Tony La Russa postgame interview
St. Louis manager feels team's most consistent trait is heart
Tony, how clutch would you say
David Eckstein was at the plate tonight?
TONY LA RUSSA:
Could you talk about the grinding
out of at-bats during the game against
Bonderman and how important that was as the
game turned out?
TONY LA RUSSA:
Not just for Game 4, but how
important have your starters been not just
throughout the World Series, but really
throughout this whole entire playoffs?
TONY LA RUSSA:
Jim talked about how it's just
baseball, the close plays, the pitching,
throwing errors and the ball off the glove. You
talk about how it's the small moments that
sometimes can make a championship run.
TONY LA RUSSA:
Your team came into the playoffs
with the least amount of victories of all the
teams, but you're having the most success.
What are you doing now that maybe you
weren't doing consistently during the season?
TONY LA RUSSA:
Could you please talk about all the
clutch hitting with two outs.
TONY LA RUSSA:
How gutty of a performance would
you say that was out of Supp tonight?
TONY LA RUSSA:
How much do you feel your team
will draw from its experience to not get too
excited being up 3-1 and being able to face
adversity throughout the season to get itself to
this point?
TONY LA RUSSA:
I'm sure Red Schoendienst was
thinking of 1968 when Northrup hit that ball and
one of the best defensive Cardinal center
fielders in history, Curt Flood, slipped. And I
wonder what your thoughts were on that play?
It was somewhat of a payback for all those
Cardinals fans that were here.
TONY LA RUSSA:
Courtesy of FastScripts by ASAP Sports. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.



