The Pittsburgh Pirates Pitcher who chose Baseball and Music
LOS ANGELES The options, whimsically proposed, were baseball star or rock star and while Steven Brault sorted through the proper way to reply while wearing a baseball uniform and drawing a baseball paycheck, his teammate, less encumbered by the optics, blurted, Rock star.
And, well, if it was out there anyway
Yeah, you have to be a rock star, right? the Pittsburgh Pirates left-hander said. You have to be a rock star. Are you kidding me? Being a baseball player, what I am now, is absolutely incredible. Being a star at the level of [Clayton] Kershaw or [Max] Scherzer, one of those guys, would be absolutely awesome. If youre a rock star, though, youre well known, youre traveling all around the world, getting to play all these places in front of all these people, thats more just letting your passion go. Baseball is showing a skill that has passion along with it. But music is just, Heres my passion.
So, yeah, I would go rock star.
He grew up in San Diego a baseball fan, a Padres fan, a Tony Gwynn fan, the kind of fan whose dad put him and his brother into an RV 11 years ago and drove them 2,800 miles to Cooperstown to witness Gwynns Hall of Fame induction.
So the baseball thing is real.
More: https://sports.yahoo.com/pittsburgh-pirates-pitcher-chose-baseball-music-150913166.html