James Edward Rice (born March 8, 1953) is a former
left fielder in
Major League Baseball.
Rice was inducted into
the Baseball Hall of Fame
on July 26, 2009, as the 103rd
member elected in by the BBWAA.
Jim Rice played his entire career for the
Boston Red Sox from
1974 to
1989. An 8-time
American League (AL)
All-Star, he was named
the AL's
Most Valuable
Player in after becoming the first major league player in 19
years to hit for 400
total bases, and
went on to become the ninth player to lead the major leagues in
total bases in consecutive seasons, and join
Ty
Cobb as one of two players to lead the AL in total bases three
years in a row. He
batted .300 seven
times, collected 100
runs batted in
(RBI) eight times and 200
hits four
times, and had eleven seasons with 20
home
runs, also leading the league in home runs three times, RBIs
and
slugging average twice
each.
In the late 1970s he was part of one of the sport's great outfields
along with
Fred Lynn and
Dwight Evans, who was his teammate for his
entire career; Rice continued the tradition of his predecessors
Ted Williams and
Carl Yastrzemski as a power-hitting left
fielder who played his entire career for the Red Sox. He ended his
career with a .502 slugging average, and then ranked tenth in AL
history with 382 home runs; his career marks in homers, hits
(2,452), RBI (1,451) and total bases (4,129) remain Red Sox records
for a right-handed hitter, with Evans eventually surpassing his
Boston records for career
runs
scored,
at bats and
extra base hits by a right-handed hitter.
When Rice retired, his 1,503 career games in left field ranked
seventh in AL history.
Notable seasons
Rice's three-run home run was the key blow in helping the
Pawtucket Red Sox (
International League) defeat the
Tulsa Oilers (
American Association) in
a 5–2 win in the 1973
Junior World
Series. After he was
AAA's
International League
Rookie
of the Year,
Most Valuable
Player and
Triple Crown
winner in 1974, he and fellow rookie teammate
Fred Lynn were brought up to the Red Sox at the
same time, and were known as the "Gold Dust Twins". He was promoted
in the Red Sox organization to being a full-time player in
1975, and finished in second place for the
American League's
Rookie of
the Year honors, and third in the
Most Valuable Player voting,
after he finished the season with 174 base hits, 102 runs batted
in, a .309 batting average and 22 home run; Lynn won both awards.
The Red Sox won the AL's East Division, but Rice did not play in
either the
League Championship Series or
World Series because of a
wrist injury sustained during the last week of the
regular season when he was
hit by a
pitch. A disappointed Rice appeared during the postseason
player introductions, in uniform and without the cast on his wrist,
which he had removed the night before, informing the team that he
was fit to play. Red Sox management, however, persuaded him that
healing would be in the best future interest of both Rice and the
team. The Red Sox went on to lose the World Series, 4 games to 3,
to the
Cincinnati Reds of the
National League (NL).
In
1978, Rice won the Most Valuable
Player award in a campaign where he hit .315 (third in the league)
and led the league in home runs (46), RBI (139), hits (213),
triple (15) and slugging average
(.600). He is one of only two AL players ever to lead his league in
both triples and home runs in the same season, and he remains the
only player ever to lead the major leagues in triples, home runs
and RBIs in the same season. His 406 total bases that year were the
most in the AL since
Joe DiMaggio had
418 in
1937, and it made Rice the
first major leaguer with 400 or more total bases since
Hank Aaron's 400 in
1959. This feat wasn't repeated again until
1997, when
Larry Walker had 409 in the NL. No AL player
has done it since Rice in 1978, and his total remains the third
highest by an AL right-handed hitter, behind DiMaggio and
Jimmie Foxx (438 in ).
In
1986, Rice had 200 hits, batted
.324, and had 110 RBIs. The Red Sox made it to the
World Series for the second time during
his career. This time, Rice played in all 14 postseason games,
where he collected 14 hits, including two home runs. He also scored
14 runs and drove in six. The 14 runs Rice scored is the fifth most
recorded by an individual during a single year's postseason play.
The Red Sox went on to lose the World Series to the
New York Mets, 4 games to 3, the fourth
consecutive Series appearance by Boston which they lost in seven
games.
Career accomplishments
Rice led the AL in home runs three times (1977, 1978, 1983), in RBI twice (1978, 1983), in slugging average twice (1977, 1978), and in total bases four times (1977-1979, 1983). He also picked up Silver Slugger awards in 1983 and 1984 (the award was created in 1980). Rice hit at least 39 home runs in a season four times, had eight 100-RBI seasons and four seasons with 200+ hits, and batted over .300 seven times. He finished his 16-year career with a .298 batting average, 382 home runs, 1,451 RBIs, 1,249 runs scored, 2,452 hits, and 4,129 total bases. He was an American League All-Star eight times (1977-1980, 1983-1986). In addition to winning the American League MVP award in 1978, he finished in the top five in MVP voting five other times (1975, 1977, 1979, 1983, 1986).
Rice is the only player in major league history to record over 200
hits while hitting 39 or more HRs for three consecutive years. He
is tied for the AL record of leading the league in total bases for
three straight seasons, and was one of three AL players to have
three straight seasons of hitting at least 39 home runs while
batting .315 or higher. From 1975 to 1986, Rice led the AL in total
games played, at bats, runs scored, hits, homers, RBIs, slugging
average, total bases, extra base hits, go-ahead RBIs, multi-hit
games, and outfield
assists. Among
all major league players during that time, Rice was the leader in
five of these categories (
Mike Schmidt
is next, having led in four).
In 1984 he set a major league single-season record by hitting into
36 double plays. His 315 career times grounding into a double play
ranked third in major league history behind
Hank Aaron and
Carl
Yastrzemski when he retired; he broke
Brooks Robinson's AL record for a
right-handed hitter (297) in 1988, and
Cal Ripken, Jr. eventually surpassed his
mark in 1999. Rice led the league in this category in four
consecutive seasons (
1982-
1985), matching Hall of Famer
Ernie Lombardi for the major league record.
The on-base prowess of Rice's teammates placed him in a double play
situation over 2,000 times during his career, almost once for every
game he played. Rice posted a batting average of .310 and slugging
percentage of .515 in those situations, better than his overall
career marks in those categories.
Rice could hit for both power and average, and currently only nine
other retired players rank ahead of him in both career home runs
and batting average:
Hank Aaron,
Jimmie Foxx,
Lou
Gehrig,
Mickey Mantle,
Willie Mays,
Stan
Musial,
Mel Ott,
Babe Ruth and
Ted
Williams. In
1981,
Lawrence Ritter and
Donald Honig included him in their book
The
100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time.
Rice was an accomplished left fielder, finishing his career with a
fielding percentage of .980 and had 137 outfield assists
(comparable to Ted Williams' figures of .974 and 140).
Although never
possessing great speed, he had a strong throwing arm and was able
to master the various caroms that balls took from the Green Monster (in left field) in Fenway Park
. His 21 assists in
1983 remains the most by a Red Sox
outfielder since
1944, when
Bob Johnson had 23. Aside
from playing 1543 games as an outfielder during his career, Rice
also appeared as a
designated
hitter in 530 games.
Rice's number 14 was retired by the Red Sox in a pre-game ceremony
on July 28, 2009.
Community activities
Rice was associated with a variety of charitable organizations
during his career, primarily on behalf of children, some of which
have carried on into his retirement. He was named an honorary
chairman of The
Jimmy Fund, the
fundraising arm of the
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in
Boston, in 1979, and in 1992 was awarded that organization's "Jimmy
Award", which honors individuals who have demonstrated their
dedication to cancer research. Rice is also active in his support
of the Neurofibromatosis Foundation of New England.
Rice's involvement
with Major League Baseball's
RBI program (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities) resulted in the
naming of a new youth baseball facility in Roxbury
, Massachusetts
in his honor in 1999. A youth recreation
center in Rice's hometown of Anderson
, South
Carolina
is also
named in his honor.
Rice's most notable
humanitarian
accomplishment occurred during a nationally televised game on
August 7, 1982, when he rushed into the stands to help a young boy
who had been struck in the head by a line drive off the bat of
Dave Stapleton. As other players and
spectators watched, Rice left the
dugout and entered the stands to help
4-year old Jonathan Keane, who was bleeding heavily. Rice carried
the boy onto the field, through the Red Sox dugout and into the
clubhouse, where the young boy could be treated by the team's
medical staff.
Retirement activities
Rice has served as a roving batting coach (1992-1994) and hitting
instructor (1995-2000), and remains an instructional batting coach
(2001-present) with the Red Sox organization. While the Red Sox
hitting coach, the team led the league in hitting in
1997 and players won two
batting titles. Since 2003, he's also been
employed as a
commentator for the
New England Sports
Network (NESN), where he contributes to the Red Sox pre-game
and post-game shows. He had a cameo appearance in the NESN movie
Wait Till This Year and
in the film
Fever Pitch. The
former slugger has been known to pass his wisdom on to the current
Sox players and stars from time to time. Rice was elected to the
Boston Red Sox Hall of
Fame when it first opened in 1995, and he is the 40th member of
Ted Williams' Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame, having been inducted
along with
Paul Molitor,
Dave Winfield and
Robin
Yount in 2001. On November 29, 2008, the Boston chapter of the
Baseball Writers
Association of America (BBWAA) announced that Rice would be the
recipient of the Emil Fuchs Award for long and meritorious service
to baseball.
During his Hall of Fame acceptance speech Rice revealed that he is
a devoted fan of
The Young
and the Restless, noting that he was watching the show when he
was informed of his acceptance.
Hall of Fame
While Rice was generally regarded as one of the better hitters of
his era based upon the statistics traditionally used by the BBWAA
to evaluate players' Hall of Fame qualifications, he was not
elected until his 15th and final year of eligibility, netting 76.4%
of the votes, in 2009. Over the years he was on the BBWAA ballot,
he received 3,974 total votes, the most ever collected by any
player that was voted on for baseball's highest honor. In
2006 and
2007, he received over
63% of votes cast. Rice just missed being elected in 2008 when the
count found him on 72.2% of the ballots, only 2.8% short of the
required 75%. Rice became the third enshrinee to get into the
shrine on his last chance on the ballot, and the first since
Ralph Kiner (1975).
Rice's delay in being elected to the Hall of Fame stemmed in part
from more current statistical analysis of player performance. This
analysis suggested that Rice's HOF credentials might have been more
questionable than they were considered during his career. The delay
may also have been related to his often difficult relationship with
the media during his playing career, many of whom are still voting
members of the BBWAA, and his career fading relatively early - he
last played in the major leagues at the age of 36. Some writers,
such as the
Boston Herald's
Sean
McAdam, said that Rice's chances improved with the exposure of
the "
Steroids Era" in
baseball. In the same article, McAdam expanded this subject by
adding: "In an era when power numbers are properly viewed with a
healthy dose of suspicion, Rice's production over the course of his
16 years gains additional stature. As such, he has received
increasingly more votes each year since the 2003 ballot, improving
his vote totals by 133 votes over the last five years on the
ballot. However, from several sabermetric standpoints (not
including
Black Ink,
Gray Ink or
HOF Monitor)
it can be argued that Rice falls short of his peers in the Hall of
Fame. In addition, the meme that was circulated by the Red Sox PR
department that Rice was the "most feared hitter of his generation"
was questionable, as he never came close to leading the league in
Intentional Walks and dominates the top 5 seasons in which a player
has grounded into the most double plays.
During the 2007 season, the
Pawtucket
Red Sox started a campaign to get Rice inducted which included
having fans sign "the World's Largest Jim Rice Jersey."
Although other players have compiled career statistics more similar
to Rice's, most notably 1999 Hall inductee
Orlando Cepeda, perhaps the most similar
player to Rice was 1968 inductee
Joe
Medwick. Both were power-hitting left fielders who batted
right-handed and played their home games in stadiums which favored
hitters, and both had a period of a few years in which they enjoyed
a remarkable burst of offense, each winning an MVP award at age 25
– Rice after collecting 400 total bases, and Medwick after becoming
the last NL player to win the Triple Crown. Both retired at age 36
due to the cumulative effect of various minor injuries. Their
career totals in games, at bats, runs, hits, RBI, steals, on-base
percentage, slugging average, extra base hits and total bases are
all fairly similar, with notable differences only in batting
average and home runs; Medwick's higher average (.324 to .298) can
be partially attributed to the higher emphasis on batting average
in the 1930s, while Rice's advantage in home runs (382 to 205) is
largely the result of a dramatic increase in homers over the 40
years between their careers (Rice ranked 10th in AL history upon
his retirement, while Medwick ranked 11th in NL history upon his).
Medwick was elected to the Hall in his final season of eligibility
in 1968, which Rice also duplicated.
See also
Reference(s)
- Boston Red Sox @ fenwayfanatics.com: Red Sox
Legends : Jim Rice
- Jim Rice (II) - Biography
- Jim Rice Statistics -
Baseball-Reference.com
- Image Gallery
- The Jimmy Fund
- Charity Hop Fundraising & Baseball Consulting -
Charities
- Jim Rice Field Map
-
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/hof09/columns/story?columnist=garber_greg&id=4353486
- Wait 'til This Year (2005) (TV)
- Fever Pitch (2005)
- TWM: Inductees to Date
- [1]
- [2]
-
http://www.baseballhalloffame.org/history/hof_voting/year/2006.htm
-
http://www.baseballhalloffame.org/news/2007/election/results.htm#2007%20BBWAA%20Hall%20of%20Fame%20Voting%20Results
- Baseball Crank: BASEBALL: Hall of Fame, Dale
Murphy, Jim Rice, and Kirby Puckett
- Boston Red Sox - Verdict is in: Rice still a tough
out - The Boston Globe
- ESPN - Warming up to Rice - MLB
-
http://web.baseballhalloffame.org/playerVoting.do?playerId=121140
- Baseball Prospectus | Articles | The Class of
2008
External links