
And Mike Stanley
Carlos Delgado turns 53 today.
Carlos Delgado was born in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. The Blue Jays signed him as an amateur free agent in 1988 when he was just 16. Carlos climbed through the minor league system as a catcher. He quickly became our top prospect; he hit 30 home runs in Dunedin in 1992 at 20 years old and 25 the following season at Double-A Knoxville.
Carlos got called to Toronto at the end of the 1993 season, our second World Series-winning year, but only got into a few games. The Jays gave him a ring anyway. Carlos started the year with the Jays the following season and played in most games for the first few months in left field. Things started well; he had a 1.028 OPS on April 24th with 8 home runs, but it went downhill. He was sent back down to the minors in early June. He was hitting .215/.352/.438 when the Jays sent him back to the minors. Cito has never had any patience with young players. It would have been nice if we had shown some patience. Bill James said that he would be an MVP candidate by 2000. He turned out to be an MVP candidate several times.
In 1995, the Jays brought Delgado up at the end of April, but Cito used him mainly as a pinch hitter, and he didn’t hit much in the 25 at-bats he was given that month (it was more important to keep Joe Carter’s .300 OBP in the lineup). The Jays sent Delgado back down. They brought him back up in September, and he did play more, but still didn’t hit much.
Finally, in 1996, Carlos got to stay up with the Jays for the entire season. DHing most of the time, he hit .270/.353/.490 with 25 homers and 82 RBI. After the season, the Jays traded John Olerud to make room at first base for Carlos.
Over the first couple of months of the 1997 season, Joe Carter played first base and Carlos DHed, but by late May, Delgado took over first base and played there for the next eight years. He had a great year, hitting .262/.350/.528 with 30 homers and 91 RBI.
1998 Carlos played first base full-time, and his numbers took another big jump. He hit .292/.385/.592 with 38 homers and 115 RBI. He received MVP votes and finished fifth in the league in slugging average.
He had another terrific season in 1999, hitting .272/.377/.571, setting a new career-high in homers with 44, RBI with 134, runs with 113, and walks with 86. He won his first Silver Slugger award and finished 12th in MVP voting. In addition, he tied George Bell’s single-season team record for RBI. He would have set a new record, but he missed the final ten games of the season, breaking his tibia after fouling a ball off his leg.
2000 Carlos played in all 162 games and led the league with 57 doubles. He hit .344/.470/.664, had 41 homers, and set a new team record with 137 RBI. Carlos also took 123 walks and led the league, being hit by pitch 15 times. He made the All-Star team for the first time, came in 4th in MVP voting, won the AL Hank Aaron Award (for best hitter), and was the Sporting News Player of the Year. He also got his second Silver Slugger award. Also, Carlos finished 4th in the league in batting average, 2nd in on-base average, 2nd in walks, 2nd in slugging, and first in total bases.
His .664 slugging average is the Jays’ single-season record, and his .344 BA and .470 OBP are the second-best in Jays’ history. He also had the Jays’ season-highs in total bases, doubles, walks, extra-base hits, and runs created. He was AL Player of the Week twice and had a 22-game hit streak. He was one of seven Jays to hit 20 homers and one of three with 30.
Delgado played in all 162 games again in 2001. His numbers dropped from the previous year, hitting .279/.408/.540 with 39 homers, 102 RBI, and 111 walks—pretty decent for a down season. It was his fourth consecutive season with over 35 HR and 100 RBI. He also stole a base for the first time in his MLB career.
His numbers fell more in 2002. He hit .277/.406/.549 with 33 homers, 108 RBI, and 102 walks. He finished 4th in the league in OBP, 8th in slugging, and 4th in walks. Carlos was the first Jay to hit 30 homers in 6 consecutive seasons and 100 RBI in 5. He missed a game on August 4th to snap a streak of 432 straight games played. Then he went on the DL for just the second time in his career, later in August, with a stiff back.
Carlos had a bounce-back season in 2003, hitting .302/.426/.593 with 42 home runs and a new career and franchise high in RBI with 145, which led the league. He made the All-Star team, got the Silver Slugger award, and came second in the MVP voting. He finished 2nd in slugging, on-base, home runs, and walks.
It was his seventh straight year with 30 home runs, sixth with 100 RBI, and fifth with 100 runs. Among other achievements, he had 97 RBI at the All-Star break and four home runs in a game on September 25th. In addition, he reached base 334 times (!), setting another team record.
2004 was Delgado’s last season with the team. He missed about a month of the season with a strained rib cage and missed reaching 100 RBI for the first time since 1997. However, he still had 32 home runs and hit .269/.372/.545.
After the season, Carlos was a free agent, and the team decided not to sign him. JP tried to cut their salary, and Carlos made $19.7 million in 2004. He signed a four-year contract with the Florida Marlins. Carlos got the blame for the team not making the playoffs. I find that bad organizations (and often fans) will blame the team’s best player for the team’s shortcomings.
After one season with the Marlins, they cut payroll and traded Delgado to the Mets for Mike Jacobs, Yusmeiro Petit, and Grant Psomas. Carlos played for the Mets for four seasons, making the playoffs for the first time in 2006 but losing to the Cardinals in the NLCS in 2007.
Carlos retired with a .280/.383/.546 line and 473 home runs in 2035 games. He was one and out on the Hall of Fame ballot, only getting 3.8% of the votes in 2015. He deserved better. He may have lost some votes because he would stay in the dugout for the God Bless America, making a silent protest against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Rob Neyers’ Big Book of Baseball Lineups lists him as the best Jays first baseman and the worst defensive first baseman in the Jays’ history. Considering John Mayberry played first for us, that’s saying something. He’s right; Delgado was never very good with the glove, but we never had a better hitter.
Carlos was awarded the Roberto Clemente Award in 2006 for ‘good play and strong work in the community.’ He does work for many charities in Puerto Rico.
He has had his moments of controversy. He protested the war in Iraq by not standing during ‘God Bless America’ (he was ahead of his time). He said,” I feel so sad for the families that lost relatives and loved ones in the war. But I think it’s the stupidest war ever.”
He is married and has a son and a daughter.
It is also Mike Stanley’s birthday. He turns 62 today.
Stanley had a 15-year MLB career. He was an offence-first catcher, hitting .270/.370/.458 in 1467 MLB games, with 187 home runs. He was never a good defensive catcher, but when you can get a corner infielder’s type of bat from your catcher, you put up with the less-than-great defense.
Stanley signed with the Jays as a free agent before the 1998 season, hitting .240/.353/.472 with 22 home runs before being sent to the Red Sox in a trade deadline deal. The trade worked well for the Red Sox; they would make the playoffs that year.
It didn’t do much for the Jays. We received Jay Yennaco and Peter Munro. Yennaco never made it out of the minors. Munro pitched in 40 games for the Jays, starting 5, putting up a 1-3 record and a 6.00 ERA.
Happy Birthday to both Carlos and Mike. I hope you both have a good one.