“When he smells blood," Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said, "he will pounce on it real quick."
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Ben Frederickson
Tony La Russa will love watching Albert Pujols’ 698th home run.
There were many times many years ago, Pujols recalled at his clubhouse locker late Friday night, when his former Cardinals manager would get on his case about letting a ripe first pitch hit the catcher’s mitt without Pujols attempting to punish it with his iconic right-handed swing.
“He was always mad at me because I took a lot of first pitches,” Pujols said. “I still take a lot of first pitches. I feel like I’m a better hitter with two strikes. I go up there and if it’s not the pitch I’m looking for, I take it. Sometimes, you take a pitch down the middle, but that’s not where you are probably looking for it. Sometimes, the ball moves just a hair, and it kind of throws you off. I’m not an aggressive hitter. That’s always been me, since I was little, minor leagues, college, high school. I like to take pitches.”
There are, of course, exceptions.
Each one of Pujols’ 19 homers this season have become a stand-alone story, and No. 698 was no different.
Before the game, Pujols played catch with a former president. No kidding. Leonel Fernandez, former president of the Dominican Republic, was in attendance as a special guest of the Cooperstown-bound slugger. He left with an autographed game-worn Pujols jersey, the one Pujols was wearing when he launched his game-tying, 427-foot two-run homer against Reds reliever Raynel Espinal. The towering shot ignited what became a 6-5 Cardinals win.
“He’s a huge fan of mine, and I’m a huge fan of his,” Pujols said about Fernandez. “To have him here, to deliver like this, it’s special.”