Sep 29, 2020

Cy Young Profile: Mike McCormick, 1967

 Pitcher, San Francisco Giants



Age:  29 (Sept. 29)

7th season with Giants (first in second stint)

Bats – Left, Throws – Left

Height: 6’2”    Weight: 195

 

Prior to 1967:

A native Californian, McCormick compiled a 34-4 record with two no-hitters at Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra as well as 49-4 playing American Legion ball, with three more no-hitters and a perfect game in which he struck out 26 of the 27 batters he faced. Intending to attend college at USC he instead signed a $50,000 bonus contract with the New York Giants in 1956. Immediately placed on the major league roster, as required by the rules at the time, the 17-year-old appeared in three games, started two of them, and struggled to an 0-1 record with a 9.45 ERA. In 1957 McCormick appeared in 24 games, primarily in relief, and went 3-1 with a 4.10 ERA. Moving to San Francisco along with the franchise in 1958, he started in 28 of his 42 pitching appearances and, relying primarily on his fastball, he posted an 11-8 record with a 4.59 ERA and 82 strikeouts while pitching 178.1 innings. The Giants were major contenders in the 1959 NL pennant race and McCormick, still being utilized as a starter and reliever, contributed a 12-16 mark and 3.99 ERA with 151 strikeouts. The team dropped to fifth place in 1960, but it still proved to be a breakout year for the steadily improving McCormick who was 15-12 with a league-leading 2.70 ERA and 154 strikeouts. He followed up with a 13-16 tally in 1961 with a 3.20 ERA and 163 strikeouts. The Giants won the pennant in 1962, but McCormick contributed little as his workload caught up to him and he dealt with chronic shoulder pain that robbed him of his fastball. He went 5-5 with a 5.38 ERA for the year, as he pitched only 98.2 innings. Traded to the Baltimore Orioles in the offseason, he was utilized as a spot starter in 1963 and produced a 6-8 record with a 4.30 ERA and 75 strikeouts over 136 innings pitched. The Orioles sent him down to Rochester of the Class AAA International League in 1964 where, with the help of a cortisone shot, he rebounded to 12-8 with a 3.29 ERA and 129 strikeouts. Dealt to the Washington Senators in 1965 McCormick was used as a starter and reliever who compiled an 8-8 tally with 88 strikeouts over the course of 158 innings. Now lacking a fastball and dependent on control, a curve, and a screwball, he was primarily a starter in 1966 and was 11-14 with a 3.46 ERA and 101 strikeouts while pitching 216 innings. Traded back to the Giants in the offseason he received his annual cortisone shot and returned to the rotation.     

 

1967 Season Summary

Appeared in 41 games

P – 40, PH – 1

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Pitching

Games – 40

Games Started – 35 [7]

Complete Games – 14 [7, tied with Claude Osteen]

Wins – 22 [1]

Losses – 10

PCT - .688 [2]

Saves – 0

Shutouts – 5 [2, tied with Gary Nolan & Claude Osteen]

Innings Pitched – 262.1 [6]

Hits – 220 [12]

Runs – 88 [12, tied with Milt Pappas & Tommie Sisk]

Earned Runs – 83 [9, tied with Mike Cuellar]

Home Runs – 25 [2]

Bases on Balls – 81 [4]

Strikeouts – 150 [19]

ERA – 2.85 [16]

Hit Batters – 5 [14, tied with eleven others]

Balks – 0

Wild Pitches – 9 [8, tied with four others]

 

League-leading wins were +2 ahead of runner-up Ferguson Jenkins

 

Midseason Snapshot: 11-3, ERA - 2.53, SO - 63 in 117.1 IP

 

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Most strikeouts, game – 8 (in 9 IP) vs. Houston 7/15, (in 9 IP) at Chi. Cubs 7/23, (in 9 IP) at St. Louis 8/10, (in 9 IP) vs. Philadelphia 10/1

10+ strikeout games – 0

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 3 (in 7 IP) at Houston 5/21 (in 7 IP) vs. Cincinnati 8/19

 

Batting

PA – 95, AB – 84, R – 8, H – 10, 2B – 2, 3B – 0, HR – 1, RBI – 5, BB – 4, SO – 32, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .119, GDP – 5, HBP – 0, SH – 6, SF – 1

 

Fielding

Chances – 46

Put Outs – 10

Assists – 36

Errors – 0

DP – 2

Pct. - 1.000

 

Awards & Honors:

NL Cy Young Award: BBWAA

NL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News

6th in NL MVP voting (73 points, 26% share)

 

NL Cy Young voting:

Mike McCormick, SF: 18 of 20 votes, 90% share

Jim Bunning, Phila.: 1 vote, 5% share

Ferguson Jenkins, ChiC.: 1 vote, 5% share

 

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Giants went 91-71 to finish second in the NL, 10.5 games behind the pennant-winning St. Louis Cardinals. The pitching staff led the league in ERA (2.92), complete games (64), fewest hits allowed (1283), and fewest earned runs allowed (478). The slow-starting Giants picked up steam as the season progressed but were derailed by a four-game series in St. Louis in which they lost three and fell to 11 games out of first.

 

Aftermath of ‘67:

/McCormick dropped off to 12-14 in 1968 as his screwball was no longer dependable, and he was relegated to the bullpen in August. He finished with a 3.58 ERA and 121 strikeouts. Back in the starting rotation in 1969 he posted an 11-9 record with a 3.34 ERA and 76 strikeouts. Off to a dreadful start in 1970 due to a pinched nerve in his back, McCormick was 3-4 with a 6.20 ERA when he was traded to the Yankees where the results were nearly the same. Released by the Yankees during 1971 spring training, he caught on with the Kansas City Royals, who released him in June. Invited to spring training by the Giants in 1972, McCormick pitched with Phoenix of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League until announcing his retirement in June. He returned to the PCL with the Hawaii Islanders, who he played with again in 1973 until he was released. He retired for good at age 34 following the season. For his major league career, McCormick compiled a 134-128 record with a 3.73 ERA, 91 complete games, and 23 shutouts, as well as 1321 strikeouts over 2380.1 innings. In two stints with the Giants he was 107-96 with a 3.68 ERA, 78 complete games, 19 shutouts, and 1030 strikeouts over 1822.2 innings. He was an All-Star during two seasons. His arm remained permanently crooked from throwing the screwball until his death in 2020 at age 81.

 

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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.  


Sep 23, 2020

MVP Profile: Keith Hernandez, 1979

 First Baseman, St. Louis Cardinals

 

Age:  25

5th season with Cardinals

Bats – Left, Throws – Left

Height: 6’0”    Weight: 180

 

Prior to 1979:

A California native, Hernandez excelled in football and basketball, as well as baseball at Capuchino High School in San Bruno before moving on to the College of San Mateo from where he was chosen by the Cardinals in the 1971 amateur draft. Initially assigned to St. Petersburg of the Class A Florida State League in 1972, he batted .256 with 5 home runs and 41 RBIs over 84 games and posted an excellent .991 fielding percentage at first base. He finished the season in Class AAA where he proved to still be a work in progress. In 1973 Hernandez was with Arkansas of the Class AA Texas League where he was again impressive in the field, duplicating his .991 fielding percentage of ’72, while hitting an uninspiring .260 with 25 extra base hits and 52 RBIs. Moving on to the Tulsa Oilers of the Class AAA American Association, he hit .333 in 31 games and showed more punch at the plate. Still with Tulsa in 1974, he topped the American Association with a .351 batting average to go along with 14 home runs and 63 RBIs. He was named a league All-Star and received a late-season call-up to the Cardinals, where he hit .294 in 14 games. Hernandez started the 1975 season in St. Louis but, hitting poorly, he was sent down to Tulsa in June. After hitting .330 in 85 games at Class AAA, he returned to the Cards late in the season and finished with a .250 major league average. Taking over at first base for the Cardinals in 1976, he started off slowly with the bat and finished at .289 with 21 doubles, 5 triples, 7 home runs, and 46 RBIs. In 1977 his production rose to .291 with 41 doubles, 15 home runs, and 91 RBIs, along with 90 runs scored and a .379 on-base percentage. Becoming known for his slick fielding, Hernandez received his first Gold Glove in 1978, although his batting dropped to .255 with 32 doubles, 11 home runs, and 64 RBIs.  

 

1979 Season Summary

Appeared in 161 games

1B – 160, PH – 2

 

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 698 [7]

At Bats – 610 [12]

Runs – 116 [1]

Hits – 210 [2]

Doubles – 48 [1]

Triples – 11 [5, tied with Larry Bowa]

Home Runs – 11

RBI – 105 [5]

Bases on Balls – 80 [11]

Int. BB – 5

Strikeouts – 78

Stolen Bases – 11

Caught Stealing – 6

Average - .344 [1]

OBP - .417 [2]

Slugging Pct. - .513 [8]

Total Bases – 313 [6]

GDP – 9

Hit by Pitches – 1

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 7 [9, tied with eight others]

 

League-leading runs scored were +6 ahead of runner-up Omar Moreno

League-leading doubles were +2 ahead of runner-up Warren Cromartie

League-leading batting average was +.013 ahead of runner-up Pete Rose

 

Midseason snapshot: 2B – 24, 3B – 7, HR – 7, RBI – 57, AVG – .325, OBP – .397

 

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 4 AB) at Houston 5/8, (in 4 AB) vs. Chi. Cubs 8/10, (in 5 AB) vs. San Diego 8/22, (in 5 AB) at NY Mets 9/22

Longest hitting streak – 14 games

HR at home – 5

HR on road – 6

Most home runs, game – 1 on eleven occasions

Multi-HR games – 0

Most RBIs, game – 5 at Montreal 7/30

Pinch-hitting – 2 of 2 (1.000) with 1 3B & 2 RBI

 

Fielding

Chances – 1643

Put Outs – 1489

Assists – 146

Errors – 8

DP – 145

Pct. - .995

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA (co-winner)

Gold Glove

All-Star

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Keith Hernandez, StL.: 216 pts. – 4 of 24 first place votes, 64% share

Willie Stargell, Pitt.: 216 pts. - 10 first place votes, 64% share

Dave Winfield, SD.: 155 pts. – 4 first place votes, 46% share

Larry Parrish, Mon.: 128 pts. – 38% share

Ray Knight, Cin.: 82 pts. – 2 first place votes, 24% share

(1 first place vote apiece for Joe Niekro, Hou., who ranked sixth, Kent Tekulve, Pitt., who ranked eighth, Gary Carter, Mon., who ranked 17th & Bill Madlock, SF/Pitt., who ranked 18th)

 

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Cardinals went 86-76 to finish third in the NL Eastern Division, 12 games behind the division-winning Pittsburgh Pirates while leading the league in hits (1594), doubles (279), triples (63) and batting (.278). The Cardinals, rebounding from a dreadful year in 1978, contended until catcher Ted Simmons went down with an injury in June. The good-hitting club still managed to remain within striking range of the top for most of the season.

 

Aftermath of ‘79:

Hernandez followed up his co-MVP season by finishing second in NL batting in 1980 (.321) while leading the league in runs scored (111) and OBP (.408). He further compiled 39 doubles, 8 triples, 16 home runs, and 99 RBIs and continued his Gold Glove play at first base. In the strike-interrupted 1981 season Hernandez batted .306 with 8 home runs, 48 RBIs, and 65 runs scored. He was once again a Gold Glove recipient for a club that topped the circuit in fielding. The Cards won the NL East in 1982 and, overcoming a slow start, Hernandez hit .299 with 33 doubles, 6 triples, 7 home runs, and 94 RBIs. He batted .333 in the three-game NLCS sweep of the Atlanta Braves, and in the seven-game World Series victory over the Milwaukee Brewers, he accounted for 8 RBIs, including one in the come-from-behind win in Game 7. Hernandez’s tenure in St. Louis came to an end during the 1983 season when, in mid-June he was traded to the New York Mets for pitchers Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey. A highly unpopular deal among Cardinal fans at the time, it came about due to Hernandez’s heavy cocaine use, which by his own admission started in 1980 and had come to manager Whitey Herzog’s attention. While he had continued to play well, drug abuse on the team forced the manager’s hand and Hernandez became a Met. Determined to clean up his act and help his new team, Hernandez batted .297 for the year, including .306 with the Mets, with 12 home runs and 63 RBIs. He kept his string of Gold Gloves alive as well. With the Mets benefiting from an infusion of talent in 1984, they contended in the NL East while Hernandez provided solid veteran leadership and hit .311 with 15 home runs and 94 RBIs, placing second in league MVP balloting. Battling the Cardinals for division supremacy in 1985, the Mets again finished second and the star first baseman batted .309 with 31 doubles, 10 home runs, and 91 RBIs. Testimony in an offseason drug trial led to Hernandez reluctantly agreeing to stipulations imposed by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth to avoid suspension for the 1986 season. The Mets won the NL East in 1986 and Hernandez hit .310 with 34 doubles, 13 home runs, 83 RBIs, and a NL-leading 94 walks drawn. In the seven-game World Series win over the Boston Red Sox, he again came through with key hits in Game 7. An All-Star for the last time in 1987, Hernandez batted .290 with 18 home runs and 89 RBIs. He had one final Gold Glove season in 1988. In 1989, a knee injury limited him to 75 games and the Mets chose to not offer him a contract for 1990. Hernandez signed with the Cleveland Indians and retired during the ’90 season. Overall, for his major league career, Hernandez batted .296 with 2182 hits that included 426 doubles, 60 triples, and 162 home runs. He scored 1124 runs and compiled 1071 RBIs and 98 stolen bases. With the Cardinals he batted .299 with 1217 hits, 265 doubles, 50 triples, 81 home runs, 595 RBIs, 81 stolen bases, and 662 runs scored. Appearing in 30 postseason games, he hit .265 with two home runs and 21 RBIs. A five-time All-Star, Hernandez also was awarded 11 Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers. He finished in the top 5 in league MVP voting three times. In retirement he went into broadcasting for Met telecasts. He was inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame in 1997.

 

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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.

Sep 18, 2020

MVP Profile: Barry Bonds, 1990

 Outfielder, Pittsburgh Pirates


Age:  26 (July 24)

5th season with Pirates

Bats – Left, Throws – Left

Height: 6’1”    Weight: 185

 

Prior to 1990:

The son of major league outfielder Bobby Bonds was born in Riverside, California and hit .476 with 14 home runs as a senior at Junipero Serra High School where he also played football and basketball. Initially he was drafted as an amateur by the Giants in 1982 but rejected a $70,000 offer and instead attended Arizona State where he was criricized for being a rule-breaker with a poor attitude as well as lauded for outstanding all-around ability. Bonds was chosen by the Pirates in the first round of the 1985 amateur draft. He batted .299 with 13 home runs for Prince William of the Carolina League in ’85, moved up to Hawaii in the Class AAA Pacific Coast League in 1986 but was called up to the Pirates after 44 games. He was inserted in center field and batted only.223 but showed flashes of future greatness with 16 home runs, 36 stolen bases, and 48 RBIs in 113 games. Bonds was shifted to left field in 1987 and improved to 25 home runs, 32 stolen bases, and 59 RBIs, and a .261 batting average. The numbers rose to .283 with 24 home runs, 17 stolen bases, and 58 RBIs in 1988 but fell off to .248 with 19 home runs, 32 stolen bases, and 58 RBIs in 1989. The disappointed Pirates sought to deal him in the offseason but were unable to work out a trade.

 

1990 Season Summary

Appeared in 151 games

LF – 149, CF – 2, PH – 3

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 621

At Bats – 519

Runs – 104 [6, tied with Bip Roberts]

Hits – 156 [18]

Doubles – 32 [10, tied with Mark Grace & Willie McGee]

Triples – 3

Home Runs – 33 [4, tied with Matt Williams]

RBI – 114 [4]

Bases on Balls – 93 [2]

Int. BB – 15 [9, tied with Darryl Strawberry & Joe Oliver]

Strikeouts – 83

Stolen Bases – 52 [3]

Caught Stealing – 13 [8, tied with Otis Nixon]

Average - .301 [13, tied with Barry Larkin]

OBP - .406 [4]

Slugging Pct. - .565 [1]

Total Bases – 293 [6]

GDP – 8

Hit by Pitches – 3

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 6

 

League-leading slugging pct was +.006 ahead of runner-up Ryne Sandberg

League-leading total bases were +40 ahead of runner-up Matt Williams

 

Midseason snapshot: HR – 15, RBI - 62, AVG - .340, SLG – .615

 

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) at San Diego 4/27, (in 4 AB) at NY Mets 9/13

Longest hitting streak – 12 games

HR at home – 14

HR on road – 19

Most home runs, game – 2 (in 5 AB) at San Diego 4/27, (in 4 AB) at Montreal 9/14, (in 4 AB) at Chi. Cubs 9/19

Multi-HR games – 3

Most RBIs, game – 5 at Philadelphia 8/6, at Atlanta 8/29

Pinch-hitting – 0 of 2 (.000) with 1 BB

 

Fielding

Chances – 358

Put Outs – 338

Assists – 14

Errors – 6

DP – 2

Pct. - .983

 

Postseason: 6 G (NLCS vs. Cincinnati)

PA – 24, AB – 18, R – 4, H – 3, 2B – 0,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 1, BB – 6, IBB – 0, SO – 5, SB – 2, CS – 0, AVG - .167, OBP - .375, SLG - .167, TB – 3, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

MLB Player of the Year: Sporting News

Gold Glove

Silver Slugger

All-Star

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Barry Bonds, Pitt.: 331 pts. - 23 of 24 first place votes, 99% share

Bobby Bonilla, Pitt.: 212 pts. – 1 first place vote, 63% share

Darryl Strawberry, NYM: 167 pts. – 50% share

Ryne Sandberg, Chi.: 151 pts. – 45% share

Eddie Murray, LAD: 123 pts. – 37% share

 

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Pirates went 95-67 to finish first in the NL Eastern Division by 4 games over the New York Mets, their first division title in 11 years while leading the league in doubles (288), walks drawn (582, tied with Philadelphia), and OBP (.330). Briefly dropping out of first place in late June, Pittsburgh, propelled by the “Killer B” hitting combination of Bonds and RF Bobby Bonilla, supplemented by CF Andy Van Slyke, battled the Mets the rest of the way, taking over first place to stay just after Labor Day. Lost NLCS to the Cincinnati Reds, 4 games to 2, as Bonds hit only .167 and Bonilla .190.

 

Aftermath of ‘90:

Bonds finished second in NL MVP voting in 1991 following a season in which he batted .292 with 25 home runs, 43 stolen bases, and 116 RBIs. Pittsburgh again topped the NL East and fell in the NLCS while Bonds hit only .148. It was a similar situation in 1992 as Bonds returned to MVP form and batted .311 with 34 home runs, 39 stolen bases, and 103 RBIs in his final year with the Pirates. The club won a third straight NL East pennant and lost once more in the NLCS. In three NLCS appearances Bonds hit only .191 in 20 games with one home run. Having garnered his second NL MVP award in three years he left the Pirates as a free agent and signed a six-year $43 million contract with the San Francisco Giants. Bonds won his third MVP award in 1993 as the Giants contended and he led the NL with 46 home runs, 123 RBIs, a .458 on-base percentage, .677 slugging percentage, and 365 total bases to go along with a .336 batting average and 29 stolen bases. He continued to be a strong performer, gaining seven consecutive All-Star selections from 1992 through ’98 and six Gold Gloves during the same time span. The Giants reached the postseason only once during that period. Bonds became the second player to hit 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season in 1996 and regularly led the NL in walks and intentional walks. Following a 1998 season in which the home run race between Mark McGwire of St. Louis and Sammy Sosa of the Cubs drew headlines, Bonds apparently turned to steroid use to improve his already impressive power hitting. Initially this was problematic in that his 1999 season was limited to 102 games due to a torn triceps that required surgery. He came back with a 49-home run season in 2000 and broke McGwire’s single-season record of 70 with 73 home runs in 2001. He was voted NL Most Valuable Player for an unprecedented fourth time and was signed to a five-year $90 million deal by the Giants despite being 37 years old. Bonds finally got to play in a World Series in 2002 and hit .471 with four home runs in a losing cause. He was the NL MVP a total of seven times, the last in 2004. His career, which became plagued by injuries in its late stages finally came to an end in 2007. Overall, Bonds hit a major league record 762 home runs, 176 of which were compiled as a member of the Pirates. He stole 514 bases, 251 with Pittsburgh, and compiled 1996 RBIs, 556 as a Pirate, and batted .298, .275 with Pittsburgh. He walked 2558 times, 688 intentionally, which are all-time major league records, as well as his single-season highs of 232 total walks and 120 intentional walks in 2004. A 14-time All-Star, the lingering concerns regarding performance enhancing drugs have thus far kept him from election to the Baseball Hall of Fame, but his #25 has been retired by the Giants.

 

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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.


Sep 15, 2020

MVP Profile: Jimmy Rollins, 2007

 Shortstop, Philadelphia Phillies


Age:  28

7th season with Phillies

Bats – Both, Throws – Right

Height: 5’7”    Weight: 175

 

Prior to 2007:

A native Californian who was born in Oakland, Rollins starred at Encinal High School in Alameda, setting school records by batting .484 and stealing 99 bases over four years. Chosen by the Phillies in the second round of the 1996 amateur draft, Rollins passed on a scholarship to Arizona State to turn pro. The 17-year-old was first assigned to Martinsville of the Rookie-level Appalachian League where he hit .238 and stole 11 bases in 49 games. Promoted to Piedmont of the Class A South Atlantic League in 1997, he batted .270 with 22 doubles, 8 triples, 6 home runs, and 59 RBIs while performing well in the field. He was named to the league’s All-Star team. Rollins continued his development in 1998 with Clearwater of the advanced Class A Florida State League where his batting average dropped to .244. It was on to Class AA and AAA in 1999 where he batted a combined .268 with 11 home runs, 56 RBIs, and 25 stolen bases. With Scranton/Wilkes-Barre of the Class AAA International League in 2000, Rollins started off in a slump and ended up hitting .274 with 28 doubles, 11 triples, 12 home runs, 69 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases. He received a late-season call-up to the Phillies where he appeared in 14 games and hit .321. Taking over as Philadelphia’s starting shortstop in 2001, Rollins was an All-Star who batted .274 with 29 doubles, a league-leading 12 triples, 14 home runs, 54 RBIs, and a NL-high 46 stolen bases, while scoring 97 runs and also showing off good range at shortstop. He placed third in league Rookie of the Year voting and became popular with the fans thanks to his evident enthusiasm as well as good play. He had difficulty with his hitting in 2002 as his average fell to .245, although he again topped the NL in triples with 10 to go along with 33 doubles, 11 home runs, and 60 RBIs while stealing 31 bases in 44 attempts. A slow start in 2003 caused Rollins to be dropped in the batting order on his way to hitting .263 with 42 doubles, 6 triples, 8 home runs, 62 RBIs, and 20 steals. Typically batting leadoff in 2004 he improved to .289 with 119 runs scored, 43 doubles, a league-leading 12 triples, 14 home runs, 73 RBIs, and 30 stolen bases. A strong second half capped by a 36-game hitting streak in 2005 led Rollins to bat .290 with 38 doubles, 11 triples, 12 home runs, 54 RBIs, 115 runs scored, and 41 stolen bases. He continued to be productive in 2006, hitting .277 with 127 runs scored, 45 doubles, 9 triples, 25 home runs, 83 RBIs, and 36 stolen bases for the second place Phillies.

 

2007 Season Summary

Appeared in 162 games

SS – 162

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 778 [1]

At Bats – 716 [1]

Runs – 139 [1]

Hits – 212 [2, tied with Hanley Ramirez]

Doubles – 38 [20, tied with four others]

Triples – 20 [1]

Home Runs – 30 [14, tied with five others]

RBI – 94

Bases on Balls – 49

Int. BB – 5

Strikeouts – 85

Stolen Bases – 41 [5]

Caught Stealing – 6 [13, tied with nine others]

Average - .296 [20, tied with Jack Wilson]

OBP - .344

Slugging Pct. - .531 [15]

Total Bases – 380 [2]

GDP – 11

Hit by Pitches – 7

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 6

 

League-leading plate appearances were +13 ahead of runner-up Jose Reyes

League-leading at bats were +35 ahead of runner-up Jose Reyes

League-leading runs scored were +14 ahead of runner-up Hanley Ramirez

League-leading triples were +8 ahead of runner-up Jose Reyes


Midseason snapshot: 3B – 10, HR – 16, RBI – 53, AVG - .286, SLG - .518

 

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) vs. Houston 4/23, (in 6 AB) vs. Cincinnati 6/28 – 10 innings, (in 5 AB) at Florida 9/1

Longest hitting streak – 14 games

HR at home – 18

HR on road – 12

Most home runs, game – 2 (in 4 AB) at NY Mets 4/12, (in 5 AB) vs. Detroit 6/15

Multi-HR games – 2

Most RBIs, game – 3 on eight occasions

Pinch-hitting – No appearances

 

Fielding

Chances – 717

Put Outs – 227

Assists – 479

Errors – 11

DP – 110

Pct. - .985

 

Postseason Batting: 3 G (NLDS vs. Colorado)

PA – 13, AB – 11, R – 1, H – 2, 2B – 0,3B – 1, HR – 1, RBI – 4, BB – 2, IBB – 0, SO – 3, SB – 1, CS – 0, AVG - .182, OBP - .308, SLG - .636, TB – 7, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

Gold Glove

Silver Slugger

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Jimmy Rollins, Phila.: 353 pts. - 16 of 32 first place votes, 79% share

Matt Holliday, Col.: 336 pts. – 11 first place votes, 75% share

Prince Fielder, Mil.: 284 pts. – 5 first place votes, 63% share

David Wright, NYM: 182 pts. – 41% share

Ryan Howard, Phila.: 112 pts. – 25% share

 

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Phillies went 89-73 to finish first in the NL Eastern Division by 1 game over the New York Mets, while leading the league in runs scored (892), triples (41), RBIs (850), bases on balls drawn (641), OBP (.354, tied with Colorado), slugging (.458), and total bases (2605). The Phillies chased the Mets all season and trailed by 7 games in September with 17 left to play. Finishing up at 13-4, they clinched the NL East on the season’s final day. Lost NLDS to the Colorado Rockies, 3 games to 0.

 

Aftermath of ‘07:

Early in the 2008 season, an ankle injury sidelined Rollins. He was back in form when he returned to the lineup and went on to bat .277 with 38 doubles, 9 triples, 11 home runs, 59 RBIs, and 47 stolen bases while also receiving another Gold Glove for his play at shortstop. The Phillies topped the NL East and won the NL pennant on the way to a World Series triumph over Tampa Bay. Rollins contributed timely hits in the postseason. Upbeat, talkative, and animated, the player known as “J-Roll” was a popular team leader. The Phillies were a pennant-winning club again in 2009 and Rollins was below average in batting average (.250) and OBP (.296), although he produced 43 doubles, 21 home runs, and 31 stolen bases while scoring 100 runs and continuing to contribute Gold Glove play in the field. He missed nearly half of the 2010 season due to a hamstring injury, hitting .243 in 88 games with 8 home runs, 41 RBIs, and 17 stolen bases. In 2011 he rebounded with 16 home runs, 63 RBIs, and a .268 average while scoring 87 runs and stealing 30 bases. With the Phillies fading in 2012, Rollins dropped to .250 with 23 home runs, 68 RBIs, 102 runs scored, and 30 stolen bases. He spent two more seasons in Philadelphia with declining performance before being traded to the Dodgers in the 2014 offseason. He hit .224 in 144 games for LA in 2015 and moved on to the Chicago White Sox, who released him in June of 2016. He failed to catch on with the Giants in 2017, thus ending his career. In the major leagues, Rollins batted .264 with 2455 hits that included 511 doubles, 115 triples, and 231 home runs. He scored 1421 runs and compiled 936 RBIs and 470 stolen bases. With the Phillies he batted .267 with 1325 runs scored, 2306 hits, 479 doubles, 111 triples, 216 home runs, 887 RBIs, and 453 stolen bases. Appearing in 50 postseason games, Rollins hit .246 with 3 home runs, 15 RBIs, and 11 stolen bases. A three-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove recipient, he led the NL in triples four times. The Phillies honored him with a retirement ceremony in Citizens Bank Park in 2019.

 

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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.


Sep 9, 2020

MVP Profile: Jason Giambi, 2000

 First Baseman, Oakland Athletics


 

Age:  29

6th season with Athletics

Bats – Left, Throws – Right

Height: 6’3”    Weight: 240

 

Prior to 2000:

A native Californian from suburban Los Angeles, Giambi was a three-sport star at South Hills High School in West Covina, including playing shortstop on the baseball team. A sinewy line-drive hitter, he moved on to Long Beach State, turning down an offer from the Milwaukee Brewers, who selected him in the 1989 amateur draft. Shifted to third base as a freshman, Giambi batted .422. As a sophomore he hit .407 and displayed an excellent batting eye by drawing 57 walks. In 1991 he was with the Team USA squad that lost to Puerto Rico in the semifinals of the Pan-Am Games. Long Beach State won the Big West title in 1992 and Giambi hit .363. Returning to Team USA in the summer, he was moved to first base. The team came up empty in the Barcelona Olympics, but Giambi played well and signed with the A’s, who took him in the second round of the ’92 amateur draft. Starting out as a third baseman with Southern Oregon of the short-season Class A Northwest League, he played in 13 games and batted .317 with three home runs and 13 RBIs. Giambi moved on to Modesto of the advanced Class A California League in 1993 and hit .291 with 12 home runs and 60 RBIs while being intentionally walked a league-high seven times. Playing with teams at the Class AA and AAA levels in 1994, he batted a combined .268 with 10 home runs and 68 RBIs. Called up to the A’s in 1995, where he backed up at first base and third, and, while sent back to Class AAA in May, he returned to Oakland in July where the hard-playing Giambi suffered various injuries on the way to appearing in 54 games at the major league level and batted .256 with 6 home runs and 25 RBIs. He started strong in 1996 while sharing time at third base with Scott Brosius and had a 19-game April hitting streak on his way to hitting .291 with 20 home runs and 79 RBIs after he faded badly during the season’s second half. Hobbled by injuries at the start of the 1997 season, Giambi took over at first base for slugger Mark McGwire, after he was dealt at midseason. He ended up batting .293 with 20 home runs and 81 RBIs. Formerly a limited defensive player at third base, Giambi initially had difficulties at first as well but maintained a potent bat in 1998 as he hit .295 with 27 home runs and 110 RBIs. While also developing into a team leader, he batted .315 in 1999 with 33 home runs and 123 RBIs in the center of a hard-hitting lineup.

 

2000 Season Summary

Appeared in 152 games

1B – 124, DH – 24, PH – 4

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 664

At Bats – 510

Runs – 108 [10, tied with Tim Salmon & Bernie Williams]

Hits – 170

Doubles – 29

Triples – 1

Home Runs – 43 [2, tied with Frank Thomas]

RBI – 137 [4, tied with Carlos Delgado]

Bases on Balls – 137 [1]

Int. BB – 6 [19, tied with five others]

Strikeouts – 96

Stolen Bases – 2

Caught Stealing – 0

Average - .333 [7, tied with Mike Sweeney]

OBP - .476 [1]

Slugging Pct. - .647 [3]

Total Bases – 330 [8]

GDP – 9

Hit By Pitches – 9 [9, tied with Herbert Perry & Mike Cameron]

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 8 [12, tied with four others]

 

League-leading bases on balls drawn were +14 ahead of runner-up Carlos Delgado

League-leading OBP was +.006 ahead of runner-up Carlos Delgado

 

Midseason snapshot: HR – 22, RBI – 78, AVG - .334, SLG – .624

 

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 4 AB) vs. San Diego 6/7, (in 4 AB) at Minnesota 6/14

Longest hitting streak – 13 games

Most HR, game – 2 on five occasions

HR at home – 23

HR on road – 20

Multi-HR games – 5

Most RBIs, game – 7 vs. San Diego 6/7, at Tampa Bay 9/15

Pinch-hitting – 1 of 3 (.333) with 1 BB & 1 RBI

 

Fielding

Chances – 1226

Put Outs – 1161

Assists – 59

Errors – 6

DP – 114

Pct. - .995

 

Postseason Batting: 5 G (ALDS vs. NY Yankees)

PA – 22, AB – 14, R – 2, H – 4, 2B – 0,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 1, BB – 7, IBB – 1, SO – 2, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .286, OBP - .500, SLG -.286, TB – 4, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 1

 

Awards & Honors:

AL MVP: BBWAA

All-Star (Started for AL at 1B)

 

Top 5 in AL MVP Voting:

Jason Giambi, Oak.: 317 pts. – 14 of 28 first place votes, 81% share

Frank Thomas, ChiWS.: 285 pts. – 10 first place votes, 73% share

Alex Rodriguez, Sea.: 218 pts.  – 4 first place votes, 56% share

Carlos Delgado, Tor.: 206 pts. – 53% share

Pedro Martinez, Bos.: 103 pts. – 26% share

 

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A’s went 91-70 to finish first in the AL Western Division by a half game over the Seattle Mariners, while leading the league in batter strikeouts (1159). Seven games behind the Mariners on August 11, the A’s caught them on Sept. 23, and took sole possession of first place heading into the last weekend in the midst of a 6-1 season-ending run. Although they played only 161 games, they did not need to play a makeup game with Tampa Bay thanks to a tiebreaker advantage. Lost ALDS to the New York Yankees, 3 games to 2.

 

Aftermath of 2000:

In 2001, Giambi had another outstanding season, batting .342 with a league-best .477 on-base percentage fueled by his AL-high 129 walks. He further topped the circuit with 47 doubles and a .660 slugging percentage to go along with 38 home runs and 120 RBIs. He placed second in league MVP voting and in the off-season signed a seven-year, $120 million free agent contract with the New York Yankees. In a solid 2002 season with his new club, Giambi hit .314 with 41 home runs and 122 RBIs. In 2003, dealing with a sore knee and other health issues, his average dropped to .250 with 41 home runs and 107 RBIs. He led the AL with 129 walks and 140 batter strikeouts as well. In the ALCS triumph over the Red Sox he hit three home runs, including two in the decisive seventh game. Illness and injuries limited Giambi to 80 games in 2004 and he batted .208 with 12 home runs and 40 RBIs. Revelations about steroid use swirled around him and were blamed for his physical deterioration. Concentrating on conditioning and splitting time between DH and first base in 2005, Giambi rebounded to .271 with 32 home runs and 87 RBIs and topped the AL with 108 walks drawn and a .440 on-base percentage. In 2006 he hit .253 with 37 home runs and 113 RBIs. Dogged by a foot injury in 2007, he had a down year, dropping to .236 in 83 games with 14 home runs and 39 RBIs. In his last year with the Yankees in 2008, Giambi batted .247 with 32 home runs and 96 RBIs. As a free agent in the offseason he returned to Oakland, where he spent the first half of the 2009 season and underperformed at .193 with 11 home runs and 40 RBIs when he was released in August. Signed by the Colorado Rockies, he hit .292 the rest of the way. Returning to the Rockies as a reserve in 2010, he appeared in 87 games and hit .244 with 6 home runs and 35 RBIs. Invited back in 2011 at age 40, he batted .260 with 13 home runs (including three in one game against the Phillies) and 32 RBIs. He spent one more inconsequential season with Colorado in 2012 before moving on to the Cleveland Indians for 2013 and ’14, his last two seasons. Overall, for his major league career, Giambi batted .277 with 2010 hits that included 405 doubles, 9 triples, and 440 home runs. He further scored 1227 runs and compiled 1441 RBIs and drew 1366 walks, a category in which he led the American League four times. His lifetime OBP was .399, and he topped the AL three times. With Oakland he batted .300 with 1100 hits, 241 doubles, 7 triples, 198 home runs, 715 RBIs, 640 runs scored, 636 walks drawn, and a .406 OBP. Appearing in 45 postseason games, he hit .290 with 7 home runs and 19 RBIs. A five-time All-Star, Giambi finished in the top 10 in league MVP voting four times. A player who was tarnished by the steroid controversy, he managed to become a respected elder figure in the clubhouse by the time he reached Colorado. His brother Jeremy was a major league outfielder/first baseman with four teams. The siblings were teammates with the A’s in 2000 and 2001.

 

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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.


Sep 3, 2020

Cy Young Profile: Ron Guidry, 1978

 Pitcher, New York Yankees



Age:  28 (Aug. 28)

2nd season with Yankees

Bats – Left, Throws – Left

Height: 5’11” Weight: 161

Prior to 1978:

A Cajun native of Lafayette, Louisiana, Guidry started out pitching in Little League and advanced to American Legion baseball. A track sprinter in high school in addition to baseball, he received a baseball scholarship to the Univ. of Southwestern Louisiana. As a college freshman in 1969, he posted a 5-1 record with a 1.57 ERA. Thanks to his outstanding fastball he recorded 87 strikeouts over 80 innings pitched as a sophomore in 1970. Guidry missed most of his junior year due to tendinitis in his throwing arm but was still selected by the Yankees in the third round of the 1971 amateur draft. First assigned to Johnson City of the Rookie-level Appalachian League, the 20-year-old Guidry started seven games and produced a 2-2 record with a 2.11 ERA and 61 strikeouts over 47 innings pitched, although he also walked 27 batters as he struggled with his control. Promoted to Fort Lauderdale of the Class A Florida State League in 1972, he appeared in 15 games (13 of them starts) and went 2-4 with a 3.82 ERA and 61 strikeouts with 50 walks over 66 innings. He spent 1973 with Kinston of the Class A Carolina League and posted a 7-6 mark with 97 strikeouts and 70 walks over the course of 101 innings. Shifted primarily to the bullpen in 1974 with West Haven of the Class AA Eastern League, Guidry appeared in 37 games (8 of them starts) and was 2-4 with a 5.26 ERA while striking out 79 batters and walking 53 over 77 innings pitched. Moving on to Syracuse of the Class AAA International League in 1975, he was used exclusively as a reliever and was 6-5 with 14 saves and a 2.90 ERA and 76 strikeouts with 37 walks issued in 42 games pitched that covered 62 innings. In a brief stint with the Yankees, Guidry was 0-1 with a 3.45 ERA in 7 appearances, all but one of them in relief. He also obtained the nickname “Gator”, due to his being from Louisiana, and learned how to throw a slider from star reliever Sparky Lyle. After spending spring training with the Yankees in 1976 Guidry was sent back down to Syracuse. Called back up to the Yankees in May, he was a rarely utilized member of the bullpen (he went unused for a 46-day stretch at one point) and was ready to quit when sent back to Syracuse in July. Overall, in Class AAA he produced a 5-1 tally in 22 relief appearances with a 1.13 ERA and 50 strikeouts in 40 innings pitched. In 7 games pitched with the Yanks, he had no record and a 5.63 ERA. Moving into the starting rotation in 1977, he broke out with a 16-7 record, which included 7 of his last 8 starts and a 2.82 ERA with 176 strikeouts while pitching 210.2 innings for the pennant-winning Yankees. With his outstanding fastball and slider, much greater things were to come in 1978.

 

1978 Season Summary

Appeared in 37 games

P – 35, PR – 2

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

 

Pitching

Games – 35

Games Started – 35 [9, tied with Dennis Eckersley, Ed Figueroa & Geoff Zahn]

Complete Games – 16 [7, tied with Dennis Eckersley, Ferguson Jenkins & Milt Wilcox]

Wins – 25 [1]

Losses – 3

PCT - .893 [1]

Saves – 0

Shutouts – 9 [1]

Innings Pitched – 273.2 [7]

Hits – 187

Runs – 61

Earned Runs – 53

Home Runs – 13

Bases on Balls – 72

Strikeouts – 248 [2]

ERA – 1.74 [1]

Hit Batters – 1

Balks – 1 [18, tied with many others]

Wild Pitches – 7 [18, tied with five others]

 

League-leading wins were +3 ahead of runner-up Mike Caldwell

League-leading win percentage was +.093 ahead of runner-up Larry Gura

League-leading shutouts were +3 ahead of runners-up Mike Caldwell & Jim Palmer

League-leading ERA was -0.53 lower than runner-up Jon Matlack

 

Midseason Snapshot: 13-1, ERA – 1.99, SO – 127 in 140 IP

 

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Most strikeouts, game – 18 (in 9 IP) vs. California 6/17

10+ strikeout games – 8

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 2 (in 9 IP) at Boston 9/9, (in 9 IP) vs. Boston 9/15, (in 9 IP) at Cleveland 9/24

 

Fielding

Chances – 60

Put Outs – 14

Assists – 44

Errors – 2

DP – 1

Pct. - .967

 

Postseason Pitching:

G – 2 (ALCS vs. KC Royals – 1 G; World Series vs. LA Dodgers – 1 G)

GS – 2, CG – 1, Record – 2-0, PCT – 1.000, SV – 0, ShO – 0, IP – 17, H – 15, R – 2, ER – 2, HR – 0, BB – 8, SO – 11, ERA – 1.06, HB – 0, BLK – 0, WP – 0

 

Awards & Honors:

AL Cy Young Award: BBWAA

MLB Player of the Year: Sporting News

AL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News

All-Star

2nd in AL MVP voting (291 points, 8 first place votes, 74% share)

 

AL Cy Young voting (top 5):

Ron Guidry, NYY: 140 pts. – 28 of 28 first place votes, 100% share

Mike Caldwell, Mil.: 76 pts. – 54% share

Jim Palmer, Balt.: 14 pts. – 10% share

Dennis Eckersley, Bos.: 10 pts. – 7% share

Rich Gossage, NYY: 4 pts. – 3% share

 

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Yankees went 99-63 to finish tied for first in the AL Eastern Division with the Boston Red Sox, which necessitated a season-extending single-game playoff. They defeated the Red Sox 8-3 as Guidry won his 25th game of the season, to clinch the AL East title with a final record of 100-63. The pitching staff led the league in ERA (3.18), saves (36), fewest hits allowed (1321), and fewest earned runs allowed (516). The Yankees started slowly and were 14 games behind the Red Sox in July, but following the replacement of Billy Martin as manager by Bob Lemon the club finished out at 48-20 to move into first in mid-September and Boston then needed an 8-game winning streak to force the climactic playoff. Guidry’s stunning first half that included a 13-game winning streak was topped off by a 6-1 tally in September/October, including the playoff. Won ALCS over the Kansas City Royals, 3 games to 1. Won World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers, 4 games to 2, after losing the first two games.

 

Aftermath of ‘78:

The Yankees dropped to fourth place in the AL East in 1979, but the pitcher known as “Louisiana Lightning” again topped the league in ERA, even though it was a full run higher than in 1978 at 2.78 to go along with an 18-8 record with 201 strikeouts over 236.1 innings. The team returned to the top of the division in 1980 and Guidry contributed a 17-10 tally with a 3.56 ERA and 166 strikeouts. He also helped out in the bullpen and picked up a save as a result. During the strike-interrupted 1981 season he posted a solid 11-5 record with a 2.76 ERA and 104 strikeouts in 127 innings pitched. Guidry was an All-Star in 1982, despite struggling with inconsistency on his way to a 14-8 mark with a 3.81 ERA and 162 strikeouts. Additionally, he won a Gold Glove for his fielding prowess for the first time. He went 21-9 in 1983 with a league-leading 21 complete games, 3.42 ERA, and 156 strikeouts. He struggled through a rough season in 1984, during which he spent time on the disabled list with a rib injury and finished at 10-11 with a 4.51 ERA. Nevertheless, in a game against the White Sox he struck out three batters on just nine pitches. Guidry rebounded in 1985 to compile a 22-6 record with a 3.27 ERA and 143 strikeouts while pitching 259 innings. With his fastball losing velocity Guidry became more of a finesse pitcher, using breaking pitches to maintain his effectiveness. However, the wear on the 35-year-old pitcher’s arm began to show in 1986 as he started only 30 games and went 9-12 with a 3.98 ERA. The decline continued in 1987 and ’88, after which he underwent surgery for a bone spur in his left elbow. Sent to Class AAA in 1989, Guidry retired following a 1-5 start with Columbus of the International League. For his major league career that was played entirely with the Yankees, he compiled a 170-91 record with a 3.29 ERA and 95 complete games, including 26 shutouts. He also recorded 1778 strikeouts over 2392 innings pitched. In addition to three 20-win seasons, he led the AL in ERA and winning percentage two times apiece. Appearing in 10 postseason games, Guidry went 5-2 with a 3.02 ERA, three complete games, and 51 strikeouts over 62.2 innings. He was a four-time All-Star and five-time Gold Glove recipient. Guidry later returned to the Yankees as a pitching coach and spring training instructor. His #49 was retired by the team.

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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.