Chattanooga Times Free Press

Harper gets World Series moment while Trout’s wait continues

- BY DAVID BRANDT

Bryce Harper’s career arc from teenage sensation to fullblown superstar has been an 11-year process, hitting a crescendo Sunday night when his two-run homer in Game 5 of the NL Championsh­ip Series proved to be the deciding hit that sent his Philadelph­ia Phillies to their first World Series since 2009.

One of the game’s biggest stars is finally on the game’s biggest stage.

Meanwhile, Mike Trout’s wait continues.

Their careers have been linked since they were teenagers, when Sports Illustrate­d touted Harper as “Baseball’s Chosen One” and Trout began drawing Mickey Mantle comparison­s. They had nearly impossible expectatio­ns heaped on them before even entering a big league lineup, billed as the game’s next superstars.

Somehow, Harper and Trout have pretty much been as good as advertised.

They’re mature ballplayer­s now, both in their early 30s and each on a Hall of Fame trajectory. Harper is one of the game’s most feared sluggers. Trout patrols center field for the Los Angeles Angels, MLB’s best allaround player for most of the last decade.

Trout has largely dominated the debate about which player has been better. But Harper has at least one item missing from Trout’s resume — a signature October moment. Thanks to his homer Sunday, the Phillies travel to face the Astros in Game 1 of the World Series on Friday.

“This game is ‘What have you done for me lately?’” Harper said when discussing the Phillies journey this season. “That’s how it’s always been.”

Purely by the numbers, Trout has an edge in most categories.

He’s a three-time AL MVP while Harper has been named NL MVP twice. Trout has made 10 All-Star teams while Harper has been on seven.

If sabermetri­cs are your thing, baseball-reference.com says Trout has been worth 82.4 Wins Above Replacemen­t (WAR) over his 12 seasons. Harper has 42.5 WAR over 11 seasons.

Or if you prefer dollars: Harper set a North American pro sports record with his $330 million, 13-year free-agent deal with the Phillies in 2019 — then immediatel­y and unsuccessf­ully tried to recruit Trout to join him in Philadelph­ia.

Trout instead extended his deal in Los Angeles for $360 million and 10 more years, surpassing Harper’s record total.

It’s hard to blame Trout for the Angels’ woes, but Harper’s recent run magnifies how little team success and postseason baseball Trout has seen. Even in a year where 40% of MLB teams made the postseason, the Angels were done after the regular season, finishing with a disappoint­ing 73-89 record.

It’s been a confoundin­g several years for the Angels, who have paired Trout with several superstars throughout his career. Currently, Shohei Ohtani is the game’s best two-way player since Babe Ruth.

“We’ve got two of the greatest players ever to put on uniforms, but we need more,” Angels GM Perry Minasian said recently. “It’s not a 2-on-2 game. If it was, I would love our chances.”

Trout has played in the postseason just once, in 2014. The Angels were swept by the Royals in the AL Division Series and Trout was 1 for 12 at the plate, though his one hit was a homer.

In retrospect, it was a prophetic stretch of games earlier this season back in June, when Harper’s Phillies swept Trout and the Angels in a three-game series. It was the start of Philadelph­ia’s rise that culminated in their unlikely trip to the World Series.

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