John Flaherty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Flaherty | ||
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Catcher | ||
Born: October 21, 1967 | ||
Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
April 12, 1992 for the Boston Red Sox |
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Final game | ||
October 1, 2005 for the New York Yankees |
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Career statistics | ||
Batting average | .252 | |
Home runs | 80 | |
RBI | 395 | |
Teams | ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
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John Timothy Flaherty (born October 21, 1967 in New City, NY) is a television baseball broadcaster and a retired major league player. Flaherty was a catcher, and last played in the major leagues for the New York Yankees. He attended George Washington University, graduating in 1988, and he batted and threw right-handed.
Drafted by the Boston Red Sox in 1988, he moved through the farm system and broke through with the Sox in 1992. He also played for the Red Sox in 1993, and in 1994 he was traded to the Detroit Tigers for Rich Rowland. In 1996, Flaherty had a 27-game hitting streak. This ranks as the third-longest hitting streak of all time by a catcher, behind only Sandy Alomar, Jr.'s 30-game streak and Benito Santiago's 34-game streak.
In 1996, the Tigers traded Flaherty to the San Diego Padres, along with Chris Gomez, for Brad Ausmus, Andujar Cedeno, and a minor leaguer. In 1997, the Padres traded Flaherty to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for Andy Sheets and Brian Boehringer. He played as the Devil Ray's everyday catcher through the 2002 season. As a member of the Devil Rays, he earned notoriety for breaking up a Pedro MartÃnez no-hitter in the ninth inning.
In 2003, he signed as a free agent with the New York Yankees. With the Yankees, he served as a back-up to regular catcher Jorge Posada. He is best known for a 2004 pinch-hit game-winning ground-rule double that ended a 13 inning game against the Boston Red Sox. In the 2005 season, Flaherty developed a good working relationship with pitcher Randy Johnson, and was paired with Johnson for most of the pitcher's starts that season.
He rejoined the Red Sox in December 2005, but announced his retirement March 7, 2006 during spring training with the team.[1]
Flaherty's career stats include a .252 batting average in 1,047 games and 849 hits, including 80 home runs.
Following his retirement, Flaherty joined the YES Network as a color analyst on Yankees Broadcasts. In addition to game commentary, Flaherty has also served the network as an analyst on the New York Yankees Pre-Game Show, Yankees Batting Practice Today, and the New York Yankees Post-Game Show. He has also appeared on the network's youth-oriented show Yankees on Deck.
John Flaherty is well known by his nickname "Flash". He is married to a former 7th grade math teacher, Alynne.[citation needed]