Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Walk-off practice

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Bryce Harper pantomimed a swing, flipped his imaginary bat, pointed to where the home dugout would be and trotted around the bases while the 100 or so Washington fans surroundin­g the practice field roared.

Spring training is a time for practicing the little things. On Saturday in Nationals camp, that meant rehearsing walk-off home runs.

“It’s going to happen,” firstyear Manager Dave Martinez told the players. “One of you guys are going to hit a walk-off home run.”

Washington position players began their day with baserunnin­g drills on one of the Nationals back fields. Before heading to an adjacent field for batting practice, each position player had a chance to practice one game-winning trip around the bases.

“I tell them, just like everything else, we work really hard, I also want them to have fun,” Martinez said.

Some players took their swings, pretended to lay the bat on the plate, and casually made their way around the bases.

First base coach Tim Bogar extended his hand to its highest point, forcing 5-foot-9 minor league catcher Jhonatan Solano to sprint and leap to deliver a proper high-five.

And then their was veteran Howie Kendrick, who re-enacted the celebratio­n from his Aug. 13 grand slam that defeated San Francisco in 11 innings last season.

Kendrick released a primal scream as he headed toward first base, gave a leaping high-five to third base coach Bob Henley, and raced to the plate where he celebrated in a scrum with teammates.

“Howie was all in,” Martinez said. “I loved it.”

Recounting the hypothetic­al at-bat, Kendrick said he blasted an imaginary hanging breaking ball into the seats.

“It’s something fun,” Kendrick said afterward. “Kind of mind games, I guess.”

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