Everything about Nomar Garciaparra totally explained
Anthony Nomar Garciaparra (; born
July 23,
1973, in ) is an American
baseball player who currently plays
third base for the
Los Angeles Dodgers. He previously played
first base for the Dodgers, and
shortstop and third base for the
Chicago Cubs, after several years as an All-Star shortstop for the
Boston Red Sox.
His first name (Nomar) is his father's first name (Ramon) backwards and his last name is his father's last name (Garcia) and his mother's last name (Parra) together.
Garciaparra was part of the so-called "Holy Trinity" of shortstops that debuted in the mid '90s, which also included
Alex Rodriguez (now a third baseman) and
Derek Jeter. Of the three, only Jeter remains a shortstop.
Garciaparra is a six-time
All-Star (
1997,
1999,
2000,
2002,
2003,
2006). In five postseason series he's batted .323 with a slugging percentage of .625.
Early years
Garciaparra attended
St. John Bosco High School in and was a letterman in football, soccer, and baseball. His teams won high school league championships in 1990-91 and he won the league MVP honors in 1991, his last year of high school. St. John Bosco High School retired Garciaparra's baseball jersey. St. John Bosco High School's Activities Office window is home to an area dedicated to Garciaparra's baseball career both at the school and with the Dodgers. And likes hotdogs:)
Garciparra attended
Georgia Tech, where he helped the
Yellow Jackets reach the
College World Series national championships in 1994, where they lost to
Oklahoma. Former Boston teammate
Jason Varitek was also a member of that team. He was an
Atlantic Coast Conference All-Star and a first team All-American twice in 1993-94.
Major League Baseball career
Boston Red Sox (1994–2004)
Garciaparra was a
first round pick of the
Red Sox in following a successful career at
Georgia Tech. He played in the Red Sox minor league system for three years (1994-
Sarasota -
Trenton, -
Pawtucket).
He made his Major League debut on August 31, 1996 as a defensive replacement against
Oakland. His first Major League hit was a home run off of Oakland pitcher
John Wasdin on September 1.
At the time, Boston's starting shortstop was
John Valentin, who finished ninth in
MVP voting in 1995. By late 1996, Nomar won the job. Garciaparra's talent was enough to displace Valentin, who was moved to
second base (then
third base) to make room for young Garciaparra, who batted .241 with 4 home runs, 16 RBI, and 5 stolen bases in his initial stint with the club near the end of 1996. As a rookie in, he hit 30 home runs and drove in 98 runs, setting a new MLB record for RBIs by a leadoff hitter. His 30-game hitting streak set an A.L. rookie record. He was named
Rookie of the Year in a unanimous vote, competed in the
Home Run Derby, and finished eighth in MVP voting. He also won the immediate admiration of Red Sox fans, who referred to him in Boston accents as "NO-mah!".
From -, Garciaparra emerged as the one of the better hitters of the Holy Trinity of shortstops, with the highest career OPS of the three by the conclusion of this period. He finished with 35 home runs and 122 RBI in 1998, and placed as the runner-up for AL MVP. Garciaparra then led the
American League in batting average for the next two years, hitting .357 in and .372 in 2000, finishing in the top ten in MVP voting both years. He is one of the few right-handed batters to win consecutive batting titles, and the first since
Joe DiMaggio.
In February of, Garciaparra appeared on the cover of
Sports Illustrated, with the headline "A Cut Above... baseball's toughest out". The week after the issue hit newsstands, Garciaparra reported to spring training with a serious wrist injury, which essentially aborted his season. He recovered by the start of the 2002 season and drove in 120 runs while hitting a league-leading 56
doubles. However, he'd a difficult time playing as strongly defensively as before, and his batting average dipped substantially.
The end of Garciaparra in Boston
Before the season, a new ownership group purchased the Red Sox. The baseball operations staff, led by
Theo Epstein, stressed on-base percentage on offense and strong defense, two areas where Garciaparra was about to decline precipitously from his pre-2001 levels. Still, Garciaparra recovered from an injury-filled 2001 season to bat .310 with 24 home runs and 120 RBIs in 2002. The star shortstop was up for a contract extension following the 2004 season and hoped for a deal before that deadline. Still considered one of the best shortstops in baseball, he hoped to receive salaries similar to peers
Alex Rodriguez and
Derek Jeter. Garciaparra turned down a four-year deal worth $60 million when the Red Sox didn't offer him a signing bonus as large as he wanted.
In, Garciaparra ended a solid but unspectacular season with a miserable September, closing with a career-low .301 batting average. He followed that with a poor post-season, contributing zero home runs, one RBI and ten strikeouts in 12 games against the
Oakland Athletics and rival Yankees, who eliminated the Red Sox in seven games.
Meanwhile, new stars and cult heroes, led by
David Ortiz and
Kevin Millar, began to emerge in
Boston. Millar convinced nearly every player on the roster other than
Johnny Damon and Garciaparra (whose wedding with
Mia Hamm followed the season) to shave his head.
After the 2003 season, Red Sox management explored trading
Manny Ramírez to the
Texas Rangers for shortstop
Alex Rodriguez. Details of this proposed trade and the subsequent agreement sending Garciaparra to the
Chicago White Sox for
Magglio Ordóñez quickly became public. The mega-deal fell apart when the
MLBPA refused to approve a restructuring of Rodríguez's contract, and Garciaparra returned to Boston as a lame duck for in the final year of a contract signed in 1997.
Garciaparra missed three months of the 2004 season with an injured Achilles' tendon when a foul ball hit him in spring training. Many critics felt Garciaparra exaggerated the injury because he was bitter that the Red Sox tried to trade him and then offered $12 million per year instead of $15 million. The injury was widely seen as the final nail in Garciaparra's coffin in Boston. Public opinion in Boston began to turn against him. By early summer Garciaparra appeared increasingly unhappy, and Boston's WEEI radio listeners began jokingly referring to him as "The Incredible Sulk". Despite being traded mid-season, Garciaparra received a World Series Championship ring as a member of the 2004 Boston Red Sox.
Chicago Cubs
On July 31, 2004, at the MLB trading deadline, Garciaparra was traded along with minor league outfielder, Matt Murton, from the Red Sox to the Chicago Cubs in a four-team deal, in which the Red Sox acquired
Orlando Cabrera and
Doug Mientkiewicz. He expressed his appreciation to Red Sox fans in a speech to media, and left for the
Windy City. At first, Garciaparra had to change his jersey number from 5 to 8, because catcher
Michael Barrett had number 5. But a few days after being traded, they switched numbers, giving Garciaparra 5 and Barrett 8.
In the season, a torn left groin forced him onto the
disabled list yet again for more than three months. Garciaparra resumed play on August 5, 2005. Because Cubs regular
third baseman Aramis Ramírez was on the disabled list for the last few weeks of the 2005 season, he temporarily played third base. Aside from his first game in the Majors, in which he played second base, he'd played shortstop in all of his other Major League games up to that point in his career.
Los Angeles Dodgers
In, Nomar returned to his home town, signing with the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Also on the team were former Red Sox players
Bill Mueller,
Derek Lowe, and manager
Grady Little.
While facing the
New York Mets on June 6, 2006, Nomar hit a two-run
home run on the first pitch he ever saw against former teammate and fellow Boston icon
Pedro Martínez. Coincidentally,
Derek Lowe was the starting pitcher for the Dodgers that day.
Though he was able to retain his original jersey number (5), he moved to first base in order to minimize the risk of injury, while the Dodgers signed
Rafael Furcal from the
Atlanta Braves to step in for the recovering
César Izturis at short. Healthy for the first extended period of time since 2003, he regained his offensive stroke, evidenced by a .370 batting average at one point, and by his remaining constantly productive. By the 2006
MLB All-Star Break, Nomar was tied with Pittsburgh's Freddy Sanchez for the lead among all MLB infielders and all
NL batters with a .358 batting average, to go along with 11 home runs and 53 RBIs, carrying a 21-game hitting streak into the break.
]]
He adjusted well to playing first base, having committed only 1 error through 588.2 innings played--a .998
fielding percentage. He also was elected to the
2006 NL All-Star Team as the National League
All-Star Final Vote winner, receiving around six million votes. It was his sixth trip to the Midsummer Classic, and his first as a first baseman and as a Dodger. Unfortunately, a combination of oblique strains, knee injuries, and simple struggles caused Garciaparra's play to drop off dramatically in the second half. His .358 batting average steadily declined to just a hair over .300 by the end of the season. Despite Garciaparra's late season slump and injuries, Garciaparra did prevail in the clutch for the Dodgers during their playoff race with two
walk off home runs. The first capped off one of the most amazing games of the season on September 18, when the Dodgers hit four consecutive home runs in the ninth inning against the San Diego Padres to tie the game. After the Padres scored a run in the tenth inning, Nomar hit a walk off two-run home run in the bottom of the tenth to win the game 11-10. Six days later on September 24, Garciaparra hit a walk off grand slam against the
Arizona Diamondbacks to give the Dodgers a 5-1 victory with one week left in the regular season. Garciaparra's walk off home run against Arizona propelled the Dodgers to win their last seven games of the regular season, helping the Dodgers to make the playoffs.
On October 7, Garciaparra was named the
National League's Comeback Player of the Year for 2006. He received 72,054 votes.
On November 20, 2006 the Dodgers re-signed Garciaparra to a 2-year contract worth $18.5 million, keeping him with the team through the season.
On June 25,, it was announced that Garciaparra would move from
first to
third base in order to make room for rookie
James Loney.
During 2008
spring training Garciaparra suffered a microfracture on his hand after a hit-by-pitch. This forced him to start the
2008 MLB season on the DL, and was replaced by rookie
Blake DeWitt. On
April 16, he started his first game against the
Pittsburgh Pirates, only to suffer a strained left calf muscle 9 days later resulting in another trip to the DL.
Personal life
On November 22, 2003 Garciaparra married
Olympian and
World Cup Champion soccer star
Mia Hamm. The couple have twin girls, Grace Isabella and Ava Caroline, who were born on March 28, 2007 in
Los Angeles.
Both he and Mia Hamm were on Olympic teams in their respective sports. Garciaparra was on the
1992 Olympic baseball team, and Hamm was on the
1996,
2000, and
2004 women's
Olympic soccer teams.
Garciaparra uses the song "
Low Rider" by
War as his entrance music when he comes up to bat.
Garciaparra is known for his idiosyncratic
tics when batting. This habit includes an elaborate routine of glove adjustments and alternating toe taps on the ground prior to an ensuing pitch.
His unique name comes from his father's name, Ramon, spelled backwards. Several callers and hosts on WEEI affectionately referred to him as "Nomie" when talking about him on the air.
Garciaparra is the cousin of
Arturo Javier Ledesma, a Mexican soccer player who currently plays for
Club Deportivo Guadalajara. His uncle is legendary Mexican soccer goalkeeper, Javier "Zully" Ledesma. His brother,
Michael Garciaparra, is a baseball player, playing second base for the Double-A
Bowie Baysox.
On the
Kate Hudson/
Radiohead episode on season 26 of
Saturday Night Live, Garciaparra cameoed in a "Boston Teens" sketch.
On October 8, 2005, Garciaparra and his uncle Victor Garciaparra were alerted to the screams of two women who had fallen into
Boston Harbor outside his condominium. One of the women sustained injuries to her head after hitting the pier on her way in. Garciaparra quickly jumped into the harbor and saved both women, who were later taken to the hospital.
Further Information
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