Mike Jacobs (baseball player)
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Florida Marlins — No. 17 | |
First base | |
Bats: Left | Throws: Right |
Major League Baseball debut | |
---|---|
August 21, 2005 for the New York Mets | |
Selected MLB statistics (through 2006) |
|
Batting average | .271 |
HR | 31 |
RBI | 100 |
Michael James Jacobs (born October 30, 1980, in Chula Vista, California) is a baseball first baseman and catcher who plays for the Florida Marlins.
Jacobs attended Hilltop High School in Chula Vista and Grossmont Junior College in El Cajon, California, before being selected by the New York Mets in the 38th round of the 1999 amateur draft and signed as an infielder.
Over his first four years in the minor leagues, Jacobs developed into a solid power-hitting prospect. In 2003, after a successful year with the AA Binghamton Mets, he won the Sterling Award for top minor league player in the Mets organization. However, in May 2004, while playing for the AAA Norfolk Tides, Jacobs suffered an arm injury and underwent surgery for a torn labrum, which ended his season prematurely. He returned to Binghamton in 2005, continuing his success at the plate. But because of his injury and his mediocre defense as a catcher, Jacobs spent much of the 2005 season learning to play first base.
Jacobs made his major league debut with the Mets on August 21, 2005, hitting a three-run pinch-hit home run against Esteban Loaiza of the Washington Nationals. He went on to hit three more home runs in his next three games, setting an all-time major league record for the most home runs by a player in the first four games of his career.
In only 30 games and 100 at-bats, Jacobs hit a very impressive 11 home runs and 23 RBI. Many people penciled him in as the Mets' first baseman for the 2006 season. However, on November 23, 2005, the Mets traded him and a minor-league pitcher, Yusmeiro Petit, to the Marlins in exchange for Carlos Delgado and $7 million.
Jacobs has been noted for having a nice fluid swing. Although he is primarily a power hitter, Jacobs has shown promise with regard to hitting for average. He also possesses the ability to hit the other way, a rarity for a rookie left-handed hitter.
Jacobs got married in December 2006 and resides in Chula Vista during the baseball offseason.[1]
Contrary to popular belief, Jacobs is not Jewish. This small detail was apparently not known to the Marlins when, on May 28, 2006, possibly as part of the team's Jewish Heritage Day promotion, they gave Jacobs t-shirts to young fans who attended the game.