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Tony Graffanino
Tony Graffanino 2007.jpg
Graffanino with the Brewers in 2007
Infielder
Born: (1970-06-06) June 6, 1970 (age 42)
Amityville, New York
Batted: Right Threw: Right 
MLB debut
April 19, 1996 for the Atlanta Braves
Last MLB appearance
April 26, 2009 for the Cleveland Indians
Career statistics
Batting average     .265
Home runs     58
Runs batted in     302
Teams

Anthony Joseph Graffanino (pron.: /ˌɡræfɨˈnn/; born June 6, 1972) is a former American Major League Baseball second baseman, third baseman, and shortstop. Though he never officially retired, Graffanino has not played since 2009.

Contents

Career [edit]

Graffanino is primarily a contact hitter (just 481 strikeouts in 2787 big-league at-bats) who is able to get on base (career .336 OBP) – and his speed is above average, with 53 stolen bases in 78 attempts. He excels as a situational hitter, being capable of hitting behind the runner and dropping down a bunt. As a fielder, he has the ability to play every infield position and left field. He has an above-average arm, which helps him in the LF and on the left side of the infield.

During Graffanino's minor league career, he spent time with Pulaski in 1990, the Idaho Falls Braves of the Pioneer League in 1991, the Macon Braves of the South Atlantic League in 1992, the Durham Bulls in 1993 and the Greenville Braves of the Southern League in 1994.

After spending three years with the Atlanta Braves, 2 12 seasons with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and another 3 12 with the Chicago White Sox, Graffanino played only second base for the Kansas City Royals in 2004, but moved around more in 2005. Obtained by the Boston Red Sox for Chip Ambres and Juan Cedeño after the All-Star Game,[1] he started at second base following the cut of Mark Bellhorn.

In 2005, Graffanino hit .298 for the Royals and .319 with the Red Sox for a combined .309 (117-for-379), a career high. He also posted career numbers in RBI (38), runs (68), doubles (17), games (110), and hits. He received some notoriety, particularly in New England, for making an error in the fifth inning of Game Two of the 2005 American League Division Series which led to three unearned runs. The runs came on a two out, three run home run by White Sox 2B Tadahito Iguchi which proved to be the game-winning hit.[2] The Red Sox were swept in that series.

Graffanino was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers at the 2006 All-Star Break for left-handed pitcher, Jorge De La Rosa.

In 2007, Graffanino struggled to begin the year, but after the call up of talented prospect Ryan Braun, Graffanino seemed to be invigorated and raised his sub .200 batting average to over .240 over a month's time. He slugged nine home runs in only 231 at bats that season. But on August 8, Graffanino tore his ACL, ending his season with a .238 batting average. After the 2007 World Series, he officially became a free agent.

On June 24, 2008, he signed a minor league contract with the Cleveland Indians. He hit .315 in 25 games and became a free agent at the end of the season. In February 2009, he re-signed with the Indians. In October 2009 Graffanino became a free agent.

Facts [edit]

  • Graffanino has been very active in the community during his career. In 2002, he coordinated and led baseball clinics for boys and girls from Mercy Home at U.S. Cellular Field and signed autographs at the James R. Thompson Center to promote the need for organ donors.
  • Graffanino was born Anthony Graffagnino but dropped the "g" after numerous mispronunciations from minor league announcers.
  • Grew up in East Islip, New York, also home town to football great Boomer Esiason.
  • Graffanino lives with his wife, Nicole, and two sons, A.J. and Nicholas, in Arizona.
  • Made the first error in the history of the new Yankee Stadium (April 16, 2009).

References [edit]

  1. ^ Cafardo, Nick (July 20, 2005). "It's a Busy Day For Dealing; Graffanino and Hyzdu Aboard; Embree is Out". The Boston Globe. p. F.5. Retrieved November 29, 2011.  (subscription required)
  2. ^ Jenkins, Lee (6 October 2005). "Red Sox Create Another Moment of Infamy". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 June 2010. 

External links [edit]


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Graffanino — Please support Wikipedia.
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20 videos foundNext > 

Tony Graffanino grounding out to the shortstop

Walkoff single, Rockies at Brewers, 7/14/2007

Tony Graffanino hits a little liner over a drawn-in infield to drive in Geoff Jenkins; Brewers win 2-1 in 10 innings.

Tony Graffanino Quotes

What was your favorite Tony Graffanino quote? 'Like' and leave a comment below, then jump over to http://quotetank.com/quotes-by/tony-graffanino and make a l...

Streaker trick

Trick.

Tony Roberts Quotes

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LIL TONY 2 STEP

Milwaukee Brewers 2007

Corey Hart singles with 2 outs to drive in Tony Graffanino to put the Brewers ahead 2-1 in the 4th inning. July 15, 2007. Miller Park, Milwaukee, WI.

Anthony Jerrall Pitching

Anthony Pitching.

Andy Marte hits a double

andy marte gets a double in the second inning. I completely messed up this play because i was zoomed in too much =( sorry for the inconveniance.

Ryan Armour Quotes

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2 news items

 
Detroit Free Press
Tue, 14 May 2013 10:07:19 -0700

“He has been a serial page turner from the day he retired Tony Graffanino on a foul pop and D'Angelo Jimenez on a double-play grounder to record his first career save for the Arizona Diamondbacks against the Chicago White Sox in June 2003,” Crasnick ...
 
ESPN Deportes
Tue, 14 May 2013 12:56:17 -0700

Siempre ha logrado pasar rápido la página desde el día en que retiró a Tony Graffanino con un elevado de foul y a D'Angelo Jiménez con un rodado para doble matanza para conseguir el primer salvamento de su carrera para los Diamondbacks de Arizona ...
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