Lodi News-Sentinel

Harper, Strickland fight highlights Giants loss

- By Gideon Rubin

SAN FRANCISCO — Drilled in the hip by a heater, Bryce Harper knew where this was headed. In a hurry, too. “You see red,” he said. Enraged, the Washington slugger charged the mound, wildly fired his helmet and traded punches to the head with reliever Hunter Strickland, setting off a furious brawl Monday during the Nationals’ 3-0 win over the San Francisco Giants.

“You never want to get suspended or anything like, but sometimes you just got to go and get them and can’t hesitate,” Harper said. “You either go to first base or you go after him and I decided to go after him.”

The two players have a history, stemming from two home runs Harper hit off Strickland in the 2014 playoffs.

“I can see how that stands in people’s minds,” Strickland said.

This flashpoint came in their first matchup since then — with two outs in the eighth inning, none on and Washington ahead 2-0, Strickland hit Harper with the first pitch, a 98 mph fastball.

Harper didn’t wait. The four-time All-Star pointed his bat at Strickland, yelled at him and took off.

“My head was on a swivel, as quick as I could to not get taken out by somebody on their team or anything like that,” he said.

No one got in Harper’s way as he rushed the mound. Giants star catcher Buster Posey stuck near the plate when Harper bolted, and stayed clear of the

fracas as things escalated.

“Strick and him are the only ones that can answer why” the fight happened, Posey said.

Posey got a concussion last month from a beaning. He said he wasn’t thinking about that accident, but was concerned about injuries.

“There were some big guys tumbling around out there,” he said. “So it was a little dangerous to get in there sometimes.”

Harper’s eyes were wide as he flung his helmet — it wasn’t close to Strickland, it might’ve slipped, helmets are hard to throw accurately — and they started swinging away.

The 6-foot-4 Strickland hit Harper in the face, then they broke apart for a moment before squaring off again. Harper punched Strickland in the head as the benches and bullpen emptied.

“I was trying to go after him, with the helmet or with myself, just doing what I needed to do keep it going, I guess,” Harper said.

Giants teammates Michael Morse and

Jeff Samardzija collided hard as they tried to get between the two fighters.

“I’m OK, but why is that news?” Morse said. “I was trying to get in there to break everyone up.”

Three Giants players forcefully dragged Strickland from the middle of the pack all the way into the dugout, while a teammate held back Harper.

Harper and Strickland were both ejected, and are certain to face punishment from Major League Baseball.

No injuries were reported in either clubhouse. Harper attributed a scratch to Nationals third baseman Anthony Rendon pulling him away from the brawl.

 ?? ARIC CRABB/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Washington Nationals' Bryce Harper (34) fights with the Giants' Michael Morse, center, and Jeff Samardzija, left, on Monday in San Francisco.
ARIC CRABB/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Washington Nationals' Bryce Harper (34) fights with the Giants' Michael Morse, center, and Jeff Samardzija, left, on Monday in San Francisco.

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