Kevin Mitchell

Player

Popular As Kevin Mitchell (baseball)

Birthday January 13, 1962

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace San Diego, California, U.S.

Age 62 years old

Nationality United States

#51152 Most Popular

1962

Kevin Darnell Mitchell (born January 13, 1962) is an American professional baseball left fielder who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) and Nippon Professional Baseball from 1984 to 1998.

He added a .353 average and 2 homers in the NLCS to help the team to its first World Series appearance since 1962.

1969

In that season, he batted .291 with a league-best 125 RBI and 47 home runs, leading the team to the playoffs and winning the National League's Most Valuable Player award, the first by a Giant since Willie McCovey in 1969.

1978

Although he has been credited with graduating from Clairemont and has claimed to have been a high school football star there, Mitchell only attended the school for two months in 1978.

He was reportedly involved in street gangs as a youth, but has claimed he was never himself a member; he also claimed to have been shot three times in his youth.

His stepbrother, Donald, was killed in a gang fight.

Mitchell reportedly did not play high school baseball.

He was signed by the New York Mets as an undrafted free agent following an open tryout at Grossmont College.

He was given a $1,500 signing bonus plus $600 monthly in salary.

In Amazin', Peter Golenbock's oral history of the New York Mets, Hall of Fame catcher Gary Carter said he gave Mitchell the nickname "World" for his ability to play in the infield and outfield.

Carter spoke fondly of Mitchell's talents.

1986

In the tenth inning of Game 6 of the 1986 World Series, after Wally Backman and Keith Hernandez had been retired for the first two outs, he was called to pinch hit for reliever Rick Aguilera after Gary Carter, the next hitter after Hernandez, singled.

Mitchell, who had already gotten out of his uniform and had on his regular clothes, hurriedly put his uniform back on without his protective cup and went to the plate and singled.

He would eventually score the tying run on Bob Stanley's wild pitch to Mookie Wilson.

Mitchell was traded to the San Diego Padres after the 1986 season,

On December 11, 1986, the Mets traded Mitchell, Shawn Abner, Stan Jefferson, Kevin Armstrong, and Kevin Brown to the San Diego Padres for Kevin McReynolds, Gene Walter, and Adam Ging.

Mitchell played for the Padres for half a season.

1987

On July 4, 1987, Mitchell was traded to the Giants as part of a multi-player trade that also sent pitchers Dave Dravecky and Craig Lefferts to San Francisco in exchange for third baseman Chris Brown and pitchers Keith Comstock, Mark Davis, and Mark Grant.

While Dravecky was initially considered to be the key to the trade for the Giants, it was Mitchell who emerged as a star player.

1989

Mitchell was a two-time MLB All-Star and won the National League Most Valuable Player Award and Silver Slugger Award in 1989, when he led the league in home runs and runs batted in.

Mitchell was born in San Diego to Alma Mitchell, who worked as an electrician with the US Navy.

Alma separated from Mitchell's father, Earl, when Mitchell was two years old.

He was raised primarily with his paternal grandmother, Josie Whitfield, who encouraged his participation in sports.

Because Mitchell struggled academically, he attended several high schools in San Diego including Lincoln High School, Clairemont High School and Crawford High School, where he claimed to have played water polo.

The interviewer then commented that maybe the increased mobility helped Mitchell to make the famous 1989 barehanded catch of Ozzie Smith's fly ball.

After two seasons playing primarily at third base, he had his best season with the Giants in 1989 upon being moved to the outfield.

Mitchell set the tone for his charmed 1989 season early in the year with a unique defensive play on April 26.

Sprinting toward the left field foul line in St. Louis's Busch Stadium, for a ball off the bat of Ozzie Smith, Mitchell realized he had overrun the ball, but was able to reach back and snare the ball with his bare hand.

Mitchell was a two-time All-Star with the Giants.

1991

Traded to the Mariners after the 1991 season, he arrived at spring training the following year 30 pounds (14 kg) overweight and hit only nine homers that year while batting .286.

1992

After starting the 1992 season in a horrible slump in April and May, Mitchell rebounded and batted .337 the rest of the way and hit seven of his nine home runs and knocked in 47 of his 67 RBI in just the last 54 games of the 1992 season.

1993

He had a resurgence in two seasons with the Reds, batting .341 with 19 home runs and 64 RBI in just 323 at-bats in 1993 and .323 with 30 home runs and 77 RBI in the strike-shortened 1994 season.

However, his weight problems kept him from being more productive.

Because of the baseball strike, he opted to play for the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in Japan the following year, where he became the highest-paid player in Japanese history.

In Japan, he incurred the displeasure of team management when he chose to travel to the U.S. in mid-season for treatment of knee problems against the team's wishes.

He spent only two months with the team.

It was discovered later that he did indeed need surgery on his knee.

In the next two years, he played for four major league teams (Cincinnati, Boston, Cleveland, Oakland), showing flashes of his former ability.

2007

In a July 2007 radio interview with local sports talk radio station KNBR, Mitchell disputed that he was out of uniform at the time, and stated that he never wore a cup, even when playing infield.

When asked why he never wore a cup, Mitchell responded, "I couldn’t find one big enough for my junk."