Los Angeles Times

One school, three opening-day pitchers

Harvard-Westlake alums Fried, Flaherty and Giolito will make MLB history when they start openers.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

Harvard-Westlake alums Fried, Flaherty and Giolito are set to make MLB history with starts Thursday.

As if Matt LaCour isn’t busy enough these days, with 22 of the Studio City Harvard-Westlake High athletic director’s teams — including football, basketball, baseball and softball — in action, he will go into nextlevel multitaski­ng mode Thursday.

While layering his normal duties with the logistical challenges of supervisin­g so many overlappin­g, pandemic-altered seasons, LaCour will try to soak in as much of a historic day for Major League Baseball and his school as he can.

At noon PDT, LaCour will fire up his office television to watch Atlanta Braves left-hander Max Fried take the mound against the Philadelph­ia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park.

An hour later, on his computer or iPad, he will queue up a live stream of the St. Louis-Cincinnati game from Great American Ball Park, where right-hander Jack Flaherty will pitch for the Cardinals.

And late in the afternoon, LaCour will slip out of the office and drive to Anaheim to watch Chicago White Sox right-hander Lucas Giolito start a 7 p.m. game at Angel Stadium.

It will mark the first time in baseball history that three players from the same high school team — Giolito, Fried and Flaherty were HarvardWes­tlake teammates in 2012— will make openingday starts in the same season.

“I’ll be running around with my head cut off,” said LaCour, who spent nine years as baseball coach before becoming AD in 2015. “But opening day will definitely be a lot more special this year.”

Flaherty, 25, and Giolito, 26, are establishe­d aces and were named opening-day starters on Feb. 25 and March 15, respective­ly. Fried, 27, was not a lock for opening day on a superb Braves staff but got the nod Thursday, completing the Harvard-Westlake trifecta.

“It’s pretty weird and wild — 10% of the league’s opening-day starters from the same high school,” Giolito said on a weekend video call. “I don’t think that’s happened before in any profession­al sport, where you have guys from the same high school all competing on the big stage.”

That this trio of former Los Angeles-area teenagers ascended to such heights is not surprising. When they were high school teammates, they didn’t just aspire to reach the major leagues.

“We wanted to be mainstays

in the big leagues,” Giolito said. “That was something we talked about all the time, because if you set those goals high and you’ve got guys in your corner to motivate you, then they’re much more reachable than if you’re just kind of on your own and hoping and wishing.”

All three were first-round picks, Fried going seventh to San Diego and Giolito 16th to Washington in 2012, and Flaherty going 34th to St. Louis in 2014. But the line from the draft to Thursday’s opening-day assignment wasn’t direct for two of them.

Giolito and Fried had Tommy John surgeries, Giolito in 2012 and Fried in 2014, and both were traded away from the teams that drafted them. The 6-foot-6, 245pound Giolito also overcame a brutal 2018 in which he went 10-13 with a 6.13 ERA and an American Leaguehigh 90 walks in 1731⁄3 innings.

The next winter, Giolito revamped his workout regimen, focusing more on core strength, and his delivery, shortening his arm stroke and slightly altering his arm slot and release point.

He went 14-9 with a 3.48 ERA and 228 strikeouts and made the All-Star team in 2019 and 4-3 with a 3.48 ERA in 12 starts in 2020, including a no-hitter Aug. 25 against Pittsburgh.

“Three years ago, Lucas was the worst pitcher in big league baseball, and he had to completely reinvent himself,” LaCour said. “If that’s not some perseveran­ce, I don’t know what it is.”

Fried, a lanky 6-4, 190pounder, had a breakout 2019 for the Braves, going 17-6 with a 4.02 ERA in 33 games. He went 7-0 with 2.25 ERA in 11 starts in 2020 and was sharp in two National League Championsh­ip Series starts against the Dodgers, going 0-1 with a 2.84 ERA in 122⁄3 innings.

Flaherty had a smoother path to the big leagues, the 6-4, 225-pounder compiling a 23-22 record and 3.37 ERA in 76 games over the last four seasons.

But he ran into some turbulence in 2020, when he was criticized by some Cardinals fans for his support of the Black Lives Matter movement and his team was shut down for 21⁄2 weeks from late July through mid-August because of a COVID-19 outbreak that forced them to play 11 doublehead­ers.

“Each of them has kind of gone through their own set of tough circumstan­ces in order to get here,” LaCour said. “It says a lot about their fight and determinat­ion, and the way they take care of their bodies, and how profession­al they are about how they go about their business.”

As accomplish­ed as the three are as major leaguers, they were unable to win a Southern Section championsh­ip together.

Giolito was projected as a No. 1 pick before he injured his elbow in his second game in 2012 and missed the rest of his senior season.

Fried went 8-2 with a 2.02 ERA and 105 strikeouts in 66 innings in 2012 but spent only one year at HarvardWes­tlake after transferri­ng from Montclair Prep, which had eliminated its athletic program because of budget cuts. Flaherty was a sophomore shortstop who hadn’t fully committed to pitching in 2012.

The Wolverines went 245-1 and lost in the quarterfin­als of the Division I playoffs in 2012, a season in which Giolito “was our biggest cheerleade­r in the dugout,” LaCour said.

The three have remained best friends, calling and texting each other regularly. They’ve worked out together in the winter. Fried and Flaherty were in Giolito’s wedding party in December 2018.

“Growing up, they all talked about playing in the major leagues,” said Rick Giolito, Lucas’ father. “I thought, ‘Wouldn’t that be something?’ But having all three start on opening day? That’s crazy.”

 ?? John Bazemore Associated Press ?? MAX FRIED, who was 7-0 in 2020, starts for the Braves on the road against the Phillies.
John Bazemore Associated Press MAX FRIED, who was 7-0 in 2020, starts for the Braves on the road against the Phillies.
 ??  ?? Ross D. Franklin Associated Press LUCAS GIOLITO will start for the Chicago White Sox against the Angels.
Ross D. Franklin Associated Press LUCAS GIOLITO will start for the Chicago White Sox against the Angels.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Lynne Sladky JACK FLAHERTY gets the nod in the Cardinals’ opener against the Reds in Cincinnati.
Associated Press Lynne Sladky JACK FLAHERTY gets the nod in the Cardinals’ opener against the Reds in Cincinnati.

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