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Eric Davis (baseball)

Eric Keith Davis (born May 29, 1962) is an American former center fielder for several Major League Baseball (MLB) teams, most notably the Cincinnati Reds, to which he owes his nickname "Eric the Red". Davis was 21 years old when he made his major league debut with the Reds on May 19, 1984. Davis spent eight seasons with the Reds and later played for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Detroit Tigers, Baltimore Orioles, St. Louis Cardinals, and San Francisco Giants. A right-handed batter and fielder, Davis had a mesmerizing combination of athletic ability, including excellent foot and bat speed, tremendous power, and superlative defensive acumen. He became one of baseball's most exciting players during his peak, achieving a number of rare feats.

Eric Davis
Outfielder
Born: (1962-05-29) May 29, 1962 (age 61)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
May 19, 1984, for the Cincinnati Reds
Last MLB appearance
October 7, 2001, for the San Francisco Giants
MLB statistics
Batting average.269
Home runs282
Runs batted in934
Teams
Career highlights and awards

In 1987, he became the first player in major league history to hit three grand slams in one month and the first to achieve at least 30 home runs and 50 stolen bases in the same season. Showcasing his career as one of the greatest Power/Speed players in MLB history, Eric is tied for 4th All-Time in 20HR/20SB seasons with seven,[1] one ahead of Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.

The Reds selected Davis, a native of Los Angeles, California, in the eighth round of the 1980 amateur draft from John C. Fremont High School in South Los Angeles, where he was a heavily recruited college basketball prospect. In his major league career, he often sustained injuries while winning two MLB All-Star Game selections, three Rawlings Gold Glove Awards and two Silver Slugger Awards. Over a 162-game period spanning June 11, 1986, to July 4, 1987, he batted .308, .406 on-base percentage, .622 slugging percentage with 47 home runs, 149 runs scored, 123 runs batted in (RBI) and 98 stolen bases. In 1990, he became a World Series champion in the Reds' upset and four-game sweep of the Oakland Athletics.

In 1996, Davis successfully restarted his baseball career with the Reds and was named the comeback player of the year. He moved to the Orioles and, despite fighting colon cancer, he had one of his best statistical seasons in 1998. Injuries again slowed Davis over the next few seasons, and he retired for good in 2001.

Along with other business interests, Davis currently works as a roving instructor in the Reds organization.

Background edit

Eric Keith Davis was born in Los Angeles, California, one of three children, to Jimmy and Shirley Davis. He has one brother named Jim, Jr., and one sister named Sharletha. Jimmy worked at a grocery chain in Gardena named Boys Market. He was active with his sons in sports, such as pick-up basketball games. With copious all-round athletic talent, Davis competed with future Los Angeles Lakers player Byron Scott at Baldwin Hills Park and Recreation Center from the age of 12, and he aspired to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA).[2]

While at Baldwin Hills, Davis befriended Darryl Strawberry, and their careers would become intertwined from high school to Major League Baseball (MLB). Davis attended John C. Fremont High School in South Los Angeles where he starred in both basketball and baseball, while Strawberry attended and played for crosstown rival Crenshaw. As a senior, Davis batted .635 and stole 50 bases in 15 games.[3] As a basketball player, he averaged 29 points and 10 assists per game. Steadfast in his goal of playing in the NBA, Davis continued to exert more effort to prepare for a career in basketball[4] than he did in baseball until his senior year of high school.[2] Davis lacked interest in attending college, and because the customary path to an NBA career at the time was by playing in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), he decided to focus his aspirations on baseball.[4]

The Cincinnati Reds selected Davis in the eighth round (200th overall) of the 1980 MLB draft.[5] Strawberry was chosen in the same draft as the first overall selection by the New York Mets.[4]

Early career edit

In his first full year of professional baseball, Davis stole 40 bases in 62 games.[4]

When Davis first appeared in the major leagues in 1984, his physical talents gave him the potential to be one of the most exciting players in the game. He was a rare five-tool player with home run power as well as sheer speed on the base paths. He made a habit of robbing home runs and elicited comparisons to Willie Mays.

Davis began to excel in 1986, batting .277, swatting 27 homers, and stealing 80 bases. He and Rickey Henderson remain the only players in major league history to be members of the "20/80 club".[6] In a 162-game span (June 11, 1986 – July 4, 1987) he made 659 plate appearance and batted .308/.406/.622 with 47 homers, 149 runs, 123 RBI, and 98 stolen bases. (He was caught stealing just 12 times.)[4]

Davis continued to build on his success in 1987. On Opening Day, he went 3–for–3 with a home run, a stolen base, and two walks. Through the first 10 games, he was batting .526 with 4 home runs and 8 stolen bases. On May 1, 1987, he hit 2 home runs, including a grand slam. Two days later, he hit another three home runs—one each to left, center, and right field—including a grand slam, and a stolen base. He hit another grand slam that month, making him the first player in history to hit three in one month. During an eventful play in the late innings at Wrigley Field on September 4, Davis crashed into the outfield brick wall as he caught a deep fly ball; he laid on the ground several moments and was slowed afterward.[4]

Davis finished the 1987 season with a .293 average, 37 homers, and 50 steals. He became the first player in history to hit 30 homers and steal 50 bases in a season, despite playing in only 129 games.[7] Prior to 1987, just six players had achieved the 30–30 club. That season, three others—including Strawberry, Joe Carter, and Howard Johnson—joined Davis in the 30–30 club.[4] He led the league in power-speed number (42.53) with a mark that is the third-highest single season mark ever.[8]

From 1986 to 1990, Davis averaged 30 home runs and 40 stolen bases. During this time, he was one of the game's most exciting players and a very visible superstar player. He drew some MVP support every year from 1986 to 1990, finishing in the top 15 in the voting every year. From 1986 to 1989, he also finished in the NL's top 10 in home runs, slugging percentage, and OPS each year. While he had some other good seasons later in his career, injuries prevented him from reaching this type of peak again. In 1990, with a solid team around him, Davis was a key player in Cincinnati's "wire-to-wire" championship season.

One of Davis' most famous moments was when he homered off Oakland's Dave Stewart in his first World Series at bat in 1990. The home run triggered a World Series sweep for the Reds. While diving for a ball during game 4 of the Series, Davis suffered a lacerated kidney, which required surgery. He also underwent off-season surgery on a knee that he had injured earlier in the season.

After 1990, Davis was unable to get his career back on track. Injuries sabotaged his play in 1991, and he was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Tim Belcher and John Wetteland. He suffered several more injuries in 1992 and was largely ineffective.

On August 23, 1993, the Dodgers dealt Davis to the Detroit Tigers for a player to be named later. One week later, the Tigers sent pitcher John DeSilva to the Dodgers to complete the trade. The Tigers had one of the top offenses in 1993 and were seeking to upgrade one of their few weaknesses, the center field position. Davis replaced Milt Cuyler and batted relatively well in 29 games down the stretch with the Tigers; he batted fifth or sixth and finished with an adjusted OPS of 142 and his sixth 20/20 season. Davis was expected to be the Tigers' primary center fielder in 1994, but injuries limited him to just 37 games and batting average of just .183. Following the strike-shortened 1994 season, Davis was granted free agency by the Tigers and chose to retire.

After recuperating for one season, he felt healthy enough to return to baseball with Cincinnati in 1996. He had a solid season with a .287 average and 26 home runs, although injuries cut into his playing time. He had played well enough, however, to convince Baltimore to sign him as a free agent.

Cancer diagnosis and recovery edit

In May 1997, while in the midst of an impressive start of leading the AL in Batting in April, his numbers began to slump quickly, and soon after Davis was diagnosed with colon cancer. By September, while he was still in treatment, Davis returned to the team. Cancer treatment left him tired, but he worked hard to regain his form and was well enough to hit a game-winning home run in the 1997 American League Championship Series. After the season, he was given the Roberto Clemente Award. He serves as an honorary board member of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation.

Davis was brought back for 1998 and had one of his best seasons, batting .327 (4th in the AL) and hitting 28 homers (eclipsing 25 HR for the 2nd time in 3 seasons), while finishing in the top 10 in Batting Average, Slugging Percent, On-Base Percent, On-Base Plus Slugging, and Offensive Win Percentage.[9] He also hit in 30 consecutive games that season, the longest streak of the 1998 baseball season, and establishing a Baltimore Orioles record.[10]

End of playing career and legacy edit

The beginning of the end for Davis's career began in 1999. He spent three injury-plagued seasons with St. Louis and San Francisco before retiring in 2001.

In 1999, Davis wrote his autobiography, Born to Play, in which he credited Pete Rose for having faith in him and teaching him about the game. He also had harsh words for 1996 Reds manager Ray Knight, with whom Davis had had a memorable on-field fight in 1986.[11] He claimed Knight did not support his comeback and did not stand up for him in contract negotiations after the season. Davis remains bitter about the Reds' treatment of him after his World Series injury. Davis was left behind in Oakland after the series and requested that the Reds provide a private plane to bring him back to Cincinnati. Davis claimed that he was refused a number of times and made his own way home after the hospital released him.

According to former Reds teammate Paul O'Neill, Davis was "the best hitter, best runner, best outfielder, best everything" he ever saw.[12]

As of 2017, Davis was a hitting instructor for Elite Development Invitational, in Vero Beach, Florida, and seeks to promote more African American youth participation in baseball.[13]

Career statistics edit

In 1,626 games over 17 seasons, Davis posted a .269 batting average (1430-for-5321) with 938 runs, 239 doubles, 26 triples, 282 home runs, 934 RBI, 349 stolen bases, 740 bases on balls, .359 on-base percentage and .482 slugging percentage. He finished his career with a .984 fielding percentage playing at all three outfield positions. In 25 postseason games, he hit .192 (14-for-73) with 7 runs, 2 home runs and 12 RBI.

In popular culture edit

Davis was the childhood idol of comedian Ron Sexton, as well as his most famous character from The Bob and Tom Show, Donnie Baker. Donnie (and Sexton) frequently appeared in character in Davis's #44 Reds jersey, and stated on numerous occasions that Davis was the most complete player he'd ever seen. Donnie claimed to have put a curse on former Reds owner Marge Schott after she "did Eric dirty" following the 1990 World Series. He went on to claim that his alleged curse worked, as she ultimately sold the team. When arguing with his unseen "neighbor to the north," Tony Mitchell, Donnie told Bob and Tom that he'd "crush Mitchell like Eric Davis crushed fastballs." In real life, Sexton named his first son Eric as a tribute to Davis.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Most Seasons with 20 Home Runs and 20 Stolen Bases".
  2. ^ a b Wiley, Ralph (May 25, 1987). "These are red letter days". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  3. ^ Newhan, Ross (May 10, 1987). "Strawberry and Eric Davis dream of playing together again". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Posnanski, Joe (May 31, 2018). "TBT: Eric the Red's epic 162-game run in 1986–87". MLB.com. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  5. ^ "Eric Davis Statistics". Baseball Reference.
  6. ^ "Rickey Henderson Statistics". Baseball Reference. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  7. ^ "Rare Feats in MLB History". MLB.com.
  8. ^ Single-Season Leaders &amp Records for Power-Speed # | Baseball-Reference.com
  9. ^ "1998 American League Batting Leaders".
  10. ^ "Each team's longest hitting streak". MLB.com.
  11. ^ "1986 Ray Knight vs Eric Davis Fight - BRAWL". Archived from the original on 2021-12-13 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ Holmes, Dan (December 10, 2011). . detroitathletic.com. Archived from the original on October 9, 2013. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  13. ^ Elman, Jake (July 22, 2017). "Reds great Davis motivating youths at EDI: Club Hall of Famer nurturing 'future of our game' while serving as hitting coach". MLB.com. Retrieved June 2, 2018.
  14. ^ "Who was Ron Sexton aka Donnie Baker? Know about the Comedian's family as he passes away at 52". The Economic Times. 24 July 2023.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Career statistics and player information from MLB, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
Awards and achievements
Preceded by National League Player of the Month
July 1986
April & May 1987
August 1988
Succeeded by
Preceded by Hitting for the cycle
June 2, 1989
Succeeded by

eric, davis, baseball, this, article, about, outfielder, pitcher, erik, davis, baseball, eric, keith, davis, born, 1962, american, former, center, fielder, several, major, league, baseball, teams, most, notably, cincinnati, reds, which, owes, nickname, eric, d. This article is about the outfielder For the pitcher see Erik Davis baseball Eric Keith Davis born May 29 1962 is an American former center fielder for several Major League Baseball MLB teams most notably the Cincinnati Reds to which he owes his nickname Eric the Red Davis was 21 years old when he made his major league debut with the Reds on May 19 1984 Davis spent eight seasons with the Reds and later played for the Los Angeles Dodgers Detroit Tigers Baltimore Orioles St Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants A right handed batter and fielder Davis had a mesmerizing combination of athletic ability including excellent foot and bat speed tremendous power and superlative defensive acumen He became one of baseball s most exciting players during his peak achieving a number of rare feats Eric DavisOutfielderBorn 1962 05 29 May 29 1962 age 61 Los Angeles California U S Batted RightThrew RightMLB debutMay 19 1984 for the Cincinnati RedsLast MLB appearanceOctober 7 2001 for the San Francisco GiantsMLB statisticsBatting average 269Home runs282Runs batted in934TeamsCincinnati Reds 1984 1991 Los Angeles Dodgers 1992 1993 Detroit Tigers 1993 1994 Cincinnati Reds 1996 Baltimore Orioles 1997 1998 St Louis Cardinals 1999 2000 San Francisco Giants 2001 Career highlights and awards2 All Star 1987 1989 World Series champion 1990 3 Gold Glove Award 1987 1989 2 Silver Slugger Award 1987 1989 Roberto Clemente Award 1997 Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame In 1987 he became the first player in major league history to hit three grand slams in one month and the first to achieve at least 30 home runs and 50 stolen bases in the same season Showcasing his career as one of the greatest Power Speed players in MLB history Eric is tied for 4th All Time in 20HR 20SB seasons with seven 1 one ahead of Willie Mays and Hank Aaron The Reds selected Davis a native of Los Angeles California in the eighth round of the 1980 amateur draft from John C Fremont High School in South Los Angeles where he was a heavily recruited college basketball prospect In his major league career he often sustained injuries while winning two MLB All Star Game selections three Rawlings Gold Glove Awards and two Silver Slugger Awards Over a 162 game period spanning June 11 1986 to July 4 1987 he batted 308 406 on base percentage 622 slugging percentage with 47 home runs 149 runs scored 123 runs batted in RBI and 98 stolen bases In 1990 he became a World Series champion in the Reds upset and four game sweep of the Oakland Athletics In 1996 Davis successfully restarted his baseball career with the Reds and was named the comeback player of the year He moved to the Orioles and despite fighting colon cancer he had one of his best statistical seasons in 1998 Injuries again slowed Davis over the next few seasons and he retired for good in 2001 Along with other business interests Davis currently works as a roving instructor in the Reds organization Contents 1 Background 2 Early career 3 Cancer diagnosis and recovery 4 End of playing career and legacy 5 Career statistics 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editEric Keith Davis was born in Los Angeles California one of three children to Jimmy and Shirley Davis He has one brother named Jim Jr and one sister named Sharletha Jimmy worked at a grocery chain in Gardena named Boys Market He was active with his sons in sports such as pick up basketball games With copious all round athletic talent Davis competed with future Los Angeles Lakers player Byron Scott at Baldwin Hills Park and Recreation Center from the age of 12 and he aspired to play in the National Basketball Association NBA 2 While at Baldwin Hills Davis befriended Darryl Strawberry and their careers would become intertwined from high school to Major League Baseball MLB Davis attended John C Fremont High School in South Los Angeles where he starred in both basketball and baseball while Strawberry attended and played for crosstown rival Crenshaw As a senior Davis batted 635 and stole 50 bases in 15 games 3 As a basketball player he averaged 29 points and 10 assists per game Steadfast in his goal of playing in the NBA Davis continued to exert more effort to prepare for a career in basketball 4 than he did in baseball until his senior year of high school 2 Davis lacked interest in attending college and because the customary path to an NBA career at the time was by playing in the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA he decided to focus his aspirations on baseball 4 The Cincinnati Reds selected Davis in the eighth round 200th overall of the 1980 MLB draft 5 Strawberry was chosen in the same draft as the first overall selection by the New York Mets 4 Early career editIn his first full year of professional baseball Davis stole 40 bases in 62 games 4 When Davis first appeared in the major leagues in 1984 his physical talents gave him the potential to be one of the most exciting players in the game He was a rare five tool player with home run power as well as sheer speed on the base paths He made a habit of robbing home runs and elicited comparisons to Willie Mays Davis began to excel in 1986 batting 277 swatting 27 homers and stealing 80 bases He and Rickey Henderson remain the only players in major league history to be members of the 20 80 club 6 In a 162 game span June 11 1986 July 4 1987 he made 659 plate appearance and batted 308 406 622 with 47 homers 149 runs 123 RBI and 98 stolen bases He was caught stealing just 12 times 4 Davis continued to build on his success in 1987 On Opening Day he went 3 for 3 with a home run a stolen base and two walks Through the first 10 games he was batting 526 with 4 home runs and 8 stolen bases On May 1 1987 he hit 2 home runs including a grand slam Two days later he hit another three home runs one each to left center and right field including a grand slam and a stolen base He hit another grand slam that month making him the first player in history to hit three in one month During an eventful play in the late innings at Wrigley Field on September 4 Davis crashed into the outfield brick wall as he caught a deep fly ball he laid on the ground several moments and was slowed afterward 4 Davis finished the 1987 season with a 293 average 37 homers and 50 steals He became the first player in history to hit 30 homers and steal 50 bases in a season despite playing in only 129 games 7 Prior to 1987 just six players had achieved the 30 30 club That season three others including Strawberry Joe Carter and Howard Johnson joined Davis in the 30 30 club 4 He led the league in power speed number 42 53 with a mark that is the third highest single season mark ever 8 From 1986 to 1990 Davis averaged 30 home runs and 40 stolen bases During this time he was one of the game s most exciting players and a very visible superstar player He drew some MVP support every year from 1986 to 1990 finishing in the top 15 in the voting every year From 1986 to 1989 he also finished in the NL s top 10 in home runs slugging percentage and OPS each year While he had some other good seasons later in his career injuries prevented him from reaching this type of peak again In 1990 with a solid team around him Davis was a key player in Cincinnati s wire to wire championship season One of Davis most famous moments was when he homered off Oakland s Dave Stewart in his first World Series at bat in 1990 The home run triggered a World Series sweep for the Reds While diving for a ball during game 4 of the Series Davis suffered a lacerated kidney which required surgery He also underwent off season surgery on a knee that he had injured earlier in the season After 1990 Davis was unable to get his career back on track Injuries sabotaged his play in 1991 and he was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Tim Belcher and John Wetteland He suffered several more injuries in 1992 and was largely ineffective On August 23 1993 the Dodgers dealt Davis to the Detroit Tigers for a player to be named later One week later the Tigers sent pitcher John DeSilva to the Dodgers to complete the trade The Tigers had one of the top offenses in 1993 and were seeking to upgrade one of their few weaknesses the center field position Davis replaced Milt Cuyler and batted relatively well in 29 games down the stretch with the Tigers he batted fifth or sixth and finished with an adjusted OPS of 142 and his sixth 20 20 season Davis was expected to be the Tigers primary center fielder in 1994 but injuries limited him to just 37 games and batting average of just 183 Following the strike shortened 1994 season Davis was granted free agency by the Tigers and chose to retire After recuperating for one season he felt healthy enough to return to baseball with Cincinnati in 1996 He had a solid season with a 287 average and 26 home runs although injuries cut into his playing time He had played well enough however to convince Baltimore to sign him as a free agent Cancer diagnosis and recovery editIn May 1997 while in the midst of an impressive start of leading the AL in Batting in April his numbers began to slump quickly and soon after Davis was diagnosed with colon cancer By September while he was still in treatment Davis returned to the team Cancer treatment left him tired but he worked hard to regain his form and was well enough to hit a game winning home run in the 1997 American League Championship Series After the season he was given the Roberto Clemente Award He serves as an honorary board member of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation Davis was brought back for 1998 and had one of his best seasons batting 327 4th in the AL and hitting 28 homers eclipsing 25 HR for the 2nd time in 3 seasons while finishing in the top 10 in Batting Average Slugging Percent On Base Percent On Base Plus Slugging and Offensive Win Percentage 9 He also hit in 30 consecutive games that season the longest streak of the 1998 baseball season and establishing a Baltimore Orioles record 10 End of playing career and legacy editThe beginning of the end for Davis s career began in 1999 He spent three injury plagued seasons with St Louis and San Francisco before retiring in 2001 In 1999 Davis wrote his autobiography Born to Play in which he credited Pete Rose for having faith in him and teaching him about the game He also had harsh words for 1996 Reds manager Ray Knight with whom Davis had had a memorable on field fight in 1986 11 He claimed Knight did not support his comeback and did not stand up for him in contract negotiations after the season Davis remains bitter about the Reds treatment of him after his World Series injury Davis was left behind in Oakland after the series and requested that the Reds provide a private plane to bring him back to Cincinnati Davis claimed that he was refused a number of times and made his own way home after the hospital released him According to former Reds teammate Paul O Neill Davis was the best hitter best runner best outfielder best everything he ever saw 12 As of 2017 Davis was a hitting instructor for Elite Development Invitational in Vero Beach Florida and seeks to promote more African American youth participation in baseball 13 Career statistics editIn 1 626 games over 17 seasons Davis posted a 269 batting average 1430 for 5321 with 938 runs 239 doubles 26 triples 282 home runs 934 RBI 349 stolen bases 740 bases on balls 359 on base percentage and 482 slugging percentage He finished his career with a 984 fielding percentage playing at all three outfield positions In 25 postseason games he hit 192 14 for 73 with 7 runs 2 home runs and 12 RBI In popular culture editDavis was the childhood idol of comedian Ron Sexton as well as his most famous character from The Bob and Tom Show Donnie Baker Donnie and Sexton frequently appeared in character in Davis s 44 Reds jersey and stated on numerous occasions that Davis was the most complete player he d ever seen Donnie claimed to have put a curse on former Reds owner Marge Schott after she did Eric dirty following the 1990 World Series He went on to claim that his alleged curse worked as she ultimately sold the team When arguing with his unseen neighbor to the north Tony Mitchell Donnie told Bob and Tom that he d crush Mitchell like Eric Davis crushed fastballs In real life Sexton named his first son Eric as a tribute to Davis 14 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Los Angeles portal nbsp Baseball portal 30 30 club Cincinnati Reds award winners and league leaders List of athletes on Wheaties boxes List of Baltimore Orioles awards List of Major League Baseball players to hit for the cycle List of Major League Baseball career home run leaders List of people from Los AngelesReferences edit Most Seasons with 20 Home Runs and 20 Stolen Bases a b Wiley Ralph May 25 1987 These are red letter days Sports Illustrated Retrieved May 31 2018 Newhan Ross May 10 1987 Strawberry and Eric Davis dream of playing together again Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 2 2017 a b c d e f g Posnanski Joe May 31 2018 TBT Eric the Red s epic 162 game run in 1986 87 MLB com Retrieved May 31 2018 Eric Davis Statistics Baseball Reference Rickey Henderson Statistics Baseball Reference Retrieved November 17 2014 Rare Feats in MLB History MLB com Single Season Leaders amp amp Records for Power Speed Baseball Reference com 1998 American League Batting Leaders Each team s longest hitting streak MLB com 1986 Ray Knight vs Eric Davis Fight BRAWL Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 via YouTube Holmes Dan December 10 2011 When Superman roamed center field for the Tigers detroitathletic com Archived from the original on October 9 2013 Retrieved August 16 2012 Elman Jake July 22 2017 Reds great Davis motivating youths at EDI Club Hall of Famer nurturing future of our game while serving as hitting coach MLB com Retrieved June 2 2018 Who was Ron Sexton aka Donnie Baker Know about the Comedian s family as he passes away at 52 The Economic Times 24 July 2023 Further reading editDavis Eric 1999 Born to Play with Ralph Wiley Viking Press ISBN 0670885118 External links editCareer statistics and player information from MLB or Baseball Reference or Fangraphs or Baseball Reference Minors or Retrosheet Awards and achievements Preceded byKevin BassSteve SaxTony Gwynn National League Player of the MonthJuly 1986April amp May 1987August 1988 Succeeded byDale MurphyTony GwynnKevin McReynolds Preceded byKelly Gruber Hitting for the cycleJune 2 1989 Succeeded byKevin McReynolds Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eric Davis baseball amp oldid 1215931742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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