So Ruiz expressed his disappointment. In doing so, he continued what has been a quick and unexpected ascent into the role of everyday catcher in his first full season.
"It was kind of like a smack," said Geary. "And I took it as, 'Wow, I like that.' He was manhandling me, but doing it in such a way that we didn't have a fight on the mound.
"You can do things with body language just as much as you can with words."
Especially when words are not really an option. A Panama native signed by the Phillies nearly a decade ago, Ruiz, 28, had spent his previous seven
seasons at various minor league levels honing his hitting, showing off that strong arm of his, but leaving the brass a little queasy about how he caught and called a game. Said Geary: "Last year in spring training, he was calling pitches that I would never, ever have thrown."
Some of it had to do with language. Ruiz understands a little English, speaks even less, and needs an interpreter in any type of detailed conversation. It's one big reason Rod Barajas was signed in the offseason, and why Chris Coste continues to languish in the minors. And yet Ruiz is on the last day of May with a .267 average, among the rookie leaders in a slew of offensive categories, including eight doubles and 11 multihit games, a hero in two of the Phillies' more rousing victories in their so-far uneven season.
And most remarkably, doing a solid job behind the plate.
"The hardest part is to get to know what the pitcher has," Ruiz said before last night's 4-3 loss to the Diamondbacks, using teammate Abraham Nunez as an interpreter. "What he likes to do in situations. They might have four different pitches and you have to know what he likes to do and how he's going to pitch each situation. So you can add to it."