Dave Dombrowski
(Redirected from David Dombrowski)
David Mark Dombrowski
- School Western Michigan University, Cornell University
- High School Harold L. Richards High School
- Born July 27, 1956 in Chicago, IL USA
Biographical Information[edit]
Dave Dombrowski was President and General Manager of the Detroit Tigers from 2002 to 2015, then became Vice-President of baseball operations for the Boston Red Sox a few days after leaving Detroit. Previously, he was GM of the Montreal Expos and the Florida Marlins.
Dombrowski got his start as an administrative assistant in the Chicago White Sox front office in 1978. He was their farm director in 1980 and the assistant GM from 1982 to 1986. He moved to the Expos as farm director in 1987, assistant GM in 1988 and GM from 1988 to 1991, when he was considered a "boy wonder", as very young General Managers were extremely rare at the time (he was just 32 when he took over for Bill Stoneman). During his time with the Expos, he was known for making aggressive trades, something Stoneman had shied away from; one of them would become infamous, as in a bid to win a division title in 1989, he traded the team's top three pitching prospects to the Seattle Mariners in order to acquire P Mark Langston. Langston pitched well the rest of the way, but the Expos fell well short of the postseason; then Langston left as a free agent after the season. What made the deal really hurt is that one of the three pitchers he gave up was a young Randy Johnson, who would turn into a Hall of Famer and 300-game winner.
He was the general manager of the Marlins from 1992 to 2001. During his time in Florida he first put together the 1997 World Series team and then blew it up in a Fire Sale before the celebratory champagne had dried off, ordered to so by ownership. He joined the Tigers as club President in 2001 and added the title of General Manager in 2002.
The Tigers had their worst-ever season in 2003 when they lost 119 games, but soon turned things around under Dombrowski's leadership. One of his first key moves was to convince free agent catcher Ivan Rodriguez to join the woeful team in 2004, and also persuading Jim Leyland, who had managed the Marlins to a world championship under Dombrowski in 1997, to become the team's manager in 2006. The rebuilt Tigers went all the way to the World Series that season, losing to the St. Louis Cardinals and remained in contention for the next decade. Dombrowski orchestrated a number of great trades, particularly the one that brought over 1B Miguel Cabrera who became a superstar in Detroit, and also signed some very productive players as free agents, most notably Victor Martinez. His signing of free agent 1B Prince Fielder before the 2012 season was key to the Tigers returning to the World Series that year, but they were swept by the San Francisco Giants and Fielder's huge contract soon became an albatross. However, he managed to get out from under that by trading him for 2B Ian Kinsler after the 2013 season. With Cabrera and ace pitchers Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer, another great acquisition via trade, all at their peak, the Tigers made a push to return to the World Series in 2014, the first season under new manager Brad Ausmus, by acquiring ace pitcher David Price at the trading deadline, but they were swept by the Baltimore Orioles in the Division Series. Scherzer left as a free agent after the season, and while the Tigers expected to compete again in 2015 and started off the season red hot, they soon ran into injury problems, with Cabrera and Verlander missing long stretches and Victor Martinez not performing up to his standards. As they were struggling to play .500 at the trading deadline, Dombrowski decided to re-tool, trading Price, closer Joakim Soria and LF Yoenis Cespedes at the end of July. On August 4th, owner Mike Ilitch announced that Dombrowski had been released from his contract and that he was being replaced by Al Avila, ending a 14-season stay. Dombrowski's contract was up at the end of the year, and speculation was that Ilitch was not prepared to pay top dollar to retain his services.
To say that Dombrowski did not stay unemployed long would be an understatement. On August 18, 2015, the Boston Red Sox surprised everyone by announcing that they had hired him as Vice-President of baseball operations, starting immediately. The hiring came only a couple of weeks after team President Larry Lucchino had announced his impending retirement, and was followed the same day by GM Ben Cherington handing in his resignation. Dombrowski had stated that he wanted Cherington to stay on, but the young executive clearly did not want to play second fiddle to Dombrowski who thus effectively took over full responsibility for reshaping the Red Sox, who were headed to their third last-place finish in four years, the exception being what was starting to look increasingly like a freakish World Series in title in 2013. The Red Sox had a lot of talented young players around the organization, and Dombrowski's first task was to figure out which of those should form the core of the team in the coming years. He also indicated that he would recruit a new GM, as it was his plan to shape the team's future from a higher level within the organization. On September 24th, he introduced Mike Hazen as the team's new GM, and the following day hired Frank Wren, who had worked for him in both the Expos and Marlins organizations as Vice-President in charge of baseball operations, to give his young new GM an experienced mentor to help him out. The Red Sox then turned things around quickly. Dombrowski once again brought David Price on board, this time through free agency, and with a number of young players developed from within the organization, such as Mookie Betts, Jackie Bradley and Xander Bogaerts, taking a step forward. After a successful 2016 season, Hazen resigned to take over as GM of the Arizona Diamondbacks and was not replaced as Dombrowski continued to pull the strings, orchestrating a big trade that landed another top-line starting pitcher in Chris Sale. The Red Sox repeated as division champions in 2017, then after signing free agent J.D. Martinez before the 2018 season, had arguably the greatest season in franchise history, winning 108 games during the regular season, and then breezing through the three rounds of the postseason to defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.
As had been the case the last time the Red Sox had won the World Series, in 2013, the year after, 2019 was a massive hangover as the the team never got going and quickly fell back in the standings, being virtually eliminated from playoff contention by mid-August. Some of Dombrowski's decisions were much blamed for this state of affairs, in particular that of not re-signing closer Craig Kimbrel but also of not signing anyone else to take his place. Thus, the Sox had problems in closing games all season, compounding the woes of a starting rotation beset by injuries. Things came to a head on September 9th, when in a stunning move, he was fired from his position. Among other moves that led to the firing were the large contracts awarded to pitchers Nathan Eovaldi and Chris Sale before the start of the season: both had been injured much of the year, and their performance had been sub-par when they were able to take the mound. The firing came after a Sunday night 10-5 loss to the New York Yankees that put the Red Sox 17 1/2 games back of their traditional rivals.
In 2020, he joined the group Music City Baseball LLC, seeking to bring an expansion team to Nashville, TN. That gig was short-lived, however, as on December 11th of that year he accepted an offer from the Philadelphia Phillies to become the team's President of Baseball Operations. Following the firing of Matt Klentak in October, he indicated that he was not interested, but as the search for Klentak's successor became drawn out, he re-considered, based on the fact that the timeline for a possible expansion of MLB had been upended by the Coronavirus pandemic. On December 22nd, he hired former player Sam Fuld to serve as the Phillies' General Manager. The Phillies reached the 2022 World Series and shortly afterwards he was rewarded with a contract extension through 2027.
Preceded by Bill Stoneman |
Montreal Expos General Manager 1988-1991 |
Succeeded by Dan Duquette |
Preceded by N/A |
Florida Marlins General Manager 1992-2001 |
Succeeded by Larry Beinfest |
Preceded by Randy Smith |
Detroit Tigers General Manager 2002-2015 |
Succeeded by Al Avila |
Preceded by Ben Cherington |
Boston Red Sox General Manager 2015 |
Succeeded by Mike Hazen |
Preceded by Mike Hazen |
Boston Red Sox de facto General Manager 2016-2019 |
Succeeded by Brian O'Halloran |
Record as a General Manager[edit]
Expansion Draft[edit]
Draft Picks[edit]
1st Round - Expos
- 1989: 10th overall C Charles Johnson - Westwood High School Did Not Sign
- 1990: 11th overall SS Shane Andrews - Carlsbad High School
- 1990: 24th overall OF Rondell White - Jones County High School
- 1990: 28th overall P Gabe White - Sebring High School
- 1990: 35th overall P Stan Spencer - Stanford University
- 1990: 37th overall P Ben Van Ryn - East Noble High School
- 1990: 40th overall OF Stan Robertson - Plainview High School
- 1991: 14th overall 1B Cliff Floyd - Thornwood High School
Other Notable Selections - Expos
- 1991: 11th round (295th overall) SS Mark Grudzielanek - Trinidad State Junior College
- 1991: 18th round (477th overall) P Kirk Rueter - Murray State University
1st Round - Marlins
- 1992: 28th overall C Charles Johnson - University of Miami
- 1993: 27th overall P Marc Valdes - University of Florida
- 1994: 5th overall 3B Josh Booty - Evangel Christian Academy
- 1995: 6th overall OF Jamie Jones - Rancho Bernardo High School
- 1996: 9th overall OF Mark Kotsay - California State University, Fullerton
- 1997: 12th overall P Aaron Akin - Cowley County Community College
- 1998: 27th overall OF Chip Ambres - West Brook High School
- 1999: 2nd overall P Josh Beckett - Spring High School
- 2000: 1st overall 1B Adrian Gonzalez - Eastlake High School
- 2001: No Pick (lost for signing Charles Johnson)
Other Notable Selections - Marlins
- 1995: 3rd round (65th overall) OF Randy Winn - Santa Clara University
1st Round Picks - Tigers
- 2002: 8th overall SS Scott Moore - Cypress High School
- 2003: 3rd overall P Kyle Sleeth - Wake Forest University
- 2004: 2nd overall P Justin Verlander - Old Dominion University
- 2005: 10th overall OF Cameron Maybin - T.C. Roberson High School
- 2006: 6th overall P Andrew Miller - University of North Carolina
- 2007: 27th overall P Rick Porcello - Seton Hall Preparatory High School
- 2008: 21st overall P Ryan Perry - University of Arizona
- 2009: 9th overall P Jacob Turner - Westminster Christian Academy
- 2010: No pick; lost for signing Jose Valverde
- 2010: 44th overall 3B Nick Castellanos - Archbishop McCarthy High School
- 2011: No pick; lost for signing Victor Martinez
- 2012: No pick; lost for signing Prince Fielder
- 2013: 20th overall P Jonathon Crawford - University of Florida
- 2013: 39th overall P Corey Knebel - University of Texas at Austin
- 2014: 23rd overall OF Derek Hill - Elk Grove High School
- 2015: 22nd overall P Beau Burrows - Weatherford High School
- 2015: 34th overall OF Christin Stewart - University of Tennessee
Other Notable Selections - Tigers
- 2002: 3rd round OF Curtis Granderson - University of Illinois
- 2002: 11th round P Joel Zumaya - Bonita Vista High School
- 2008: 5th round C Alex Avila - University of Alabama
- 2010: 2nd round P Drew Smyly - University of Arkansas
- 2010: 6th round C Bryan Holaday - Texas Christian University
- 2011: 2nd round C James McCann - University of Arkansas
- 2011: 6th round OF Tyler Collins - Howard College
- 2012: 13th round 2B Devon Travis - Florida State University
- 2013: 5th round P Buck Farmer - Georgia Tech
- 2013: 11th round P Chad Green - University of Louisville
1st Round Picks - Red Sox
- 2017: 24th overall P Tanner Houck - University of Missouri
- 2018: 26th overall 3B Triston Casas - American Heritage School (Plantation)
Other Notable Selections - Red Sox
Significant Trades[edit]
Expos
- December 6, 1988 traded Jeff Parrett and Floyd Youmans to the Philadelphia Phillies for Kevin Gross
- December 8, 1988 traded Luis Rivera and John Dopson to the Boston Red Sox for Spike Owen and Dan Gakeler
- December 8, 1988 traded Tracy Jones to the San Francisco Giants for Mike Aldrete
- March 28, 1989 traded Mark Bailey and Tom O'Malley to the New York Mets for Steve Frey
- March 28, 1989 traded Neal Heaton to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Brett Gideon
- May 25, 1989 traded Randy Johnson, Brian Holman and Gene Harris to the Seattle Mariners for Mark Langston and Mike Campbell
- July 5, 1989 traded Sergio Valdez, Nate Minchey and Kevin Dean to the Atlanta Braves for Zane Smith
- August 28, 1989 traded Alonzo Powell to the Minnesota Twins for Jim Dwyer
- August 29, 1989 traded Mike Blowers to the New York Yankees for John Candelaria
- April 2, 1990 traded Jeff Huson to the Texas Rangers for Drew Hall
- April 23, 1990 traded Rex Hudler to the St. Louis Cardinals for John Costello
- August 8, 1990 traded Zane Smith to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Moises Alou, Willie Greene and Scott Ruskin
- December 23, 1990 traded Tim Raines, Jeff Carter and Mario Brito to the Chicago White Sox for Ivan Calderon and Barry Jones
- April 1, 1991 traded Otis Nixon and Boi Rodriguez to the Atlanta Braves for Jimmy Kremers and Keith Morrison
- July 15, 1991 traded Tim Burke to the New York Mets for Ron Darling and Mike Thomas
- July 21, 1991 traded Oil Can Boyd to the Texas Rangers for Jonathan Hurst, Joey Eischen and Travis Buckley
Marlins
- November 17, 1992 traded Eric Helfand and Scott Baker to the Oakland A's for Walt Weiss
- November 17, 1992 traded Danny Jackson to the Philadelphia Phillies for Joel Adamson and Matt Whisenant
- June 24, 1993 traded Trevor Hoffman, Jose Martinez and Andres Berumen to the San Diego Padres for Rich Rodriguez and Gary Sheffield
- June 17, 1993 traded Cris Carpenter to the Texas Rangers for Robb Nen and Kurt Miller
- November 24, 1994 traded Carl Everett to the New York Mets for Quilvio Veras
- August 8, 1995 traded Bobby Witt to the Texas Rangers for Scott Podsednik and Wilson Heredia
- August 8, 1996 traded John Burkett to the Texas Rangers for Rick Helling and Ryan Dempster
- March 26, 1997 traded Joe Orsulak and Dustin Hermanson to the Montreal Expos for Cliff Floyd
- July 21, 1997 traded Billy McMillon to the Philadelphia Phillies for Darren Daulton
- November 11, 1997 traded Moises Alou to the Houston Astros for Oscar Henriquez, Manuel Barrios and Mark J. Johnson
- November 18, 1997 traded Devon White to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Jesus Martinez
- November 18, 1997 traded Robb Nen to the San Francisco Giants for Joe Fontenot, Mike Pageler and Mike Villano
- December 15, 1997 traded Kevin Brown to the San Diego Padres for Derrek Lee, Rafael Medina and Steve Hoff
- February 6, 1998 traded Al Leiter and Ralph Milliard to the New York Mets for A.J. Burnett, Jesús Sánchez and Robert Stratton
- May 14, 1998 traded Gary Sheffield, Charles Johnson, Bobby Bonilla, Manuel Barrios and Jim Eisenreich to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Mike Piazza and Todd Zeile.
- May 22, 1998 traded Mike Piazza to the New York Mets for Preston Wilson, Ed Yarnall and Geoff Goetz
- December 14, 1998 traded Edgar Renteria to the St. Louis Cardinals for Pablo Ozuna, Armando Almanza and Braden Looper
- February 1, 1999 traded Ed Yarnall, Mark J. Johnson and Todd Noel to the New York Yankees for Mike Lowell
- July 8, 1999 traded Matt Mantei to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Vladimir Nunez, Brad Penny and Abraham Nunez
- July 25, 1999 traded Livan Hernandez to the San Francisco Giants for Jason Grilli and Nate Bump
- December 13, 1999 traded Johan Santana to the Minnesota Twins for Jared Camp
- March 28, 2001 traded Cesar Crespo and Mark Kotsay to the San Diego Padres for Matt Clement, Eric Owens and Omar Oritz
Tigers
- December 11, 2001 traded Juan Encarnacion and Luis Pineda to the Cincinnati Reds for Dmitri Young
- July 5, 2002 in a three team trade sent Jeff Weaver to the New York Yankees for Carlos Pena, Franklyn German and Jeremy Bonderman from the Oakland A's
- January 11, 2003 traded Mark Redman and Jerrod Fuell to the Florida Marlins for Nate Robertson, Gary Knotts, Rob Henkel
- January 8, 2004 traded Ramon Santiago and Juan Gonzalez (minors) to the Seattle Mariners for Carlos Guillen
- June 8, 2005 traded Ugueth Urbina and Ramon Martinez to the Philadelphia Phillies for Placido Polanco
- July 31, 2006 traded Brian Rogers to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Sean Casey
- October 29, 2007 traded Jair Jurrjens and Gorkys Hernandez to the Atlanta Braves for Edgar Renteria
- December 5, 2007 traded Andrew Miller, Cameron Maybin, Mike Rabelo, Burke Badenhop, Dallas Trahern and Eulogio De La Cruz to the Florida Marlins for Dontrelle Willis and Miguel Cabrera
- February 5, 2008 traded Mike Hernandez to the Texas Rangers for Armando Galarraga
- July 30, 2008 traded Ivan Rodriguez to the New York Yankees for Kyle Farnsworth
- December 10, 2008 traded Matt Joyce to the Tampa Bay Rays for Edwin Jackson
- December 8, 2009 traded Curtis Granderson to the New York Yankees and Edwin Jackson to the Arizona Diamondbacks in a three team deal for Phil Coke, Austin Jackson, Max Scherzer and Daniel Schlereth
- June 1, 2010 traded Dontrelle Willis to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Billy Buckner
- July 28, 2010 traded Giovanni Soto to the Cleveland Indians for Jhonny Peralta
- July 30, 2011 traded Chance Ruffin, Charlie Furbush, Casper Wells and Francisco Martinez to the Seattle Mariners for Doug Fister and David Pauley
- August 15, 2011 traded Cole Nelson and Lester Oliveros to the Minnesota Twins for Delmon Young
- July 23, 2012 traded Jacob Turner, Rob Brantly and Brian Flynn to the Miami Marlins for Omar Infante and Anibal Sanchez
- July 30, 2013 traded Avisail Garcia to the Chicago White Sox and Brayan Villarreal to the Boston Red Sox in a three-team deal for Jose Iglesias
- November 20, 2013 traded Prince Fielder to the Texas Rangers for Ian Kinsler
- December 2, 2013 traded Doug Fister to the Washington Nationals for Ian Krol, Robbie Ray and Steve Lombardozzi
- March 21, 2014 traded Jose Alvarez to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim for Andrew Romine
- July 23, 2014 traded Corey Knebel and Jake Thompson to the Texas Rangers for Joakim Soria
- July 31, 2014 traded Austin Jackson to the Seattle Mariners and Drew Smyly and Willie Adames to the Tampa Bay Rays in a three-team trade for David Price
- November 13, 2014 traded Devon Travis to the Toronto Blue Jays for Anthony Gose
- December 5, 2014 traded Robbie Ray and Domingo Leyba to the Arizona Diamondbacks in a three-team trade for Shane Greene from the New York Yankees
- December 11, 2014 traded Rick Porcello to the Boston Red Sox for Yoenis Cespedes, Alex Wilson and Gabe Speier
- December 11, 2014 traded Eugenio Suarez and Jonathon Crawford to the Cincinnati Reds for Alfredo Simon
- July 30, 2015 traded Joakim Soria to the Pittsburgh Pirates for JaCoby Jones
- July 30, 2015 traded David Price to the Toronto Blue Jays for Daniel Norris, Matt Boyd and Jairo Labourt
- July 31, 2015 traded Yoenis Cespedes to the New York Mets for Luis Cessa and Michael Fullmer
Red Sox
- December 6, 2016 traded Luis Alexander Basabe, Victor Diaz, Michael Kopech and Yoan Moncada to the Chicago White Sox for Chris Sale
- December 6, 2016 traded Yeison Coca, Mauricio Dubon, Josh Pennington and Travis Shaw to the Milwaukee Brewers for Tyler Thornburg
- July 26, 2017 traded Shaun Anderson and Gregory Santos to the San Francisco Giants for Eduardo Nunez
- June 28, 2018 traded Santiago Espinal to the Toronto Blue Jays for Steve Pearce
- July 25, 2018 traded Jalen Beeks to the Tampa Bay Rays for Nathan Eovaldi
- July 30, 2018 traded Ty Buttrey and Williams Jerez to the Los Angeles Angels for Ian Kinsler
Significant Signings[edit]
Expos
- July 3, 1989 signed Antonio Alfonseca as an amateur free agent
Marlins
- December 8, 1992 signed Charlie Hough as a free agent from the Texas Rangers
- December 8, 1992 signed Dave Magadan as a free agent from the New York Mets
- December 16, 1992 signed Benito Santiago as a free agent from the San Diego Padres
- April 10, 1995 signed Andre Dawson as a free agent from the Boston Red Sox
- December 14, 1995 signed Al Leiter as a free agent from the Toronto Blue Jays
- December 22, 1995 signed Kevin Brown as a free agent from the Baltimore Orioles
- January 13, 1996 signed Livan Hernandez as an amateur free agent
- November 22, 1996 signed Bobby Bonilla as a free agent from the Baltimore Orioles
- December 12, 1996 signed Moises Alou as a free agent from the Montreal Expos
Tigers
- February 6, 2004 signed Ivan Rodriguez as a free agent from the Florida Marlins
- November 18, 2004 signed Troy Percival as a free agent from the Anaheim Angels
- February 7, 2005 signed Magglio Ordonez as a free agent from the Chicago White Sox
- December 15, 2005 signed Kenny Rogers as a free agent from the Texas Rangers
- December 22, 2005 signed Todd Jones as a free agent from the Florida Marlins
- September 12, 2007 signed Bruce Rondon as an amateur free agent
- July 2, 2008 signed Dixon Machado as an amateur free agent
- January 19, 2010 signed Jose Valverde as a free agent from the Houston Astros
- February 22, 2010 signed Johnny Damon as a free agent from the New York Yankees
- November 19, 2010 signed Al Alburquerque as a free agent from the Colorado Rockies
- November 19, 2010 signed Joaquin Benoit as a free agent from the Tampa Bay Rays
- November 26, 2010 signed Victor Martinez as a free agent from the Boston Red Sox
- December 9, 2011 signed Octavio Dotel as a free agent from the St. Louis Cardinals
- January 26, 2012 signed Prince Fielder as a free agent from Milwaukee Brewers
- November 8, 2012 signed Jose Alvarez as a free agent from the Florida Marlins
- November 16, 2012 signed Torii Hunter as a free agent from the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
- April 2, 2013 signed Blaine Hardy as a free agent from the Kansas City Royals
- December 4, 2013 signed Joe Nathan as a free agent from the Texas Rangers
- December 11, 2013 signed Rajai Davis as a free agent from the Toronto Blue Jays
- December 13, 2013 signed Joba Chamberlain as a free agent from the New York Yankees
- March 24, 2014 signed J.D. Martinez as a free agent from the Houston Astros
- November 17, 2014 signed Jefry Marte as a free agent from the Oakland Athletics
- January 6, 2015 signed Tom Gorzelanny as a free agent from the Milwaukee Brewers
Red Sox
- February 18, 2017 signed Hector Velazquez as a free agent from the Mexican League
- February 26, 2018 signed J.D. Martinez as a free agent from the Arizona Diamondbacks
Further Reading[edit]
- Associated Press: "Dombrowski adds Red Sox title to 1997 Marlins championship", USA Today, October 28, 2018. [1]
- Ian Browne: "Red Sox hire Dombrowski; Cherington to step aside: Owner Henry excited to be working with new president of baseball operations again", mlb.com, August 19, 2015. [2]
- Ian Browne: "Red Sox part ways with Dave Dombrowski", mlb.com, September 9, 2019. [3]
- Anthony Castrovince: "In Philly, has Dombrowski finally found home, sweet home?", mlb.com, October 31, 2022. [4]
- Anthony Fenech: "Dombrowski: 'I could tell something wasn't right'", Detroit Free Press, August 5, 2015. [5]
- Bob Nightengale: "Gone from Tigers, Dave Dombrowski becomes one of MLB's top free agents", USA Today Sports, August 5, 2015. [6]
- Bob Nightengale: "Dave Dombrowski in Boston: 'Things sure changed in a hurry'", USA Today Sports, August 19, 2015. [7]
- Bob Nightengale: "Dave Dombrowski on hot seat in Boston just one year after winning the World Series", USA Tpday, August 20, 2019. [8]
- Bob Nightengale: "Defending champion Red Sox fire Dave Dombrowski as president of baseball operations", USA Today, September 9, 2019. [9]
- Bob Nightengale: "Phillies set to hire Dave Dombrowski as team president", USA Today, December 10, 2020. [10]
- Bob Nightengale: "'Retool, not a rebuild': Phillies bet big on Dave Dombrowski leading team back to glory", USA Today, December 11, 2020. [11]
- Todd Zolecki: "Dombrowski on Phils: 'We want to win' in '21", mlb.com, December 11, 2020. [12]
- Todd Zolecki: "Phillies extend Dombrowski through 2027", mlb.com, November 22, 2022. [13]
We're Social...for Statheads
Every Sports Reference Social Media Account
Site Last Updated:
Question, Comment, Feedback, or Correction?
Subscribe to our Free Email Newsletter
Subscribe to Stathead Baseball: Get your first month FREE
Your All-Access Ticket to the Baseball Reference Database
Do you have a sports website? Or write about sports? We have tools and resources that can help you use sports data. Find out more.