Jul 5, 2021

MVP Profile: Carl Yastrzemski, 1967

 Outfielder, Boston Red Sox

 

Age:  28 (Aug. 22)

7th season with Red Sox

Bats – Left, Throws – Right

Height: 5’11” Weight: 175

Prior to 1967:

A native of Long Island in New York state where his family had a potato farm, Yastrzemski was the son of a semipro baseball-playing father who instilled a passion for baseball in in him as a youth. The two played alongside each other for a local sandlot team while the younger Yastrzemski was in high school, drawing the interest of major league scouts. Not receiving a bonus offer out of high school, Yastrzemski headed off to college at Notre Dame where he played his freshman year and then signed with the Red Sox for a $108,000 bonus in November of 1958. Initially assigned to the Raleigh Capitals of the Class B Carolina League in 1959, he played second base and batted .377 with 15 home runs and 100 RBIs. Promoted to Minneapolis of the Class AAA American Association for their playoff appearance, he hit well and returned to Minneapolis in 1960 to learn to play left field, with the expectation that Boston’s star left fielder, Ted Williams, would retire following the ’60 season. Yastrzemski hit .339 with 36 doubles, 8 triples, 7 home runs, and 69 RBIs and, with Williams indeed having departed, he made the Red Sox as the starting left fielder in 1961. He struggled initially and Williams was called back to give the rookie some additional coaching. Yastrzemski went on to hit a respectable .266 with 31 doubles, 6 triples, 11 home runs, and 80 RBIs. He improved in 1962 to .296 with 43 doubles, 19 home runs, and 94 RBIs. In 1963, “Yaz” won the AL batting title with a .321 mark and further topped the circuit in hits (183), doubles (40), walks drawn (95), and on-base percentage (.418). Along the way, he was an All-Star for the first time. Yastrzemski’s batting average dropped to a still-solid .289 in 1964 along with 15 home runs and 67 RBIs, and he was overshadowed by rookie Tony Conigliaro, who primarily played in left field while “Yaz” moved to center field. Back in left field in 1965, with Conigliaro shifted to right field, Yastrzemski batted .312 and led the league in doubles (45), OBP (.395), and slugging (.536), while also producing 20 home runs and 72 RBIs. In 1966, the Red Sox finished ninth and Yastrzemski hit .278 with a league-leading 39 doubles along with 16 home runs and 80 RBIs. By 1967, he was recognized as a good line-drive hitter with an excellent natural swing that produced some power. His defense had been improving in the outfield and he was a key player with a chronically underproducing team.


1967 Season Summary

Appeared in 161 games

LF – 161, CF – 1, PH – 1

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Batting

Plate Appearances – 680 [5]

At Bats – 579 [8]

Runs – 112 [1]

Hits – 189 [1]

Doubles – 31 [3]

Triples – 4

Home Runs – 44 [1, tied with Harmon Killebrew]

RBI – 121 [1]

Bases on Balls – 91 [4]

Int. BB – 11 [6, tied with Curt Blefary, Ron Hansen & Reggie Smith]

Strikeouts – 69

Stolen Bases – 10 [13, tied with six others]

Caught Stealing – 8 [8, tied with four others]

Average - .326 [1]

OBP - .418 [1]

Slugging Pct. - .622 [1]

Total Bases – 360 [1]

GDP – 5

Hit by Pitches – 4

Sac Hits – 1

Sac Flies – 5 [11, tied with seven others]

League-leading runs scored were +7 ahead of runner-up Harmon Killebrew

League-leading hits were +16 ahead of runner-up Cesar Tovar

League-leading RBIs were +8 ahead of runner-up Harmon Killebrew

League-leading batting average was +.015 ahead of runner-up Frank Robinson

League-leading OBP was +.007 ahead of runner-up Al Kaline

League-leading slugging pct was +.046 ahead of runner-up Frank Robinson

League-leading total bases were +55 ahead of runner-up Harmon Killebrew

Midseason snapshot: HR - 19, RBI - 56, AVG - .324, SLG - .602, OBP – .420

 

---

 

 

Most hits, game – 5 (in 8 AB) at NY Yankees 4/16 – 18 innings

Longest hitting streak – 13 games

HR at home – 27

HR on road – 17

Most home runs, game – 2 on five occasions

Multi-HR games – 5

Most RBIs, game – 4 vs. Baltimore 5/17, at Washington 9/5, vs. Minnesota 9/30

Pinch-hitting – 1 for 2 (.500) with 1 2B & 1 RBI

 

Fielding

Chances – 317

Put Outs – 297

Assists – 13

Errors – 7

DP – 1

Pct. - .978

 

Postseason Batting: 7 G (World Series vs. St. Louis)

PA – 30, AB – 25, R – 4, H – 10, 2B – 2,3B – 0, HR – 3, RBI – 5, BB – 4, IBB – 1, SO – 1, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .400, OBP - .500, SLG -.840, TB – 21, GDP – 1, HBP – 1, SH – 0, SF – 0

Awards & Honors:

AL MVP: BBWAA

MLB Player of the Year: Sporting News

Gold Glove

All-Star (Started for AL in LF)

 

Top 5 in AL MVP Voting:

Carl Yastrzemski, Bos.: 275 pts. – 19 of 20 first place votes, 98% share

Harmon Killebrew, Min.: 161 pts. – 58% share

Bill Freehan, Det.: 137 pts. – 49% share

Joe Horlen, ChiWS.: 91 pts. – 33% share

Al Kaline, Det.: 88 pts. – 31% share

(1 first place vote for Cesar Tovar, Min., who ranked seventh)

 

---

 

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, while leading the league in runs scored (722), hits (1394), doubles (216, tied with Minnesota), home runs (158), RBIs (666), batting (.255), slugging (.395) & total bases (2162). The upstart Red Sox, under new manager Dick Williams, became involved in a dramatic four-team pennant race with the Twins, Tigers and 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, while the Tigers lost to California, to take the flag and achieve “the Impossible Dream”. In the final 12 games of the season, Yastrzemski went 10-for-13, including 7-for-8 with 6 RBIs in the last two games against the Twins, which propelled him to the AL Triple Crown. Lost World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals, 4 games to 3, despite “Yaz” hitting .400 with 5 RBIs, which could not overcome St. Louis ace RHP Bob Gibson’s three complete game wins.

 

Aftermath of ‘67:

In 1968, a season dominated by pitching, Yastrzemski won another batting title by hitting .301 (his closest competitor batted .290) and paced the circuit with a .426 OBP and 119 walks drawn as well. His home run total dropped to 23, which was more in line with his previous production, and he compiled 74 RBIs. The injury-plagued Red Sox dropped to fourth place. 1969 was a year of dissension in Boston and Yastrzemski became a part of it when he was fined $500 by manager Dick Williams for loafing during a game in Oakland. For the year, his average dropped to .255 but he still accounted for 40 home runs and 111 RBIs. “Yaz” hit another 40 home runs in 1970 and his batting average rebounded to .329, which narrowly missed being the AL’s best. He did lead the league in runs scored (125), OBP (.452), slugging (.592), and total bases (335). His RBIs totaled 102 and he stole 23 bases. Prior to the 1971 season Yastrzemski signed a three-year, $500,000 contract. He suffered through a mediocre year in ’71 in which he batted .254 with 15 home runs and 70 RBIs. He also became a target of criticism from some of his teammates which contributed to an offseason purge. The 1972 season started late due to a strike by the players, which led to teams playing an unequal number of games, which narrowly cost Boston the AL East title. Yastrzemski missed a month due to a knee injury, and although he hit well down the stretch in September, he finished at .264 with 12 home runs and 68 RBIs. He also saw considerable action at first base, where he primarily played in 1973. “Yaz” made up for a slow start in ’73 with another strong performance down the stretch as the Red Sox chased the Orioles and he ended up hitting .296 with 19 home runs and 95 RBIs. Boston started well in 1974 and collapsed down the stretch. Yastrzemski batted .301 and led the league with 93 runs scored in a year of disappointment in which he hit 15 home runs with 79 RBIs while splitting time between first base and left field. Almost exclusively a first baseman in 1975, he had a mediocre season at bat as he hit .269 with 14 home runs and 60 RBIs and was overshadowed by rookie sensation Fred Lynn. The Red Sox did not fall short in their battle for the AL East title and “Yaz” was outstanding, both offensively and defensively, as the club defeated Oakland for the AL pennant. He further played well in the seven-game World Series loss to Cincinnati. The aging star hit 21 home runs with 102 RBIs in 1976, while batting .267, and splitting time between first base and left field, for the third place Red Sox. Back in left field in 1977, Yastrzemski hit a solid .296 with 28 home runs and 102 RBIs. The Red Sox started fast in 1978, ultimately losing out to the Yankees in a playoff and, down the stretch, “Yaz” was hindered by back and wrist injuries on his way to batting .277 with 17 home runs and 81 RBIs. Playing on two bad feet in 1979, he hit .270 with 21 home runs and 87 RBIs and joined the 3000-hit club. Now into his forties, Yastrzemski played on until 1983, primarily appearing as a Designated Hitter in his last seasons. For his major league career, spent entirely with the Red Sox, “Yaz” batted .285 with 3419 hits that included 646 doubles, 59 triples, and 452 home runs. He scored 1816 runs and compiled 1844 RBIs while drawing 1845 walks and ending up with a .379 OBP and .462 slugging percentage. Appearing in 17 postseason games he hit .369 with 4 home runs and 11 RBIs. In addition to three batting titles, Yastrzemski received seven Gold Gloves for his defensive play in left field. An 18-time All-Star, he placed in the top ten in league MVP voting five times. The Red Sox retired his #8, and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1989. His grandson, Mike Yastrzemski is currently an outfielder for the San Francisco Giants.

 

--

 

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.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment