St. Louis -- Chris Perez was
the closer at Triple-A Memphis before getting his
first taste of the big leagues with the St. Louis
Cardinals, and his early reviews suggest taking
over Jason Isringhausen's role might not be a huge
leap.
But the team is in no hurry to elevate the
hard-throwing 22-year-old right-hander, no matter how
impressive and unflappable he's been.
"As soon as I think he's better than some of the other
guys out there, specifically Ryan Franklin, then he
would do it," manager Tony La Russa said. "He's not
better than Ryan Franklin, so why would he close?"
Perez certainly hasn't been politicking for the big
stage.
"I'm just happy being up here right now," he said.
"Frankie's our closer and he's the closer for a reason,
he's been pitching great and he's got the experience.
"Hopefully, the day will come, and when it does I'm
going to try to do my best."
Perez had piled up seven scoreless outings, often
pitching in key situations, finishing four games and
with six strikeouts in 6 1/3 inning. Just not the key
situation.
"I think the last three outs when you shake hands, I
don't care what the score is, they're different," La
Russa said.
For that, until Isringhausen is ready to reclaim his
job, La Russa is leaning on a veteran. Franklin has
done well as the stand-in, too, with five saves in
seven chances on the year, although his outings lately
have been just as eventful as Isringhausen's often have
been with fans on the edge of their seats before the
third out. Franklin gave up a leadoff ninth-inning
homer on Thursday before recording three straight outs
to save a one-run victory over the Pirates, and
surrendered a bases-clearing double on Friday before
nailing down a save.
"The last inning is no different to me than when I was
starting," Franklin said. "I know you have to get one
out at a time and you can't walk people.
"You can't let anything negative creep in there, just
trust your stuff and stay positive."
Just because Perez has had no such stumbles doesn't
mean, in La Russa's eyes, that he's ready to step in.
"Sometimes it's better to go slowly than rush a guy in,
then all of a sudden something goes wrong and he takes
a big step back," La Russa said. "He's actually
pitching a lot of important roles.
"He's earned more than his experience would suggest.
He's doing really well."
Perez has been a closer since the Cardinals drafted him
in the second round in 2006 out of Miami, although
during an extended look in spring training he was used
in middle relief. His fastball was clocked at 99 mph
last August in the minors and there appears to be no
fear on the mound that is a prerequisite for closing.
"I couldn't ask for more," he said. "I couldn't ask to
be pitching any better, and the coaching staff has
shown confidence in me, putting me out there in close
games."
Perez said getting a lot of action in spring training
was just as big for his confidence as it was for the
team's confidence in him.
"I trust my stuff, and so far I know if I locate it
good, not too many people are going to hit it," he
said. "I'm trying to get ahead of the hitters and put
them away."
(news-leader.com)