Larry Walkeras an Expo |
Larry Walker is going into the Baseball hall of fame wearing a Rockies cap. Based on the resumé alone, it’s a decision that
should have been easy. Walker’s 1997 MVP season took place in Colorado,
as did all three batting titles and all but one of his five all-star
nods.
The choice seemed obvious
enough and yet it wasn’t. The Expos were the team that gave Walker his
first opportunity in 1984, and Montreal is where he spent the first six
years of his career. He knows what the organization meant to the city,
and more important he’s aware of what his accomplishments meant to an
entire country.
Walker has never been
the kind of guy to turn his back on any of that. He proudly represented
Canada as a player, and he remains involved as a coach with the
national team program. Perhaps that’s one reason why, even as Walker
stated the obvious that he would become the first Rockies player to
enter the hall, the native of Maple Ridge, B.C. seemed slightly
conflicted.
“It’s a hard decision, being a Canadian, but I feel with all the
at-bats, games played in Colorado, the years spent there, it really
seems like the right decision and we all agreed on that,” said Walker,
who finished his career with the Cardinals. “All three teams will be on
that plaque represented and I’m honoured that I got to put all three of
those uniforms on.”
Walker always represented the best of
what Canada had to offer on the world stage. He was an elite talent
without a hint of ego. Funny, self-deprecating, humble and grateful for
his opportunities. A laid-back personality without any noticeable signs
of insecurity. The type of guy we all aspired to be if fame suddenly
struck.
His
first passion, like so many people in this country, was hockey. Walker
dreamt of becoming an NHL goaltender, but the desire began to wane in
his teens. He turned to baseball almost on a whim, first through
Baseball Canada and later a deal with the Expos. When Walker’s
minor-league career began in 1985, he still didn’t even have a firm
grasp of all the sport’s rules.
In a
sign of just how gifted an athlete Walker was, it didn’t take him long
to figure things out. By age 23, Walker was the Expos’ starting right
fielder. At 25, Walker was an all-star. He would go on to play 17
seasons while batting .313 with 383 home runs and 1,311 RBIs. He’s one of only 19 hitters in history with a
plus-.300 average, .400 on-base percentage and .500 slugging percentage
across 5,000 or more plate appearances.
“You’re
born in Canada, you come into the world with a hockey stick and skates
on and that’s what you do,” Walker told reporters in New York on
Wednesday afternoon. “Baseball was something I never really did. I
played more softball than I did baseball growing up, until I was 16 and
got an opportunity with Team Canada and got scouted by (Montreal’s) Jim
Fanning and Bob Rodgers. The minor leagues are what I used to figure out
how to do the game and how to play it.”
Larry as Rockie |
Walker did these things at a time when
Canada was known for hockey and little else. There were moments of
Olympic glory, but within the professional sporting community the
country’s impact was almost inconsequential. Steve Nash had yet to
emerge. Two high-profile athletes — boxer Lennox Lewis and tennis player
Greg Rusedski — abandoned the country in favour of the British flag.
Tennis stars Denis Shapovalov and Bianca Andreescu weren’t even born.
Prior
to Walker’s stardom, Canada’s non-hockey athletes had been relegated to
bit roles. In basketball, it was Bill Wennington, Mike Smrek, Leo
Rautins and Rick Fox. Baseball had a Hall of Famer in Ferguson Jenkins,
but for kids growing up in the late 1980s and early 1990s he was more
folklore than a source of real pride. Instead, part-timers such as Rob
Ducey and Doug Frobel were the ones left carrying the flag.
For those who weren’t interested in becoming the next Wayne Gretzky,
Walker offered an alternative. Someone they could look up to. Talk to
any Canadian who broke into the majors during the early 2000s and they
typically credit two things for their passion of the sport: Walker and
the Blue Jays’ back-to-back World Series titles in 1992-93. His impact
was that big.
Larry Walker, Canadian, eh |
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