Aug 30, 2019

Cy Young Profile: Jim Lonborg, 1967

Pitcher, Boston Red Sox


Age:  25 (Apr. 16)
3rd season with Red Sox
Bats – Right, Throws – Right
Height: 6’5”    Weight: 200

Prior to 1967:
A native Californian and son of a college professor, Lonborg was a pitcher on his high school baseball team as well as a center on the basketball team. Receiving an academic scholarship to Stanford, where he was a biology major with thoughts of going into medicine, he made the freshman baseball team. He played summer league baseball in between college seasons and performed particularly well for Stanford during his junior year. Following a strong summer showing in the Basin League in 1963 he accepted a $25,000 offer from the Red Sox. Lonborg spent 1964 with Winston-Salem of the Class A Carolina League and Seattle of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League. He was a combined 11-9 with a 4.34 ERA and 156 strikeouts. He was rushed up to the pitching-desperate Red Sox in 1965. He quickly became noted for his sophisticated tastes as well as his explosive fastball. With a poor team that finished ninth in the AL, Lonborg compiled a 9-17 record with a 4.47 ERA and 113 strikeouts over 185.1 innings pitched. He improved to 10-10 in 1966 with a 3.86 ERA and 131 strikeouts. Playing winter ball in the offseason in Venezuela, Lonborg developed a slider and changeup to go with his curve and fastball that rode in on opposing batters and led to many hit batters. He was looking to continue his improvement in 1967 with a Boston team that little was expected from under new manager Dick Williams.

1967 Season Summary
Appeared in 39 games

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Pitching
Games – 39
Games Started – 39 [1, tied with Dean Chance]
Complete Games – 15 [2, tied with Steve Hargan]
Wins – 22 [1, tied with Earl Wilson]
Losses – 9
PCT - .710 [2]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 2 [17, tied with eleven others]
Innings Pitched – 273.1 [2]
Hits – 228 [4]
Runs – 102 [8]
Earned Runs – 96 [3, tied with Earl Wilson]
Home Runs – 23 [4, tied with Gary Bell]
Bases on Balls – 83 [12]
Strikeouts – 246 [1]
ERA – 3.16 [18]
Hit Batters – 19 [1]
Balks – 1 [10, tied with many others]
Wild Pitches – 12 [4, tied with Rickey Clark & Tom Phoebus]

League-leading strikeouts were +10 ahead of runner-up Sam McDowell
League-leading hit batters were +8 ahead of runner-up Gary Peters

Midseason Snapshot: 11-3, ERA - 2.80, SO - 127 in 138 IP

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Most strikeouts, game – 13 (in 9 IP) vs. KC A’s 4/28
10+ strikeout games – 8
Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 2 (in 7 IP) at California 7/5

Batting
PA – 108, AB – 99, R – 7, H – 14, 2B – 1, 3B – 1, HR – 0, RBI – 8, BB – 4, SO – 52, SB – 1, CS – 1, AVG - .141, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 6, SF – 0

Fielding
Chances – 44
Put Outs – 19
Assists – 24
Errors – 1
DP – 2
Pct. - .977

Postseason Pitching(World Series vs. St. Louis)
G – 3, GS – 3, CG – 2, Record – 2-1, PCT – .667, SV – 0, ShO – 1, IP – 24, H – 14, R – 8, ER – 7, HR – 3, BB – 2, SO – 11, ERA – 2.63, HB – 0, BLK – 0, WP – 1

Awards & Honors:
AL Cy Young Award: BBWAA
AL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News
All-Star
6th in AL MVP voting (82 points, 29% share)

AL Cy Young voting:
Jim Lonborg, Bos.: 18 of 20 votes, 90% share
Joe Horlen, ChiWS.: 2 votes, 10% share

Red Sox went 92-70 to win the AL pennant by 1 game over the Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins, their first pennant since 1946. The upstart Red Sox, under new manager Dick Williams, became involved in a dramatic four-team pennant race with the Twins, Tigers & White Sox. All four clubs were in first on Sept. 6 and Boston stayed at or near the top the rest of the way. By the season’s final weekend the Twins were in first by one game and heading into Fenway Park for a two-game series. The Red Sox, who were one behind, swept both games, with Lonborg winning the finale, and the Tigers losing to California, to take the flag and achieve “the Impossible Dream”. Lost World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals, 4 games to 3, although Lonborg pitched a one-hit shutout in Game 2 and kept the Red Sox alive with a complete game win in Game 5 before falling short against St. Louis ace Bob Gibson in Game 7.

Aftermath of ‘67:
In the offseason, Lonborg tore ligaments in his left knee while skiing, an activity that he had considered valuable in maintaining his strength and pitching stamina. Following surgery he did not appear in a 1968 game for the Red Sox until May. His pitching motion became altered and he injured his right shoulder as a result. He ended up appearing in just 23 games (17 of them starts) and he compiled a mediocre 6-10 record with a 4.29 ERA. After getting off to a 6-0 start in 1969 Lonborg finished up at 7-11 with a 4.51 ERA and 100 strikeouts while pitching 143.2 innings. The sore shoulder put him on the disabled list in 1970, after which he was sent down to Louisville of the Class AAA International League. He was shut down for the year in August after having gone 4-1 with a 3.18 ERA for the Red Sox and 1-1 with a 4.50 ERA at Louisville. Starting the 1971 season with Louisville, he was 4-2 with a 0.90 ERA when promoted back to the Red Sox. He was 10-7 with a 4.13 ERA for Boston and appeared to have turned the corner in his recovery. In the offseason he was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers along with LHP Ken Brett, first baseman George Scott, catcher Don Pavletich, and outfielders Billy Conigliaro and Joe Lahoud for four players, most notably outfielder Tommy Harper.  Pitching through shoulder pain with a last place team, Lonborg produced a 14-12 record in 1972 with a 2.83 ERA and 143 strikeouts. Once again he was dealt in the offseason, this time to the rebuilding Philadelphia Phillies as part of a six-player trade. In 1973 he was 13-16 with a 4.88 ERA while pitching 199.1 innings. With the Phillies rising in the standings in 1974, he pitched a career high 283 innings that included 16 complete games and was 17-13 with a 3.21 ERA and 121 strikeouts. Dealing with a groin injury in 1975 Lonborg’s record dropped to 8-6 with a 4.12 ERA. In 1976 the Phillies reached the postseason for the first time since 1950 by topping the NL East. Lonborg contributed an 18-10 record with a 3.08 ERA. He lost his only NLCS start as the Phils were swept by Cincinnati. Shoulder pain limited him to 25 starts in 1977 as he went 11-4 with a 4.11 ERA as Philadelphia again won the division title. He lost again to the Dodgers in the NLCS as the Phillies once more failed to advance to the World Series. Lonborg dropped to 8-10 with a 5.23 ERA in 1978 and did not pitch in the NLCS which the Phillies again dropped to the Dodgers. He returned for the 1979 season and was released in June after making just four unimpressive appearances, thus ending his career. Overall, Lonborg compiled a 157-137 major league record with a 3.86 ERA and 1475 strikeouts over 2464.1 innings pitched. He was 68-65 with the Red Sox with a 3.94 ERA and 784 strikeouts. Appearing in five postseason games, he was 2-3 with a 3.51 ERA. He was selected to just the one All-Star Game and 1967 was his only award-winning year. Following his retirement from baseball, Lonborg became a dentist in Massachusetts.

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Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league.

Aug 24, 2019

Rookie of the Year: Eddie Murray, 1977

First Baseman/Designated Hitter, Baltimore Orioles


Age:  21
Bats – Both, Throws – Right
Height: 6’2”    Weight: 190

Prior to 1977:
A native of Los Angeles, Murray played Little League baseball prior to starring at LA’s Locke High School, where he was a teammate of future Hall of Fame shortstop Ozzie Smith and batted .500 as a senior. Selected by the Orioles in the third round of the 1973 amateur draft, Murray was first assigned to Bluefield of the Rookie level Appalachian League where he batted .287 in 50 games with 11 home runs and 32 RBIs. Playing with teams at the Class A and AA levels in 1974, he hit a combined .289 with 12 home runs and 65 RBIs. With Asheville of the Class AA Southern League in 1975, Murray, a natural right-handed hitter, tried switch-hitting after getting off to a slow start at the plate, and batted .264 with 17 home runs and 68 RBIs. Moving to Charlotte of the Southern League in 1976, he hit .298 in 88 games with 12 home runs and 46 RBIs before advancing to Rochester of the Class AAA International League where, over 54 games, he batted .274 with 11 home runs and 40 RBIs. Murray played his way to a roster spot with the Orioles in 1977 spring training. Although blocked at first base by veteran slugger Lee May he was utilized primarily as a Designated Hitter.

1977 Season Summary
Appeared in 160 games
DH – 111, 1B – 42, PH – 5

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 666 [14, tied with Sal Bando]
At Bats – 611 [9]
Runs – 81
Hits – 173 [15, tied with Rusty Staub]
Doubles – 29 [18, tied with four others]
Triples – 2
Home Runs – 27 [13, tied with Toby Harrah, Lee May & Leroy Stanton]
RBI – 88
Bases on Balls – 48
Int. BB – 6 [17, tied with nine others]
Strikeouts – 104 [14]
Stolen Bases – 0
Caught Stealing – 1
Average - .283
OBP - .333
Slugging Pct. - .470
Total Bases – 287 [15]
GDP – 22 [3, tied with Chris Chambliss]
Hit by Pitches
 – 1
Sac Hits – 0
Sac Flies – 6

Midseason snapshot: HR - 13, RBI - 46, AVG. - .280, OBP - .330

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) at Cleveland 6/29 – 10 innings
Longest hitting streak – 15 games
Most HR, game – 2 (in 5 AB) at Oakland 8/3 – 10 innings, (in 5 AB) at Boston 10/1
HR at home – 14
HR on road – 13
Multi-HR games – 2
Most RBIs, game – 4 vs. Detroit 9/29
Pinch-hitting – 0 of 4 (.000)

Fielding
Chances – 388
Put Outs – 368
Assists – 17
Errors – 3
DP - 34
Pct. - .992

Awards & Honors:
AL Rookie of the Year: BBWAA

AL ROY Voting:
Eddie Murray, Balt.: 12 votes, 43% share
Mitchell Page, Oak.: 9 votes, 32% share
Bump Wills, Tex.: 4 votes, 14% share
Dave Rozema, Det.: 2 votes, 7% share

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Orioles went 97-64 to finish second in the AL Eastern Division, tied with the Boston Red Sox, 2.5 games behind the division-winning New York Yankees.

Aftermath of ‘77:
Murray and Lee May switched roles in 1978, with May becoming the regular DH and the second-year Murray taking over at first base, where he excelled defensively while also batting .285 with 27 home runs and 95 RBIs. Along the way he garnered All-Star honors for the first time and ended up placing eighth in AL MVP voting. The Orioles won the AL East in 1979 and Murray contributed a .295 average along with 30 doubles, 25 home runs, and 99 RBIs. He hit .417 in the four-game ALCS win over the California Angels and only .154 in the seven-game World Series loss to Pittsburgh. The low-key “Steady Eddie” batted .300 in 1980, with 32 home runs and 116 RBIs. He ranked sixth in MVP balloting. In the strike-interrupted 1981 season he co-led the AL with 22 home runs and topped the league outright with 78 RBIs while hitting .294. He placed fifth in AL MVP voting. The Orioles were edged for the division title in 1982 by the Brewers, and Murray delivered another fine season, batting .316 with 32 home runs and 110 RBIs. In addition to placing second in league MVP voting, he received his first Gold Glove for his fielding performance at first base. He again was second in MVP balloting in 1983 as Baltimore won the AL East and went on to capture the World Series. Murray hit .306 with 33 home runs and 111 RBIs while once again excelling in the field. He hit two home runs in the five-game World Series victory over Philadelphia. 1984 was another outstanding season for Murray, who led the AL in on-base percentage (.410) and walks drawn (107) while batting .306 with 29 home runs and 110 RBIs. He received a third straight Gold Glove and was fourth in league MVP voting. Quiet and consistent, he was a .297 hitter in 1985 with 31 home runs and 124 RBIs. Dealing with an ankle injury in 1986, Murray was forced to go on the disabled list for the first time in his career and over 137 games he still hit .305 with just 17 home runs and 84 RBIs. He played two more seasons with the Orioles in 1987 and ’88 with solid results prior to being traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers for three players. In his first National League season in 1989 at age 33, Murray batted only .247 with 20 home runs and 88 RBIs. He rebounded in 1990 to hit .330 with 26 home runs and 95 RBIs. He placed fifth in NL MVP voting. In 1991 he dropped to .260 with 19 home runs and 96 RBIs. In the offseason he signed as a free agent with the New York Mets for two years. In 1992 he hit .261 with 16 home runs and 93 RBIs and batted .285 in ’93 with 27 home runs and 100 RBIs. A free agent again, Murray moved on to the Cleveland Indians in 1994 where he was utilized primarily as a DH and provided veteran leadership to an up-and-coming team in the strike abbreviated 1994 season. He hit .254 with 17 home runs and 76 RBIs over 108 games. In 1995 the Indians cruised to the AL Central title and won the AL pennant. Murray, despite missing a month with broken ribs, still batted .323 with 21 home runs and 82 RBIs. In the six-game World Series loss to Atlanta, he had a RBI single that won Game 3 in the eleventh inning. In 1996, the Indians dealt him back to the Orioles in July for LHP Kent Mercker. For the year he had a combined total of 22 home runs with 79 RBIs and a .260 batting average.  He split his final season in 1997 at age 41 between the Angels and Dodgers. Overall for his major league career, Murray batted .287 with 3255 hits that included 560 doubles, 35 triples, and 504 home runs, making him one of the most successful switch-hitters in baseball history. He also accumulated 1917 RBIs. Of those totals, a .294 average with 2080 hits, 363 doubles, 25 triples, 343 home runs, and 1224 RBIs came with the Orioles. He was an eight-time All-Star who received three Gold Gloves and three Silver Slugger Awards apiece. While never a league MVP, he finished in the Top 10 on eight occasions, twice placing second. In 44 postseason games, Murray hit .258 with 9 home runs and 25 RBIs. The Orioles retired his #33 and he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2003. The Orioles have also placed a statue of Murray outside Oriole Park at Camden Yards. His brother Rich, also a first baseman, played briefly with the San Francisco Giants.
  
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Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were recipients of the Rookie of the Year Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1947 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1948 and from 1949 on to one recipient from each major league. 

Aug 18, 2019

Cy Young Profile: Tom Glavine, 1991

Pitcher, Atlanta Braves


Age:  25
5th season with Braves
Bats – Left, Throws – Left
Height: 6’0”    Weight: 175

Prior to 1991:
A Massachusetts native, Glavine excelled in ice hockey, as well as baseball, in high school. Chosen by the Los Angeles Kings in the 1984 NHL draft, he was also picked by the Braves in that year’s baseball amateur draft and chose to commit to baseball. Initially assigned to Gulfport of the rookie-level Gulf Coast League, he was 2-3 in 8 games with a 3.34 ERA. Advancing to Sumter of the Class A South Atlantic League in 1985, Glavine started 26 games and posted a 9-6 record with a 2.35 ERA. He started 1986 with Greenville of the Class AA Southern League and went 11-6 with a 3.41 ERA before advancing to Richmond of the Class AAA International League where he started seven games and was 1-5 with a 5.63 ERA. Back with Richmond in 1987, Glavine was 6-12 with a 3.35 ERA before being promoted to the Braves in August. In nine starts with the fifth place club, he compiled a 2-4 record and showed that he was ready for major league-level play. He had a tough year with the cellar-dwelling Braves in 1988, going 7-17 with a 4.56 ERA. In 1989, Glavine added a circle changeup to his fastball, curve, and slider and improved to 14-8 with a 3.68 ERA. Atlanta was still a last place team in 1990 with Glavine contributing a 10-12 record and 4.28 ERA. The pieces were in place for a dramatic improvement in 1991 thanks to the development of Glavine along with RHP John Smoltz and LHP Steve Avery.

1991 Season Summary
Appeared in 36 games
P – 34, PH – 1, PR – 1

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Pitching
Games – 34
Games Started – 34 [9, tied with four others]
Complete Games – 9 [1, tied with Dennis Martinez]
Wins – 20 [1, tied with John Smiley]
Losses – 11 [17, tied with nine others]
PCT - .645 [7]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 1 [13, tied with nineteen others]
Innings Pitched – 246.2 [2]
Hits – 201 [12, tied with Bruce Hurst & Bud Black]
Runs – 83
Earned Runs – 70
Home Runs – 17 [15, tied with Bruce Hurst, Mark Gardner & John Smiley]
Bases on Balls – 69 [14, tied with Ramon Martinez]
Strikeouts – 192 [3]
ERA – 2.55 [3]
Hit Batters – 2
Balks – 2 [16, tied with thirteen others]
Wild Pitches – 10 [7, tied with Mike Hartley, Jose de Jesus & Jim Clancy]

Midseason Snapshot: 12-4, ERA - 1.98, SO – 108 in 127 IP

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Most strikeouts, game – 12 (in 8 IP) at Philadelphia 6/19
10+ strikeout games – 6
Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 3 (in 7 IP) at St. Louis 7/20

Batting
PA – 95, AB – 74, R – 1, H – 17, 2B – 1, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 6, BB – 6, SO – 19, SB – 1, CS – 0, AVG - .230, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 15, SF – 0

Fielding
Chances – 61
Put Outs – 16
Assists – 45
Errors – 0
DP – 4
Pct. - 1.000

Postseason Pitching:  G – 4 (NLCS vs. Pittsburgh – 2 G; World Series vs. Minnesota – 2 G)
GS – 4, CG – 1, Record – 1-3, PCT – .333, SV – 0, ShO – 0, IP – 27.1, H – 20, R – 11, ER – 9, HR – 3, BB – 13, SO – 19, ERA – 2.96, HB – 0, BLK – 1, WP – 0

Awards & Honors:
NL Cy Young Award: BBWAA
NL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News
Silver Slugger
All-Star (Starting P for NL)
11th in NL MVP voting (16 points, 5% share)

NL Cy Young voting (Top 5):
Tom Glavine, Atl.: 110 pts. – 19 of 24 first place votes, 92% share
Lee Smith, StL.: 60 pts. – 4 first place votes, 50% share
John Smiley, Pitt.: 26 pts. – 22% share
Jose Rijo, Cin.: 13 pts. – 1 first place vote, 11% share
Dennis Martinez, Mon.: 4 pts. – 3% share

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Braves went 94-68 to finish first in the NL Western Division by 1 game over the Los Angeles Dodgers, to complete a leap from last place the previous year to the top of the division. The Braves, with their combination of outstanding starting pitching and timely hitting, caught the Dodgers in the season’s final days and secured rhe crown in the season's last weekend. Won NLCS over the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4 games to 3. Lost World Series to the Minnesota Twins, 4 games to 3. The Series came down to a dramatic seventh game pitching performance by Minnesota RHP Jack Morris, who outlasted John Smoltz and two relievers to win in 10 innings.

Aftermath of ‘91:
The unflappable and consistent Glavine was 20-8 in 1992 as the Braves were again NL champions. Joined in the rotation by RHP Greg Maddux in 1993, he was 22-6 with a 3.20 ERA as Atlanta topped the NL West but fell short in the NLCS against the Phillies. Glavine was 13-9 with a 3.97 ERA during the strike-shortened 1994 season. He won a second Silver Slugger Award for his hitting in 1995 (.222, 1 HR, 8 RBIs), a year in which he produced a 16-7 record with a 3.08 ERA. He was 2-0 in the World Series victory over Cleveland, receiving MVP honors after his Series-clinching one-hit win, in combination with RHP Mark Wohlers. Following a 15-10 season in 1996 and 14-7 in 1997, Glavine won a second Cy Young Award as he went 20-6 with a 2.47 ERA in 1998. In four more years with Atlanta, he had one more 20-win season (21-9 in 2000). After an 18-11 performance in 2002, Glavine departed as a free agent and joined the New York Mets for four years and $42.5 million. He slumped to 9-14 with a 4.52 ERA in 2003 but improved to 11-14 and a 3.60 ERA in 2004. After breaking even at 13-13 in 2005, he was 15-7 with a 3.82 ERA in 2006 as the Mets topped the NL East. For his last year in New York in 2007 at age 41, Glavine posted a 13-8 mark and a 4.45 ERA. He returned to the Braves in 2008 and was released in June with a 2-4 record and 5.54 ERA, thus ending his career. Overall in the major leagues, he compiled a 305-203 record and a 3.54 ERA. Never a power pitcher, he struck out 2607 batters over 4413.1 innings pitched. He accumulated five 20-win seasons along with 56 complete games and 25 shutouts. He further set a record with 682 starts without appearing in relief. With the Braves he was 244-147 with a 3.41 ERA and 2091 strikeouts over 3408 innings. In 35 postseason starts, he was 14-16 with a 3.30 ERA and 143 strikeouts. Glavine was a 10-time All-Star who, in addition to two Cy Young Awards, received four Silver Slugger awards. The Braves retired his # 47 and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2014. His brother Mike was briefly a teammate with the Mets in 2003.

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Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league.  

Aug 11, 2019

MVP Profile: Ivan Rodriguez, 1999

Catcher, Texas Rangers


Age:  27
9th season with Rangers
Bats – Right, Throws – Right
Height: 5’9”    Weight: 205

Prior to 1999:
A native of Puerto Rico, Rodriguez played Little League, where he first began his development as a catcher, which continued in high school until he signed with the Rangers at age 16. Initially assigned to Gastonia of the Class A South Atlantic League in 1989, the 17-year-old batted only .238, but was impressive behind the plate. He also picked up his long-term nickname of “Pudge”. Rodriguez spent 1990 with Port Charlotte of the advanced Class A Florida State League, where he hit .287. With the Tulsa Drillers of the Class AA Texas League in 1991, he was batting .274 after 50 games and performing very well on defense when he was called up to the Rangers in June due to an injury to catcher Geno Petralli. At age 19, Rodriguez started 81 games behind the plate and hit .264. He also threw out 34 of 70 baserunners attempting to steal against him (48.6 %) and placed fourth in AL Rookie of the Year voting. The starting catcher from the start in 1992, Rodriguez was sidelined for three weeks in June due to a stress fracture in his back. He still went on to bat .260 in 123 games with 8 home runs and 37 RBIs. He also received his first Gold Glove in recognition of his defensive prowess. His steady advancement continued in 1993 as he hit .273 with 28 doubles, 4 triples, and 10 home runs with 66 RBIs. He was once again exceptional defensively. He added a Silver Slugger award to his list of accomplishments following the strike-shortened 1994 season in which he batted .298 with 16 home runs and 57 RBIs. He also was catcher for a perfect game hurled by LHP Kenny Rogers. In 1995, Rodriguez batted .303 with 32 doubles, 12 home runs, and 67 RBIs over the course of 130 games. He again received Silver Slugger recognition in addition to a Gold Glove. The Rangers topped the AL West in 1996 and Rodriguez contributed a .300 average along with 47 doubles, 19 home runs, and 86 RBIs. He placed tenth in league MVP balloting and hit .375 in the four-game ALDS loss to the Yankees. He hit over .300 in both 1997 and ’98 with 20 home runs in ’97 and 21 in 1998. He received Silver Sluggers in addition to Gold Gloves each year and had become established as an outstanding all-around catcher.

1999 Season Summary
Appeared in 144 games
C – 141, DH – 1, PH – 2

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 630
At Bats – 600 [16]
Runs – 116 [7, tied with Bernie Williams]
Hits – 199 [5]
Doubles – 29
Triples – 1
Home Runs – 35 [11, tied with John Jaha]
RBI – 113 [14]
Bases on Balls – 24
Int. BB – 2
Strikeouts – 64
Stolen Bases – 25 [14, tied with Kenny Lofton]
Caught Stealing – 12 [3, tied with Juan Encarnacion & Jose Offerman]
Average - .332 [7]
OBP - .356
Slugging Pct. - .558 [10]
Total Bases – 335 [7]
GDP – 31 [1]
Hit by Pitches – 1
Sac Hits – 0
Sac Flies – 5

League-leading times grounded into DPs was +6 ahead of runner-up Mike Bordick


Midseason snapshot: HR – 15, RBI – 49, AVG - .295, SLG PCT - .487

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Most hits, game – 5 (in 6 AB) vs. Kansas City 8/1
Longest hitting streak – 20 games
HR at home – 12
HR on road – 23
Most home runs, game – 2 on five occasions
Multi-HR games – 5
Most RBIs, game – 9 at Seattle 4/13
Pinch-hitting – 1 of 2 (.500)

Fielding
Chances - 940
Put Outs – 850
Assists – 83
Errors – 7
DP – 13
Pct. - .993

Postseason Batting: 3 G (ALDS vs. NY Yankees)
PA – 12, AB – 12, R – 0, H – 3, 2B – 1,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 0, BB – 0, IBB – 0, SO – 2, SB – 1, CS – 0, AVG - .250, OBP - .250, SLG -.333, TB – 4, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

Awards & Honors:
AL MVP: BBWAA
Gold Glove
Silver Slugger
All-Star (Started for AL at C)

Top 5 in AL MVP Voting:
Ivan Rodriguez, Tex.: 252 pts. - 7 of 28 first place votes, 64% share
Pedro Martinez, Bos.: 239 pts. –8 first place votes, 61% share
Roberto Alomar, Clev.: 226 pts. – 4 first place votes, 58% share
Manny Ramirez, Clev.: 226 pts. – 4 first place votes, 58% share
Rafael Palmeiro, Tex.: 193 pts. – 4 first place votes, 49% share
(1 first place vote for Derek Jeter,NYY, who ranked 6th)


Rangers went 95-67 to finish first in the AL Western Division by 8 games over the Oakland Athletics, while leading the league in hits (1653), batting (.293), slugging (.479), and total bases (2705), for their third division title in four years. Lost ALDS to the New York Yankees, 3 games to 0.

Aftermath of ‘99:
Rodriguez’s 2000 season was cut short by a broken thumb. He still ended up batting .347 with 27 home runs and 83 RBIs in 91 games. Another strong season in 2001 was also cut short, this time due to the need for knee surgery in September. But he ended up with a .308 average and 25 home runs with 65 RBIs. Back problems limited Rodriguez to 108 games in 2002, and his streak of consecutive All-Star appearances ended at 10. He also failed to receive Gold Glove recognition. Allowed to become a free agent in the offseason, he signed with the Florida Marlins for one year and $10 million. Rodriguez provided outstanding play and solid veteran leadership to a club that went on to win the World Series in 2003. He contributed a .297 average, 16 home runs, and 85 RBIs, and was MVP of the NLCS triumph over the Cubs. A free agent once again, he signed a four-year, $40 million pact with the Detroit Tigers. He was typically excellent in 2004, hitting .334 with 19 home runs and 86 RBIs, regaining All-Star, Gold Glove, and Silver Slugger recognition. He was still an All-Star in 2005, although his average dropped to .276. He slugged 14 home runs and drove in 50 RBIs. The Tigers won the AL pennant in 2006 and Rodriguez hit .300 with 13 home runs and 69 RBIs, in addition to Gold Glove play behind the plate and fine leadership. Following a lesser year in 2007, he was traded to the New York Yankees at the end of July during the 2008 season, where he filled in for injured catcher Jorge Posada. For the year he batted .276 with 7 home runs and 35 RBIs. Rodriguez signed on with the Houston Astros for 2009 In August, he was batting .251 when he was dealt back to the Rangers, where he finished out the season. His career concluded with two undistinguished seasons with the Washington Nationals in 2010 and ’11. Overall for his major league career Rodriguez batted .296 with 2844 hits that included 572 doubles, 51 triples, and 311 home runs. He also compiled 1332 RBIs and 127 stolen bases. With the Rangers he hit .304 with 1747 hits, 352 doubles, 28 triples, 217 home runs, and 842 RBIs. In 40 postseason games he batted .255 with 4 home runs and 25 RBIs. He caught in a record 2427 games and won 13 Gold Gloves. He also ranks first all-time with 14,864 put outs. A 14-time All-Star, Rodriguez finished in the Top 10 in MVP voting four times, including the one win. Despite unfounded suspicions of steroid use, he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2017. The Rangers retired his #7. His son Dereck is a pitcher with some major league experience to date.

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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award (1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present) as Most Valuable Player. 

Aug 5, 2019

MVP Profile: Jeff Kent, 2000

Second Baseman, San Francisco Giants


Age:  32
4th season with Giants
Bats – Right, Throws – Right
Height: 6’1”    Weight: 185

Prior to 2000:
A native Californian from suburban Los Angeles, Kent was a star hitter and pitcher in high school. Making the Univ. of California at Berkeley baseball team as a walk-on, he had a strong season in 1988 that was followed by a lesser performance in ’89, after which he was chosen by the Toronto Blue Jays in the amateur draft. He signed and was initially assigned to St. Catherines of the short-season Class A New York-Pennsylvania League where he played third base and, over the course of 73 games, hit .224 with a league-leading 13 home runs with 37 RBIs. In 1990 Kent was with Dunedin of the advanced Class A Florida State League and batted .277 with 16 home runs and 60 RBIs. Appearing regularly at second base, he topped the league defensively with 404 assists and 261 put outs. Moving up to Knoxville of the Class AA Southern League in 1991, Kent hit .256 with 34 doubles, 12 home runs, and 61 RBIs. Kent jumped up to the Blue Jays in 1992, where he appeared at all four infield positions and batted .239 until he was traded to the New York Mets in August as part of the deal that brought RHP David Cone to Toronto. His batting average in 37 games with the Mets the rest of the way was .239 while he played almost exclusively at second base. The starting second baseman for the Mets in 1993, Kent hit .270 with 21 home runs and 80 RBIs while leading NL second sackers with 18 errors. During the strike-shortened 1994 season he batted .292 with 14 home runs and 68 RBIs and showed some defensive improvement. Kent’s hitting remained solid in 1995 as he batted .278 with 20 home runs and 65 RBIs. He was shifted to third base in 1996 and was dealt to the Cleveland Indians at the end of July along with second baseman Jose Vizcaino for second baseman Carlos Baerga. Appearing at both second and third base for the Indians, Kent did not hit well and, for the year, batted a combined .284 (.265 for Cleveland) with 12 home runs and 55 RBIs. He was dealt again in the offseason, this time to the Giants where he was once more a starting second baseman in 1997 and hit .250 with 29 home runs with 121 RBIs. Kent had another strong season in 1998, batting .297 with 31 home runs and 128 RBIs. He was an All-Star for the first time in 1999 on his way to a .290 average with 23 home runs and 101 RBIs.  

2000 Season Summary
Appeared in 159 games
2B – 150, 1B – 16, PH – 2

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 695 [8]
At Bats – 587 [15]
Runs – 114 [8]
Hits – 196 [5]
Doubles – 41 [8, tied with Mark Grace]
Triples – 7 [7, tied with six others]
Home Runs – 33 [16]
RBI – 125 [4]
Bases on Balls – 90 [15, tied with Shawn Green]
Int. BB – 6
Strikeouts – 107
Stolen Bases – 12
Caught Stealing – 9 [16, tied with Jullio Lugo, Mark Kotsay & J.D. Drew]
Average - .334 [5]
OBP - .424 [6]
Slugging Pct. - .596 [10]
Total Bases – 350 [7]
GDP – 17 [10, tied with Jose Vidro, Phil Nevin & Mark Kotsay]
Hit by Pitches – 9 [16, tied with five others]
Sac Hits – 0
Sac Flies – 9 [9, tied with six others]

Midseason snapshot: HR – 23, RBI – 85, AVG - .355, SLG PCT - .673

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 6 AB) at Oakland 6/4, (in 6 AB) at Houston 6/24
Longest hitting streak – 12 games
HR at home – 14
HR on road – 19
Most home runs, game – 2 (in 6 AB) at Oakland 6/4, (in 4 AB) vs. LA Dodgers 7/2
Multi-HR games – 2
Most RBIs, game – 6 vs. Pittsburgh 8/3
Pinch-hitting – 1 of 2 (.500) with 1 2B, 1 R & 3 RBI

Fielding (2B)
Chances – 706
Put Outs – 302
Assists – 394
Errors – 10
DP – 96
Pct. - .986

Postseason: 4 G (NLDS vs. NY Mets)
PA – 17, AB – 16, R – 3, H – 6, 2B – 1,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 1, BB – 1, IBB – 0, SO – 3, SB – 1, CS – 0, AVG - .375, OBP - .412, SLG - .438, TB – 7, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: BBWAA
Silver Slugger
All-Star (Started for NL at 2B)

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:
Jeff Kent, SF: 392 pts. - 22 of 32 first place votes, 88% share
Barry Bonds, SF: 279 pts. – 6 first place votes, 62% share
Mike Piazza, NYM: 271 pts. – 3 first place votes, 60% share
Jim Edmonds, StL.: 208 pts. – 46% share
Todd Helton, Col.: 198 pts. – 1 first place vote, 44% share

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Giants went 97-65 to finish first in the NL Western Division by 11 games over the Los Angeles Dodgers in their first season playing at Pacific Bell Park, while leading the league in walks drawn (709) and on-base percentage (.362, tied with Colorado). Lost NLDS to the New York Mets, 3 games to 1.

Aftermath of 2000:
Kent followed up in 2001 with a .298 batting average while his doubles reached a career-high 49, with a lesser home run of 22, along with 106 RBIs. He began the 2002 season on the disabled list due to a broken wrist suffered in an off-field mishap, but went on to bat .313 with 37 home runs and 108 RBIs as the Giants secured the NL Wild Card slot for the postseason, from which they won the league pennant. Kent hit three home runs in the seven-game World Series loss to the Angels. A free agent following the season, he signed with the Houston Astros for two years and $18.2 million. For 2003 he batted .297 with 22 home runs and 93 RBIs. He was an All-Star once more in 2004 in a season in which he hit .289 with 27 home runs and 107 RBIs. A free agent once again, Kent joined the Los Angeles Dodgers, where he spent the last four years of his career until age and injuries caught up to him. Over the course of his major league career, he batted .290 with 2461 hits that included 560 doubles, 47 triples, and 377 home runs. He further compiled 1518 RBIs and 94 stolen bases. His best seasons came with the Giants, where he hit .297 with 247 doubles, 22 triples, and 175 home runs, with 689 RBIs. A five-time All-Star (three with the Giants), Kent finished in the Top 10 in NL MVP voting on four occasions (including the one win). In 49 postseason games, he batted .276 with 9 home runs and 23 RBIs.

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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award (1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present) as Most Valuable Player.