696 games later, he gets his 1st at-bat, and well ...
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PITTSBURGH -- At-bats are for closers.
Cubs reliever David Robertson waited until the 696th game of his 14-season career for his first. So who can blame him for smiling after striking out?
In the ninth inning of the Cubs' 14-5 rout of the Pirates on Wednesday, the veteran reliever, who pitched a scoreless eighth inning, grabbed Yan Gomes' helmet and Christopher Morel's bat to see how the other half lives. It's an opportunity that, in Robertson¡¯s words, ¡°made my dream come true.¡±
¡°[Manager David Ross and I] talked about it before the position player got in,¡± Robertson said. ¡°If the DH was up and I came in, he could pinch-hit me for the DH. So we talked about it. I just didn¡¯t think it was going to happen. We had to go all the way through the order for me to get up there.
¡°And then I blew it. I blew it!¡±
Entering Wednesday, Robertson¡¯s 695 career games were fourth most of any player without a plate appearance, behind only Buddy Groom (786), Joakim Soria (773) and Bryan Shaw (722). The last time he¡¯d made a plate appearance was high school.
Not to mention, he stepped in against a position player. Trailing 10-1 entering the ninth, the Pirates put second baseman Diego Castillo on the hill, and you'll never guess what happened: The Cubs sent seven men to the plate -- including four with two outs -- giving Robertson his long-awaited at-bat.
¡°I saw him smiling, feeling happy because he was going to have his first at-bat, probably,¡± Castillo said. ¡°Feels good. He¡¯s had a long time in the big leagues. I was just thinking, ¡®OK, let¡¯s see what happens. Throw the ball over the plate and let¡¯s see what he¡¯s going to do.¡¯¡±
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"He couldn't stop smiling on-deck," Ross said. "Feels like he's a kid at heart a lot of times, even when he's pitching. ... His teammates were definitely enjoying that, I was enjoying that. It was fun."
Like the professional hitter he is, Robertson worked the count full after falling behind 1-2. But on a shoulder-high 50.7 mph fastball (?), Robertson took a mighty swing and came up empty. But he left the batter's box smiling, telling his dugout: "I wasn't not going to swing."
¡°It was easy to tell when it was going to be a ball or a strike when it¡¯s 40 mph, but I wasn¡¯t going to walk,¡± Robertson said. ¡°I was going to swing. I had to try. I don¡¯t know if I¡¯ll ever get another opportunity, so I¡¯m glad I did.¡±
The .000 number on his career line hardly matters. And not only does he have the memory -- he was gifted the lineup card from the game as a souvenir for his wonderful whiff-filled at-bat.
¡°It¡¯s just a fun atmosphere,¡± Robertson said. ¡°I get ribbed in the dugout, and then I get the lineup card from my first at-bat and get told how bad I stink after the game. We were having a great time. It¡¯s nice to have days like that.¡±