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Athletes - David Ortiz


David Ortíz (or-TEEZ, IPA: ) born David Américo Ortíz Arias (November 18, 1975 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic), is a Major League Baseball first baseman/designated hitter who plays for the Boston Red Sox (since 2003). Previously, Ortiz played for the Minnesota Twins (1997-2002). He bats and throws left-handed.

Ortíz consistently hits for power to all fields. For a slugger, he is a good two-strike hitter and a hard man to strike out. Like many left-handed power hitters, Ortiz feasts on pitches down and over the inside half of home plate. While he is below average in foot speed, Ortiz is a heads-up player who will try for the extra base hit at the right time. He also plays at first base, though he is fairly immobile on the field.

Career

Ortiz is a career .282 hitter with 177 home runs and 626 RBI in 892 games (through the 2005 season).

In 1992, at age of 17, Ortiz signed with the Seattle Mariners. He was sent to Minnesota in 1996, and made his debut in September 1997. After moving up and down from the majors to the minors, Ortiz hit .272 with 20 home runs and 75 RBI in 2002, when the Twins lost the American League pennant to the Anaheim Angels. But Ortiz, whose left knee and right wrist had been surgically repaired, had not played in more than 130 games in a season. Thinking he was injured too often, struggled against left-handed pitching, and didn't work hard enough, and also fearing the money he would be awarded in arbitration, Minnesota let Ortiz go, and the Red Sox signed him.

Along with Bill Mueller
and Kevin Millar
, Ortiz was another free agent signee who came up big for the Red Sox in 2003. A DH and fifth in the order at bat, he had a huge second half and finished the season hitting .288 with 31 home runs and 101 RBI in 128 games. Considered by many to be the future of the Red Sox franchise, Ortiz finished fifth in the American League MVP selection.

In 2004 Ortiz surpassed all expectations around him by turning in another solid season. Batting in the cleanup slot in the batting order, he led the American League in extra base hits (91) and was second in RBI (139); had 33 go-ahead RBI, 50 RBI with two out, and collected career highs in batting average (.301), home runs (41), RBI (139), runs (94), doubles (47), triples (3), walks (75), total bases (351), on base percentage (.380), slugging average (.603), OPS (.983), and games played (150).

In addition, Ortiz and Manny Ramírez
became the first pair of American League teammates to hit 40 home runs, have 100 RBI, and bat .300 since the Yankees Babe Ruth
and Lou Gehrig
in 1931, and the first Red Sox duo with 40 homers since Tony Armas
and Jim Rice
(1984). Also along with Ramirez, Ortiz hit back-to-back home runs six times, tying the major league single season set by Hank Greenberg
and Rudy York
(Detroit Tigers) and Frank Thomas
and Magglio Ordóñez
(Chicago White Sox). Ortiz also hit 24 road home runs, second only to Ted Williams
’ 26 in 1957. A first time All-Star, he hit a two-run home run, walked twice and scored two runs in the game.

In 2005 Red Sox owner John Henry named Ortiz "The Best Clutch Hitter in the History of the Boston Red Sox." He set a new career record of 47 home runs in the season, 43 of them as designated hitter, beating Edgar Martinez's record of 37 set in 2000. Twenty of his home runs either tied or gave Boston the lead, and over the period 2003-2005, he hit .326, with 22 home runs and 73 RBIs in only 221 at bats in the late innings of close games. He also led the American League in RBIs with 148, and his 47 homers were second in the AL to the Yankees' Alex Rodriguez
. He also finished second to Alex Rodriguez in MVP votes.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for David Ortiz ]



Some related entries: Kevin Robinzine | Gerry Lopez | Sean Locklear | Richie Guerin | Donzell McDonald | Kevin Curtis | Robert Leavitt | Sandy Koufax | Fred Wacker | Jim Carey | Jeremy Ware

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article David Ortiz; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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