Bobby Thigpen can't seem to save time for a chat

CROWE'S NEST

Major leagues single-season record holder for saves with 57 doesn't appear interested in talking about the Angels' Francisco Rodriguez chasing his mark.

Maybe it pains Bobby Thigpen that Francisco Rodriguez of the Angels is on pace to shatter his single-season major league saves record.

Or maybe the former Chicago White Sox closer, now 45, is too busy managing the Bristol (Va.) Sox of the Appalachian League, a rookie-level affiliate of the White Sox, to squeeze in a few minutes to reminisce about his signature season.

Or maybe he's just a grump.

Whatever the reason, the 1990 Rolaids Relief Man blows off a scheduled telephone interview, finally picks up the phone 90 minutes later and, by way of greeting, berates the caller for interrupting a meeting.

Several more calls go unanswered and, even after Bristol club President Mahlon Luttrell relays a message, Thigpen still does not reach out.

Said Luttrell, apologetically, "I can't make him."

How times change.

Eighteen years ago, when he racked up a whopping 57 saves to break the previous record of 46, Thigpen had no trouble answering a call.

"We went to him every night," said former Dodgers and Angels catcher Jeff Torborg, manager of the White Sox during Thigpen's record-breaking season.

"We were not exactly a juggernaut -- we didn't score a lot of runs -- yet we won 94 games, and a big part of it was Bobby, because he was always available."

For a team that finished second in the American League West, nine games behind the division champion Oakland Athletics, Thigpen made a league- and career-high 77 appearances. In 88 2/3 innings, the 6-foot-3, 195-pound right-hander compiled a 4-6 record and 1.83 earned-run average to go along with all those saves, finishing fourth in balloting for the Cy Young Award and fifth in the most valuable player vote.

"He kept you on the edge of your seat at times. He wasn't automatic," Torborg said of Thigpen, who might have put the record out of reach if he hadn't squandered eight save opportunities. "He had almost a whirling-dervish delivery -- kind of like [Rodriguez], legs and arms flying -- but he was a big, strong horse."

Also, Torborg notes, setup man Barry Jones had a career year in front of the closer, compiling an 11-4 record and career-best 2.31 ERA.

"It takes a solid 'pen to help you get to that number," Torborg said of Thigpen's record sum. "Barry Jones had a lot to do with it."


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