View Full Version : K-Rod does the Answer Man interview w/Yahoo Sports


rmjon23
09-13-2008, 06:58 AM
http://tinyurl.com/4wyvbz

Thu Sep 11, 2008 2:23 pm EDT

Answer Man: Francisco Rodriguez talks goggles, 58 celebrations
By David Brown
The single-season save record he's chasing was set across the street,
which might have put Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez in the perfect
Answer Man mood for his session at U.S. Cellular Field last Saturday.

Usually ready for anything opposing teams pit against him, Rodriguez
patiently but enthusiastically navigated a minefield of topics that
included destination weddings, how he gets by without his once-
trademark eyewear, what the world might be like under the mop top of
Magglio Ordonez and why Venezuela worships the Cubs backup catcher,
Hank White.


Q: People here in Chicago are under the impression that, of all the
great Venezuelans playing ball in the U.S. — Magglio Ordonez, Carlos
Zambrano, Johan Santana, Miguel Cabrera, you — that back home, Henry
Blanco is the biggest deal. Is that true?

Francisco Rodriguez: Yeah, it is. He's really popular out there in
Caracas. He's captain of the Lions, a winter league team. He has a
tremendous personality and he's been around for a long time. He's one
of those big-league players who's always, starting on the first day of
the season back home, he's playing.

Q: After Chavez retires, do you think Henry can step in and run the
country?

FR: Ha! Yeah, why not? He's got a pretty big crowd following him back
home, so yeah.

Q: What do you think your delivery would look like if you had hair
like Magglio's?

FR: Oh, man! I'd be real messed up. I don't think I would be able to
see. That's really bad pelo (hair) right there. That's what we call
it.

Q: Is Venezuela a good place for a destination wedding for someone
from the United States?

FR: No.

Q: How come?

FR: I don't know, but for some reason, I can't see it, no. Not at all.

Q: Well, which country would you pick?

FR: Hmm. Well, let's see. You could go ... I think the U.S. would be
fine.

Q: Stay in the U.S.? Wait. People say Costa Rica, or Belize or
Trinidad would be good.

FR: I've never been to those places, but I've been to St. Martin and
that's a really nice place.

Q: Is it true that your first glove was a milk carton?

FR: That is totally true.

Q: How long until it wore out?

FR: It would wear out quick; it would maybe last two or three games.

Q: Did you catch better with chocolate milk, or regular?

FR: I think it was regular milk.

Q: What would you have done if your family got its milk in bottles?

FR: Would have used my bare hand. I remember my second glove — after
the ones I made with the milk cartons —was given to me from Carlos
Subero, who's now the Double-A manager with the White Sox. He'd give
me gloves and shoes.

Q: The U.S. gets so many players from Venezuela, should we be
airlifting gloves and other supplies into there as a gesture of good
faith and an investment in the future?

FR: Yeah, it should. Matter of fact, I've got an academy back home,
from where I come from, and I supply all the kids with shoes, gloves
and batting gloves. I just want to make sure they have what I didn't
have.

Q: Vladimir Guerrero doesn't really say much in English interviews, so
English-only speakers don't really know what he's like. So, what's he
like?

FR: [Smiling]. He's a tremendous guy. A great character. He knows how
to speak English, but he's shy to speak. He's a tremendous person.
It's fun having him around.

Q: There are two Darrens in the bullpen, Oliver and O'Day — are the
guys on the team always getting them mixed-up?

FR: Mmm, Oliver, we call "the Old Man." He's "El Viejo." And O'Day, we
just go with the O'Day. We don't go by the first name with either.
Always by the last name.

Q: Can you remember all of your nicknames?

FR: Oh, I do. Frankie, Francisco, Fran, Pancho, Kid, K-Rod, Nene
(Baby), Nene Fran, Bebe. Oh, there's so many.

Q: Which is the most "you"?

FR: Nene Fran. Just because that's what my mom and dad, and all my
closest friends, that's what they call me. I like that better than
Frankie or K-Rod, or whatever.

Q: Doesn't K-Rod sound too much like A-Rod? It's just kind of ripping
off him which, maybe five years ago, was cool. Now, maybe it's not as
cool to be like A-Rod.

FR: I don't know what to tell you about that [laughs].

Q: In 2002 when the Angels brought you up in September, did you feel
like a secret weapon?

FR: Kind of. I know the Angels knew what was being kept by them. But
nobody else knew who I was. They didn't even know that I existed
because I was down in the minor leagues.

Q: So many people miss your goggles. Why don't you wear them anymore?

FR: Because Oakley won't provide me. Oakley won't provide the glasses.
They always play when I make the order, and the guy never talks to me
and never sends me more glasses, so I stopped wearing them.

Q: Did you try someone other than Oakley?

FR: I tried different companies, different kinds and they wanted me to
wear the glasses, but I didn't feel comfortable that much wearing them
as I did with the Oakley glasses.

Q: Do you want money for a sponsorship?

FR: Nah. Not anymore. That don't matter. I made the adjustment with my
contacts. I'll be fine. I don't think I'll be wearing the glasses
anytime soon.

Q: Did goggles have special powers? X-ray vision? They looked like
safety goggles, or something you'd use for soldadura (soldering) or in
wood shop, shooting skeet.

FR: Ha! No, not at all. They were good enough to see through. My mom
used to make fun of me and say the the glasses would power me. She
would tell me that Superman without a cape isn't Superman, and Frankie
without glasses isn't Frankie.

Q: Which Michael Jackson song gets your groove on the best?

FR: "Thriller." That was a really popular song back home, back in the
day, when I was growing up.

Q: And you're a really good breakdancer?

FR: I used to be! Not anymore. When I was 4, 5 or 6 years old, yes.
After so many beat-downs [laughs] my mom used to give me because I'd
get dirty all the time, I had to stop.

Q: OK, but when the 58th save comes, why don't you break out the break
dancing once again to celebrate? That would be the ultimate Francisco
Rodriguez celebration.

FR: Ha! Nah, nah, nah. Not at all. I don't want to make nobody upset
or get offended.

Q: But it's fun to celebrate.

FR: Yeah, it is. But sometimes people take it in a way, in a bad way,
in the wrong way. I'm not trying to show up or offend anybody on the
opposing team. That's just how I learned to show the passion that I've
got for the game.

Q: Are you more conservative now in how you celebrate?

FR: I'm pretty much the same, I just go with how I feel with the
adrenaline, with the game on the line. It's just the passion in me.
When I stop doing that, that's when I'll have nothing left and I will
retire.

Q: Can you sing like Michael Jackson? Cantante-Rod?

FR: I wish I would, but I can't. Honestly, I can't. I'm a bad singer.

David Brown is a regular contributor to Big League Stew and writes
Morning Juice, which runs Monday-Friday in the a.m. Answer Man is a
regular feature on BLS.