Chapman Watch vs. Watch Chapman
AlbertÃn
Aroldis
Chapman de la Cruz, the latest closer to be signed by the Chicago Cubs, has been under the
spotlight since he first stepped onto American soil in 2009, after successfully
defecting from his home country of Cuba. To put it mildly, Chapman’s fastball
is akin to Halley’s comet. It can streak
across the plate at up to 105.1 mph, the current confirmed MLB record. Pittsburgh’s
Andrew
McCutchen was batting at Great American Ballpark in 2011 when Chapman supposedly
threw a pitch clocked at 106 mph per the scoreboard. Unlike the famous comet, however, we get to
witness this trajectory path of brilliance over and over again. The control issues Aroldis experienced at the beginning
of his career have greatly diminished.
At least with his fastball. More
on that later…
Originally
drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in 2010, Aroldis has been setting pitching
radars on fire and sending batters to the bench wondering if they ever saw the
flash of white that just exploded in catchers’ mitts behind them. During a spring training game in 2014 against
the Kansas City Royals, Chapman was hit over his left eye when catcher Salvador
Perez smoked a line drive and he couldn’t get his glove up in time. It’s
really scary to think that such a gifted athlete’s career could have been
extinguished that day. Luckily, he
battled back from the disabled list and proceeded to throw 15 out of 20 pitches
over 100 mph when he returned to the rubber approximately two months later. Wow.
Why
then, am I in such turmoil over the Chicago Cubs recent acquisition of this
one-of-a-kind player? I’ll tell
you. In December of last year, it was
learned that Chapman was involved in a domestic dispute back in October. Reports confirmed that he fired gunshots from
his Davie, Florida home and also included accusations that he choked his
girlfriend. As a result of the
allegations, Aroldis’s imminent trade to the Los Angeles Dodgers was
nixed. He was eventually traded to the
Yankees but would become the very first player to be disciplined without an
actual conviction per new MLB rules enacted in August of 2015. After accepting and serving a 30-game
suspension, Aroldis was marginally apologetic over the incident and insisted he
never hurt his girlfriend.
Fast
forward to July 25th, 2016, the day news dropped that Chapman was
signed by the Cubs. The following
article from Steve Rosenbloom of the Chicago Tribune describes my rolling
emotions to a T: Chapman
Trade. Rosenbloom aptly expresses the conundrum many
Cubs fans like myself are faced with.
How can I support a man who left his girlfriend cowering in the
bushes? Yet, he has served his
suspension and now wishes to leave his prior poor judgement decisions in the
past. Language barriers have not helped
him to convey, if it actually exists, his remorse over what he did nor his
acceptance of what the Cubs organization expects out of him.
Theo
Epstein claims to have done all of his homework on Chapman and assures fans that
the integrity and values of the Cubs have not been compromised or
overlooked. So, after reviewing the
facts of an incident which formerly had me incensed, I have decided to give him the benefit of the doubt. I
will, like the rest of us, enjoy his compact windup, perfect leg kick, and
delivery of pitches that primarily make contact with a glove only. In other words, I am willing to move forward
but not forget Aroldis’s mistakes.
Everyone deserves a second chance.
You can blow an occasional save, Chapman. Just don’t blow this second opportunity that
you’ve been given. Help us win a World Series the right way, by keeping your
domestic life drama free. Or your fast
ball along with your career will disappear into a black hole.
Get your own free website!
Get your own free website!
Comments
Post a Comment