Results tagged ‘ hideki matsui ’
June 12 – Happy Birthday Hideki Matsui
The initial signing of this former Yomiuri Giant standout was a great move by the Yankee front office prior to the 2003 season. Only Ishiru Suzuki ranks in front of him in terms of on-the-field performance by a Japanese player in the Major Leagues. He knocked in over 100 runs in four of his first five seasons in Pinstripes and only a wrist injury prevented him from making it all five.
The second contract the Yankees gave Matsui (four years, $52 million) after the 2005 season, did not turn out as well for New York. The wrist mishap ended Hideki’s consecutive game streak of over 1,700 (started in Japan and continued during his first 518 games as a Yankee.) After the broken wrist, he missed close to forty percent of the Yankee’s regular-season games during the next three seasons with an assortment of ailments and injuries including two very painful knees.
Matsui then put together a memorable final year in pinstripes in 2009. During the regular season he blasted 28 home runs and drove in ninety. But he saved his very best effort for the 2009 World Series. He hit .615 in fourteen plate appearances against the Phillies with three home runs and 8 RBIs. I had the pleasure of seeing him hit one of those round-trippers live, at Game 2 at the Stadium. His Game 6 performance will remain one for the ages. Matsui drove in six of the seven Yankee runs with a homer, double and single and was named the Series MVP. Since he hit 332 home runs while playing in Japan, Matsui has now (as of today) hit 507 combined home runs during his career.
Matsui’s quiet brilliance during his seven seasons in the Bronx made him one of my favorite Yankees. “Godzilla” announced his retirement from baseball on December 27, 2012.
This former Yankee relief pitcher shares Matsui’s birthday.
| Year | Tm | G | PA | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | BB | SO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | NYY | 163 | 695 | 623 | 82 | 179 | 42 | 1 | 16 | 106 | 2 | 63 | 86 | .287 | .353 | .435 | .788 |
| 2004 | NYY | 162 | 680 | 584 | 109 | 174 | 34 | 2 | 31 | 108 | 3 | 88 | 103 | .298 | .390 | .522 | .912 |
| 2005 | NYY | 162 | 704 | 629 | 108 | 192 | 45 | 3 | 23 | 116 | 2 | 63 | 78 | .305 | .367 | .496 | .863 |
| 2006 | NYY | 51 | 201 | 172 | 32 | 52 | 9 | 0 | 8 | 29 | 1 | 27 | 23 | .302 | .393 | .494 | .887 |
| 2007 | NYY | 143 | 634 | 547 | 100 | 156 | 28 | 4 | 25 | 103 | 4 | 73 | 73 | .285 | .367 | .488 | .855 |
| 2008 | NYY | 93 | 378 | 337 | 43 | 99 | 17 | 0 | 9 | 45 | 0 | 38 | 47 | .294 | .370 | .424 | .795 |
| 2009 | NYY | 142 | 528 | 456 | 62 | 125 | 21 | 1 | 28 | 90 | 0 | 64 | 75 | .274 | .367 | .509 | .876 |
| 10 Yrs | 1236 | 5066 | 4442 | 656 | 1253 | 249 | 12 | 175 | 760 | 13 | 547 | 689 | .282 | .360 | .462 | .822 | |
| NYY (7 yrs) | 916 | 3820 | 3348 | 536 | 977 | 196 | 11 | 140 | 597 | 12 | 416 | 485 | .292 | .370 | .482 | .852 | |
| TBR (1 yr) | 34 | 103 | 95 | 7 | 14 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 7 | 0 | 8 | 22 | .147 | .214 | .221 | .435 | |
| OAK (1 yr) | 141 | 585 | 517 | 58 | 130 | 28 | 0 | 12 | 72 | 1 | 56 | 84 | .251 | .321 | .375 | .696 | |
| LAA (1 yr) | 145 | 558 | 482 | 55 | 132 | 24 | 1 | 21 | 84 | 0 | 67 | 98 | .274 | .361 | .459 | .820 | |
December 30 – The Top Five Yankees During the Past Five Years
December 30th is one of the few days of the year on which no Yankee,
past or present was born. So last year on this date, I presented this
“Top Ten Yankees of the Decade” post. This year, I thought I’d condense
that a bit and discuss who the five players are who’ve contributed the
most to Yankee baseball over the past five years.
1. Derek Jeter - this list has to start with “The Captain.” Despite
his first-ever mediocre year in 2010 and the needless and very
derogatory comments made about him by the Yankee front office during
his just-completed contract negotiation, Jeter remains the classiest
act in all of baseball and is still the straw that stirs this Yankee
team. I’m predicting he will be back better than ever in 2011.
2. Robinson Cano – His awesome 2010 regular season performance and
the fact that he finally put together some offense in a postseason has
convinced me that this guy has the entire package necessary to be
baseball’s best second baseman for at least the next five years.
3. Mariano Rivera – The only reason he is not number two on my list
is the inability of the rest of New York’s pitching staff to get him
any save situations in this year’s ALCS against Texas. The best closer
ever.
4. Alex Rodriguez – Has become the all-time greatest third baseman
in Yankee franchise history but his recent injuries and longer term
power outages may be evidence of the magic of performance enhancing
pharmaceuticals happening right before our eyes.
5. You decide who belongs in this slot and let the rest of our
readers know by posting your answer in the “comments” section below.
Candidates include Pettitte, Sabathia, Matsui, Teixeira, Damon, Posada,
etc.

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