In his first taste of the big
leagues, Chris Perez is showing the St. Louis
Cardinals that he's well-suited to be the team's
future closer. Perez, 22, has been solid out of
the bullpen in a setup role, recording four holds
and 11 scoreless outings in his first 13 games.
Perez talked with News-Democrat reporter David
Wilhelm about his transition to the big leagues,
his desire to be the Cardinals' closer and the
benefits of being a member of a veteran bullpen.
Q: Is this a best-case scenario for you, considering
it's your first trip to the big leagues?
A: You couldn't ask for more. I couldn't ask to be
pitching any better. The coaching staff is showing
confidence in me, putting me out there in close games.
My second outing was a tie game in the ninth. I was
able to get through that, and I keep gaining confidence
every time out.
Q: Are you treating these hitters as if they're
Triple-A or Double-A hitters?
A: That has to be your mindset. I trust my stuff, and
so far, I know if I locate it good, not too many people
are going to hit it. I'm trying to get ahead of the
hitters and put them away, get ground balls and stuff
like that and work down in the zone.
Q: Are you looking forward to the time when you are the
ninth-inning guy? A: I'm just happy being up here right
now. "Frankie" (Ryan Franklin) is our closer. He's
there for a reason. He's pitching great, and he's got
experience. I'm just here to pitch whenever they call
me. If that time comes, maybe he's down or something
and I'm up, I'm going to try and treat it the same way.
You can't put extra pressure on yourself. That's when
you start walking people. Hopefully, the day will come.
When it does, I'm going to try to do my best.
Q: When your contract was purchased from Memphis, what
went through your mind? A: I just thought it was a
tremendous opportunity to come here and show them what
I can do --whether it was for two weeks or a month or
for however long. I wanted to put something good in
their mind so if they do send me back down and
something else happens, I'll be the first one up again.
I just kept that mindset and tried to show them what I
can do.
Q: Since you were the closer at Memphis, are you
itching to get back into those save situations?
A: I'm just glad to be in the big leagues. The only
difference between pitching the eighth inning and ninth
inning is you get a save by your name. It's one of my
ultimate goals --to be a closer in the big leagues. But
as long as I'm here getting experience and pitching and
we're winning games, I can't complain.
Q: How have you been able to go out there and maintain
a cool head?
A: It's always easy to pitch when you're making good
pitches. Luckily, I haven't run into any rough spots
yet. My confidence is pretty high right now just
because I've been going out and making good pitches.
That could all change tomorrow. I could give up a home
run or something and you're back to square one. When
you're throwing your curveball and slider for strikes,
it's easy to pitch.
Q: Do you think one of your keys is your
aggressiveness?
A: Hitters can pick up on a guy that's tentative, a guy
that's trying to miss the strike zone or trying to
nibble. It's a huge advantage to come out firing.
Sometimes that borderline pitch that they wouldn't
swing at, they'll swing at because they know you're
coming at them. It always seems to work that way. If
they see you attacking them, they have to swing. It's
definitely an advantage. Hitters don't like hitting 0-1
and 0-2, so that's even a bigger advantage if you can
attack and throw strikes.
Q: Pitchers often say they want to respect hitters, but
not fear them. Is that part of the way you go about it?
A: I don't really look at who the batter is. I look at
where they are in the lineup. Obviously, the three,
four and five hitters, you can't really make too many
mistakes over the plate or they're going to hurt you.
The seven, eight, nine guys, you can get away with a
little bit more. But I know if I make my pitches, I can
get pretty much anybody out. If I stay ahead of the
hitters, it makes me even better.
Q: Tony La Russa doesn't talk about whether you'll be
the closer here. He talks about when you'll be the
closer. It may not be this year. Are you OK with that?
A: I can't complain. I'm in the big leagues at 22.
That's something many people don't get the chance to
do. I'm just playing every day. I could pitch the fifth
inning. I couldn't care less. I'm in the big leagues
and our team's winning --and I'm helping them win.
Right now, it's great. My ultimate goal is to be the
closer. I closed in college (University of Miami) and I
closed in the minors. If that comes a month from now, a
year from now or two years from now, I'll still be
happy to just go out there and play.
Q: Did you see the stadium radar gun register you at
100 mph in your first outing?
A: Yeah, I saw that. I usually throw 94, 95, 96. I can
make it up to 97, 98. I don't know about 100. That
might have been off. I don't consistently throw there.
Q: What made you ready for this opportunity at such a
young age?
A: Spring training. The big-league invite to spring
training helped me a lot. Mentally, going up there
against big-league hitters. I had some success, I had
some failure. You learn from failure. I learned I
needed to work on (getting) pitches down in the zone. I
also had success, so that told me I could do it.
Q: Troy Percival said recently that you could really
help yourself by observing a guy like Russ Springer.
Have you been able do that?
A: Russ is great. Frankie's great. We've got (Ron)
Villone here. Our whole bullpen's good. They've been
talking to me a lot in the outfield, especially Spring
Dog (Springer). He tells me I've got great stuff. Just
go after (hitters). Even though they're in the big
leagues, they still can't hit 98 (mph pitches) that
good. ...
I couldn't be in a better bullpen. We've got guys who
have won the World Series, been in the playoffs. Russ
has played on six different teams. He knows what he's
talking about. Twelve, 13 years in the game, he's doing
something right. It's good to have those guys in your
corner.
Q: Who's your favorite closer?
A: I like Joe Nathan. He doesn't get much recognition
up in Minnesota, but he comes right after you and
throws strikes and he has good offspeed (pitches).
Every year, you look up and he's in the top four in
saves. He doesn't show much emotion. He just goes about
his business.
Q: You're pretty much doing what Nathan did, right? He
was a setup guy, too, before becoming a closer.
A: That's something most closers do. Not too many guys
go straight to the closer's role. There's just
something about it. Basically, you have to prove to
your manager that you can handle it. Another part of
that is going through some struggles --having a tough
game and coming back the next day. That's something
else I have to show I can do --bounce back and have a
short memory. That's the hardest part. That's the worst
part. Your team battles its butt off, your starting
pitcher goes six or seven and you go out there and
pitch one inning and give it up. That's the worst,
coming back into that locker room after that.
(bnd.com)