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September 27, 2008 | The Real McCoy | Cincinnati Reds baseball news
 

Home > Blogs > The Real McCoy | Cincinnati Reds baseball news > Archives > 2008 > September > 27

Saturday, September 27, 2008

A meeting in St. Louis under the ARCH

First of all, read this post about the big summit meeting of the big-heads in St. Louis today and how Bob Castellini wanted to know Dusty Baker’s goals.

Should he need to ask? If it isn’t a World Series championship, and pronto, then they have the wrong man. But they don’t.

After reading this, be sure to go to my previous post and read about Sunday’s pitcher, Adam Pettyjohn, and how he was days from death and lost 60 pounds and most of his intestines, but came back to not only live but to pitch again.

Sunday is his first major-league start since 2001, when he was hit with a deadly disease. A heart-warming story.

But first …

Owner Bob Castellini, general manager Walt Jocketty and manager Dusty Baker spent nearly five hours huddled in a St. Louis Hilton hotel suite discussing the future of the Cincinnati Reds.

At one point, Castellini turned to Baker and said, “What are your goals?” If Baker didn’t say, “Win a World Series and win it soon,” he should have been handed a ticket to Sacramento.

Baker sat in his office before Saturday’s game with the St. Louis Cardinals and said, “I told him exactly what I’m telling you now.

“The town, the people (fans) made it a lot less tough and more enjoyable than it could have been,” he said. “There is very little mean-spiritedness. I went into this situation with my eyes open.

“I’m in this for the long run to make this organization better and good for a long time.”

Told that fans are waiting for nothing more than a winner and that they’ve been overly patient during eight years of losing and no playoff appearances since 1995, Baker said, “That’s what I’m waiting for and that’s why I came.

“I’m seeing improvement and I’m seeing fight the way we’ve come back — like Friday night (down 6-4 in the ninth with two outs, Javier Valentin tied it with a two-run homer, though the Reds lost, 7-6) and like in Houston (down 8-1 in the ninth, the Reds scored five runs and had the tying run at-bat).

“Very rarely now are we blown out of games,” Baker added. “There has been only one game we’ve been blown out of in a long time (Cubs 14-9 on Sept. 6, but they also lost to Milwaukee week ago, 8-1).

“I like what I’m seeing and I’m liking this team, especially the nucleus,” he added. “And I’ll tell you there are other people taking notice of this team lately, you know.”

Baker said he hates to see a season come to an end, especially now.

“It’s always sad to me to have a season end,” he said. “It has been a long road and we’ve come through a lot together. Now I’m one year older and one year closer to the end of my career.”

But as he told Castellini, “Sometimes it is difficult to be patient because time is running out. That’s OK, though, because when I leave I want to have made this team a winner, won a championship and leave the organization in a better place than when we got here. I want to do what Tom Kelly did with the Minnesota Twins.”

VOLQUEZ: TENDINITIS

As expected, an MRI Saturday on pitcher Edinson Volquez’s left knee revealed nothing more than tendinitis. He’ll continue treatment and rest.

QUOTE

“The hardest thing about patience is being patient.” — Reds manager Dusty Baker.

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From near-death to back on the mound

When Adam Pettyjohn faces The Great Pujols today in Busch Stadium, he won’t melt into a perspiration puddle. He’ll close his eyes briefly and think back to 2002.

He’ll think back to when he lost 65 pounds in three months. He’ll think back to when doctors told him he came within days of his body functions shutting down. He’ll think about near-death.

There is a line in his biography in the Cincinnati Reds media guide next to 2002 that says, “Did Not Pitch.” It almost could have said, “Did Not Live.”

So when the 30-year-old Pettyjohn makes his first major-league start since 2001 today against Pujols and the St. Louis Cardinals, he knows there are things more difficult than locating fastballs and holding runners on base.

The lefthanded Pettyjohn was a No. 2 draft pick of the Detroit Tigers in 1998 and steadily moved up the system until he reached the majors in 2001. He was 1-5 with a 5.82 ERA in six games, nine starts and seven relief appearances.

But something was wrong.

On Saturday, a day before his first major-league start in seven years, Pettyjohn smiles broadly and says, “I’ve been through it a little bit.”

He said it matter-of-factly, as if what he went through was nothing more than a long line at the grocery store checkout counter.

“I had ulcerated colitis right after my rookie year with the Tigers,” he said. “They took my entire colon out.”

Usually, Pettyjohn is a solid 200 pounds, but during his illness his weight dropped to 135 in a span of seven to eight weeks.

Pettyjohn paused to think about it, thinking about getting married after his rookie season and what it eventually entailed.

“It was diagnosed in the spring of 2001,” he said. That was the year of his major-league debut. “They diagnosed it and did the colonoscopy and all the proper tests.

“When they gave me the medications, there was about a two-month supply,” he added. “Right when the medication ran out was when I got called up (from Class AAA Toledo to Detroit).”

That’s when things turned ugly.

“I didn’t go back to get my medication,” he said. “I had a million things going on at the time.”

So Pettyjohn pitched without the medication and said sheepishly, “When the season was over, we just went home. A couple of the colonoscopies I had early were so brutal — there was no sedation, they couldn’t put me under — that I was hoping my body would heal itself.”

That wasn’t Dr. Pettyjohn talking, that was youth and stubbornness.

“Being young and strong, I thought that might happen,” he said. “Obviously, that didn’t happen and when the symptoms began coming back in October and November of 2001 (after his rookie) season I just basically hid it, hoping it would heal itself.”

That, as it turned out, was a terrible decision — like throwing Pujols a belt-high fastball right down the middle.

Pettyjohn and his wife went on their honeymoon and when they returned Pettyjohn decided it was time to see a doctor.

“They gave me all the same type of medication as I took before,” he said. “It was too far gone then and they didn’t realize it until mid-March.”

How bad was it?

“I couldn’t walk on my own,” he said. “I was walking with the aid of a walker for the last two weeks before I had surgery in March.” This isn’t good for a 22-year-old pitcher.

“I couldn’t use my voice because it was too sapping of my strength and energy,” he said. This isn’t good for a 22-year-old newlywed.

“I got married on January 12 and I still weighed 195,” Pettyjohn said. “By March 17 I was down to 135 pounds and it had nothing to do with my wife’s cooking.

“It hit fast and it hit hard and was a very tough thing to go through,” he added. “But I’m definitely better for it.”

That’s a positive way to look at near-death, which doctors told him was very close.

“When all this happened, I really didn’t care if I ever played another game of baseball,” he said. “The doctors told me after I had surgery in that when they opened me up I was literally days from my organs shutting down. I was so malnourished and nutritionally depleted. I was lucky to get the surgery when I did.

“What that disease does is spit out anything that’s in your intestines,” he said. “I was going to the bathroom 20 to 25 times a day. I was losing all my nutrients. All my blood. I was anemic, too. I had about half the blood count of a normal person.”

Pettyjohn, though, wouldn’t quit.

“A lot of hard work,” he said about the process of returning to the game. “When I started I couldn’t lift more than 10 pounds. For a year, my body didn’t do anything. Heck, I had a colostomy bag for six months.

“I didn’t have any choice over what I went through, but it definitely gives you a new and good perspective,” he said. “It gives you an appreciation for having your health and being able to go out and play this game.”

It wasn’t easy coming back.

He played briefly at Erie, Detroit’s Class AA affiliate, at the end of 2003, but was released. The San Francisco Giants signed him for the 2004 season and he pitched at Class AAA Fresno before he was sold to Oakland in mid-season and pitched at Class AAA Sacramento.

To stay in baseball, he had to sign with Long Beach of the Golden Independent League for 2005. When he went 10-2 with a 3.92 ERA in 16 starts, Seattle signed him to a minor-league contract for 2006. By June 21, he was released.

So it was back to Long Beach and the independents for just two starts before Oakland signed him again on July 14 of 2006.

Milwaukee signed him to a minor-league contract for 2007 and he won 16 games at Class AA Huntsville and Class AAA Nashville.

The Reds signed him last December as a minor-league free agent and he won 16 games for Class AAA Louisville and was rewarded with a promotion to the Reds on September 12, even though he was not on the 40-man roster.

And now, this afternoon in Busch Stadium, all the packing and moving and perseverance pays off. Albert Pujols? Who’s he?

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