On the one hand, Chris Perez
spent the last two months enjoying every minute of
his time with the St. Louis Cardinals in what was
his first taste of the major leagues.
But the Cardinals' No. 2 rated prospect by Baseball
America was wise enough to soak up all the knowledge he
could while he was there. And with that knowledge,
Perez, who was sent back to the Redbirds last week,
plans to put it all to good use so that the next time
he makes the trip up I-55 to St. Louis, it's for a more
permanent stay.
''It was great,'' Perez said. ''I was up there for two
months, which is a good amount of time. I learned a
lot. It was fun. It's the big leagues. It's your dream
and I got to do it. Hopefully, I'll get back up there
soon and hopefully stay for a longer time.''
Perez is considered to be the Cardinals' closer of the
future. Unfortunately, the big league club desperately
needs someone to fill that role ASAP.
Perez pitched in 23 games during his stint with St.
Louis, going 2-1 while posting a 4.18 ERA in 23.2
innings. He failed to pick up a save in his two save
opportunities. Perez did strike out 22 batters while
walking 13.
''The hitters are really good up there,'' he said.
''The only way you can find out is by going up there
and actually pitching and facing them and finding out
what works and what doesn't. What works in Triple-A
sometimes doesn't work up there. It's just a game of
adjustments. They sent me back down to work on some
stuff so I can be more successful up there. Hopefully
I'll get back up there and have some more learning
opportunities.''
The biggest thing the Cardinals want Perez to work on
is developing a consistent second pitch. That means
getting better control of his slider, as well as his
curveball, to go along with his blistering fastball. He
came into the season with Baseball America rating him
as having the best fastball and the best slider in the
Cardinals' minor league system.
''I got in kind of a funk. I was dropping down and
trying to make it do too much,'' Perez said. ''It's
tough to work on it up there in the big leagues because
the hitters are so good. If you make a mistake, they
hit it. So they just wanted me to come down here and
work it out in the minor leagues where there's some
pressure, but not like it is in the big leagues.''
To help alleviate some of that pressure, Redbirds
manager Chris Maloney said Perez will be used primarily
in the seventh and eighth innings, as opposed to
closing. Before being called up to St. Louis, Perez was
the Redbirds closer, posting eight saves in 10 chances.
With Kelvin Jimenez's recent call-up, the closing role
will now be split between Jason Motte and Mark Worrell,
Maloney said.
While in St. Louis, Perez also had to get used to not
closing, something he's been doing since his days at
the University of Miami where he became a first-round
supplemental pick by the Cardinals in the 2006 draft.
Perez had grown accustomed to knowing he was never
going more than two consecutive days without pitching.
While in St. Louis, there was no telling when he was
going to appear.
''It's a little different,'' Perez said of not closing.
''The game's kind of different later in the game.
Hitters are more aggressive trying to get stuff done.
In the fifth or six inning, they're still a little
patient and trying to wait for their pitch. I had some
success in that role, and I also had some failure.
''The way they (the Cardinals) were using me then, I
needed two pitches for strikes. Sometimes as a closer,
you can just throw a slider as a chase pitch and you
don't really have to control it for a strike. That's
probably the biggest difference I had to contend
with.''
Since rejoining the Redbirds, Perez has made two
one-inning scoreless appearances, combining for two
hits, four strikeouts and one walk.
''It's nice to have Chris back,'' Maloney said. ''He's
definitely a very plus guy to have on your staff.''
Perez is grateful for the taste of major league
baseball that he received. If nothing else, it let him
know that he can get big league hitters out.
And because of that, Perez plans to work even harder to
realize his dream of becoming a big league closer.
''That's my ultimate goal, to be a closer in the big
leagues,'' he said. ''It might not be this year. It
might not be next year. It might be two years, three
years, whatever, but that's my ultimate goal and I'm
going to keep working to try to get there.''
(commercialappeal.com)