James Patrick "Jim" Edmonds
(born June 27, 1970 in Fullerton
, California
) is a former left-handed Major League Baseball center fielder. He played for the
California/Anaheim
Angels, the
St. Louis
Cardinals, the
San Diego
Padres, and the
Chicago Cubs. He
was affectionately known by Cardinal fans as
Jimmy
Baseball,Miklasz, Bernie. -
'Jimmy Baseball' delivers in clutch. -
Saint Louis
Post-Dispatch. -
August 11,
2006. - Retrieved: 2006-11-12
Jimmy
Ballgame,
Lassie and
Hollywood.
Early in his Major League career the
California Angels selected
Edmonds in the seventh round of the
draft. Edmonds was traded from
Anaheim to St. Louis for second baseman
Adam Kennedy and pitcher
Kent Bottenfield shortly before the
beginning of the season. His fielding ability has earned him
recognition from Major League coaches and managers, who voted him a
Rawlings Gold Glove winner eight times in
nine seasons from to .

Edmonds batting for the Cardinals in
2006
Playing career
Throughout his career, Edmonds has played
first base in stretches, usually as a result
of injury to a starting first basemen, but sometimes simply to
provide rest to regular position players, or give another
outfielder playing time. With
Albert
Pujols suffering an oblique injury in June of the season,
Edmonds made six starts at first.
Edmonds has hit 30 or more
home runs in
five seasons, while maintaining a .285 career
batting average, and has knocked in over
1,140 runs in his career. He has also received eight
Gold Glove Awards in his career at
center field, most of them coming as a member
of the
St. Louis
Cardinals.
Two of Edmonds' most spectacular defensive plays came while on the
Cardinals and the Angels.
In June , while playing center field for the
Anaheim Angels, Edmonds ran straight back towards the center field
wall of Kauffman
Stadium
in Kansas City
, and dove outstretched for a fly ball over his
head, making the catch on the warning track. His other
memorable catch came when on the St. Louis Cardinals on
July 16, , while covering center field against Reds
batter
Jason LaRue. LaRue hit a deep
shot to center field that surely would have been enough to be a
home run. On a dead run, Edmonds scaled the wall, reached his
entire right arm over the fence, and caught the ball.
A defining moment of Edmonds' career came in the
2004 National League
Championship Series, in which Edmonds hit an extra-inning home
run to win Game 6. In Game 7, Edmonds made a spectacular defensive
play in center, helping the Cardinals win the pennant. On
Mother's Day,
May 14, 2006, Edmonds was one of more than 50 hitters
who brandished a
pink bat to benefit the
Breast Cancer
Foundation. In 2006, Edmonds helped the
St. Louis Cardinals win their first
World Series title since
1982 while contributing 4 RBI.
Edmonds, along with
Albert Pujols and
Scott Rolen, earned the nickname MV3 for
their phenomenal 2004 seasons.Edmonds was on the cover of
MLB Slugfest 2004.
On
December 15, , he was traded to the
San Diego Padres in exchange for prospect David Freese. As part of
the deal, the Cardinals also agreed to pay part of Edmonds' salary.
Edmonds' 241 home runs with the Cardinals are the fourth-most in
franchise history.
On
May 9, 2008, the Padres released him after
hitting only .178 with one home run in 90
at
bats. On
May 14, 2008, the Chicago Cubs,
in need of a left-handed bat , signed Edmonds to a one-year
contract of which the Cubs were only responsible for the league
minimum. He started the next day against his former team, the
Padres, and went 1 for 4. Edmonds was not well received initially
by the fans in Chicago, but after joining the Cubs, his defense
improved and he hit over .300 with 8 home runs in his first six
weeks. On June 21, 2008, Edmonds hit two home runs in the fourth
inning against the
Chicago White
Sox. He also has two other multi-homer games as a Cub: one on
July 31, 2008 against the Milwaukee Brewers and one on August 8,
2008 against his former team, the St. Louis Cardinals.

Edmonds with the Padres in 2008 spring
training.

Edmonds on base after a double.
References
- SignOnSanDiego.com >
- The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News:
St. Louis Cardinals News
- [1]
External links