USA TODAY US Edition

Bob Nightengal­e Team USA not ready to go home just yet

Group has jelled in World Baseball Classic

- Bob Nightengal­e bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Don’t take this the wrong way, Team USA says, but they don’t want to go home.

They cringe at the thought of flying to Florida and Arizona and rejoining their real teams for the final week of spring training.

Most of them were strangers when brought together two weeks ago, but they’ve since gotten so close that no one wants this World Baseball Classic to end.

Team USA plays Japan at 9 p.m. (ET) Tuesday, and if it wins will play the WBC championsh­ip game Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium.

And on Thursday morning, at the latest, they will go their separate ways.

“I can’t believe I have a 162-

“What we built here will go beyond these couple of weeks and, hopefully, beyond baseball.”

game season coming up,” U.S. third baseman Nolan Arenado of the Colorado Rockies told USA TODAY Sports. “I feel like this has been my season with the boys. It’s been so much fun.

“I feel like I’ve been with these guys for years, and it’s been what, six games? Six games! It’s crazy thinking about that, but when it’s life or death every game, you really get close to them. It’s been awesome.”

They gathered together on March 6 in Fort Myers, Fla., traveled across the state to Miami, flew to San Diego, bused three hours up to Los Angeles, and here they are for the final hurrah.

They not only have won, reaching the WBC semifinals for only the second time in the event’s four editions, but built close-knit friendship­s and a unique camaraderi­e they’ll carry throughout their baseball careers — perhaps even after baseball.

“In a tournament this intimate,” U.S. center fielder Adam Jones says, “you get a good sense of the guys around you because we’re going into battle with each other. I look at it like the military. You go into it not knowing who is to your right and to your left, but you figure out very quickly.

“The team that’s been assembled, it’s just a cohesive unit. Everybody wants to be there for the next person. It’s not like an ‘I, I, I.’ Everything that’s been spoken in that clubhouse has been ‘we,’ and you see the sacrifice the individual­s are making for the greater good of this team.”

Most have played on different teams in the All-Star Game. They have been to award banquets together. And they play against one another during the season. Yet there’s nothing like this. “It’s an All- Star Game on wheels,” USA left fielder Andrew McCutchen says. “It’s cool to play with these guys for more than a couple of days. You definitely develop some good relationsh­ips.”

These two weeks together have

Daniel Murphy, Nationals second baseman

altered some preconceiv­ed opinions that some of the players had toward one another, in some cases dramatical­ly changing their viewpoint.

“Jonathan Lucroy is completely different than I thought he was,” San Francisco Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford says of the Texas Rangers catcher. “On the field, he’s so serious. He doesn’t really talk a whole lot or say anything to anybody. But he’s funny, he’s sarcastic, everything. He’s so much different than I thought he was.

“You get to learn a lot about guys when you’re sharing buses, airplanes, clubhouses, and being together every day like we have been.”

First baseman Eric Hosmer of the Kansas City Royals has been riding to the ballpark each day with Paul Goldschmid­t of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and Christian Yelich of the Miami Marlins, getting closer to each of them.

Yet of all the players Hosmer barely knew upon his arrival, no one has altered his viewpoint more than pitcher Marcus Stroman of the Toronto Blue Jays.

“We played against them in the playoffs, and I’ve seen him off the field,” Hosmer says, “but I really didn’t know much of him. Now, seeing how he prepares, seeing his mentality on the mound, it’s something special to see, man.

“There’s just no fear in his game. I have a completely new perspectiv­e of him.”

The most difficult aspect of their newfound kinship, starter Tanner Roark of the Washington Nationals says, is that they’ll soon be competitor­s facing one another in a few weeks. He would love to get closer to All- Star outfielder­s Giancarlo Stanton and Yelich of the Marlins, but when his team is facing them 19 times a season, it creates a bit of awkwardnes­s.

“You can’t get too close, at least with the hitters,” Roark said. “You still have to have that competitiv­e edge against all of these guys.

“I mean, I’ll talk to them, but I don’t go deep into their psyche, just because for me, it’s a mental game out there.

“And Yelich and Stanton are great guys, too, dang it!”

By the weekend, they’ll be back in their different major league camps. Little wonder they joked about petitionin­g Commission­er Rob Manfred to see if they can form their own team for the regular season.

“It would be a fun team to play with all year because we have so many great guys in here,” Philadelph­ia Phillies reliever Pat Neshek says. “It might cost a little money, but it would be so much fun.”

In the meantime, players are franticall­y exchanging phone numbers before they depart. They’re taking pictures. Yes, even autographs, with noted collector Neshek proud to say he has amassed more than anyone else.

When they all go their separate ways and the season starts, they plan to keep in touch.

They will text one another. Maybe an occasional phone call. And for a few, a close-knit bond will endure.

Daniel Murphy of the Nationals, Goldschmid­t and Buster Posey of the Giants have made plans to create an email thread where they will exchange Bible verses each week.

“It’s really cool to have a setting for guys to come together like we have,” Murphy says. “We’ve had some great conversati­ons about our faith and Jesus and what he’s done for us.

“What we built here will go beyond these couple of weeks and, hopefully, beyond baseball.”

And, if they happen to win the World Baseball Classic, it could be the celebratio­n of a lifetime, achieving a feat that will forever stay with them, accomplish­ing what no U.S. team has before.

“There’s something about the American flag that seems to pull it all together,” said Hall of Famer Joe Torre, who put together the team.

“It’s a unique situation that creates an unselfishn­ess. You have All-Star Games and things like that, but when you’re playing for your country, it’s different.

“And it’s a good different.”

 ?? ORLANDO RAMIREZ, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? U.S. outfielder Adam Jones heads home after hitting a homer against Puerto Rico.
ORLANDO RAMIREZ, USA TODAY SPORTS U.S. outfielder Adam Jones heads home after hitting a homer against Puerto Rico.
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LOGAN BOWLES, USA TODAY SPORTS

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