Los Angeles Times

Ready to start to put it all behind

Hill could be opening day starter, and after his last exit, wouldn’t that be something?

- BILL PLASCHKE

PHOENIX — Dave Roberts was asked about the most delicious of opening day scenarios, and he bit.

With Clayton Kershaw and Walker Buehler moving slowly through spring training for physical reasons, could Rich Hill be the opening day starter?

“It could be,” the Dodgers manager said Friday afternoon at Camelback Ranch. “Rich is in the mix. When you’re talking about Rich, yeah, it could be Rich.”

Wouldn’t that be, well, rich?

The guy whose departure from Game 4 of the World Series essentiall­y ended the 2018 season is the guy whose arrival will signify the start of the 2019 season?

The pitcher who is symbolic of the last straw of 2018 would throw out the first ball of 2019?

“It’s out of my control,” Hill said, his trademark quote accompanie­d by his trademark grin.

It figures that would be his philosophy, because in a Dodgers career that has extended through parts of three seasons, his three most memorable moments were out of his control.

In September 2016, he was pulled after throwing seven perfect innings against the Miami Marlins over worries of a potential blister on his left index

finger.

In Game 2 of the 2017 World Series, he was pulled after four strong innings against the Houston Astros and the Dodgers eventually lost the game.

Then came the hook of all hooks, in Game 4 of the 2018 World Series against the Boston Red Sox. You remember it. You booed until you were blue. This columnist ripped it in print. Even President Trump mocked it in a tweet.

With a runner on first, one out in the seventh inning and the Dodgers leading 4-0, Hill was pulled by Roberts despite allowing just one hit with seven strikeouts in 91 pitches.

The Red Sox offense was reborn.

The Dodgers’ bullpen collapsed.

The Red Sox scored three runs that inning on a home run by Mitch Moreland against reliever Ryan Madson, tied it one inning later on a Steve Pearce homer off Kenley Jansen, then scored five in the ninth to take an eventual 9-6 victory and an insurmount­able three-games-to-one series lead.

The next day, Boston clinched the World Series championsh­ip and, even though the Red Sox were clearly a better team, the blame for a second consecutiv­e October failure was placed on that seventh inning and squarely on the shoulders of … who exactly?

After Game 4, Roberts revealed that in the dugout before the start of the seventh, Hill told him, “Keep an eye on me … let’s go hitter to hitter and just keep an eye on me.”

Roberts said he was surprised to encounter such apparent doubt in such a big situation.

“I’ve never heard it,” Roberts said.

Then, when Roberts went to the mound, the manager said he was simply going to check on Hill’s strength and give him a pep talk, but Hill handed him the ball before he could get to the rubber and walked off.

By the time the late night ended, there were questions as to whether Roberts made the move because he thought Hill wanted to come out of the game.

A day later, Hill held an impromptu news conference in an attempt to squelch the growing questions.

“We need to change the narrative of this where it’s being insinuated that I wanted to come out of the game,” Hill told reporters. “Understand that when I said, ‘Keep an eye on me,’ I never said, ‘tired’ [or] ‘I wanted to come out of the game.’ I never want to come out of the game.”

Hill told reporters he was just reminding Roberts that he understood the situation and would self lessly do what was necessary.

“You’re thinking about the 25 guys and understand­ing that if things get haywire out there, and saying, ‘Hey, if there’s a better option coming out of the bullpen, I’m going to be on board with that because of the gravity of the situation,’ ” Hill said.

So what really happened? It will remain one of the biggest mysteries in Dodgers history because we’ll never really know the absolute truth, but the reality probably is found somewhere in the middle of the dueling perception­s.

If Hill wanted to keep pitching indefinite­ly, he probably should not have said anything in the dugout that even remotely implied otherwise.

Then again, if Roberts had done a better job of communicat­ing with Hill, he would not have taken the pitcher’s words so literally.

If Hill really wanted to stay in the game, once the mound visit occurred, he shouldn’t have handed the ball to Roberts, he should have waited for the manager to take it from him.

Then again, if Roberts really didn’t want to give Hill the impression he was coming out of the game, he should not have gone to the mound in the first place, because he rarely went to the mound that season for just pep talks.

It was essentiall­y a complete communicat­ions breakdown during the most tenuous moment of the season, one that could have been prevented by either party, one that will live with both forever.

Roberts acknowledg­ed this week that he was willing to own the responsibi­lity. As the man who has the ultimate control of who steps on the field during the game, it is indeed his burden to bear.

“Ultimately, if there is some kind of communicat­ion that isn’t conveyed, that’s my fault, and I’ll leave it at that,” he said. “I’ll take it. It’s OK.”

When told that Roberts was accepting responsibi­lity for the mess, Hill said he had moved beyond such discussion­s.

“We can all sit there and play Monday morning quarterbac­k and try to decipher what could have, should have, would have, but we’re in 2019,” Hill said. “To be perfectly honest with you, the past is over with; we move on into 2019.”

It will be an interestin­g year for Hill even without the controvers­ial backstory. At age 39, he could begin the season as the oldest pitcher in baseball. In the final year of his contract, he will be playing not only for a championsh­ip, but also to extend his career.

“It’s all relative to what you think age is,” Hill said. “I feel great; I don’t really know where there is a point of enough is enough. I feel like I can keep going for a while.”

The Dodgers will keep him going by pitching him the usual five innings for about 25 starts to keep him fresh for the playoffs. This has sometimes been criticized, but it’s helped prevent his chronic blisters and saved his arm. He has responded with a career playoff earned-run average of 3.04, including a World Series ERA of 1.80 in three Dodgers starts.

“These are the greatest years of Rich’s career, even if people gravitate toward those three games,” Roberts said, referring to those three early hooks. “Rich has pitched a lot for us, and I think I’ve managed him very well, in his best interest, and in the best interest of the Dodgers.”

It will be pretty cool if Roberts starts him in the March 28 opener against the Arizona Diamondbac­ks at Dodger Stadium, if only for the sound.

One can only imagine resounding cheers from Dodgers fans after the first pitch when they are struck by the delightful realizatio­n that Hill is still in the game.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? RICH HILL, when last we saw him, was being pulled by Dave Roberts in World Series Game 4.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times RICH HILL, when last we saw him, was being pulled by Dave Roberts in World Series Game 4.
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 ?? Morry Gash Associated Press ?? RICH HILL, throwing during a spring training workout Wednesday in Glendale, Ariz., could be the Dodgers’ opening day starter since Clayton Kershaw is considered unlikely to take the mound after a slow spring.
Morry Gash Associated Press RICH HILL, throwing during a spring training workout Wednesday in Glendale, Ariz., could be the Dodgers’ opening day starter since Clayton Kershaw is considered unlikely to take the mound after a slow spring.

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