Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tatis bringing back fun, excitement in San Diego

High expectatio­ns heaped on young star, pitching staff

- By Bernie Wilson

SAN DIEGO — Baseball is fun again in San Diego, where the Padres are heading into one of their most anticipate­d seasons ever.

The main focus is always on electrifyi­ng shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr., who has reached full-blown superstard­om and received a 14-year, $340 million contract — the longest in MLB history — without having yet played the equivalent of a full season.

Tatis — a son of former big league infielder Fernando Tatis — has played in only 143 games during two seasons, including the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, yet quickly has become one of the faces of baseball. He stands out because of his flair, easy smile, blond dreadlocks flowing from under his cap and his dance moves in the dugout after hitting home runs.

He vows his big contract won’t change him. “I’m playing the game I love. And I feel when you do the things with passion and with love,

I feel like it’s going to reward you,” he said. “And I feel like when people ask me how

I’m going to play this game, I’m just going to be the same kid every single time.”

San Diego not only has Tatis for his bat and defense, but it has a revamped rotation. With Yu Darvish, Blake Snell and Joe Musgrove leading the way, it’s expected to be one of the best in baseball, the product of general manager A.J. Preller’s relentless wheeling and dealing.

And, of course, all eyes will be on NL West race against the rivals up the freeway, the Los Angeles Dodgers, who stand in the way of where the Padres want to go.

Anchored by a star-studded infield featuring Tatis and third baseman Manny Machado, San Diego ended a 13-year playoff drought and won a first-round series against St. Louis last season before being swept in a division series by the Dodgers, who went on to win the World Series.

The Padres return their entire infield — Tatis, Machado,

second baseman Jake Cronenwort­h and first baseman Eric Hosmer — as well as outfielder­s Trent Grisham, Wil Myers and Durango product Tommy Pham.

They also look to welcome back fans to Petco Park, which, due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, was empty when the Padres clinched a playoff spot and when they clinched a wild-card series against the St. Louis Cardinals. Thousands of fans packed downtown to celebrate that win, and the Padres hope fans get to celebrate inside the downtown ballpark this year.

Musgrove, who pitched for Grossmont High in suburban El Cajon, is looking forward to having family and friends in the ballpark as California slowly reopens.

When he heard during a Zoom call with the media that there should be limited capacity for opening day, Musgrove pounded his fists on a table and said, “Good news. It’s exciting, man.”

Musgrove said players were getting tired of the fake crowd noise pumped into empty stadiums last year.

“I’m thrilled to have fans in San Diego,” he said. “I know these fans are excited. It’s been a long time since they’ve been able to come to games and I know they’re waiting to watch this team.”

 ?? Charlie Riedel The Associated Press ?? San Diego shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr. signed a huge contract in the offseason and has Padres fans dreaming of a World Series.
Charlie Riedel The Associated Press San Diego shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr. signed a huge contract in the offseason and has Padres fans dreaming of a World Series.
 ?? Sue Ogrocki The Associated Press ?? Yu Darvish joined an already solid Padres pitching staff to give it one of the better rotations in the major leagues.
Sue Ogrocki The Associated Press Yu Darvish joined an already solid Padres pitching staff to give it one of the better rotations in the major leagues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States