Aug 24, 2021

MVP Profile: Willie McGee, 1985

Outfielder, St. Louis Cardinals


 

Age:  26

4th season with Cardinals

Bats – Both, Throws – Right

Height: 6’1”    Weight: 175

Prior to 1985:

A California native, McGee developed a passion for baseball early on. From a deeply religious family, and shy and sensitive as a youth, he starred at Henry Ells High School in Richmond where he batted .408 as a senior and received All-Northern California Baseball Team recognition. Selected by the White Sox in the 1976 amateur draft, McGee instead enrolled at Diablo Valley College from where he was chosen by the New York Yankees in the 1977 secondary draft. After playing for Diablo Valley in the spring he signed with the Yankees for $7500. Assigned to Oneanta of the short-season Class A New York-Pennsylvania League, McGee hit .236 with nine extra base hits in 65 games. Naturally a right-handed batter, he began to switch-hit in 1978 with Fort Lauderdale of the Class A Florida State League and hit .251 with little power, although his on-base percentage improved to .331 thanks to drawing 50 walks. He opened 1979 with West Haven of the Class AA Eastern League and, suffering from a foot injury and struggling to hit curveballs, he was sent back to Fort Lauderdale where he batted .318 with a .378 OBP and stole 16 bases in 46 games. Back in Class AA in 1980 with the Nashville Sounds of the Southern League, he broke his jaw in a collision with a teammate but hit .283 in 78 games. The Yankees had a glut of outfielders entering 1981 and McGee returned to Nashville where a hip injury sidelined him for five weeks, derailing a strong start to the season, and he ended up batting .322 in 100 games with 20 doubles, 5 triples, 7 home runs, and 63 RBIs. In the offseason the Yankees traded McGee to the Cardinals for nondescript LHP Bob Sykes. Impressive during spring training in 1982, he started the season with Louisville of the Class AAA American Association but was called up to St. Louis in May because the Cards had a need for a center fielder. He quickly moved into the lineup and played well in the field while hitting .296 with 24 extra-base hits, 56 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases. St. Louis won the NL East title. In the NLCS sweep of the Atlanta Braves, McGee stopped at third base for a triple which could easily have been an inside-the-park home run in Game 1 and misplayed a ball in Game 2 which was scored a single and three-base error as Atlanta shortstop Rafael Ramirez circled the bases. The mistakes didn’t cost the Cardinals, who advanced to the World Series against the Milwaukee Brewers. In the Cards’ Game 3 win, McGee hit two home runs and made a spectacular catch in center field. He also expressed annoyance with the media giving him the tag “E.T.” due to a perception that he resembled the movie character. The Cardinals defeated the Brewers in seven games helped along by McGee’s two home runs, 5 RBIs, and 6 runs scored. He finished third in NL Rookie of the Year voting. The team had a lesser season in 1983 but the second-year centerfielder was an All-Star for the first time as he hit .286 with 22 doubles, 8 triples, 5 home runs, and 75 RBIs while stealing 39 bases. He also received a Gold Glove for his defensive play. The Cardinals led the NL with a club record 220 stolen bases in 1984 and McGee contributed 43 while also batting .291 with 11 triples, 6 home runs, 82 runs scored, and 50 RBIs.


1985 Season Summary

Appeared in 152 games

CF – 146, PH – 4, LF – 3

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Batting

Plate Appearances – 652 [13, tied with Hubie Brooks & Johnny Ray]

At Bats – 612 [7]

Runs – 114 [3]

Hits – 216 [1]

Doubles – 26

Triples – 18 [1]

Home Runs – 10

RBI – 82 [16]

Bases on Balls – 34

Int. BB – 2

Strikeouts – 86

Stolen Bases – 56 [3]

Caught Stealing – 16 [3]

Average - .353 [1]

OBP - .384 [6, tied with Keith Hernandez]

Slugging Pct. - .503 [7]

Total Bases – 308 [3]

GDP – 3

Hit by Pitches – 0

Sac Hits – 1

Sac Flies – 5 [18, tied with thirteen others]

League-leading hits were +18 ahead of runner-up Dave Parker

League-leading triples were +5 ahead of runners-up Juan Samuel & Tim Raines

League-leading batting average was +.033 ahead of runners-up Tim Raines & Pedro Guerrero

Midseason snapshot: 3B – 10, HR – 3, SB – 36, RBI – 39, AVG - .339, SLG – .472, OBP - .369

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Most hits, game – 5 (in 6 AB) at Chi. Cubs 7/30

Longest hitting streak – 11 games

Most HR, game – 1 on ten occasions

HR at home – 3

HR on road – 7

Multi-HR games – 0

Most RBIs, game – 5 vs. Atlanta 5/20

Pinch-hitting – 2 for 4 (.500) with 1 R

Fielding

Chances – 402

Put Outs – 382

Assists – 11

Errors – 9

DP - 2

Pct. - .978

Postseason Batting: 13 G (NLCS vs. LA Dodgers – 6 G; World Series vs. KC Royals – 7 G)

PA – 57, AB – 53, R – 8, H – 14, 2B – 3,3B – 0, HR – 1, RBI – 5, BB – 4, IBB – 1, SO – 9, SB – 3, CS – 5, AVG - .264, OBP - .316, SLG - .377, TB – 20, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 0, SF – 0

Awards & Honors:

NL MVP: BBWAA

Gold Glove

Silver Slugger

All-Star


Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:

Willie McGee, StL.: 280 pts. - 14 of 24 first place votes, 83% share

Dave Parker, Cin.: 220 pts. – 6 first place votes, 65% share

Pedro Guerrero, LAD: 208 pts. – 3 first place votes, 62% share

Dwight Gooden, NYM: 162 pts. – 1 first place vote, 48% share

Tom Herr, StL.: 119 pts. – 35% share

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Cardinals went 101-61 to finish first in the NL Eastern Division by 3 games over the New York Mets while leading the league in runs scored (747), triples (59), RBIs (687), stolen bases (314), walks drawn (586), batting (.264), and on-base percentage (.335). The Cardinals battled the Mets into September when a 14-1 stretch put them in a position to maintain control of the NL East. Won NLCS over the Los Angeles Dodgers, 4 games to 2. Lost World Series to the Kansas City Royals, 4 games to 3, after leading by 3 games to 1.


Aftermath of ‘85:

Leg injuries hindered McGee in 1986, limiting him to 124 games in which he batted .256, although he still received a Gold Glove for his play in center field. In the offseason he had arthroscopic knee surgery. The Cardinals returned to the top of the NL East in 1987 and McGee returned to form as he hit .285 with 37 doubles, 11 triples, 11 home runs, and 105 RBIs. He hit .308 in the seven-game NLCS win over the Giants and .370 with 10 hits and 4 RBIs in a seven-game World Series loss to Minnesota. The Cardinals re-signed him for three years and $4.1 million in the offseason. The club wasn’t as productive offensively in 1988 on the way to a fifth-place finish, but McGee batted a solid .292 although with his RBI total dropping to 50. He stole 41 bases after being less active on the basepaths in 1986 and ’87. In an injury-riddled 1989 season he played in only 58 games and hit .236 with 17 RBIs and 8 stolen bases. Rebounding in 1990 with a team that was heading toward a last-place finish, McGee was hitting .335 when he was traded to Oakland in late August. He batted .274 in 29 games in the American League, but his .335 National League average remained high enough to win another batting championship. A free agent in the offseason, he signed with the San Francisco Giants for four years and $13 million. He hit a solid .312 for the Giants in 1991, with 30 doubles, a .357 OBP, and 67 runs scored. McGee hit .297 in 1992 and .301 in ’93. Still dependable at bat although lacking his former speed, he reached the end of the line with the Giants during the 1994 season. Sidelined in June by a torn Achilles tendon that required surgery he was released in the offseason. He caught on with the Boston Red Sox in June of 1995. After a brief minor league stint, McGee joined the Red Sox and appeared in 67 games in which he hit .285. He returned to the Cardinals in 1996, where he remained for four seasons as a popular veteran leader with a potent bat, retiring following the 1999 season at age 40. For his major league career, he batted .295 with 2254 hits that included 350 doubles, 94 triples, and 79 home runs. He scored 1010 runs and compiled 856 RBIs and 352 stolen bases. His OBP was .333 and he had a .396 slugging percentage. With the Cardinals, McGee batted .294 with 1683 hits, 255 doubles, 83 triples, 63 home runs, 678 RBIs, 760 runs scored, 301 stolen bases, a .329 OBP, and .400 slugging percentage. Appearing in 54 postseason games, McGee hit .276 with 8 doubles, 3 triples, 4 home runs, and 23 RBIs. A two-time batting champion, he was a four-time All-Star, and won three Gold Gloves. McGee was elected to the Cardinals Hall of Fame in 2014. He has served the organization as an assistant to the general manager and as a coach.


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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.


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