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MLB Batting Statistics

Year Team G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO BA OBP SLG
1997 MIN 15 49 10 16 3 0 1 6 0 2 19 0.327 0.353 0.449
1998 MIN 86 278 47 77 20 0 9 46 1 39 72 0.277 0.371 0.446
1999 MIN 10 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 12 0.000 0.200 0.000
2000 MIN 130 415 59 117 36 1 10 63 1 57 81 0.282 0.364 0.446
2001 MIN 89 303 46 71 17 1 18 48 1 40 68 0.234 0.324 0.475
2002 MIN 125 412 52 112 32 1 20 75 1 43 87 0.272 0.339 0.500
2003 BOS 128 448 79 129 39 2 31 101 0 58 83 0.288 0.369 0.592
2004 BOS 150 582 94 175 47 3 41 139 0 75 133 0.301 0.380 0.603
2005 BOS 159 601 119 180 40 1 47 148 1 102 124 0.300 0.397 0.604
2006 BOS 151 558 115 160 29 2 54 137 1 119 117 0.287 0.413 0.636
2007 BOS 149 549 116 182 52 1 35 117 3 111 103 0.332 0.445 0.621
2008 BOS 109 416 74 110 30 1 23 89 1 70 74 0.264 0.369 0.507
2009 BOS 150 541 77 129 35 1 28 99 0 74 134 0.238 0.332 0.462
2010 BOS 145 518 86 140 36 1 32 102 0 82 145 0.270 0.370 0.529
2011 BOS 146 525 84 162 40 1 29 96 1 78 83 0.309 0.398 0.554
2012 BOS 90 324 65 103 26 0 23 60 0 56 51 0.318 0.415 0.611
2013 BOS 137 518 84 160 38 2 30 103 4 76 88 0.309 0.395 0.564
2014 BOS 142 518 59 136 27 0 35 104 0 75 95 0.263 0.355 0.517
2015 BOS 146 528 73 144 37 0 37 108 0 77 95 0.273 0.360 0.553
2016 BOS 151 537 79 169 48 1 38 127 2 80 86 0.315 0.401 0.620
Career 2408 8640 1419 2472 632 19 541 1768 17 1319 1750 - - -

MLB Fielding Statistics

Year Team G GS Inn PO A E DP Fld%
1997 MIN 11 10 87 84 10 1 10 0.989
1998 MIN 71 69 587 503 46 6 51 0.989
1999 MIN 1 0 5 7 0 0 1 1.000
2000 MIN 27 25 215 210 12 1 17 0.996
2001 MIN 8 7 55 60 2 0 2 1.000
2002 MIN 15 13 103 90 6 1 8 0.990
2003 BOS 45 44 378 342 30 3 20 0.992
2004 BOS 34 31 260 253 21 4 23 0.986
2005 BOS 10 10 78 69 11 2 8 0.976
2006 BOS 10 10 68 62 6 2 8 0.971
2007 BOS 7 7 48 37 3 0 3 1.000
2008 BOS 108 - -
2009 BOS 6 6 39 42 6 1 2 0.980
2010 BOS 4 4 26 23 1 0 1 1.000
2011 BOS 2 138 13 18 0 0 4 1.000
2012 BOS 7 88 52 54 2 0 4 1.000
2013 BOS 6 135 39 36 1 0 4 1.000
2014 BOS 5 136 43 37 2 0 9 1.000
2015 BOS 9 143 60 51 5 1 2 0.982
2016 BOS 1 140 5 5 0 0 0 1.000
Career 387 1016 - 1983 164 22 177 -
 
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Age48
Birthday 18 November, 1975
Birthplace Santo Domingo, Distrito Nacional, D.R.
Height 6' 4" (193 cm)
Eye Color Brown - Dark
Hair Color Black
Zodiac Sign Scorpio
Nationality Dominican
Occupation Baseball
Claim to Fame Boston Red Sox
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David Ortiz Baseball Actor - Born November 18, 1975 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

Birth Name David Americo Ortiz Arias

Nicknames Big Papi, The Big Cat

Height 6' 3" (1.91 m)

Mini Bio (1) David Ortiz was born on November 18, 1975 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic as David Americo Ortiz Arias. He is an actor and producer, known for Patriots Day (2016), Check Mate (2012) and American Masters (1985). He has been married to Tiffany Brick since November 16, 2002. They have three children.

Spouse (1) Tiffany Brick (16 November 2002 - present) ( 3 children)

Trade Mark (1) Spitting on his hands before an at-bat

Trivia (9)

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Made his MLB debut on 9/2/1997 as a Minnesota Twin. He was signed by the Red Sox at the beginning of the 2003 season.

Came in second in American League Most Valuable Player voting in 2005, finishing 24 votes behind winner Alex Rodríguez of the Yankees, whom the Red Sox had tried to acquire before the 2004 season. Rodríguez, a fine-fielding third- baseman who won two Gold Gloves as a shortstop, beat out Ortiz, a non-fielding designated hitter, earning 16 first-place votes and 331 points versus Ortiz's 11 first- place votes and 307 points. "David Ortiz is a great player...," Rodríguez said of his rival. "I'd certainly trade his World Series championship for this MVP trophy." For the 2005 season, Ortiz batted .300 with a career-best 47 home runs, 148 RBIs, 119 runs, 102 walks, a .604 slugging percentage and a .397 on-base percentage in 159 games. He was listed first or second on every MVP ballot cast. Ortiz won the Players Choice Award as the AL's outstanding player after leading the Majors in RBIs and ranking among AL leaders in extra-base hits (first with 88), home runs (second), slugging (second), walks (second), total bases (third), and runs (third).

He finished among the top five in American League Most Valuable Player voting in 2003 (fifth), 2004 (fourth) and 2005 (second). No other player in baseball has ranked in the top five in A.L. M.V.P. voting in each of the last three years.

In a game against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays at Boston's Fenway Park on April 19, 2006, "Big Papi" Ortiz was paid the ultimate compliment to a slugger when Devil Rays manager Joe Maddon made a shift of his fielders so that Ortiz faced five rather than the normal three outfielders. At the bottom of the first inning of the game, which the Red Sox eventually won 7-4, the Devil Rays' defense shifted, leaving only the shortstop and the first baseman in the infield. The third baseman played left field, the left fielder positioned himself in left-center, the second baseman played shallow right, the center fielder shaded toward right, and the right fielder played down the line. Ortiz grounded to short in the first, but doubled off the Wall in the third inning against the shift. Of the shift, Ortiz said "Crazy, man. But whatever they do, they can't catch the ball if you hit it off the Green Monster," referring to the 37-foot wall in left field. The Red Sox had runners on base in Ortiz' other at- bats, forcing the Rays to stick with the over-shift that's usually in play when the slugger comes to the plate. Only the very best hitters, like the late great Ted Williams and superstar Barry Bonds are subjected to such radical fielding strategies.

Played for the Dominican Republic in the inaugural World Series of Baseball in 2006.

Was voted Most Value Player of American League Championship Series in 2004, when the Boston Red Sox finally topped their hated rivals, the New York Yankees, in the playoffs, one year after losing to the Bronx Bombers in a heartbreaking Game 7. In the two rounds of playoffs, Ortiz batted .400 (22-for-55) with five homers, 19 RBIs and 13 runs scored in 14 games. The Red Sox, cleared of the Yankees Curse, went on to win their first World Series since Babe Ruth was their star pitcher in 1918.

Following the 2002 season, the Minnesota Twins thought so highly of him that they released him, getting nothing in return for a future superstar. This despite him having a respectable .272 batting average and hitting 20 home runs.

Most valuable player of 2013 World Series (2013).

Currently with the Red Sox who just won their first World Series since 1918. [November 2004]

Personal Quotes (1) [following the Boston Marathon bombings] This jersey that we wear today, it doesn't say "Red Sox." It say "Boston." We want to thank you, Mayor Menino, Governor Patrick, the whole police department for the great job that they did this past week. This is our fucking city, and ain't nobody gonna dictate our freedom. Stay strong.

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