Matt Stairs played for a lot of teams
Posted by Andy on August 3, 2011
Matt Stairs was released by the Nationals the other day. They were his 13th team in the big leagues (but only the 12th franchise since he started off with the Expos.)
There are 20 players currently listed as active who have played for at least 8 teams in the majors:
Rk | From | To | Age | Pos | Tm | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Juan Acevedo | 8 | 1995 | 2003 | 25-33 | *1 | COL-NYM-STL-MIL-FLA-DET-TOR-NYY | |
2 | Miguel Batista | 9 | 1992 | 2011 | 21-40 | *1 | PIT-FLA-CHC-MON-KCR-ARI-TOR-SEA-WSN-STL | |
3 | Henry Blanco | 9 | 1997 | 2011 | 25-39 | *2/357 | LAD-COL-MIL-ATL-MIN-CHC-SDP-NYM-ARI | |
4 | Milton Bradley | 8 | 2000 | 2011 | 22-33 | 89D7 | MON-CLE-LAD-OAK-SDP-TEX-CHC-SEA | |
5 | Russell Branyan | 10 | 1998 | 2011 | 22-35 | 537D/9 | CLE-CIN-MIL-SDP-TBD-STL-PHI-SEA-LAA-ARI | |
6 | Orlando Cabrera | 9 | 1997 | 2011 | 22-36 | *64/5D | MON-BOS-LAA-CHW-OAK-MIN-CIN-SFG-CLE | |
7 | Miguel Cairo | 9 | 1996 | 2011 | 22-37 | *453/76D9 | TOR-CHC-TBD-STL-NYY-NYM-SEA-PHI-CIN | |
8 | Mike Cameron | 8 | 1995 | 2011 | 22-38 | *89/D7 | CHW-CIN-SEA-NYM-SDP-MIL-BOS-FLA | |
9 | Bruce Chen | 10 | 1998 | 2011 | 21-34 | *1 | ATL-PHI-NYM-MON-CIN-HOU-BOS-BAL-TEX-KCR | |
10 | Elmer Dessens | 9 | 1996 | 2010 | 25-39 | *1 | PIT-CIN-ARI-LAD-KCR-MIL-COL-ATL-NYM | |
11 | Octavio Dotel | 12 | 1999 | 2011 | 25-37 | *1 | NYM-HOU-OAK-NYY-ATL-KCR-CHW-PIT-LAD-COL-TOR-STL | |
12 | Jerry Hairston | 8 | 1998 | 2011 | 22-35 | 47685/9D3 | BAL-CHC-TEX-CIN-NYY-SDP-WSN-MIL | |
13 | LaTroy Hawkins | 8 | 1995 | 2011 | 22-38 | *1 | MIN-CHC-SFG-BAL-COL-HOU-NYY-MIL | |
14 | Felipe Lopez | 8 | 2001 | 2011 | 21-31 | *645/73D91 | TOR-CIN-WSN-STL-MIL-ARI-BOS-TBR | |
15 | Ron Mahay | 8 | 1995 | 2010 | 24-39 | *1/8D | BOS-OAK-FLA-CHC-TEX-ATL-KCR-MIN | |
16 | Darren Oliver | 8 | 1993 | 2011 | 22-40 | *1 | TEX-STL-BOS-COL-HOU-FLA-NYM-LAA | |
17 | Dennys Reyes | 10 | 1997 | 2010 | 20-33 | *1 | LAD-CIN-COL-TEX-PIT-ARI-KCR-SDP-MIN-STL | |
18 | Arthur Rhodes | 8 | 1991 | 2011 | 21-41 | *1 | BAL-SEA-OAK-CLE-PHI-FLA-CIN-TEX | |
19 | Matt Stairs | 12 | 1992 | 2011 | 24-43 | 9D37/84 | MON-BOS-OAK-CHC-MIL-PIT-KCR-TEX-DET-TOR-PHI-SDP-WSN | |
20 | Brett Tomko | 10 | 1997 | 2011 | 24-38 | *1 | CIN-SEA-SDP-STL-SFG-LAD-KCR-OAK-NYY-TEX |
That first column is franchises played for, and Octavio Dotel has also played for 12.
Among players all-time to play for at least 10 franchises in the majors since 1901, Stairs edges out Todd Zeile for most career homers:
Rk | Player | HR | From | To | Age | G | PA | AB | RBI | Pos | Tm | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Matt Stairs | 265 | 12 | 1992 | 2011 | 24-43 | 1895 | 6023 | 5204 | 899 | .832 | 9D37/84 | MON-BOS-OAK-CHC-MIL-PIT-KCR-TEX-DET-TOR-PHI-SDP-WSN |
2 | Todd Zeile | 253 | 11 | 1989 | 2004 | 23-38 | 2158 | 8649 | 7573 | 1110 | .769 | *532/D71 | STL-CHC-PHI-BAL-LAD-FLA-TEX-NYM-COL-MON-NYY |
3 | Jose Guillen | 214 | 10 | 1997 | 2010 | 21-34 | 1650 | 6414 | 5888 | 887 | .761 | *97D/8 | PIT-TBD-CIN-ARI-OAK-ANA-WSN-SEA-KCR-SFG |
4 | Russell Branyan | 191 | 10 | 1998 | 2011 | 22-35 | 1047 | 3381 | 2919 | 459 | .811 | 537D/9 | CLE-CIN-MIL-SDP-TBD-STL-PHI-SEA-LAA-ARI |
5 | Tommy Davis | 153 | 10 | 1959 | 1976 | 20-37 | 1999 | 7739 | 7223 | 1052 | .733 | *7D58/394 | LAD-NYM-CHW-HOU-SEP-CHC-OAK-BAL-KCR-CAL |
6 | Kenny Lofton | 130 | 11 | 1991 | 2007 | 24-40 | 2103 | 9234 | 8120 | 781 | .794 | *8/7D9 | HOU-CLE-ATL-SFG-CHW-PIT-CHC-NYY-PHI-LAD-TEX |
7 | Royce Clayton | 110 | 11 | 1991 | 2007 | 21-37 | 2108 | 8164 | 7379 | 723 | .679 | *6/5D | SFG-STL-TEX-CHW-MIL-COL-ARI-WSN-CIN-TOR-BOS |
8 | Paul Bako | 24 | 11 | 1998 | 2009 | 26-37 | 789 | 2471 | 2202 | 195 | .623 | *2/D3 | DET-HOU-FLA-ATL-MIL-CHC-LAD-KCR-BAL-CIN-PHI |
9 | Ken Brett | 10 | 10 | 1967 | 1981 | 18-32 | 386 | 373 | 347 | 44 | .698 | *1 | BOS-MIL-PHI-PIT-NYY-CHW-CAL-LAD-MIN-KCR |
10 | Terry Mulholland | 2 | 11 | 1986 | 2006 | 23-43 | 687 | 687 | 619 | 23 | .276 | *1 | SFG-PHI-NYY-SEA-CHC-ATL-PIT-LAD-CLE-MIN-ARI |
Wow...Terry Mulholland makes a leader board as a batter!
August 3rd, 2011 at 8:41 am
Matt Stairs failed to hit a homer for the Nationals so he hit homers for eleven different teams matching Zeile. That has to be a record, right?
Russell Branyon has homered for ten different teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 8:44 am
Dotel matches Stairs and Zeile in a way as he has given up homers for eleven different teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:05 am
If we go back before 1901, Dan Brouthers played for 10 teams and hit 106 home runs. He homered for 9 of the ten teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:06 am
Stairs also played for 11 different minor league teams, bringing his total to 24 different professional uniforms he's worn. Dotel also pitched for 11 teams in the minors, for a total of 23. That's a lot of packing and unpacking.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:08 am
I forgot that Stairs played for Chunichi in Japan. Make that 25 teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:14 am
Looking at Matt Stairs' career record, I had no recollection that he ever played for Detroit. But with only 14 games played, I think there's a good chance Stairs himself doesn't remember ever playing for the Tigers.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:18 am
7 former Phillies on that homer list including one of the, "Phillies get the bad brother" players in Ken Brett.
Others include: Mike Maddux, Mark Leiter, Jeremy Giambi, Vince DiMaggio and probably more.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:34 am
Matt's from my town (He was born in Saint John but all of his family is from Tay Creek outside Fredericton, NB) and is a high class guy. Great to see an article here on him as his career winds down. We wish him all the best. He'll likely get passed by Jason Bay as the #2 home run hitter from Canada in MLB history, but he's done great for a guy from the Maritime Provinces.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:34 am
Matt's from my town (He was born in Saint John but all of his family is from Tay Creek outside Fredericton, NB) and is a high class guy. Great to see an article here on him as his career winds down. We wish him all the best. He'll likely get passed by Jason Bay as the #2 home run hitter from Canada in MLB history, but he's done great for a guy from the Maritime Provinces.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:44 am
I'm still confusing Felipe Lopez with every other player in the infamous 2006 trade.
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:47 am
I've tried clicking on "View Play Index Tool Used" for that first table, but I still don't see how it was made. Please can anyone help?
Thanks!
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:52 am
Mike Morgan gave up home runs for 12 different teams, which I am fairly sure is a record.
I may have missed someone writing this, as I do, but was Stairs the first man ever to play for 13 different major league franchises?
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:20 am
Wait, wait. Juan Acevedo is still pitching somewhere??
Also, Matt Stairs never homered for the Expos either. A bit funny that his 265 career home runs on 11 different teams are bookended by zero home runs stints for the same franchise long before and long after they moved.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:33 am
#7: Tom Barrett,
Also Garvin Hamner, although in that case they had the right brother too.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:36 am
This is now off-topic, but do you know which of the all-time great players had a brother named Butts who also played major-league baseball?
Answer is here.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:39 am
Stairs has played for more teams ... but Dotel has disappointed more teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:42 am
Stairs has played for more teams ... but Dotel has disappointed more teams.
Bitter Mets fan alert!
That trade the Mets made--sending away Dotel and Cedeno for Derek Bell and Mike Hampton--pretty damn good. Bell is on my all-overrated team, but as long as you think of him as an average corner outfielder with good speed, then it was a good trade.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:50 am
@7, Roddy -- That's a bit of a cheap shot at Ken Brett, no?
Big brother Ken did quite nicely in his only season in Philly, going 13-9 with a 110 ERA+ in 212 IP for a crappy team -- not to mention hitting .250 with 4 HRs and 16 RBI in 80 ABs (102 OPS+).
And then they traded him for Dave Cash, a clear "win" for the Phils.
August 3rd, 2011 at 10:54 am
I counted 10 for Dave Martinez. Am I wrong?
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:00 am
This gave me a fun idea.
What's the least number of players who have, as a group, played for every franchise. Just looking at this list, Stairs, Dotel, Branyan, and Hawkins cover every team except the Marlins, so it can definitely be done with 5 players. I wonder if it can be done with 4.
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:09 am
Is there a way to do the same search but with a threshold for seasons or games played or PA/IP? I'd be curious to see guys that not only played for a lot of teams but actually spent meaningful (if potentially unproductive) time in those spots.
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:29 am
Wow - was Kenny Lofton a terrible human being or something? Man was a fine leadoff hitter, close to HOF level (sort of like Johnny Damon, but without 3000 hits, so no one pushing for him - well, Damon isnt' at 3K yet, but that's never stopped the sportswriters)
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:36 am
I think the issue with Lofton is that his flash outweighed his production. Don't get me wrong--he was a good player. But outside of 1993 and 1994, he didn't put up any monster offensive years. After 1999 he never posted an OBP of .400, and his career OPS+ was 107 even including those great early years.
I think he was traded a lot because he was flashy and stole a lot of bases, so GMs tended to think he would spark their offense and he was consistently worth more to the acquiring team than his existing team. He was traded 6 times!
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:43 am
I enjoy that the 2nd list is a full squad as long as Tommy Davis plays 2B.
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:49 am
@8, John M:
I was in Fredericton about a month back and saw the New Brunswick Sports Hall of Fame. It was only $3, so I spent about an hour there. I had hoped to se some Matt Stairs stuff, but there was only his jersey from the A's when he passed some milestone, which I'm embarrassed to admit, I forgot.
I'd like to see the Jays give him a one-day contract to be able to retire a Jay. I know his best years were not as a Jay, but his career did get a second wind with the Jays. Also, he broke in with a Canadian team, and I think it would be fitting that he retire with a Canadian team. They could have a Matt Stairs retirement day with Matt Stairs bobbleheads and "in case of emergency, use Stairs t-shirts.
August 3rd, 2011 at 12:00 pm
@23 Andy
I think your assessment is pretty far off the mark.
OPS+ isn't the best way to measure a high OBP/ low SLG CF, particularly one who steals as many bases as Lofton did. SLG is naturally more variant than OBP, and OBP is a more important stat, which is why OPS/OPS+ can often be so misleading. A player with a .400 OBP and a .400 SLG is a significantly better player than one with a .350 OBP and a .450 SLG, but they'll have the same OPS.
You say that he never put up a .400+ OBP after 1999, as though that was a negative. That was his age 32 season, so it would be expected that he'd decline from there. Saying he was traded six times is also a little misleading - he was traded once when he was still a prospect, and four times after he turned 35 and was more or a role player. He was only traded once in his prime, and it was heading into his contract year.
Lofton had six seasons with 5+ WAR, and ended with a 65.3 WAR. For comparison's sake, Albert Belle had a 143 career OPS+ and only a 37.4 career WAR, Jim Rice a 128 OPS+ and a 41.5 WAR. He was an awesome player, and I'd vote for him for the Hall of Fame.
August 3rd, 2011 at 12:09 pm
Jim,
I'll go ahead and agree with you---toward the end of my post at 23 I started thinking--well OPS+ doesn't take into account that he was a great base runner and base stealer, and played an important defensive position (and played it well for most of his career.)
For the record, Lofton is on my list of favorite players and I think he's actually underrated by many folks (but not readers of this blog, typically.)
August 3rd, 2011 at 2:05 pm
I'd like to see some team give Tommy Davis a one-game contract, just so he can turn the odometer in the "games played" column. I mean, I know he's 70 years old or something, but still, he could probably bat cleanup for the Mets.
August 3rd, 2011 at 2:07 pm
Bobo Newsom played for only different 9 teams, but was traded 16 times. He played for the Senators on five different occasions, the Browns three times.
August 3rd, 2011 at 2:46 pm
I wonder if the Senators kept a Bobo uni ready at all times in case he'd rejoin them. Or the A's a Rickey one, for that matter.
August 3rd, 2011 at 2:48 pm
Stairs is the only player to appear for all 4 1969 expansion franchises. From this list Jerry Hairson is only missing KC. Darren Oliver is one of 2 who played for all 4 1961/2 expansion teams. The other was Nolan Ryan, his only 4 teams.
August 3rd, 2011 at 3:28 pm
@15 Andy
So the guy who has the worlds rarest baseball card because he hated smoking has a brother named Butts???
that is priceless
August 3rd, 2011 at 3:46 pm
ESPN - The Magazine had a thing about Stairs. He's had a jersey with each of the teams he's been with framed. Pretty cool, I think.
August 3rd, 2011 at 3:49 pm
Anyone think Stairs might be picked up?
August 3rd, 2011 at 4:01 pm
I don't know, Greg. I'm sure if you bought him a few drinks and asked him nicely, he'd consider it at least.
August 3rd, 2011 at 4:55 pm
I didn't know he swung that way!
August 3rd, 2011 at 5:20 pm
As soon as I saw that Stairs had been dropped by the Nationals last week, I realized that he had the chance to set the record of most franchises played for.
For many years, Dick Littlefield was said to have held this record, with 10 teams. However, I always pointed out that because he played for the St. Louis Browns at the time they moved to Baltimore and became the Orioles, he only played for 9 different franchises. Considering that he was only in the major leagues during 9 seasons (1950-1958), this works out to be an average of one franchise a year.
Incidentally, this may be the right place for me to acknowledge that I had one important detail incorrect regarding interleague trades before 1959. Someone else corrected me on it when I originally posted it, and indeed, it jogged my memory as to the restriction on these trades. The restriction was not that the player had to be sold (for money) rather than traded (for one or more players). It was that waivers were needed to trade the player into the other league.
Only one of Littlefield's deals brought him into the other league. He was traded from Baltimore to Pittsburgh for Cal Abrams in May 1954. Before that, he only played in the American League, for four franchises but wearing the uniforms of five different teams. After that, he only played in the National League, for five franchises.
I keep waiting for the Phillies to pick up Dotel because three of the six Houston pitchers who were involved in that no-hitter in Yankee Stadium in 2003 (Roy Oswalt, Brad Lidge, and Billy Wagner) have played for them already. Two of the other three are out of baseball now. That third one isDotel.
A few years ago, I put together a "wrong brothers" team for the Phillies:
RHP Greg Maddox (Mike)
LHP Al Leiter (Mark)
Relief pitcher Todd Worrell (Tim)
C Joe Torre (Frank)
1B Jason Giambi (Jeremy) (Jason Giambi's free agent departure from Oakland gave the A's a compensatory draft pick that was used to select Joe Blanton, a decent contributor to the 2008 World Series champs)
2B Marty Barrett (Tommy)
3B George Brett (Ken)
SS Nomar Garciaparra (Mike, who only played in the minors for the Phillies; originally this spot was filled by college shortstop B.J. Surhoff, whose brother Rich was once traded straight up by for Dave Stewart, whom they released not too long after that)
OF George Bell (Juan; George was lost by the Phillies in the Rule 5 draft)
OF Joe DiMaggio (Vince)
OF Dom DiMaggio (Vince)
And the exception that proves the rule is the DH, selected by this one-time Washington Senators fan - Dick Allen, brother of Hank. That was one time when the Phillies got the "Right Brother"!
August 3rd, 2011 at 6:40 pm
There's an error on the list: Dennys Reyes has played 4 games this year for Boston, his 11th franchise.
August 3rd, 2011 at 6:47 pm
By the way... Stairs just retired.
August 3rd, 2011 at 7:13 pm
Why isn´t mike morgan on the list? he played for 12 teams also...
August 3rd, 2011 at 7:37 pm
@21, in April, 2005, Sean Lahman posted this list to SABR-L:
Most games for at least X teams (1871-2004)
Teams Games Player Name
1 3308 Carl Yastrzemski
2 1270 Henry Aaron
3 727 Darrell Evans
4 518 Rusty Staub
5 249 Don Baylor
6 154 Gary Sheffield
7 128 Tom Brown
8 99 Dave Collins
9 72 Paul Radford
10 45 Tom Brown
11 36 Tom Brown
12 2 Deacon McGuire
The way to read this is, for example, Staub played at least 518 games for each of 4 different teams, and no one played more than 518 games for at least 4 different teams. Sean added, "I counted franchise relocations as two different teams. That's why Aaron gets credit for 1806 games with the
Milwaukee Braves and 1270 with the Atlanta Braves. If you don't like that
method, then Eddie Collins belongs in his place, with 1670 games for Chi-A and 1156 for Phi-A."
Sean also found the fewest total games based on total number of teams played for (1871-2004):
Total Total
Teams MLB Games Player Name
12 544 Mike Morgan*
11 660 Jim Donnelly
10 229 Frank Foreman*
9 215 Jersey Bakely*
8 147 Jeff Juden*
7 59 Andrew Lorraine*
6 34 Rich Sauver*
5 12 Ensign Cottrell*
4 5 Dummy Leitner*
3 3 Bill Barrett
2 2 28 players
1 1 979 players
* asterisk indicates a pitcher
August 3rd, 2011 at 7:48 pm
Sorry that´s an active players list...
I think both Dotel and Stairs probably can´t name in order all teams they have played for...
August 3rd, 2011 at 9:09 pm
Obviously by another team but if he announced his retirement, I guess not likely
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:17 pm
Former Expo and Pirate pitcher Matt Skrmetta has played for 25 different professional teams, a baseball record that may extend to all American sports.
August 3rd, 2011 at 11:29 pm
Why would Stairs retire now? Has he forgotten "In case of emergency, use Stairs"? Surely some team would have picked him up for their playoff run. Hm, Giants are good at picking up players who were released and sitting at home. Maybe we could use Stairs after the rosters expand...
August 4th, 2011 at 1:57 am
The one guy who stands out to me is Felipe Lopez. He has already played for 8 teams and is just 31 - could he set a new record?
August 4th, 2011 at 3:08 pm
These my friends, are what you call journeyman. Corey Patterson will be up there by the time he retires. But hey, playing baseball for a living in all kinds of different cities could not be all that bad. Look for Stairs to be picked up by a young NL team that has a shot at the playoffs. Maybe the Pirates again?
August 14th, 2011 at 2:45 am
Juan Acevedo is still pitching somewhere? The hell?