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Bryce Harper, in introductory news conference, says wants to be with Phillies ‘through the ups and downs’

"I want to be part of this family, this Phillie Nation and, like I said, the bumps and the bruises, the good and the bad, I want to be here," he said during an elaborate news conference fit for the biggest contract in baseball history.

Bryce Harper donned the red pinstripes for the first time on Saturday.
Bryce Harper donned the red pinstripes for the first time on Saturday.Read moreYONG KIM / Staff Photographer

CLEARWATER, Fla. -- Bryce Harper stood atop the third-base dugout Saturday afternoon, reached his arms through the sleeves of a Phillies jersey, and tugged the brim of his red hat.

This felt like the moment an entire city had longed to see for months. Bryce Harper, after choosing to play in Philadelphia, was wearing a Phillies uniform. It was finally official.

And if Harper has his way, those will be the colors he wears for the rest of his career. Harper’s mega-deal does not include a clause to allow him to opt-out and become a free agent. His 13-year, $330 million contract will keep him in Philadelphia until he is 39 years old.

Harper said he began his anticipated free agency with one simple request of his agent, Scott Boras. He did not want an opt-out.

“I wanted to be able to dig my roots somewhere, and that was through the good and through the bad, through the ups and downs of a team and an organization,” Harper said. “I want to be part of this organization. I don’t want to go anywhere else. I want to be part of this family, this Phillie Nation and, like I said, the bumps and the bruises, the good and the bad, I want to be here.”

“I want to be on Broad Street on a frickin’ boat or whatever -- a thing, a bus, whatever it is -- and have a trophy over my head and do that. Because that’s what it’s all about.”

» READ MORE: Harper jerseys hit store shelves at Citizens Bank Park

Harper made it clear Saturday that he wants to win in Philadelphia. He also made it possible in his contract for the team to keep trying to win, too. Harper’s deal is the richest in the history of American team sports and it was the finishing touch on an offseason that saw the Phillies add roughly $440 million in player salary.

But the contract was creatively constructed to not limit the Phillies in future offseasons. By extending the deal to 13 seasons, Harper’s average-annual value lowered to $25.38 million, the figure calculated each year toward baseball’s competitive-balance tax. Harper’s salary is not enough to handcuff the Phillies from being busy again. And Boras said Harper wants to recruit players to the Phillies.

“I’m making 26 million a year, something like that, so I think that’s going to be able to bring some other guys in as well to be able to help this organization win,” Harper said. “I know there’s another guy in about two years that comes off the books. We’ll see what happens with him.”

» MIKE SIELSKI: Bryce Harper is the modern-day version of Dr. J

» WATCH: See playback of Bryce Harper’s introductory news conference

The guy who “comes off the books” sure sounded like a reference to Mike Trout, the Eagles season-ticket holder who spends his summers as the best player in baseball. If the Angels fail to sign Trout to an extension and he hits free agency after the 2020 season, the Phillies will put on a full-court press in an effort to become baseball’s Golden State Warriors, assembling a group of star players who jockeyed to play together.

General manager Matt Klentak said he never wants to go into an offseason without flexibility. You “just don’t know what’s around the corner in terms of a team need or an opportunity to add a player,” he said. The Phillies, Klentak said, found a way to maintain that flexibility even when adding a superstar on a record-setting contract.

“One of the things that's a priority to us is we want to make sure that we can sign Bryce and still have room to do the things that he's going to want us to do, whether it's at the July trading deadline or next offseason or five offseasons from now,” Phillies owner John Middleton said. “This is a lifetime contract. He's not just worried about this season or next season. He's worried about seven years from now, 10 years from now.”

» READ MORE: What Bryce Harper said at his first news conference with Phillies

Middleton was a Phillies fan when they signed Pete Rose and owned a stake in the franchise when he was one of the driving forces for the Phillies to sign Jim Thome and Cliff Lee. Middleton, better than anyone else who sat on the dais at Saturday’s news conference, knew what that moment meant to a city when Harper pulled on that jersey.

“I was talking to a couple of people in Philadelphia and in the organization, and I was saying how it reminded me of those kind of reactions,” Middleton said. “And this person said, ‘You know, John, I was there too for all that, and I think it’s even better.’

"It’s hard for me to kind of say, but it’s at least as big and maybe it’s bigger. It feels really unbelievable. And I’m not in Philadelphia. I’ve been down here. But the intel I get is that people are going crazy.”

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