Travis Ishikawa

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Travis Ishikawa

Ishikawa with the Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates – No. 3
First baseman / Designated hitter
Born: (1983-09-24) September 24, 1983
Seattle, Washington
Bats: Left Throws: Left
MLB debut
April 18, 2006 for the San Francisco Giants
Career statistics
(through 2013 season)
Batting average .260
Home runs 19
Runs batted in 111
Teams

Career highlights and awards

Travis Takashi Ishikawa (Japanese: 石川隆, born September 24, 1983) is an American professional baseball first baseman in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization. He stands 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) tall and weighs 220 pounds (100 kg). He bats and throws left-handed. Previously, he has played for the San Francisco Giants, the Milwaukee Brewers, the Baltimore Orioles, and the New York Yankees.

Ishikawa grew up in Washington. He was drafted in the 21st round of the 2002 Major League Baseball (MLB) Draft by the San Francisco Giants out of high school. He made his Major League debut with the Giants in 2006, but it was not until 2009 that he made it to the major leagues full-time. He started 2009 as the Giants' first baseman but failed to produce offensively and was replaced part of the season by Ryan Garko. However, on defense he was third in the National League (NL) in fielding percentage. In 2010, he served as a pinch-hitter and defensive replacement for the Giants and won a World Series ring as the Giants won the 2010 World Series. Ishikawa was designated for assignment at the end of spring training in 2011 and spent the entire season in the minor leagues. In 2012, he signed with the Milwaukee Brewers, who used him mainly as a pinch-hitter and defensive replacement. Ishikawa spent most of 2013 in the minor leagues, though he played six games for the Baltimore Orioles and one game for the New York Yankees.

High school years

Ishikawa attended Federal Way High School in Federal Way, Washington, where he lettered in baseball, leading his team to the Washington State Class 4A Title as a junior in 2001 and to the title game as a senior in 2002.[1] He was drafted in the 21st round of the 2002 Major League Baseball (MLB) Draft by the San Francisco Giants.[2] The Giants gave him a $955,000 bonus to prevent him from attending Oregon State University. The bonus was the highest back then for a non-first-round player, cued on by the organization's approaching signing deadline. The Giants could afford to pay a 21st-round pick that much because their higher picks had signed quickly for routine bonuses.[3]

Minor League career

Ishikawa began his career playing for the rookie-league Arizona League Giants in 2002. He batted .279 with 10 runs scored, 19 hits, one home run, and 10 Runs batted in (RBI) in 19 games (68 at bats) before being called up to the Class A-Short Season Salem-Keizer Volcanoes of the Northwest League. With Salem-Keizer, he hit .307 with 14 runs scored, 27 hits, one home run, and 17 RBI in 23 games (96 at bats).[1][4] His performance helped Salem-Keizer win the Northwest League championship.[1]

In 2003, Ishikawa was initially assigned to the Class A Hagerstown Suns of the South Atlantic League. After he batted .206 with 20 runs scored, 40 hits, three home runs, and 22 RBI in 57 games (194 at bats), he was demoted to Salem-Keizer. In 66 games (248 at bats) with the Volcanoes, he batted .254 with 53 runs scored, 63 hits, three home runs, and 31 RBI.[1][4]

Coming into 2004, Ishikawa was ranked the Giants' seventh-best prospect by Baseball America.[5] He spent most of 2004 with the Suns, batting .257 with 59 runs scored, 92 hits, and 54 RBI in 97 games (355 at bats).[4] He tied with Nate Schierholtz for the team lead with 15 home runs, and he won the Hagerstown Player of the Month award in July.[1][6] In the last month of the season, Ishikawa was promoted to the Class A-Advanced San Jose Giants of the California League, where he batted .232 with 10 runs scored, 13 hits, one home run, and 10 RBI in 16 games (56 at bats).[4] He also played eight playoff games for San Jose.[1]

Ishikawa was ranked the 10th-best prospect in the Giants' organization by Baseball America entering 2005.[5] In 2005, he spent the entire season with San Jose. In 127 games (432 at bats), he batted .282 with 87 runs scored, 122 hits, and 79 RBI.[4] His 22 home runs ranked fourth in the San Francisco Giants' organization and tied with Bryan LaHair, Travis Metcalf, and Aneudi Cuevas for seventh in the California League.[1][7] He appeared in six playoff games, batting .217 with four RBI as San Jose won the California League championship.[1]

Major League career

San Francisco Giants

2006

Before the season, Baseball America ranked Ishikawa the number four prospect in the Giants' organization. He attended spring training with the Giants for the first time in his career.[8] He was recalled from the minors for the first time on April 18 when Lance Niekro was placed on the Bereavement List,[9] and made his major league debut the same day in a 74 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks.[10] His first big league hit came on April 19 as a pinch-hit single off Brandon Webb in a 103 loss to Arizona.[11] The next day, he returned to the minors to make room for Niekro.[12][13] On May 26, he was recalled when Daniel Ortmeier was sent to the minors.[14] He had his first big league start that day against the Colorado Rockies and had three hits, two doubles and three RBI in a 90 victory. After the game, Kevin Frandsen and Todd Greene gave him a pie in the face to celebrate.[15] After four games (during which he hit .500), he was returned to the minors on May 30.[16] He was recalled on June 13 when Niekro went on the disabled list again.[17] After six games on this stint, he returned to the minors on June 21 when Frandsen was recalled.[12][18] In the minor leagues that year, Ishikawa played for the Class AA Connecticut Defenders of the Eastern League. In 86 games (298 at bats), he batted .232 with 33 runs scored, 69 hits, 10 home runs, and 42 RBI.[4] In 12 games (24 at bats) with the Giants, he batted .292 with one run scored, seven hits, no home runs, and four RBI.[1] After the season, he played for the Scottsdale Scorpions in the Arizona Fall League.[19]

2007 (minors)

Ishikawa attended spring training with the Giants in 2007 but was reassigned to the minors on March 6.[20] He spent the entire season in the minors, splitting time between Connecticut and San Jose. He began the season with Connecticut, hitting .214 with three home runs and 17 RBI in 48 games (173 at bats) before suffering a knee injury. He was sent to San Jose on June 28 to recover from it, and he said that the Giants told him he would be promoted to Class AAA after a rehab assignment. However, he struggled and remained with San Jose for the rest of the year, batting .268 with 13 home runs, 34 RBI, and a .551 slugging percentage in 56 games (198 at bats).[4][21] He batted .241, hit two home runs, and posted five RBI in the playoffs as San Jose won another California League championship.[1]

2008

A baseball player with a black number 10 on the back of his uniform prepares to hit
Ishikawa with the Giants

In 2008, Ishikawa again attended spring training for the Giants and again began the season in the minors. On August 13, he was called up by the Giants to replace a slumping John Bowker as the Giants' starting first baseman, a position Ishikawa held for most of the remainder of the season.[22][23][24] Ishikawa hit his first major league home run on August 17 at Turner Field, a two run shot off Charlie Morton to right field in a 31 victory over the Atlanta Braves.[25] He set a career high by having three hits on September 12 and 14 against the San Diego Padres. In 33 games (95 at bats) with the Giants, Ishikawa batted .274 with 12 runs, 26 hits, six doubles, three home runs, and 15 RBI.[1]

Prior to his callup by the Giants, Ishikawa played for Connecticut and the Class AAA Fresno Grizzlies of the Pacific Coast League, batting .299 (121-for-405) with 69 runs, 35 doubles, 24 home runs, and 94 RBI in 112 games with both clubs. Initially, he was assigned to Connecticut, where he batted .289 with 16 doubles, 8 home runs, and 45 RBI in 64 games before earning a promotion to Fresno on June 20. In 48 games with Fresno, he batted .310 with 19 doubles, 16 home runs, and 46 RBI in 171 at bats.[4] He had the fourth-highest average, the second-most home runs, and the third-most RBI of players in the Giants' organization. In May and June, Ishikawa was awarded the Giants Player of Month title; from June 2 to 8 he was named the Eastern League Player of Week after amassing 10 hit in 22 at bats (.455 average) with three home runs and nine RBI.[1]

2009

Ishikawa retained the position of starting first baseman in 2009. In the first game of the season, Ishikawa had two hits, including a three-RBI triple in the first inning against Milwaukee Brewers' starting pitcher Jeff Suppan as the Giants won 106.[26] From May 25 through July 11, Ishikawa had his best stretch of the year, batting .326 while hitting seven home runs and driving in 17 runs.[1] He set a career high with four hits on May 25 and hit his first home run of the year, a three-run shot against Buddy Carlyle, in an 82 victory over Atlanta.[27] On July 3, he hit a ball that was originally ruled a double against Felipe Paulino, but the umpires changed it to a three-run home run after watching the replay as the Giants won 130 over the Houston Astros.[28] Ishikawa and Juan Uribe hit the Giants' first set of back-to-back home runs in 2009 against Josh Geer on July 9 in a 93 victory over the Padres.[29] Through July 26, he batted .269 with seven home runs and 30 RBI.[30] On July 27, the Giants traded for Ryan Garko from the Cleveland Indians, intending for him to replace Ishikawa at first base and provide more offense than Ishikawa had.[31] However, Garko struggled to produce offensively, and at the end of August Ishikawa began making most of the starts at first for the rest of the year.[30][32] On August 25, he snapped a 22 tie with a game-winning three-run eighth-inning home run against Jon Rauch as the Giants defeated Arizona 54.[33] In 120 games (326 at bats), Ishikawa batted .261 with 49 runs scored, 85 hits, 10 doubles, nine home runs, and 39 RBI. His batting average at AT&T Park was fifth in the National League (NL) for home stadiums at .349, but he batted .162 in away games. Defensively, his .996 fielding percentage was third in the NL behind Adam LaRoche's .999 and Todd Helton's .998.[1]

2010

The Giants made Garko a free agent following the 2009 season, but they signed Aubrey Huff to play first base.[34][35] As a result, Ishikawa spent most of 2010 pinch-hitting, backing up Huff, and entering as a defensive replacement at first base late in games.[36] Ishikawa hit his first home run of the year on April 7, against Jeff Fulchino of the Astros in a 104 victory at Minute Maid Park.[37] Huff began platooning in right field with Schierholtz (and later, with Andrés Torres) at the beginning of July, and Ishikawa got the starts at first base when Huff was in right field.[36][38][39][40] On July 3, Ishikawa hit his first career grand slam against Ubaldo Jiménez (who had a 141 record at the time) in an 118 victory over Colorado.[41] Ishikawa hit .290 with two home runs and 17 RBI in 36 games from July 1 through August 13, and he even saw his season batting average go over .300 at times during the stretch. However, the acquisition of José Guillén on August 13 moved Huff back to first base, which returned Ishikawa to a utility role. Giants' manager Bruce Bochy said, "[Ishikawa]'s done a nice job."[36][42]

Ishikawa ended up hitting .266 with three home runs and 22 RBI in 116 games (158 at bats) for the season.[43] He batted .315 as a pinch-hitter, which ranked seventh in the NL. In a reverse from 2009, he batted .326 on the road while only hitting .194 at AT&T Park.[1] The Giants won the NL West for the first time since 2003, and Ishikawa was on the Giants' active roster throughout their postseason run.[44] He had a pinch-hit double against Mark Lowe in Game 1 of the World Series against the Texas Rangers as the Giants won 117.[45] In Game 4, he got his first start of the postseason, playing first base in the Giants' 40 victory.[46] He earned a World Series ring as the Giants defeated Texas in five games to win their first World Series since 1954.[47]

2011 (minors)

After the final game of spring training in 2011, Ishikawa was designated for assignment and outrighted to the minors to make room for rookie first baseman Brandon Belt.[2] On April 24, Ishikawa hit a grand slam for Fresno against Kevin Mulvey in a 12-5 victory over the Reno Aces.[48] He did not appear for the Giants in 2011, spending most of the season with the Grizzlies. However, he injured his shoulder diving for a ball early in the year and underwent season-ending shoulder surgery in the summer of 2011.[49] In 56 games (175 at bats) for the Grizzlies, Ishikawa batted .251 with 21 runs scored, 44 hits, 14 doubles, three home runs, and 18 RBI.[4] On November 2, the Giants made him a free agent.[43]

Milwaukee Brewers

A baseball player with a white number 45 on the back of his navy-blue shirt prepares to hit
Ishikawa with the Brewers

Ishikawa signed a minor league contract with the Milwaukee Brewers on December 12, 2011,[50] and made the team out of spring training as a backup first baseman and pinch hitter.[51] On May 2, he became the starting first baseman for the Brewers after Mat Gamel tore his ACL.[52][53] He hit two home runs against Dillon Gee and had five RBI on May 15 in an 80 win over the New York Mets.[54] He batted .250 with four home runs and 14 RBI in his first 32 games before going on the disabled list on May 27 with a left rib-cage strain.[53][55] He returned from the disabled list on June 23, but by then Corey Hart had taken over the first base job, limiting Ishikawa to a reserve role for the rest of the year.[53][56][57] On October 3, the final game of the season, Ishikawa had four RBI against Andrew Werner in a 76 loss to the Padres.[58] In 94 games (152 at bats), he hit .257 with four home runs and 30 RBI.[1] On November 3, Ishikawa elected to become a free agent after being outrighted off the Brewers' 40-man roster the day before.[59]

Baltimore Orioles

On December 19, 2012, Ishikawa was signed to a minor league deal by the Baltimore Orioles.[60] He spent most of spring training with the team but was assigned to the Class AAA Norfolk Tides of the International League on March 27.[61] In 49 games (177 at bats) with Norfolk, he batted .316 with 56 hits, seven home runs, and 31 RBI.[4] Ishikawa was brought up from the Tides on June 18 when pitcher Miguel González was placed on the paternity leave list; Ishikawa was called up to play designated hitter and give Chris Davis days off at first base.[62] Ishikawa appeared in six games for the Orioles, getting two hits in 17 at bats with 1 RBI.[1] The Orioles designated him for assignment on June 29 to make room for Jair Jurrjens on the roster.[63]

New York Yankees

Ishikawa was claimed off assignment waivers by the New York Yankees on July 7.[64] He appeared in one game for the Yankees, starting at first base and going 0-2 with two strikeouts in a 51 loss to the Kansas City Royals.[65] On July 14, Ishikawa cleared waivers and elected free agency after being designated for assignment when Derek Jeter returned from the 60-day disabled list.[66]

Chicago White Sox

On July 18, 2013, Ishikawa signed a minor league deal with the Chicago White Sox and was assigned to the Charlotte Knights of the International League.[67] In 34 games with the Knights (120 at bats), he batted .250 with 30 hits, two home runs, and 23 RBI. His combined totals between Norfolk and Charlotte were a .290 batting average, 86 hits, nine home runs, and 54 RBI in 83 games (297 at bats).[4]

Pittsburgh Pirates

Ishikawa signed a minor league deal with the Pittsburgh Pirates on December 18, 2013.

Personal life

Ishikawa's father is a third generation Japanese-American (Sansei) and his mother is European-American. His paternal grandparents were held in an internment camp in Colorado during World War II.[68] He met his wife, Rochelle, a dental assistant, after being hit by a pitch in the face in his first game with San Jose. They have a daughter who was born on Ishikawa's 25th birthday, September 24, 2008.[69] Ishikawa became a Christian in 2007, which he believes helped him out of his slump that year. He says, "Faith will always be the biggest part of anything that happens."[21]

References

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