Daryle Ward
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| Chicago Cubs — No. 32 | |
| First Baseman | Born: June 27 1975 |
|---|---|
| Bats: Left | Throws: Left |
| Major League Baseball debut | |
| May 14, 1998 for the Houston Astros | Selected MLB statistics (through 2007) |
| AVG | .265 |
| HR | 86 |
| RBI | 362 |
| Teams | |
| |
Daryle Ward (born June 27, 1975 in Lynwood, California) is a Major League Baseball outfielder and first baseman for the Chicago Cubs. He bats and throws left-handed. The 6-foot-2, 240 pound (109 kg) Ward was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the 1994 amateur draft. He is the son of former major leaguer Gary Ward. As of 2006, he was one of six active major leaguers (along with Moises Alou, David Bell, Barry Bonds, Prince Fielder, and Ken Griffey, Jr.) to hit 20 home runs in a season whose fathers had also hit 20 home runs in a MLB season.
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[edit] Professional career
Ward came to the Houston Astros in December 1996 as part of a ten-player trade with Detroit. He debuted in 1999, hitting 8 home runs in 150 at bats. In 2000, he hit 20 home runs in just 264 at-bats. In his third season for the Astros, Ward batted .263 with 9 home runs and 39 RBI in 95 games. The next year he went for .276, 12, 72 in 136 games. After the season he was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Ward spent 2003 in a part-time role, hitting .183 with one extra base hit (a double) in 109 at-bats. After the season, the Dodgers released Ward, and the Pirates signed him as a minor league free agent. Ward played better in 2004, and the Pirates re-signed him for 2005 as their part-time first baseman. Ward has signed on to become a member of the Chicago Cubs bench for 2007. In 549 career games played, Ward has batted .259 (384-1485), with 65 HRs, 254 RBI, 155 runs, 80 doubles and four triples, with an on base percentage (OBP) of .306 and slugging percentage (SLG) of .447.
[edit] 2004 season
After being called up from the Triple-A Nashville Sounds to replace Raúl Mondesí, Ward got off to a torrid start. On May 26, 2004, Ward, recalled from the Triple-A Nashville Sounds two weeks before, hit for the cycle and tied his career high with six RBI in the Pirates' 11-8 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Ward hit a two-run double in the first, an RBI triple in the fourth, golfed a three-run homer in the fifth and singled in the ninth. He was the first Pittsburgh player to hit for the cycle since Jason Kendall on May 19, 2000, against the Cardinals. It has been done 23 times in club history and 243 times since 1882.
Ward joined his father, Gary, to become the first father-son combination in major league history to hit for the cycle. The older Ward accomplished the feat on September 18, 1980, for the Minnesota Twins. Ward slumped later in the season, slowed down by a wrist injury, and finished hitting .249 with 15 HR and 57 RBI, with a .306 OBP and .474 SLG. Ward, along with Valerio de los Santos, signed a deal to play with the Nationals, .
[edit] 2006 season
On August 31, 2006, Ward was traded to the Atlanta Braves for minor-league pitcher Luis Atilano.
[edit] 2007 season
Ward was signed on December 7, 2006 by the Chicago Cubs to a one-year deal worth $1.05 million after hitting .308 with a .380 OBP in 2006 for Washington and Atlanta in 150 combined plate appearances. He replaced John Mabry as a backup at 1st base to Derrek Lee. On May 6, Ward hit a game winning single against his former team, the Washington Nationals. He was also called to replace Derrek Lee on May 13, after Lee left the game with neck spasms. Ward also saw time as an pinch hitter in close game situations. On August 18 Ward hit a grand slam in the third inning off of St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Anthony Reyes, the third of his career and his first home run as a member of the Cubs.
[edit] Trivia
- Ward is the only player to hit a home run out of Pittsburgh's PNC Park and into the Allegheny River on the fly—a truly "Stargellesque" blast—in a regular season game, a feat he accomplished in 2002 as a member of the Houston Astros. Many Home Runs have made the river on the bounce, and several home runs hit during the 2006 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby made the river on the fly as well, creating speculation of juiced balls.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Chicago Cubs current roster |
|---|
1 Kosuke Fukudome |
2 Ryan Theriot |
3 Eric Patterson |
4 Neal Cotts |
5 Ronny Cedeño |
7 Mark DeRosa |
9 Jake Fox |
12 Alfonso Soriano |
16 Aramis Ramírez |
17 Mike Fontenot |
19 Matt Murton |
20 Félix Pie |
21 Jason Marquis |
24 Henry Blanco |
25 Derrek Lee |
30 Ted Lilly |
32 Daryle Ward |
34 Kerry Wood |
36 Sean Gallagher |
37 Ángel Guzmán |
38 Carlos Zambrano |
43 Michael Wuertz |
45 Sean Marshall |
46 Ryan Dempster |
47 Scott Eyre |
49 Carlos Marmol |
50 Jeff Samardzija |
51 Juan Mateo |
53 Rich Hill |
55 Kevin Hart |
56 Billy Petrick |
57 Sam Fuld |
58 Geovany Soto |
62 Bob Howry |
63 Carmen Pignatiello |
-- José Ascanio |
-- Adam Harben |
-- Tim Lahey
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Categories: 1975 births | Living people | Major league first basemen | Major league left fielders | Houston Astros players | Los Angeles Dodgers players | Pittsburgh Pirates players | Washington Nationals players | Atlanta Braves players | Chicago Cubs players | Baseball players who have hit for the cycle | Major league players from California | American baseball players | African American sportspeople | People from Los Angeles County | People from Los Angeles | Nashville Sounds players

