The Next NaturalHAGERSTOWN, Maryland - On the day Bryce Harper walked into the eye doctor’s office, he was, he would say later, “blind as a bat.”
Keith Smithson, the Washington Nationals’ team optometrist, asked Harper to read an eye chart, then looked at him with astonishment and said, according to Harper: “I don’t know how you ever hit before. You have some of the worst eyes I’ve ever seen.”
That was on April 19.
The next night, fitted with a new pair of contact lenses, Harper, batting just .231 at the time for the low-Class A Hagerstown Suns of the South Atlantic League, had a double and a single against the visiting Hickory Crawdads.
The next night, he homered. And the night after that, he singled, doubled, homered and drove in six runs.
“It was like I was seeing in HD,” Harper says a month later.
Suffice it to say Harper’s hi-def vision is a huge upgrade over standard-def. In the 30 games after his visit to the eye doctor, Harper hit nearly .500 (52 for 112) with a .560 on-base percentage and an .893 slugging percentage — with seven homers, 14 doubles and 27 RBIs.
For the season, through games of May 20, he is hitting .358/.439/.642, leading the league in all three “slash-line” categories.Oh, and lest you forgot, he’s only 18 years old, the youngest player in the “Sally” League. His next closest pursuer in OPS (on-base plus slugging), first baseman Matt Curry of the West Virginia Power, is almost 23.
Harper’s classmates at Las Vegas High — the ones he left behind after sophomore year to pass his GED tests with flying colours and enrol in a junior college in order to speed up his draft eligibility — are preparing for their senior prom.
Harper’s offensive rampage, which included a 19-game hitting streak, raises two important questions:
How did he become the top amateur player in the nation in 2010 — and the No. 1 overall draft pick, taken by the Washington Nationals — as well as arguably the greatest hitting prospect in Major League Baseball draft history, when he was “blind as a bat” prior to his being fitted with contacts?
And secondly, what in the world is he still doing here in Hagerstown?
To the first question, Harper merely shrugs and says, “I don’t know,” apparently being too modest to tell the truth, which is: That’s just how good he was.
“I needed the contacts in college,” he says. “I tried them for a while in high school, and they gave me headaches really bad. So I just got by without them. But these are a new kind of lenses, and they really help. The difference in vision is huge.”
The second question — why is Harper still in Hagerstown — is a bit more complicated. A promotion to high-Class A Potomac is almost certainly coming, just not soon enough to satisfy the legions of Nationals fans who want to see him promoted (ideally to Washington) today, if not yesterday.
“We haven’t had any discussions about moving him at all,” says Doug Harris, the Nationals’ farm director. “I know everyone wants to speculate about that. But he’s with a good group of teammates. He’s learning. Going through a league a second or third time — that’s a good challenge for a player.”
The one thing the team has confirmed is that Harper will not, under any circumstances, play in the big leagues this season.
Pressed about Harper’s offensive numbers — and whether they might suggest he isn’t being challenged by Sally League pitching — Harris said: “I think there’s more to it than just statistics in this instance. He’s making great strides in all phases of the game. Offence is just one component of the game, especially in the big leagues.”
Indeed, when you watch Harper play — as opposed to simply reading box scores or following his at-bats online — it becomes apparent he is still raw and prone to forehead-smacking mistakes on defence and on the basepaths.
Over the course of two games earlier this month, Harper made a series of outstanding catches in right field (he is also seeing extensive action in centre field), but also airmailed a throw to the plate that sailed into the netting behind the plate, about 15 feet above the ground.
He also tried to throw behind a runner making a turn at first base following a single, even though the first baseman was about 20 feet from the bag.
The basepaths provide another setting for adventure. Last week, after singling to left field, Harper saw the left fielder bobble the ball momentarily and took off for second, only to be thrown out by 20 feet. It wasn’t the first time this season that Harper has been guilty of playing “Little League” baseball on the basepaths — defined as running until someone tags you out.
“The hardest thing for Harper is realizing all these other players are better than what he’s played against before,” says Hagerstown Manager Brian Daubach.
“And some of the risks he could take on the bases before don’t work here, and arecertainly not going to work at higher levels. By no means do we want to take away his aggressiveness. It’s much easier to reel someone in than to try to get a passive player to be that aggressive. He’ll learn.”
And one day, the rest of us will learn just how good he can be.
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