Ronnie Belliard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Washington Nationals — No. 10 | |
| Second Baseman | |
| Bats: Right | Throws: Right |
| Major League Baseball debut | |
|---|---|
| September 12, 1998 for the Milwaukee Brewers | |
| Selected MLB statistics (through April 7, 2007) |
|
| Batting average | .272 |
| Home runs | 80 |
| Runs batted in | 439 |
| Former teams | |
Ronnie Belliard (born April 7, 1975 in Bronx, New York) is a second baseman of Dominican descent who currently plays for the Washington Nationals. Belliard, an All-Star in 2004, is well known for playing out on the outfield grass. Belliard was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 8th round of the 1994 MLB Amateur Draft, and is a cousin of former major-league shortstop Rafael Belliard.
Contents |
AVG: .272
H: 1040
HR: 80
RBI: 439
AB: 3821
SLG: .411
G: 1052
In 1999, Belliard was named Milwaukee Brewers player of the year. Ronnie began the season at Triple A Louisville before being recalled on May 11. He finished the season tops among National League rookies in almost every offensive category, including batting average (1st), runs batted in (6th), multi-hit games (4th), runs (6th), hits (4th), total bases (5th), doubles (2nd), triples (T-3rd), hitting streaks (T-5th), walks (1st), on-base percentage (1st), slugging percentage (3rd) and extra base hits (4th). Ronnie hit his first Major league home run and drove in his first run with a solo shot May 15.
In 2000, Belliard established career highs in several categories, including games (152), runs scored (83), hits (150) and doubles (30) while setting the Brewers' National League franchise record with career-high 9 triples.
2001 saw Belliard set a career mark with 11 home runs and equaled a career-high with 30 doubles previously set in 2000. Ronnie was Milwaukee's Opening Day second baseman.
In 2002, Belliard played second base (49 games) and third base (42 games) for Milwaukee.
On January 17 2003, Belliard was signed as a minor league free agent by the Colorado Rockies after being non-tendered by Milwaukee on December 20 and became the first non-roster invitee in franchise history to start on Opening Day.
Belliard signed a one-year deal with Cleveland for the 2004 campaign. In 2004 Belliard enjoyed a fine season from an offensive standpoint, stabilizing the second base position after the club experienced inconsistency at the position in 2003. Ronnie amassed career-highs in hits (169), doubles (48) and RBI (70) and also set a new career-high with 12 HR. He finished 2nd in the American League with 48 doubles, which represented the highest total by an Indian since Albert Belle's 52 in 1995. His .282 batting average at second base led all AL second basemen. His 169 hits ranked 2nd and his 69 RBI placed 4th among league 2B. Belliard earned his first trip to the All-Star Game after hitting .304 (103-339) in the first half with 5 home-runs & 37 RBI in 84 games (was voted in by players). He avoided arbitration and signed a 1-year contract on December 20 with a club option for 2006. In 2005, Belliard developed into one of the American League's best second baseman in his 2nd season with the Indians as he continues to establish himself as one of the most consistent and underrated members of the club. He collected new career-highs in homers (17) and RBI (78). as he finished 3rd among AL second basemen in RBI and doubles (36) and 4th in home runs. Ronnie returned to Cleveland for his third season with the club for the 2006 season.
On Sunday, July 30, 2006, Belliard was traded to the Cardinals for utility infielder Hector Luna in a move designed to acquire for St. Louis an every-day second baseman for the stretch run, and to provide bench bat strength for Cleveland.
Belliard was a key part of the Cardinals' success in the 2006 National League Division Series when he hit .462 with two RBI and two runs scored. The Cardinals defeated the San Diego Padres three games to one to advance to the National League Championship Series. Belliard eventually won his first championship ring when the Cardinals won the 2006 World Series, defeating the Detroit Tigers, four games to one.
Belliard signed a minor league contract with the Nationals on February 18, 2007. He was added to the National's 40-man roster on March 22, 2007.
After the Cardinals World Series victory in 2006 Belliard, who is married and has two children, was accused of impregnating a woman after meeting her at a St. Louis nightclub. George Edwards, the woman's father, then allegedly tried to extort $150,000 from Belliard to keep quiet about the incident. When the woman had a miscarriage of the alleged child Edwards still attempted to extort the money from Belliard in order to keep the media out of the situation. In January 2007 four conversations between Belliard's agents and Edwards were recorded and local investigators along with the FBI have now become involved in the case. While the case continues Edwards has been ordered jailed without bond as a flight risk and public danger. [1]
Belliard's trademark is to stick out his tongue quite often during games, and has even been described by Cardinal commentator Dan McLaughlin as "the Michael Jordan of baseball".
When Belliard was with the Cardinals the song played when he stepped up to the plate at New Busch Stadium was "Temperature" by Sean Paul.
He plays for the Licey Tigers in the Dominican Winter Baseball League.
- ^ "Belleville man drops challenge of evidence in alleged shakedown of athlete." Belleville News-Democrat 30 Mar. 2007 Bellevillenewsdemocrat.com 1 Apr. 2007 <http://Bellevillenewsdemocrat.com>.
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