Cardinals cleanup hitter Pedro Guerrero resorted to using his hands, not his bat, to connect against Astros pitcher Danny Darwin.
On Aug. 16, 1990, during a game between the Astros and Cardinals at Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis, Guerrero got upset with Darwin for throwing a pitch too close to him.
When Darwin reached first base on a single, he and Guerrero argued and Guerrero struck him.
Feeling frustrated
With the Astros ahead, 3-1, in the sixth inning, the Cardinals had runners on second and third, two outs, and Guerrero at the plate. Darwin threw a fastball that was “head high, but looked to be over the inside corner of the plate,” according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Guerrero said he thought the pitch was intended to hit him, but plate umpire Mark Hirschbeck told the Post-Dispatch, “It was not even close.”
After Guerrero struck out, stranding the runners, he glared at Darwin. “He was just looking to start something,” Hirschbeck said. “He was yelling, ‘I’m going to get you.’ ”
Said Darwin: “I don’t appreciate the look he gave me.”
Sticks and stones
The hard feelings carried over to the next inning.
With two outs and none on in the seventh, Darwin singled versus reliever Scott Terry. Standing at first base, Darwin and Guerrero jabbered at one another.
According to Guerrero, “When he got to first base, I said, ‘Hey, man, what’s wrong? Can’t anybody look at you?’ ”
According to Darwin, “When I got to first base, Guerrero said, ‘What’s your problem?’ I said, ‘What’s my problem? You mean I can’t pitch inside?’ He said, ‘I know you’re going to pitch inside.’ I said, ‘Then why’d you give me that look?’ ”
Guerrero said Darwin “pointed a finger in my face” and started cussing at him. Umpire Bob Davidson said both players were cussing at one another.
Davidson stepped between the two, but Guerrero reached around and hit Darwin, the Post-Dispatch reported. Video at 4:28 mark
Both benches emptied. Guerrero and Darwin were ejected, and Astros manager Art Howe also was tossed for arguing with the umpires.
In a corridor leading to the clubhouse, Guerrero and Astros coach Ed Ott shouted at each another before police arrived and separated them, the Post-Dispatch reported. Boxscore
Guerrero said he offered to fight Darwin anywhere he wanted to meet. “I’m not afraid of anybody,” Guerrero said.
Darwin said, “He’s a cheap-shot artist. I think he’s gutless. If he thinks he can intimidate me, he’s crazy. I’ve hit guys a lot meaner than him.”
Play ball
In remarks to Cardinals broadcaster Mike Shannon, Guerrero said Astros pitchers threw at him in a series at Houston, and he needed to put a stop to it when Darwin pitched him high and tight at St. Louis.
Guerrero may have been brushed back by the 1990 Astros but he wasn’t hit. Guerrero got plunked once in 1990 and it happened in September when he was struck on the right forearm by a pitch from the Phillies’ Jose DeJesus.
On Aug. 26, 1990, 10 days after his altercation with Guerrero, Darwin again started against the Cardinals at Houston and got a complete-game win. Guerrero wasn’t there for a rematch. He was on the disabled list because of a strained lower back. Boxscore
Guerrero batted .333 (8-for-24) versus Darwin in his career and never was hit by a pitch from him.
The umpires that night took a pounding! Don’t know what Pedro was upset about. That pitch wasn’t even close. Also, that year he hit the Astros well going 8 for 26. There is a classic story with regards to Danny Darwin. In 1988 when he was with the Giants, in a game against the Phillies, a brawl started. Who did Danny Darwin punch? His own teammate Orel Hershiser. Later, when Hershiser asked him why, Danny said it was retaliation for getting hit with a pitch years earlier!
Fun story about Danny Darwin and Orel Hershiser. Thanks!
My opinion of Danny Darwin as a kid (just from staring at a baseball card) was “skinny twerp with a mustache.” Boy, was I wrong.
Also, is pitching inside a large part of evolution and the “Darwin Theory?”
Ok, ok….that was bad.
No, that was good. I wish I had thought of it: Baseball Darwinism: How to get into the heads of batters like Pedro Guerrero.