Gregg Jefferies

Player

Birthday August 1, 1967

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Burlingame, California, U.S.

Age 56 years old

Nationality United States

Height 177 cm

#64277 Most Popular

1967

Gregory Scott Jefferies (born August 1, 1967) is an American former infielder/outfielder in Major League Baseball who had a 14-year career from 1987 to 2000.

He was a highly touted prospect who became the first two-time winner of the Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year Award.

1985

Drafted by the New York Mets out of Junípero Serra High School in the first round of the 1985 amateur draft (#20 overall), Jefferies hit .331 in his first year in the minor leagues, moving from Kingsport of the Appalachian League (rookie) to Jackson of the Texas League (AA) in two years.

1986

He was named Baseball America's Minor League Player of the Year for both 1986 and 1987, becoming the first player to receive that distinction in consecutive years.

1987

He hit .367 with 20 home runs, 48 doubles and 101 RBI for Jackson in 1987, earning Jefferies a brief call-up from the New York Mets at the end of the 1987 season.

He went 3 for 6 in 6 games, at the age of 19, making him the youngest player in the Major Leagues that season.

The Mets decided they needed to make room for Jefferies, but didn't know where to play him, as the veteran team was full at the spots Jefferies played in the minor leagues (shortstop, third base and second base).

1988

The outfield was full as well, with the team finding it difficult to get outfielders Lenny Dykstra and Mookie Wilson playing time alongside Darryl Strawberry and Kevin McReynolds, so Jefferies was sent to AAA Tidewater to start the 1988 season.

After spending most of the 1988 season at AAA (where he hit .282), Jefferies was recalled at the end of August and allowed to play out the year as a starter, mostly at third base.

He responded by hitting .321 over the last 29 games of the 1988 season.

The team had an MLB-best 24–7 record after his debut and finished with a league-best 100 wins en route to the National League East title.

The Mets made a full-time roster spot for Jefferies when they traded Wally Backman to the Minnesota Twins, leaving second base open for Jefferies.

1989

But Jefferies faltered, hitting .258 with little selectivity as a rookie in 1989.

During a game against the Philadelphia Phillies on September 27, 1989, Jefferies was the last batter to ground out before the Mets lost the game.

Jefferies then heard some unkind comments from his former teammate Roger McDowell and charged the mound, starting a bench-clearing brawl.

1990

In 1990, Jefferies raised his batting average to .283 while scoring 96 runs and leading the NL with 40 doubles, but the Mets finished 2nd for the second straight year.

1991

In response to criticism from teammates, on May 24, 1991, Jefferies pleaded his case in an open letter read on WFAN, New York's sports radio station.

In the letter, Jefferies wrote: "When a pitcher is having trouble getting players out, when a hitter is having trouble hitting, or when a player makes an error, I try to support them in whatever way I can. I don't run to the media to belittle them or to draw more attention to their difficult times. I can only hope that one day those teammates who have found it convenient to criticize me will realize that we are all in this together. If only we can concentrate more on the games than complaining and bickering and pointing fingers, we would all be better off."

He slipped in 1991, hitting .272 with 30 extra base hits in 486 at bats as the team slipped to 5th place.

That off-season the team traded him, along with McReynolds and infielder Keith Miller, to the Kansas City Royals for former All-Star pitcher Bret Saberhagen and utility man Bill Pecota, ending his stay with the Mets.

1992

After playing the 1992 season with the Royals, he moved on to the St. Louis Cardinals, where he would have his two best seasons, batting .342 and .325, respectively, while finding a home at first base and being named to the National League All-Star team in both the 1993 and 1994 seasons.

1994

Jefferies signed a four-year, $20 million contract (equivalent to $ million in ) with the Philadelphia Phillies after the 1994 season.

At the time, the contract was the largest in Phillies history.

1995

He chose to leave St. Louis because the Cardinals would not give him a no-trade clause and he moved to the outfield for the Phillies, where he performed adequately over the 1995, 1996 and 1997 seasons, but injuries to his thumb and hamstring hampered his effectiveness.

On August 25, 1995, in a game vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers at Veterans Stadium, Jefferies became the first Phillie to hit for the cycle since Johnny Callison in 1963.

1998

In 1998, he was traded mid-season to the Anaheim Angels, where he hit .347 in 19 games before moving to the Detroit Tigers the next year.

2000

He hit a collective .231 for the Tigers over two seasons before he retired in 2000 due in part to a severed right hamstring.

2001

Tigers manager Phil Garner offered Jefferies the bench coach job for 2001 but he declined.

For his career, Jefferies had a career .289 batting average with 126 home runs, 663 RBIs and 196 stolen bases.

2017

In 2017, Baseball America called him their most highly regarded prospect until Andruw Jones.

He went on to become a two-time All-Star.

Jefferies was born in Burlingame, California, to Rich and Joan Jefferies.

Rich, the baseball coach at Parkside Junior High School in San Bruno, California, developed Jefferies as a baseball player by pushing him through an intense workout eight hours per day, six days per week which involved, among other things, swinging a baseball bat underwater.

Jefferies attended Junípero Serra High School in San Mateo, California, where he played baseball and football.

While he was in high school, his brother, Dean, was playing baseball at the University of San Francisco.

Jefferies initially committed to play both college baseball and football at Cal State Fullerton after high school.

2020

In 2020, Jefferies denied having written the letter but would not reveal its true author or authors.

In 2020, he told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he was "absolutely not" content with what he accomplished in his career.

Jefferies resided in Pleasanton, California, with his wife Jeannie Marshall and kids.

He was a hitting instructor at Total Players Center in Pleasanton before opening his own Gregg Jefferies Sports Academy, also in Pleasanton.