Times Colonist

Seahawks QB works out with Yankees

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TAMPA, Florida — Russell Wilson’s head knows football was the right choice. Baseball still has his heart.

A 2014 Super Bowl champion quarterbac­k with the Seattle Seahawks, the 29-year-old began a week of workouts Monday with the New York Yankees.

“Is this just a stunt?” he said. “I think that if you really know me, baseball’s been a part of my blood. It’s been a part of who I am and where I’ve come from and what I’ve done. When you see me make plays on the football field, a lot of that’s a direct correlatio­n to baseball.”

Wilson hit six homers in 39 swings as part of a battingpra­ctice group that included Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton, the top sluggers in the major leagues last season, plus Gary Sanchez and Greg Bird.

A middle infielder who hit .229 over 93 games at Class A in the Colorado Rockies’ system in 2011 and ’12, Wilson became the Seahawks’ starting quarterbac­k in autumn 2012. He was selected by Texas in the 2013 winter meeting draft and attended spring training with the Rangers.

Wilson was on vacation in the Bahamas this month when he learned he had been acquired in a trade by the Yankees, his favourite team growing up. While the Yankees gave playing time to football players Deion Sanders and Drew Henson, they said Wilson will not appear in any spring training games; they want to observe his leadership skills, and he wants to soak up the attitude of a franchise with a record 27 World Series titles.

“There’s an aroma around here that I’ve got to figure out, and I can’t wait to learn more about it and use that for my football career,” he said.

Wearing pink sunglasses for BP, Wilson fell short of the fence in his first 17 swings with a 33-inch, 31-ounce Louisville Slugger, a personaliz­ed maple model H319C in black. He then hit three in his next four tries, cleared the left-field walkway and clanked his final drive off the centre-field batter’s eye.

“It’s just cool being able to pick his brain, that was the coolest part for me,” Judge said. “When he’s working out, everything is for a purpose.”

Wilson was on the field hours early, working with shortstop Didi Gregorius. He and the Yankees were all smiles.

“Watching him take a ball from the outfield that was kind of an in-between hop and watching him moving his feet real well and create a longer hop, that’s a savvy good-player move,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

Wilson spoke to the team before batting practice about leadership principles and said Judge and Stanton would be tight ends if they played in the NFL. He wore No. 73 — his football number, 3, is retired by the Yankees for Babe Ruth and his baseball number in high school was 7, retired by New York for Mickey Mantle.

Wilson has no intention of switching sports.

“I love playing the game I play now,” he said. “Being the starting quarterbac­k for the Seattle Seahawks, I’m one of 32 men in the world that get to do what I get to do. It’s the best job in the world.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY, AP ?? Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, right, watches from the dugout Monday as the New York Yankees played an exhibition game against the Philadelph­ia Phillies in Tampa, Florida.
LYNNE SLADKY, AP Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, right, watches from the dugout Monday as the New York Yankees played an exhibition game against the Philadelph­ia Phillies in Tampa, Florida.

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