Tagged: Reid Brignac

BEYOND THE BOXSCORE … GETTING TO KNOW TAMPA BAY RAYS P DEWON DAY

   Right-handed reliever Dewon Day was on vacation in New York City last fall, about to go out with a friend to watch an American League Championship Series game between the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays.  

  Though the Rays had already eliminated his own team, the Chicago White Sox, in the first round of the playoffs, Day was still cheering for the Rays. After all, one of his best friends, shortstop Reid Brignac, was with the club.  

    Then Day’s cel phone rang and he got the news.  

Dewon AFL.jpg  He’d just been claimed on waivers by the Boston Red Sox. 

  “I was like, ‘Damn, I don’t know who to cheer for now,'” he laughed, recalling the night.  

  It was the second time that Day, now 28, had changed organizations. And it wouldn’t be the last time.  

  Though he never threw a pitch in a Red Sox uniform, he participated in the organization’s winter Rookie Development Program that January, spending time with the coaches and the players he thought would be his future teammates.  

  “I really liked everything they did with that organization, how they treated their players on and off the field really wowed me,” he recalled. “But while I don’t usually really keep up with that stuff, I pay some attention to transactions and I noticed they were signing a lot of free agents.” 

  Enough so that one day after lunch, when he saw farm director Mike Hazen approach him, he had an idea what was up.  

  “I knew what time it was,” he laughed. “They told me that they had designated me for assignment and that I’d been claimed.” 

  By the Tampa Bay Rays.  

  This marked Day’s third American League East club since he’d turned pro in 2003.  

  Originally drafted out of Southern University in 2002 by the Toronto Blue Jays, the lanky Mississippi native had struggled through the good and the bad in his first few pro seasons. His electric arm showed flashes of brilliance, his slider was nasty, but elbow trouble kept him from reaching his full potential.  

  He’d posted a 1.80 ERA and 12 saves in his pro debut at short-season Pulaski in ;03 and a 1.50 ERA at short-season Auburn, one level higher, the next summer, limiting New York-Penn League hitters to a .184 average but his 2005 campaign was a lost summer due to injury.  

  That winter, the Jays left him unprotected and the White Sox took a flyer on him, selecting him with the last pick in the Minor League Rule 5 draft. 

  Now healthy, he posted a 3.40 ERA that summer in 40 games at Advanced A Winston-Salem and had a 3.60 ERA with 48 strikeouts in 25 innings the next spring with Double-A Birmingham when he got the most unexpected call: he was going to the big leagues.  

  His trip to the big leagues was a mixed bag over two months, showing flashes of his potential but also some control problems. He also had a stint on the DL and eventually returned to the Minors, this time to Triple-A Charlotte.  

  Day made up for lost time in the Arizona Fall League where he posted an impressive 1.38 ERA in 11 games, striking out 17 while walking just four over 13 innings, but there was no return to the Majors in 2008.  

  After he posted a 4.56 ERA in the bullpen at Charlotte, the Sox decided to see how he’d do as a starter and it was back to Birmingham to work on that transition. It wasn’t one he really wanted to make.  

  “Changing roles was like starting all over again,” he said. “It was so frustrating. I didn’t want to be a starter. I’d never thrown more than one or two innings at a time. But my biggest fear had always been failing and once you do, you realize it’s not that bad because at least you’re still playing. So I think I’m better now for the experience.” 

  The move over to his new organization was made easier by already having friends there. In fact, when he was with Charlotte and the team would travel to Durham, Day would stay with Brignac at his house there. And coincidentally, Day already had travel plans made to go to Tampa Bay to hang with his buddies for Super Bowl festivities.  

  “I told Reid even before I told my parents and he thought I was kidding,” said Day.  

  Though Day did not stick on the Rays’ 40-man roster, he made an impression in spring training, posting a 1.80 ERA in three games before being reassigned to the Minors where he will more than likely break camp in the Durham bullpen.  

  He could not be happier with his new organization.  

  “Every single day here has been fun, because it’s a really loose clubhouse where everyone is nice, everyone jokes around,” he said. “But what makes it so good are the coaches. They are all great. And Joe Maddon is the coolest manager I have ever been around.” 

MLB: Of what accomplishment, on or off the field, in your life are you the proudest?  
Dewon Day: On the field it would have to be going to the big leagues after everything I went through, being pretty much in rookie ball for three years. But if you ask me this question again in three or four months, it will be finishing my college degree through the University of Phoenix online. I won a scholarship last year. I think my mom will be even happier about it than I am.  

MLB: What do you think you’d be doing now if you weren’t playing baseball?  
DD: When I went to college I was a nerd so I’d probably be dong something with numbers, probably an engineer.   Dewon.jpg

MLB: Do you have other hobbies or creative outlets aside from baseball? 
DD: I love playing chess. I picked it back up last year. I don’t play in the clubhouse, I play on my iPod. And I shoot pool a lot.  

MLB: Complete this sentence: It would surprise people to know that I…  
DD: I’m a mama’s boy. People who know me personally know that but others would probably never guess it. And it will make her smile when she reads this. Also, I love to go to the mall and shop for hours. I’m addicted to buying jeans.  

MLB: Who would play you in the movie of your life? 
DD: Donald Faison (“Scrubs,” “Clueless”). Here in Tampa we were out one night and a bartender kept saying ‘I know you, you’re an actor,” and I kept saying no She kept on, because she thought I was lying and just didn’t want to admit it. She was like “You’re that guy from ‘Clueless’ but you look cuter in person than you do on TV.” I finally had to show her my driver’s license.  

Donald Faison.jpgMLB: Which aspect of life in the minors has surprised you the most, in comparison to what you might have imagined before you turned pro?  
DD: We stayed in some pretty bad hotels and had some bad clubhouses, especially in the Appalachian League. In a few places, if you weren’t the first person in the shower you were in standing water.  

 

 

BEYOND THE BOXSCORE … GETTING TO KNOW TAMPA BAY RAYS SS REID BRIGNAC

  It was obvious my so-called knowledge of pop culture had gaping holes.

  Standing on the field in Huntsville, Ala., in the summer of 2007, I was set to interview Tampa Bay Rays shortstop phenom prospect Reid Brignac. We were adjusting his mic and checking levels when he said to me “I don’t know what to do with my hands.”

  “Well, don’t worry about them,” I assured the then-21-year-old. “We’ll pretty much just focus on a closeup of your face anyway.”

  Everyone cracked up. I was oblivious.

  Hey, dude, I am just not a Will Ferrell fan, what can I tell you? It was weeks, maybe months, before I finally saw the clip from the movie “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and understood what Brignac was referencing.  

  The next time I saw him, I think it was in the Arizona Fall League, I admitted that I FINALLY “got it.” Duh.

Ferrell Hands.jpg  So last month, Brignac was one of a handful of elite prospects on hand for the annual Rookie Career Development Program hosted jointly by Major League Baseball and the Players’ Association.

  Among the many worthwhile programs they offer is an in-depth look at how to work with the media. And of course, among the clips they showed, was that clip from the film.

  Needless to say, Brignac needled me about it over lunch. And I totally deserved it.

  But I can also add that it’s been a lot of fun to watch how Brignac has gone from the unbelievably shy, sweet kid I first met during 2007 spring training, who probably DIDN’T know what to do with his hands, to one of the most engaging guys around.

  This past season had its highs and lows, as he made his big league debut on July 4, but missed the last month of the season, including playoffs with both his Triple-A Durham Bulls and the Rays, after having his wrist broken when he was hit by a pitch in early August.

Reid.jpg  The Louisiana native, the Rays’ second-round pick in 2004 out of high school, spent a few days with the big club before returning to Durham, where he finished with a .250 average with nine homers and 43 RBIs in 97 games.
 
  Brignac still projects prominently in the Rays’ plans. In 2006 he won California League MVP honors after hitting .326 with 21 homers and 83 RBIs at Advanced A Visalia, going on to hit .260 with 17 homers, 81 RBIs and 15 steals at Double-A Montgomery in 2007, helping lead that team to the Southern League championship at just 21 years old.

  Now, with 2009 on the horizon, things are looking markedly better for Brignac who, now healthy, is already down in Florida working out with his teammates at Tropicana Field in anticipation of the move down the Gulf Coast to the new spring training digs in Port Charlotte.

  “It’s part of the game, and it might not have been my time,” he said. “But we’ve got a new year now and I’m really looking forward to competing for a job.”

GOTMILB: Of what accomplishment, on or off the field, in your life are you the proudest?
RB: I’ve always been baseball, baseball, baseball. I’ve always wanted to make it to the major leagues. That was always my dream. So right now I’d have to say that was the biggest accomplishment for me personally. As far as teams go, we’ve won a couple of Double-A championships (with Montgomery) and that was exciting, celebrating and having a good time with my teammates, but I also won a state championship in high school with over half a team I’d known and played with my whole life.

GOTMILB: What do you think you’d be doing now if you weren’t playing baseball?
RB: I’d probably be coaching baseball. I like to help young kids get better at the game and I think I’ll always be teaching the game when I’m done with my career. I’ve learned so much through great coaches that I’d like to pass on what I’ve learned.

GOTMILB: What is the worst job you’ve ever had?
RB: I was a stock boy at a grocery store working in the cooler where it was freezing cold, stocking beer and drinks. But an even worse job was being an umpire when I was 13 or 14, with kids who were 9 and 10. I could tell right away it wasn’t for me. I respect umpires and it’s not an easy job. It’s a reaction and once you make a call you have to stand by it, right or wrong.

GOTMILB: Who was your childhood crush?
RB: I grew up with three beautiful neighbors as a child. The oldest was named Paisley Broussard and I had the biggest crush on her. My parents would always say ‘Whenever Paisley walks into the room, Reid gets SO RED.” Now she’s married and about to have a child.

GOTMILB: If you could trade places with one person for a day who would it be and why?
RB: It would have to be something fun and exciting if it’s only for one day. Being LeBron James would be a great day.

GOTMILB: Which aspect of life in the minors do you find to be the biggest challenge and why?
RB: That first full season was an eye-opener for me, being the first time I’ve ever had to play that many games and run out there every day. In high school you play 50 games max. I learned, going into the next off-season, how to better prepare myself for what I was going to go through. No one in my family, none of my friends, had ever been drafted so it was all new to me. And after that first full season I learned how to take care of my body, when to go out and when to stay home, certain things you learn as you get older.

GOTMILB: Who is the most unusual character you’ve met in your pro baseball career?
RB: (Rays outfielder) Fernando Perez, who is one of my best friends. He’s such an intelligent person who could do anything he wants in life, he doesn’t have to play baseball to be successful. I admire him for all the things he’s accomplished in his life. There’s nobody like Fernando and nobody will ever be like him.

GOTMILB: What is the best minor league promotion or visiting act you’ve seen?
RB: Myron Noodleman is my favorite. One of the first games my mom and dad came to watch me play was in Charleston, SC and he was the act for the night. We’d never seen him and we just loved him. He was hilarious and got the crowd really involved.