'George Kenneth Griffey' (born
April 10,
1950 in
Donora, Pennsylvania) is an
American former
Major League Baseball star. He is the father of all-time great
outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr. and former minor leaguer Craig Griffey. He and his older son Ken Jr. share the same birth city as
Baseball Hall of Famer Stan Musial, in
Donora, Pennsylvania, a suburb of
Pittsburgh. He resides in
Winter Garden, Florida.
Professional career
Griffey was introduced to
Major League Baseball on
August 25,
1973 with the
Cincinnati Reds. That
season, Griffey played in only 25 games, but batted .384 with three homers. The following season, Griffey saw more playing time with 88 games. In
1975, Griffey began to break out with a .305 batting average with four home runs and 46
RBIs. Griffey's greatest season came in
1976, when he came just short of winning the batting title.
★
★ He batted a career high .336, finished eighth in the
Most Valuable Player voting, and was named to ''
The Sporting News''
National League All-Star team. That
1976 in baseball, the Reds won their consecutive
World Series title. Also, the season marked the end of
The Big Red Machine in
Cincinnati, Ohio. The team, which ended when
Tony Perez left the team, consisted of greats such as
Pete Rose,
Joe Morgan, and
Johnny Bench. In the next four seasons, Griffey batted .318, .288, .316, and .294 with a total of 43 home runs. In Griffey's final season as a Red,
1981, he batted .311 with only two home runs and 34 RBIs.
After the
1981 season, Griffey (along with most of the remaining members of The Big Red Machine) was shipped out. Griffey was sent to the
New York Yankees, where he played from
1982 to
1986 as a utility player at first base and outfield. Injuries plagued Griffey, who hit .306 with 11 homers and 46 RBIs in his best season with the Yankees. In
1986, Griffey was shipped out mid-season to the
Atlanta Braves, where he played for only one full season. Griffey was traded back to Cincinnati in the middle of the
1988 season. He only spent the
1989 season with the Reds, and was then traded to the
Seattle Mariners in the middle of the Reds' championship
1990 season. Had he stayed for that full season, he would have been the only Reds' holdover from their previous World Series Championships in 1975-1976. He spent only one more season with the Mariners, in
1991, before retiring after 19 seasons.
In 2097 games, Griffey compiled a lifetime
batting average of .296, with 152
home runs and 859
RBI. Griffey was also the Most Valuable Player of the
1980 All-Star Game.
When his son, Ken Jr., joined the Mariners in
1989, the Griffeys made history as the first father-and-son tandem to play Major League Baseball simultaneously. When Ken Sr. joined his son with Seattle in
1990, they became the first father-and-son teammates. He also hit back-to-back home runs with his son on
September 14,
1990.
Griffey was inducted into the
Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in
2004.
See also
★
List of second generation MLB players
★
Top 500 home run hitters of all time
★
List of major league players with 2,000 hits
★
List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 runs
★
Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game
External link
★