Friday, 29 April 2016

Top 40 All-Time Blue Jays: #32: Dave Winfield

Top Blue Jays Player #32: Dave Winfield


Position: Designated Hitter
Seasons With the Jays: 1 (1992)
MLB Awards: Silver Slugger (1992)
MLB Hall of Fame: Inducted 2001
Stats: Games Played 156               Batting Average .290
                                              Base Hits 169                        Runs Scored 92
                                              Home Runs 26                      RBIs  108
                                              Doubles  33                            Triples  3
                                              Stolen Bases  2                     Walks  82

                While it’s true that Dave Winfield only played one season with the Blue Jays, the fact that it was such an outstanding year, for him personally as well as the team, it warrants placing him at number 32 on the all-time list of the team’s greatest players.
                Winfield broke into the big leagues with the San Diego Padres in 1973. One of his teammates who shared the outfield with him in 1973 was the Jays’ manager in 1992, Cito Gaston. Winfield played eight seasons with the Padres, and established himself as a super-star baseball player after being a three-sport standout in college while playing with the University of Minnesota (football and basketball were the other sports.) He was a four-time All-Star while with San Diego.
                The next stop was the Bronx, where he would play nine tumultuous seasons with the Yankees. While he was an eight-time All-Star in New York, Yankee owner, George Steinbrenner, was always putting him down, in particular calling him “Mr. May” in reference to his poor showing in the 1981 World Series.
                Two years with the California Angles preceded his season with the Blue Jays. And in 1992, Winfield would show that at 40 years old, he was still a force to be reckoned with at the plate. He batted .290 and slugged 26 home runs. He also became the oldest player in big league history to record one hundred or more RBIs. He would finish the season with 108 runs driven in.
                But as remarkable as his season was for a forty-year old player, the postseason would produce even more greatness. In Game 1 of the ALCS against the Oakland A’s, Winfield’s first postseason game since 1981 was impressive. He flew out in the first inning, did the same in the fourth, cranked a solo home run in the sixth and singled and scored in the eighth. Although Toronto lost 4-3, Winfield’s 2-for-4 performance at the plate was a sign of things to come.
                After going hitless in Game 2, he singled, walked and scored two runs in the third game, singled and scored in Game 4, then hit his second home run of the series in Game Five. Despite going hitless in the sixth and final game of the series, a 9-2 Toronto win that propelled the Jays to the World Series for the first time, Winfield ended the series batting .250, with two homers, three RBIs and seven runs scored.
                On to the World Series against the Atlanta Braves where, despite batting .277 for the series, Winfield’s performance was considered anemic until his final at bat. Up until that point, he had only one RBI in the series and no extra base hits. But that was about to change. With the Jays leading the World Series three games to two, the game was tied at two with two out in the top of the eleventh. With two runners on base and a three-and-two count, Winfield would become the World Series hero when he doubled down the left field line, scoring both runners, Devon White and Roberto Alomar, and giving Toronto a 4-2 lead. There was some drama in the bottom of the inning as Atlanta scored one run and had the tying run on third base. But the Jays held on and won the game 4-3 and with it, their first World Series Championship.
                Winfield was not re-signed by Toronto after the season and signed with the Minnesota Twins. He played two seasons with the Twins and finished his career in 1995, playing 46 games with the Cleveland Indians. His career totals of a .283 batting average, 465 home runs, 1833 RBIs and 223 stolen bases earned him a spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2001. He entered with a San Diego Padres hat on his plaque but Toronto Blue Jay fans will always have a place in their hearts for the 1992 World Series hero.

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