Cole Hamels at the top of the world

February 15, 2009|By Frank Fitzpatrick, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • Cole Hamels and his wife, Heidi, can see his "office," Citizens Bank Park, from their new penthouse at Two Liberty Place, about a mile and a half away.
  • Cole Hamels and his wife, Heidi, can see his "office," Citizens Bank Park, from their new penthouse at Two Liberty Place, about a mile and a half away.
  • Cole Hamels bought a penthouse at Two Liberty Place in the off-season. Stephen Calandrino, sales rep there, samples the view.
  • Outside and inside at Razzel's, a bar in Clearwater, Fla., where Hamels broke his pitching handin a 2005 brawl. The Phils were so mad they disinvited him to spring training. "I got kicked out. But . . . that's what baseball is all about. You take certain experiences and you try to learn."
  • This is the closet in the master bedroom of Hamels' new penthouse. Such lofty heights seemed unlikely four years ago when Hamels broke his pitching hand in a bar fight.
  • Cole Hamels appears to be remarkably at ease with a celebrity that has been enhanced by his 2008 World Series performance.

CLEARWATER, Fla. - Legendary Sports Illustrated photographer Walter Iooss Jr., had cluttered a Bright House Field concourse with wires, lights and equipment as he prepared for Cole Hamels' noon Friday cover shoot.

Iosss understood that most athletes would rather don tutus than pose. Typically, they show up late and beg off early. Making them wait invariably produced photographic poison. So he and his two assistants would be ready no matter how tardy the Phillies pitcher might be.

At 11:45 a.m., 15 minutes early, Hamels, wearing a crisp white uniform, the blond streaks in his hair glistening in the midday Florida sun, arrived. The eager smile on his face was as wide as Iooss' eyes.

"I've shot maybe 300 athletes [for covers]," Iosss said later. "And three have shown up early. Marion Jones, I can't remember the other one, and now Hamels."

As he prepares rigorously for a season as the world champions' ace, Hamels has at last fulfilled his "Hollywood" nickname. The transformation of nerdy-voiced Colbert Richard Hamels into cool Cole Hamels is complete.

The San Diego-area native appears remarkably at ease with a growing celebrity status, one that was enhanced by his starring role in the Phillies' 2008 world championship.

He said he was increasingly comfortable signing autographs, mingling with fans, "working those facial muscles," as he calls it. When he talks with reporters he is glib and frank, though the words sometimes pour forth so rapidly that his brain can't always accommodate the pace. In the fall, for example, he called the rival Mets "choke artists" on a New York City sports-talk radio station.

"I didn't even know what I was saying," Hamels said. "I thought I was just answering a question. Sometimes it's really hard. But I'm glad it happened. It kind of keeps me aware. Every time I make a mistake, I correct myself. I try to live by being honest, but I don't want it really to affect who I am. Playing baseball, you've got to put all your effort on the field. But all the off-the-field stuff is just kind of irrelevant."

 

Relaxed, cooperative

Irrelevant perhaps, but certainly nothing to be ignored. Even posing for the double-whammy of a Sports Illustrated cover on Friday the 13th, he was relaxed and cooperative.

"I don't mind things like this, the celebrity stuff," said Hamels, who endured the 45-minute shoot obediently, patiently, even gladly. "I guess I was always a little photogenic, so that makes it easier."

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