Jeff Williams
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Hanshin Tigers — No. 54 | |
Relief Pitcher | |
Bats: Right | Throws: Left |
Major League Baseball debut | |
September 12, 1999 for the Los Angeles Dodgers | |
Selected MLB statistics (through 2006) |
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Games pitched | 37 |
Record | 4-1 |
ERA | 7.49 |
Teams | |
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men's Baseball | |||
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Silver | 2004 Athens | Team Competition |
Jeffrey F. Williams (born June 6, 1972 in Canberra) is an Australian-born, left-handed pitcher for the Hanshin Tigers baseball team. He is a specialist set-up pitcher, or closer.
Contents |
[edit] Olympics
Williams pitched for the Australian Olympic baseball team in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. The team placed 7th overall in the competition.
Williams again pitched for the Australian Olympic baseball team in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. The Australian team was awarded the Silver Medal in the competition after losing in the final to the team from Cuba. Willams was credited with two saves during the tournament, including the semi-final game against Japan where he prevented the Japanese team from scoring, preserving the 1-0 win.[1][2]
[edit] Professional career
Williams was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1996. Williams began his Major League Baseball career in September 1999 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and pitched for the Dodgers until September 2002. While with the Dodgers in 2000 and 2001, the tandem of Williams and fellow Australian Luke Prokopec gained considerable popularity in the Los Angeles area.[citation needed] However, the attention was short lived, as both moved on to other franchises.
In 2003 Williams signed with the Hanshin Tigers, and earned 25 saves as a closer (52 games), helping the Tigers win their first Central League championship in 18 years.
In the 2004, he pitched in 51 games, earning 14 saves. In 2005, he reverted to the role of set-up pitcher appearing in 75 games for the Hanshin Tigers, who won the championship.
Williams pitched for the Tigers again in 2006 and 2007, seeing action in 107 games (112 innings). He recently renewed his contract with the Tigers, though the details of the contract are not yet public. [3]
His performance in set-up pitching, combined with his set-up and closing pitcher teammate Kyuji Fujikawa and Tomoyuki Kubota, were well rekowned by fans and other teams. Their formation were later named JFK by their team, taking their initials with their pitching order (Jeff, Fujikawa, Kubota, it is noted that currently Fujikawa currently being the closer instead of set-up). The formation was one important element boosting Hanshin's countless victories, even they have a poor starting pitcher line (Hanshin's starting pitcher's team ERA in 2007 is 4.45, the worst in the league, but their overall ERA is 3.56, best in the league)
[edit] Collegiate career
Williams played college ball for Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana, from 1992 to 1996. In his senior year, Williams was selected as an NCAA Division I All-American; that year he registered 125 strikeouts and 12 wins. In 2004, he was inducted into the SLU Lions Hall of Fame.
[edit] Mitchell Report
On December 13, 2007, Williams was named as a player linked to performance enhancing drug use in the Mitchell Report for Major League Baseball. In the report, Kirk Radomski claims he sold the steroids Anavar and Dianabol to Williams. The document includes a photocopy of a February 2004 check from Williams to Radomski in the amount of $1,820 and mentions that Williams address and phone number were in Radomski's address book. Williams did not respond to a request to meet with Mitchell to address these accusations.[4]
After the Mitchell Report became public, Hanshin Tigers club president Nobuo Minami defended Williams stating
"I trust him, He (Williams) flatly denied the use of any banned substances and said he is ready to accept fresh checkups at any time."[5]
In Olympic competition and while playing in Japan, where they conform with Olympic testing standards, Williams has never tested positive for performance enhancing drugs.[6]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Nicole Jeffery and Peter Kogoy (2007-12-21). Strip baseball medals: Gosper. The Australian. Retrieved on 2007-12-27.
- ^ James Christie (2007-12-21). Australian Olympic silver under question. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved on 2007-12-27.
- ^ Tigers acquire veteran Atchison. The Japan Times (2007-12-20). Retrieved on 2007-12-27.
- ^ Mitchell Report pp. 227-8 (PDF).
- ^ Paul White (2007-12-24). Ripple effect felt in Japan over Mitchell Report. USA Today. Retrieved on 2007-12-26.
- ^ Ripple effect felt in Japan over Mitchell Report. USA Today (2007-12-24). Retrieved on 2007-12-26.
[edit] Sources
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube
- Historical Player Stats from MLB.com, Jeff Williams
- "Jeff William's Baseball Stats", Baseball Almanac.
- Japanese Baseball.com, Statistics for Jeff Williams
[edit] External links
- Japanesebaseball.com - Nippon Professional Baseball career statistics
- Hanshin Tigers website (Japanese)
- Jeff Williams supporters' website (English) (Japanese)
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