American baseball player (born 1948)
Baseball player
Steven Patrick Garvey
(born December 22, 1948) is an American former professional
baseball
player and
candidate
in the upcoming
2024 United States Senate election in California
. He played in
Major League Baseball
as a
first baseman
for the
Los Angeles Dodgers
and
San Diego Padres
from 1969 to 1987.
Garvey began his major league career with the Dodgers in 1969. He won the
National League
(NL)
Most Valuable Player Award
in 1974 and was the
National League Championship Series
MVP in 1978. Garvey won his only World Series ring as a member of the Dodgers' 1981 Series-winning squad.
Garvey signed with the Padres in December 1982 and remained with the team until 1987, when his playing career ended. In 1984, Garvey was once again named a National League Championship Series MVP; he hit a dramatic walk-off home run to win Game Four of the Championship Series for the Padres. Overall, Garvey was an NL
All-Star
for 10 seasons. He holds the NL record for consecutive
games played
with 1,207. The Padres
retired
Garvey's No. 6 in 1988.
During his time as a baseball player, Garvey also served as vice president of the
philanthropic organization
No Greater Love
.
[1]
In October 2023, Garvey announced his candidacy as a
Republican
for
U.S. Senate
from California in the
2024
election for the term starting in January 2025. He finished a close second in the March 2024 "
jungle primary
", 3,478 votes behind Democratic Rep.
Adam Schiff
, advancing them both to the general election.
[2]
Garvey finished first in the
partial term special election
primary to replace Laphonza Butler with that term ending in January 2025. He will face Schiff in that election.
[2]
Early life
[
edit
]
Garvey was born in
Tampa, Florida
, on December 22, 1948
[3]
to parents who had recently relocated from
Long Island, New York
.
[4]
Garvey is Irish-American on his father's side; his father's roots come from County Cork, Ireland.
[5]
From 1956 to 1961, Garvey was a batboy for the
Brooklyn Dodgers
,
New York Yankees
and
Detroit Tigers
during
spring training
. He graduated from
George D. Chamberlain High School
in 1966.
[6]
At Chamberlain, he was a teammate of future Major Leaguers
Tom Walker
and
Mike Eden
.
[7]
Michigan State University
[
edit
]
After graduating from
Chamberlain High School
, Garvey played football and baseball at
Michigan State University
. He was committed to play football and baseball in college despite being drafted in the third round by the Minnesota Twins in the June 1966 amateur draft at age 17.
[8]
Garvey credited his choosing MSU to Spartan head football coach
Duffy Daugherty
's encouraging him to be a multi-sport athlete.
[9]
At MSU, Garvey recorded 30 tackles and earned a letter as a defensive back in 1967.
[10]
His first at-bat in a Spartan uniform resulted in a grand-slam home run, with the ball landing in the
Red Cedar River
.
[11]
Garvey continued to work towards completing his degree after beginning his professional baseball career, and in 1971 he received a
Bachelor of Science
in health and physical education.
[12]
[13]
Garvey was named Michigan State Baseball Distinguished Alumnus of the Year in 2009,
[14]
he was inducted into the Michigan State University Hall of Fame in 2010,
[10]
and his baseball jersey number 10 was retired from Michigan State University in 2014.
[15]
Major League Baseball career
[
edit
]
Los Angeles Dodgers
[
edit
]
Garvey was drafted by the
Los Angeles Dodgers
in the 1st round of the
1968 MLB draft
(June secondary phase).
[16]
He made his Major League debut on September 1, 1969, at the age of 20.
[16]
He appeared in the 7th inning to pinch hit for
Ray Lamb
and struck out in his one appearance at the plate.
[17]
He had two more plate appearances in 1969 as a pinch hitter and recorded his first hit on September 10, off
Denny Lemaster
of the
Houston Astros
. He played
third base
for the Dodgers in 1970 and hit his first home run on July 21, 1970, off
Carl Morton
of the
Montreal Expos
. He moved to
first base
in 1973 after the retirement of
Wes Parker
.
Garvey was part of one of the most enduring infields in baseball history,
[18]
along with third baseman
Ron Cey
, shortstop
Bill Russell
, and second baseman
Davey Lopes
. The four infielders
stayed together as the Dodgers' starters for eight and a half years
, starting on June 13, 1973.
[19]
Garvey is one of only two players to have started an All-Star Game as a write-in vote, doing so in
1974
. That year, he won the
NL MVP award
and had the first of six 200-hit seasons. In the
1978 National League Championship Series
, which the Dodgers won over the
Philadelphia Phillies
, Garvey hit four home runs and added a triple for five extra base hits, both marks tying
Bob Robertson
's
1971 NLCS
record and earning him the
League Championship Series Most Valuable Player Award
;
Jeffrey Leonard
would tie the NLCS home run record in the
1987 NLCS
.
Garvey's cheerful personality, his availability with reporters, and his willingness to sign autographs for fans made him a very popular player, and the Dodgers took advantage of this, making him one of the main focuses of their public relations campaigns. This caused friction with some of his Dodger teammates, such as Cey and Lopes, who thought Garvey was only acting this way to get endorsement opportunities. Cey, Lopes, and another unnamed player criticized Garvey in a mid-June 1976
San Bernardino Sun-Telegram
article, which prompted manager
Walter Alston
to call a team meeting. At this meeting, Garvey said, "If anyone has anything to say about me, I want it said to my face, here and now."
[20]
No one said anything.
Tommy John
thought it was at this point that Alston, who retired at the end of the year, began to lose control of the team.
[21]
Late in the 1978 season, the rift resurfaced when
The Washington Post
published an article in which
Don Sutton
was quoted complaining that Garvey was the only Dodger to get publicity, and insisting that
Reggie Smith
was a better player.
[22]
The day after the article appeared, Garvey confronted Sutton with a copy of it in the locker room of
Shea Stadium
, where the Dodgers were playing a series against the
New York Mets
. When Sutton affirmed that the quotes were his, the two got into a brawl. Garvey threw Sutton into Tommy John's locker, causing 96 baseballs John had been signing to fall out. Neither was hurt and the two managed to overcome their feud, making sure they were the first to congratulate each other on the field for the rest of the season.
[23]
With the Dodgers, Garvey played in 1,727 games over 14 seasons and hit .301 with 211 homers and 992 RBI.
[16]
He was selected to eight All-Star Games and won the
All-Star Game MVP Award
for the 1974 and
1978
games.
[16]
He also won four straight
Gold Glove Awards
from 1974 to 1977, won the 1981
Roberto Clemente Award
, and finished in the top 10 in the NL MVP Award voting five times.
After Garvey signed with the San Diego Padres in 1982, the Dodgers kept his number 6 out of circulation for 21 years until it was given to
utility player
Jolbert Cabrera
in 2003. It is Dodger policy not to officially retire a number unless a player who spent a majority of his playing days with the franchise gets inducted into the Hall of Fame.
San Diego Padres
[
edit
]
In December 1982, Garvey signed with the Padres for $6.6 million over five years in what some felt was a "masterstroke" to General Manager
Jack McKeon
's effort to rebuild the team.
[24]
Though San Diego had vastly outbid the Dodgers, McKeon noted Garvey's value in providing a role model for younger players.
[25]
Additionally, Garvey's "box office appeal"?his impending departure from the Dodgers provoked some Girl Scouts to picket the stadium?helped San Diego increase its season ticket sales by 6,000 seats in Garvey's first year.
[26]
Sports Illustrated
ranked the signing as the 15th best free agent signing ever as of 2008.
[27]
His first season in San Diego allowed him to break the National League record for consecutive games played, a feat that landed him on the cover of
Sports Illustrated
as baseball's "Iron Man".
[28]
In an unusual homecoming, Garvey tied the record in his first appearance back at
Dodger Stadium
in Padre brown.
[29]
[30]
For breaking the record, he was named the National League Player of the Week. The streak ended at
1,207 consecutive games played
(from September 3, 1975, to July 29, 1983) when he broke his thumb in a collision at home plate against the
Atlanta Braves
. It is the fourth-longest such streak in Major League Baseball history.
It was Garvey's second season in San Diego, however, that would be his highlight in a Padres uniform. In 1984, Garvey became the only first baseman in MLB history to commit no errors while playing 150 or more games.
[31]
He handled 1,319
total chances
(1,232
putouts
and 87
assists
) flawlessly in 159 games for the Padres.
[32]
[33]
Led by Garvey, who won his second
National League Championship Series
MVP award, the
Padres
won their first National League
pennant
over the
Chicago Cubs
in 1984.
[34]
In Game 4,
Tony Gwynn
drew an intentional walk that Garvey converted into one of his four RBIs.
[34]
After getting hits in the third, fifth, and seventh innings, Garvey capped off his efforts with a two-run
walk-off home run
off
Lee Smith
in the ninth inning.
[34]
As he rounded third base, Garvey was met by fellow Padres who later carried him off the field in celebration.
[34]
The home run became popular among San Diego Padres fans and was captured in a sequence of three shots by Padres team photographer Martin Mann. He was the only photographer to get a sequence of shots of the swing, and went on to sell limited edition series photos of "The Home Run", along with appearances on local television. In an interview with
The San Diego Union Tribune
, Martin Mann said, "It was like nothing I've ever seen at a baseball game. It was just a magical night. There was something about that night, I don't know what it was. It felt like something was going to happen."
[35]
Garvey's career spanned from 1969 to 1987.
[16]
He made his final appearance in a game on May 23, 1987, pinch-hitting for
Lance McCullers
in the ninth inning and flying out.
[36]
In his 19-year MLB career, Garvey was a .294 hitter with 272 home runs and 1,308 RBI in 2,332 games played.
[16]
Hall of Fame candidacy
[
edit
]
During his 15 years (1993?2007) on the
National Baseball Hall of Fame
ballot of the
Baseball Writers' Association of America
(BBWAA), Garvey failed to reach the 75% required for induction. His highest percentage of votes was 42.6% in
1995
; he received 21.1% in his final year on the ballot.
He was considered by the Hall of Fame's Expansion Era Committee (for the 1973?present era) in voting for
2011
and
2014
and was not elected. In 2017, he was on the 10-candidate ballot that was considered by the Hall's Modern Baseball Era Committee (for the 1970?1987 era) in voting for
2018
and fell short of the 75% threshold. In the December 2019 voting by the Modern Baseball Era's 16-member committee for the
2020
Hall of Fame class, Garvey received six votes (37.5%).
[37]
Post-baseball career
[
edit
]
In 1983, Garvey started Garvey Media Group while playing for the Padres. Its strength was in sports marketing and corporate branding.
[38]
In 1988, he headed Garvey Communications, mainly involved in television production including
infomercials
. In addition, he did
motivational speaking
for corporations.
[38]
Since 1990, Garvey has served as a member of the board of the
Baseball Assistance Team
, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping former major league, minor league, and
Negro League
players through financial and medical hardships.
[
citation needed
]
Garvey played himself on an episode of the
NBC
sitcom
Just Shoot Me!
, and could also be seen in infomercials for products such as Fat Trappers and Exercise in a Bottle in 1999.
[39]
Both supplements were produced by Enforma Natural Products of
Encino
, and both were involved in controversy, with both
Sonoma
and
Napa
counties in California filing lawsuits against the company.
[40]
On September 1, 2000, Garvey and his management company, Garvey Management Group, were charged by the
Federal Trade Commission
in the
United States District Court for the Central District of California
for
false advertising
related to a
weight-loss
product.
[41]
In 2004, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
ruled that Garvey was not liable for the content of the infomercials as he was merely a
spokesman
. He had earned $1.1 million for appearing in the advertisements.
[42]
Garvey has mainly pivoted to being a spokesman,
motivational speaker
, and hosting
meet and greet
events to sustain himself post-baseball, but has had a variety of financial troubles, including millions of dollars of
liens
against his properties.
[43]
2024 U.S. Senate campaigns
[
edit
]
On October 10, 2023, Garvey announced that he was running in the
2024 United States Senate elections in California
as a
Republican
.
[44]
[16]
Garvey is seeking the Senate seat that was held by Democrat
Dianne Feinstein
from 1992 until her death in 2023; following Feinstein's death, Democrat
Laphonza Butler
was appointed to the seat by California Governor
Gavin Newsom
subject to a
partial term special election
to fill Feinstein's remaining term. In the March 2024 "
jungle primary
" Garvey advanced to the November election for the term starting in January 2025 facing Democratic U.S. Representative
Adam Schiff
, the first-place candidate by only 3,478 votes.
[2]
Garvey won the partial term special election primary to replace Laphonza Butler with that term ending in January 2025, and will face Schiff in that election.
[2]
Political positions
[
edit
]
In April 2024, Garvey repeatedly called college students protesting the
war in Gaza
, "
terrorists
."
[45]
He encouraged law enforcement to take action against the anti-war protestors, but his comments came the day following arrests at universities across the U.S.
[45]
He claimed that interruptions to and obstruction of education are an act of terrorism.
[45]
Personal life
[
edit
]
At age 22, Garvey married
Cynthia Truhan
[46]
in 1971. They had two daughters, Krisha and Whitney.
[47]
Truhan left Garvey for composer
Marvin Hamlisch
; Garvey was already romantically involved with his secretary, which Truhan didn’t find out until after she had left him.
[46]
Garvey and Truhan divorced in 1985.
[48]
In July 1988, Garvey discovered that Cheryl Moulton was pregnant with his child, Ashleigh Young.
[46]
Despite this, Garvey proposed to Rebecka Mendenhall in November 1988, telling Mendenhall about Moulton at the time of the proposal. Mendenhall learned that she was pregnant that January. Garvey broke their engagement January 1, 1989.
[48]
Garvey and Mendenhall had been in a long-distance relationship since 1986. Their only child, a son named Slade Mendenhall, was born in October 1989.
Garvey said he was in the midst of what he termed a "midlife disaster".
[46]
Garvey sued his ex-wife, Truhan, for access to his two children when she had denied it, which he won.
[46]
His daughters testified in court that they did not wish to see him, but a psychiatrist testified that they exhibited
parental alienation syndrome
.
[49]
[50]
[
failed verification
]
[
better source needed
]
In January 1989, Garvey became engaged to Candace Thomas, whom he met at a benefit for the
Special Olympics
. Over the next few weeks, Garvey and Thomas began a courtship that included trips to the inauguration of President
George H. W. Bush
and the
Super Bowl
.
[46]
Garvey and Thomas were married on February 18, 1989. They have three children together and four children from previous marriages. Garvey resides in Los Angeles and
Palm Desert, California
.
[51]
Honors
[
edit
]
- Steve Garvey Junior High School (1978), in Lindsay, California, was named for him, but was eventually renamed as part of Reagan Elementary in 2011.
[52]
[53]
- In 1981,
Lawrence Ritter
and
Donald Honig
included him in their book
The 100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time
.
- Garvey's jersey No. 6, worn during his entire MLB career, was
retired by the Padres
on April 16, 1988.
- California Sports Hall of Fame
(2009)
- Irish American Hall of Fame (2009)
- Michigan State University Athletics Hall of Fame (2010)
[54]
- Garvey's jersey No. 10 was retired by Michigan State in 2014.
[15]
- He was selected to the initial class of "Legends of Dodger Baseball" in 2019.
[55]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
McCarthy, Colman
(December 20, 1981).
"No Greater Love has no greater friend at Yuletime than Dave Butz"
.
Arizona Daily Star
. Vol. 140, no. 354. p. C3
. Retrieved
May 28,
2024
– via
Newspapers.com
.
Syndicated from
The Washington Post
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Riquelmy, Alan (April 12, 2024).
"California certifies March 5 primary election results"
.
Courthouse News Service
. Retrieved
April 13,
2024
.
- ^
"Steve Garvey Baseball Stats | Baseball Almanac"
.
- ^
Boyer, Peter J. (September 24, 1989).
"The Intimate Steve Garvey: The Former Dodger Hero Tells How His Perfect Life Became a Perfect Nightmare"
.
Los Angeles Times
. Los Angeles, CA
. Retrieved
April 14,
2024
.
- ^
"Dodgers go green"
. March 17, 2012.
- ^
Totem Yearbook
. Tampa, Florida. 1966. p. 225.
{{
cite book
}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link
)
- ^
Smith, Marc (June 15, 1977).
"Expos' Call Relieves Tom"
.
Florida Today
. p. 1C
. Retrieved
March 8,
2024
.
- ^
Johnston, Joey (April 21, 2017).
"Legacy Gala looks to enlist alumni in restoring Chamberlain's luster"
.
Tampa Bay Times
. Retrieved
June 19,
2019
– via www.tampabay.com.
- ^
"Steve Garvey | Video Library"
. Lansing State Journal. Archived from
the original
on January 27, 2014
. Retrieved
August 15,
2015
.
- ^
a
b
"MSU Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2010: Steve Garvey ? Michigan State Official Athletic Site"
. Msuspartans.com. September 29, 2010
. Retrieved
April 7,
2014
.
- ^
"Steve Garvey | Video Library"
. Lansing State Journal. Archived from
the original
on January 27, 2014
. Retrieved
August 15,
2015
.
- ^
Kahn, Alex (April 18, 1971).
"Garvey Feels He'll Stay"
.
Standard-Examiner
. Ogden, UT.
United Press International
. p. 8D – via
Newspapers.com
.
- ^
"Padres' Garvey remembers paying visit to Tigers' Den"
.
The Commercial Appeal
. Memphis, TN. October 13, 1984. p. D3 – via
Newspapers.com
.
- ^
"Steve Garvey has jersey retired at Michigan State on Sunday"
. True Blue LA. January 25, 2014
. Retrieved
April 7,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
"MSU baseball Q&A: Steve Garvey's Spartan stint a '10'
"
. Archived from
the original
on January 27, 2014
. Retrieved
January 10,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
"Baseball MVP Steve Garvey running for California Senate Seat"
.
Washington Post
. Retrieved
October 10,
2023
.
- ^
"New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers Box Score, September 1, 1969"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
.
- ^
"Steve Sax ? Los Angeles Dodgers Steve Sax"
. Losangelesdodgersonline.com. Archived from
the original
on September 27, 2011
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
"The Durable Dodger Infield"
.
- ^
John, Tommy; Valenti, Dan (1991).
TJ: My Twenty-Six Years in Baseball
. New York: Bantam. p. 164-165.
ISBN
0-553-07184-X
.
- ^
John and Valenti, p. 165
- ^
Boswell, Thomas
(August 17, 1978).
"
'Best Reggie' Leads 5-4 Dodger Win"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
John and Valenti, 183-84
- ^
Maisel, Ivan (April 4, 1983).
"San Diego"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Retrieved
December 23,
2018
.
- ^
Steve Wulf (April 25, 1983).
"Incredibly, Steve Garvey's return to L.A. as a Padre ? 04.25.83 ? SI Vault"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Archived from
the original
on November 4, 2012
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
Wulf, Steve (April 25, 1983).
"It Was Too Good To Be True"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Retrieved
December 23,
2018
.
- ^
Heyman, John (May 15, 2008).
"What a deal!"
.
Sports Illustrated
.
Archived
from the original on May 19, 2008
. Retrieved
June 26,
2011
.
- ^
"Steve Garvey, Baseball, San Diego Padres ? 04.25.83 ? SI Vault"
.
Sports Illustrated
. April 25, 1983.
Archived
from the original on August 9, 2009
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
Steve Wulf (April 25, 1983).
"It Was Too Good To Be True ? 04.25.83 ? SI Vault"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
"Garvey Sets a League Record"
.
The New York Times
. Associated Press. April 17, 1983.
ISSN
0362-4331
. Retrieved
December 23,
2018
.
- ^
"Error Records by First Basemen"
.
www.baseball-almanac.com
.
- ^
"Steve Garvey Career Stats at Retrosheet"
.
retrosheet.org
. Retrieved
March 8,
2024
.
- ^
"1984 Regular Season Fielding Log For Steve Garvey"
.
retrosheet.org
. Retrieved
March 8,
2024
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Steve Wulf (October 15, 1984).
"You've Got To Hand It To The Padres"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Retrieved
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2011
.
- ^
Kirk, Kenney (February 27, 2021).
"San Diego Stadium farewell: Garvey's '84 homer remains Padres' ? and city's ? most memorable sports moment"
.
San Diego Union Tribune
.
- ^
"Montreal Expos at San Diego Padres Box Score, May 23, 1987"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
December 23,
2018
.
- ^
Castrovince, Anthony (December 8, 2019).
"Miller, Simmons elected to HOF on Modern Era ballot"
.
MLB.com
. Retrieved
December 8,
2019
.
- ^
a
b
"Steve Garvey's Biography - Book Steve Garvey for a Speaking Engagement"
.
- ^
Henderson, Joe (December 20, 1999).
"It's hip to be square for Garvey"
.
Tampa Bay Times
. Vol. 105, no. 303. p. Sports 1
. Retrieved
May 29,
2024
– via
Newspapers.com
.
- ^
Hellmich, Nanci (August 20, 1999).
"Diet supplements' claims anger consumer watchdogs"
.
The Times
. Vol. 128, no. 265. p. 1D
. Retrieved
May 29,
2024
– via
Newspapers.com
.
- ^
"FTC Files Charges Against Additional Defendants Involved in the Deceptive Advertising of "The Enforma System"
"
.
Federal Trade Commission
. September 1, 2000
. Retrieved
September 29,
2021
.
- ^
"Ninth Circuit: Steve Garvey Not Liable for Hawking Weight Loss Program"
.
Metropolitan Newspaper Service
. September 2, 2004
. Retrieved
September 29,
2021
.
- ^
Shultz, Alex (May 29, 2024).
"Steve Garvey's bizarre Senate campaign: I think I figured out why he's really running"
. Politics.
Slate
.
ISSN
1091-2339
.
OCLC
728292344
. Retrieved
May 29,
2024
.
- ^
Mehta, Seema (October 10, 2023).
"Former Dodgers star and Republican Steve Garvey enters U.S. Senate race"
.
Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
October 11,
2023
.
- ^
a
b
c
Korte, Lara; Venteicher, Wes (April 25, 2024).
"California Senate candidate Steve Garvey calls student protesters 'terrorists'
"
.
Politico
. Retrieved
April 25,
2024
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Reilly, Rick (November 27, 1989).
"America's Sweetheart"
.
Sports Illustrated
. Archived from
the original
on December 23, 2018
. Retrieved
May 8,
2024
.
- ^
John and Valenti, p. 183
- ^
a
b
Chin, Paula; Rebelo, Kristina (March 13, 1989).
"In the Game of Love, Steve Garvey Plays the Artful Dodger"
.
People
.
- ^
Baker, Amy J. L.
"Parental Alienation Syndrome ? The Parent/Child Disconnect"
.
Social Work Today
.
8
(6): 26
. Retrieved
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.
- ^
Lewis, Ken.
"Parental Alienation Can Be Emotional Child Abuse"
(PDF)
.
ncsc.org
.
National Center for State Courts
. Retrieved
March 4,
2024
.
- ^
Schrotenboer, Brent.
"Revisiting the Padres of '84"
. SignOnSanDiego.com
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
"Year in Review - The Sun-Gazette Newspaper"
.
www.thesungazette.com
. January 4, 2012.
- ^
Steve Garvey
? Brooks International Speakers & Entertainment Bureau
- ^
"MSU Athletics Hall of Fame inducts 10 new members"
.
Msu Athletics Hall of Fame Inducts 10 New Members - the State News
. The State News
. Retrieved
November 8,
2011
.
- ^
"Maury Wills named to 'Legends of Dodger Baseball'
"
.
MLB.com
. April 13, 2022
. Retrieved
April 17,
2022
.
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