Colonel William A. Phillips

Carlos Noriel Lee (born June 20, 1976), nicknamed "El Caballo", is a Panamanian former professional baseball left fielder and first baseman. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1999 to 2012 with the Chicago White Sox, Milwaukee Brewers, Texas Rangers, Houston Astros, and Miami Marlins. He had 17 career grand slams, ranking him seventh in MLB history (tied with Jimmie Foxx and Ted Williams); his seven grand slams hit with the Astros is a club record he shares with Jose Altuve and Alex Bregman.[1][2]

Professional career

Chicago White Sox

Lee made his major league debut with the Chicago White Sox on May 7, 1999, hitting a home run in his first Major League at-bat. In his rookie year, Lee hit .293 while driving in 84 runs in 127 games. He finished 7th in the AL Rookie of the Year voting. In 2000, Lee drove in 92 RBI while hitting 24 home runs. In 2001, Lee once again hit for power, hitting 24 home runs and driving in 84 runs but his average dipped from .301 the previous year to .269 in 150 games.

In 2002, Lee played in just 140 games but was consistent once again, driving in 80 runs while hitting 26 home runs. In 2003, Lee had his breakout season for the White Sox, playing in 158 games, Lee drove in 113 RBI while homering 31 times and scoring 100 runs. The following year, Lee continued his success, hitting 31 home runs and scoring 103 runs. He also drove in 99 RBI while hitting .305 for the White Sox.

After the season, Lee was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange for outfielder Scott Podsednik and pitcher Luis Vizcaíno.

Milwaukee Brewers

In 2005, Lee hit 32 home runs with 114 RBIs and an NL-leading 11 sacrifice flies. He was selected for the National League All-Star team in his first two seasons as a Brewer, and participated in the Home Run Derby in 2005. In 2005, he also won his first career Silver Slugger Award.

On July 28, 2006, he was traded to the Texas Rangers with minor league outfielder Nelson Cruz for outfielders Kevin Mench and Laynce Nix, relief pitcher Francisco Cordero, and minor league pitcher Julian Cordero.[3] According to Brewers General Manager Doug Melvin, the Brewers attempted to re-sign Lee, but by July 27, it became apparent he would not sign a contract extension. The Brewers reportedly offered a four-year, $48 million contract extension, close to the four-year, $50 million extension David Ortiz signed earlier in 2006. Lee's agent Adam Katz said the two parties were too far away in negotiations.

Texas Rangers

In 59 games for the Rangers, Lee hit 9 home runs while hitting .322 while serving as their DH and left fielder. Between both the Brewers and the Rangers, Lee hit a career high 37 home runs while compiling 116 RBI in 161 games.

Houston Astros

On November 24, 2006, Lee agreed to a six-year, $100 million contract with the Houston Astros.[4] Lee had a productive first year in Houston, hitting .303 with 32 home runs and driving in 119 runs, which was good for a three-way tie in the National League with Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder.[5][6][7][8][9]

In his second year, 2007, despite playing in just 115 games due to injury, Lee drove in 100 runs and homered 28 times for the Astros.

In 2009, he had the lowest range factor of all starting major league left fielders (1.56).[10][11] Despite his limited range, Lee was a force once again at the plate, driving in 102 RBIs while hitting exactly .300 in 160 games.

In 2010, after Lance Berkman was dealt to the New York Yankees, Lee filled in for a handful of games at first base. While this was not the first time in his career he had played first, it was the first time he did so on a regular basis. Lee hit a career low .246 despite driving in 89 runs and homering 24 times for the Astros. In 2011, he was an above-average defender according to UZR and other statistical measurements.[12]

Through 66 games in 2012 for Houston, Lee struck out just 17 times in 258 at bats. During his 6-year tenure with the Astros, Lee never struck out over 65 times in a season. He set the club record with seven grand slams.

Miami Marlins

On July 4, 2012, Lee was traded to the Miami Marlins for minor leaguers Matt Dominguez and Rob Rasmussen. He played his first game as a Marlin the next day against the Milwaukee Brewers, and went 2-for-4 with a run in a win. He hit his first home run as a Marlin, a grand slam, on July 17 against the Chicago Cubs. In 81 games for the Marlins, Lee hit .243 while homering 4 times in 338 plate appearances.

Career statistics

In 2,099 games over 14 seasons, Lee compiled a .285 batting average (2,273-for-7,983) with 1,125 runs, 469 doubles, 19 triples, 358 home runs, 1,363 RBI, 125 stolen bases, 655 base on balls, 984 strikeouts, .339 on-base percentage and .483 slugging percentage. Defensively, he recorded a .988 fielding percentage playing left field and first base.[13]

Personal life

In reference to his nickname, Carlos has a fan club called Los Caballitos,[14] which means "Little Horses". He is married and has two daughters, Cassandra and Karla and two sons, named Karlos and Carlos. Lee owns and operates cattle ranches in Aguadulce and Houston.

His younger brother, also named Carlos, Carlos Humberto Lee, played professional baseball in the Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Brewers' minor league systems from 2001–2007.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Carlos Lee Baseball Stats | Baseball Almanac".
  2. ^ "Alex Bregman, Jose Altuve, Carlos Lee now tied with most Astros career grand slams | abc13.com". abc13.com.
  3. ^ "JS Online: So long, slugger". Archived from the original on August 10, 2006.
  4. ^ best baseball player Astros reel in Lee, Williams | astros.com: News Archived August 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Rich Kraetsch. "Bad Paper: The 10 Worst Contracts in the MLB". Bleacher Report.
  6. ^ "The Worst Contracts In Baseball (Spring Training '09)".
  7. ^ Posnanski, Joe (August 13, 2009). "When it comes to bad contracts, Jays' Ricciardi is hard to beat". Sports Illustrated (Opinion). Time Inc. Retrieved December 24, 2021. A contract that is still not a disaster ... but the iceberg approacheth: Carlos Lee (6 years, $100 million).
  8. ^ Joshua Fisher. "The worst contract in baseball". The Hardball Times.
  9. ^ "Baseball Toaster: Mike's Baseball Rants : Intestinal Dreifort-itude". mikesrants.baseballtoaster.com.
  10. ^ "MLB Player Fielding Stats – As lf – 2009" Archived July 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine ESPN, accessed October 6, 2009
  11. ^ "Joe Posnanski » Posts Worst Everyday Player in Baseball «". Archived from the original on 2010-08-16. Retrieved 2010-08-08.
  12. ^ "Carlos Lee » Statistics » Batting". FanGraphs Baseball.
  13. ^ "Carlos Lee Career Statistics at Baseball Reference". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
  14. ^ DAVID BARRON, Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle (18 May 2007). "Fans of Lee stick with their horse". Houston Chronicle.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

External links