Larry Walker hustles to the bat rack, Albert Pujols hurries to get his helmet, Jim Edmonds grabs a quick drink of water.
Between innings at Busch Stadium, the bench is a beehive of activity. At any moment, the St. Louis Cardinals' true cleanup man will get busy.
Like clockwork, he swings into action. Manager Tony La Russa, the guy No. 4 hitter Scott Rolen calls the "street sweeper," starts to stroll toward the far end of the dugout with a purpose.
His mission? Stomp every paper cup in his path, then slowly nudge them soccer-style with the side of his foot toward the tunnel leading to the locker room.
Sometimes, he finds a couple thrown by players. Other times, a dozen. La Russa follows the same pattern, and they end up crushed and out of sight.
"I've never seen anything like it," Cardinals pitcher Jeff Suppan said. "But we all have our own little quirks, and that's his."
Atlanta pitching coach Leo Mazzone rocks back and forth while watching ballgames. Texas manager Buck Showalter bundles up in a jacket even in summertime heat. Reliever Turk Wendell would brush his teeth each time he got the third out.
La Russa laughs at his odd habit. It's not a nervous tick -- he did it way before Boston led St. Louis 2-0 in the World Series going into Game 3 Tuesday.
"I mean, it's so atypical of me," he said last week during the NL championship series. "Look around my office here. There's clutter everywhere. So it's not like I'm some ultra-neat person."
Sure enough, there are stacks of letters littering his desk, bats piled up, and boxes of stuff scattered all over. Pretty messy, really.
"It's just something that happened over time, something I do in-between innings," he said. "You spend a lot of time in the dugout, and I like to stand up. It's my way of keeping busy, looking for those cups."
No such cleanup guy on the ragamuffin Red Sox.
Manny Ramirez and Orlando Cabrera wear batting helmets gunked up with goo, a combination of pine tar and dirt. Trot Nixon's cap is a weird shade of white, stained with sweat.
Oh, and then there's Boston's hair -- Johnny Damon's shaggy look, Bronson Arroyo's cornrows and an assortment of unkempt goatees and beards.
"We give our players personal freedom to express themselves here," Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein said. "And I think our players play better that way. I'm not saying it's better or worse to do it that way. It depends on the mix of personalities you have."
Asked about his clean-cut appearance, the 30-year-old Epstein smiled.
"Don't be fooled by looks. You don't see me at night," he said.
La Russa's little show is on display day and night.
He could easily get a clubhouse boy to dispose of the green cups that wind up on the wooden-slat floor -- no telling how many hit the ground by game's end. There's a plastic-lined trash can in the middle of the dugout, and not many teams have that.
La Russa prefers to do it himself, home or road.
"Oh, we have fun with him," outfielder Reggie Sanders said. "We'll wait for him to go by, then throw one on the floor. But he always gets them on his way back."
"I'll tell you this," said Sanders, playing for his seventh big league team in seven years, "he has the cleanest dugout I've ever seen."
Said La Russa: "I know those guys play with me."
Most dugouts are flat-out gross by the final out. Players routinely spit sunflower seeds and tobacco juice, and toss cups.
Japan’s Shohei Ohtani is the record-breaking baseball “superhuman” following in the footsteps of the legendary Babe Ruth who has also earned comparisons to US sporting greats Michael Jordan and Tom Brady. Not since Ruth a century ago has there been a baseball player capable of both pitching and hitting at the top level. The 30-year-old’s performances with the Los Angeles Dodgers have consolidated his position as a baseball legend in the making, and a national icon in his native Japan. He continues to find new ways to amaze, this year becoming the first player to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases
Zhang Shuai yesterday said that she nearly quit after losing 24 matches in a row — now the world No. 595 is into the quarter-finals of her home China Open. The 35-year-old is to face Spain’s Paula Badosa as the lowest-ranked player to reach this stage in the history of the tournament after Badosa reeled off 11 of the last 12 games in a 6-4, 6-0 victory over US Open finalist Jessica Pegula. Zhang went into Beijing on a barren run lasting more than 600 days and her string of singles defeats was the second-longest on the WTA Tour Open era, which
Taiwan’s Tony Wu yesterday beat Mackenzie McDonald of the US to win the Nonthaburi Challenger IV in Thailand, his first challenger victory since 2022. The 26-year-old world No. 315, who won both his qualifiers to advance to the main draw, has been on a hot streak this month, winning his past nine matches, including two that ensured Taiwan’s victory in their Davis Cup World Group I tie. Wu took just more than two hours to top world No. 172 McDonald 6-3, 7-6 (7/4) to win his second challenger tournament since the Tallahassee Tennis Challenger in 2022. Wu’s Tallahassee win followed two years of
Taiwanese martial artists bagged one gold, four silver and three bronze medals at the World Junior Wushu Championships in Brunei, the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Brunei Darussalam said yesterday. Liu Yu-tzu won the gold medal in the girl’s taijiquan A group and also picked up a silver medal in the girl’s taijijian A group. Hu Hsin-ling, Yu Min-hsun and Chen Chao-hsiang each won a silver medal in the girl’s jianshu B, boy’s nangun B and boy’s taijijian A groups respectively. Hu also won a bronze medal in the girl’s qiangshu B group, while Yu and Lin Shih-hung picked up bronze medals