Perez gradually coming of age
03/14/2007 7:42 PM ET
Peterson pleased with subtle signs of pitcher's development
By Charlie Nobles / Special to MLB.com
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- Mets pitching coach Rick Peterson has repeated the
same theme with erratic left-hander Oliver Perez for some time now: pitch
with a consistent arm angle and the result will be improved control.
"We're getting to the point now where he can master what he's started,"
Peterson said the other day. "The best way to say it is he's got his Brown
Belt right now, and we're going for the Black Belt."
After a rocky spring start, Perez has settled into the type of rhythm that
Peterson has envisioned. After being hit hard for four runs in two innings in
his debut against the Tigers, Perez came back to hold the Indians to two hits
and a run in three innings in his next chance. In his most recent game, he
rationed the Nationals to a run in four innings, permitting two hits and two
walks. Manager Willie Randolph particularly liked the way he "attacked" the
hitters.
Another challenge awaits Perez on Thursday night. The Red Sox provide the
Mets' competition, and depending on which players make the long trip from
Fort Myers to Port St. Lucie, this is likely to be the most formidible
batting order Perez will face until the season begins.
Perez still has a lot to overcome. He pitched for much of last season as if
he was not only beltless, but clueless. He had a 2-10 record and 6.63 ERA
with the Pirates before being traded to the Mets. The 139 runners he allowed
in 76 innings was disheartening.
The change of scenery didn't help much either -- at least initially. Perez
lost three of his four decisions and produced a 6.38 ERA in seven starts with
the Mets. But he awoke in the playoffs and gave the Mets hope he could be a
factor in this season's starting rotation by winning one start and pitching
effectively in the other.
"I feel positive," Perez said recently. "That's why I have to keep working."
Catcher Paul Lo Duca said Perez may well be at his best when the pressure is
the greatest.
"I think he's a guy that when you need a lot, which he showed with us, he can
perform," Lo Duca said. "I think there are guys who get more amped up in
certain situations, get psyched up for the playoffs. It looks like he does."
Perez, 25, is trying to recapture the magic of his 2004 season for the
Pirates, when he produced a 12-10 record and a 2.99 ERA and struck out 239
batters in 196 innings. But from that point until the Mets acquired him with
Roberto Hernandez for Xavier Nady at the trading deadline last July, Perez
lost 15 of 24 decisions in 35 starts. And word circulated around the National
League that he had mysteriously lost velocity off his fastball.
He once threw in the 92-94 mph range fairly regularly, but more recently his
fastball has been closer to 88 mph, occasionally touching the low 90s .
Perez acknowledged that his velocity has declined, and he has an explanation.
"I was worrying more about mechanics instead of just throwing the ball," he
said. "I was thinking too much on the mound and putting too much pressure on
myself. But a lot of pitchers don't throw too hard. They know how to locate
the ball."
Peterson said Perez's velocity doesn't concern him nearly as much as his
ability to control his pitches.
"I'm working with where he is right now," the pitching coach said. "He just
needs so many repetitions to lock in his control. It's like a workout
program. It sounds simple to do 400 situps, but it takes focus and
consistency and effort every time out there to get it done."
Lo Duca sees subtle signs that Perez is getting it together on the mound.
"He's starting to learn to calm himself down," the catcher said. "A couple
years ago, he would have gone out there and tried to throw 100 mph and been
all over the place. Now, he's working on throwing strikes. I'd rather have
him give up runs by them hitting the ball than by walking guys."
Randolph repeatedly has said that the final determination on the rotation
will be based on a full body of performance in exhibition games. He has
resisted the urge to get excited or discouraged about any pitcher in camp.
And that applies to Perez, too.
"When he's in a nice little rhythm, he has nasty stuff," Randolph said. "He
has some of the best stuff we have in camp, from the left side, anyway. I
like him."
Peterson gradually has brought Perez back to respectability by following a
"process" in Spring Training. He wanted Perez to "pound the strike zone" with
his fastball in his first outing, convinced that is the core pitch for most
pitchers. Once Perez had a good feel with it, he branched out more with his
breaking pitches in subsequent starts.
Perez remains somewhat baffled by what he has experienced in recent seasons.
"I don't know what happened last year and two years ago," he said. "But I
want to learn and keep working."
It is that willingness to commit to a plan that has Peterson believing the
worst could be in the rearview mirror.
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