Rafael Palmeiro

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Rafael Palmeiro
First Baseman
Born: September 24 1964 (1964-09-24) (age 44)
Batted: Left Threw: Left
MLB debut
September 8, 1986
for the Chicago Cubs
Final game
August 30, 2005
for the Baltimore Orioles
Career statistics
AVG     .288
HR     569
Hits     3020
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • MLB All-Star
    1988, 1991, 1998-99
  • Major League Baseball Player of the Year
    1999
  • American League Gold Glove Award
    1997-99
  • American League Silver Slugger Award
    1997-99
  • Led AL in Hits (191) and Singles (136) in 1990
  • Led AL in Doubles (49) in 1991
  • Led AL in Runs (124) in 1993
  • Ranks 70th on MLB All-Time Slugging Percentage List (.515)
  • Ranks 80th on MLB All-Time OPS List (.885)
  • Ranks 17th on MLB All-Time Games List (2,831)
  • Ranks 15th on MLB All-Time At Bats List (10,472)
  • Ranks 15th on MLB All-Time Plate Appearances List (12,046)
  • Ranks 29th on MLB All-Time Runs List (1,663)
  • Ranks 24th on MLB All-Time Hits List (3,020)
  • Ranks 10th on MLB All-Time Total Bases List (5,388)
  • Ranks 15th on MLB All-Time Doubles List (585)
  • Ranks 10th on MLB All-Time Home Runs List (569)
  • Ranks 14th on MLB All-Time RBI List (1,835)
  • Ranks 30th on MLB All-Time Walks List (1,353)
  • Ranks 73rd on MLB All-Time Singles List (1,828)
  • Ranks 17th on MLB All-Time Runs Created List (2,040)
  • Ranks 6th on MLB All-Time Extra-Base Hits List (1,192)
  • Ranks 18th on MLB All-Time Times on Base List (4,460)
  • Ranks 8th on MLB All-Time Sacrifice Flies List (119)
  • Ranks 22nd on MLB All-Time Intentional Walks List (171)
  • Ranks 73rd on MLB All-Time At Bats per Home Run List (18.4)
  • Texas Rangers All-Time Leader in Games Played (1,573), At Bats (5,830), Plate Appearances (6,767), Runs (958), Walks (805), Runs Created (1,172), Times on Base (2,551) and Intentional Walks (113)

Rafael Palmeiro Corrales (born September 24, 1964 in Havana, Cuba) was a Major League Baseball player with a career spanning 20 years, 1986 to 2005. Though technically not retired, Palmeiro has not played since 2005.

Palmeiro was an All-American at Mississippi State University before being drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 1985. His major league debut came on September 8, 1986 with the Cubs. He played three seasons with the Cubs (1986-1988), ten seasons with the Texas Rangers (1989-1993, 1999-2003), and seven seasons with the Baltimore Orioles (1994-1998, 2004-2005). He was named to the All-Star Team four times, and won the Gold Glove three times. He is a member of the exclusive 500 home run club and the 3000 hit club and is only the fourth player in history to be a member of both. He ranks tenth in history with 569 home runs.

Contents

[edit] Career

Palmeiro debuted on September 8, 1986 in a game between the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies at Wrigley Field, as a left fielder.[1] During his tenure with the Cubs, he normally played left field, though occasionally he would play other outfield positions or first base. Palmeiro was the runner up to National League batting champion Tony Gwynn in 1988 with a .307 batting average, only six points below Gwynn's. After the 1988 season, Palmeiro was traded by the Cubs to the Texas Rangers along with Jamie Moyer and Drew Hall in exchange for Mitch Williams, Paul Kilgus, Steve Wilson, Curt Wilkerson, Luis Benitez, and Pablo Delgado.

Upon moving to the American League, Palmeiro was primarily used as a first baseman or designated hitter. Palmeiro blossomed as a hitter while with the Rangers, leading the league in hits in 1990 and doubles in 1991. In 1990, he was third in the American League in batting.

Prior to Palmeiro's 1995 season, he had hit more than thirty home runs only once (37 in 1993). Starting in 1995, Palmeiro began a streak of 38+ home run years that continued through the 2003 season. He hit 373 home runs during this nine-season span, while also driving in over 100 runs in each of these seasons. However, Palmeiro never led the league in home runs, and is history's most prolific home run hitter to have never won the home run crown. Palmeiro's nine consecutive years with 38+ home runs set the record - breaking record of seven consecutive years by Babe Ruth (1926-1932).

On May 11, 2003, Palmeiro hit his 500th home run off of David Elder in a game against the Cleveland Indians. Two years later, Palmeiro joined Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, and Eddie Murray as the only players in major league history to get 3,000 hits and 500 home runs when he got his 3,000th base hit off of Joel Pineiro during a game against the Seattle Mariners on July 15, 2005. Because most of Palmeiro's home runs came with the Rangers and Orioles, he is one of only four players in history to hit over 200 home runs for two different clubs.

Palmeiro has played in 2,831 major league games, the most by any player who has never played in the World Series. His 1999 Gold Glove Award is regarded by many as controversial, because he won the award despite playing only 28 games at first base that season.[2] [3] He played most of his games that year as a designated hitter.

Palmeiro filed for free agency on October 29, 2005, indicating he would attempt to play his 20th season in baseball. As of 2007, he has not signed or played with any team. Palmeiro currently resides in Colleyville, TX.

[edit] Speculation of a comeback

On January 7, 2007, the Boston Globe newspaper reported, upon speculation, that Palmeiro wants to make a comeback.[4]

[edit] Steroids

During 2002 and 2003, the relatively low-profile Palmeiro became more visible on national TV, as a spokesman for Viagra. [5] Impotence is a symptom associated with anabolic steroid use.[6]

Former Rangers teammate José Canseco identified Palmeiro as a fellow steroid user in his 2005 book, Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits & How Baseball Got Big, and claimed he personally injected Palmeiro with steroids. During Palmeiro's first six years in baseball, he hit an average of one home run per 42 at bats, never hitting more than 26 home runs in a season. After playing with Canseco for the Texas Rangers in 1992, Palmeiro averaged a home run every 17 at bats for the remainder of his career, hitting over 26 home runs in 10 of the next 12 seasons. On March 17, 2005, Palmeiro appeared at a Congressional hearing about steroids in baseball and, while under oath, denied ever using steroids, pointing his finger (a la Bill Clinton) and stating, "Let me start by telling you this: I have never used steroids, period. I don't know how to say it anymore clearly than that. Never."[7]

On August 1, 2005, Palmeiro was suspended for ten days after testing positive for steroids.[8] In a public statement, Palmeiro disclosed that an appeal of the suspension had already been denied. He released a statement saying, "I have never intentionally used steroids. Never. Ever. Period. Ultimately, although I never intentionally put a banned substance into my body, the independent arbitrator ruled that I had to be suspended under the terms of the program."[9] It should be noted that all of his previous tests were negative, and a test he took just three weeks after his positive test was also negative.[10]

The Washington Post reported that the steroid detected in Palmeiro's system was a "serious" one.[11] According to The New York Times, Palmeiro tested positive for the potent anabolic steroid stanozolol, the same substance Olympic sprinter Ben Johnson of Canada took in 1988 when he was stripped of the gold medal at the Seoul Summer Olympics.[12] Palmeiro returned to Camden Yards following his 10-day suspension on August 11, 2005, although he did not play in the lineup until August 14. Coincidentally, this was the date that had been planned as "Rafael Palmeiro Appreciation Day" in celebration of his 500-home run, 3,000-hit milestone. It was canceled after Palmeiro's suspension. Palmeiro famously inserted earplugs in his ears to drown out the loud boos of the fans during a subsequent game in Toronto against the Blue Jays.[13]

The Baltimore Sun reported that Palmeiro never offered an explanation for his positive test to the MLB arbitration panel, which ran contrary to his public statements.[14] ESPN later reported that Palmeiro implicated Miguel Tejada to baseball's arbitration panel, suggesting a supplement provided to him by Tejada was responsible for his positive test. This supplement was simply vitamin B12, though the needle could have theoretically been tainted.[15]

On November 10, 2005, ESPN reported that the House Government Reform Committee would not seek perjury charges against Palmeiro.[16]

In December of 2007, Palmeiro was included in the Mitchell Report in which it was alleged that he used performance-enhancing drugs during his career. The report recaps allegations made by Jose Canseco, Palmeiro's appearance before conggress and his subsequent failed drug test. The report also details a conversation Larry Bigbie alleges he had with Palmeiro where he claims "Palmeiro asked him about his source of steroids and human growth hormone (the source was Kirk Radomski) and how the substances made him feel". Bigbie also stated that "Palmeiro denied in those conversations that he had ever used performance enhancing substances himself".[17]

On December 20, 2007 Palmeiro was also named in Jason Grimsley's unsealed affidavit as a user of amphetamines.[18]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
John Olerud
Bernie Williams
Nomar Garciaparra
Joe Randa
American League Player of the Month
July 1993
June 1998
June 1999
August 1999 (with Iván Rodríguez)
Succeeded by
Frank Thomas
Albert Belle
Joe Randa
Albert Belle
fr:Rafael Palmeiro

ja:ラファエル・パルメイロ

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