The Fabulous Forum

The who, what, where, when,
why — and why not — of L.A. sports

« Previous Post | The Fabulous Forum Home | Next Post »

Boos, blues don't get Phillies' Shane Victorino down

October 14, 2008 |  7:47 pm

Shane Victorino As baseball players go, Philadelphia's Shane Victorino is one of the nicest guys you'll never meet.

Polite. Cooperative. Gracious with his time and thoughts.

Here's an example: Moments after learning his grandmother Irene, with whom he was close, had died in Hawaii, Victorino sat shirtless in front of his locker in the Phillies clubhouse, staring at the floor as several teammates came by and wrapped him in a hug.

Through a team spokesman, Victorino said he didn't want to speak to the media even though he'd had a fabulous night, knocking in four runs and saving two others in an 8-5 win over the Dodgers in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series.

Still, more than a dozen reporters huddled near his locker, conflicted over whether to leave Victorino alone in his grief or to press the issue in the hopes of getting a great quote.

Eventually Victorino stood and called us over.

"It's definitely an emotional time," he said, trying to smile, though his eyes were red. "But it's all about baseball right now."

Victorino went on to thank us, the vultures, for our handshakes and our questions of concern for him and his family.

Then two days later, Victorino watched a Hiroki Kuroda fastball sail a foot behind his head.

Victorino said he knew someone on his team would be thrown at, even hinting that the Dodgers were justified in doing so after Dodgers catcher Russell Martin had been hit. But when he motioned angrily at Kuroda to throw at his ribs, not his head (Martin, after all, had been hit in the knee), it touched off a bench-clearing incident, and now Victorino is Public Enemy No. 1 at Dodger Stadium, where the mere mention of his name inspires 50,000 people to boo.

"You hear them," Victorino said Tuesday. "I don't feed off it. I try to stay focused. [But] you definitely hear it. When I walk out to the outfield, I hear it all the time: 'You suck!' "

The catcalls figure to be uglier tonight, because Victorino's last at-bat at Dodger Stadium produced a game-tying two-run home run on Monday, sparking the Phillies to a 7-5 win that left the Dodgers a loss from postseason elimination.

"They're going to take him as the bad guy now," teammate Geoff Jenkins said. "So he's Godzilla now."

Asked if the fans are at least creative with their put-downs, Victorino said yes -- but when pressed for a favorite epithet he demurred, suggesting it wasn't suitable to repeat.

"I can't really put it on paper," he said with a smile.

-- Kevin Baxter

Photo: The Philadelphia Phillies' Shane Victorino looks to the sky while crossing the plate after hitting a home run during the eighth inning of Game 4 of the National League Championship Series at Dodger Stadium on Monday. Credit: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times


Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In





Comments


Advertisement

About the Bloggers
The Fabulous Forum is written by the entire Sports department of the L.A. Times.

Recent Posts


Categories


Archives
 




Buy Tickets
Search for Tickets
 

LATimes.com now offers sports tickets to popular sporting events around the world including basketball tickets, baseball tickets, and football tickets to otherwise sold-out events.

Popular Events
As the Dodgers are playing tough in the NL West, Dodgers tickets have been selling great all season. LA Angels tickets are as always a big hit, and there are plenty of fans looking for Athletics tickets and Padres tickets too.

USC Trojans football tickets are also in high demand, as the NCAA football season starts up again.
Powered by TicketNetwork