Tuffy Rhodes

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Karl Derrick "Tuffy" Rhodes (born August 21, 1968, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is a professional baseball player. currently playing his 11 season of professional baseball in Japan. He played 5 years in Major League Baseball before beginning his career in Japan..

Rhodes was an ambassador to the game of baseball and a class act while in Japan. He is the all time leader for foreign born players with 360 home runs in Japan. He carried himself with grace, and was one of the biggest superstars during his era in Japan. He was embraced for both learning to speak fluent Japanese as well as his home run records.

Prior to Japan, he was an outfielder who played in Major League Baseball for the Houston Astros, Chicago Cubs and Boston Red Sox from 1990-1995. In 1993, he hit an extra-inning home run to win the American Association championship for the Iowa Cubs.

A versatile reserve player, Rhodes was a good-fielding utility and left-handed pinch hitter. His only season of more than 250 at bats came with the 1994 Cubs. In that season, Rhodes became the first National League player to hit three home runs on opening day when he connected off Dwight Gooden at Wrigley Field.

In his major league career, Rhodes batted .224, with 13 home runs and 44 runs batted in, 74 runs scored and 14 stolen bases in 225 games played. Granted free agency after the '95 season, he signed with the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes of the Japanese Pacific League.

Unexpectedly, Rhodes went from zero to hero in Japan. A strict workout routine and adjustments in the batting cage made him a more complete and stronger hitter than he had been previously. In the 2001 season, he hit his 55th homer to tie Sadaharu Oh's Japanese League single season home run record, set in 1964. With five games to go, Rhodes would see few good pitches to finish the season. The following year Alex Cabrera tied the record, but he also was denied good pitches to hit late in the year.

After Orix refused to sign him to a multi-year contract, he signed a two year deal with the Yomiuri Giants of the Japanese Central League in 2004. A successful first year was followed by a difficult second year. He left the team halfway through the 2005 season due to injury, and was released in the off-season. In 2006, he tried to return to Major League Baseball with the Cincinnati Reds but was released by the team in spring training. After spending the rest of 2006 at home with his family, he returned to Japan in 2007, signing a one year contract with the Orix Buffaloes. Rhodes began the season with a bang by hitting a homerun in his first game, and connecting for two more in the next game on two consecutive at bats. According to manager Terry Collins, Rhodes still has an 'explosive' bat.

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