USA TODAY US Edition

Strickland regrets his brawl with Harper

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Bob Nightengal­e

SAN FRANCISCO – It was the brawl that ended one career, a violent collision that prevented injury to one of the game’s biggest stars, sparing another a colossal suspension and leaving one filled with remorse.

It was one year ago on Tuesday that Giants closer Hunter Strickland threw a 98 mph fastball into Nationals AllStar right fielder Bryce Harper’s right hip.

It ignited a Memorial Day brawl that left Giants outfielder Michael Morse with a concussion that ended not only his season but his career; a punch that Giants starter Jeff Samardzija got so close to throwing at Harper’s face but never got off; and a perplexing scene in which Giants All-Star catcher Buster Posey knew what was coming and simply watched.

“It’s a shame my last game had to be so ironic,” Morse, 36, told USA TODAY, “but it’s not something I sit around and dwell on. It happened; what are you going to do?”

Morse, who was planning to retire after the 2016 season until talking to general manager Bobby Evans at Giants outfielder Hunter Pence’s wedding, wasn’t sure how long he was going to be able to stick around anyways. He was hitting .194 with one home run

and three RBI in 24 games, and the Giants were on their way to a 67-95 season.

“The way I figure it, I was playing with house money,” Morse says. “I wasn’t really planning on playing last year. So it was my last hurrah. Maybe the concussion thing was God’s way of saying, ‘It’s time to take it to the house, man. You have no business being here.’ ”

Morse, recently hired to be a parttime analyst on the Nationals’ pregame and postgame telecasts, no longer seeks treatment for his post-concussion symptoms. Yet when he gets a headache, they are much more severe than at any time before the concussion.

Samardzija, who was on his way to inflict punishment on Harper before Morse got in his way, never went on the DL. Still, he felt the remnants of the collision, involving two 6-5 men weighing a combined 470 pounds.

“Morse was a mess after that. It’s a shame that’s how it ended for him,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “Samardzija felt it, too. This spring, he had neck things going on after that happened. Two big men colliding like that, and they were running pretty good.”

Strickland, who was seeking revenge from the 2014 National League Division Series in which Harper hit two homers off him, staring at the pitcher after the last one, wasn’t injured but was suspended for six games by Major League Baseball compared with Harper’s fourgame suspension. The only real injury was the blow to Strickland’s reputation, leaving him with lingering regret.

“You hear things like I ended his career,” he said, “so sure, obviously, I feel bad for Mike. You never know how things would have played out, but that was the end of his career. That was a mistake I made personally, and a decision I made, but you’ve just got to move forward and forget about it. You deal with the consequenc­es.”

The premeditat­ed decision to hit Harper even threatened to divide the Giants clubhouse. Strickland told his teammates that if he ever got a chance to face Harper again, he would deliberate­ly hit him. And if Harper charged the mound, Strickland pleaded with Posey and others not to stop him. He wanted a piece of Harper himself.

Posey felt uncomforta­ble watching Harper charge the mound. He stood off to the side, provoking debate throughout baseball whether he should have tried to stop Harper.

One year later, if Strickland had to do it all over again, he says he wouldn’t retaliate.

“When I saw Strickland, that’s the first thing he said to me,” said Giants special adviser Dusty Baker, who was managing the Nationals at the time. “He told me he was sorry it happened. I said, ‘You do what you want to do, but you have to suffer the consequenc­es.’

“When you start a brawl like that, you don’t come out to dance. You come out to fight. And that’s what happened. It’s just a shame (Morse) got hurt, never getting over that concussion.”

Harper, a five-time All-Star and 2015 MVP who leads the NL with 16 homers, vividly remembers the day a year later. He remembers charging toward Strickland, firing his helmet toward him and the punches that were thrown. But most of all, the look in Samardzija’s eyes as he raced toward him, only for Morse to step in front of him, acting as peacemaker.

“I texted Mikey Mo afterwards and said, ‘Thank you for getting in front of me,’ ” Harper said. “I don’t know what would have happened, but just the way Samardzija came out there, he saw blood for sure. I really haven’t kept in contact with him much after that, but I’ll always remember what he did for me.”

Morse might have saved Samardzija, too. One Giants coach is convinced that if Morse hadn’t rushed in to protect Harper, his former Nationals teammate in 2012, “he would have broken his jaw. There’s no question in my mind.”

If Harper, one of the game’s greatest stars, was sidelined with a major injury caused by a brawl, guess who might have received the mother of all suspension­s?

“It might have been the best thing that happened to me,” Samardzija says. “I might have been suspended for years if I hurt that kid, the prodigal son.”

Would he have hurt him? “Maybe in a parallel universe, we would know what happened there,” he says, “but the one we currently live in, it didn’t happen. So we will never know.

“It was a crazy time. It wasn’t that I was mad. My buddy was just in a fight. To me, it’s as simple as that. If guys are going out there and pushing and shoving, you can kind of play patron. But when punches are thrown, it’s no longer in a baseball setting anymore. It’s time to go out there and protect your guys.

“I don’t think I was going to hit him. I was just going to kind of footballpl­ow him in a way. I think. I guess we’ll never really know.”

Samardzija keeps in regular contact with Morse, a 13-year veteran. They share stories about their young kids. Morse, who lives in Fort Lauderdale and owns a boat, regales Samardzija with his latest fishing ventures off the Florida coast and the Bahamas.

And, yes, they talk about May 29, 2017, the last day Morse would wear a baseball uniform.

“We talk about it a lot, me and him,” Samardzija says. “You don’t want to see anybody get hurt, especially to your own guy. I hated that it happened, because he’s a guy that’s so great to be around. But that’s the crazy thing about sports, right? You can’t control everything. It happens, man. At least we can joke about it now. It’ll probably be funnier down the road.”

Morse, who won a World Series title in San Francisco and will forever be remembered for his tying pinch-hit homer in Game 5 of the 2014 NL Championsh­ip Series against the Cardinals, insists there are no hard feelings. Baseball treated him too well — he grossed about $35 million in salary and won a World Series ring — to be angry at anyone.

“Really, I’m fine with everything,” Morse says, “and physically I’m good. I’m more sensitive to a couple of things since the concussion, like when I get a headache, I really get a headache. But besides that, I’m fine.

“I’ve got no regrets, man. None. Come on, how could I?”

 ?? KELLEY L COX/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Giants and Nationals players try to break up the fight between the Giants’ Hunter Strickland, left, and the Nationals’ Bryce Harper on May 29, 2017, in San Francisco.
KELLEY L COX/USA TODAY SPORTS Giants and Nationals players try to break up the fight between the Giants’ Hunter Strickland, left, and the Nationals’ Bryce Harper on May 29, 2017, in San Francisco.
 ?? Columnist USA TODAY ??
Columnist USA TODAY
 ?? JOHN RIEGER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Last year’s Memorial Day brawl left Giants outfielder Michael Morse with a concussion that ended his career.
JOHN RIEGER/USA TODAY SPORTS Last year’s Memorial Day brawl left Giants outfielder Michael Morse with a concussion that ended his career.

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