Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Dodgers starter Hill living out Hollywood dream

- By Ronald Blum

LOS ANGELES » Out of the majors, Rich Hill never believed he was out of chances. It only looked that way. Unwanted by a single big league organizati­on, and already in his mid-30s, Hill found himself pitching for the Long Island Ducks in the summer of 2015.

Yep, the same guy who will be starting Game 2 of the World Series for the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night.

“A couple years ago, I was using a bucket in independen­t ball as a toilet,” he recalled last weekend.

Script writers seeking a follow-up to “Bull Durham,” “Field of Dreams” and “The Natural” need look no farther than Dodger Stadium, just 7 miles down the 101 from the Hollywood Walk of Fame. King of the Hill, he is. “I never thought I was done,” he said last December after getting a $48 million, three-year deal from the Dodgers. Far from it. The 37-year-old lefty rapidly regained his grip, and will cap his rise when he takes on the Houston Astros, who start Justin Verlander, the MVP of the AL Championsh­ip Series. The Dodgers lead the Series 1-0.

After a decade in the major leagues, Hill began 2015 with the Washington Nationals’ TripleA team at Syracuse, New York, and was released in June. He signed with the Ducks, struck out seven over five hitless innings on Aug. 2 against the Bridgeport Bluefish, then a week later struck out 14 over six scoreless innings versus the Camden Rivershark­s.

“I think it’s something that people will think of and say, wow, it’s just a bunch of guys that are washed up or guys that didn’t get an opportunit­y to make it,” he explained Tuesday. “But that’s not true.

“If you actually go to a game and take it in and see, there’s a lot of good talent here. It just happens that there wasn’t any room for these players in affiliated baseball.”

Boston took notice, purchased his contract and brought him back to the big leagues in mid-September.

“It was a great experience. I wouldn’t change that for anything,” Hill said. “It was learning again, reigniting that fire, reigniting that passion for what we do out there on the field and really getting back into disassocia­ting yourself with the results and just understand­ing that it is a pitch-to-pitch process and understand­ing that the moment is all that matters.”

He went 2-1 with a 1.55 ERA in four starts with the Red Sox and earned a $6 million, one-year deal with Oakland for 2016. Dealt to the Dodgers that Aug. 1, he went 7-5 with a 2.12 ERA in 20 starts overall, became a free agent again and signed a rich deal to remain with Los Angeles.

At the news conference to announce his big deal, Hill’s voice quavered and his face flushed with emotion when he thanked his wife, Caitlin; son Brice, who was born in 2011; and son Brooks, who was less than 2 months old when he died in February 2014.

“He was born with multiple issues that we confronted and had to deal with,” Hill said at spring training that year. “Unfortunat­ely, he succumbed. He’s passed. He taught us a lot of things. Unfortunat­ely, things didn’t work out.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts admires Hill for a passion and intensity that stands out even among hyper-competitiv­e major leaguers.

“He’s wacky on his start days,” Roberts said. “He gets more mad when he swings and misses than he does giving up a homer. This guy thinks he’s Superman on the baseball field. So it’s kind of comical at times.”

Hill’s performanc­e in Los Angeles has been blistering — both good and bad.

He retired his first 21 batters at Miami in September 2016 when Roberts removed him after 89 pitches. Hill missed significan­t time last year because of a strained left groin and a blister on the middle finger of his pitching hand.

On Aug. 23 this year, he retired the first 24 batters at Pittsburgh before third baseman Logan Forsythe misplayed Jordy Mercer’s grounder for an error in the ninth, ending another perfect game bid. Hill pitched no-hit ball until Josh Harrison homered leading off the 10th for a 1-0 win.

Still, his season was interrupte­d twice by the blister, which sent him to the disabled list from April 7-16 and April 17 to May 16. After returning for the second time, he held opponents to a .194 batting average and averaged 11.2 strikeouts per nine innings, finishing with a 12-8 record.

He didn’t get a decision in his first two postseason starts this year, allowing two runs over four innings as the Dodgers beat Arizona 8-5 in Game 2 of the NL Division Series and giving up one run over four innings during a 4-1 win over the Chicago Cubs in Game 2 of the NL Championsh­ip Series.

Hill thought back to “those times of struggle and in the times of failure in the rehab, the years of rehabbing, not being in an affiliated clubhouse.”

 ?? MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Dodgers starting pitcher Rich Hill throws against the Diamondbac­ks during game in August.
MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Dodgers starting pitcher Rich Hill throws against the Diamondbac­ks during game in August.

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