Orioles rookie Colton Cowser had a great response to realizing he tossed Craig Kimbrel’s milestone baseball into fountains

“I just yeeted it behind me!”

Big-league teams know that rookies are going to make mistakes. It’s part of the process for every player. But I don’t think the Baltimore Orioles quite anticipated the kind of mistake star rookie Colton Cowser would make on Saturday night.

It nearly had him going to take a dive into the fountains at Kauffman Stadium.

Orioles closer Craig Kimbrel went into the game needing just one more save to tie Billy Wagner for seventh on the all-time save list. And sure, seven isn’t a huge milestone. But Kimbrel was the replacement at closer for Wagner in Atlanta. So, that milestone was personally meaningful to Kimbrel.

And when Kimbrel recorded that final out on a fly ball to Cowser, the Orioles left fielder clearly wasn’t informed of that milestone. He dramatically chucked the ball over his head and into the fountains.

Cowser quickly realized he messed up, but he was a great sport about it. He detailed that realization to MLB.com after the game:

“I just yeeted it behind me … Right when I threw it, I said, ‘Craig has a lot of saves, that one might have been important. I literally told [center fielder Cedric Mullins] right whenever, ‘I might have messed up.’ And it turns out I did. We got the ball back, though.”

According to MLB.com, the stadium staff went to retrieve the baseball out of the fountains. And it was easy to pick out the correct baseball because only two baseballs were in the water — one of which was way too old to be the Kimbrel ball.

As for Kimbrel, he wasn’t upset that the ball ended up in a fountain and told Cowser not to worry about it.

Craig Kimbrel committed a super casual intentional balk to prevent the Marlins from stealing signs

Brilliant move, actually.

The Philadelphia Phillies took Game 1 of their wild-card series against their NL East rival Marlins on Tuesday, but it wouldn’t be a Phillies game without some late drama.

With a three-run lead in the ninth, Phillies closer Craig Kimbrel allowed a lead-off double to Josh Bell to give the Marlins hope for a rally. He was able to get Jazz Chisholm to pop out the next at-bat, and a Jake Burger ground out wasn’t enough to advance Bell to third base.

Now, Kimbrel obviously had the advantage here with a three-run lead and two outs. But the Phillies closer really didn’t want to take any chance with a runner on second base against Bryan De La Cruz. So, he did something you rarely see pitchers do on purpose: He balked.

Kimbrel stepped on the rubber and casually dropped the ball for a balk. He actually had to get the umpiring crew’s attention to be like, “Hey, I balked!” But in a high-pressure situation like that, Kimbrel would rather face De La Cruz with a runner on third base than risk the Marlins relaying signs from second base. It was a brilliant call from Kimbrel, actually.

Kimbrel, who doesn’t utilize the PitchCom system, had a similar intentional balk last season. And the strategy clearly worked as he got De La Cruz to ground out to end the game.

Phillies fans blamed Nick Nurse for Craig Kimbrel’s blown save after the new Sixers coach copied the closer’s stance

Not the best start for the Nick Nurse era in Philly!

The Nick Nurse era in Philadelphia got off to a rocky start to close out August.

While the Philadelphia 76ers won’t be taking the court with their new head coach until October, fans got to see Nurse during Wednesday’s Phillies game. Ahead of the Phillies final game in their series against the Los Angeles Angels, Nurse had the honor of throwing out the first pitch in front of the home crowd.

And before his first pitch, Nurse gave Phillies fans his best Craig Kimbrel impression, imitating the closer’s iconic spread-arm stance before tossing a pretty solid ball to the Phillie Phanatic.

Unfortunately for Nurse and Phillies fans, Kimbrel came into Wednesday’s game but blew a save in the top of the ninth after giving up a home run that allowed the Angels to take an 10-8 lead.

Naturally, Phillies fans looked for someone to blame for the rough loss and turned to Nurse and his imitation of Kimbrel’s stance that cursed the closer before the blown save.

Que Craig Kimbrel salga al campo con ‘Let It Go’ de Frozen ha sido el mejor amuleto de la suerte

La música con la que salen al campo los cerradores, quien usan canciones específicas cuando entran a los juegos de la MLB para intentar lograr algunas salvadas es algo real (¡o al menos eso pensamos!). Edwin Diaz regresó a usar Narco y se convirtió …

La música con la que salen al campo los cerradores, quien usan canciones específicas cuando entran a los juegos de la MLB para intentar lograr algunas salvadas es algo real (¡o al menos eso pensamos!).

Edwin Diaz regresó a usar Narco y se convirtió en algo enorme para el cerrador de los New York Mets y es algo que le ayuda a enfocarse y a pichar mejor.

¿Y qué pasa con Craig Kimbrel, el cerrador de Los Angeles Dodgers? Un cambio en sus canciones resultó ser justo lo que ordenó el doctor.

El mes pasado, en el Día de las Mujeres en el Dodger Stadium, los jugadores eligieron canciones diferentes para entrar al campo, canciones que fueron elegidas por sus parejas. A Kimbrel le pusieron Let It Go de Frozen.

Ese día pichó muy bien, así que decidió dejarla como su canción de entrada al campo, y desde entonces, ha pichado MAGISTRALMENTE.

Así fue como empezó

Traducción: En honor al Día de las Mujeres en el Dodger Stadium, los jugadores de Dodgers entrarán al campo con canciones diferentes según las hayan seleccionado sus parejas.

 

Traducción 1: Chris Kimbrel acaba de entrar (con una ventaja de 10-3) con “Let It Go” de Frozen. Tienen que amar esto.
Traducción 2: En honor al Día de las Mujeres en el Dodger Stadium, los jugadores de Dodgers entrarán al campo con canciones diferentes según las haya seleccionado sus parejas.

Así va hasta ahora

Traducción: Algo que aprendí hoy: la canción de entrada de Kimbrel es “Let It Go”.

 

Traducción: En la era de “Let It Go”, ahora Craig Kimbrel tiene 4.1 entradas sin anotación. 0 hits, 2 BB, 5 K.

 

Traducción: Los Dodgers ganaron 9-4. Van 92-41. Ganan la serie contra los Padres y su número mágico es el 9.
Craig Kimbrel libre fue para una entrada 1-2-3. Ahora, su ERA está por abajo de 4.

 

Esto es lo mejor

Traducción: Kimbrel entrando al campo con Let It Go.

 

Traducción: Acabo de ver a Craig Kimbrel entrar otra vez con “Let It Go“. Está funcionando. ¿Tal vez “Let It Go” sea la nueva Narco“?

 

Traducción: El ERA de Craig Kimbrel desde que cambió su canción de entrada a “Let It Go”: ¡0.00!

 

Traducción: Craig Kimbrel tiene una frecuencia de bases por bola de 0% cuando entra con Let It Go.

 

 

Artículo traducido por Ana Lucía Toledo

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Craig Kimbrel walking out to ‘Let It Go’ from Frozen has become an incredible good-luck charm

The song from Frozen has seemingly helped him pitch better.

Walkout music for closers who use specific songs as they come into MLB games to get saves is a real thing (or at least I think so!).

Edwin Diaz getting back to using Narco has become a huge deal for the New York Mets closer that helps him get focused and pumped to pitch.

And for Los Angeles Dodgers closer Craig Kimbrel? A change in songs has been what the doctor ordered.

Last month, on Women’s Day at Dodger Stadium, players chose different walk-up songs that were chosen by their significant others. Kimbrel got Let It Go from Frozen.

He pitched well that day, so he decided to keep it as his entrance song. And since then, he’s pitched MASTERFULLY:

Craig Kimbrel broke out the most casual intentional balk to prevent sign stealing

Bold strategy.

It’s no secret that Major League teams are paranoid. Whenever there is even the slightest suspicion of sign stealing, it becomes a whole thing. You’ll even see a pitcher put himself at a technical disadvantage just to make sign stealing tougher on the opponent.

That’s exactly what happened on Tuesday with Craig Kimbrel against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

With a runner on second and the Dodgers up by two runs in the ninth inning, Kimbrel took a glance at Geraldo Perdomo on second base, flipped his glove over and let the ball drop to the mound for a balk. It was all so casual and all so intentional.

But there was a reason behind it all.

Kimbrel wanted to move Perdomo to third base in order to prevent him from relaying signs to Ketel Marte at the plate. We saw the intentional balk in that situation last season pretty regularly, but now, teams are allowed to use PitchCom instead of traditional catcher-pitcher signs. The Dodgers just choose not to use PitchCom because technology is scary.

The strategy somewhat backfired because Perdomo ended up scoring on an infield single. Kimbrel did manage to close out the game the following at-bat.

Still, fans had plenty of thoughts about the unconventional move.