Manny Ramirez Traded in Three-Way Deal Involving Four Minor League Players
Friday, August 1, 2008 at 12:56PM MLN Newswire - www.mlntherawfeed.com – LOS ANGELES
– The Los Angeles Dodgers today acquired 12-time All-Star Manny Ramirez
and cash considerations from the Boston Red Sox in exchange for
infielder Andy LaRoche and right-handed pitcher Bryan Morris. General
Manager Ned Colletti made the announcement.
Following
the trade, the Pittsburgh Pirates acquired LaRoche, Morris, outfielder
Brandon Moss, and right-hander Craig Hansen from Boston in exchange for
outfielder Jason Bay.
A 12-time American League All-Star, including each of the last 11 seasons, Ramirez has won nine AL Silver Slugger Awards during his 16 Major League seasons. The 36-year-old is a career .312 hitter with 493 doubles, 510 home runs, and 1,672 RBI in 2,050 games with Cleveland (1993-2000) and Boston (2001-2008). He was the AL batting champ in 2002 with a .349 average and the 2004 AL home run champ with 43.
Ramirez
ranks 23rd on baseball’s all-time home run list, and is one of only 11
players in baseball history with at least 11 seasons with 30 or more
homers (1995-96, 1998-2006). He has also hit at least 20 home runs in
14 straight seasons, including a career-high 45 in 1998 with Cleveland
and 2005 with Boston.
Ramirez
won two World Series championships with Boston in 2004 and 2007, and
was named the World Series Most Valuable Player in 2004. The Dominican
Republic native is a veteran of nine postseasons overall, including
four World Series. He also played in the 1995 and 1997 Fall Classics
with Cleveland. Ramirez is baseball’s all-time post-season home run
leader with 24, and ranks second with 64 RBI.
Among
active players, Ramirez ranks third in RBI, fifth in home runs, sixth
in on-base percentage (.409), and seventh in batting average. He also
ranks eighth in baseball history, and second among active players
behind only Albert Pujols (.620), with a .590 slugging percentage. His
2,318 hits rank 10th among active players, while his 493 doubles are
tied for fourth.
Ramirez
ranks 23rd on baseball’s all-time RBI list with 1,672. He has logged
at least 100 RBI in 11 seasons, including nine straight campaigns from
1998-2006. Since “RBI” became an official statistic in 1920, only
eight players in history have recorded nine consecutive seasons of at
least 100 RBI. Ramirez has 1,300 RBI since the start of the 1998
season, trailing only Alex Rodriguez (1,340) among all Major Leaguers
in that time. Ramirez’s 401 home runs in that same span rank third,
behind only Rodriguez (477) and Sammy Sosa (402).
Ramirez
leaves Boston ranking fifth in franchise history with 274 home runs and
a .411 on-base percentage. He also ranks fourth in Red Sox history
with a .588 slugging percentage and sixth with 868 RBI.
Ramirez,
who graduated from George Washington High School in Bronx, New York in
1991, hit .299 with 22 doubles, 20 homers, and 68 RBI in 100 games with
the Red Sox in 2008. He hit career homer No. 500 on May 31 at
Baltimore, accomplishing the feat in his 7,263rd at-bat, eighth fewest
all-time. Ramirez was originally selected by the Indians as the 13th
overall pick of the 1993 First-Year Player Draft. He then signed with
Boston as a free agent on December 13, 2000.
The
24-year-old LaRoche, who was selected by the Dodgers in the 39th round
of the 2003 draft, hit .217 with three homers and 16 RBI in 62 games
with Los Angeles over the last two seasons. He is batting .294 with 95
homers and 331 RBI in 494 minor league games. LaRoche played 27 games
with the Dodgers in 2008, batting .203 with two homers and six RBI. He
is hitting a combined .284 with five homers and 27 RBI in 42 games this
season with Las Vegas of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League and
Jacksonville of the Double-A Southern League.
Morris, 21, was the second of two first-round picks (26th overall) of the Dodgers in the 2006 draft, and is 6-9 with a 4.16 ERA in 30 professional starts. After missing the entire 2007 season due to “Tommy John” ligament-replacement surgery, he is 2-4 with a 3.39 ERA in 16 starts this year with Great Lakes of the Single-A Midwest league.
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