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Eckstein among Angels' stellar defensive players
By David Schoenfield
From ESPN.com
10/22/02

SAN FRANCISCO -- David Eckstein can't understand all the fuss over the home runs hit in the first two games of the World Series.

"Don't pitching and defense win games?" the Angels shortstop said, laughing, on Monday.

Game 2, of course, featured little pitching aside from Francisco Rodriguez. But lost amid the six-homer barrage -- the most home runs in a World Series game since 1989 -- were some excellent defensive plays, most notably a diving stop by Eckstein to throw out Rich Aurilia and teammate Adam Kennedy's diving grab and throw to nail Shawon Dunston. San Francisco's David Bell also made a diving play at third base to throw out Eckstein and Reggie Sanders made some nice plays in right field.

Eckstein's ability to handle shortstop -- and play it better than expected -- has been a hidden key all season for the Angels. A second baseman while coming up in the minors with the Red Sox, Eckstein won the shortstop job as a rookie last year primarily because the Angels had nobody else to play there.

With his admittedly weak throwing arm and awkward-looking straight-over-the-top motion, most teams wouldn't even consider the notion of playing Eckstein at shortstop. But he's quick and uses terrific footwork to get behind the ball and in position to make throws.

"I give a lot of credit to (Angels infield coach) Alfredo Griffin for helping me with the fundamentals and how to play hitters," Eckstein says. "He's helped with reading what the pitchers are doing and how that affects my positioning."

Indeed, he seems to always be in the right place. In Game 2, besides his diving play to get Aurilia in the first inning, he caught a line drive off the bat of Benito Santiago inches off the ground and doubled Barry Bonds off first base. He also made a heads-up play to get Reggie Sanders trying to advance from second to third on a groundball in the fourth.

But those plays were forgotten once Tim Salmon delivered his clutch home runs as was the bang-bang play at second when Kennedy made a terrific stop up the middle on Bell's grounder in the fifth and flipped to Eckstein at second. J.T. Snow was ruled safe and Dunston then added an RBI single.

Eckstein said the Angels weren't going to let a close call bother them.

"The way that game was going, we knew we'd have plenty of opportunities to get it back," he said. "That's what we've done all year. It's not going to rattle us and we'll keep fighting."

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