
In Wednesday’s
exhibition against the Washington Nationals, Roy Halladay threw 66 pitches in
the Phillies’ 6-3 victory. However, it was one pitch that ramped up the
rhetoric between the division rivals for the 2013 season.
Halladay threw a
pitch behind the back of Nationals outfielder Tyler Moore. He blamed the pitch
on a bad grip... kind of. It just so happened that Chase Utley was drilled with
a pitch in the leg by Nats’ ace, Stephen Strasburg in the previous inning.
“It slipped,” Halladay said of the pitch to Moore.
He paused.
“A little bit.”
Halladay’s slipped pitch
reminded some folks of another time when he plunked a guy and kicked off a
bench-clearing incident. That one was against the Phillies during spring
training of 2003.
The combatants … Roy
Halladay vs. Larry Bowa.
What happened? Here’s
the way I remembered it a few years ago:
By 2003, there were
plenty of players in the Phillies’ clubhouse who wanted to take a poke at their
manager and the pitching coach. Eventually, one pitcher is said to have
cold-cocked the pitching coach before a game at Citizens Bank Park, but the
manager only ever (publicly) started fracases with the opposition.
That manager, of course, was Larry Bowa whose
house-divided style of skippering never really caught on during his reign from
2001 to 2004. And certainly we’ve seen enough of his act to know how it works.
It’s just like clockwork:
• Something happens in the game that wrankles
Larry’s delicate sensibilities.
• Larry starts talking trash.
• Benches clear.
• Larry gets behind two or three
players/coaches in uniform who, “hold him back.”
• Rinse and repeat.
It was something that was put on display a few
times during Bowa’s stint as manager of the Phillies and then, famously, during
the 2008 NLCS where as a coach for the Dodgers, Bowa was reported to have been
chirping, “You started it!” toward Brett Myers.
Cooler heads prevailed before Phillies’ coach Davey
Lopes could put Bowa over his knee.
Nevertheless, one of Bowa’s better known
bench-clearing incidents with the Phillies happened in a spring training game
during 2003 at Jack Russell Stadium against the Blue Jays. That was the one
where Roy Halladay plunked Jim Thome with a pitch and immediately got an earful
from Bowa. By the time Halladay took his turn at the plate, he had heard all he
could handle from Bowa and did what most sane people do in those situations…
He tried to stick his bat down Bowa’s throat.
Before he could dig in, Rheal Cormier missed twice while
attempting to plunk Halladay. Still that wasn’t enough to stop Bowa from
running his mouth. By the sixth inning of the game, Halladay had heard enough
and went after the Phillies’ skipper only to be intercepted before he could
shove the bat down Bowa’s throat.
Bowa, meanwhile, fell back into his old tricks… he
talked, postured and talked some more.
After the game Bowa claimed Halladay intentionally tried
to hit Thome — in a Grapefruit League game — and based it on the fact that the
Jays’ pitcher “has really good control.” Ultimately, Bowa was suspended for a
game. He later had his revenge, too, when he ordered rookie Ryan Madson to drill
a Blue Jays hitter in a Grapefruit League game in 2004.
Halladay, meanwhile, was a bit stunned by the whole
thing. He said he told Bowa that he didn't try to hit Thome, but just got
cursed at.
“He said a lot of things,” Halladay said back in 2003. “But
when he finally came close, I said, ‘I didn't mean to hit the guy.’ And he
said, ‘[bleep!]’ and a few other four-letter words.”
All that yelling by Bowa was a bit confusing to Halladay.
“I don't understand why anybody would think I'd
intentionally hit Jim Thome in that situation,” Halladay said. “After all the
times I faced him in the American League and never hit him, I can't imagine why
they thought I'd intentionally hit him here.”
Halladay continued:
“I didn't mean to hit the guy, but I understood why they
were upset,” Halladay said. “So you take your shots at me. Then it's over and
done with. That should have been the end of it. ... If he hits me, fine. He
tried twice, and he didn't get me. But to come out there screaming and yelling
... that was ridiculous.”
Bowa was a bit more, um, curt.
“I don't know what he said, to be honest with you, and I
really don't give a damn,” Bowa relayed from his on-the-field “conversation”
with Halladay.
So not only was Halladay a next-door neighbor to the
Phillies during spring training at the Jays’ base in Dunedin, but like a lot of
the old-time Phillies he also wanted to fight Larry Bowa.