Stephen Strasburg era begins for Washington Nationals (一)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/15/AR2010021503133.html
By Dave Sheinin
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
VIERA, FLA. -- And so it begins, the Stephen Strasburg era. It begins -- the
hype, the hope, the scrutiny. It begins like this: Monday morning, five days
before the Washington Nationals' pitchers and catchers are to report for
spring training, on a back field at the team's minor league complex. A couple
dozen players are gathered for an informal pre-camp workout.
And then Strasburg, 21, steps onto a bullpen mound -- dressed minimally in a
white Billabong T-shirt, gray athletic shorts and black Nike spikes, no socks
-- and signals to his catcher that a fastball is coming. As it leaves his
right hand, humming and hell-bent, his new teammates are divided into two
categories: those who are sneaking glances at the phenom, and those who are
outright gawking.
"I'm just curious. I've never seen him throw before," said third baseman Ryan
Zimmerman, a glancer. "It's exciting. There's just a different kind of buzz
here this year."
A few hundred yards down Stadium Way, in the home clubhouse at Space Coast
Stadium, equipment manager Mike Wallace and his lieutenants are unpacking
boxes and hanging up uniforms. Strasburg's name is on an end-of-row locker in
the middle of the room. His uniform number, 37, has lived an itinerant,
undistinguished life for this franchise, having previously graced the backs
of coaches Dave Huppert (2005) and Pat Listach (2009) and pitchers Travis
Hughes (2006), Mike Bacsik (2007) and Levale Speigner (2008).
It is here that Strasburg's professional baseball career will begin, and here
where his transition from youth to adulthood, with all its blessings and
responsibilities, becomes complete.
"It's a fun ride," Strasburg said Monday morning before his first bullpen
session of the spring. "This is just another part of the journey."
In the past six months, that journey has seen Strasburg sign his name to the
largest contract (four years, $15.1 million) ever given to a drafted player,
dazzle scouts in the developmental Arizona Fall League, take in marriage the
hand of his college sweetheart and leave San Diego to live somewhere else for
the first time in his life. When his plane touched down in Orlando Thursday,
home was suddenly 3,000 miles away and life was changed forever.
"I don't know how to explain it, but he's just totally at peace with where
everything is in his life," said Erik Castro, Strasburg's former teammate at
San Diego State and the best man at his wedding. "He knows he has a lot of
blessings in his life, so he's ready to go. This is what he lives for."
* * *
Kathy Swett cried, just a little, at the wedding of her only child. It
happened just as her Stephen took the hand of the former Rachelle Lackey,
before several hundred friends and family members at a winery outside San
Diego, and recited his vows.
"And then," she said, "I reminded myself there was nothing to cry about
because I was actually getting a daughter I never had. And I couldn't have
asked for anyone better. I'm a very typical, protective mother. Nobody was
ever going to be good enough for my son. But she's great."
It was Jan. 9. The groom wore a black tux with a plain black tie. The bride
wore white, the bridesmaids purple.
The next day, per his Nationals contract, Strasburg received the second of
three $2.5 million installments from his $7.5 million signing bonus.
Stephen and Rachelle had met at "State," as he calls his alma mater. Of her,
he says: "We're great together, and we're really excited to start our new
life together. I need her by my side as much as she needs me."
They honeymooned in Hawaii, on the island of Kauai, and Stephen had his
baseball glove in his carry-on luggage. Every other day, he would drive to
Kauai High School to throw a bullpen session. The catcher, Lanan Rice-Kashima
-- "Put his name in there; he'll get a kick out of that," Strasburg said --
was a 5-foot-9, 165-pound high school ballplayer whose services had been
lined up in advance by Strasburg's agents.
At the first session, it was just Stephen and Lanan. But as word spread
around the island, more and more people showed up to watch the pitcher with
the 100-mph fastball, a kid who has been described as the best pitching
prospect of all time. By the last session, there were dozens of spectators,
many of them asking for autographs, a few inviting the newlyweds over for
dinner.
When they flew home at the end of the trip, Strasburg's mother picked them up
at the airport.
"The first thought that went through my mind," Kathy Swett said, "was that he
looked awesome."
* * *
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