Aug/07/08 06:01 PM Filed in:
Chris Perez
ST. LOUIS -- Even though he
looked dominant on Wednesday night, Chris Perez is
"no Bruce Sutter, yet."
And despite the many issues for the Cardinals' bullpen
this year, manager Tony La Russa is not ready to name
Perez the closer, though the rookie was lights out
against the Dodgers.
"The worst thing we can do right now is heap on
expectations on Perez -- anointing him the closer --
mostly because he's not ready for it," La Russa said.
"Just let him take his assignments and once in a while,
he's closing."
Entering the game with a runner on second base on
Wednesday, Perez retired five of the six batters he
faced. Possessing a blazing fastball and slider with
bite, Perez has the potential to close.
Not only is Perez young and relatively inexperienced,
La Russa has other reasons for hesitating with the
rookie. He is in his second stint in the Majors this
season. The Cardinals sent Perez back down to Triple-A
Memphis on July 18 with a mission: work on the slider.
"There's a reason he got sent down," La Russa said. "He
lost an edge there. ... He had a problem. Command of
his fastball was good, not great. Command on his
breaking ball was not as nice. If he improves both of
those things, like yesterday, he does that a lot --
just let him baby step, baby step, baby step."
After Jason Isringhausen struggled on Tuesday, the
Cardinals announced they would operate by a closer "by
committee." La Russa said that includes anyone that is
available.
In a perfect world, La Russa would rather have Perez
grow into the role over the course of the year -- much
like Kyle McClellan is preparing for next year and Adam
Wainwright did in 2006.
"The best is if you can give him a whole year in the
Major Leagues and you can groom him, groom him, groom
him," La Russa said. "Then the next year, it bears
fruit."
(mlb.com)