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Home > Blogs > The Real McCoy | Cincinnati Reds baseball news > Archives > 2008 > September > 12 > Entry

Getting down with Dunn

I’m ba-a-a-a-a-a-ck. I was benched, but now I’m back.

The paper decided not to send me to Milwaukee, what with the team eliminated. So I took four days away from the world and played Mr. Mom.

Now I see what retirmemenrt is like and, hey, it ain’t bad. Read four novels (no, I didn’t start my book, but soon. I promise. Soon).

With Adam Dunn wearing Arizona rust, the paper decided a trip to the desert would b e OK, so here I am, enjoying the dry heat. It’s 100 out, but you don’t feel it. Yeah, right. If you believe that, I have some cacti you might enjoy sitting on.

Anwyay, after an uneventful and pleasant flight via American from Dayton to Phoenix, through Dallas, I had a chance to spend some time with Dunn.

And here it is (And, yes, I’m glad I’m back).

Adam Dunn, resplendent in his rust-colored Arizona Diamondbacks jersey, was leaning on a bat near the batting cage when Cincinnati Reds catcher Paul Bako walked up, carrying a cardboard box.

Dunn left Cincinnati in such a hurry after he was traded to the Diamondbacks August 11 that he left his black African masks hanging on a wall near his dressing cubicle.

Bako delivered them to Dunn and as he squinted toward the Reds dugout he said, “Bako is one of the few guys I recognize.”

Said Dunn, “Looking over there, it is so different. It’s way different. I don’t know too many guys. I didn’t think it would be that weird facing them, but now that they’re here, yeah, it is. It’s a different color red and Cincinnati red is all I’ve ever known.”

Dunn was asked if the Diamondbacks had talked about a contract for next year and he said, “No, nothing. And I’m not worried about it. I’m only thinking about two things — the 17 games we have left and Hurricane Ike.”

Dunn built a new home on Lake Conroe last year, about 40 minutes from Houston and his parents and grandparents live about 25 minutes from Houston.

“And they’re not going anywhere,” he said. “I’ve got aunts and uncles there, too, and they aren’t going anywhere. We’ll know more in the morning.”

Dunn even laughed when somebody brought up Hurricane Bronson.

First, Arroyo told writers the Reds traded Dunn because he was going to ask for between $120 million and $125 million for a new contract.

“Who is he, my agent?” said Dunn. “First and foremost, I would never say anything like that. And if I did the only guy I would have said it to would have been Ken Griffey Jr. But I didn’t say it.

“I don’t talk care about salary and I don’t talk about salary because there is nothing I can really do about it,” Dunn added. “I don’t care about money. I really don’t. Whatever.”

Then Dunn was told that Arroyo said on a recent radio show that the Reds pitchers enjoying the young outfielders chasing down balls, “And, yes, Dunn hit some home runs, but he didn’t catch some balls out there.”

Dunn shrugged that one off and said, “That’s because when Arroyo pitched I didn’t have to go after too many. They went over my head.”

Dunn has played first base five or six times, played some right field and was back in his familiar if not comfortable left field against the Reds Friday in Chase Field.

“I’m a utility guy,” he said with a laugh.

The D-Backs just lost six straight games on the road and fell from first place to second in the National League West, 3 1/2 games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers.

“It’s been fun being in a race and, yeah, we’ve struggled the last week-and-a-half,” he said. “It’s a fun team and it’s a young team. It’s so different in many ways.”

In 27 games with the D-Backs, Dunn is hitting .267 with four homers, 15 RBIs, with 29 walks and 26 strikeouts in 86 at-bats.

Reds manager Dusty Baker looked up Dunn and later said, “It’s real strange seeing him on the other side. No matter which side he is on, he is a quality person, a quality guy.”

Dunn is pumped over being in a championship race for the first time in his eight-plus years.

“Yeah, it is different,” he said. “I just wish we could have played better on the road. We had a chance to separate ourselves (they lost three straight in LA, but we didn’t. We still have 17 games and anything can happen. We can get back on a roll. That’s what we’re looking for.”

Dunn took another glance into the Reds dugout and shook his head said, “It’s weird, so weird. I’m telling you. At least this is red — sort of.”

Dunn is wearing uniform No. 32, the same number Jay Bruce wears for the Reds, but Dunn laughed and said, “That’s not why. I know Jay misses me. Probably carries my picture in his wallet. I’m sure he sleeps with it.”

Permalink | Comments (21) | Post your comment |

Comments

By bigdoc

September 13, 2008 11:06 PM | Link to this

Glad you’re back, Hal! I think when Dunn’s career is over, he (and we) will look back at his Cincinnati days as his most productive. He strikes me as very young to be an AL DH—meanwhile, it doesn’t look like JR will pass Sosa this season.

By John

September 13, 2008 7:40 PM | Link to this

A few years back, Marty and Griffey got into it after Marty criticized him. Griffey went after him, and Marty said, “I was here before you, and I’ll be here after you’re gone.” I’m not so sure that’s a badge of honor. Dunn and Griffey are both better off elsewhere. Meanwhile, Marty is another year older and deeper in negativity.

By tom

September 13, 2008 1:50 PM | Link to this

If Owings doesn’t make the rotation, he can replace Dunn in left field with his hitting.

By timb

September 13, 2008 10:56 AM | Link to this

Welcomeback, Hal. Two great columns on one day. To Y-City Jim, Amen. I get tired of him trying to run the best players on the team on team out of town for lacking some…thing.

By Y-City Jim

September 13, 2008 7:55 AM | Link to this

The Reds should put Welch in the booth with Marty. I think he would be willing to go toe-to-toe with Brennaman. Speaking of Welch, I enjoyed his questioning of the decision to play Dickerson in LF versus CF.

By AP-FLORIDA

September 13, 2008 3:43 AM | Link to this

WELCOME BACK HAL-you look well rested…Same old reds

By Wizard

September 13, 2008 1:36 AM | Link to this

I have felt, as you do apparently, that Marty has always been condescending—and someone has obviously given him all the rope he wants, to disparage whomever he wants to go after—That includes all the announcers, including his own son.He thinks he is more important than he is.

By Y-City Jim

September 13, 2008 1:25 AM | Link to this

But why can’t Brennaman let it go. He plays for another team and Marty still seizes every chance to rag on the guy.

By Wizard

September 13, 2008 1:14 AM | Link to this

I think Brenneman is a pain in the @ss. I just happened to agree with his comment on Dunn’s lack of speed. I felt all year he should have been switched, defensively with Votto—but he, and all others disregarded the idea. And tonight I see him playing 1st for the seventh time for the snakes—but would not do it for the Reds.What I am upset about is the crappy season this team had,largely because they had two players in the wrong places both offensively and defensively—that was a big part of the failure—IMO.

By Doc

September 13, 2008 1:04 AM | Link to this

Wasn’t Hal’s blog about Adam Dunn? I thought that was what people were supposed to discuss.

By Y-City Jim

September 13, 2008 12:59 AM | Link to this

The Reds have moved on. Why can’t Brennaman?

By Wizard

September 13, 2008 12:55 AM | Link to this

I, as one, am real interested in the Reds future—that’s why I am so glad they got rid of the deadwood/lack of defense and clutch hitting from the likes of Dunn and Griffey. Much more exciting brand of baseball now happening. Ain’t no body whining on here, it seems to me—except the old guard that don’t want to allow any invasion of their domain. Just expressing my opinion—Must have hit a nerve.Go Reds.

By Mr. Redlegs (Original)

September 13, 2008 12:42 AM | Link to this

Adam Dunn no longer plays for the Cincinnati Reds, thusly I don’t give a flip what he says, where he plays, whether he walks or strikes out, how much money he doesn’t want—nothing. He’s past tense, old history, tired news. The game always moves on. That is, unless you’re the Reds fans who spend way too much time looking over your shoulders (Big Red Machine, Strike of ‘94, Dunn, etc.) pining and whining about the past instead of being interested in the future. Clue: Clocks don’t run backwards.

By Wizard

September 13, 2008 12:38 AM | Link to this

No doubt. That’s one.

By Y-City Jim

September 13, 2008 12:20 AM | Link to this

I bet they are real impressed tonight since his walk provided them with the win.

By Wizard

September 13, 2008 12:07 AM | Link to this

Yep, the snakes are real impressed with all of his walks or strikeouts!

By Y-City Jim

September 12, 2008 11:59 PM | Link to this

Dunn lumbers to 1B on a walk, which drives in a run and keeps the inning alive so another run can score on a wild pitch.

By Carl's Little Brother

September 12, 2008 11:50 PM | Link to this

Welcome back Hal, we all have missed you and I have worried about you. All’s well now!

By Y-City Jim

September 12, 2008 11:42 PM | Link to this

I’ll be glad when Marty Brennaman retires. He really went from being an insightful, straight forward play-by-play man to a bitter, spiteful, meandering one.

By Wizard

September 12, 2008 11:30 PM | Link to this

“And Dunn goes lumbering after it”—Marty Priceless.

By Y-City Jim

September 12, 2008 11:12 PM | Link to this

So it is pretty obvious that there were tensions between Dunn and Arroyo. Any clue to how it all got started?
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