Kelly Gruber |
---|
Gruber in 1992 |
Third baseman |
Born: (1962-02-26) February 26, 1962 Houston, Texas |
Batted: Right |
Threw: Right |
|
MLB debut |
---|
April 20, 1984, for the Toronto Blue Jays |
Last MLB appearance |
---|
June 29, 1993, for the California Angels |
MLB statistics |
---|
Batting average |
.259 |
---|
Home runs |
117 |
---|
Runs batted in |
443 |
---|
Teams |
---|
|
Career highlights and awards |
---|
|
Kelly Wayne Gruber (born February 26, 1962 in Houston, Texas) is a former Major League Baseball third baseman.
Early life
Gruber was born on February 26, 1962.[1]
Early career
Gruber played baseball at Westlake High School in Austin, Texas where his number was later retired. He was drafted by the Cleveland Indians in the 1st round (10th pick) of the 1980 amateur draft but did not see time with the team. On December 5, 1983, the Toronto Blue Jays picked him up in the Rule 5 draft. Gruber saw his first Major League action shortly after, playing in his first game on April 20, 1984. Over the next three seasons, he split time between the Majors and the minors, eventually earning an everyday spot in the Toronto line-up by 1987. The Toronto media quickly nicknamed him "Xanthos" (meaning blonde) after his long flowing blonde hair. During his stay in Toronto he was voted the city's most eligible bachelor.
Best years
On April 16, 1989, Kelly Gruber was the first Blue Jay in history to hit for the cycle[1] when he got four hits in six at–bats with six RBI and four runs scored.[2] His cycle occurred in the following order: home run, double, triple, and single.[3] He was told to stop at first for his single even though a double was easily attainable.
Gruber had his best season in 1990, hitting .274 with 31 HRs, 118 RBIs and 14 SBs, winning Gold Glove and Silver Slugger awards and ending up fourth in MVP balloting that year.
Gruber was a member of the 1992 World Series-winning Blue Jay team, and was involved in one of the most controversial plays in World Series history. In the fourth inning of Game 3, Gruber appeared to make a diving tag on Braves runner Deion Sanders' foot to record the third out of a triple play, which would have been only the second such play in World Series history. However, the second-base umpire ruled Sanders safe, despite clear photographic evidence to the contrary. Gruber tore his rotator cuff on the play; however, he hit a key game-tying home run in the eighth inning, and the Jays would go on to win the game in walk-off fashion, later taking the series in six games.[4]
Gruber was traded to the California Angels for Luis Sojo in 1993. He appeared in interviews to be very bitter about the move, feeling that he deserved better treatment from the team to whom he had been so loyal.
Gruber's career was cut short in 1993 due to a bone spur on his spine. He played 63 games for the Angels. Due to growing threats of paralysis, Gruber had surgery performed on the bone spur that ended his career in 1993. The surgery was successful.
In 1997, Gruber attempted a comeback with the Baltimore Orioles. While his performance was good enough to impress coaches and staff with the Orioles, Gruber decided to retire for good due to health-related concerns.
Today, Kelly Gruber often makes public appearances as a motivational speaker for charitable organizations as well as holding baseball seminars throughout North America.
Autobiography
In 1992, Gruber published his autobiography Kelly, At Home on Third.
References
- 1 2 Piercy, Justin (February 26, 2014). "Birthday Bio: Kelly Gruber". CBC Sports. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
- ↑ "Apr 16, 1989, Royals at Blue Jays Play by Play and Box Score". Baseball Reference. Sports Reference. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
- ↑ "AMERICAN LEAGUE; Blue Jays, Down by 6, Defeat Royals, 15-8". NY Times. April 17, 1989. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
- ↑
External links
|
---|
|
- 1965: Ray Fosse
- 1966: John Curtis
- 1967: Jack Heidemann
- 1968: Robert Weaver
- 1969: Alvin McGrew
- 1970: Steve Dunning
- 1971: David Sloan
- 1972: Rick Manning
- 1973: Glenn Tufts
- 1974: Tom Brennan
- 1975: Rick Cerone
- 1976: Tim Glass
- 1977: Bruce Compton
- 1978: Phil Lansford
- 1979: John Bohnet
- 1980: Kelly Gruber
- 1981: George Alpert
- 1982: Mark Snyder
- 1983: Dave Clark
- 1984: Cory Snyder
- 1985: Mike Pohel
- 1986: Greg Swindell
- 1987: No first round pick
- 1988: Mark Lewis, Charles Nagy, Jeff Mutis
- 1989: Calvin Murray
- 1990: Tim Costo, Sam Hence
- 1991: Manny Ramirez
- 1992: Paul Shuey
- 1993: Daron Kirkreit
- 1994: Jaret Wright
- 1995: David Miller
- 1996: Danny Peoples
- 1997: Tim Drew, Jason Fitzgerald
- 1998: CC Sabathia
- 1999: No first round pick
- 2000: Corey Smith, Derek Thompson
- 2001: Dan Denham, Alan Horne, J. D. Martin, Mike Conroy
- 2002: Jeremy Guthrie, Matt Whitney, Micah Schilling
- 2003: Michael Aubrey, Brad Snyder, Adam Miller
- 2004: Jeremy Sowers
- 2005: Trevor Crowe, John Drennen
- 2006: David Huff
- 2007: Beau Mills
- 2008: Lonnie Chisenhall
- 2009: Alex White
- 2010: Drew Pomeranz
- 2011: Francisco Lindor
- 2012: Tyler Naquin
- 2013: Clint Frazier
- 2014: Bradley Zimmer, Justus Sheffield
- 2015: Brady Aiken
|
|