Miles, Rodriguez pregame interview
Cards players take extra BP in cold, wet weather
Aaron, in this series with you guys
waiting around and not knowing whether
you're going to play or not and the fans are
waiting around and it's cold and miserable in
the stadium, do you think at all that baseball
should do something to move the schedule up,
whether it's double headers or do you have any
thoughts? Some people have been kicking the
idea of having a warm-weather site for the
World Series. Do you think of anything like
that, and what do you think of the stands and
everybody is bundling up like it's December?
AARON MILES:
This is for Aaron, I was going to ask
you, about several years ago you played for the
Birmingham Barons, and here you are on the
World Series team. Can you talk about what
this means to you, plus just the idea of maybe
getting a big World Series check?
AARON MILES:
John, did you feel like this team
relaxed and kind of got a burden off of its
shoulders when it did clinch the division, and
everything went back to 0-0 and you could start
playing playoff games again?
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
This question is for both of you
guys: You haven't gone through the NLCS, are
veterans of the rainout here and had to pass
the time. I am wondering, has anything
developed to help you guys pass the time in
the clubhouse or how you guys have done that
here, if there's a hearts tournament going or a
World Series of Poker?
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
AARON MILES: I took BP probably three times yesterday. So luckily we've got guys that will throw to us anytime. You might have a start at 8:00, we might have a start at 9:00. So just shuffling back and forth to the BP cage, going and watching the film. We watched it so much yesterday, I don't think we need to watch any today. If we're waiting around today, it will be boring for us.
A lot of people thought you should
play or would have played yesterday when it
was misting out. Did you want to get out and
start the game based on the weather conditions
at 7, 8:00?
AARON MILES:
John, Aaron was referring to the
dreams you had when you were six or seven
years old, can you take us through what your
baseball was like when you were a kid and
what your specific thoughts of the World Series
was like when you were a kid.
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
When you guys are on the bench
and throughout the game in these weather
conditions, are you doing anything different to
keep yourself warm and make it easier to get
loose? I imagine it's different when you're
going through these weather conditions?
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
AARON MILES: I tell you, I wouldn't want to be at Wrigley Field or Fenway Park, because there's no place to hit off the tee. There's no batting tunnels. Luckily here we can come in our hitting tunnel and warm up and stretch and throw in the hitting tunnel, take swings, when you're getting ready to get in there. So you're not necessarily cold. When you see the guy has been sitting on the bench and he's cold and frosty. It's true if you're at Wrigley or Boston or some of the old parks that don't have some of the new amenities that some of the new fields have, but that's one of the lucky things we have with the new ballparks now. Coming off the bench cold, it's not like it used to be.
John, just as a follow-up to what
you were saying before, can you take us
through the story of how you were discovered
in New York and how you signed and came up.
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
For both of you guys, when you look at this
team, three weeks ago a lot of people were not
saying that it was going to be the Cardinals and
Detroit here. Were the Cardinals a team that was
maybe built for a short series, and is it fair to say
that? Is it fair to say that for Detroit and why?
AARON MILES:
JOHN RODRIGUEZ: Like Aaron said, it is all about pitching. You're not seeing games that are outrageous scores, like 12 to 10 or even 9 to 8. Everything has been like 2-1, or 3-0 or 5-2 or 5-3. There might have been that one game we scored 12, but that's about it. It really is pitching.
John, how many balls did you hit
out for home runs in Yankee Stadium that day?
And I also wanted to get the names of the
uncle, the cop and the scout?
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
The cop?
JOHN RODRIGUEZ:
Courtesy of FastScripts by ASAP Sports. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

