[情報] out until healthy, bradley adjusting
04/23/09 6:56 PM ET
CHICAGO -- This is not how Milton Bradley wanted to start his tenure with the
Cubs.
The outfielder knows he's battled a series of injuries, and now he's
sidelined with a nagging groin injury. He knows he has a reputation for being
volatile and then his first at-bat on April 16 at Wrigley Field ended with
him being ejected for arguing a called third strike with home plate umpire
Larry Vanover.
He has not talked to the media since he collected his first hit in Milwaukee,
which also is his only hit so far, and doesn't like having reporters hovering
near his locker in the cramped Cubs clubhouse.
"It's been frustrating," Bradley said after Thursday's game. "You come in
here and all they want to talk about is how often you get hurt and your
attitude and everything. I've given them an example right off the bat. I just
don't feel like getting caught up in all the negativity.
"I'm a positive person, an upbeat person," he said. "I'm trying to focus on
what I'm trying to do here. My teammates are behind me and the more reporters
get in my face, the more I talk, the more things get written the way I don't
say them or they're taken out of context, and that's when you lose teammates
and you lose fans. The best strategy for me has always been to not say
anything."
Which is the approach he's taken, until Thursday when he called MLB.com over
for a one-on-one conversation.
"I can sit here and think about the questions I'm going to get and the
perfect answer to come up with," he said, "but when it comes to that time,
and somebody throws a question at you, just the way they ask it or the
question, might make me look perturbed at the question they're asking. I just
prefer not to talk. I told Peter [Chase, media relations director] and
everybody, and they suggested I talk. But I just don't want to do it."
On Thursday, after the Cubs lost 7-1 to the Cincinnati Reds, reporters tried
to ask Bradley a question but he chose not to answer.
"When I turn around and people are standing at my locker every time, I'm
trying to figure out why, because I've already told them I don't want to
talk," Bradley said. "That's the only thing -- I never had a problem with the
media until I started reading stuff that wasn't what I said.
"I never had a problem in my life until I started playing baseball," he said.
"All of a sudden, there are all these things. I just want to be me. I just
want to be that guy who plays baseball and enjoys his teammates and has a
good time. That's what I do."
Bradley and Cubs manager Lou Piniella met prior to Thursday's game, and the
end result was the outfielder being benched until he's 100 percent healthy,
and when he is, he'll be bumped to sixth in the order.
How close is he to coming back?
"I want to say I am, but I'm not," Bradley said.
On Wednesday, Bradley made his first start since April 12, and went 0-for-4
with three strikeouts. He is 1-for-23 with the Cubs so far, and has been
bothered by a strained right groin that forced him out of the April 12 game
in Milwaukee.
"He's not 100 percent," Piniella said of Bradley, who signed a three-year,
$30 million contract with the Cubs this offseason. "When he's 100 percent,
I'll put him out there to play. Until then, I'll use [Reed] Johnson and
[Micah] Hoffpauir in the outfield."
Bradley had told the Cubs he was ready to go on Wednesday, or at least he
thought he was.
"I thought I was getting better to the point where I thought I could play at
a decent pace," he said. "The ball went into the bullpen the other night and
when I threw it in, I couldn't get in my proper throwing mechanics, so I kind
of pulled at it again and aggravated it and never let it get to where it
needed it to be."
On Thursday, Hoffpauir started in right and had trouble fielding two balls,
and after the game, Piniella said he would probably go with a more defensive
alignment and start Kosuke Fukudome in right and Reed Johnson in center.
"I don't play people unless they're totally healthy," Piniella said. "That's
been my M.O. throughout my managerial career. With Milton, when he's ready to
play, I'll put him out there.
"I told him basically I'll take him out of the fourth hole when he comes back
and put him in the sixth hole where he might be a little more comfortable and
we'll go from there," Piniella said. "When I get him out there, I expect him
to run hard and play hard the way he always has."
Bradley has batted fourth all season between Derrek Lee and Aramis Ramirez.
Piniella was asked if Bradley has a responsibility to address the press.
"Look, I think you can make it much easier on yourself communicating,"
Piniella said. "That's basically up to the individual. At the same time,
you're in the public limelight and people want to know what's going on."
Bradley was hoping he could have a clean slate in Chicago.
"I'm just not into negativity," he said. "I can see already I'm going to be
that guy that since nothing else is going on in here -- 'We're going to harp
on Bradley all year and see if we can get him to snap.' I'm not going to go
for it.
"You can't get a good story if I don't talk to [the media]," he said. "You'll
make something up like you always do. If I talk to you, you're going to make
something up, and if I don't talk to you, you're going to make something up.
So just go ahead and make something up and leave me out of it."
There was no talk about putting Bradley on the disabled list to give him time
to heal. He had been bothered by the sore groin before the April 12 game, and
does not appear close to being ready to come back. Piniella said he is
available to pinch-hit.
Bradley also is waiting for a hearing on his appeal of a two-game suspension
issued by Major League Baseball disciplinarian Bob Watson after the
outfielder argued a called third strike by home plate umpire Larry Vanover on
April 16. That's a matter of principle.
"It was a surprise to me," Bradley said of the suspension. "I had no idea I
touched him. They need a video forensic scientist to find a frame that shows
I touched him with the bill of my helmet. It is what it is. I'm appealing
because I didn't feel that I touched him. I just want to say that I didn't do
it, and didn't do it intentionally."
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 210.241.89.115
推
04/24 10:56, , 1F
04/24 10:56, 1F
推
04/24 14:02, , 2F
04/24 14:02, 2F
推
04/24 18:09, , 3F
04/24 18:09, 3F
推
04/24 19:46, , 4F
04/24 19:46, 4F
推
04/25 07:15, , 5F
04/25 07:15, 5F
推
04/26 16:14, , 6F
04/26 16:14, 6F
Cubs 近期熱門文章
11
17
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章