Otherwise, he doesn't look much different than the guy who pitched the Atlanta Braves to their first World Series in 1991.
``Really, he's not all that gray,'' Chipper Jones said, glancing toward the locker of his 36-year-old teammate. ``He must be putting some stuff in his hair.''
Indeed, Glavine appears to have just been pulled from a time capsule, unaffected by the passage of the last decade or so. He's still doing what he's always done: baffling hitters with less-than-overpowering stuff, a sinker here, a changeup there.
``Actually, that's too simplistic,'' Glavine said. ``I'm not the same pitcher I was 10 years ago. I'm not the same pitcher I was last year. But I think it's a credit that I've been able to make those changes without people noticing.''
Glavine, who already has two Cy Young awards in his trophy case, is better than ever. He got to 10 wins at the earliest point of his 16-year career and stands 11-2 with a major-league leading 1.53 ERA heading into his start Sunday against the Boston Red Sox.
When the left-hander walks into the Hall of Fame, they should put this mantra on his plaque: He never gave in to the hitter.
``Those kind of guys are the most frustrating to face,'' Jones said. ``As a hitter, you're taught to work ahead in the count so you can look for your pitch. But Glavine never throws your pitch. He's going to throw what he wants, when he wants, where he wants.''
That philosophy Glavine would rather walk a guy with the bases loaded than throw a pitch he might hit for a grand slam has carried him to five 20-win seasons and a career record of 235-134.
``When he's locating and changing speeds, he's got you at his mercy,'' Jones said. ``It sounds crazy to say that a guy who throws 86, 87 miles an hour can do that to major league hitters. But the fact of the matter is that he's perfected the art of pitching.''
Glavine, who's in the final year of his contract after spending his entire career with the Braves, would like to pitch at least three more seasons, preferably in Atlanta. He's also started pondering his legacy and that likely spot in Cooperstown.
``I'd be lying if I said I haven't thought about it,'' Glavine said. ``If I can do anything to improve my chances, that's even better.''
In his last start, Glavine allowed just two hits in seven scoreless innings for an 11-0 victory over Minnesota, lowering his road ERA to an astounding 0.71.
The Twins, coincidentally, beat Glavine's Braves in the classic 1991 World Series. No one from Minnesota's championship team is still around, but Glavine just keeps rolling along a major reason Atlanta is on track for its 11th straight division title.
``He's so good,'' marveled Twins first baseman Matthew LeCroy, ``the catcher never has to move his glove for a pitch.''
Glavine struggled the first half of last season, leaving many to wonder if baseball's new edict on the strike zone higher and tighter, like the rule book says would transform him into just another pitcher.
Instead, he transformed himself.
``He's pitching now,'' said Greg Maddux, a teammate and fellow Cy Young winner. ``He's using all of his pitches on both sides of the plate and he's mixing his pitches up better. You can't guess with him anymore.''
The turning point came almost a year ago, in a June 18 game against Florida. Glavine was handed a 5-0 lead but couldn't hold it.
The next night, he was joined on the bench by John Smoltz, yet another of the Braves' Cy Young winners.
``Smoltzie came over and laid some things on the line for me,'' Glavine recalled. ``He said I had given in to the strike zone or just accepted the fact that things weren't going the way I wanted them to. He said he didn't see the same fire he was used to seeing from me.
``Sometimes, we all need a kick in the butt, and when it comes from a guy like Smoltzie, who is a dear friend and someone I respect a lot, it had a lot of meaning.''
So, Glavine changed, although the adjustments were so slight hardly anyone noticed.
``After talking to people and kind of realizing that, hey, every once in a while you move the ball around and change the umpire's angle, change the hitter's angle, that pitch might look a little more like a strike than the first time, to both the umpire and the hitter. And it's worked.''
Glavine's control actually improved as he began to use both sides of the plate.
``Over the last year, I have learned a lot about myself and how to get people out,'' he said. ``My Plan A is still the same sinkers and changeups away but now I've got a Plan B to go to.''
What is Plan B?
``Plan B is kind of whatever,'' Glavine said. ``If I have to pitch inside more, I pitch inside more. If I have to use more breaking balls, I do that.''
Glavine doesn't have as much room for error as someone such Curt Schilling (the only pitcher in the majors with more wins than Glavine) or Roger Clemens. Those guys can get away mistakes simply because of their repertoire is so overpowering.
On this point, though, Glavine won't give in either.
``Matching people stuff for stuff for stuff? I'm not going to do that,'' he said. ``I'm not going to put up some of the eye-popping numbers that some of the other guys put up.
``But when it comes down to winning games, I've always felt like somehow, some way, I can hold my own with anybody.''
No change there.
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/6/193493