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Gary Joseph Gaetti (born August 19, 1958 in Centralia,
Illinois), nicknamed "G-Man" ("Rat" during his earlier days), is an
American former third baseman in Major League Baseball for the Minnesota
Twins (1981-90), California Angels (1991-93), Kansas City Royals
(1993-95), St. Louis Cardinals (1996-98), Chicago Cubs (1998-99) and
Boston Red Sox (2000). He won a World Series championship with Minnesota
in 1987 and was the MVP of that year's American League Championship Series
against the Detroit Tigers. In 1988, Gaetti became a born-again Christian,
completely changing his image, which up until that time was the image of a
hard-drinking baseball player interested primarily in the game, booze and
cheap women.
Gaetti won four Gold Glove Awards for fielding
excellence from 1986 through 1989, and was selected an All-Star in 1987
and 1989. A power-hitting third baseman who had his best season in 1986
when he batted .287 with 34 home runs and 108 runs batted in, Gaetti left
the small-market Twins for the Angels as a free agent following the 1990
season. His production dropped significantly with the Angels, who released
him in June 1993. He signed with the Royals, who had lost their projected
regular third baseman, Keith Miller, to injury, and had been playing
struggling rookie Phil Hiatt at third. Handed the third base job, Gaetti
turned his career around. In 1995, at the age of 36, he put together one
of his best seasons, hitting .261/35/96, setting a career high in home
runs and missing the Royals team record for most home runs in a season by
one.
Following the 1995 season, Gaetti signed as a free agent with
the Cardinals, where he enjoyed two more productive seasons before being
released again in August 1998 after the Cardinals' acquisition of Fernando
Tatis. Gaetti signed with the Cubs, where he enjoyed a good two months
during the Cubs' pennant drive, hitting .320/8/27 and helping the Cubs win
the National League wild card. The following season, the Cubs became
disillusioned with its aging infield, which featured Gaetti at third, Jeff
Blauser at short, Mickey Morandini at second, and Mark Grace at first.
Gaetti played only semi-regularly and was released at the end of the
season. He wound up his career the following season in Boston, appearing
in five games in April 2000 at the age of 41.
Gaetti became the
interim hitting coach for the Houston Astros on July 14, 2004 when the
Astros dismissed manager Jimy Williams, hitting coach Harry Spilman, and
pitching coach Burt Hooton. Gaetti was previously the hitting coach for
the AAA level New Orleans Zephyrs.
In 2006, his first year of
eligibility, Gaetti received less than 5% of the vote (he received 4
votes; the threshold was 26) from the Baseball Writers Association of
America (BBWAA) for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame, thus
becoming ineligible to appear on future BBWAA ballots. However, he may
eventually be considered for induction into the Hall by the Veterans
Committee once 20 years have passed from his date of retirement
(therefore, in the year 2021), in accordance with current Hall of Fame
rules (enacted in 2001).
Trivia
Did you know
that Gary Gaetti hit a home run in his first-ever Major League at bat? He
currently is the all-time home run king of players that homered in their
first Major League at bat.
Did you know Gary was part of
two triple plays in one game, while playing for the Minnesota
Twins?
Did you know Gary has an entire webpage dedicated
to his image and persona? GaryGaetti.com
*Baseball-Reference.com -
career statistics and analysis
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The Wikipedia article is
licensed under http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html and uses material from
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