Matt Williams (baseball)
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| Matt Williams | ||
|---|---|---|
| Third Baseman | ||
| Born: November 28, 1965 | ||
| Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | ||
| April 11, 1987 for the San Francisco Giants |
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| Final game | ||
| May 31, 2003 for the Arizona Diamondbacks |
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| Career statistics | ||
| AVG | .268 | |
| HR | 378 | |
| RBI | 1218 | |
| Teams | ||
| Career highlights and awards | ||
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Matthew Derrick "Matt" Williams (born November 28, 1965 in Bishop, California) is a former Major League Baseball third baseman and right-handed batter who played for the San Francisco Giants (1987-96), Cleveland Indians (1997) and Arizona Diamondbacks (1998-2003). His numbers and defensive skills proved he was one of the best third basemen to play in the last 25 years.
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Williams was originally selected by the New York Mets out of Carson High School in Carson City, Nevada, but he did not sign. The Giants later drafted him out of college in the first round (3rd pick) of the 1986 amateur draft. Despite his several leg injuries and lower-back ailments, Williams was a dangerous hitter when he got the pitch he was looking for. As a third baseman, he had good reactions and excellent hands, then a quick release with an accurate and strong arm. He was one of the premier fielders at third base as he earned four gold gloves from 1991-1997.
A hitter with exceptional power, six times he hit over 30 home runs with over 90 runs batted in, including his outstanding 1994 season when he hit a league-best 43 HRs with 96 RBI in a season shortened by nearly a full third due to a strike. He finished second in the league MVP vote behind Jeff Bagwell.
Matt was an original member of the Arizona Diamondbacks and holds the Diamondback record for the most runs batted in for a season with 142 in 1999 (since tied by Luis Gonzalez in 2001). Williams played in three World Series for three different teams (1989 with the Giants, 1997 with the Indians, and 2001 with the Diamondbacks) and was a member of the World Champion Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001. For his career, Williams batted .268 with 378 home runs, 1218 runs batted in, 997 runs scored, 1878 hits, 338 doubles, and 35 triples in 1866 games.
Williams is now a part owner in the Diamondbacks franchise with the title of special assistant to the general partner. He occasionally serves as color commentator on Diamondbacks radio and television broadcasts, and has even assisted in coaching and player personnel matters [1].
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| Opening Day Roster | C Jorge Fábregas | 1B Travis Lee | 2B Edwin Díaz | 3B Matt Williams | SS Jay Bell | LF Brent Brede | CF Devon White | RF Karim García | P Andy Benes |
| Catcher / Infield / Outfield | C Damian Miller | C Kelly Stinnett | IF Tony Batista| IF Andy Fox | IF Hanley Frías | IF Danny Klassen | IF Andy Stankiewicz | IF/OF Hensley Meulens | IF/OF Mike Robertson | OF Yamil Benitez | OF David Dellucci | OF Bernard Gilkey | OF Chris Jones |
| Pitchers | SP Brian Anderson | SP Andy Benes | SP Willie Blair | SP Omar Daal | SP Jeff Suppan | RP Joel Adamson | RP Willie Banks | RP Scott Brow | RP Bobby Chouinard | RP Bryan Corey | RP Alan Embree | RP Ben Ford | RP Barry Manuel | RP Chris Michalak | RP Vladimir Núñez | RP Gregg Olson | RP Ricky Pickett | RP Félix Rodríguez | RP Clint Sodowsky | RP Aaron Small | RP Russ Springer | RP Amaury Telemaco | RP Efraín Valdez | RP Neil Weber | RP Bob Wolcott Manager Buck Showalter |
Williams has been married three times. His second wife (1999-2002) was actress Michelle Johnson. In 2002 she filed for divorce due to irreconcilable differences [1]. The couple had no children and by 2003 the divorce was final as he was engaged to another woman [2]. Since then, he has married Erika Monroe, who is a former TV weather anchor from KTVK-TV NewsChannel 3. They have a child together.[citation needed]
On Nov. 6, 2007, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Matt Williams purchased $11,600 worth of HGH, steroids and other drugs from the Palm Beach clinic in 2002. Williams told the Chronicle he used HGH on the advice of a doctor to treat an ankle injury he suffered during spring training in 2002.
- Top 500 home run hitters of all time
- MLB players who have hit 30 or more home runs before the All-Star break
- List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 RBI
- List of Major League Baseball RBI champions
- List of Major League Baseball home run champions
- Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game
- Arizona Diamondbacks all-time roster
- ^ Matt Williams' actress-wife seeks divorce. Sports Illustrated (2002-7-16). Retrieved on 2007-10-09.
- ^ Ron Rapoport (2003-06-03). Roger and out. Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved on 2007-10-09. “He...is engaged to Phoenix news anchor Erika Monroe”
| Accomplishments | |||||||||
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| 4 Craig Counsell | 5 Tony Womack | 9 Matt Williams | 12 Steve Finley | 13 Midre Cummings | 16 Reggie Sanders | 17 Mark Grace | 20 Luis Gonzalez | 22 Greg Swindell | 25 David Dellucci | 26 Damian Miller | 28 Greg Colbrunn | 29 Danny Bautista | 32 Albie Lopez | 33 Jay Bell | 34 Brian Anderson | 36 Mike Morgan | 38 Curt Schilling | 40 Bobby Witt | 43 Miguel Batista | 44 Erubiel Durazo | 48 Rod Barajas | 49 Byung-Hyun Kim | 51 Randy Johnson | 54 Troy Brohawn Manager 15 Bob Brenly |
Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007 | 1965 births | Living people | Major league players from California | National League All-Stars | National League home run champions | National League RBI champions | Arizona Diamondbacks players | Cleveland Indians players | San Francisco Giants players | Major league third basemen | Gold Glove Award winners | People from Inyo County, California | People from San Francisco | Major League Baseball announcers | 1994 in baseball