Baker talks about 2009 season
Reds manager expecting improvements in upcoming year
SARASOTA, Fla. --- Often during Spring Training and the regular season, Reds manager Dusty Baker has his 10-year-old son, Darren, near his side. Baker also has a daughter under 30. He often says he believes that youthful presence in his personal life serves him well at work while relating to today's players.
It will definitely be a good test for how in tune Baker is with younger generations. The Reds are loaded with a bevy of 20-somethings and rely more on its Minor League development than the club has in many years. The 59-year-old Baker is in his second season in Cincinnati after the club finished 74-88 during his first year. During a lunch break in his office recently, Baker talked with MLB.com about Spring Training and the season ahead. MLB.com: When you got here, you told the players you wanted to be the most fundamental, most mistake-free team and work on the little things. How's that going so far? Dusty Baker: We're on the way. We've got some young players here, some young Minor League players, too, that we're trying to get this throughout the system, not just here. We've been pretty good. We stress it every day -- get the signs, hit the cutoff man, stay alert and be in the game and expect the unexpected. So far the guys have been doing it and we're going to have to do it to win. We stress defense... the really good teams I've been on, you don't give away outs. It will help our pitching. The defense will prevent our pitchers from having to face extra guys and instead of taking them into the seventh, I'd have to get him in the sixth. MLB.com: It probably drove you nuts then last season with all the extra outs that were given away? Baker: Yeah, we gave away some outs. And it transferred to the pitchers where they think they had to strike out everybody. Now, I can see the difference in the mindset and attitude where they can throw strikes and if they keep it in the ballpark, we're going to get outs. MLB.com: Would you take your rotation's top four against anyone in the National League? Are you satisfied with that crew? Baker: I haven't seen everybody in the National League, No. 1, to see what they have. But they're coming. Volquez, you hope he'll repeat or get better than he was last year. You know Aaron Harang is definitely going to get better. There's a good chance Arroyo will be consistent and get 14-15 wins and 200 innings every year. Cueto, you hope he gets better and learns from last year. He's still very young. I wouldn't put us up against everybody yet but we're coming. That's the talk around when we talk to other people. They give you an opinion and almost everybody said they liked our pitching. If we throw quality strikes and pitch more effectively, then we have a chance to be one of the best. You have to do it before you can say it. Then you have to do it again.
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Mark Sheldon is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.




