Saskatoon StarPhoenix

BORN for BASEBALL

Harper is expected to set a salary record with his next contract — thanks to doing more by the age of 25 than almost anyone else in major league history

- CHELSEA JANES

One morning a few years ago, in the wellworn clubhouse at Turner Field, Bryce Harper sat on the edge of the black leather rolling chair at his locker and looked around the near-empty room.

“What if I just went and became a firefighte­r in Huntington Beach?” Harper asked, to no one in particular. Nobody answered him.

What would they say if they had? Everyone knows the man heralded as the most transcende­nt baseball talent of a generation since he was a teenager, the one who lived up to the hype and somehow fostered more — the guy destined for a contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars — can’t just up and leave it all behind.

Harper never said anything like that again, at least not when reporters were around. But who, subjected to scrutiny and pressure and funnelled into one destiny since adolescenc­e, wouldn’t see the appeal of a world touched only by sunlight, free of the spotlight? Who, presented with a life in which his every move is analyzed, and every talent monetized, wouldn’t wonder about a simpler existence now and then?

“I don’t want to really think about that. This is what I was born to do,” Harper said. “... That crosses everybody ’s mind — maybe I wanted to do this or do that. But I enjoy being a baseball player. I wouldn’t trade it for the world.”

This might be the most scrutinize­d season of Harper’s career, of the life he believes he was born to lead, the one that affords him far fewer choices than it might seem. He will be a free agent after this season, one of a handful of Hall of Fame-type talents available to the highest bidder.

An MVP-calibre season could secure him a record deal. A disappoint­ing season could lead to a disappoint­ing one, or at least not the history-making contract most assumed he would get until this most recent winter of free-agent discontent. The 25-year-old has asked that no reporters inquire about his intentions for the future, hoping to limit his exposure to those stresses. But team executives around the game, TV analysts and others will spend all season wondering and waiting. Harper’s grandmothe­r used to tell him there were two things he should never talk about — politics and his salary. Harper avoids the former with relative ease. Others talk about the latter for him.

For years, those emotionall­y invested in Harper’s future have analyzed every word, hunting for some insight into where he might go. All winter, most of those organizati­ons who might financiall­y invest in his future eschewed spending, leading some to wonder exactly what kind of market will exist for his services. All season, others will remind him much is at stake with every swing.

Meanwhile, a man will sit in the middle of it all, balancing the need to perform with the reality of the biggest decision he has ever got to make. The swirl of attention that has always followed him will only swirl faster, and he won’t be able to escape it.

Bryce Harper is financiall­y secure for life. He is married with a healthy family. He gets all the perks of fame, showered in gifts and free meals from those who endorse him and those who hope to endorse him. But for all the bravado some see in him still, Harper is also human. This season, and all that comes with it, will test him.

“I think the thing that surprises you is that while he embraces the spotlight he gets, it may not be what he wants. He just wants to play baseball,” catcher Matt Wieters said. “... That’s the big surprise. From the outside, he looks like a guy who wants all the attention and wants everything. He deals with it because he has to, because he has that kind of talent.”

If he didn’t have that once-in-ageneratio­n swing, or that cannon of a right arm — in other words, if he weren’t born for baseball — Harper really would want to be a firefighte­r.

“It’s like four days on, two days off,” Harper said. “It’d be fun.”

“Fun” is an interestin­g part of Harper’s story, one introduced to the narrative when he declared his mission to “Make Baseball Fun Again.” Two years ago, the slogan was scrawled across hats and he tossed it around in interviews. Slowly, it slid out of use. Making baseball fun again takes a lot of work. Declaring one’s mission to make baseball fun again garners a lot of extra attention and criticism.

Harper has always been willing to put in work, though he admits the major league schedule grates him. More than once, he has been critical of late plane flights and long games, and he is as willing to say so in public statements about Major League Baseball’s scheduling policies as he is to teammates in the clubhouse.

He has posted Instagram pictures of what he thinks is an overcrowde­d Nationals charter plane. He wanted a few more days off than he got in recent years. He rarely smiles around the clubhouse, more businessli­ke than boyish — but willing to conduct his business, no lazier for the wear and success of six big league seasons, according to those who see him daily.

During one 2017 slump, Harper didn’t return from the dugout until a half-hour after a night game ended, his hands red with dye from his batting gloves, the strain of hundreds of swings, or both. Though he has always been something of his own hitting coach, advised closely by his father, Ron, Harper is not one to shut out feedback, either.

Harper turns down more interviews than he takes, and he declines requests from those inside and outside the organizati­on — when he sees fit. Teammates constantly ask Harper to sign things for friends, and opposing players constantly ask for memorabili­a. Any time a teammate brings a visitor to work, that visitor inevitably wants to meet Harper, who inevitably takes the time to do so. But no one gets pulled in as many directions as often as he does, even with the organizati­on’s best efforts to protect him.

Harper is not a vocal leader in that clubhouse, not a larger-thanlife presence — or even a largerthan-most presence these days. Max Scherzer, Daniel Murphy and others are the moulders of minds there. Gio Gonzalez is the jokester. Shawn Kelley is the jovial one. Trea Turner and Anthony Rendon are the best buddies and locker neighbours. Sean Doolittle is the intellectu­al. When Harper leads, he does so with key hits and big plays — just a remarkably talented guy who, like so many of his colleagues, is always eager to get home to his family.

“I feel like I’ve always wanted to try to get away from the field and just relax and be away as much as I can, I guess,” Harper said. “... But also, I know when I come to the field I have to strap it on and be Bryce.”

Whether he has accomplish­ed more as a player than expected or less varies by the judge, but the fact of the matter is he has done more as a player by age 25 than almost anyone in major league history.

Only 17 players have hit 150 home runs, driven in at least 400 runs and played in at least 750 games by 25 as Harper has. Only four of those players have walked more often — three Hall of Famers and Mike Trout. He has accumulate­d 27.7 FanGraphs Wins Above Replacemen­t since he started playing regularly in 2012, the 10th most in the majors in that span.

Because of injuries, he has played in 45 fewer games than anyone ahead of him. Trout leads all players with 53.7 WAR, though Josh Donaldson is second with 37.1 WAR in 817 games. If Harper had been healthier, he likely would rank in the top five. He is younger than all nine players ahead of him on that list which, combined with his general marketabil­ity as an edgier star in a rather polite baseball generation, is the reason so many expect Harper’s free agent deal to break records.

Until this winter’s unpreceden­ted free agent spending freeze, almost everyone in the industry expected Harper to earn a contract far exceeding the 13-year deal worth $325 million the Miami Marlins gave Giancarlo Stanton in November 2014. Nothing seems certain now, though with a strong season, Harper should have no trouble finding an average annual value of well above $30 million.

Exactly how far the Nationals are willing to go in pursuit remains to be seen, though a few things are clear already.

For one, they do not believe in committing a quarter or fifth of their payroll to one player. They will clear $80 million in payroll this winter, dipping their committed money to somewhere around $140 million, including arbitratio­n players.

Second, they do not want to exceed the collective bargaining tax threshold for a third consecutiv­e year, meaning any commitment­s they make cannot lift their payroll to the $200 million range like it is this season.

Given how much payroll they clear in soon-to-be free agents such as Harper, Murphy, Gonzalez, Ryan Madson, Kelley and others, signing Harper would not necessaril­y push them over that threshold. But it would limit their ability to sign other players.

But third, the Nationals — as represente­d by general manager Mike Rizzo — love Harper the player. They would like to keep him around. They have no problem with him. Rizzo would defend Harper to the end, and expects Harper would do the same. Those who have watched him grow feel similarly.

But he might not do it in Washington much longer. But whatever he does this season, wherever he plays baseball next, Harper will be caught in a chaos few others can understand, one in which he has grown up, one that has smoothed his edges and tested his patience — one from which he cannot, and would not, ever escape.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE ?? Bryce Harper’s general marketabil­ity as an edgier star in a rather polite baseball generation is one reason his next contract will likely break records.
AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE Bryce Harper’s general marketabil­ity as an edgier star in a rather polite baseball generation is one reason his next contract will likely break records.

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