Jorge Posada

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Jorge Posada
Image:Jorge P.jpg
New York Yankees — No. 20
Catcher
Born: August 17 1971 (1971-08-17) (age 37)
Bats: Switch Throws: Right 
Major League Baseball debut
September 41995 for the New York Yankees
Selected MLB statistics
(through October 2, 2007)
Batting average    .277
Home Runs    218
Runs batted in    861
Teams
Awards
  • All-Star and Silver Slugger (AL): (2000-2003, 2007)
  • Jorge Rafael Posada Villeta (born August 17, 1971 in Santurce, Puerto Rico) is a Major League Baseball catcher who plays for the New York Yankees. He is a switch hitter and has been to 6 All Star Games over his 12 year career. He is considered one of the best Yankees catchers ever, along with Bill Dickey, Yogi Berra, Elston Howard, and Thurman Munson. He is the only Major League catcher to ever hit .330 or better with 40 doubles, 20 home runs and 85 RBIs in a single season. Posada and Yogi Berra are the only Yankees catchers to hit 30 home runs in a season. Since 2000, Posada has more runs batted in, by far, than any other catcher in baseball (603).

    He was drafted by the Yankees in the 24th round of the 1990 amateur draft, and made his major league debut in 1995.

    Contents

    [edit] High school & college

    Posada attended the Alejandrino High School in San Juan, where he participated in basketball, volleyball, track, and baseball. As a baseball player in high school, he was named an All-Star player at shortstop in the 1988-89 season.

    He went on to attend Calhoun Community College in Decatur, Alabama in 1991, where he received an Associate Degree. He was the valedictorian of the class[citation needed]. He was voted best hitter (1990), co-captain (1991), and selected all-conference (1991).

    [edit] Baseball career

    Posada was a second baseman during his first minor league season. Although his successful conversion from that position to catcher was unusual, the relationship between the positions is not unheard of, with future Hall-of-Fame second baseman Craig Biggio making the opposite switch. Posada survived a hideous home plate collision in 1994 in which he broke his left leg and dislocated his left ankle while playing for the AAA Columbus Clippers.

    Since his debut with the Yankees, Posada has a career on base percentage of .379. His batting average, through 2006, has been 39 points higher against righties than against lefties.[1]

    Posada has also been a member of 4 World Series championship teams ( 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000) and 6 American League championship teams ( 1996,1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003). Posada has been a 5-time All-Star (2000-03, 2007) and a 5-time winner of the Silver Slugger Award in those same years.

    In 2000 he batted .287 and was 6th in the league in walks (107), 8th in on base percentage (.417), and 9th in intentional walks (10).

    In 2001 he was 8th in the league in intentional walks (10).

    In 2002 he was 7th in the league in doubles (40), and 10th in intentional walks (9). He also led the leagues in grounding into double plays (23).

    Arguably, his best season to date was 2003, when he hit 30 home runs (1 every 16.0 at bats, 9th best in the league) and drove in 101 runs, both career highs. He batted .281 and was also 5th in the league in OBP (.405), and 6th in the league in walks (93; walking 17.5% of the time, a career high). He tied Yogi Berra’s record for most home runs by a Yankee catcher and finished third in the MVP voting.

    In 2004 he was 3rd in the league in walks (88), and 4th in OBP (.400). He also led the leagues in grounding into double plays (24).

    In 2005, he suffered a down year, causing some skeptics to think that his career was almost over.

    However, in 2006, he had a bounce back year, posting one of his best offensive seasons. Among other things, he led the major leagues with 20 pinch hits.[2] In addition, work with new first base coach Tony Peña, a former catcher, helped him improve his percentage of runners thrown out stealing second almost 60 points above his career average.

    On September 30, 2007, Posada was interim manager filling in for Joe Torre. Posada got his first managerial win, in the Yankees 10-4 win over the Orioles.

    A .270 career hitter entering the 2007 season, Posada finished at .338, with 20 home runs, 90 RBIs, and career highs in hits (171) and doubles (42). He joined Ivan Rodriguez as the only two catchers in MLB history to record at least 40 doubles in two separate seasons. He was 3rd in the AL in on-base percentage (.426), 4th in batting average, 6th in OPS (.970), and 8th in doubles and slugging percentage (.543). Posada batted .395 in September, and became the first Yankee catcher since Thurman Munson, in 1978, to finish among the top 10 AL batting leaders. His longest hitless streak was only 11 at-bats. Posada is the first catcher to hit .330 or better with a slugging percentage of at least .540 and an on-base percentage of at least .420 since Mike Piazza in 1996-97.

    On November 2, 2007, Posada openly backed new Yankee manager, Joe Girardi, after reports claimed that he would have a difficult time playing under Girardi.

    On November 12, 2007, Posada signed a 4 year, $52 million contract to remain with the Yankees.[3]

    [edit] Awards

    • 1993 - Carolina League All-Star C
    • 1995 - International League All-Star C
    • 1996 - International League All-Star C
    • 2000 - AL Silver Slugger Award C
    • 2000 - AL All-Star
    • 2000 - Thurman Munson Award received for baseball accomplishments and philanthropic work
    • 2001 - AL Silver Slugger Award C
    • 2001 - AL All-Star
    • 2001 - Milton Richman "You Gotta' Have Heart" Award received from the NY Chapter of the BBWAA
    • 2002 - Baseball America First-Team Major League All-Star C
    • 2002 - AL Silver Slugger Award C
    • 2002 - All-Star
    • 2003 - NY Yankees Player of the Year
    • 2003 - AL Silver Slugger Award C
    • 2003 - AL MVP Voting Rank: # 3
    • 2003 - AL All-Star
    • 2003 - Named one of the Diamond Dads Founding Fathers
    • 2007- AL All-Star
    • 2007- Roberto Clemente Award Nominee
    • 2007 - AL Silver Slugger Award C

    [edit] Trivia

    • Is one of an extremely small number of baseball players, which also include Vladimir Guerrero, teammate Doug Mientkiewicz, Jason Kendall and Moises Alou, who bat without the use of batting gloves.[1].
    • 5-time All-Star and 5-time Silver Slugger (2000-03; 2007)
    • Top 10 MVP (3rd, 2003)
    • Top 10 in American League On-Base Percentage 4 times in career (2000 - #8, 2003 - #5, 2004 - #4, 2007 - #3)
    • Was the catcher for David Wells during his perfect game in 1998.
    • When the announcer called Jorge Posada's name over the speaker at the 2002 All-Star Game, Jorge let his son, Jorge Jr., run out on the field.
    • Best friend in the game is his teammate, Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter. Jeter served as Jorge's best man at his wedding.[citation needed]
    • Posada, along with his wife and their two children, appeared on an episode of the ABC series Extreme Makeover: Home Edition that aired on May 14, 2006. He donated a Yankees jersey signed by the entire roster to the Arena family of the Westchester County community of Somers, who had lost their only son Jimmy to a brain tumor in 2005.
    • Posada appeared on two episodes of the Discovery Channel series American Chopper that aired in September 2005 when the crew at Orange County Choppers built a Yankee themed bike to benefit the Jorge Posada Foundation for Craniosynostosis, a condition which his son Jorge Jr. suffers from. Posada entertainingly met Paul Teutul Sr.'s 87-year old mother who repeatedly referred to him as George.
    • Posada has a rally cry "Hip Hip Jorge!" ESPN had a commercial using it multiple times thus annoying him.
    • Posada made the last out in the 2003 World Series by grounding out to Josh Beckett.
    • Posada made the last out in the 2007 American League Division Series by striking out to Joe Borowski.
    • Posada is sponsored by Nike
    • Posada was in the same class in elementary school with Prison Break actor Amaury Nolasco.
    • Posada's favorite player to watch while growing up was George Brett whom he credits for why he doesn't use batting gloves, Brett also didn't use batting gloves.

    [edit] Career statistics

    Jorge Posada (Updated as of August 14, 2007) [2]
    Games AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BA
    Career 1395 4682 716 1290 294 8 212 839 16 .276

    [edit] Family

    • On January 21, 2000, Jorge married Laura Posada, an attorney and former model and actress from Puerto Rico.
    • Son Jorge Posada Jr. suffers from craniosynostosis, which he was diagnosed with 10 days after he was born, and has endured numerous surgeries to correct the condition. Posada established the Jorge Posada Foundation to help find a cure for the disease and support families with children affected by the condition. Jorge and Laura also have a daughter without the condition, Paulina (born 7/15/02).

    [edit] See also

    [edit] References

    1. ^ Cubs outfielder brings gold gloves to the plate, Bob Wolfley
    2. ^ Jorge Posada Statistics. Baseball-Reference.com (2007-07-09). Retrieved on 2007-08-14.

    [edit] External links

    de:Jorge Posada

    fr:Jorge Posada ja:ホルヘ・ポサダ pt:Jorge Posada zh:荷黑·波沙達

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