NL NOTEBOOK: PLAYING AT COORS NOW NOT AS ROCKY.Byline: TONY JACKSON
Anthony (Antonio) Jackson, best known as Tony Jackson Staff Writer Four years after it was first utilized under a cloud of secrecy that didn't sit well with the commissioner's office, the infamous Coors Field • • [ humidor hu·mi·dor n. A container designed for storing cigars or other tobacco products at a constant level of humidity. [From humid (on the model of cuspidor).] finally is achieving its intended purpose. That much was evident during three games last week when the Dodgers and Colorado Rockies For the National Hockey League team (1976 – 1982), now known as the New Jersey Devils, see . The Colorado Rockies are a Major League Baseball team based in Denver, Colorado. They are in the West Division of the National League. combined to score 20 runs. Total. For the series. ``It has some similarity to real baseball games,'' Dodgers manager Grady Little said Wednesday, just before his team took the rubber game 3-2. That's great news for baseball purists, who long ago tired of the beer- league softball scores for which Coors Field was notorious. But it could be even better news for the Rockies, who essentially will change their entire, organizational personality now that use of the humidor -- the first balls in are now the first balls out, with each dozen stored for about six months -- has been honed to a science. ``A great offense sends a lot of guys to the All-Star Game,'' Rockies manager Clint Hurdle said. ``Pitching and defense win championships. It's how we have to win. Our park is not a pinball machine anymore.'' Through 20 home dates entering Friday, Coors Field had produced an average of 8.85 runs a game and 1.65 home runs. That was 20 percent off last year's figures for the same number of games. And while the pending warmer weather should help balls carry farther in farther in Of or relating to an option contract with an earlier expiration date than a contract that is currently owned or being considered. the mile-high air, the humidified balls still should keep the average runs scored well below the 13.83 the park yielded from its 1995 opening through 2001, the year before the humidor was incorporated. ``It's not the place that people used to see,'' Rockies left fielder Matt Holliday said. ``It's not just us who aren't hitting home runs and scoring. It's the opponents too. How we finish is going to have a lot to do with our pitching. ``All you have to do is check the statistics and see this park is different.'' And so are the Rockies, who finally are shedding their longtime image as a bunch of hackers in their hitter-friendly home who can't adjust to normalcy nor·mal·cy n. Normality. Noun 1. normalcy - being within certain limits that define the range of normal functioning normality on the road. ``It was mentally draining trying to be two different teams,'' Hurdle said. < --Hitting stride: Plagued by a horrendous sophomore jinx jinx n. 1. A person or thing that is believed to bring bad luck. 2. A condition or period of bad luck that appears to have been caused by a specific person or thing. tr.v. throughout April, Atlanta right fielder Jeff Francoeur finally is beginning to look the part of a guy who almost captured the National League's Rookie of the Year award Rookie of the Year award is newly established in 1985 that third season in K-League. Many star palyers were received this award such as Lee Dong-Gook, Lee Chun-Soo, and so on. last year despite playing only half the season in the big leagues. Francoeur entered Friday with a 16-game hitting streak, during which he had hit .351 with six homers and 22 RBIs, and he led the club with 10home runs. |
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