Hurdle enjoying every minute on big stage
Colorado skipper is mix of media-savvy point man, story teller, life coach
![]() | Colorado manager Clint Hurdle leads the Rockies into their first World Series appearance in franchise history against the Boston Red Sox. |
Ray Stubblebine / Reuters |
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The newly initiated to Hurdle-speak have learned that a clutch performer ‘has a slow heartbeat’, and a pitcher who can get out of jams, ‘works well in traffic’.
Hurdle, intelligent enough to have been offered an Ivy League scholarship a few years before we first saw him as a Sports Illustrated cover boy phenom, also openly has discussed the ups and downs of a life in baseball, and the mixed blessings of raising a 5-year-old daughter born with a rare genetic defect, Prader-Willi Syndrome.
And even on the eve of World Series Game 1 — set for Wednesday night at Fenway Park — Hurdle took the time to explain to those who didn’t already know the touching significance of why he writes the number ‘64’ on each game’s lineup card — in memory of Kyle Blakeman, a teenage football player who died of cancer in August, shortly after a couple of hospital visits from Hurdle and his wife.
Yes, Hurdle is front-and-center again — the lead voice for a team on a historic roll. Which if you’ve been around the Rockies long enough, you get the happy irony here.
You see, that’s the way it used to be around this long-downtrodden franchise. The rebuilding program that coincided with Hurdle’s ascension from hitting instructor to manager in late-April 2002 came complete with growing pains. The Rockies sunk in the standings, and attendance at once always-sold-out Coors Field dwindled as a result.
And as the consecutive losing-seasons streak grew to six in 2006, so did criticism of the organization starting at the top and working down — and even worse, apathy. But you could always count on Hurdle to put a positive spin on the proceedings, to be a human shield of positivism and patience protecting his bosses and players alike.
Then all of a sudden, this Rockies team grew up around him this season — Matt Holliday turned into an MVP candidate, Jeff Francis morphed into a legitimate ace, Troy Tulowitzki burst onto the scene as the next coming of Derek Jeter — and Hurdle quietly moved to the background. When the Rockies got good, Hurdle went low-profile.
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“I think Clint has changed quite a bit,’’ Holliday said during the National League Championship Series. “When I was a first, or second-year player, we had a lot of first, and second-year players. But as we’ve gotten older, and we have a bit more experience, he’s let us go out and play, and just kind of set back and made the moves he needs to make. I think he has done a great job of transforming.’’
And now here Hurdle is again, media-savvy point man, story teller and life coach — and enjoying every minute of it with his team on the biggest stage of all. Asked about the progression of then-to-now, Hurdle needed paragraphs to capture his emotions:
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“It’s one of those things I hold near and dear to my heart,’’ he said. “I really believe we’re prepared for the future through our past. I really believe if we listen and we watch, we can learn. Patience has become a very important tool for me, and it’s not one that’s easily learned.
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“Also, the importance of keeping humility in your back pocket -- one of the best things I was ever told as a young player that I never understood until I was an older player. There are two kinds of people who play this game – those who are humble and those who are about to be. At the age of 18, I laughed, ‘yeah, that’s cute’. Well, by the age of 38, I was wearing it.
“This is something that has a lot of meaning to me -- the fact that it has become something that has become very, very special, that has given our organization value, that has brought joy to a lot of different people on many different levels.’’
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