Larry Walker
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Missing image | |
Position | Right Field |
Team | St. Louis Cardinals |
Years of Experience | 16 years |
Age | 38 |
Height | 6-3 |
Weight | 235 lbs. |
Bats | Left |
Throws | Right |
College | N/A |
2005 Salary | $12,666,667 |
Place of Birth | Maple Ridge, British Columbia |
Selection | Amateur free agent, 1984 |
Drafted by | Montreal Expos |
Major League Debut | August 16, 1989 |
Larry Kenneth Robert Walker (born December 1, 1966 in Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada) is a Major League Baseball player. He is widely regarded as the best Canadian position player in the history of the game, if not the best Canadian baseball player ever. His 1997 season, for which he won the National League MVP award, is regarded as one of the best all-round seasons in Major League history. He hit .366 with 49 home runs, 130 RBIs, 33 SBs and 409 total bases -- at the time, the most total bases in a single season since 1948.
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Early Career
Larry enjoyed the typical Canadian passions as a child and, like everyone his age, aspired to be an ice hockey player. In time, he found handling a bat more natural than wielding a stick.
Larry was signed by the Montreal Expos as an amateur free agent in 1984 and made his debut on August 16, 1989. During his first several seasons, Larry was an above average batter in all respects, hitting for some power, stealing 20-30 bases, and regularly batting near the .300 mark. In 1994, the Montreal team -- and Larry himself -- appeared to be rising to its potential. Grounded by rising young stars Pedro Martinez, Moises Alou, Cliff Floyd, Mike Lansing and Jeff Fassero, Montreal was off to a 74-40 start, leading the National League Eastern Division. Larry, with 86 RBIs, was well on his way to his first 100 RBI season. The season, however, was stopped due to the 1994 players' strike. No World Series -- which the Expos appeared to be destined for -- was played and Montreal lost many of its players during the next season due to free agency and salary constraints. The 1994 Montreal Expos team that could have been remains one of baseball's hot discussion points.
Best Years
Larry signed in the off-season prior to 1995 with the Colorado Rockies, where the thin air of Coors Field was an instant boon to his statistics. Larry was a big producer in Colorado's winning 1995 season, hitting 36 home runs and knocking in 101 runs.
Larry's best season came in 1997, when he hit 49 home runs, had 130 RBIs, batted .366, and stole 33 bases, en route to becoming the first Canadian player to win an MVP award. Larry lost the 1998 Lou Marsh Award for Canadian Male Athlete of the Year award to Formula One driver Jacques Villeneuve. Larry did, however, win the award the following year. Combined with 12 outfield assists, the season remains one of the finest all around performances in recent baseball history.
Larry has been plagued by injuries over the past several years but has nevertheless continued to produce. As of the end of the 2004 season, his 368 career home runs ranked 61st all-time. In August 2004, he was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals for three minor leaguers.
Accomplishments
- Lou Marsh Trophy, 1998
- 5-time All-Star (1992, 1997-99, 2001)
- 6-time National League Gold Glove Award winner (1992-93, 1997-98, 2001-02)
- 9-time Tip O'Neill Award winner (1987, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001 - with Corey Koskie, 2002 - with Eric Gagné)
- National League MVP award winner (1997)
- Finished 5th in National League MVP voting (1992)
- Finished 7th in National League MVP voting (1995)
- Finished 10th in National League MVP voting (1999)
- Silver Slugger (1992, 1997, 1999)
- His 409 total bases in 1997 were the most in a Major League season since Stan Musial's 1948 season (although Barry Bonds bettered this mark in 2001 with 411 total bases, Luis Gonzalez had 419 total bases in 2001, and Sammy Sosa bettered it twice, with 416 in 1998 and 425 in 2001; however, between 1948 and then the only other time 400+ total bases was achieved in a season was the 406 by Jim Rice in 1978)
Teams
- Montreal Expos (1989-1994)
- Colorado Rockies (1995-2004)
- St. Louis Cardinals (2004-current)
See also
External link
- Baseball Reference (http://www.baseball-reference.com/w/walkela01.shtml)
Categories: 1992 National League All-Stars | 1997 National League All-Stars | 1998 National League All-Stars | 1999 National League All-Stars | 2001 National League All-Stars | Colorado Rockies players | Montreal Expos players | St. Louis Cardinals players | Canadian baseball players | Major league right fielders | 1966 births | People from British Columbia