Tag: Seattle Mariners

All In The Cards: A Remembrance Of Ken Griffey, Jr.

The card still sits back at my parents’ home, buried amidst a rubble of teals and navy blues.

The card has not been taken out in a long while, covered in a hard plastic sleeve and enclosed in a notebook buried somewhere in my old room. There are pages and pages filled mostly with the card’s look-a-likes in that notebook, most of which bear that same cross-stitching of a compass and a baseball.

‘Seattle Mariners’ is branded in the bottom-right corner.

The card was my most prized possession for an extended period in my life (before I discovered that balloons could be filled with water), and still remains one of my few links to a career filled with home runs, Gold Gloves, smiles, and an unexplainable importance to a game I grew to love.

The card presently runs for nearly $50 on the market. I can remember breaking the bank on it when I was five years old and my neighbors took me to my first (and last) card show, spending two hard-earned dollars  of my own money—foraging through couches for dimes and nickles is no walk in the park.

But the card is not for sale—it might never be.

There is so much tied to that card, to the player on it, that giving it up would essentially be giving up a small piece of what has molded sports into such a passion.

To recall the card’s description is to recall my first impression of Julia Roberts—easy:

The bat resting coolly on his shoulders. Sitting, relaxed, on top of the dugout bench in the Kingdome. The ultra-cool, David Duval-type sunglasses. A hat turned backwards. That ‘I-Can-Do-Anything’ smile. That swing.

Ken Griffey Jr. was baseball in the early 1990s, especially for a kid living in North Carolina with no distinctive ties to any team around. The Atlanta Braves were the closest major league club around, my two grandfathers created a split-decision between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Cincinatti Reds, and the nearest professional team was the Triple-A Charlotte Knights.

The Mariners were never playing on TV back then – which still inherently holds true – so the only way to see Griffey play was to tune in and hope Charley Steiner would narrate his feats on a 45-second clip of SportsCenter.

No all-access Major League Baseball packages. No Internet capabilities. No YouTube.

Forty-five seconds at a time, The Kid became the most iconic and memorable athlete throughout my life not named Jordan. And no, not Jordan Palmer.

Every quality about Griffey fit with all that is good in sports. He was the perfect poster boy for Major League Baseball: an easily-marketable image following the 1994 lockout, the good-looking and ultra-athletic black athlete baseball needed, and a man who unfailingly went about his Hall of Fame business with dignity and class.

Forty-five seconds at a time, Junior joined Jordan to create all the sports entertainment needed for every one of my childhood summers. So when it came time to head to that baseball card show with my neighbors, there were zero doubts as to who would be the beneficiary of my $2 bank account: any vendor selling a Griffey card.

For an athlete over two thousand miles away to have such a lasting effect on a young person, there must be something exceptional about them. Put it this way: Rick Mirer and Detlef Shrempf were not sparking any idolization, nor even thoughts of support, from me during their time in Seattle.

Griffey did.

Ken Griffey, Jr. was exceptional.

Yet, despite becoming the most important figure in baseball for an entire generation, he also became one of the most forgotten in sports history.
Somehow, in the circus of sports media and an ever-changing fan environment, one of the 10 greatest players to play the game became irrelevant. Injuries and “what-if” scenarios were a prime factor, but the shift into a new era left Griffey in a cold state of indifference.

As the Steroid Era came to a head, the apple of the baseball world’s eye for an entire generation faded in the mediocrity of Cincinnati baseball. The sports media’s gaze shifted to St. Louis, Chicago and San Francisco—as, admittedly, did my own.

Maybe if I had not kept that card buried in a notebook in my room during the time, I would not have lost sight of what baseball was really all about.

Junior was playing great baseball still, even spectacular at times – hitting .282 with 166 home runs between the McGwire and Sosa home run race in 1998 to Barry Bonds’ asterisk-laden, unbelievable 73 home runs in 2001. But the height of the Steroid Era belonged to the steroid users, and every other player just fell into a undeserved shadow.

Estimations and reevaluations will incessantly follow Griffey from his retirement yesterday to his sure-to-come Hall of Fame induction and beyond.

But this is not how I will remember him. My memories of George Kenneth Griffey, Jr. will not be a collection of “what if” scenarios, but rather a belief that I grew up watching a player that has solidified his place as one of the greatest in history.

My memories will be held in a different light.

…The bat resting coolly on his shoulders. Sitting, relaxed, on top of the dugout bench in the Kingdome. The ultra-cool, David Duval-type sunglasses. A hat turned backwards. That ‘I-Can-Do-Anything’ smile. That swing…

I’ll choose to remember 10 Gold Gloves and a three-time Home Run Derby champion that made every kid in every neighborhood get their aluminum bats and tennis balls out of the garage to see who could hit one farthest over the backyard fence.

I’ll choose to remember a Most Valuable Player.

I’ll choose to remember a father and son who made history.

I’ll choose to remember, “Here is Junior to third base, they’re going to wave him in. The throw to the plate will be late, the Mariners are going to play for the American League Championship! I don’t believe it! It just continues! My, oh my!”

And now he is retiring – “I don’t believe it”.

The other day, Griffey took the field for the last time, retiring at the age of 40. The sport will miss The Kid…I will miss The Kid, obviously.

While there are certain recollections that will still continue to lay hidden beneath pages in a dusty notebook for years to come, the memories tied to that first baseball card and what that player meant towards shaping an obsession with sports will be a part of me forever.

Thanks for the past 20 years.

Here’s hoping I never forget again.
(This article can also be found on my sports blog, Walking Into The Kicker)

 

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Ken Griffey Junior Phoned-In Retirement to Mariners on Drive To Orlando

There are a lot of ways to retire. Ken Griffey Jr. seems to have found a new one. A mobile retirement.

According to Seattle Mariner President Chuck Armstrong, talking on Seattle sports radio station KJR, Griffey’s agent, Brian Goldberg, called Armstrong Wednesday afternoon with some news. Junior was retiring, effective immediately.

A few minutes later, according to Armstrong, Griffey himself called to confirm it.

You imagine it went something like this:

‘So would you like to do a press conference Junior?’

‘Well, I can’t, exactly.’

‘Why not?’

‘I’m driving to Orlando.’

This was about four hours before game time Wednesday night. The Mariners were home for game three of a four game set with Minnesota.

Griffey, apparently, told no one. Not a teammate. Not his manager Don Wakamatsu. Not even the sleep coordinator in the Mariner’s clubhouse.

Just got in his car and started to drive.

‘Man, I just don’t feel like going to work today. Think I’ll go for a little drive. De-stress in the car. Turn on some music. Relax. Where should I go?’

For Griffey, apparently the answer was Orlando.

At some point in the drive he realized he might be missed at work. So he gave his agent a call. Instead of calling in sick, Junior decided to call in sick of it all.

Of course, I’m picking on one of the classiest guys to ever don a baseball uniform, so for that I apologize. But the way this whole retirement went down was just a little un-Junior-like.

Of course, the last year-and-a-third of his career has been very un-Junior-like. His return to Seattle has been one filled with few home runs, a low batting average, and tons of runners left on base. He has, in all fairness, smiled through it all. But something has been missing.

The retirement came, in the end, about eight months late. He should have hung it up after the disappointing season of 2009.

An unnamed source quoted in the Seattle Times on Friday said Griffey had been upset recently with the lack of playing time that he had been getting lately. Manager Wakamatsu confirmed in the paper that he had had discussions recently with Junior about his decreased playing time.

On KJR Armstrong said that he and Griffey had had talks in the offseason about a reduced role this season, and Junior was OK with that. Armstong said Griffey would do whatever they needed him to, even if that was just pinch hit.

Somewhere along the line Griffey changed his tune and became unhappy with the reduced role. So much so apparently that he got into his car and never turned back.

The Mariners complained that the hasty retirement decision didn’t even allow them to call someone up from the minors in time for the game that night. Kind of reminds one of a few weeks back when someone was sleeping in the clubhouse and left the team hanging when they needed a pinch hitter.

Again, I don’t mean to come down too harshly on a baseball great and a legend, but, something about the way this was handled by Junior was somewhat classless and a little childish.

The Mariner fans wanted a press conference. No such luck. They wanted to say goodbye and thanks at the game that night. No such luck.

Will Griffey be back this year to Safeco Field for a proper sendoff? His longtime agent Brian Goldberg, in a separate interview on KJR on Friday, said he wasn’t certain Griffey would be back this year for a tribute, but he hoped so.

Part of me can see Griffey’s side to this too. Maybe he isn’t a big one for goodbyes. Maybe he didn’t know he was quitting until he got in the car that day. Maybe he would have been too broken up at a news conference.

Maybe.

Or, maybe he was just really enjoying the drive.

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Ken Griffey Jr. Retires: Saying Goodbye To My First Sports Hero

I’d always assumed the first time I’d feel old as a sports fan would be when LeBron James retired.

Made sense, right? After all, The King and I were born just six months apart, and graduated high school the same year. We attended our senior proms just two weeks apart (although, as hard as this might be to believe, mine wasn’t a national news story).

And right as LeBron was getting his first taste of the NBA lifestyle after being drafted in 2003, I was getting my first taste of independence as a college freshman.

I always pictured the day, in 2019 or 2020 or 2021, when a graying, balding LeBron would step in front of the cameras and say that he couldn’t do it anymore, that he was retiring from basketball. Somewhere, a graying, balding me would be watching, holding back a tear, and realizing, “Man, I’m getting old.”

When LeBron James, the greatest contemporary athlete of my generation, couldn’t do it anymore, I’d always assumed that a little piece of me as a sports fan would retire with him.

Then Wednesday night happened.

While the nation was transfixed on Armando Galarraga-gate, another, smaller baseball headline scrolled across the bottom of our television screens. Ken Griffey Jr., my first sports hero, announced his retirement.

And man do I feel old.

For anyone under the age of 20 this might be hard to believe, but there was a time in the early and mid-1990s when there wasn’t a bigger superstar than Ken Griffey Jr.

I’m not talking about in baseball. I’m talking about in sports. Period.

(This is just PART of Aaron’s article on his boyhood hero, Ken Griffey Jr. To read the remainder, please click here or visit him at www.aarontorres-sports.com )

Sure basketball had Michael Jordan, but when he went from NBA superstar, to minor league baseball afterthought, back to NBA superstar in the blink of an eye, it rubbed a lot of people (including everyone in my household) the wrong way.

The NFL was in the midst of a semi-identity crisis, caught between the John Elway/Dan Marino era and the Peyton Manning era, with its best team—the Dallas Cowboys—having players who made more headlines for doing drugs and hanging with strippers than for anything they did on the field.

Tennis had Pete Sampras, but believe me when I say that he was about as fun to watch as a Matlock marathon on A&E. And remember too, this was pre-Tiger Woods, so I really couldn’t tell you who the best golfer in the world was. If only because nobody cared about golf.

But Griffey had a 100 percent approval rating. It didn’t matter if you were a Mariners fan, a Red Sox fan, a Yankees fan, whatever.

If you were between the ages of 6 and 13 in 1993, Griffey was your favorite player. End of story.

(Random side note: I remember a time, maybe in kindergarten or first grade, some friends and I were talking baseball at recess. Everyone was saying who his favorite player was. The conversation went like this: Griffey…Griffey…Griffey, Griffey…Griffey…until our last friend defiantly said “Frank Thomas.” We all reacted like he’d told us he was going in for a sex change operation. Seriously.)

Everyone wanted to be like “The Kid.” Everyone in Little League, fought over who got to wear No. 24. Everyone wanted to play center field.

I dressed like him one Halloween. I even coaxed my parents into buying me an $80 Griffey jersey at Sports Authority one day (why I remember the price, I have no idea). I wore the jersey on the first day of school, and pretty much every day after that too, until someone made fun of me for wearing the same shirt everyday.

Looking back, it probably was a bit unhygienic, but you know what? I think that little prick was probably just jealous he didn’t have a Griffey jersey of his own.

At his peak Griffey was bigger than any baseball player is now, and it wasn’t even close. He was on Wheaties boxes. He was one of the first athletes to have his own video game (this seems minor now, but believe me in 1994 this was a big deal). I even remember re-arranging my schedule on a Monday night so that I could catch an episode of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air that he made a minor cameo on. In the episode Hilary went ga-ga over him.

No more so than every little kid in America did at the same time.

On the field, Griffey was that transcendent athlete who endeared himself to young and old, black and white, male and female. He always wore his trademark backwards hat, accompanied by a huge smile, and carried himself confidently without ever being cocky. For us young folks he hit enough home runs to keep us coming back to our TVs every time he came to bat, and for the baseball purists he played about as flawless a center field as you’ll ever see…

(To read the REMAINDER of this article, and read the rest of Aaron’s thoughts on his boyhood hero, please click HERE or visit Aaron at www.aarontorres-sports.com

Also, for Aaron’s thoughts on all things sports, be sure to follow him on Twitter @Aaron_Torres and Facebook.com/AaronTorresSports )

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Seattle Mariners: Baseball’s Interpretation of Snow White

“Hi-ho. Hi-ho. It’s off to work we go.”

Those are the immortal lyrics sung by the seven dwarfs in the classic Disney movie “Snow White.”

These words represent exactly what the Seattle Mariners need to focus on if they want to salvage any dignity from their season.

Every manager, supervisor or human resource department in any industry deals with employee issues on a daily basis. All businesses have workers who are sleepy, dopey, bashful, happy, sneezy, or grumpy.

The movie “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” has found a new setting in the Pacific Northwest and an All-Star cast of new characters.

“Snow White” is played by GM Jack Zduriencik, in danger of being stalked by the wicked witch of free agency and being duped by the poison apple of baseball acquisitions gone wrong. The dwarfs love him, but they can’t necessarily protect him at all times. Evil lurks around every corner, and the magic mirror sees all.

“Doc” is played by Manager Dan Wakamatsu who is strong and steady but trying to get the most out of a rag-tag pack that needs to overachieve to be an average group of baseball major leaguers.

The rest of the cast was set at the beginning of the season:

“Dopey”: Eric Byrnes; Obviously.

“Bashful”: Ichiro; Solid and reliable but always somewhere out of the spotlight.

“Grumpy”: Milton Bradley; Duh.

“Happy”: Mike Sweeney; Clubhouse leader with smiles and fun attitude.

“Sneezy”: Erik Bedard; Always productive when allergies (injuries) aren’t acting up.

“Sleepy”: Ken Griffey, Jr.; Nap-Gate, hello?

 

The Mariners have the cast, but they’re not reading the same lines. They’re offensively inept. When they do manage to score runs, the pitching breaks down. The bullpen is struggling. Nobody is working together to get the job done.

Hi-Ho. Hi-Ho.

The M’s need to get it together, sing a song in unison, work as a team and protect each other from dragons, witches, poison and any other curveballs thrown their direction.

Problem is that the Mariners are down a couple dwarfs.

Ken Griffey Jr. retired yesterday. Erik Bedard was transferred to the 60-day DL last week. Eric Byrnes was released a month ago. Chone Figgins has failed to show up on the set at all—although his bat is auditioning for the vacated role of “Sleepy. Milton Bradley may not have the ability to show up on a regular basis regardless of his mindset.

Minor league players, injured stars and possibly a free agent or two (Jermaine Dye, Pat Burrell?) are auditioning for new roles. Avoiding new dwarfs like “Sleezy” (Ben Roethlisberger), “Crazy” (Jose Canseco), or “Liar” (Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds) will be paramount.

Whoever the Mariners are going to send to the mines, they just need to work together. Individually, they are nothing to write home about (Ichiro, Felix Hernandez and Cliff Lee excluded), but if they work together there are loads of gold to be mined.

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Ken Griffey Jr. vs. Albert Pujols? Griffey Gets the Nod

Ken Griffey Jr. has called it quits after 22 years. One of the best players of all time, “The Kid” has endured one too many injuries, aged one too many years, and sat on the bench one too many games. After a stellar career, he has decided to hang up his cleats.

Griffey was the Player-of-the-Decade in the 90’s: Voted to the All-Century Team when he wasn’t even 30 years old; 10 gold gloves; 40+ homers in 7 seasons; 56 HRs in 1997 and 1998; .300 batting average.

Griffey averaged 52 HR, 142 RBI, 19 SB, and had a .294 batting average from ’96-‘99! Yes, those were his average totals.   Nothing “average” about them.

In comparison, the current most feared hitter in baseball and Player-of-the-Decade for the 2000s, Albert Pujols has career highs of 49 HRs (2006), 137 RBI (2006), 16 SB (2009,2005), and .358 batting average. (2003).

That means for a four year period, Griffey averaged more homers, RBI, and stolen bases than Pujols has ever had in any given season. Pujols has won three MVP awards and Griffey won just once. After nine full seasons, Pujols is still almost 300 homers behind Griffey.

Pujols is a great, great player and that shows just how ultra-great Griffey was in his prime.

That’s why it was so hard to watch the 40 year old “Kid” struggle this year. He should have gone out last year as the catalyst for an over-achieving team while smacking 19 HR’s in just 117 games. Instead, he goes out after “Nap-Gate” and a .184 average with zero long balls for an under-achieving team about ready to dismantle players at the trading deadline.

If the Mariners could have turned it around prior to Griffey retiring it would have been unlikely. Without their veteran team leader, Hall of Fame voice in the dugout, fun-loving, practical joke playing mentor, the M’s success this season seems impossible.

Griffey hit 630 homers over 22 seasons, an average of one long ball every four games of his career.

He had four seasons where he played in 83 games or less, missing 370 games in the prime of his career due to various injuries. Had he played those games he would have likely hit 100 or more home runs.

Regardless of the injuries, his statistics place him among the best players in the history of the game; however, his achievements are much more impressive than his “numbers”.

“The Catch”, “The Double”, the smile, the leadership, the chemistry, the enthusiasm, and the savior of baseball in Seattle (and possibly for MLB after the 1994 strike season put many fans out of favor with baseball), all point to Griffey being much more than just a great baseball player.

He was arguably the greatest of the last 50 years: offensively, defensively, leadership.

Ken Griffey, Jr. will be missed in Seattle and in Baseball. He is the last chapter in the book of the Mariner’s teams of the ‘90s: Jay Buhner, Edgar Martinez, and Randy Johnson have a new teammate in retirement.

Thank you, Griffey, for all you gave to us. Good night and good luck.

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Growing Up With the Kid: How Ken Griffey Jr Has Affected My Life.

Like any kid who grew up in Pacific Northwest in the 1990’s, I idolized Ken Griffey JR.

He was everything that was right about the game of baseball. He had more fun than anybody on the field, always smiling with his signature backwards ball cap. His non-chalant swing seemed to launch homeruns that, to this day, still have yet to come down.

We felt like we grew up with him, like he was one of us. Just a big kid who loved to play a game. Our game. Baseball.

Where would we be without him? Would I be the die-hard fan that I am today?

Would I be on this website writing about the Seattle Mariners?

Would I still consider Opening Day better than Christmas, Halloween, Thanksgiving, and my birthday all rolled into one?

Doubtful.

Without Griffey, my baseball experience may be much different.

Without Griffey, perhaps I wouldn’t have been able to hold on to my love of the game after the Strike in 1994.

Without Griffey, would I still be able to love the game the way I do after the steroid era came to light, and I had to watch one after another of my heroes fall from grace?

Without Griffey, Would The Seattle Mariners even exist as a franchise today?

All questions I ask myself today as I write this article. All questions that I firmly believe have the same awnser.

No.

Thank you Ken Griffey JR. for you have made the game of baseball a joy for me, and many others.

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Ken Griffey Jr. Retires: The 10 Most Memorable Moments Of His Career

The day we thought would never come has arrived. Ken Griffey Jr. retired from Major League Baseball. We have watched Ken Griffey Jr. do things unlike any ballplayer in history. Twenty-one years and 630 home runs later, one of the greatest centerfielders of all-time is finally hanging them up.

Ken Griffey Jr. has given us a lifetime’s worth of baseball memories. Some of the best highlights in all of baseball over the last 20 years feature Ken Griffey Jr. From all of his countless great moments, here is a look at the 10 best moments of Ken Griffey Jr.’s career.

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Ken Griffey Jr. Made Baseball Cool

When I was growing up in the ’90s, there was one guy who every young baseball player wished he could be: Ken Griffey Jr.

He made baseball more exciting than anyone else in the game and kept my short attention span focused on a slow-paced sport.

I remember playing wiffle ball in my backyard, imitating Griffey’s swing, even though I was right-handed—that smooth left-handed swing with the one-handed follow-through, the prettiest swing in the history of baseball.

The way the guy played the game was amazing. He really was the first baseball player in his era to make the sport cool for a younger audience—an audience that had options to follow other action-packed sports. Griffey brought the action to baseball, steering the younger crowd towards the great sport of baseball.

I know this was the case, because I grew up in a time when football was emerging as the most popular sport in America. The one thing that kept me glued to baseball was the excitement that Griffey brought to the ballpark every night.

When Griffey would participate in the home run derby every year, everyone watched. He was the coolest cat out there with his backwards hat. He brought a certain swagger to a sport that had been lacking an attractive attitude for younger fans.

I wasn’t a Mariners fan, but Griffey was one of my favorite players. If it wasn’t for him, I might not be following the New York Mets the way I do today. He is the reason that I grew up with baseball.

If he never got hurt, there is no doubt in my mind that he would have broken the home run record and would have gone down as one of the statistically great players ever. 

We all know how important statistics are to baseball purists, so those of you that are statistically driven, don’t read this next part. 

I don’t care what the stats say—Ken Griffey Jr. was the greatest ever to play the game.

There was never anyone to play center field the way he did, and there weren’t many that were as physically gifted. If you just watched the way Griffey played the game, you didn’t need to look at statistics to know that he was the greatest outfielder ever. Based solely on the eyeball test, Griffey is the greatest ever.

The overall production of his career will land him in the Baseball Hall of Fame, without a doubt. But those numbers don’t do justice to what he brought to the sport every day.

And we all know the greatest baseball video game ever is Major League Baseball Featuring Ken Griffey Jr.

I could just keep going on about Griffey’s contributions to the sport, but as a journalist for a college newspaper, I feel that I am not worthy of commemorating a player such as him.

Major League Baseball is in a hangover right now; the sport is decreasing in popularity, whether it be due to the steroid era or the dominance of the NFL. If you go to baseball stadiums nowadays, you rarely see a sold-out crowd, and the TV ratings are down.

Baseball needs another Ken Griffey Jr. to step up and make it exciting again, for the future of the game. However, I don’t know if there’s a player like that right now. Albert Pujols is putting up inhuman numbers, and because of his stats he will go down as one of the greatest ever, but he’s nothing like Griffey.

Baseball needs someone to make the game cool again.

 

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Ken Griffey Jr., Cleanest Star of the 90s, Retires After 22 Seasons

The face of Seattle Mariners has called it quits. Ken Griffey Jr., the once bright-eyed youngster with a million dollar smile and backward hat, ended his career Wednesday, June 2.

Junior was the biggest star of the 1990s and one of the few who did it all naturally, as far as we know. Not once has Griffey even been suspected of doing performance enhancing drugs.

While blasting home runs with a perfect swing that seemed right out of a movie, Griffey’s swing and backward hat were emulated by every kid who loved the game of baseball. While other stars of his era have been accused of using PEDs, it was injuries that derailed a record setting career.

Griffey suffered several injuries early in his career in Seattle chasing down fly balls. After Griffey left the Mariners for the Cincinnati Reds, he saw his 2001-2003 seasons cut short with injuries.

In his heyday in the ’90s, Griffey was the man who save baseball in the Pacific Northwest. One of the defining moments in a hall of fame career was the 1995 American League Division Series.

Seattle was down 2-0 to the New York Yankees. The Mariners came back to tie the series at 2-2.

In the 11th inning of the deciding fifth game, with Griffey on first base, Edgar Martinez, another Mariners great, hit a double. Griffey raced around the bases to score the winning run putting Seattle in the American League Championship series.

In 1995, Griffey famous stated he would never play for the Yankees and cited the way his father and he were treated by the organization. Junior, along with Martinez, Randy Johnson, and Alex Rodriguez, helped sell out the Kingdome.

The Mariners of that era helped get the state legislature to help build the new stadium known as Safeco Field. With Griffey leading the way, many call Safeco “the house Griffey built.”

While in Seattle, Griffey would get his own Super Nintendo game, grace boxes of Wheaties, and become an endorser of Nike. Griffey was to baseball what Michael Jordan was to basketball in the ’90s.

After the 1994 labor dispute, Griffey would excite and bring fans back to baseball with his home run hitting swing. He would lead the Major Leagues with 56 home runs in 1997.

In 2000, Griffey left Seattle to become a Red in his home town of Cincinnati. Griffey would spend the later part of 2008 in Chicago after he was traded to the White Sox.

During his career, Griffey would be named a 13-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner,  three-time Home Run Derby Champion, and the 1997 MVP. He would have 2,781 hits, a lifetime batting average of .284, and hit 630 home runs.

Earlier this season it was reported that Griffey missed a chance to pinch hit because he was napping. The story caused controversy but was put to rest after the Mariners and Griffey denied the report.

There is no telling what kind of home run numbers Griffey would have put up his is abilities were not slowly robbed by injuries. Early in his career, he was on pace to surpass Hank Aaron on the all-time home run list.

Still, while Junior will not top that list, he will be known as the greatest player in the steroids era. Most of his peers have been accused of using PEDs and cheating the game of baseball.

Nearly all of the star players of the ’90s have been suspected of PED use but Junior. He might be the last player most fans can say with a certain amount of certainty that was the last clean hitter.

As fans, we will never forget how Griffey could chase down a fly ball and run up a wall to steal a home run. No one will ever forget Junior’s backward hat and most of all his perfect home run swing.

After 22 years in the majors, Griffey’s legacy is well cemented and now his Hall of Fame election is all that waits. For baseball fans, there is no joy in Mudville as mighty Junior has walked out.

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Going, Going, Gone: Ken Griffey Jr. Calls It a Career

Today marks the end of the career of one of most prolific hitters in the history of professional baseball as Ken Griffey, Jr. announced his retirement today after 22 years.

In an official statement, the 40 year-old Griffey stated:

“While I feel I am still able to make a contribution on the field, and nobody in the Mariners front office has asked me to retire, I told the Mariners when I met with them prior to the 2009 season and was invited back, that I will never allow myself to become a distraction. I feel that without enough occasional starts to be sharper coming off the bench, my continued presence as a player would be an unfair distraction to my teammates, and their success as team is what the ultimate goal should be.”

In 33 games this season, Griffey was homerless in 108 plate appearances with a .184 batting average and seven RBI.

It was hard for me to watch him struggle this season he was a shell of the Ken Griffey Jr. I remember watching as a kid.

He was arguably the most feared hitter in the Major Leagues during the ’90s.

His career achievements include 10 Gold Gloves, 13 All-Star selections, 7 Silver Slugger awards, and an AL MVP award in 1997. He won an ESPY for Male Athlete of the Year in 1998 and was named to the MLB All-Century Team in 1999.

He ranks fifth all-time on the career homerun list behind Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, and Willie Mays. He also scored 1,662 runs, collected 2,781 hits, drove in 1,836 runs, and hit for a .284 average in 2,671 career games.

What makes his numbers more impressive is the fact that Griffey was plagued by injuries in Cincinnati that forced him to miss 260 games from 2002 to 2004.

In his prime, Jr. was a pop culture icon. He starred on the cover of four video games by Nintendo from 1994 to 1999. In 1996, he was a major spokesman for Nike and was the central focus of the company’s “Ken Griffey, Jr. for President” ad campaign.

Griffey also made guest appearances in TV episodes of The Simpsons and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air as well as in the movies Little Big League and Summer Catch .

Most importantly, Griffey did it the right way. He has never been linked to steroids or other performance enhancing drugs. His character has never been questioned, and he is still a beloved figure in Seattle and across the Major Leagues.

His playing career might be over, but something tells me he’s not done with the game of baseball. There are plenty of teams that would love to have a guy like him as a bench coach or hitting instructor.

Congratulations on a great career Mr. Griffey—see you in Cooperstown.

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