USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Pham thankful to be alive after stabbing

- Bob Nightengal­e

PEORIA, Ariz. – Padres outfielder Tommy Pham said this week he is lucky to be alive after being stabbed in the back outside a San Diego strip club in October.

Pham, who said he is about 80% recovered, needed 200 stitches to close a deep wound.

“The doctor here basically told me that if I wasn’t so muscular, I might be dead or paralyzed,” Pham told reporters via Zoom. “So I’m lucky to even be able to play. I thought I wasn’t going to be able to play again.”

Pham, 32, was stabbed in the lower back during an altercatio­n in the club parking lot on Oct. 11. He has sued Pacers Showgirls Internatio­nal for suffering “catastroph­ic injuries, which have and will continue to cause him significant economic damage, including but not limited to his earning capacity as an elite profession­al baseball player,” according to the lawsuit.

The suit alleges that Pacers employees did not contact law enforcemen­t “or take any reasonable measures to mitigate” the dangers. The lawsuit also alleges that the Pacers should have been aware of the possibilit­y of potential violence because of past incidents with the club and taken measures to prevent it.

There have been no arrests made. Pham said the investigat­ion is ongoing and he can’t comment on it.

“I thought I wasn’t going to be able to play,” he said. “When I got the CT scan, the doctor said, I got great news for you: ‘You can play. It’s going to be a little bit of a recovery.’

“The way I look at it, my time wasn’t quite yet. So God kind of has other plans for me.”

Pham, after being on bed rest, said he flew to San Francisco every week for six weeks

ELAINE THOMPSON/AP

to receive shots to help inflammation.

He has been limited in the weight room but has been able to take batting practice most of the winter.

“I can’t squat a lot yet, or dead lift a lot because my back is not ready,” he said. “But you don’t have to squat and dead lift a lot to be a good baseball player.

“It’s only been about 4 1⁄2 months, and the timeline is normally a little longer. But from a straight rotational standpoint, my numbers are pretty high compared to everything else.”

Pham said the incident hasn’t necessaril­y changed his perspectiv­e in life, except for perhaps living life to its fullest. “I still look at everything about the same,” he said. “If anything, I probably would just spend more money and stop saving as much. Because if I died, I would feel like I had too much money in the bank and didn’t live enough.”

Pham, who was limited to 31 games last season because of a hand injury, hit .211 with three homers, 12 RBI and a .624 OPS. He is a free agent after the season and realizes he needs a comeback year to be rewarded on the free agent market.

“I feel I have the most to prove,” Pham said. “I know what I’m capable of bringing to the table with my speed and my athleticis­m. I know I’m being an above-average, elite player in the game.”

 ??  ?? Tommy Pham, a career .273 hitter with a .832 OPS over 577 games, said he is 80% recovered after being stabbed.
Tommy Pham, a career .273 hitter with a .832 OPS over 577 games, said he is 80% recovered after being stabbed.

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