One day after joining baseball's exclusive 500 home run club, Albert Pujols insists he is not concerned with reaching another longball milestone.
Let the fans and the media talk about 600 or 700 home runs, Pujols said, adding that he's not even thinking about homer number 501.
"You can't read the future. It's still going to be the same goal that I've had from day one - and that's about winning," the Los Angeles Angels slugger said on Wednesday.
"It's about taking care of the 25 guys (in the clubhouse) and representing the name across my shirt. Before you get to 600 or 700, you need to get to 501.
Pujols clubbed two homers against the Washington Nationals on Tuesday, the second enabling the 34-year-old first baseman to become the 26th major leaguer to hit 500 round-trippers.
He contends he will feel no differently at the plate now that the highly anticipated benchmark has been reached.
"I'll feel the same way that I've felt for 14 years," he said. "Probably better than the last couple of years, because I'm healthy now. I can tell you that for sure. But my approach is not going to change."
Pujols won the World Series with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2011 and then signed a 10-year, $240 million contract with the Angels before the year was out.
His numbers declined during the next two seasons but Pujols maintains he's ready to return to the form that made him a three-time National League MVP with the Cardinals.
"I'm healthy and I'm feeling good at the plate right now," he said. "It would be stupid for me to tell you I've felt like that the last couple of years. My power wasn't there."
Pujols said the three moments he'll remember most from Tuesday's landmark homer are running around the bases, seeing his teammates at home plate ready to embrace him, and the heartfelt reception he received in the clubhouse after the game.
"Those moments are pretty special," he said. "But nothing tastes better than raising a championship trophy.
"Hopefully, we can get that this year. That would be sweeter than anything."
Angels manager Mike Scioscia said he enjoyed watching Pujols reach the 500 homer plateau but the camaraderie in the dugout was more memorable.
"Watching Albert interact with the team in the dugout right after it happened and then in the clubhouse was special," he said. "As happy as Albert is to reach his milestone, I know his teammates were happier for him. It was fun to watch."
Pujols will undoubtedly be asked by the Baseball Hall of Fame to donate his bat, hat, uniform or shoes that he wore on Tuesday at Nationals Park.
But Cooperstown might be disappointed, he said.
"I have to talk to my family, my kids," he said. "I'll have to see what they want."
Albert Pujols is showered with a bucket of Gatorade by his Los Angeles Angels teammates during a live TV interview following Tuesday's win over the Washington Nationals. Pujols hit his 499th and 500th career home runs in the Angels' 7-2 victory. Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press |
(China Daily 04/25/2014 page24)