Anthony Reyes won't be overlooked now.
He entered with the fewest regular-season wins of any World
Series Game 1 starter. He walked off the mound with the biggest
victory of his life.
``Now I can sit back and kind of relax and appreciate what I just
did,'' Reyes said after the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Detroit
Tigers 7-2 Saturday night.
``I was a little nervous, not too much. ``Everyone told me stay
focused, one pitch at a time. And I tried to focus on the mitt and
not let anything else rattle me,'' he said. The right-hander, who
turned 25 last Monday, pitched into the ninth for the first time in
the major leagues, allowing four hits in eight-plus innings with
four strikeouts and a walk. In the first-ever World Series opener
matchup of rookie starters, he outpitched Detroit's Justin
Verlander.
Showing his socks high and wearing a cap with a flat bill, Reyes'
pitches were prettier than his sartorial choices.
``That style is not attractive,'' Cardinals manager Tony La Russa
opined. ``It has something to do with his concentration and focus. I
don't think it's going to be copied widely by the kids of America.''
Reyes said he's been wearing his socks that way since Little
League.
``The hat helps me see a little bit, gets more light in, helps me
see signs,'' he said.
After giving up Craig Monroe's double with one out in the first
and Carlos Guillen's two-out RBI single, Reyes retired 17 straight
batters.
Reyes relied on his fastball more than his breaking pitches, and
threw first-pitch strikes to 22 of 29 batters.
``We kept getting down 0-1, and that's a bad sign,'' Tigers
leadoff man Curtis Granderson said. ``That's when you have to be
defensive. We played right into his hands.''
For the first time in his big league career, Reyes pitched into
the ninth. He didn't make it far into the inning _ Monroe homered on
the first pitch, and Reyes was pulled.
``I thought he did a good job of throwing away a little bit, but
getting a lot of outs inside,'' Tigers manager Jim Leyland said.
``He had excellent control and basically he jammed us a lot, and he
got a lot of outs on fastballs in.''
Reyes was selected by Detroit on the 13th round of the 2002
amateur draft but stayed at Southern California for his senior year,
then was taken by St. Louis in the 15th round a year later.
``I came off an injury in college when they drafted me, so I just
figured, take the summer off and just heal up and try to go back to
my last year of college,'' he said.
La Russa had a chance to add Jason Marquis to his World Series
roster and start him in the opener.
``As time elapsed,'' La Russa said, ``we decided it was more
reasonable for Anthony than to challenge Jason. It's tough because
Marquis has been an important part of our club for three years.
That's one of those things _ not fun to make that decision.''
With a 5-8 record and 5.06 ERA in 17 regular-season starts, Reyes
had the fewest wins of any Game 1 starter in World Series history
and was the first with a losing regular-season record since the
Mets' Jon Matlack in 1973.
``We actually had a coach's dinner last night and each coach put
down what they thought he would do,'' La Russa said. ``And there was
actually two coaches that they said `into the eighth inning.' I
thought if he went five or six with low runs that he had done a
great job.''
___
STAR STRUCK: Just like 2004, the Cardinals opened the World
Series on the road. Just like then, they're not happy about the
all-star game being the deciding factor.
``I don't think it's right,'' general manager Walt Jocketty said
Saturday. ``I'll probably get reprimanded for saying that, but I
don't care.
``I don't think there was anything wrong with the way it was,
where you alternated. That was more fair.''
Giving the league that wins the all-star game home field
advantage began as a two-year experiment in 2003 to make the game
more attractive to fans and more meaningful for teams. The idea was
extended last season.
The American League has won the home field advantage for the
World Series for four straight years.
___
CASEY AT THE BAT: Detroit DH Sean Casey went 0-for-3 Saturday
night in his first action since injuring his left calf in the AL
championship series opener against Oakland.
The sweep against the Athletics and the six-day break before the
World Series gave Casey enough time to get back in the lineup, but
he acknowledges it didn't do much for his legs.
``I'm slow, but now I guess I'm just a bit slower,'' Casey joked.
If Casey was hurt later in his first post-season appearance, he
might have missed his chance to play in the World Series.
``Some guys play their whole career and don't make it to the
playoffs, let alone the World Series,'' he said before Game 1 on
Saturday. ``It's like a dream come true. The World Series _ it
doesn't get any better than that.''
Detroit manager Jim Leyland expected to use Casey as his DH in
the first two games before putting him at first base Tuesday for
Game 3 in St. Louis. He struck out, flied out and popped out in the
opener.
The Tigers got Casey from Pittsburgh on July 31, the trading
deadline, for Brian Rogers, a fringe prospect. Casey gave Detroit
the left-handed bat it desperately needed and much-needed help at
first base, where Chris Shelton fizzled after a strong start.
© The Canadian Press, 2007