Outfielder, San
Francisco Giants
Age: 38 (July 24)
10th
season with Giants
Bats – Left,
Throws – Left
Height: 6’1” Weight: 185
Prior to 2002:
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 criticized for being a rule-breaker with a poor attitude as well
as lauded for outstanding all-around ability. Bonds was chosen by the
Pittsburgh 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, 59 RBIs, and a .261 batting average. The numbers continued
to rise over the next two seasons until he broke through with an MVP year in
1990 as Pittsburgh won the NL East. Bonds batted .301 with 33 home runs, 52
stolen bases, and a .301 batting average to go with his league-leading .565
slugging percentage. He was also selected to his first All-Star Game and
received a Gold Glove for his play in left field. He 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
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 title and lost once
more in the NLCS. In three NLCS appearances with the Pirates, 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 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 (who homered 37 times that year) 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 homers in 2001. In addition in 2001,
he batted .328 and led the NL in OBP (.515), slugging (.863), and walks drawn
(177) and was voted Most Valuable Player for an unprecedented fourth time. Bonds
was signed to a five-year, $90 million deal by the Giants despite being 37
years old.
2002 Season Summary
Appeared in 143
games
LF – 135, DH – 5,
PH – 4
[Bracketed
numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]
Batting
Plate
Appearances – 612
At Bats – 403
Runs – 117 [3]
Hits – 149
Doubles – 31
Triples – 2
Home Runs – 46 [2]
RBI – 110 [6,
tied with Scott Rolen]
Bases on Balls
– 198 [1]
Int. BB – 68 [1]
Strikeouts – 47
Stolen Bases – 9
Caught Stealing
– 2
Average - .370
[1]
OBP - .582 [1]
Slugging Pct. -
.799 [1]
Total Bases – 322
[7]
GDP – 4
Hit by Pitches
– 9 [18, tied with seven others]
Sac Hits – 0
Sac Flies – 2
League-leading bases
on balls drawn were +63 ahead of runner-up Brian Giles
League-leading
int. bases on balls drawn were +36 ahead of runner-up Vladimir Guerrero
League-leading
batting average was +.032 ahead of runner-up Larry Walker
League-leading
OBP was +.132 ahead of runner-up Brian Giles
League-leading
slugging pct was +.177 ahead of runner-up Brian Giles
Midseason
snapshot: HR – 27, RBI - 57, AVG - .345, SLG - .780, OBP – .562
Most hits, game
– 4 (in 4 AB) at Colorado 8/27, (in 4 AB) at San Diego 9/13
Longest hitting
streak – 8 games
HR at home – 19
HR on road – 27
Most home runs,
game – 3 (in 4 AB) at Colorado 8/27
Multi-HR games
– 5
Most RBIs, game
– 5 at LA Dodgers 4/2
Pinch-hitting –
0 for 3 (.000) with 2 BB
Fielding
Chances - 253
Put Outs – 241
Assists – 4
Errors – 8
DP – 2
Pct. - .968
Postseason
Batting: 17 G (NLDS vs. Atlanta – 5 G, NLCS vs. St. Louis – 5 G, World Series
vs. Anaheim – 7 G)
PA – 74, AB – 45,
R – 18, H – 16, 2B – 2,3B – 1, HR – 8, RBI – 16, BB – 27, IBB – 13, SO – 6, SB
– 0, CS – 1, AVG - .356, OBP - .581, SLG - .978, TB – 44, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH
– 0, SF – 2
Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: BBWAA
Silver Slugger
All-Star (started
for NL in LF)
Top 5 in NL MVP
Voting:
Barry Bonds, SF:
448 points - 32 of 32 first place votes, 100% share
Albert Pujols,
StL.: 276 points – 62% share
Lance Berkman,
Hou.: 181 points – 40% share
Vladimir
Guerrero, Mon.: 168 points – 38% share
Shawn Green, LAD:146 points – 33% share
---
Giants went
95-66 to finish second in the NL Western Division by 2.5 games behind the
division-winning Arizona Diamondbacks and qualifying for a Wild Card playoff
spot while leading the league in slugging (.442) and total bases (2429). The Giants
started well and spent most of April in first place in the NL West but spent
all of June and much of July in third and only secured second place and the
wild card in September with a strong finish. Won NLDS over the Atlanta Braves,
3 games to 2, overcoming a 2-games-to-1 deficit. Won NLCS over the St. Louis
Cardinals, 4 games to 1. Lost World Series to the Anaheim Angels, 4 games to 3.
Holding a 5-0 lead following the top of the seventh inning in Game 6, the
Giants gave up three runs apiece in the seventh and eighth innings to lose 6-5,
forcing a decisive seventh game also won by the Angels. Criticized for his past
postseason futility, in the World Series Bonds hit .471 with 4 home runs and 6
RBIs in a losing cause.
Aftermath of ‘02:
Bonds went on to be the NL MVP a total of seven times, winning again in 2003 and 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, 586 of which were compiled as a member of the Giants. He stole 514 bases, 263 with San Francisco, and knocked in 1996 runs, 1440 as a Giant, and batted .298, .312 with San Francisco. 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 suspicions regarding performance enhancing drugs have thus far kept him from election to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
---
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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