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Kurt Suzuki

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Kurt Suzuki

Oakland Athletics — No. 24
Catcher
Born: October 4 1983 (1983-10-04) (age 24)
Bats: Right Throws: Right 
Major League Baseball debut
June 122007 for the Oakland Athletics
Selected MLB statistics
(through 2007)
Batting Average     .249
Runs Batted In     39
Home Runs     7
Teams

Kurt Kiyoshi Suzuki (born October 4, 1983 in Wailuku, Hawaii) is a Major League Baseball catcher for the Oakland Athletics. The Athletics drafted him in the second round of the 2004 June amateur draft and assigned to the single A Vancouver Canadians, where he batted .297 and committed just one error in 46 games. He joined the major league club on June 9, 2007 and made his debut three days later as a pinch hitter in a game against the Houston Astros[1].

Contents

College career

He played at Cal State Fullerton, where he was a teammate of pitcher Jason Windsor, also a 2004 A's draftee. Cal State Fullerton captured the 2004 College World Series championship, thanks to Suzuki's two-out RBI single in the bottom of the seventh inning, giving the Titans a 3-2 win over the Texas Longhorns (whose closer, Huston Street, was also drafted by the A's in 2004). That same year, he won the Johnny Bench Award as the country's top collegiate catcher in 2004. He was also selected All-American by two publications, Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball.

Professional career

His first full season of professional baseball came in 2005, with another single A team, the Stockton Ports. Playing in 114 games, Suzuki put up a .277 average, 12 home runs, 65 RBIs and a .440 slugging percentage. Moving up to the Midland RockHounds (AA) in 2006, Suzuki batted .285 with a .392 OBP. He began the 2007 season with the Sacramento River Cats (AAA), where he hit .280 with 3 home runs. He was called up to the A's major league club on June 9, 2007[2] after rarely used catcher Adam Melhuse was traded to the Texas Rangers. He served as backup to veteran Jason Kendall until Kendall was traded to the Chicago Cubs on July 16 thus making Suzuki the Athletics everyday catcher. On July 17, 2007, pitcher Shane Komine got into a game in the 8th inning against the Texas Rangers with Suzuki doing the catching. This marked the first time in major league baseball history that there was a battery where both the players were from Hawaii. On September 10, 2007 Suzuki hit his first career grand slam in the second inning against the Mariners at Seattle.

Bibliography

  • 2005 Oakland Athletics Media Guide. Pg. 374. Produced by the Oakland Athletics Public Relations Department.
  • 2006 Oakland Athletics Media Guide. Pg. 215. Produced by the Oakland Athletics Public Relations Department.

External links

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Kurt Suzuki from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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