| Whatever happened to the Junior Griffey we used to know? 
It wasn't so long ago he looked like a guy on a quest to be Michael Jordan. Now he's on a quest to find Johnnie Cochrane. So what happened?
    Once, he was just a fun guy with a sweet swing. He was the human Web Gem. 
He was the smiling face on the Nike spots.
    Now, it seems, hardly a week goes by when Junior isn't whining publicly 
about something: Marty Brennaman, the All-Star Game, the schedule, the 
Mariners, too many Jim Edmonds highlights, too many media critics. Yadda, 
yadda, yadda.
    We can't think of any player of his luster in recent memory who has taken 
less time to blow more craters in his once-radiant landscape than Junior 
Griffey. What a shame. We like the guy. We admire his talent. We love 
watching him play. But what the heck is he doing to himself?
    "Listen," says Reds GM Jim Bowden, "we've had a tough year. We're under 
.500. There are a lot of explanations. People are frustrated. And these 
things happen. I'm not trying to downplay this. But when it's all said and 
done, Junior's going to hit 40 to 50 homers, drive in 100 and win a Gold 
Glove. But when things aren't going good, everyone points to things that are 
negative."
    It's true that Griffey reached 100 RBI this year faster than all but one 
year of his career, and not much has been said about that. It's also true 
that while his average is down, his on-base percentage is right around his 
career norms -- an indication of how much he's been pitched around because of 
the rough seasons by the hitters around him. And it's true, too, that Griffey 
has taken more heat for the Reds' disappointments than he probably deserves.
    "Our problem," says Bowden, flatly, "is not Junior."
    And that's true. But Junior's problem is Junior.
He's 30 now. He's still as big a name as there is in the game. It's time for 
him to grow up and rise above the rubble to behave at the same level at which 
he plays.
    "It's not always fair," says one of Griffey's old friends. "When teams 
don't win, it's always a question of who can you blame? But when you make 
that money, you have to accept it. You don't have to like it. But it comes 
with the territory. It's part of being a star. Some guys can handle it. Some 
don't want to handle it. But once you get a reputation as a whiner in this 
game, it's tough to shake."
    It does seem as if his 0-for-4's all make it onto SportsCenter, while 
other guys' don't. It does seem that when he strikes out with two on in the 
third, it's news, while it's not for other people. We empathize. But again, 
it goes with the territory.
    You can argue that baseball's powers that be haven't helped him, either. 
The sport hasn't properly promoted players like him. And it hasn't properly 
coached them on the responsibilities of fame. When Michael Jordan's team went 
to the playoffs, he went to the interview room just about every day. When 
Griffey's Mariners made the playoffs, it was an event if he went once. That's 
baseball's fault as much as his.
    "Yeah, but you can only educate a guy so much," says one frustrated 
Griffey supporter in Cincinnati. "You can give him as much wisdom as you 
want. But if the guy doesn't want to do it, he won't do it. There's a lot of 
wisdom around him, believe me. There are a lot of people giving him advice -- 
including his dad. He's got a lot of positive people around him, including 
Barry Larkin. But it's amazing the crap this guy takes. He's just sensitive 
to what people write, and he's sensitive to what people say. He just wants to 
be loved. But when you're losing, things get blown out of proportion."
    And when you take on Marty Brennaman, you're taking on a local icon who 
is an extension of the city itself. So that's a dangerous neighborhood to be 
wandering around in. But it's not too late for Junior Griffey to escape it. 
Robby Alomar climbed out of his abyss, with class and grace. Junior can do 
the same.
    But to do that, he doesn't need to look for Johnnie Cochrane. He needs to 
look inside himself -- for the smiling face America used to know and love. 
The future of baseball in Montreal is as bleak as it's ever been, following 
the decision of owner Jeffrey Loria to drop the option on the most desirable 
piece of downtown real estate on which to build a new ballpark. Nevertheless, 
the Expos are not history in Montreal until commissioner Bud Selig decides to 
give up the fight and grant them permission to move. And indications are that 
Selig hasn't made that determination yet.
"I've seen worse situations that looked more hopeless," says one prominent 
baseball man. "And those teams never moved. So I would say this story has 
some chapters to be written yet."
It's clear the Expos will be in Montreal at least through next season. So 
that leaves the city time to find another solution. But once the most 
attractive stadium site is peddled elsewhere, it's hard to foresee any better 
sites coming along. And without a gorgeous ballpark in the perfect location, 
with an owner committed to the city -- which Loria obviously isn't -- can 
baseball possibly succeed in Montreal? Don't bet an autographed picture of 
Youppi on it.
Despite claims by Diamondbacks owner Jerry Colangelo that reports of the 
club's recent loan request were blown out of proportion, several baseball 
sources say the club was actually in "a very serious situation." The 
Diamondbacks' short-term ability to operate is not in jeopardy. But their 
current debts and all their deferred contract money have many in baseball 
wondering about their long-term health.
"They owe a lot of money to guys on the downside of their careers," says one 
baseball official. "And that doesn't go away. It almost has to tie their 
hands for what they can do in the future."
Few significant deals are expected before Thursday night's deadline to set 
rosters for the postseason, because almost no players of significance made it 
through waivers. One starting pitcher who reportedly did: Colorado's Masato 
Yoshii.
Davey Johnson almost asked to be fired by the Dodgers this week, telling 
the Los Angeles Times' T.J. Simers that if he's going to be canned anyway, 
"let's do it and not wait. Let me put my house on the market instead of 
waiting eight weeks. Just do it."
Oh, they'll be doing it once the season is over. You can book that. But one 
baseball source says there are two compelling reasons the Dodgers won't do 
anything during the season: 1) "there's no benefit to the club in doing it 
now, because they're not going to win anyway," and 2) "the best candidates to 
replace him won't be available until after the season." Translation: Dusty 
Baker, Bobby Valentine, Felipe Alou -- with Kevin Kennedy as a backup plan.
If the Mets get to the World Series, Valentine will be back in New York. If 
not, his most likely options would seem to be either the Dodgers or Japan, 
even if six to 10 managerial jobs open this winter, as expected.
"He's seen as too devisive around baseball," one prominent baseball man says 
of Valentine. "So I just don't see many general managers willing to take that 
risk of bringing in a guy like that."
Despite lots of haggling with the union, baseball wound up balking at 
giving big-league service time to players who made the Olympic team. The one 
concession MLB did make was to agree to waive the right to cut salaries of 
Olympians on major-league rosters by 20 percent next year.
Even with George Steinbrenner's Olympic connections, the Yankees wound up 
being the team that was the least cooperative in providing players to go to 
Sydney. Sources say the Yankees even refused to give the OK for pitchers like 
Randy Keisler and Jay Tessmer to be part of the team, even though there's 
next to no chance they'll play any meaningful role in New York in September.
Is it almost time to elevate Oakland shortstop Miguel Tejada into the 
Nomar-Jeter-A-Rod class? One AL executive actually said the other day: "I'd 
take him over Jeter." Tejada is a defensive higlight waiting to happen every 
night. And he has 40-homer potential.
One of the most significant anniversaries this week was Ray Lankford's 10th 
anniversary as a Cardinal. Lankford's performance has slipped. He's struck 
out 115 times in 313 at-bats. And the Cardinals quietly shopped him early in 
the season. But he's now a 10-and-five guy, so he won't be going anywhere 
without his permission.
Useless information dept.
|  | List of the week |  
|  | With Glenallen Hill up to 12 homers as a Yankee, he has a chance to rank with 
the Yankees' greatest midseason acquisitions ever. Here, courtesy of SABR's David Vincent, are the only other Yankees to hit 10 homers or more after being picked up in the middle of a season:
Jesse Barfield,1989, 18, (acquired April 30) Hector Lopez, 1959, 16, (acquired May 26)
 Cecil Fielder, 1996, 13, (acquired July 31)
 Cliff Johnson, 1977, 12, (acquired June 15)
 Chad Curtis, 1997, 12, (acquired June 9)
 Oscar Gamble, 1979, 11, (acquired Aug. 1)
 Ken Phelps, 1988, 10, (acquired July 21)
 |  Padres reliever Todd Erdos moved into the early lead in the Cheapest Save 
of the 2000s competition Tuesday by saving a 16-1 game against the Mets. He 
supplants Alan Mills, who saved a 16-2 win by the Dodgers on April 22. They 
both have a ways to go to match the cheapest saves of the '90s: a tie between 
Texas' Ed Vosberg, for saving a 26-7 game in 1996, and Cincinnati's Stan 
Belinda, for saving a 22-3 game last September. Stay tuned -- for nine more 
years.
The Mariners' recent eight-game losing streak wasn't the longest in the 
American League this year. But it did remind us that the streaks in each 
league that were the longest were all by teams that started those streaks in 
first place: The Rockies (11 games in July) have the longest skid in the NL. 
The Royals (nine games in April) and Rangers (nine games in June) have the 
longest in the AL.
And the next-highest streaks in each league were by teams that also would 
make the playoffs if the season ended right now -- the Mariners and Giants 
(who lost eight in a row in May). What does that tell you about how thin the 
line is in baseball between winning and losing?
Ismael Valdes is now the official president of the Offense is Overrated 
Club. Tuesday, he hit a home run but didn't win. Earlier this year, he 
managed to drive in the only run in a 1-0 game -- without getting the win in 
that game, either.
Last Sunday in Chicago, the White Sox and Devil Rays played a game in which 
both teams blew a four-run lead in the same game. Incredibly, here in a 
season in which officially no lead is safe, that's the third game this year 
in which each team blew a lead of four runs or more. The others, according to 
the Elias Sports Bureau's Kevin Hines: Rangers 17, A's 16 on May 5 in Texas 
and Orioles 11, Rangers 10 on June 14 in Baltimore.
The Pirates finally won last Sunday after losing on nine straight Sundays 
before that. In case you were wondering, the Steelers haven't lost on nine 
straight Sundays since they went from Game 2 of the '69 season to a 23-10 win 
over the Bills on Oct. 11, 1970. That's 16 straight Sundays, by the 
computation of Elias' Ken Hirdt.
The Sultan of Swat Stats, SABR's David Vincent, reports that Gerald 
Williams just became the 10th active player to hit 20 or more homers out of 
the leadoff hole. The others: Rickey Henderson (obviously), Marquis Grissom, 
Brady Anderson, Craig Biggio, Al Martin and the surprises -- Chad Curtis 
(1995), Barry Bonds (twice), Ellis Burks (1987) and Nomar Garciaparra (in 
1997). Most ever: 35, by Anderson in '96 and Bobby Bonds in '73.
Now that B.J. Surhoff's iron-man streak has bit the dust, the current 
longest streak belongs to -- guess who? -- Sammy Sosa (365 in a row, through 
Friday).
We're now up to 23 games this season in which a pitcher has given up 10 
runs or more -- including twice apiece by Jose Lima, Jamie Moyer and Mark 
Mulder. Elias checked back 25 years and found only one other season in which 
this many pitchers exploded for double figures in one game -- 1996 (also 23). 
In 1990, exactly one pitcher (Curt Young) did it.
The White Sox still may not be bigger in Chicago than the Cubs among 
humans. But their canine attendance continues to skyrocket. Last Sunday's 
fifth annual Dog Day drew a record 568 pooches, up 41 from last year.
"Interestingly," says White Sox promotions genius Rob Gallas, "I still get 
notes from people who go to dog day -- but don't bring their dogs for whatever 
reason. ... They just enjoy being part of the experience." Woof, woof.
Baseball is an amazing sport. On Aug. 17, Orioles rookie John Parrish gave 
up two hits in 6 2/3 innings in a start against the White Sox. Six days 
later, he got knocked out in the second inning -- against the same team. On 
Aug. 18, Wade Miller took a no-hitter into the seventh inning against the 
Brewers. Five days later, he gave up 12 runs to the Cubs.
In the fifth inning of a tie game in Baltimore last weekend -- with two 
Orioles on base and one out -- the sprinklers abruptly went off. Press-box 
announcement after the sprinkling subsided: "Rain delay lasted 21 seconds."
SABR's Chuck Rosciam reports that Brent Mayne's winning-pitcher act in 
Denver on Tuesday raised the all-time victory total by catchers to 10 -- all 
but his in the 19th century: two by Buck Ewing in 1889, two by Sleeper 
Sullivan in 1884, one each by Eddie Fusselback in 1882 and Amos Booth in 1877 
and four by Roger Bresnahan in 1887. Most innings pitched by a catcher: 95 
2/3, by Booth. Most innings pitched by a catcher since 1901: 24, by 
victory-less Charlie Moran in 1903.
What a week. Pedro Martinez gives up five runs in the first inning and 
Randy Johnson gets KO'd in the third on back-to-back nights. Pedro gave up as 
many runs in the first inning Thursday in Kansas City as he'd allowed in his 
previous 29 starts put together, counting the postseason.
As for the Big Unit, the Valley Tribune's Ed Price reports that in the 11 
years between his no-strikeout games, he racked up 2,937 strikeouts and made 
351 consecutive appearances (nine in relief) with at least one whiff. In his 
62 previous starts as a Diamondback, he'd averaged 10.4 strikeouts per start.
The Mets are batting .386 against Johnson this season. Everyone else: .201.
One more astounding Diamondbacks factoid: Since trading for Curt Schilling, 
the D-backs have gone 6-7 in games started by Schilling and Johnson. Hard to 
believe.
Since the Phillies moved Bobby Abreu into the leadoff hole, he's 10 for 24, 
with seven walks and a .548 on-base percentage (.417). He might stick around 
in that spot a while.
Minor-leaguer of the week: Howe Sportsdata reports that Charleston (W. Va.) 
first baseman Emmanuel Santana just went 0 for a month (0 for 23, from July 
20 to Aug. 21).
And speaking of hitless, down in the Midwest League, Clinton Lumber Kings 
first baseman Samone Peters had a shot at the rarified 200-strikeout plateau. 
He was at 185 whiffs through Friday, with 10 games left in the season.
Jayson Stark is a senior writer at ESPN.com. Rumblings and Grumblings will appear each Saturday.
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 ALSO SEE
 Jayson Stark archive
 Stark: Week in Review
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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