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Thursday, June 1 | |||||
Big Mac victimized by Diamondbacks | |||||
PHOENIX -- The list of "firsts" by the Arizona
Diamondbacks filled out quickly the first two years. One that was
missing was the one for triple plays.
The franchise, which began play in 1998, got its first Wednesday
night, and Mark McGwire hit into it.
"I hope we never turn another one," manager Buck Showalter
said after the spectacular play keyed a 6-2 victory over the St.
Louis Cardinals. "I don't want that many runners out there again.
Bases loaded, nobody out -- you don't like your chances of getting
out of that."
The Diamondbacks were up 3-1 in the fifth inning when the
Cardinals loaded the bases.
McGwire, facing Randy Johnson, hit a towering popup to Steve
Finley in shallow center field.
Finley threw out Placido Polanco, who tagged up at third and
tried to score. After making the tag play at the plate, catcher
Damian Miller threw to third, where shortstop Tony Womack tagged
out Edgar Renteria, who was trying to advance.
"Steve made a nice throw to the plate," said third baseman
Matt Williams, who moved out to a cutoff point. "He had him in one
shot. Damian had the presence of mind to get it back to Tony at
third. It was nice."
The 8-2-6 combination is rare as triple plays go, and Showalter
said it worked because everyone was in the right position.
"He gets behind the ball and comes through the way you draw it
up and gives a cuttable throw to the plate, which kind of freezes
the trail runner (Renteria)," Showalter said. "Damian puts on a
quick tag and looks at the trail runner like you teach it. And
Tony's where he's supposed to be."
"I just put myself in position to make the play," Womack said.
"I had to be there, because I saw Matty going to be the cutoff
guy."
Finley knew Polanco was going.
"I really didn't know how deep I was in the outfield," Finley
said. "I just tried to stay behind the ball as best I could and
get my momentum going to home plate, and to make sure I threw it to
the cutoff man in case the runner on second tried to go to third. I
didn't expect it to happen like that."
It was the fourth triple play in the majors this year and the
second this week -- Oakland's Randy Velarde turned an unassisted
triple play Monday at New York.
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