Mar 24, 2021

MVP Profile: Kevin Mitchell, 1989

Outfielder, San Francisco Giants



Age:  27

3rd season with Giants (second complete)

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 5’10” Weight: 186

 

Prior to 1989:

A San Diego native, Mitchell boxed and played football, in addition to baseball, in his youth. Signed by the New York Mets to a $600-per-month contract as an undrafted free agent in 1980, he was first assigned to Kingsport of the Rookie-level Appalachian League in 1981 where the 19-year-old batted .335 in 62 games with 7 home runs and 45 RBIs while playing primarily at third base. Following a stop at Lynchburg of the Carolina League in 1982, Mitchell moved on to Jackson of the Class AA Texas League in 1983 where he hit .299 with 15 home runs and 85 RBIs. Moving up to Tidewater of the Class AAA International League in 1984, and apparently distracted by his brother’s gang-related shooting death back home in San Diego, Mitchell’s production dropped to .243 with 10 home runs and 54 RBIs while he split time between third and first base. Called up to the Mets in September, he appeared in seven games and batted .214. Back with Tidewater in 1985, his average rose to .290 along with 9 home runs and 43 RBIs. Making it to the Mets in 1986, he was an infield backup and came to be platooned in left field. Appearing in 108 games, he hit .277 with 12 home runs and 43 RBIs and had a key hit in the ninth-inning rally in Game 6 of the World Series against the Red Sox that helped propel the team to a championship. In the offseason he was traded to his hometown San Diego Padres as part of an eight-player transaction. Installed as the starting third baseman in 1987, he struggled and was hitting .245 with 7 home runs and 26 RBIs when he was dealt to the Giants as part of a seven-player trade. Taking over at third base for his new club, Mitchell fielded well and batted .306 the rest of the way with 15 home runs and 44 RBIs as the Giants won the NL West title. He hit .267 with a home run in the seven-game NLCS loss to St. Louis. Due to  the presence of second-year third baseman Matt Williams in 1988, he still saw plenty of action at third but also played 40 games in left field, which became his regular position in 1989. At bat he hit .251 with 19 home runs and 80 RBIs.

 

1989 Season Summary

Appeared in 154 games

LF – 147, PH – 6, 3B – 2

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 640 [19]

At Bats – 543

Runs – 100 [4, tied with Brett Butler]

Hits – 158 [15, tied with Milt Thompson]

Doubles – 34 [7, tied with Lonnie Smith & Barry Bonds]

Triples – 6 [13, tied with eight others]

Home Runs – 47 [1]

RBI – 125 [1]

Bases on Balls – 87 [5, tied with Eddie Murray]

Int. BB – 32 [1]

Strikeouts – 115 [10]

Stolen Bases – 3

Caught Stealing – 4

Average - .291 [8, tied with Jose Oquendo]

OBP - .388 [8]

Slugging Pct. - .635 [1]

Total Bases – 345 [1]

GDP – 6

Hit by Pitches – 3 [20, tied with seventeen others]

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 7 [12, tied with nine others]

 

League-leading home runs were +11 ahead of runner-up Howard Johnson

League-leading RBIs were +8 ahead of runner-up Pedro Guerrero

League-leading int. bases on balls were +7 ahead of runner-up Spike Owen

League-leading slugging pct was +.076 ahead of runner-up Howard Johnson

League-leading total bases were +24 ahead of runner-up Will Clark

 

Midseason snapshot: HR –  31, RBI – 81, AVG –  .295, SLG –  .692

 

Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) at NY Mets 5/21

Longest hitting streak – 9 games

HR at home – 22

HR on road – 25

Most home runs, game – 2 on six occasions

Multi-HR games – 6

Most RBIs, game – 4 at San Diego 4/3, vs. Cincinnati 8/9, vs. NY Mets 9/1

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

 

Fielding

Chances – 320

Put Outs – 305

Assists – 8

Errors – 7

DP – 0

Pct. - .978

 

Postseason Batting: 9 G (NLCS vs. Chi. Cubs - 5 G; World Series vs. Oakland – 4 G)

PA – 38, AB – 34, R – 7, H – 11, 2B – 0, 3B – 0, HR – 3, RBI – 9, BB – 3, IBB – 2, SO – 6, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .324, OBP - .368, SLG - .588, TB – 20, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 1

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

MLB Player of the Year: Sporting News

Silver Slugger

All-Star (started for NL in LF)

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Kevin Mitchell, SF: 314 pts. - 20 of 24 first place votes, 93% share

Will Clark, SF: 225 pts. – 3 first place votes, 67% share

Pedro Guerrero, StL.: 190 pts. – 1 first place vote, 57% share

Ryne Sandberg, ChiC.: 157 pts. – 47% share

Howard Johnson, NYM: 153 pts. – 46% share

 

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Giants went 92-70 to finish first in the NL Western Division by 3 games over the San Diego Padres, while leading the league in batter strikeouts (1071) and slugging (.390). Led by the hitting of Mitchell and 1B Will Clark along with solid pitching and defense, the Giants were consistent and went 17-11 in September to hold off the surging Padres. Won NLCS over the Chicago Cubs, 4 games to 1. Lost World Series to the Oakland Athletics, 4 games to 0, in a Series marked by an earthquake that necessitated a 10-day postponement in the action.

 

Aftermath of ‘89:

Mitchell signed a $2,083,000 contract for 1990 and, although hindered by bone spurs in his right wrist that necessitated offseason surgery, he batted .290 with 35 home runs and 93 RBIs. Limited by injuries to 113 games in 1991, his average dropped to .256, but he still hit 27 home runs with 69 RBIs. Traded to the Seattle Mariners in the offseason, he was overweight and still having wrist trouble combined with a stomach injury. Limited to 99 games in 1992, he batted .286 with 9 home runs and 67 RBIs. On the trading block once again in the offseason, Mitchell was dealt to the Cincinnati Reds where he rebounded somewhat in 1993 to .341 with 19 home runs and 64 RBIs. The production was better during the strike-shortened 1994 season as he hit .326 with 30 home runs and 77 RBIs. He signed with the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks of the Japan Pacific League for 1995 and lasted just 37 games before leaving the club due to a dispute over a knee injury that eventually required surgery. He was back in the USA in 1996 where he signed with the Boston Red Sox. He played in just 27 games for the Red Sox until he was traded back to Cincinnati at midseason. For the year he appeared in 64 games and batted .316 with 8 home runs and 39 RBIs. Moving on to Cleveland as a free agent in 1997, he was released in June after hitting only .153 in 20 games. His major league career came to an end with Oakland in 1998 where he lasted until August before being let go. While he saw action in the Mexican League in 1999 and with independent minor league teams in 2000 and 2001, Mitchell’s playing career was effectively over. For his major league career, he batted .284 with 1173 hits that included 224 doubles, 25 triples, and 234 home runs. He scored 630 runs and compiled 760 RBIs. With the Giants he batted .278 with 614 hits, 351 runs scored, 109 doubles, 17 triples, 143 home runs, 411 RBIs, and a .536 slugging percentage. Appearing in 23 postseason games, Mitchell hit .288 with 4 home runs and 11 RBIs. A two-time All-Star, he received MVP votes after three seasons, winning once. Following his playing career, he managed a couple of independent minor league teams.

 

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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.

 

Mar 17, 2021

MVP Profile: Marty Marion, 1944

Shortstop, St. Louis Cardinals



Age:  27

5th season with Cardinals

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 6’2”    Weight: 170

 

Prior to 1944:

Born in South Carolina, Marion grew up in Atlanta, where a compound fracture of his right leg at age 10 put him in traction for several months and didn’t allow him to walk for over a year. He was later able to play third base at Tech High School and for an American Legion team. He was signed by the Cardinals following a tryout in 1936. Assigned to Huntington of the Class C Middle Atlantic League as a 19-year-old, he played shortstop and hit .268. The tall and slender Marion picked up the nickname “Slats”, which stuck. He advanced to Rochester of the Class AA International League in 1937 and batted .246. Quick and agile in the field with a strong throwing arm, Marion spent two more seasons with Rochester in 1938 and ’39, hitting for .272 in the latter year. He won the starting shortstop job for the Cardinals in 1940 and batted .278 with 22 extra-base hits while performing well in the field, where his fielding percentage was .949 and he was in the top five among NL shortstops in chances, put outs, assists, and double plays. Known for his friendly personality as well as defensive skill, Marion hit .252 with 22 doubles in 1941 while leading league shortstops with 489 assists. The Cards won the NL pennant in 1942 while “Slats”, or “the Octopus” (due to his long arms and legs) batted .276 with a league-leading 38 doubles and was among the leaders among NL shortstops with 775 chances, 296 put outs, 448 assists, and 87 DPs. He placed seventh in league MVP voting. He hit only .111 in the World Series triumph over the Yankees. Eligible to be drafted for World War II military service, Marion was deferred due to concerns regarding his boyhood leg injury. The Cardinals repeated as NL champs in 1943 and Marion was an All-Star for the first time, batting .280 and once again ranking among the leaders in defensive measurements at shortstop. This time he hit .357 as the Cards lost the World Series rematch with the Yankees.

 

1944 Season Summary

Appeared in 144 games

SS – 144

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 565

At Bats – 506

Runs – 50

Hits – 135

Doubles – 26

Triples – 2

Home Runs – 6

RBI – 63

Bases on Balls – 43

Int. BB – N/A

Strikeouts – 50 [12, tied with Ray Sanders & Buck Etchison]

Stolen Bases – 1

Caught Stealing – 3

Average - .267

OBP - .324

Slugging Pct. - .362

Total Bases – 183

GDP – 9

Hit by Pitches – 0

Sac Hits – 16 [5]

Sac Flies – N/A

 

Midseason snapshot: 2B – 9, HR - 1, RBI – 27, AVG – .254, OBP - .314

 

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Most hits, game – 4 (in 7 AB) at Pittsburgh 6/23 – 14 innings, (in 4 AB) at Bos. Braves 7/22

Longest hitting streak – 9 games

Most HR, game – 2 (in 5 AB) at NY Giants 10/1 – 13 innings

HR at home – 2

HR on road – 4

Multi-HR games – 1

Most RBIs, game – 3 at Phila. Phillies 7/27, at Pittsburgh 8/3

Pinch-hitting – No appearances

 

Fielding

Chances – 750

Put Outs – 268

Assists – 461

Errors – 21

DP - 90

Pct. - .972

 

Postseason Batting: 6 G (World Series vs. St. Louis Browns)

PA – 25, AB – 22, R – 1, H – 5, 2B – 3,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 2, BB – 2, IBB – 2, SO – 3, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .227, OBP - .292, SLG - .364, TB – 8, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 1, SF – N/A

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

MLB Player of the Year: Sporting News

All-Star (Started for NL at SS)

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Marty Marion, St.LC.: 190 pts. – 7 of 24 first place votes, 57% share

Bill Nicholson, ChiC.: 189 pts. – 4 first place votes, 56% share

Dixie Walker, Brook.: 145 pts. – 3 first place votes, 43% share

Stan Musial, StLC.: 136 pts. – 3 first place votes, 40% share

Bucky Walters, Cin.: 107 pts. – 3 first place votes, 32% share

Bill Voiselle, NYG: 107 pts. – 32% share

(2 first place votes for Ray Mueller, Cin., who ranked seventh & 1 first place vote apiece for Walker Cooper, StLC., who ranked eighth & Babe Dahlgren, Pitt., who ranked twelfth)

 

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Cardinals went 105-49 to win the NL pennant by 14.5 games over the Pittsburgh Pirates, while leading the league in runs scored (772), hits (1507), doubles (274), home runs (100), RBIs (722), batting (.275), OBP (.344), and slugging (.402). The Cards cruised to their third straight pennant, despite a small September slump. Won World Series over the St. Louis Browns, 4 games to 2, in the only all-St. Louis Series, with Marion performing impressively in the field.

 

Aftermath of ‘44:

Marion’s stellar defensive performances were despite the Cardinals’ home field, Sportsman’s Park, having an infield that was regularly in poor condition. Playing shallow at short, he was sure-handed, agile, and effective at throwing out runners from deep in the hole. The Cardinals dipped in the standings in 1945 but Marion batted .277 with 27 doubles and continued to excel in the field. He placed eighth in NL MVP voting. Dealing with chronic back pain, Marion maintained his All-Star status in 1946, while hitting .233 with 29 doubles and leading NL shortstops with 791 chances, 290 put outs, 480 assists, and 105 double plays. The Cardinals returned to the top of the National League and defeated the Red Sox in the World Series. In 1947, Marion batted .272 with a career-high 74 RBIs and led NL shortstops with 796 chances, 329 put outs, and 104 DPs. Off the field, he played a significant role in negotiating a pension plan for major league players. Marion remained with the Cardinals until 1950, when he was limited to 106 games due to a knee injury. He became manager of the Cards in 1951 and the club finished third and, having run afoul of owner Fred Saigh, he was fired and moved on to the St. Louis Browns, where he was a player/coach in 1952 and ‘53. He saw limited action on the field, and it marked the end of his playing career. For his major league career, Marion batted .263 with 1448 hits that included 272 doubles, 37 triples, and 36 home runs. He scored 602 runs and compiled 624 RBIs. Almost all of his production occurred with the Cardinals. Appearing in 23 World Series games, he hit .231 with a home run and 11 RBIs. Marion became manager of the Browns during the 1952 season and stayed on through 1953, the club’s final year in St. Louis. He became a coach with the Chicago White Sox in 1954 and took over as manager late in the season. He stayed on through 1956. His managerial record was 356-372. Marion remained involved in baseball, becoming a minor league co-owner, and attempting to return to the major leagues in a similar capacity. He was elected to the Cardinals Hall of Fame in 2014, three years after his death at age 94. His brother Red played briefly for the Washington Senators.

 

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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.

 

Mar 11, 2021

MVP Profile: Andrew McCutchen, 2013

Outfielder, Pittsburgh Pirates


Age:  26

5th season with Pirates

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 5’11” Weight: 195

 

Prior to 2013:

A native of Fort Meade, Florida, McCutchen displayed great athletic prowess from an early age. Able to play for the Fort Meade High School varsity baseball team as a 13-year-old eighth grader, he became the starting shortstop and batted .591. In high school he also played football and ran track. For his varsity baseball career, he hit .474 and was chosen by the Pirates in the first round (eleventh overall) of the 2005 amateur draft. Playing 58 games at the Rookie and Class A levels as an 18-year-old in ’05, McCutchen, now an outfielder, batted .310 with 18 extra-base hits, 35 RBIs, and 17 stolen bases. In 2006 with the Hickory Crawdads of the Class A South Atlantic League, he hit .291 with 20 doubles, 14 home runs, 62 RBIs, and 22 stolen bases. He moved up to Altoona of the Class AA Eastern League later in the season and batted .308 in 20 games. McCutchen spent most of 2007 with Altoona, hitting .258 with 20 doubles, 10 home runs, 70 runs scored, 48 RBIs, and 17 stolen bases. He finished off the season with Indianapolis of the Class AAA International League, where he spent 2008. He hit .283 at Class AAA in ’08 and started off with Indianapolis again in 2009 before being promoted to the Pirates in June. Inserted into the lineup in center field, McCutchen batted .286 in 108 games with 26 doubles, 9 triples, 12 home runs, 74 runs scored, 54 RBIs, and 22 stolen bases. He placed fourth in NL Rookie of the Year voting. In his first full major league season in 2010, the production improved to .286 with 35 doubles, 16 home runs, 94 runs scored, 56 RBIs, and 33 stolen bases. The perennially losing Pirates showed improvement in 2011 and McCutchen was an All-Star for the first time as he hit .259 with 34 doubles, 23 home runs, and 89 RBIs. He had an outstanding year in 2012, batting .327 with a league-leading 194 hits as well as 107 runs scored, 29 doubles, 31 home runs, and 96 RBIs. By 2013, McCutchen was clearly established as a rising star for the Pirates, with his excellent speed, solid fielding, and line-drive hitting ability.

 

2013 Season Summary

Appeared in 157 games

CF – 155, RF – 13, PH – 3, DH – 1

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 674 [10, tied with Nori Aoki]

At Bats – 583 [17, tied with Adrian Gonzalez]

Runs – 97 [6]

Hits – 185 [3]

Doubles – 38 [7, tied with Daniel Murphy & Ian Desmond]

Triples – 5 [15, tied with eight others]

Home Runs – 21

RBI – 84 [11, tied with Carlos Beltran & Michael Cuddyer]

Bases on Balls – 78 [4]

Int. BB – 12 [4]

Strikeouts – 101

Stolen Bases – 27 [6]

Caught Stealing – 10 [7, tied with Adeiny Hechavarria & Gerardo Parra]

Average - .317 [7]

OBP - .404 [3]

Slugging Pct. - .508 [6]

Total Bases – 296 [5]

GDP – 13

Hit by Pitches – 9 [14, tied with eight others]

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 4

 

Midseason snapshot: 2B – 26, HR – 10, RBI – 49, AVG – .302, SB – 20, OBP –

 .376, SLG – .471

 

Most hits, game – 4 (in 5 AB) at Milwaukee 4/30, (in 4 AB) vs. Seattle 5/7, (in 5 AB) at Cincinnati 7/20

Longest hitting streak – 11 games

HR at home – 9

HR on road – 12

Most home runs, game – 2 (in 5 AB) at Washington 7/22

Multi-HR games – 1

Most RBIs, game – 4 at Washington 7/22

Pinch-hitting – 1 for 3 (.333) with 1 RBI

 

Fielding

Chances – 338

Put Outs – 321

Assists – 11

Errors – 6

DP – 3

Pct. - .982

 

Postseason Batting: 6 G (NLWC vs. Cincinnati – 1 G; NLDS vs. St. Louis – 5 G)

PA – 26, AB – 21, R – 3, H – 7, 2B – 1,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 0, BB – 5, IBB – 1, SO – 3, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .333, OBP - .462, SLG - .381, TB – 8, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

Silver Slugger

All-Star

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Andrew McCutchen, Pitt.: 409 pts. - 28 of 30 first place votes, 97% share

Paul Goldschmidt, Ari.: 242 pts. – 58% share

Yadier Molina, StL.: 219 pts. – 2 first place votes, 52% share

Matt Carpenter, StL.: 194 pts. – 46% share

Freddie Freeman, Atl.: 154 pts. – 37% share

 

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Pirates went 94-68 to finish second in the NL Central Division, 3 games behind the division-winning St. Louis Cardinals and qualifying for a Wild Card playoff spot, achieving their first postseason berth since 1992. With McCutchen’s hitting and performance in the field for a fine defensive club, and a solid bullpen, the Pirates spent 50 days in first place before falling behind the Cardinals, who swept them in a three-game series in St. Louis, in September. Won NLWC over Cincinnati Reds, 1 game to 0. Lost NLDS to the St. Louis Cardinals, 3 games to 2.

 

Aftermath of ‘13:

McCutchen followed up with another outstanding season in 2014, batting .314 with 38 doubles, 6 triples, 25 home runs, 89 runs scored, 83 RBIs, and 18 stolen bases. He led the NL with a .410 on-base percentage and placed third in league MVP voting. In 2015, despite being hindered by a left knee injury to start the season, he hit .292 with 36 doubles, 23 home runs, 91 runs scored, and 96 RBIs with a .401 OBP. He placed fifth in NL MVP balloting and was a Gold Glove finalist. Struggling to play despite injuries in 2016, McCutchen’s performance dropped off to .256 with 24 home runs and 79 RBIs and he had problems with his range in the outfield also. He started the 2017 season in right field before moving back to center field. For the year he batted .279 with 30 doubles, 28 home runs, and 88 RBIs. Traded to the San Francisco Giants in 2018, “Cutch” played right field and hit .255 with 15 home runs and 55 RBIs until he was dealt to the New York Yankees at the end of August. He started 25 games for the Yankees in right and left field and hit .253 with 5 home runs and 10 RBIs. Signed by the Philadelphia Phillies as a free agent in the offseason, McCutchen filled a need in left field and as a leadoff hitter until his season was ended by a torn left ACL in June. He finished at .256 in 59 games with 10 home runs, 45 runs scored, and 29 RBIs. In the pandemic-shortened 2020 season he split time between left field and DH and hit .253 with 10 home runs and 34 RBIs. For his major league career through 2020, McCutchen has batted .285 with 1719 hits that include 343 doubles, 48 triples, and 243 home runs. He has scored 974 runs and compiled 853 RBIs and 191 stolen bases. He has a .376 OBP and .478 slugging percentage. With the Pirates the totals were .291 with 814 runs scored, 1463 hits, 292 doubles, 44 triples, 203 home runs, 725 RBIs, 171 stolen bases, a .379 OBP, and .487 slugging percentage. Appearing in 13 postseason games, he hit .239 with one RBI. A five-time All-Star, he has received one Gold Glove and four Silver Slugger awards.

 

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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.

 

Mar 4, 2021

MVP Profile: Mike Schmidt, 1980

Third Baseman, Philadelphia Phillies


Age:  31 (Sept. 27)

8th season with Phillies

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 6’2”    Weight: 195

 

Prior to 1980:

A native of Dayton, Ohio, Schmidt starred in football as well as baseball at Fairview High School. Knee injuries in high school narrowed his focus to baseball and he became a two-time All-American at Ohio University, where he had gone to study architecture. A shortstop who produced a .640 career slugging percentage in college, he was chosen by the Phillies in the second round of the 1971 amateur draft. Starting off at Reading of the Class AA Eastern League, Schmidt batted a mere .211 with 8 home runs and 31 RBIs over the course of 74 games in ’71. Promoted to the Eugene Emeralds of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League in 1972, Schmidt played primarily at second and third base and his average jumped to .291 with 26 home runs and 91 RBIs. He was chosen as second baseman on the PCL All-Star team and received a late-season call-up to the Phillies where he hit his first major league home run. The Phillies, rebuilding with youth, opened a spot in the lineup for Schmidt in 1973 by trading third baseman Don Money. Schmidt proved to be capable at third and showed off his power potential with 18 home runs but batted an anemic .196 and struck out 136 times. He improved to .282 with a league-leading 36 home runs and .546 slugging percentage in 1974. He also compiled 116 RBIs and was an All-Star for the first time. Schmidt followed up in 1975 by again topping the NL in home runs with 38, to go along with 95 RBIs, a .249 average, .523 slugging percentage, and 29 stolen bases. He also led the league in batter strikeouts (180) for the second straight year, but also was second in assists by a third baseman with 368 and third in putouts (132). The Phillies, who contended in ’75, won the AL East in 1976 and Schmidt contributed another 38 home runs, including a record-tying four in a wild ten-inning, 18-16 win over the Cubs at Wrigley Field. In addition to leading the NL in homers for the third year in a row, he also led in total bases (306) while hitting .262 with 107 RBIs and a .524 slugging percentage. “Schmitty” or “Captain Cool” due to his calm and typically unemotional demeanor, also received his first Gold Glove for his play at third base. Philadelphia went quietly in the NLCS vs. Cincinnati, but Schmidt hit .308 and drove in two runs. He remained productive in 1977 although his 38 home runs failed to lead the league. But he batted .274 with 101 RBIs and a .574 slugging percentage. Hindered by a hamstring injury during 1978, Schmidt had a lesser season at bat, hitting .251 with only 21 home runs and 78 RBIs, although defensively he still received another Gold Glove. He rebounded in 1979 by batting .253 with 45 home runs, 114 RBIs, a .564 slugging percentage, and drawing a league-high 120 walks. Through his first seven years with the Phillies, Schmidt had been a four-time All-Star who led the NL in home runs three times and received four Gold Gloves.  

 

1980 Season Summary

Appeared in 150 games

3B – 149, PH – 1

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Batting

Plate Appearances – 652 [16]

At Bats – 548

Runs – 104 [2]

Hits – 157

Doubles – 25

Triples – 8 [9, tied with nine others]

Home Runs – 48 [1]

RBI – 121 [1]

Bases on Balls – 89 [4]

Int. BB – 10

Strikeouts – 119 [2]

Stolen Bases – 12

Caught Stealing – 5

Average - .286 [20]

OBP - .380 [4]

Slugging Pct. - .624 [1]

Total Bases – 342 [1]

GDP – 6

Hit by Pitches – 2

Sac Hits – 0

Sac Flies – 13 [1]

 

League-leading home runs were +13 ahead of runner-up Bob Horner

League-leading RBIs were +12 ahead of runner-up George Hendrick

League-leading slugging percentage was +.107 ahead of runner-up Jack Clark

League-leading total bases were +35 ahead of runner-up Steve Garvey

Legue-leading sac flies were +1 ahead of runner-up Dusty Baker

 

Midseason snapshot: HR – 21, RBI – 57, AVG – .280., SLG – .608

 

Most hits, game – 4 (in 6 AB) at Chi. Cubs 8/11 – 15 innings, (in 4 AB) at Montreal 4/18, (in 4 AB) vs. Atlanta 7/25 – 12 innings, (in 5 AB) at NY Mets 8/14

Longest hitting streak – 9 games

HR at home – 25

HR on road – 23

Most home runs, game – 2 on five occasions

Multi-HR games – 5

Most RBIs, game – 6 vs. NY Mets 4/22

Pinch-hitting – 0 of 1 (.000)

 

Fielding

Chances – 497

Put Outs – 98

Assists – 372

Errors – 27

DP – 31

Pct. - .946

 

Postseason Batting: 11 G (NLCS vs. Houston – 5 G; World Series vs. KC – 6 G)

PA – 51, AB – 45, R – 7, H – 13, 2B – 2,3B – 0, HR – 2, RBI – 8, BB – 5, IBB – 0, SO – 9, SB – 1, CS – 0, AVG - .289, OBP - .353, SLG - .467, TB – 21, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 1  World Series MVP

 

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

Gold Glove

Silver Slugger

All-Star

 

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Mike Schmidt, Phila.: 336 pts. - 24 of 24 first place votes, 100% share

Gary Carter, Mon.: 193 pts. – 57% share

Jose Cruz, Hou.: 166 pts. – 49% share

Dusty Baker, LAD: 138 pts. – 41% share

Steve Carlton, Phila.: 134 pts. – 40% share

 

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Phillies went 91-71 to finish first in the NL Eastern Division by 1 game over the Montreal Expos, while leading the league in slugging (.400, tied with the St. Louis Cardinals) & total bases (2248). Boosted by Schmidt’s hitting and LHP Steve Carlton and reliever Tug McGraw’s pitching, first baseman Pete Rose’s leadership, and solid performances from several rookies, the Phillies overcame a 6-game August 10 deficit and went 36-19 the rest of the way, including 6 of their last 7 games. Clinching the NL East title came down to a Schmidt home run that beat Montreal in the 11th -inning in the season’s final weekend. Won NLCS over the Houston Astros, 3 games to 2, which came down to a 10-inning win in the deciding game. Won World Series over the Kansas City Royals, 4 games to 2, for the first World Series triumph in franchise history.

 

Aftermath of ‘80:

Schmidt followed up with another MVP year during the strike-shortened 1981 season as he batted .316 with a NL-high 31 home runs, 91 RBIs, 78 runs scored, 73 walks drawn, a .435 OBP, a .644 slugging percentage, and 228 total bases. The Phillies reached the postseason but fell to Montreal in the first round. Hampered by various injuries in 1982, Schmidt hit .280 with 35 home runs and 87 RBIs, leading the NL in walks drawn (107), OBP (.403), and slugging percentage (.547). Philadelphia returned to the top of the NL East in 1983 and Schmidt won the NL home run crown with 40, while hitting .255 with 109 RBIs. His .399 on-base percentage also topped the league as did his 128 bases on balls and 148 batter strikeouts. The Phillies won the pennant but lost the World Series. The star third baseman placed third in league MVP balloting. In 1984 he tied Atlanta’s Dale Murphy for the league lead in home runs with 36 while topping the circuit along with Montreal’s Gary Carter in RBIs with 106 while batting .277. During the 1985 season Schmidt was shifted to first base in an effort to reduce wear and extend his career. Following a slow start at the plate, he again hit .277, with 33 home runs and 93 RBIs. He adapted well defensively at first base. Schmidt returned to third base in 1986 and received his third NL MVP award after batting .290 and leading the league with 37 home runs, 119 RBIs, and a .547 slugging percentage. He had one last big season in 1987, hitting .293 with 35 home runs and 113 RBIs. Various ailments limited Schmidt to 108 games in 1988, in which he produced 12 home runs, 62 RBIs, and a .249 batting average. At the end of May in 1989, while struggling to come back from surgery for a torn rotator cuff, Schmidt retired. Fans still voted him to the All-Star Game which he appeared at as a uniformed non-participant. For his career, spent entirely with the Phillies, Schmidt batted .267 with 2234 hits that included 408 doubles, 59 triples, and 548 home runs. He scored 1506 runs and compiled 1595 RBIs, 174 stolen bases, and drew 1507 walks. He had a career on-base percentage of .380 and a .527 slugging percentage. Schmidt hit over 30 home runs in 13 seasons, reached 40 three times, and led the NL on eight occasions. Appearing in 36 postseason games he hit .236 with 4 home runs and 16 RBIs. A 12-time All-Star, Schmidt received 10 Gold Gloves for his fielding prowess at third base, six Silver Slugger awards, and finished in the top 10 in league MVP voting nine times. The Phillies retired his #20 and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1995. A statue has been erected in his honor outside of Philadelphia’s Citizens Bank Park.

 

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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.