Ryan Ludwick | |
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Free agent | |
Right fielder | |
Born: July 13, 1978 Satellite Beach, Florida |
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Bats: Right | Throws: Left |
MLB debut | |
June 5, 2002 for the Texas Rangers | |
Career statistics (through September 24, 2011) |
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Batting average | .262 |
Home runs | 117 |
Runs batted in | 449 |
Hits | 688 |
Teams | |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Ryan Andrew Ludwick (born July 13, 1978) is a Major League Baseball right fielder. His brother Eric played four seasons in Major League Baseball as a pitcher.
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Ludwick attended Durango High School in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Ludwick played for the UNLV Rebels for three seasons. He was named to the Baseball America all-Freshman team in 1997 after batting .354 with 16 home runs and 68 RBI and was All-WAC in 1999, hitting .381 with 13 home runs and 69 RBI. Ludwick had a .363 career batting average at UNLV.[1]
Ludwick was chosen in the second-round (60th overall) of the 1999 Major League Baseball Draft by the Oakland Athletics. He was traded to the Texas Rangers before the 2002 season, along with Gerald Laird, Jason Hart, and Mario Ramos, for first baseman Carlos Peña and pitcher Mike Venafro.
Ryan Ludwick belongs to a very tiny group of Major League Baseball players: he bats right-handed and throws with his left. In the entire history of Major League Baseball through the 2008 season, and including the National Association of 1871-75 (not currently counted as a major league by MLB), only 57 players who played at least half their games at a position other than pitcher batted right and threw left. The most famous individual in this exclusive group is Hall-of-Fame outfielder Rickey Henderson.[2]
Ludwick made his major league debut with the Rangers in 2002, but his season was cut short when he fractured his hip the same year, an injury which significantly hampered his career. In 2003, Ludwick was traded by the Rangers to the Cleveland Indians for pitcher Ricardo Rodríguez and outfielder Shane Spencer. He was designated for assignment and sent to Triple-A in June 2005
Ludwick spent the 2006 season playing for the Toledo Mud Hens, the Triple-A affiliate of the Detroit Tigers, and was named to the International League team for the 2006 Triple-A All-Star Game. Ludwick enjoyed great success in the Detroit organization, but due to a surplus of outfielders, Detroit made the decision to not offer Ludwick a new contract.
In 2007, Ludwick was invited to spring training by the Cardinals and started in Triple-A Memphis. On May 6, 2007, Ludwick was promoted to the Cardinals after Preston Wilson went on the DL. In the 29 games preceding Ludwick's promotion, he hit .340 with 8 home runs at Memphis.
His fast start in 2008 earned him an everyday player role. Ludwick was named to his first All-Star game on July 6 at Yankee Stadium in New York City. He won the National League Player of the Week Award for July 27-August 2. On August 14, Ludwick hit his 29th home run[3] of the 2008 season; this broke the record for the most home runs in a season by a player who throws left-handed yet bats right-handed previously held by Rickey Henderson.[4]
Ludwick would go on to win a Silver Slugger Award at the end of the 2008 season for his offensive performance along with fellow outfielders Matt Holliday and Ryan Braun. That year, Ludwick hit 37 home runs, 40 doubles, 3 triples and a solid .299 Batting Average.[5]
After his breakout season of 2008, Ludwick started out 2009 with a solid April, posting similar figures to his 2008 season by hitting .297 with five home runs, and 19 RBIs. He was then slowed by a strained right hamstring which placed him on the DL for 15 games. After returning from his injury, Ludwick struggled with a .200 average during the month of June. He had a productive July, hitting .340, with six home runs and a league-leading 28 RBIs, landing him NL Player of the Month honors.[6] This gave the Cardinals 3 out of the last 4 NL Player of the Month awards, coupled with Albert Pujols's awards in April and June. At the end of the 2009 season Ludwick finished batting .265 with 22 home runs and 97 RBIs. Ludwick is primarily a right fielder, but also gets playing time in left field and occasionally in center field.
During the 2010 offseason, Ludwick and the Cardinals were able to avoid arbitration, reaching an agreement on a one-year contract worth $5.45 million for 2010.[7] Through mid-June, he batted .451 with runners in scoring position, second-best among all MLB players.[8] Additionally, he batted .476 with 11 RBIs with runners in scoring position and two out.[9] His strong performance with runners in scoring position lead to him being placed in the cleanup role on June 14 against the Seattle Mariners. The move paid off as he hit a 3-run home run in his first at bat, and went 2-for-4 in the game.[10]
Ludwick was traded to the San Diego Padres in a three team deal on July 31, 2010, which sent starting pitcher Jake Westbrook and minor leaguer Nick Greenwood to the St. Louis Cardinals and Corey Kluber to the Indians.[11]
Upon his first at-bat back in St. Louis, as a Padre, he received a standing ovation from the St. Louis crowd, and Ludwick tipped his cap to the crowd in return.
His stats took a hit in 2011 due to lack of production at the Padres home field, Petco Park. At the end of his tenure as a Padre, Ludwick was hitting .238, but with 11 home runs and 64 runs batted in and 42 runs scored. He accounted for 25.3 percent of the Padres' runs. By comparison, Adrian Gonzalez accounted for 23.6 percent of the Padres' runs in 2010.[12][13]
In the final hour of the 2011 MLB non-waiver trading deadline on July 31st, San Diego traded Ludwick to the Pittsburgh Pirates for a player to be named later. [14][15]
Ludwick and his wife, Joanie, reside in Georgetown, Texas, and have one son, Stetson Tyler.[16]
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded by Albert Pujols |
National League Player of the Month July, 2009 |
Succeeded by Ryan Howard |
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