American baseball player (born 1983)
Baseball player
Mark Andrew Reynolds
(born August 3, 1983) is an American former
professional baseball
infielder
. He played in
Major League Baseball
(MLB) for the
Arizona Diamondbacks
,
Baltimore Orioles
,
Cleveland Indians
,
New York Yankees
,
Milwaukee Brewers
,
St. Louis Cardinals
,
Washington Nationals
, and two stints with the
Colorado Rockies
. A right-hander both when batting and throwing, Reynolds was known for his frequent and long
home runs
, high
strikeout
totals, and defensive versatility, having been primarily a
third baseman
before transitioning to
first base
while playing for the Orioles.
The Diamondbacks drafted Reynolds in the 16th round of the
2004 MLB draft
from the
Cavaliers
of the
University of Virginia
, with whom he played mainly
shortstop
. In the
minor leagues
, he played
second base
, third base, shortstop, and
left field
. He broke out in 2006 with
Lancaster
and
Tennessee
, batting .318 with 31 home runs and 98
runs batted in
(RBIs) in 106 games. With the Diamondbacks in 2009, he established career highs in home runs (44), RBIs (102),
stolen bases
(24), and
runs
scored (98).
Between 2009 and 2011, he finished with top ten home run totals and
at bats per home run
rates. In 2009, he set the all-time record for most strikeouts among batters in a season (223). He also holds two other of the ten highest single-season strikeout totals (211 and 204), and led the league in strikeouts in four consecutive seasons. As of 2018, he led all active major league ballplayers in career strikeouts, with 1,870.
[1]
Early life
[
edit
]
Mark Andrew Reynolds was born on August 3, 1983, in
Pikeville, Kentucky
. Reynolds later moved with his family to
Virginia Beach, Virginia
. In 1994 he played for the Virginia Blasters
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU)
baseball
program, where one of his teammates was
B. J. Upton
. Both would eventually join B. J.'s younger brother
Justin
,
David Wright
and
Ryan Zimmerman
on a
Hampton Roads
-based autumn showcase team called the Mets in 2000. The five players, who were all
shortstops
at the time, rotated among the three positions on the left side and middle of the
infield
.
[2]
While with the Mets, Reynolds was
nicknamed
"
Skeletor
" due to his lanky build and "
Forrest Gump
" because of his awkward running style.
[3]
Reynolds was a four-year
letterman
in baseball,
basketball
and
golf
at
First Colonial High School
, where he graduated in 2001.
[4]
College career
[
edit
]
In his three years at the
University of Virginia
, he was the starting
shortstop
on the
Cavaliers baseball team
. During his
sophomore
and
junior
campaigns, he played alongside Zimmerman, who had been shifted to
third base
.
[3]
Reynolds led the team in
home runs
(15) in 2002,
runs batted in
(46) in 2003 and
triples
(5) in 2004.
[5]
His 60
runs
scored in 2004 matched a school record which has since been broken.
[6]
His 35 career home runs at Virginia is tied for second all-time in Cavaliers history.
[7]
Through August 2011, he was one of 29 former UVA players to have made it to the major leagues, along with former Cavaliers
Michael Schwimer
,
Javier Lopez
, and Zimmerman.
[8]
In 2002, he played
collegiate summer baseball
in the
Cape Cod Baseball League
for the
Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox
, and returned to the league in 2003 to play for the
Harwich Mariners
.
[9]
[10]
Professional career
[
edit
]
Draft and minor leagues
[
edit
]
The
Arizona Diamondbacks
selected Reynolds in the 16th round (476th overall) of the
2004 Major League Baseball draft
.
[11]
During the 2004 season, he played 64 games with the
Yakima Bears
of the
Class A-Short Season
Northwest League
and four games each with the
South Bend Silver Hawks
of the
Class A
Midwest League
and the
Lancaster JetHawks
of the
Class A-Advanced
California League
, with an overall
batting average
for the season of .253 with 12 home runs and 42
runs batted in (RBIs)
.
[12]
He spent all of 2005 with South Bend, again hitting .253, with 19 home runs and 76 RBIs.
[12]
He played 76 games for Lancaster in 2006, batting .337. hitting 23 home runs, and driving in 77 runs,
[12]
and was promoted to play for the
Tennessee Smokies
of the
Class AA
Southern League
, appearing in 30 games for the Smokies and batting .272 with eight home runs and 21 RBIs.
[12]
He began 2007 with the Diamondbacks′ new Class AA affiliate, the
Mobile BayBears
of the Southern League, and hit .306 for them in 37 games, with six home runs and 22 RBIs.
[12]
Arizona Diamondbacks (2007?2010)
[
edit
]
2007 season
[
edit
]
Reynolds made his major league debut on May 16, 2007, against the
Colorado Rockies
. He had been called up from Double-A
Mobile
when
Chad Tracy
was placed on the
disabled list
.
[13]
Reynolds made an instant impact with the Diamondbacks, driving in 14 runs in his first 15 MLB games.
Reynolds was the latest of a number of players from the
Tidewater region
of Virginia to make it to the major leagues in recent years, a list that includes
David Wright
,
Ryan Zimmerman
,
B.J. Upton
,
Justin Upton
, and
Michael Cuddyer
.
Reynolds ended the season third among National League rookies in strikeouts (129), fourth in runs (62), tied for fourth in triples (4), and tied for sixth in home runs (17). He also drove in 62 runs and had a .279 batting average.
On October 3, 2007, when Arizona faced the
Chicago Cubs
in the first game of the
2007 National League Division Series
, Reynolds' seventh-inning home run off of Cubs reliever
Carlos Marmol
led the Diamondbacks to a 3?1 victory and a three-game sweep of the division series. Reynolds also hit a home run in Game 3 of the
2007 National League Championship Series
against the
Colorado Rockies
. The Diamondbacks eventually lost the league championship series to the Rockies in just four games.
2008 season
[
edit
]
On September 25, Reynolds set a major league record by striking out for the 200th time in one season when he failed to check his swing against
St. Louis Cardinals
pitcher
Joel Pineiro
. He broke the record of 199 set in 2007 by
Philadelphia Phillies
first baseman
Ryan Howard
. Reynolds ultimately finished the season striking out 204 times.
[14]
He also led the majors in strikeout percentage, with 33.3%.
[15]
Reynolds made the most errors (34) and had the lowest
fielding percentage
(.904) of all major league third basemen.
[16]
He did have a good offensive year, leading the team in home runs (28) and RBIs (97) to go along with 11 stolen bases and 87 runs scored. His batting average saw a significant dip from his rookie campaign, however, ending with a .239 clip.
[17]
2009 season
[
edit
]
In
2009
. Reynolds was named one of the five finalists for the National League Final Vote for the
All-Star Game
, finishing third behind
Shane Victorino
and
Pablo Sandoval
.
[18]
On July 28, Reynolds hit a two-run home run off of
Philadelphia Phillies
closer
Brad Lidge
landing at 481 feet, making it the longest home run of the 2009 season, and the second-longest home run in the history of
Chase Field
. He quickly became recognized for hitting towering home runs (25 of his 44 home runs being over 400 feet), averaging his home runs at 430 feet (longest in baseball).
[19]
In the Diamondbacks' four-game series against the Mets on July 29 ? August 3, Reynolds managed to hit the longest home run in the short history of
Citi Field
, at 461 feet, as well as capped off the series finale with home runs in consecutive innings (first and second).
[20]
His four home runs at Citi Field rank second all-time in home runs hit at the park by a visiting player.
[21]
On August 10, 2009, Reynolds was named the NL Player of the Week for the week ending August 9, beating out teammate
Ryan Roberts
(who finished second) in voting for the honor. Reynolds finished the week hitting .448 with 6 home runs, 32 total bases, 10 RBIs, 1 stolen base, a .515
on-base percentage
, and a
slugging percentage
of 1.103. This was Reynolds's second NL Player of the Week award (the other being earlier this season for the week ending June 14).
[22]
As tradition with the Player of the Week award, Reynolds received two wrist watches (one for each week), one of which he gave to his father, and the other of which he gave to his grandfather.
Reynolds played at first base for 26 games, where he had a .974 fielding percentage, the second-highest in the league of players with 125 or more innings at first base, and an 8.21 range factor, the best in the league. Reynolds helped improve his defensive skills by working with former Diamondbacks third baseman
Matt Williams
, during spring training; work that has raised his fielding percentage by over 50 points from the previous season.
[23]
He has also made headlines for several notable catches including July 21 in Colorado,
[24]
July 24 in Arizona,
[25]
and August 1 in New York.
[26]
He shattered his own 1-year-old major league record for strikeouts in a season in 2009 with 223. He also hit .260 (batting average), hit 44 home runs, had 102 RBIs, and scored 98 runs,
[27]
along with 24 stolen bases. He also led the National League in
power-speed number
(31.1).
[28]
He led the major leagues in the
Three True Outcomes
(the total of the three main outcomes not involving defense) with 343.
2010 season
[
edit
]
After signing a three-year, $14.5 million contract extension on March 18, 2010,
[3]
[29]
Reynolds began the season with two home runs in the first four games of the season. On May 20, Reynolds hit his 100th career home run off of the Giants'
Tim Lincecum
. Though he finished the season with 32 home runs, the sixth-highest total in the National League, along with 85 RBIs and a career-high 83 walks in 145 games, Reynolds again led the league in strikeouts with 211 and, having reached the mark three times, remained the only player in major league history to have at least 200 strikeouts in a season. Most notably, his .198 batting average established him as the first full-time position player in Major League history to finish the season with a lower batting average (x 1000) than strikeout total.
[30]
Baltimore Orioles (2011?2012)
[
edit
]
Reynolds and a player to be named later (
John Hester
on April 30, 2011) were traded to the
Baltimore Orioles
for
David Hernandez
and
Kam Mickolio
on December 6, 2010.
[31]
[32]
From the Diamondbacks' standpoint, the transaction, which was executed by new
general manager
Kevin Towers
, was to improve the
bullpen
and reduce the record-breaking strikeout total by the team's batters (1,529 in
2010
).
[33]
[34]
The Orioles, on the other hand, needed a starting third baseman and a power hitter.
[35]
2011 season
[
edit
]
In 2011, Reynolds led all major leaguers in errors, with 31, as his .897 fielding percentage was the lowest of all major league third basemen, and led the American League in strikeouts, with 196.
[36]
[37]
[38]
He batted .221, and was fourth in the league in home runs, with 37.
[37]
On August 7, facing
Ricky Romero
of the
Toronto Blue Jays
, Reynolds became the first player in the history of
Oriole Park at Camden Yards
(which was 19 years old at the time) to hit a home run into the 2nd Deck (Club Level) in Left Field. ESPN's Home Run Tracker measured the "True Distance" of the blast at 463 feet.
[39]
2012 season
[
edit
]
Reynolds was homerless until May 4 when he hit a home run against the
Boston Red Sox
. On the next day, May 5, he hit a three-run home run, his second of 2012. On May 29, he became the fastest position player to reach 1,000 strikeouts in major-league history, having done so in only 747 career games.
Reynolds started off the 2012 season at third base, but was moved over to play first base, with first baseman
Chris Davis
moving to third, early in the season. He excelled at first base, playing in 108 games there in 2012 and committing only five errors. He had a fielding percentage of .995, which was tied for fourth-best among first basemen in the major leagues.
On August 17, during a game between the Orioles and the
Detroit Tigers
, third baseman
Manny Machado
fielded a ground ball off the bat of
Jhonny Peralta
. Machado threw off line to Reynolds, who had to lay all the way out to catch the ball, and was unable to keep his foot on the bag long enough to record the out. Peralta and Tigers manager
Jim Leyland
argued to first base umpire
Jeff Kellogg
, who conferred with home plate umpire
Tim Timmons
. Kellogg's call was reversed, giving Peralta first base. Reynolds angrily threw his glove to the ground, causing him to be ejected by second base umpire
Vic Carapazza
. Orioles manager
Buck Showalter
angrily argued that Reynolds could not be ejected for throwing his glove, but he too was tossed, by third base umpire
Marty Foster
. Reynolds initially walked back onto the field, as if the umpires reversed the ejection call, only to return to the dugout moments later.
On September 6, Reynolds hit two home runs against the
New York Yankees
in a 10?6 Orioles win. It was only the second time since 1918 that a player had three multi-homer games against the Yankees in a single season,
[40]
and it was Reynolds′ eighth home run in six games.
In 2012, Reynolds batted .221 for the second straight year, with 23 home runs and 69 RBIs.
[12]
On October 31, the Orioles declined Reynolds's 2013 option. He was non-tendered on November 30, making him a
free agent
for the first time.
A tongue-in-cheek article appeared in
Baseball Prospectus
in January 2013 that purported to lay out evidence "proving" that Reynolds is
blind
.
[41]
Cleveland Indians (2013)
[
edit
]
On December 9, 2012, Reynolds agreed to a one-year contract with the
Cleveland Indians
.
[42]
On April 13, in a game against the
Chicago White Sox
, he hit his second career grand slam off of
Chris Sale
. He had eight home runs with a batting average of .301 in the month of April. However, he batted only .187 from May on. The Indians
designated Reynolds for assignment
on August 8.
[43]
When he was designated for assignment, he was leading the team
[
citation needed
]
with 15 home runs
[12]
but his batting average was only .215.
[12]
The Indians released him on August 12.
[
citation needed
]
New York Yankees (2013)
[
edit
]
On August 15, 2013, Reynolds agreed to a deal with the
New York Yankees
.
[44]
[45]
In his first at-bat as a member of the Yankees, he hit a home run against the
Boston Red Sox
.
[46]
On August 28, Reynolds started at second base for the first time in his career while
Robinson Cano
and
Eduardo Nunez
were stricken with injuries.
[47]
He batted .236 in 36 games with the Yankees, hitting six home runs and driving in 19 runs.
[12]
Milwaukee Brewers (2014)
[
edit
]
On January 17, 2014, Reynolds signed a minor-league contract with the
Milwaukee Brewers
, with an invitation to major-league camp. Under the deal, Reynolds was to make $2 million, with an additional $500,000 in possible bonuses, if he made the major-league team.
[48]
On March 25, the Brewers announced that Reynolds had made the
Opening Day
roster. He played in 130 games for the Brewers, hitting 22 home runs and driving in 45 runs, but posted only a .196 batting average for the season.
[12]
St. Louis Cardinals (2015)
[
edit
]
On December 11, 2014, Reynolds signed with the
St. Louis Cardinals
on a one-year, $2 million contract that included playing times incentives.
[49]
After five consecutive seasons with at least 21 home runs but batting averages that hovered between .196 and .221, he agreed to take a role as
bench
player to back up
Matt Adams
at first base and
Matt Carpenter
at third base.
[50]
Reynolds hit his fourth career grand slam on May 4 against the
Cubs
, aiding the Cardinals to a 10?9 win.
[51]
The next game, Reynolds's pinch-hit double drove in the go-ahead runs as the Cardinals defeated the Cubs, 7?4.
[52]
He drove in the go-ahead run with a bases-loaded infield single on June 23 against the
Miami Marlins
in a 4?3 win.
[53]
As a member of the Cardinals, Reynolds' first multiple-home-run game came against the
Pittsburgh Pirates
in a 6?5
extra-inning
loss on July 12. It was his 22nd career multi-home-run game.
[54]
He played in 140 games for the Cardinals, batting .230, with 13 home runs and 48 RBIs.
[12]
Secont stint with Colorado Rockies (2016?2017)
[
edit
]
Reynolds and the
Colorado Rockies
agreed to a one-year, $2.6 million contract on December 16, 2015, including up to an additional $1.1 million in performance bonuses.
[55]
He appeared in 118 games in the 2016 season, and hit .282./356/.450 with 14 home runs and 53 RBIs in 393 at bats.
[56]
He hit the third-longest home run in MLB in 2016, at 484 feet.
[57]
Reynolds signed a minor league contract with the Rockies on February 1, 2017. The contract included an invitation to spring training.
[58]
Due to an injury to
Ian Desmond
, Reynolds became the Rockies' Opening Day first baseman for
2017
. On April 3, Reynolds went 2-for-3, hitting a two-run home run in the top the second, logging two runs, three RBIs, and a walk on Opening Day against the
Brewers
.
[59]
On May 9, in a 10?4 victory versus the
Cubs
, he tied his personal best by homering in his fourth consecutive game, first achieved August 6?9, 2009.
[60]
In 520 at bats over 148 games with the Rockies in 2017, Reynolds batted .267/.352/.487 with an .839
on-base-plus-slugging
percentage, had 97 RBIs, and hit 30 home runs, his eighth season with 20 or more homers, with 175 strikeouts (4th in the league).
[12]
[61]
Washington Nationals (2018)
[
edit
]
A free agent after the conclusion of the 2017 season, Reynolds went unsigned until April 12, 2018, when the
Washington Nationals
signed him to a minor-league contract.
[61]
The Nationals assigned him to the
Syracuse Chiefs
of the Triple?A
International League
.
[12]
He played in 10 games for Syracuse, batting .231 with a double and a home run in 39
plate appearances
,
[62]
before the Nationals selected his contract on May 12, after they placed starting first baseman
Ryan Zimmerman
on the 10-day disabled list with a right
oblique strain
.
[62]
Reynolds made his season debut on May 13, hitting two home runs in the game.
[63]
On July 6, Reynolds hit a pinch-hit, walk-off home run against the
Miami Marlins
.
[64]
The next night, Reynolds went 5?5 with 2 home runs, a double, and a career-high, franchise record-tying 10 RBI in an 18?4 win over the Marlins. It was the most RBI in a game by any player in MLB since
Scooter Gennett
’s 10 RBIs for the
Cincinnati Reds
during his 4 home run performance on June 6, 2017, and it tied the franchise record set by teammate
Anthony Rendon
in 2017. On July 9, he was named the
National League Player of the Week
after
slashing
.625/.684/1.313 with 12 RBI and 3 home runs in seven games. For the 2018 season, he batted .248/.328/.476 with 13 home runs and 40 RBI in 206 at bats.
[65]
Third stint with Colorado Rockies (2019)
[
edit
]
On January 30, 2019, Reynolds signed another minor league contract with the Rockies with an invitation to spring training.
[66]
If added to the Rockies' 40-man roster, Reynolds will receive a one-year contract for $1 million plus up to an additional $1 million in performance bonuses.
[67]
Reynolds said he had interest from other teams but wanted to play with a contender, and expects to make spot starts or be a pinch-hitter off the bench.
[66]
He is expected to be a backup first baseman for
Daniel Murphy
, who was Reynolds' teammate in Washington.
[66]
On March 22, Reynolds was announced to have made the roster for the 2019 season. On July 21, 2019, Reynolds was designated for assignment.
[68]
He was released on July 26, 2019. In 2019 he batted .170/.290/.311 with four home runs in 135 at bats.
[69]
Reynolds announced his retirement on April 9, 2020.
[70]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Active Leaders & Records for Strikeouts | Baseball-Reference.com
- ^
Lee Jenkins (September 29, 2008).
"Virginia's Boy Wonders"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Retrieved
December 10,
2012
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Connolly, Dan. "For Orioles' Reynolds, a fresh start"
"
.
The Baltimore Sun
. March 27, 2011
. Retrieved
December 10,
2012
.
[
permanent dead link
]
- ^
"Mark Reynolds (baseball player biography) ? University of Virginia Athletics"
. Virginiasports.cstv.com. August 3, 1983. Archived from
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on March 21, 2012
. Retrieved
December 10,
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.
- ^
"Annual Batting Leaders"
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on March 27, 2012
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. Nbc29.com. August 17, 2011. Archived from
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. capecodbaseball.org
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. thebaseballcube.com
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. Prosportstransactions.com. January 10, 2004
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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.
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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Newman, Mark (July 9, 2009).
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'Bran-Torino' takes a ride to All-Star Game"
.
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. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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.
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. Rotoprofessor. July 7, 2009
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.
- ^
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. MLB
. Retrieved
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.
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"Spacious Citi no match for Reynolds"
.
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. MLB. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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.
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"Reynolds named NL Player of the Week"
.
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. MLB. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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.
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.
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. MLB
. Retrieved
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2012
.
[
permanent dead link
]
- ^
"Baseball Video Highlights & Clips | ARI@COL: Reynolds runs into the stands for the catch"
.
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. MLB
. Retrieved
December 10,
2012
.
[
permanent dead link
]
- ^
"Baseball Video Highlights & Clips | PIT@ARI: Reynolds falls into the stands for the out ? Video"
.
Arizona Diamondbacks
. MLB
. Retrieved
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2012
.
[
permanent dead link
]
- ^
"Baseball Video Highlights & Clips | ARI@NYM: Reynolds dives on the tarp for a big out ? Video"
.
Arizona Diamondbacks
. MLB
. Retrieved
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2012
.
[
permanent dead link
]
- ^
"MLB Player Batting Stats ? 2009"
. ESPN
. Retrieved
December 10,
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.
- ^
Yearly League Leaders & Records for Power-Speed # | Baseball-Reference.com
- ^
"Reynolds signs multiyear contract with D-backs"
.
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(Press release). MLB. March 18, 2010. Archived from
the original
on April 6, 2012
. Retrieved
December 10,
2012
.
- ^
'Duk (October 1, 2010).
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.
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. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
"Orioles acquire 3B Mark Reynolds from Arizona Diamondbacks"
.
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(Press release). MLB. December 6, 2010. Archived from
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on April 6, 2012
. Retrieved
December 10,
2012
.
- ^
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.
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(Press release). MLB. April 30, 2011. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
Gilbert, Steve (December 6, 2010).
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.
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. MLB. Archived from
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on December 11, 2010
. Retrieved
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.
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
Ghiroli, Brittany (December 6, 2010).
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.
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. MLB. Archived from
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on December 9, 2010
. Retrieved
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.
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"2011 Major League Baseball Fielding Leaders"
.
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
a
b
"Mark Reynolds Statistics and History"
. Baseball-Reference.com
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.
- ^
"2012 Regular Season MLB Baseball 3B Fielding Statistics ? Major League Baseball"
. ESPN
. Retrieved
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[
permanent dead link
]
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a
b
Castillo, Jorge, "Nationals agree to minor league deal with veteran slugger Mark Reynolds," washingtonpost.com, April 12, 2018, 8:41 p.m. EDT.
- ^
a
b
Reddington, Patrick, "Washington Nationals place Ryan Zimmerman on 10-Day DL; bring Mark Reynolds up from Triple-A," federalbaseball.com, May 12, 2018, 3;32 p.m. EDT.
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Janes, Chelsea (May 13, 2018).
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.
espn.com
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Mark Reynolds Stats | Baseball-Reference.com
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a
b
c
Reynolds returning to Rox on Minors deal
(MLB.com)
- ^
Mark Reynolds reaches minor league deal with Colorado Rockies
(AP)
- ^
Patrick Saunders (July 21, 2019).
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External links
[
edit
]