sport.wikisort.org - AthleteDavid Andrew McCarty (born November 23, 1969) is a former first baseman and outfielder in Major League Baseball. From 1993 through 2005, McCarty played with the Minnesota Twins (1993–1995), San Francisco Giants (1995–1996), Seattle Mariners (1998), Kansas City Royals (2000–2002), Tampa Bay Devil Rays (2002), Oakland Athletics (2003) and Boston Red Sox (2003–2005). He batted right-handed and threw left-handed.
American baseball player
This article is about the American baseball player. For the American college football player, see David McCarty (American football).
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Baseball player
David McCarty |
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First baseman / Outfielder |
Born: (1969-11-23) November 23, 1969 (age 52) Houston, Texas |
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May 17, 1993, for the Minnesota Twins |
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May 1, 2005, for the Boston Red Sox |
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Batting average | .242 |
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Home runs | 36 |
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Runs batted in | 175 |
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- Minnesota Twins (1993–1995)
- San Francisco Giants (1995–1996)
- Seattle Mariners (1998)
- Kansas City Royals (2000–2002)
- Tampa Bay Devil Rays (2002)
- Oakland Athletics (2003)
- Boston Red Sox (2003–2005)
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- World Series champion (2004)
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Career
McCarty attended Stanford University, and in 1989 he played collegiate summer baseball with the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod Baseball League.[1] He was drafted by the Twins in the 1st round (3rd overall) of the 1991 Major League Baseball draft.[2] In an eleven-season career, he was a .242 hitter with 36 home runs and 175 RBI in 630 games.
A utility player in the purest sense, McCarty was a defensive first baseman and outfielder who occasionally was called upon to pitch. His most productive season came in 2000 for the Royals, when he posted career-highs in batting average (.278), home runs (12), RBI (68), runs (34), hits (75), doubles (14) and games played (103).
On August 4, 2003, McCarty was claimed off waivers by the Boston Red Sox from the Oakland Athletics.[3]
2004 highlights
On May 11, 2004, in the bottom of the eighth inning, original pinch-hitter Brian Daubach was called back to the bench after the Indians made a pitching change and decided to go to lefty Scott Stewart. McCarty, due to hitting well against lefties, was sent up to hit by manager Terry Francona. On an 0-1 pitch, McCarty lined a two-run triple to right field that gave the Red Sox a 5-3 lead. They went on to win by that score.
On May 30, 2004, McCarty, who had entered the game in the eighth inning, hit a walk-off two-run home run against Mariners pitcher J. J. Putz in the bottom of the twelfth inning to give the Red Sox a 9-7 victory.
Release and retirement
McCarty, who was released by the Boston Red Sox in May 2005 after the team signed first baseman, John Olerud, refused a minor league assignment.[4] He retired and was a Red Sox analyst on NESN from July 1, 2005 until the end of the 2008 season.[5]
McCarty was an oddity in MLB in that he batted right-handed and threw left-handed, and was a position player as opposed to a pitcher.
Pitching
McCarty made three pitching appearances for the Red Sox in 2004. The first was during the April 9 home opener against the Toronto Blue Jays, the second was in the June 12 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in which he struck out Jayson Werth and finally, in the final game of the season, McCarty went two scoreless innings against the Baltimore Orioles in which he struck out Rafael Palmeiro, Larry Bigbie and David Newhan.
Personal life
Born in Houston, Texas, McCarty graduated from Sharpstown High School in 1988[6] before attending Stanford University. He lives in Piedmont, California with his wife, Monica, and their two children.
References
- "Major League Baseball Players From the Cape Cod League" (PDF). capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
- Vega, Michael (May 12, 2004). "After a shift, McCarty clutch". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
- Dave McCarty Statistics and History - Baseball-Reference.com
- "Olerud a unique weapon". MLB.com. May 2, 2005. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
- Snow, Chris (July 2, 2005). "Damon captures popular vote". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
- Houston Independent School District article Archived February 3, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
External links
Pac-12 Conference Baseball Player of the Year |
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- 1978: Elder (North) & Tolman (South)
- 1979: Dodd (North) & Auten (South)
- 1980: Walker (North) & Francona (South)
- 1981: Hunsinger (North) & Sodders (South)
- 1982: Wilson (North) & Davis (South)
- 1983: Reece (North) & Hardgrave (South)
- 1984: Skurla (North), McDowell (South) & McGwire (South)
- 1985: Lovell (North) & Lundblade (South)
- 1986: Brundage (North), Lovullo (South) & Sanchez (South)
- 1987: Bowen (North), Lovullo (South) & Hale (South)
- 1988: Olerud (North) & Ingram (South)
- 1989: Kuykendall (North), Erickson (South) & Zinter (South)
- 1990: Walker (North) & Ellis (South)
- 1991: Hatteberg (North) & McCarty (South)
- 1992: Loomis (North), Penix (South) & Zuber (South)
- 1993: Christman (North), LoDuca (South) & McGuire (South)
- 1994: Smith (North) & Cruz (South)
- 1995: Blood (North), Hinch (South) & Jenkins (South)
- 1996: Miller (North) & Hinch (South)
- 1997: Miller (North) & Glaus (South)
- 1998: Checketts (North) & Valent (South)
- 1999: Bloomquist
- 2000: Myers
- 2001: Myers
- 2002: Concepcion
- 2003: Garko & Pedroia
- 2004: Lowrie
- 2005: Crowe & Ellsbury
- 2006: Gillespie
- 2007: Wallace
- 2008: Wallace
- 2009: Kipnis
- 2010: MacPhee
- 2011: Renda
- 2012: Mejia
- 2013: Conforto
- 2014: Conforto
- 2015: Kingery
- 2016: Cumberland
- 2017: Madrigal
- 2018: Vaughn
- 2019: Rutschman
- 2020: Not awarded
- 2021: Zavala
- 2022: Melton
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Baseball America College Player of the Year Award |
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1991 College Baseball All-America Team consensus selections |
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- 3B Scott Stahoviak
- SS Brent Gates
- O Mike Kelly
- O Mark Smith
- O Mark Sweeney
- DH None
- U None
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1991 Major League Baseball draft first round selections |
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Minnesota Twins first-round draft picks |
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- 1965: Eddie Leon
- 1966: Bob Jones
- 1967: Steve Brye
- 1968: Alex Rowell
- 1969: Paul Powell
- 1970: Bob Gorinski
- 1971: Dale Soderholm
- 1972: Dick Ruthven
- 1973: Eddie Bane
- 1974: Ted Shipley
- 1975: Rick Sofield
- 1976: Jamie Allen
- 1977: Paul Kroft
- 1978: Lenny Faedo
- 1979: Kevin Brandt
- 1980: Jeff Reed
- 1981: Mike Sodders
- 1982: Bryan Oelkers
- 1983: Tim Belcher
- 1984: Jay Bell
- 1985: Jeff Baumgarner
- 1986: Derek Parks
- 1987: Willie Banks
- 1988: Johnny Ard
- 1989: Chuck Knoblauch
- 1990: Todd Ritchie, Midre Cummings
- 1991: David McCarty, Scott Stahoviak
- 1992: Dan Serafini
- 1993: Torii Hunter, Jason Varitek, Marc Barcelo, Kelcey Mucker
- 1994: Todd Walker, Travis Miller
- 1995: Mark Redman
- 1996: Travis Lee
- 1997: Michael Cuddyer, Matthew LeCroy
- 1998: Ryan Mills
- 1999: B. J. Garbe
- 2000: Adam Johnson, Aaron Heilman
- 2001: Joe Mauer
- 2002: Denard Span
- 2003: Matthew Moses
- 2004: Trevor Plouffe, Glen Perkins, Kyle Waldrop, Matt Fox, Jay Rainville
- 2005: Matt Garza, Henry Sanchez
- 2006: Chris Parmelee
- 2007: Ben Revere
- 2008: Aaron Hicks, Carlos Gutiérrez, Shooter Hunt
- 2009: Kyle Gibson, Matthew Bashore
- 2010: Alex Wimmers
- 2011: Levi Michael, Travis Harrison, Hudson Boyd
- 2012: Byron Buxton, José Berríos, Luke Bard
- 2013: Kohl Stewart
- 2014: Nick Gordon
- 2015: Tyler Jay
- 2016: Alex Kirilloff
- 2017: Royce Lewis
- 2018: Trevor Larnach
- 2019: Keoni Cavaco
- 2020: Aaron Sabato
- 2021: Chase Petty
- 2022: Brooks Lee
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