks, and then he really turned it
on. Marmol in cold weather with that slider and that motion he comes at you
with, it's not easy to hit. I don't think we can go wrong with any of the
three."
What makes the situation even more interesting is that all three want the
job.
"That's a big part of the battle -- they all want the challenge, they all
want the responsibility," Piniella said. "I could flip a coin right now and I
could feel comfortable with any of them. We'll let it play out. That's why we
have Spring Training."
Piniella didn't want to pick a favorite.
"Anything I say will probably bite me later on, so I might as well just leave
it open and give ourselves some options," he said. "I can't go wrong with
either three, and leave it at that."
Other teams have had success with three closer-type pitchers for the late
innings. The Astros did so with Brad Lidge, Octavio Dotel and Billy Wagner,
and the 1990 Cincinnati Reds had the trio of Randy Myers, Norm Charlton and
Rob Dibble.
"Regardless of how it plays out and who they put in what role, the fact that
you have three guys who you feel could do a quality job closing ... it should
give us a strong back end of a bullpen," Howry said.
So this competition thing, this battle for the ninth inning, it's strictly
media-driven?
"Absolutely," Wood said.
"One hundred percent it is," Howry said.
Howry does have the edge in that he's done it more than the other two. In
1999, he was the White Sox closer and totaled 28 saves. Piniella has hinted
in other interviews this spring that Howry is the favorite.
"I have to live up to it, if that's the case," Howry said. "Does that come
because I've been around longer than all of them for experience? I may have
more durability than Kerry does. The first time I did it, shoot, I was two
months into the big leagues. Who's to say a young guy can't do it? It's a
competition from the outside, but from here, let's get ready for the season.
We expect to have a strong bullpen."
And if Howry didn't get the job?
"I'm not going to mope about it," he said. "Do I want it? Yeah. If it comes
down and they say, 'Hey, one of these two guys is going to do it,' [setup] is
what they brought me in to do two years ago.
"[To be the closer] is a great opportunity. I'm still going to be pitching in
the same situations an inning earlier if I'm not closing."
All they want is to know their role when the season starts. Otherwise, their
job is the same: get hitters out.
"You want to turn it into a six-inning game," Howry said. "I realize starters
want to go seven, they want to go eight, they want to go nine. The way it
works, and especially in the National League, if you can give us six quality
innings, we've got a bullpen -- and not just us three, but the bullpen as a
whole -- that we feel the game is over.
"You give us the lead after six innings, there's no doubt in my mind we
should win."
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