USA TODAY US Edition

HARPER FOCUSED ON HERE AND NOW

Free agency on back burner as star savors baseball life

- Bob Nightengal­e bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Bryce Harper might be one of the greatest young talents in baseball, a four-time All-Star outfielder for the Washington Nationals, but he can’t bring himself to watch the games he doesn’t play.

He can be defiant, and he oozes with bravado with every step he takes, but he’s as awestruck as a 7year-old getting his first autographe­d baseball card when meeting those who played the game before him.

An All-Star by 19, he’s now a three-time division winner and a married man at 24.

He also just so happens to be a walking contradict­ion to popular belief, which amuses him more than angers him, as he captivates the baseball world like no other.

This is a player opposing fans love to hate, but if only they actually knew he’s not merely the pre-

“Believe me, I’m having the time of my life,” Nationals superstar Bryce Harper says as he enters his sixth season. STEVE MITCHELL, USA TODAY SPORTS

cocious product of a hype machine but also one of the most engaging, charming and passionate players in the game.

“I seriously don’t think about what people are saying about me,” Harper tells USA TODAY Sports. “I just say whatever comes to mind. I mean, I really don’t sugarcoat anything. I don’t really try to be proper.

“You’re going to get what you see, and that’s always how I’ve been. But I sure don’t try to disrespect anybody or anything.”

People look at him and see that 24-year-old face, but if only they knew the old soul inside his youthful body.

“The biggest thing that bothers me with these young kids is that they don’t know the tradition of the game,” Harper says. “They don’t know Willie Mays, Jackie Robinson, Mickey Mantle, George Brett, Ken Griffey Jr. There are kids that don’t even know about Junior, and that’s absurd to me.”

Folks keep pondering Harper’s future when he’s eligible for free agency in two years, wondering whether he’ll become baseball’s first $400 million player or possibly command $540 million over 13 years, as the Nationals ownership fears. But if only they knew he’s looking no further ahead than to his next spring training at-bat.

“That’s still two years down the road, and we’ve still got, what, 324 more (regular-season) games to go,” Harper says. “It wouldn’t be fair to anybody in this clubhouse if I started worrying about free agency. If you worry about the future, that’s when you get yourself in trouble. You start thinking, ‘I got to do this, I got to do that.’ “I want to live for now.” The industry’s speculatio­n — assumption, really — is that his talent and personalit­y are made for the New York Yankees, who are preparing for the star-studded 2018 free agent class. His consistent response is about his love for Washington, D.C., and its history.

“It’s such a great place to play in such a monumental town,” Harper says. “They have so many incredible people that have come through the city. You drive down 395, and you see the Washington monuments, the Jefferson Memorial, and right down the road is the White House. “It’s just beautiful.” Even the Nationals want to believe that Harper beat himself up all winter after hitting .243 last season, on the heels of his 42homer National League MVP effort in 2015.

The man himself has a different perspectiv­e.

“To tell you the truth, when I got to the offseason, baseball was the last thing on my mind,” Har- per says. “I had a big-boy offseason, really. Buying a house. Moving into the house. Getting furniture. Designing the exterior. The interior. Planning a wedding.

“So baseball didn’t eat me up at all or anything like that. The only thing that mattered to me was my family.

“Besides, everybody says this and that about my year, but personally I thought I had a pretty good year. Not my best year, of course, but if that’s the worst year (24 homers, 86 RBI, 21 stolen bases and a .814 on-base plus slugging percentage) I’m ever going to have, I’ll take it. Why not?”

Despite all of his exposure from the time he graced Sports Il

lustrated’s cover at 16, Harper somehow remains the man the baseball world can’t quite figure out.

“He’s a throwback baseball player,” Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch says, “which is unique nowadays because of the attention that was given to him at 16 years old. You watch him prepare. You watch him compete in the box. He gives off a very unique throwback baseball vibe when you watch him play.”

There were times last year when Harper barely resembled the player from 2015, when his league-leading 1.109 OPS helped make him a unanimous MVP.

The Nationals say he played with a stiff neck, causing him to miss five consecutiv­e games at one point. There were reports of an ailing shoulder that restricted his swing. There was speculatio­n that Harper was never fully healthy the final few months of the season.

Harper remains purposely vague on the subject.

“I feel like everybody goes through aches and pains during the season,” Harper says. “You can’t make excuses. What’s the point? You’re still playing. That’s just part of the game. Part of sports. You just play through those. I feel I should be out there every day, playing hard for my team.

“I expect greatness out of myself, and the guys around me expect the same thing.”

Harper, of course, also expects a championsh­ip. The Nationals have won NL East titles every other year beginning with his 2012 debut. They won 95 games last season, tied for the second most in baseball. But the Nationals have never even won a playoff series, let alone a World Series. The last team in Washington to win a World Series were the Senators in 1924.

“I want to win it so bad, not just for the fans of D.C., but for the fans of Montreal as well,” Harper says. “That’s what people forget sometimes. It’s not just D.C., but the Expos organizati­on (which relocated to Washington after the 2004 season).

“People forget how good those teams were in Montreal. Look at all of the studs they drafted that came through the organizati­on. Randy Johnson. Cliff Lee. Delino DeShields. Marquis Grissom. It’s crazy to look back to see how good those teams were and what could have been.

“We’d love to win it for all of those people.”

And perhaps one day the Nationals could rise to the pre-eminent status of all of Harper’s favorite teams. He’s a Dallas Cowboys fan in football. A Los Angeles Lakers fan in basketball. A Duke fan in college basketball. He grew up a Yankees fan. And, now, of course, a fan of the Golden Knights, the expansion NHL team in his hometown of Las Vegas.

The man has a passion for greatness.

He idolizes Dave Winfield, the Hall of Fame baseball player who was drafted in three sports, and marvels at the exploits of twosport stars Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders, vowing to let his future kids play multiple sports.

He openly roots for his former childhood teammate, NL MVP Kris Bryant of the Chicago Cubs, like Harper a newlywed and now a close friend. His favorite player to watch is Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve, the AL leader in hits the last three seasons. He’s enthralled by the talent of young stars Corey Seager of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Mookie Betts of the Boston Red Sox.

And, yes, he has dreams, aspiring to have a career like two of his favorite players, Derek Jeter and Robinson Cano, who so happen to be former Yankees.

“I still remember I’m 19 years old, standing on second base, and there’s Jeter at short, Cano at second and Andy Pettitte on the mound. How awesome is that?” Harper says. “And then Jeter, who wasn’t just the captain of the Yankees, but the captain of baseball, walks over and talks to me.” The message was simple. “He told me, ‘Enjoy this, have fun,’ ” Harper says. “I’ll always remember that. I mean, if you don’t enjoy this, what’s the point of doing it?

“Believe me, I’m having the time of my life.”

If everyone can see that, perhaps only then will they understand him.

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 ?? JASEN VINLOVE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Nationals right fielder Bryce Harper, making a catch in Tuesday’s spring training game, was the National League MVP in 2015.
JASEN VINLOVE, USA TODAY SPORTS Nationals right fielder Bryce Harper, making a catch in Tuesday’s spring training game, was the National League MVP in 2015.

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