Bayou Brothers: Scalise, Richmond bridge opposite ends of Congressional Baseball Game spectrum

Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., (36) and Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., right, react with members of the Republican team after the Congressional baseball game, Thursday, June 15, 2017, in Washington. The annual GOP-Democrats baseball game raises money for charity. The democrats won 11-2. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., (36) and Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., right, react with members of the Republican team after the Congressional baseball game, Thursday, June 15, 2017, in Washington. The annual GOP-Democrats baseball game raises money for charity. The Democrats won 11-2. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Rep. Steve Scalise, who is still using a crutch to move around, takes grounders at Republican practice the week before this year's game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)
Rep. Steve Scalise, who is still using a crutch to move around, takes grounders at Republican practice the week before this year’s game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)
Fellow Louisianan Rep. Cedric Richmond remains the most important player in the Congressional Baseball Game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)
Fellow Louisianian Rep. Cedric Richmond remains the most important player in the Congressional Baseball Game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)
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Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., (36) and Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., right, react with members of the Republican team after the Congressional baseball game, Thursday, June 15, 2017, in Washington. The annual GOP-Democrats baseball game raises money for charity. The democrats won 11-2. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Rep. Steve Scalise, who is still using a crutch to move around, takes grounders at Republican practice the week before this year's game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)
Fellow Louisianan Rep. Cedric Richmond remains the most important player in the Congressional Baseball Game. (WTOP/Noah Frank)

The 2018 Congressional Baseball Game, which begins at 7 p.m. Thursday, June 14, will be broadcast live on 1500 AM, televised on C-SPAN, and streamed on Facebook Live.

WASHINGTON — Even before news leaked out Wednesday that Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana, — the Majority Whip who was shot and nearly killed the day before last year’s Congressional Baseball Game — would be starting at second base Thursday night, his story was already going to be the dominant one of the game.

When the decision was made to go ahead with last year’s game, just 36 hours after Scalise, lobbyist Matt Mika, staffer Zachary Barth, and United States Capitol Police Officers David Bailey and Crystal Griner were shot, Scalise was still very much in critical condition. But his fellow Louisianian, from a neighboring Congressional district, but deeply entrenched on the other side of the aisle, was taking the ball for the other side.

“We were still worried about Steve and whether he would pull through,” Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-Louisiana, who visited Scalise in the hospital on gameday, told WTOP. “The one thing I know about Steve is that he wouldn’t have wanted me to take it easy on those guys, and he surely wouldn’t have wanted those guys to win without him.”

Because that’s the thing about this game — for all that feel-good framing, once the pregame festivities are complete, it’s Richmond’s job to tune it all out, go out there and shove.

“Oh no, we don’t come together,” said Richmond. “There’s absolutely no intention of coming together for this baseball game. We’ve established good friendships with people on the other side, but when it comes to this game, both sides want to win, and it is very important to win.”

As the starting pitcher for the Democrats, Richmond has guided them to six victories in the seven years he’s taken the mound. A former college pitcher at Morehouse, he is the most important player in determining the outcome of any Congressional Baseball Game in which he plays. While he earned the win last year, allowing two runs over a seven-inning complete game, he also led the charge afterward to hand the trophy over to the Republicans, to put in Scalise’s hospital room.

Meanwhile, the degree to which Scalise will truly be able to participate is still in question. At practice last week, he was using a crutch to get to and from his position at second base, still moving with a heavy limp. While he could field a ground ball hit directly at him, his physical recovery is still very much a work in progress, his name on the lineup card still more of a symbolic sign of recovery than a true indication of his physical state.

“It feels incredible just to be back out here,” Scalise told WTOP. “This is something I love doing. And obviously with what happened last year, I couldn’t make the game. I wondered if I’d even be able to walk again. To be able to be back out here — obviously I’m not as mobile as I used to be, but I might still be one of the faster guys on the team.”

But playing is more than just a personal milestone for Scalise in his recovery. Yes, the game raises a lot of money for charity, more than $1.5 million last year alone, and any additional attention can only help that figure continue to grow. But in an increasingly divided Washington, with the heightened awareness brought by last year’s shooting, it offers a unique chance to find some shared humanity between sides.

“It also gives us a real opportunity to show the country that for all the differences we have, which are real up here in Washington, that the two parties can come together, at least for one night,” said Scalise. “And hopefully that builds something longer-lasting.”

Because as different as Scalise’s and Richmond’s politics might be, they’re still two baseball-loving guys from Louisiana.

“It shows what I call that Louisiana resilience, that New Orleans resilience. We get knocked down an awful lot, but we always get back up,” said Richmond.

“Seeing him back tomorrow in a uniform, and on the field, just shows the triumph and strength of America when we put our mind to something.”

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