Julián Tavárez Carmen (born
May 22, 1973 in Santiago
, Dominican Republic
) is a former Major
League Baseball pitcher.
Baseball career (1990-2009)
Minor leagues (1990-93)
Tavárez began his professional career on
March
16, , signing a
minor league
contract with the
Cleveland
Indians organization. For two years, he was a starter for the
Dominican Summer League
Indians. In , he gave birth to first son Justin Tavarez, and
although he had the burden of raising a mentally retard boy, he
joined the Class A
Burlington
Indians where he led the league in
shutouts and
hit
batsmen. Tavárez progressed rapidly the following year, playing
in Kinston, Canton-Akron, and finally with the Cleveland
Indians.
Cleveland Indians (1993-96)
He made his major league debut on
August 6,
, and received his first
win on
August 14 against the
Texas Rangers. For his time in
Canton-Akron, Tavárez won
Carolina
League Player of the Year honors and was named the league's top
prospect by
Baseball America.
Tavárez was demoted to Triple-A Charlotte in , where he led the
International League in wins.
He did make one spot start for Cleveland that year. Tavárez was
sent to the
bullpen in , which was a
breakout year for him. He was first in wins, third in
innings pitched, and fifth in
ERA among
American League relief pitchers and threw 4.1 scoreless
innings against the
Atlanta Braves in
the
World Series. Tavárez was the
Sporting News American League Rookie of the
Year, but finished sixth in the ballot by the
Baseball Writers
Association of America. was Tavárez's final year with
Cleveland. He was suspended for three days after a brawl in
Milwaukee and spent two weeks in
Triple-A
Buffalo before appearing in
the
ALDS.
San Francisco Giants (1997-99)
Tavárez was traded to the
San
Francisco Giants on November 13, 1996, along with
infielders Jeff Kent and
Jose Vizcaino and a player to be named
(pitcher
Joe Roa) in exchange for
third baseman Matt Williams and a player to
be named (
outfielder Trenidad Hubbard). In his first year with
the club, Tavárez led the
National
League with 89 appearances, while also setting a club record in
the statistic. He had a stretch of 24 consecutive scoreless games
and appeared in all three games of the
NLDS against the
Florida Marlins. Tavárez recorded his first
save on
May
14, , with a 3 inning outing against the
Montreal Expos. He also was placed on the
disabled list for the first time after
straining a
latissimus dorsi
muscle and received his second suspension after an argument
with
umpire Sam
Holbrook. Tavárez again appeared on the disabled list in due to
pneumonia and had two
minor league stints.
Colorado Rockies (2000)
Tavárez was claimed off
waivers by the
Colorado Rockies on November 21,
1999. He recorded one of two career
major league complete games with a
four-hitter against the
Chicago Cubs
and went on to post an NL best 9-game win streak on his way to a
career high 11 wins.
Chicago Cubs (2001)
Tavárez signed as a
free agent with the
Chicago Cubs on
November 16, , and set career highs in
innings,
strikeouts, and
games started after returning to a
full-time starting role. On
April 11, he
executed a safety squeeze to record his first
RBI. He was suspended from
April 29 to
May 4 for his part
in a bench clearing brawl against the Giants. On
May 5, Tavárez won a lopsided 20–1 game against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. He then
recorded his first multi-hit game against Pittsburgh on
July 24. On
October 6,
against the
Pittsburgh Pirates,
Tavárez struck out 9 hitters and took a
no-hitter into the eighth inning before it was
broken up by
Mendy Lopez.
Florida Marlins (2002)
Tavárez was acquired by the
Florida
Marlins on
March 27, , along with
minor league pitchers
Jose Cueto and
Dontrelle Willis and
catcher Ryan Jorgensen
in exchange for
pitchers Antonio Alfonseca and
Matt Clement. On
May 16,
he chose to pitch with a shoulder injury and allowed a career high
10
earned runs. It began a stretch of 5
consecutive
losses. He allowed 25
runs and had a .391
opponents
batting average in the first-inning.
Pittsburgh Pirates (2003)
Tavárez was relegated to bullpen duty in after being signed by the
Pittsburgh Pirates as a
minor league free agent on
January 28. During the season, he compiled a
streak of 14.1 consecutive scoreless innings and ended the season
with a career-high 11 saves, allowing only 9 of 35 inherited
runners to score.
St. Louis Cardinals (2004-05)
Tavárez signed on with the
St. Louis
Cardinals on
January 9, .
He earned his first
win with St.
Louis
against the Cincinnati
Reds, striking out the side in the 10th inning, and went on to
surpass 1000 career innings pitched in August.
Tavárez was ejected from a game against the Pirates on
August 20, 2004, after an accusation of having a
"foreign substance" on his cap. He served an 8 day suspension for
the incident.
Tavárez posted a 2.61 ERA in nine
postseason games, but suffered breaks in his left
ring finger and fifth
metacarpal after punching a bullpen phone in the
dugout following being removed from Game 4 of the
NLCS. He had allowed a
solo
home run to
Carlos Beltran, issued two
walks, and hit a batter. Tavárez played the
rest of the 2004 postseason with a protective wrap in his glove,
and when the glove was removed his hand was noticeably swollen.
Tavárez suffered the loss against the
Boston Red Sox in Game 1 of the
2004 World Series, giving up the
game-winning home run to
Mark Bellhorn
in the eighth inning.
Julian was hit with a hot dog in the bullpen while in Philadelphia
in 2005.
Boston Red Sox (2006-08)
A free agent following the season, Tavárez agreed to a $6.7
million, two-year deal with the Boston Red Sox on
January 18, .
On
March 27, 2006, Tavárez was suspended
for the first ten games of his Red Sox career as a result of a
fistfight that broke out between him and
Tampa Bay Devil Rays outfielder Joey
Gathright during a
spring
training game. Although he had a poor year as a relief pitcher,
injuries forced the Sox to use him as a starter for the last few
weeks of the season. In 6 starts, he went 3–0 with a 4.01 ERA, and
recorded his second complete game in a 7–1 win against the Toronto
Blue Jays.
On
March 22, , teammate
Jonathan Papelbon was named the team's
closer, and Tavárez took his spot
in the
rotation.
Tavárez called the 2007 Red Sox pitching staff the best he's ever
been associated with.
During a game in May 2007, Tavárez wore shoes emblazoned with the
likeness of his teammate
David
Ortiz.
In spring training, it had been assumed that Tavárez was simply
holding the fifth spot in the rotation for the Red Sox top pitching
prospect
Jon Lester while he recovered
from
cancer. However, with Lester struggling
in Triple-A and Tavárez pitching well, he kept his spot in the
rotation through the All-Star break.
After a stretch of poor starts, 0–4 with a 7.79 ERA, he was moved
to the bullpen on
July 22, 2007, and
replaced in the rotation by Lester.
Tavárez earned his first World Series ring when the Red Sox swept
the Colorado Rockies in the
2007 World
Series.
On
May 11, , Tavárez was designated for
assignment. He later accepted an assignment to the Triple-A
Pawtucket Red Sox even though he
could have opted for free agency. Later that month, he was
released.
Milwaukee Brewers (2008)
On
May 27, 2008, Tavárez signed a contract
with the
Milwaukee Brewers for the
remainder of the 2008 season. On
June 19,
Tavárez was designated for assignment, and rejected an outright
assignment to the minors, opting instead to be released from his
contract.
Atlanta Braves (2008)
Tavárez signed a contract with the Atlanta Braves on
July 8, 2008, for the remainder of the 2008 season.
On that day, he made his Braves debut against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. He pitched a third
of an inning and gave up two runs, one earned.
Washington Nationals (2009)
On March 13, 2009, Tavárez signed a minor league contract with the
Washington Nationals and was
invited to Spring Training. When asked why he chose to sign with
the Nationals, Tavárez acknowledged he had no other options: "Why
did I sign with the Nationals? When you go to a club at 4 in the
morning, and you're just waiting, waiting, a 600-pounder looks like
J-Lo. And to me, this is Jennifer Lopez right here. It's 4 in the
morning. Too much to drink. So, Nationals: Jennifer Lopez to me."In
July 2009 he was designated for assignment by the Nationals, and
eventually released.
Retirement (2009)
After playing 19 years of baseball, at the minor and major league
level, he decided to retire from baseball.
See also
References
- Error - BostonHerald.com
- Surviving Grady: A Diary of Unhealthy Red Sox
Obsession
- Brewers add Tavarez to bullpen mix
- Tavarez designeted for assignment
- McCalvy, Adam. "Tavarez elects free agency." MLB.com.
24 June 2008.
- Washington Nationals agree to terms with
right-handed reliever Julian Tavarez
- Julian Tavarez, Kip Wells, Joe Beimel candidates to
close in Washington
External links