DUNEDIN, Fla. – You look into Marcus Stroman’s brown eyes, see that powerful energy, feel his passion, and suddenly realize how deftly he can fit a lifetime worth of experiences into less than a one-year span.

Spend just a few moments with the 24-year-old and you understand his zeal to become baseball’s finest pitcher is only a starting point, that trying to narrowly define the heavily-tattoed, bleach-blond African American Toronto Blue Jay is almost as futile as pinning him down for just a few moments in a whirlwind winter.

Stroman, all 5 feet 8 inches of him, was told his entire life that he was too short to reach the major leagues. Too small to handle the rigors of pitching nine innings. Or that his intelligence would somehow subvert his drive and hunger to star for the Blue Jays.

Today, Stroman is the future of baseball, the brightest and most irrepressible star of a new generation determined to push the boundaries of a sport that quietly roots for that to occur, the best to stay relevant to its young fans.

Spring training begins next week for most clubs, the natural marker for players to ramp up their baseball activities and ramp down everything else.

Stroman, a businessman, rapper, designer, and graduate of one of the most prestigious universities, never ramps down, or so it seems.

It’s all part of a grander plan for perhaps baseball’s most mesmerizing and charismatic player.

“I’m just getting started,’’ Stroman told USA TODAY Sports during a two-hour lunch last week. “I want to be the best in the game. I want to be the best off the field. I want to create a brand. I want to create a company.

“I have visions that are beyond baseball. I want to be multidimensional. I don’t ever want to be known as just a baseball player. That’s a reason why I got my education.

“I want to able to branch into brand marketing, branch into the business world, and branch into the fashion world. I want a lane in everything.’’

These days, it’s more like his own eight-lane, cross-continental interstate.

He has a patent in two countries on his designer logo: HDMH (Height Doesn’t Measure Heart). He’s a darling on social media (@MStrooo6), with nearly a half-million followers across his Twitter and Instagram accounts.

He jetted to L.A. for some face time in rapper Mike Stud’s music video, These Days, and dropped a few bars on a remix of the song. Last month, he joined his former Duke teammate on stage at a Tampa tour stop, rocking the mic in front of an overflow crowd.

Breaking stereotypes. #HDMH

A photo posted by Marcus Stroman (@mstrooo6) on Jan 28, 2016 at 9:10am PST

“I was so nervous,’’ said Stroman, who encouraged Stud to enter the music world when they wrote lyrics on their MacBook Pro in college. “People say, ‘Aw, but you can pitch in front of 50,000 fans.’ But it’s different when you grab the mic. It’s like a completely different feeling.’’

He went to Las Vegas in December, meeting several of his teammates, for the Conor McGregor-Jose Aldo fight. Traveled to Miami for a charity golf tournament. Then off to Toronto for the Blue Jays’ winter caravan. Trekked through a January blizzard to accept an award at the New York baseball writers’ dinner.

And broke down during his speech with his family sitting in front of him.


UP NEXT

03

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman is already a rising star on the mound, he now looks to conquer other fields.
USA TODAY Sports