USA TODAY US Edition

Major League salaries

Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw leads with $33 million.

- Jorge L. Ortiz @jorgelorti­z USA TODAY Sports

Opening day

The full-fledged opening of the baseball season evokes a similar excitement to the start of a long-distance race, where the competitor­s know they’re in for an endurance test but still can’t wait to get going.

Monday’s opening day presents a number of intriguing story lines that could set the initial tone for the six months to come. Among them: Back with a flourish: Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw was well on his way to a fourth Cy Young Award — with an 11-2 record and 1.79 ERA through June 26 — when a back injury sidelined him for 2½ months. Kershaw was equally sharp upon his return but wound up with just 21 starts, the fewest since his rookie season of 2008.

Now he’s back in full health as the leader of a club that has claimed the last four NL West crowns but has failed to reach the World Series in nearly three decades.

As was the case last season, Kershaw and the Dodgers will get started by facing the hapless San Diego Padres, though this time at Dodger Stadium. Last year, some 120 miles south, he yielded one hit over seven innings in a 15-0 win. That outing improved Kershaw’s record to 4-0 with a 0.93 ERA in six openingday starts, with 44 strikeouts and just six walks in 381⁄ innings. In other 3 words, he’s ready to dominate from the get-go. McCutchen’s switch: Andrew McCutchen has played no other defensive position than center field in his eight major league seasons, all of them with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Monday he makes his debut as a right fielder in … Fenway Park?

Yes, the need for at least one interleagu­e game every day, due to having 15 teams in each league, brings about the hardly traditiona­l matchup of the Pirates and Boston Red Sox on Day 1. That means McCutchen will have to be mindful of the Pesky Pole corner and the short fence in right field — Torii Hunter can tell him how easy it is to flip over into the bullpen — but at least the Green Monster will be Gregory Polanco’s concern.

Polanco will switch outfield corners, going from right to left as part of an alignment that sends twotime Gold Glove winner Starling Marte to center.

McCutchen, the 2013 MVP and the face of the Pirates for years, has made it clear he’s not crazy about the move but will not fight it. National attention: President Trump won’t be bringing his hardball style to Nationals Park — the Washington Nationals said he turned down a chance to throw out the ceremonial first pitch — but the local club has a pretty hard thrower in store nonetheles­s in Stephen Strasburg.

The eternally tantalizin­g right-hander will be taking the ball for the inaugural against the Miami Marlins because Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer is still recovering from a broken finger, but Strasburg has plenty of experience and star power of his own.

Strasburg, who forsook free agency to sign a seven- year, $175 million extension in May, will be making his fourth opening-day start in the last six years and registered a 2.25 ERA in the previous three. He is coming off a 15-4 season but missed most of the last month and the playoffs with an injury and has pitched more than 185 innings just once.

The Marlins will be wearing a patch with the No. 16 in memory of star pitcher Jose Fernandez, killed in a boating accident in September. “The guy coming in after Vin”: Those are the words used by Joe Davis, who understand­ably eschews the term “replacing ” when describing his duties as the Dodgers’ new lead TV play-by-play announcer after the retirement of legendary Vin Scully after last season.

Davis, 29, was not even a year old when Los Angeles made its last World Series appearance in 1988.

The change could be jarring for a fan base that adored silky-smooth Scully, but at least Davis’ voice won’t be entirely new. He called 52 road games last season as the club groomed him for the full-time post.

Big man in town: In an offseason that saw several big-name free agents resign with their clubs — such as Yoenis Cespedes, Kenley Jansen and Jose Bautista — slugger Edwin Encarnacio­n was an exception, leaving the Toronto Blue Jays after eight years to sign a three-year, $60 million deal with the Cleveland Indians.

Monday marks his debut with the defending American League champions in a clash of the 2016 division winner against the host Texas Rangers.

 ??  ?? JOE CAMPOREALE, USA TODAY SPORTS
JOE CAMPOREALE, USA TODAY SPORTS

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