Tag: Bryce Harper

MLB All-Star Game 2012: Does Bryce Harper Deserve to Make the NL Squad?

Voting for the 2012 All-Star Game at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City is under way, with the first results being released this past Tuesday.

One name missing from the ballot is Bryce Harper‘s, and many are probably wondering the same thing I am—does he deserve to partake in the weekend’s events?

Let’s just take a look at his numbers.

Nothing really jumps out at you when you look at Harper’s stat line—maybe his four triples surprised you, but that stat alone won’t be enough for him to make the squad.

He’s been solid all around in his rookie season. With six home runs, 17 RBI and a line of .288/.367/.532, he has put himself in the running for the NL Rookie of the Year award.

For me, the most impressive stat I see on Harper’s line is his .367 OBP. For a 19-year-old playing in the majors, that’s very impressive.

Again, that won’t help him to make the All-Star team, though.

At this point, it seems as if the only way that Harper will participate in the All-Star festivities is if fans write him in. That’s not exactly a bad situation, as there’s no doubt that most fans would love to see Harper in the game.

Major League Baseball would greatly benefit from having Harper in Kansas City for the game. They could very easily market his personality, and the fact that he’s in the game could even draw more fans to the contest.

Harper has already done great things for the game of baseball, which will likely be enough (in the fans’ eyes) to warrant an All-Star nod.

Whether or not his achievements within the game of baseball are enough remains to be seen.

In the end, I see Harper making the team as a write-in.

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Bryce Harper Has Historic Night, Stephen Strasburg Ks 13 in Nats’ Rout of Sox

Stephen Strasburg allowed the Boston Red Sox to put two runs on the board in the second inning to take an early lead over the Washington Nationals on Friday night at Fenway Park.

Bryce Harper wasted no time taking part in the rally in the next half-inning that allowed the Nationals to take a 3-2 lead, a lead that they would never give back.

After a Danny Espinosa walk, Harper doubled to set up Ryan Zimmerman with runners on second and third. Zimmerman delivered with a single that plated Espinosa. Harper and Zimmerman would later score on an Ian Desmond double, giving the Nats the 3-2 lead.

In the next inning, Harper did it again when he smashed a two-run home run to right-center field, next to the 420-foot marker. It was an historic home run, as Harper became only the fourth visiting teenager to ever hit a home run at Fenway Park, joining Hall of Famers Robin Yount, Mickey Mantle and Al Kaline. 

Harper also finished the night with three hits, joining only Ken Griffey, Jr., and Kaline as the only visiting teenagers to have three hits at Fenway in the last 72 years, according to ESPN.com.

The closest the Red Sox came to getting back in the game was in the sixth inning. Strasburg started the inning with another strikeout but then allowed Dustin Pedroia and Adrian Gonzalez to reach base with hits. David Ortiz then walked to load the bases. That is when Strasburg showed everyone why he is one the best pitchers in baseball.

Strasburg mowed down Jarrod Saltalamacchia and then got Kevin Youkilis on a borderline pitch to end the inning. He froze Youkilis and it led to Youkilis being ejected.

That was all for Strasburg on the night, and when everything settled his final line read 13 strikeouts in six innings. He allowed four hits and two earned runs while throwing a career-high 119 pitches.

The Nationals went into Fenway Park, won 7-4 and showed why they are one of the best teams in baseball. Strasburg’s dominance and Harper’s explosive bat can lead them a long way this season.

Furthermore, the win proved that they are able to contend with any team, whether a National League foe or a talented AL East team.

Strasburg is now 7-1 with a 2.41 ERA, while Harper raised his batting average to .288 with his three hits in five at-bats. 

 

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Why the Nationals Should Lock Up Strasburg, Harper to Long-Term Deals NOW

Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper are the future of the Washington Nationals

Strasburg will be the ace of a formidable starting rotation for years to come, and Bryce Harper will anchor the outfield and the lineup with his five-tool talent. The future is in good hands. 

Here are seven reasons why the Washington Nationals need to quickly sign both players to long-term contracts to ensure the successful future of the franchise.

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Playing Rough in Modern Baseball: Beanballs, Collisions and Charging the Mound

Playing Rough

Something you hear a lot about from fans is the lack of an “old-school” mentality in the modern game of baseball.

While many of the proponents of the so-called “old-school” are too young to know anything about it, there is some truth to the idea that the game was more hard-nosed in days gone by. Whether this is a good or bad thing is open to debate (that’s what we’re here for, after all). With injury concerns and millions of dollars at stake, with careers and long-term health on the line, we have seen less and less of the violent action that, in our sepia-toned memories, once punctuated the game with much greater frequency.

Collisions at Home Plate

Recently, the focal point of these debates has been collisions at home plate.

Talented young catcher Buster Posey broke his leg blocking the plate and missed all but a few weeks of the 2011 season after a Rookie-of-the-Year season in 2010. Perhaps more famously, in the 1970 All-Star game, Pete Rose ran over catcher Ray Fosse, causing Fosse to suffer a separated shoulder, which many fans attribute to the decline of Fosse’s career. In fairness, Fosse played 42 more games that season and hit .297, and the collision with Rose was just one of many injuries Fosse suffered through the years.

The question here is was it worth it?

Fosse has been quoted many times saying it’s “part of the game”, and Rose maintains he was just trying to win. The problem here is that this was an exhibition game, with nothing on the line. In general, the catcher can possibly try for a sweep tag or even attempt to catch the runner further up the line. The runner isn’t always forced to hit the catcher; he can opt instead to slide around him or go for the plate with his hands.

While I don’t believe collisions are a thing of the past, I do think players on either side will be less likely to hit each other going forward because of the possibility of injury. Nobody will tell them explicitly not to do it, but the unwritten rules of baseball are legion.

My view: sometimes the team needs that run, or needs to prevent that run, more than anything. If it is going to give them the best chance at the result they want, then a collision is going to happen. These decisions are made in split seconds. So unless it’s unnecessarily aggressive, then it’s just part of the game.

Charging the Mound

Here’s something you rarely see, and likely with good reason.

While a pitcher can easily enrage a batter by hitting him or brushing him back one time too many, it’s probably not a great idea to rush at him from the batter’s box. If the batter is holding onto the bat and threatens the pitcher, he is looking at a suspension or even the possibility of criminal charges.

If the batter is a little bit smarter than that and drops the bat first, he just made the mistake of approaching a guy standing on raised ground who is, in all likelihood, quite a large man. Pitchers are big, often bigger than many sluggers. They have eight other guys on the field ready to back them up, including one wearing protective gear located right behind the batter.

Still, this is such a rarity that I only included it in this article so I could show the picture of Nolan Ryan beating up Robin Ventura. Ryan, already an old man and not long from retirement, famously got the upper hand when a young Robin Ventura came steaming towards the mount. Ryan was ready for him, and he grabbed Ventura in a headlock (a side headlock for you wrestling fans) and pounded his fist into his head until other players intervened. Do a Google Image Search for Robin Ventura, and you will see this in the first five pictures.

My view: if you’re stupid enough to do it, then go ahead. Fun for everybody!

Playing Dirty

There are countless examples or ‘dirty’ plays in every major sport that are nevertheless a part of the game. Then there are some things that just don’t jive well with most fans or players. I think the two most extreme examples of these types of behaviors are throwing at a batter and spiking the baseman.

Firstly, spiking the baseman.

You’re going from first to second on a sharp grounder off the bat of your teammate, and you see the second baseman running to cover the bag. The game is tied with one out in the seventh and the pitcher is tiring; you need to break up this double play. So you slide right at the second baseman, hoping to cause him to throw wide.

Breaking up the double play is always the right choice, but the line is drawn when you decide to stick your front foot up a bit and aim for the legs.

This is a dangerous and mean-spirited play and if obvious enough would result in an ejection. This wasn’t always the case, though.Ty Cobb, one of the greatest of his time – all-time leader in batting average, second all-time in hits, and all-time leader in being a psychotic bastard – was infamous for sharpening his spikes and aiming them at the defenders’ vulnerable legs. Cobb, being the demon in human form that he was, did this even on the most routine plays. While this was met with scorn and criticism even in his day, in Cobb’s mind every play was the most important one of the game.

Throwing at a batter; this is what prompted this whole article.

More specifically, Cole Hamels hitting Bryce Harper is what prompted this article.

Pitchers have hit batters for over a hundred years, and they’ll keep on doing it. While it’s dangerous and often a prelude to run-scoring retribution, I can’t say it doesn’t have its place in the game. It’s the situation it takes place in that makes all the difference.

Hall of Famer Don Drysdale was infamous for hitting batters, and quite hated for it, but it was a part of his strategy (which he put down to not wanting to waste four pitches on an intentional walk when he could throw one and plunk him).

On the flip side, you have the recent plunking of super-prospect and media magnet Bryce Harper by popular-only-in-Philadelphia Cole Hamels, who claims he hit Harper to “teach him a lesson”. While most pitchers will agree that sometimes throwing at a guy is acceptable, this is an example where it’s just a scummy thing to do.

Nowadays hitting a batter is taken pretty seriously by umpires, and hitting a guy who had never faced him before in the first inning of a scoreless game is a stupid move for a pitcher. Since it was both unprovoked and obviously on purpose, Hamels could have easily been ejected.

Where would that leave his team?

Now you’re asking another starter to pitch on the wrong day. Or you’re asking the bullpen, which hadn’t even begun to think about warming up, to patch together nine innings and screw up the next few games because all your relievers’ arms are tired.

For that matter, what lesson was Hamels teaching Harper, except one about Hamels’ obvious jealousy of Harper’s new-found fame?

Being a rookie isn’t a punishable offense, nor should it be (although Harper got the last laugh, stealing home on a pickoff attempt after Hamels put him on base by hitting him). One further point on Hamels and Harper; Bryce Harper is a National League pitcher, and one thing that is rarely tolerated in baseball is unprovoked throwing at a pitcher. Pitchers don’t throw at each other sometimes out of respect, but generally because it’s considered a high crime in the baseball world to do it. So when Cole Hamels was a rookie in Philly, who threw at him?

My view: Situational. Pitchers shouldn’t throw at a guy for nothing, or because they can’t get a guy out, or any other cowardly, selfish reason. However, there are times it’s justified. I cheered when Shaun Estes threw at Roger Clemens (although he didn’t hit him). I crossed my fingers during his every at-bat that Barry Bonds would take one in the head. Even though this isn’t something that should be common, in retaliation for an unjust plunking or as part of a rough game between rival teams, it has its place. That will never change.

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Bryce Harper Injury: Updates on Nationals’ RF After Receiving Stitches for Wound

Washington Nationals rookie right fielder Bryce Harper had an Amar’e Stoudemire moment in last night’s game against the Cincinnati Reds. While showing his frustrations over a sub-par night, he inadvertently slapped himself in the head with his own bat.

Fortunately for him and the Nationals, he wasn’t seriously hurt, and according to Adam Kilgore of The Washington Post, Harper is in the lineup tonight.

 

 

OK, everyone, he’s alright, it’s cool to laugh now.

Harper was 0-for-5 for the game; after his fourth at-bat he smashed his war club against the clubhouse wall, it rebounded and smacked him on the noggin, right above his left eye.

It opened up a cut that required 10 stitches to close, but doctors have given him the OK to play.

Here are a few of the images posted by Dan Steinberg and The Washington Post:

Harper didn’t do anything crazy or unforgivable. Frustrated athletes, and specifically baseball players, have smashed their bats over strikeouts and double plays in the past. It just so happened Harper’s bat hit back, and caught the teen sensation in the dome.

He is only 19 years old, but with such high expectations, he is putting a ton of pressure on himself.

Harper confirmed this notion after last night’s game. He said this to Kilgore:

“I just got caught up in the moment,” Harper said. “I want to do so well. It just got me.”

At some point he’ll relax, and realize he doesn’t have to do it all every night and in every at-bat. His talent is undeniable, he just needs to be patient.

Things aren’t going to come as easy for him on this level as they have at every other level of baseball.

As he found out last night, even the clubhouse walls are tougher in the major leagues.

 

Follow Brian Mazique and Franchiseplay.net for reactions, analysis and news from the world of sports and sports video games.

 

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Bryce Harper: Nationals Phenom Must Learn to Control His Emotions Immediately

Baseball is a sport where you’re considered a success if you fail 70 percent of the time, so it’s understandable that emotions will run high at times. It’s important to keep them in check, though, and that’s something that Washington Nationals phenom Bryce Harper needs to learn quickly.

According to Amanda Comak of the Washington Times, Harper needed 10 stitches last night after slamming his bat into a wall in the dugout only to have it come back and hit him above his left eye. Harper had a rough night, as he went 0-for-5 and struck out three times, but the 19-year-old has to realize that bad games are going to happen once in a while.

He had been playing quite well since being called up two weeks ago and the Nationals have continued to roll, but Harper simply lost his cool. Washington beat the Cincinnati Reds quite easily by a score of 7-3 despite Harper’s poor game. However, it’s no surprise that Harper’s tantrum has been the biggest talking point.

“I just got caught up in the moment,” Harper said, “blood still staining the hair on the back of his head after he spent much of the seventh and eighth innings wiping it off his face.

“I want to do so well. It just got me.”

While it’s nice to see that Harper has a passion for the game and deeply cares about being the best player that he can possibly be, he also needs to act like a professional. Perhaps those antics were tolerated when he was dominating the competition in high school, college and the minor leagues, but now that he’s in the majors with the big boys, he has to carry himself better.

Emotions get the best of players from time to time, but for Harper to get this worked up after only being in the big leagues for two weeks, it has to throw up some red flags about his temper. There have been plenty of great players with short fuses over the years. Former Cincinnati Reds and New York Yankees outfielder Paul O’Neill comes to mind, but even he was careful about how he expressed himself.

Had Harper just hit the wall with the bat and not injured himself, then nobody would have given it a second thought. The fact that he was so reckless that he hurt himself is an issue, though. The Nationals already have a lot of money invested in Harper and had he suffered a concussion or some other debilitating injury, it would have been awful for him and the organization.

Although manager Davey Johnson said that he thought Harper would miss a couple games due to the mishap, Harper contradicted that thought, according to Comak.

“I think I’m good,” he said, adding that he never felt woozy or dazed and didn’t undergo a concussion test. “[The] doctor said I could play, so I’m going to play.”

If Harper’s assessment is accurate, then he dodged a bullet. Harper is still just a kid, so it’s easy to understand why he may not have the best judgment, but when it comes to playing in the majors, it’s important to mature quickly. Whether he knows it or not, Harper is already the face of the franchise along with Stephen Strasburg, and he can’t go bloodying it up by making poor decisions.

Harper looks like he has all the tools to be one of the best in the game, but there are going to be plenty more 0-for-5 nights along the way. Hopefully, next time he refrains from throwing a tantrum altogether, or at the very least does it a lot more carefully.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Washington Nationals: Bryce Harper, the Birth of a Legend

Few prospects have been hyped for as long or as hard as the NationalsBryce Harper.  When third baseman Ryan Zimmerman was put on the 15-day disabled list it heralded the call-up heard ’round the baseball world: Harper’s debut.

The throng of reporters and circus-like media frenzy that surround the 19-year-old phenom seems oddly justified.  Bryce Harper looks like the real deal—a legend in the making.  

Of course, all professional ballplayers are special.  They have beat long odds and have risen above scores of other young men for the opportunity to come to the show.  Every name on every clubhouse locker, and each spot on every manager’s lineup card is, in fact, the fulfillment of a lifelong dream.

But Harper represents something that is even more rare: He is a once-in-a-generation talent.  A player destined for All-Star teams and Gold Gloves, for MVP awards and someday Cooperstown.  It sounds like a hyperbole for a boy that has just begun a career, but deep down it feels like the truth.

Of one thing I am truly certain: Bryce Harper will sell tickets.  Seats will be filled, jerseys will be bought and kids everywhere will start smearing thick eye-black on their faces.  The marketing of young Harper has already begun, and that is a train that will only gain speed.

“Why Harper?” You might ask yourself.

Here’s why:  He’s a five tool player, although I believe he is even more than that. The tools, for those that don’t know the list are: batting average, power, speed, throwing and defense.  

Anyone who saw his 300-foot throw from left field in the seventh inning of Tuesday night’s game knows that his strength and accuracy are, well, other-worldly.  As Dan Steinberg wrote in the Washington Post, “The dude can do things that other people just can’t do.”  

His first hit in the majors was a laser-beam double that went over the head of Matt Kemp in Dodger Stadium.  As Harper sped around first base he knocked off his batting helmet, a calculated bit of theater from a player who will be a true showman of the sport.  Bryce Harper was born to be in the spotlight.

He was recently caught playing softball with a group of strangers in the shadow of the Washington Monument. This is the stuff that a publicist’s dreams are made of.

But Harper is earning the hype on the field.  He’s making tumbling barehanded three-fingered grabs, as well as key hits.  Nationals manager Davey Johnson says of Harper: “The beauty of him is that he hits the ball hard to all fields…He hits the ball where the pitch is thrown.”  

Some critics and insiders are saying that young Harper needs to “complete his development” in the minor leagues.  I doubt Harper is going down, it doesn’t make sense.  He is too compelling to watch, a talent that has far outgrown the minor leagues.  

When you watch Bryce Harper you see someone play the game the way it is meant to be played, the way the best little league coaches taught it.  He catches with both hands, he runs hard, he keeps the hustle and drives the ball.  He loves baseball, and when you distill everything else down—the business, the contracts, the hype and the money—it is really about loving baseball.

Harper doesn’t read anything about himself in the press, he doesn’t need to.  He focuses on his game, and he remembers that baseball is a humbling sport.  Nationals GM Mike Rizzo said, “This guy is performing admirably in the big leagues.  We feel that he’s got a chance to really impact the ballclub.”

The legend of Bryce Harper has begun, and it will be fun to watch.  I have a signed baseball from Harper sitting on a bookshelf in my den.  Beneath his signature he has scribbled the citation of his favorite Bible scripture: Luke 1:37.  It states, “For nothing will be impossible with God.”  

I believe that Bryce Harper will be showing all of us that the great game of baseball is about to get just a little bit greater.

See you at the ballpark.

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Washington Nationals, Bryce Harper Rally in 8th, Win in 11th

Just when you thought the Washington Nationals might lose a one-run game at home, they come from behind again to win against the Philadelphia Phillies.

Stephen Strasburg looked good on Friday night, but was the victim of the ball jumping out of Nationals Park. Hunter Pence and Carlos Ruiz connected for surprisingly long home runs. When they landed, they accounted for a total of three runs.

Strasburg had not allowed a home run since August 15, 2010.

Strasburg only allowed one other hit in his six innings of work and struck out four.

That Nats bullpen was lights-out on Friday. Five relievers combined for five innings of three hit balls. They also struck out six batters, with Henry Rodriguez and Tyler Clippard striking out two apiece.

Bryce Harper was hitless on Friday, but still had a big impact on the game. He went 0-for-3 but walked three times and was a part of the rally in the 11th inning.

Steve Lombardozzi singled with two outs in the 11th inning and was followed by Harper getting on base with a walk and Jayson Werth following with a walk.

Wilson Ramos singled on a one-two pitch scoring Lombardozzi and sending the 34,377 fans in attendance home happy.

Ryan Perry was credited with the win and Michael Schwimer took the loss in this one.

The Nats have scored 86 runs this season and 42 of them have been scored in the seventh inning or later.

They improve to an amazing 8-0 in one-run games at home this season. Overall, they are 11-3 at Nationals Park.

Washington (17-9) remains on top of the NL East and will look to create more distance with the Phillies on Saturday and Sunday.

Gio Gonzalez (2-1, 1.82 ERA) will take on the Phillies’ Vance Worley (2-1, 1.97 ERA) on Saturday at 1:05 p.m. ET.

The Nats and Phillies are in prime time on Sunday night when Jordan Zimmermann (1-2, 1.89 ERA) opposes Cole Hamels (3-1, 2.78 ERA) at 8 p.m. ET.

 

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Matt Kemp, Bryce Harper and the Beauty of Major League Baseball

I hate Matt Kemp.

As a diehard San Francisco Giants fan, I’m contractually obligated to hate the best player on the Los Angeles Dodgers and that is, most definitely, Kemp. Right now, the 27-year-old is the best player in Major League Baseball and the competition ain’t particularly close. So, with all due respect to Clayton Kershaw, Kemp is the finest specimen the Bums have to offer and has been for several years now.

For most of those years, it was easy to despise Rihanna’s ex.

But as the man said, no good thing lasts forever.

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Mike Trout: How Does Angels’ Top Prospect Stack Up to Bryce Harper?

The future of baseball has arrived.

With the Saturday debuts of highly touted prospects Bryce Harper and Mike Trout, both the American League and National League are entering a new era.

Obviously it’s tough to put such lofty expectations on 19- and 20-year-old kids, but these are legitimately two of the best prospects in the last decade.

Both are also charged with somewhat daunting tasks in 2012. Harper must keep the upstart Washington Nationals rolling, while Trout needs to provide a spark for the Anaheim Angels, who have limped out of the gate.

With their immense talent level, both are capable of pulling off the feats. But how do the two wonder boys stack up against each other? Let’s examine.

 

Hitting

The two bring different things to the plate, as Harper is a strong power hitter, while Trout torches pitchers by consistently knocking base hits.

This season, Harper has struggled a little in Triple-A, hitting just .250 with a home run and 3 RBI in 20 games. Last year, however, he was dominant in Single- and Double-A, cranking 17 homers and driving in 58 runs while hitting .297 in 109 games. 

So far this year, Trout has lived up to all the expectations. In 20 Triple-A games, he has hit .403 with one home run and 13 RBI.

 

Fielding

Harper has had to make plenty of adjustments in the field the last few years. After playing catcher his entire career, he’s played all three outfield positions since joining the Nationals organization.

Trout, meanwhile, is a pure outfielder. He should have no trouble making the transition from the minors to the pros, at least as far as fielding is concerned.

 

Intangibles

Both guys are very confident, a trait you love to see from a young prospect.

Torii Hunter recently bestowed some major praise upon Trout, touting his heart and fearless nature.

Harper is also well known for his unflappable demeanor. His mental toughness is very advanced for his age, and he practically oozes confidence at the plate. He was also on the cover of Sports Illustrated as a 16-year-old, so I doubt he will ever be phased by the spotlight. 

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