McClendon says Pirates get no breaks from schedule-makers

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Tuesday, June 28, 2005 -- After dripping through a muggy weekend and managing a split of four games with the Cardinals, the best team in the National League, the Pirates yesterday got their only day off between June 13 and the All-Star break.

"We really need this day off -- for a lot of reasons," manager Lloyd McClendon said.

It's a short respite before things kick up again tonight in Washington against the Nationals, the Pirates' seventh series against a first- or second-place team in a current stretch of nine series, dating to May 30 and ending Thursday. Another series was in New York at vaunted Yankee Stadium.

That kind of scheduling irks McClendon, who last month criticized the Pirates' interleague matchups.

During the series in St. Louis he took another chance to expound on his team's difficult stretch.

"My God, you look at the schedule -- and I don't mean to keep harping on it; everybody has a tough schedule -- but we started with Florida, Atlanta, Baltimore, Tampa Bay, New York, Washington, St. Louis, a day off, and then Washington," McClendon said.

The Pirates began that stretch strong, winning the Florida, Atlanta, Baltimore and Tampa Bay series before being swept by the Yankees, losing two of three in Boston and two of three against the Nationals last week at home.

With the split against St. Louis, their record over those games is 13-13, which could be considered encouraging for a team trying to climb out of a 12-year slump, but that doesn't mean McClendon wouldn't like what he thinks would be a fairer schedule.

He sees another disadvantage, in the form of a travel nightmare, coming late in the season.

"I don't know what these people were thinking, but you look at our stretch in the middle of September. We play Cincinnati and Houston at home, fly to [Los Angeles] and play the next day," McClendon said.

"We play four in L.A., fly to Chicago and get in at, like, 7 o'clock in the morning and play Chicago [that night]. To play a night game in L.A. and get into Chicago [and have to play in 12 hours]?"

McClendon thinks someone should give the schedule-makers some tougher guidelines, and he knows who that someone could be.

"You know what? The players association allows that," he said. "They shouldn't allow that. You talk about abusing the product. These guys are going to be so worn out. It doesn't make any sense."

General manager David Littlefield doesn't get nearly as worked up over snags and rough spots in the Pirates' schedule.

"It's a very, very challenging thing to work through and to put together, and no one is ever happy with their schedule, I don't care if it's minor leagues or major leagues or whatever," Littlefield said.

"This is the big leagues, and everyone's got their issues. If we have good starting pitching and we hit the ball, the schedule will be secondary."

Still, McClendon isn't the only manager unhappy with scheduling quirks.

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa, the National League All-Star manager, complained over the weekend about St. Louis' game July 10 in San Francisco, the eve of the All-Star activities, being switched to a night game for TV, meaning he and most likely some of his players will have to take a red-eye to Detroit.

"You would think that ESPN would understand that we have several players who are going to be participating," La Russa told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

"I don't know. You would think you would get [the Sunday night game] from a team that's playing in the East or Midwest. It's hard to understand."

McClendon feels his pain, but he's thankful for the All-Star break, something on every team's schedule.

"That halfway point, that break, is much needed, make no mistake about it, to kind of get over the aches and pains, get your starting pitching staff fresh."
 

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Pittsburgh Scouting Report: Washington Nationals




Starting matchups: RHP Josh Fogg (4-3, 4.57) vs. RHP Ryan Drese (1-1, 4.05), LHP Dave Williams (6-5, 3.77) vs. RHP John Patterson (3-2, 3.14), RHP Kip Wells (5-7, 4.36) vs. RHP Livan Hernandez (11-2, 3.32).

Season series: Nationals, 2-1.

Three things to know about the Nationals: 1. They are among the game's hottest teams, having gone 17-6 in June, and they owe that to a quick adjustment to their new home. A 12-game winning streak at RFK Stadium was snapped Sunday by a 9-5 loss to Toronto, one shy of the franchise record set in 1979 in Montreal. The Nationals still have the best home record in Major League Baseball at 26-10. 2. They are banged up. 1B Nick Johnson, who has reached base in 69 of his team's 74 games, is uncertain for the series because of a bruised right heel. OF Ryan Church, whose left shoulder was bruised Wednesday at PNC Park making an exceptional game-ending catch, might return tonight. And superb 2B Jose Vidro will not return from a sprained ankle until after the All-Star break. 3. Livan Hernandez is having a Cy Young type of season, especially when his importance to the team is weighed. Washington is 13-3 when he starts, and he leads the National League in innings pitched. Against the Pirates last week, he lasted seven innings and won, largely on the strength of drawing four double plays.

The Pirates' key to success: Try a new approach against Washington OF Jose Guillen. When the Nationals took two of three last week at PNC Park, all he did was go 8 for 14 with four home runs, a double and six RBIs.

The intangible: How is it that the Nationals have been outscored, 316-310, but are 13 games above .500? They are clutch. Of their 44 victories, 18 have come by one run, most in the league, and 27 required comebacks, most in the majors.
 

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Washington Nationals first baseman Nick Johnson will be out three to seven days with a bone bruise in his right heel, the result of an awkward play at the plate in Sunday's 9-5 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays.
Johnson, who leads the Nationals with a .320 batting average and 42 RBI, underwent an MRI yesterday that revealed no breaks or tears. Club officials originally worried the injury might be more serious and might have affected either his ankle or knee.
Johnson hurt himself trying to avoid Blue Jays catcher Gregg Zaun when he crossed the plate on Vinny Castilla's seventh-inning double. Rather than attempting to slide around or knock over Zaun, Johnson tried to sidestep him and wound up getting his right foot caught in the dirt. He walked gingerly back to the dugout and was replaced in the field by veteran Wil Cordero.
Nationals manager Frank Robinson is likely to start either Cordero or outfielder Brad Wilkerson at first base tonight against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Cordero is batting .038 (1-for-26) and has played only parts of two games in the field this season after undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery. Wilkerson played extensively at first base last year in Montreal but is considered a superior outfielder.


Right fielder Jose Guillen also underwent an MRI yesterday on his left shoulder, which revealed a severe contusion. Guillen's status is day-to-day and doubtful for tonight.
 

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Pirates schedule is brutal and as a big fan, kind of have mixed feelings. I like seeing the best teams play them and you have to beat the best, to be the best. But as a fan, it means losing also.

I still believe that this is a good team but just not there yet. I do see them taking 2 of 3 out in Washington. They were disappointed that they didn't do this in PGH and this series was an asterick on their calendar and they want this series.

Confidence is a little down now, but a much deserved extra inning victory Sunday might get them back on track. And if you look at the 2 blown calls on the road trip before, (Sheffield was out and Bellhorn dropping ball flatout) we should have been .500 on that road trip. That was some of the lousiest umpiring I have seen in awhile!! GL to you!
 
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