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Rasmus ended his best season as a Blue Jay with a .276 average, 22 home runs, and 66 RBIs in 118 games. [30] Rasmus was announced as the Blue Jays' Wilson Defensive Player of the Year on November 7, 2013. [31] In January 2014, he filed for salary arbitration with Toronto, but came to terms on a one-year, $7 million contract on January 17. [32]
May 5, 2009, for the Toronto Blue Jays: Last MLB appearance; September 25, 2018, for the St. Louis Cardinals: MLB statistics; Win–loss record: 44–47: Earned run average: 4.29: Strikeouts: 670: Stats at Baseball Reference Teams; Toronto Blue Jays (2009–2016) St. Louis Cardinals (2017–2018) Career highlights and awards; All-Star
At the end of that season, he became eligible for salary arbitration and the Brewers granted him free agency a few months later. [16] Ten years after they drafted him, the Toronto Blue Jays signed him on December 23, 1998, for the 1999 season. He served as Darrin Fletcher's understudy.
The Blue Jays are last in the AL East, which could put players like Bo Bichette (far left), and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (right) on the trade block in the coming months. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty ...
The Blue Jays promoted Carpenter to the Class-A Advanced Dunedin Blue Jays of Florida State League in 1995. Baseball America rated him the #100 prospect in the minor leagues before the season. He made 15 starts and yielded a 2.17 ERA in 99 + 1 ⁄ 3 innings. [7] In 13 of those starts, he yielded three or fewer earned runs (ER). [10]
Kirby Puckett and Rickey Henderson signed the first contracts which paid an average of $3 million a year in November 1989. In 1990, Jose Canseco signed for 5 years and $23.5 million, making him the first player to earn an average of $4 million a year. It wasn't until 2010 when the MLB average salary rose above that same mark. [7] [8]
Paul Sterling DeJong (dÉ™-YUNG; born August 2, 1993) is an American professional baseball shortstop and third baseman who is a free agent. He has previously played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the St. Louis Cardinals, Toronto Blue Jays, San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox, and Kansas City Royals.
Carl Yastrzemski played in Major League Baseball for 23 seasons, all with the Boston Red Sox.. The following is a list of former Major League Baseball (MLB) players who played in at least 10 MLB seasons and spent their entire MLB playing careers exclusively with one franchise.