KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Jose Guillen said he was sick. Despite some cryptic comments the night before, his manager corroborated his account.
Guillen was back in Kansas City’s lineup Wednesday against Seattle, a day after being a late scratch against the Mariners. Royals manager Trey Hillman corroborated his account after causing confusion the night before by saying the mercurial outfielder had been scratched based on a managerial decision.
“Last night he was a late scratch simply because I didn’t feel it was in our best interest and his best interest for him to be in the lineup,” Hillman said. “He didn’t feel well.”
Guillen was initially in the lineup for Tuesday’s game against the Seattle Mariners, batting third and playing right field. Less than a half hour before the game, the Royals announced he had been scratched.
Hillman said after the game that he had made a late managerial decision to scratch him from the lineup, that the rest of the story should be kept in-house.
an eyebrow. With Guillen, the initial thought was that he did something wrong – again.
The highest-paid player in franchise history, Guillen has been on a disruption-a-month plan almost since the day he signed a three-year, $36 million contract.
After a relatively quiet first month of the season, Guillen called his teammates “babies” during a 12-game losing streak in May. June brought a profane tired about how he “could care less” about the home fans who were booing him.
On July 5, Guillen had to be separated from pitching coach Bob McClure in the clubhouse in Tampa Bay. And just last month, he had a sitdown with general manager Dayton Moore after confronting a heckling fan during a game against Texas.
Guillen hadn’t had an outburst in September yet, so there was concern that something other than an illness led to his late scratch against the Mariners.
Turns out, he was just sick.
“You asked me if he was sick and I just said it was a manager’s decision to keep him, and that’s exactly what it was,” Hillman said. “I believe there are things we should do a better job of collectively as a group, keeping in house. It was just a managerial prerogative in the way I answered the question. There really wasn’t a whole to read into it.”
Guillen wouldn’t elaborate on his illness from the night before and answered a rapid-fire grilling before Wednesday’s game with a mischevous-looking smile.
The manager said it was a managerial decision to keep you out of the lineup, you said you were sick. Which was it?
“I was not feeling good yesterday, how about that?” Guillen said.
How are you feeling today?
“Same.”
You were feeling bad yesterday and didn’t play, you’re feeling the same, but today you’re in the lineup?
“I might not play today.”
Do you feel well enough to play”
“I don’t know, we’ll see.”
If you had to decide right now, would you play?
“No.”
The back and forth continued for several more minutes, ending with someone asking Guillen when he started feeling sick.
After covering his eyes with his hands for several seconds, Guillen looked up, still grinning.
“Done.”
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