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ELI: You pitched very well at Rookie ball the year you were drafted, did you need to make any adjustments moving away from high school?
CHRIS: Yeah, it was actually a big adjustment. In high school, I just sort of threw the ball and got away with it. In the minors, I had to set up batters -- hit my spots.
ELI: You pitched very well in Low-A for Wisconsin, but your W-L numbers did not show it. Was it frustrating not getting the run support needed to put wins on the board?
CHRIS: No, it really wasn't. I just wanted to get up and do what I could to help the team win. Everything else was out of my hands. I just had to do my part, and I felt I did.
ELI: The Erik Bedard trade talks dragged on a lot, what were your feelings on it when you first heard you could be traded, and then when you finally were traded?
CHRIS: At first, I didn't really know about it. But our closer, JJ Putz, started giving me crap about it. I was disappointed when I heard the news, just because I started to really get to know the guys, but I am happy where I am at now.
ELI: Coming into Spring Training, did you feel any pressure to perform having been one of the guys to come over in the Erik Bedard trade?
CHRIS: No, I didn't. Baseball is baseball, I just went out and had fun.
ELI: You are 6-5, have any coaches told you how to pitch effectively to your size, or is that something you have figured out on your own?
CHRIS: No, not really. They mostly told me to stay tall and not to drop my arm angle.
ELI: What did it mean to you to have established veterans Steve Trachsel and Jamie Walker take you under their wing, in a sense?
CHRIS: It was pretty cool. Those guys have been around awhile, they know what they are talking about, so I definitely listened.
ELI: What did you think of Baltimore's old fashioned spring facility?
CHRIS: You know, I was spoiled coming from Seattle, but it was nice.
ELI: The best feeling you have had on a baseball field came when and under what circumstance?
CHRIS: Probably when I was fourteen, pitching in the junior Olympics. I was pitching with all my friends, who I have played with since we were nine, and we went 10-0.
ELI: Can you think of one thing you have enjoyed the most about playing baseball as a professional?
CHRIS: There is nothing better than getting up and going to the field everyday.
ELI: What is your usual choice for food on the road? McDonald's? Subway?
CHRIS: They usually feed us at the field, so we eat pretty healthy.
ELI: When you left the Major League camp at Spring Training, was there anything the Orioles coaches told you to go and work on?
CHRIS: Yeah, they told me to work on holding runners on. And from a mechanics standpoint, not to cross my body too much when throwing.
3 comments:
keep up the great work tilly! everyone back home is rootin' for ya!
i played catch with this kid since i was 5! then i moved when i was 12from buena park and didnt hear from or about him until he got drafted. im very happy for him and wish for the best.
I had the pleasure of coaching chris for a few seasons back in pony baseball, see you in the bigs Chris
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