Mark Quinn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mark Quinn | ||
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Outfield | ||
Born: May 21, 1974 | ||
Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
September 14, 1999 for the Kansas City Royals |
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Final game | ||
June 7, 2002 for the Kansas City Royals |
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Career statistics | ||
Batting Average | .282 | |
Home Runs | 45 | |
Runs Batted In | 167 | |
Teams | ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
- You may also be looking for the British contemporary sculptor Marc Quinn
Mark David Quinn (born May 21, 1974 in La Mirada, California) is a former Major League Baseball outfielder and right-handed batter who played for the Kansas City Royals. Quinn was drafted in the 11th round of the 1995 Amateur Draft after playing two seasons for the Rice University Owls. He played for the Royals between 1999-2002. On July 8, 2006 he signed a minor league contract with the Toronto Blue Jays organization. He was released one month later, and retired for good prior to the 2007 season.
[edit] Career
In 1998, Quinn led the Texas League in batting average when he hit .349 for the Wichita Wranglers. He captured a second minor league batting crown the following year, posting a .360 average for the Omaha Golden Spikes of the Pacific Coast League.
On September 14, 1999 Quinn became just the third player in MLB history to hit two home runs in his major league debut, joining Bob Nieman (1951) and Bert Campaneris (1964). In 2000 Quinn became the Royals regular leftfielder. He hit .294 with 20 home runs, earning him the Sporting News American League Rookie Player of the Year and a spot on the 2000 Topps All-Star Rookie Team. Quinn split the 2001 season between rightfield, leftfield, and designated hitter. His production at the plate dropped to 17 homers and a .269 average. By 2002 Quinn only appeared in 23 games for the Royals and hit just .237 in what would be his final year in the majors.
After the Royals released him during Spring Training of 2003, Quinn played in the San Diego Padres, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, St. Louis Cardinals, and Chicago White Sox organizations, along with a stint for the Long Beach Armada of the independent Golden Baseball League.
In four seasons with the Royals, Quinn batted .282 with 45 home runs, 167 RBI, 153 runs, 72 doubles, five triples, and 17 stolen bases in 293 games.
Quinn's 45 career home runs surpassed fellow Royals alumnus Jamie Quirk's total of 43, giving him the most home runs all time for a player who's last name begins with a "Q".
[edit] Sources
- Biographical information from BR Bullpen
- Statistical information from Baseball-Reference