Roy (Doc)
Halladay was mowing them down in order last Saturday afternoon: 00, 01, 02,
03.... Routine. Twice on the day before starts and once more on game day, the
Toronto Blue Jays righthander takes a laminated grid containing 100 randomly
distributed numbers and locates each one in sequence: 37, 38, 39, 40.... Think
of it as Sudoku for Cy Young winners. The purpose of the exercise is to narrow
the focus of a lively mind to nothing but the next number, which helps Halladay
sharpen his concentration on nothing but the next pitch when he reaches the
mound. "I'm not one of those guys who's worried about who's on deck,"
he says. When he began working the 10-square-by-10-square grid five years ago,
he needed 17 to 20 minutes to finish. Now he has become so proficient that he
sometimes amps up the distractions, turning on the TV or listening to songs
with burrowed-in-the-brain lyrics: 89, 90, 91, 92.... He usually finishes in 3
1/2 minutes. This effort, he clocked in four minutes and 29 seconds.
Most of the time
Halladay is just as efficient dispensing with numbers one through nine.
"He's more than just good, he's great," says Detroit Tigers designated
hitter Gary Sheffield. "His breaking ball is second to none. His sinker is
second to none. His changeup is second to none. If he's on that particular day,
forget it."
"There
is," says Tampa Bay Devil Rays manager Joe Maddon, "a simple elegance
about him."
For someone with
a 2003 Cy Young award on the shelf, a .664 career winning percentage and an
array of pitches with more plane changes than a platinum-level frequent flier,
Halladay deserves Johan Santana--like recognition. But Halladay is far less
visible than the Minnesota Twins lefty--and not just because he plays for
Canada's Team, bystanders in the AL East laser-sword fight between the Yankees
and the Red Sox. He simply isn't on the mound long enough. According to the
Elias Sports Bureau, the average time of a nine-inning game started by Halladay
since '02 is 2:37, alacrity surpassed only by Chicago White Sox lefthander Mark
Buehrle. (In a 6--3 win on Sunday at Tampa Bay, Halladay dispatched the Devil
Rays in a tidy 2:32.) As A.J. Liebling, the prolifically brilliant New Yorker
writer, once described himself, Halladay is better than anybody faster than him
and faster than anybody better than him.
"Your second
foot is getting into that [batter's] box, and he's already winding up,"
says Baltimore Orioles outfielder Jay Gibbons. "With a lot of movement and
great control, it'll be one, two pitches and a grounder to second. He's the
quickest 0 for 3 in the league."
Despite
technicolor stuff and so many pitches (cutter, curve, change and a China
Syndrome sinker) that, as Twins outfielder Michael Cuddyer puts it, the catcher
has to remove his glove to flash signs, the 29-year-old Halladay has averaged
just 6.3 strikeouts per nine innings during his 10-year career. "He knows
what hitters are hunting and entices contact," Blue Jays pitching coach
Brad Arnsberg says. "He throws so many strikes that the hitters get very,
very antsy. Because they don't want to see that hook and don't want him carving
the edges of the plate, they try to attack him early in the count. He defines
hitters' strike zones for them."
Once the season
opens, purpose rules in Halladay's world. No deep counts. No lollygagging. No
clubhouse card games. "He's looking at video on hitters, working out,
throwing a bullpen [session], putting in an eight-hour day whether it's his day
[to pitch] or not," Toronto catcher Gregg Zaun says. "A towel over his
shoulder and a bead of sweat dripping off his nose--that's him."
Halladay
inherited his work ethic from his father, Roy Jr., a commercial airline pilot
from the Denver bedroom community of Arvada, who when his young son was idle
would invite him to build a model boat or toss a baseball or fly a
remote-control airplane. "Something productive," says Halladay, whom
the Blue Jays chose with the 17th pick in the 1995 draft. "I never had a
lot of time when I was just 'kicking rocks,' as my dad called it. That comes
into play now. I always feel I have to do something to make myself
better."
It's pitching as
a self-help program. "He's prepared in every department and overprepared in
some," Arnsberg says. "His focus is almost overfocus." Indeed, when
Arnsberg joined the Toronto staff before the 2005 season, he was warned not to
pick up Halladay's towel or touch his rosin bag or talk to him while he
stretched. While Arnsberg treads gingerly when he visits Halladay on the
mound--"I tell him he scares me at times, always growling and
grumbling"--he might grab the forbidden towel before the game to break the
ice, a tacit reminder to focus on the window of the strike zone rather than the
window dressing.
If Halladay holds
dearly to routine, it is because not so long ago his career was in free
fall.