Frustrated Freeland takes bat to dugout light
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DENVER -- Rockies pitcher Kyle Freeland felt the lighting d¨¦cor in the Coors Field home dugout wasn¡¯t to his liking during his team¡¯s 8-5 victory over the Padres on Thursday afternoon.
¡°I just didn¡¯t like where that light was in the dugout -- it didn¡¯t look good,¡± deadpanned Freeland, who redecorated by taking a baseball bat to one of the ceiling lights.
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Of course, the ambiance had nothing to do with why Freeland sent the plastic cover and shattered bits of bulb everywhere before tossing the bat aside.
The Rockies had given Freeland a 5-2 lead going into the fifth inning. Had he pitched more efficiently and gotten through that inning, he would have had a win. We all know wins aren¡¯t an important stat to sabermetric worshipers. Still, a player wants to pitch well.
Instead, Freeland yielded a Trent Grisham leadoff home run, a double to Ha-Seong Kim and an RBI single to Jake Cronenworth before manager Bud Black removed him for Jhoulys Chac¨ªn, who gave up Jorge Alfaro¡¯s game-tying RBI single. Even on a hot afternoon, Freeland, who didn¡¯t have a feel for any of his pitches, then let out some heat.
¡°I felt good out of the gate, but things kind of unfolded on me,¡± said Freeland, whose inconsistent first half will send him into the All-Star break with a 4.96 ERA. ¡°I kind of stopped attacking the zone, tried to be too fine. I¡¯m not sure why. Obviously, it¡¯s a solid lineup they have over there, but that's not my game, trying to be fine with pitches. My game is being in the zone, attacking.¡±
In the end, though, the sun shone on Colorado, who won three out of four from San Diego.
¡°It was huge,¡± Freeland said. ¡°Hats off to our offense and our bullpen for picking me up and doing their job.
¡°I¡¯ve just got to be more consistent, get back to who I know I am.¡±
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