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by Baron
CLEVELAND (92.3 The Fan) – Another page on the calender is ready to be turned, and with it the Indians are right in the thick of things in the American League Central, waking up Sunday just a game out of first-place.
The teams recent good homestand to this point has continued on the road, winning five of their first seven of an 11-game trip over the Orioles and the White Sox.
They got good news this past week with the return of their two 2012 All-Stars, as Chris Perez and Asdrubal Cabrera returned to the team and went right back in their roles.
Then, as things were steamrolling for the Indians, there was a quiet blip on the radar that went widely unnoticed, yet once again seems to underlie the issues with Perez on and off the field.
The Indians closer Thursday decided to pick and choose his way through who he was going to speak to through the media, as reported by Indians Plain Dealer veteran beat reporter Paul Hoynes.
Before the game, Perez told a team official that he would talk to reporters, but only if two reporters were excluded from the interview. It did not appear Perez talked to reporters before the game.
The note basically flew under the radar of most in the National media, but for those that have dealt with Perez and have spoken to him before, you can take a pretty strong guess that Hoynes, along with veteran Akron Beacon Journal Indians beat reporter Sheldon Ocker, were the two reporters that Perez didn’t want to have in the interview.
Perez has always had some engaging interviews in the past, and to weed out two of the top print reporters (assuming that’s who it was) the Indians have is a mystery.
If he felt they would write something unfair, then just say that.
To simply say that he didn’t want them as part of the interview is a childish move, and once again you have to wonder the mindset of the player who needs to be more worried about taking the ball in the 9th inning of a close game – not who is writing things down about him.
Perez did the right thing awhile back by getting rid of his twitter account, though even then I felt he should have stood in front of the cameras and faced the music about it, instead of having the Indians release a statement on his behalf.
Clearly Perez has felt he’s been misrepresented by the media for pulling such antics, but while he can think that all he wants, if he were simply to get batters out in key situations and not make headlines off the field, there’s no doubt the media would leave him alone.
It’s okay for a player with his reach to speak his mind, and he was the one that opened up the can of worms to the mess last season in May when he spoke about fan loyalty when it came to the low attendance numbers at Progressive Field.
At the time the thoughts may have been spot on, but since then he’s had a number of other memorable moments that have kept him in the headlines.
He’s jumped on former manager Manny Acta after his firing, spoken out about how great the ownership in Detroit is and not Cleveland (this was prior to the Indians offseason spending spree), closed the twitter account, and then the off the field legal issues before the latest saga with who he didn’t want involved in his interviews.
Perez this season has struggled, going 2-1 with 6 saves in 8 attempts and a 4.32 ERA in 17 outings. The Indians are paying him $7.3 million this season, and so far he’s not lived up to his side of things.
While it’s a long season, and there’s still half of it to go, the Indians really need Perez to stop worrying about who is involved in media interviews, how many people are at the ballpark, and if he’s getting booed by ignorant fans when he’s doing his job.
It’s time for him to put aside all of what he may feel is unfair about how he’s portrayed by those off the field, and start performing like he has in the past on it.
If he wants out of Cleveland, and he has always claimed he hasn’t, he’s doing a good job of doing the little things to do so.
It will in the end be a tough decision for the Indians to give up on him, but pulling stunt after stunt, no matter how small in the eyes of Perez they may be, is going to make that decision that much easier.
Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everyone you meet.