The Palm Beach Post

Stanton's 'weird' return

Miami fans get a chance to cheer slugger again — and maybe see his 300th HR.

- By Greg Cote Miami Herald

“It’s going to be weird for me,” Giancarlo Stanton said.

It’s going to be weird for us, too. And wonderful and bitterswee­t and sad. It’s going to be a reason to get out to Marlins Park. To feel the power of the emotional tug of sports.

It’s going to be South Florida’s first real chance to say thank you.

Not quite 11 months ago, last Oct. 1, the Marlins season ended for Stanton with a strikeout, and 59 home runs for the year. It ended with an “M-V-P!” chant, an ovation and a curtain call.

“It was something special for me,” he said then, of that season and that night.

We hoped it wasn’t goodbye. It was.

The trade to the Yankees came nine weeks later — the gut-punch that let us know new boss Derek Jeter wasn’t joking about the imperative to rebuild Miami’s farm system. Wasn’t joking when he warned, “There’s going to be times there are unpopular decisions we make.”

Now, tonight and Wednesday night, what’s going to be “weird” for Stanton is not automatica­lly walking to the home clubhouse as he returns in pinstripes for his first appearance at Marlins Park since being traded for second baseman Starlin Castro and two minor league prospects.

Jeter hosting the team he starred for for 20 seasons will be weird, too. For him. But it’s Stanton back in the ballpark that’ll be weird for us.

We had Stanton a long time. Eight seasons. We remember him coming up at age 20. We remember

when he was still called Mike. We remember the face-shattering pitch that could have ended his career. We remember 59 home runs — perhaps the greatest individual season by one of our pro athletes since Dan Marino’s 1984. Big enough for the company of the best of Dwyane Wade and LeBron James.

He left us with a Marlins-record 267 home runs, in a half-career that has him pointed to Cooperstow­n.

“It’s been a big part of my life, my time down there,” Stanton told reporters in New York on Sunday. “It’ll be a cool experience going back.”

Stanton has been fighting a tight left hamstring that has had him limited to designated-hitter duties the past 12 games, but, with no DH in National League-hosted games, Stanton is expected to be back in his familiar rightfield spot for this two-game series, albeit in unfamiliar clothing.

Stanton waived his no-trade clause to agree to the trade, but can you blame him? After eight straight Marlins seasons of no playoffs despite him and now the prospect of yet another payroll-slashing do-over?

“I wouldn’t want to do that, no,” he said as last season ended.

Now Stanton is headed for the first postseason of his career as the Yankees appear wild card-bound and, after a slow start, Stanton has brushed off the pressure of the biggest team and toughest fans in baseball to live up to expectatio­ns. His 32 homers rank fourth in the AL, his 80 RBIs rank fifth, and he is batting .285.

“Obviously, he came in with a lot of expectatio­n and lot of fanfare,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. “I’d have to say he’s been living up to that.”

Said Marlins catcher J.T. Realmuto: “It’s just nice to see the success he’s having with the Yankees. He deserves everything he’s getting.”

Stanton is enjoying national appreciati­on maybe for the first time.

“He was appreciate­d (in Miami) by the (fans) who were there,” Realmuto said. “But obviously we don’t draw as well as other teams and we don’t get talked about near as much. So definitely (he wasn’t) as appreciate­d as he is with the Yankees right now. They’re on TV every night. He was a little more of a hidden gem (in Miami) than he deserved to be.”

Stanton’s 267 homers for Miami and 32 for the Yanks put him on the doorstep of a major career milestone.

“We’re not going to let him get a homer,” Realmuto said. “We’re going to try especially hard, because we know him …”

No. 300 could come in front of the fans who raised Stanton.

“That would be really cool if I did that,” he said.

 ?? ELSA / GETTY IMAGES ?? After a slow start, Giancarlo Stanton has bounced back and enters the series with 32 home runs, 80 RBIs and a .285 average. After a stint at DH, he’s expected to be back in right field in Miami.
ELSA / GETTY IMAGES After a slow start, Giancarlo Stanton has bounced back and enters the series with 32 home runs, 80 RBIs and a .285 average. After a stint at DH, he’s expected to be back in right field in Miami.

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