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词条 Mark Johnson (catcher)
释义

  1. Minor league manager

  2. References

  3. External links

{{other people|Mark Johnson}}{{BLP sources|date=January 2009}}{{Infobox baseball biography
|image=Mark Johnson 1999 (cropped).jpg
|caption=Johnson with the White Sox in 1999
|name=Mark L. Johnson
|position=Catcher
|bats=Left
|throws=Right
|birth_date={{Birth date and age|1975|9|12}}
|birth_place=Wheat Ridge, Colorado
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate=September 14
|debutyear=1998
|debutteam=Chicago White Sox
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate=September 27
|finalyear=2008
|finalteam=St. Louis Cardinals
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Batting average
|stat1value=.218
|stat2label=Home runs
|stat2value=16
|stat3label=Runs batted in
|stat3value=83
|teams=
  • Chicago White Sox ({{Baseball year|1998}}–{{Baseball year|2002}})
  • Oakland Athletics ({{Baseball year|2003}})
  • Milwaukee Brewers ({{Baseball year|2004}})
  • St. Louis Cardinals ({{Baseball year|2008}})

}}

Mark Landon Johnson (born September 12, 1975) is a former professional baseball player, a catcher who played with several major league teams, but primarily with the Chicago White Sox. In 2011, he retired as a player and became a minor league manager. He currently manages the Chicago Cubs Double-A affiliate Tennessee Smokies.

Standing at 6'0" and weighing 185 pounds, Johnson attended Warner Robins High School in Warner Robins, Georgia.

Batting left-handed but throwing right-handed, Johnson was drafted by the Chicago White Sox 26th overall in the {{Baseball year|1994}} draft.[1] The first two seasons of his professional career were nothing near stellar-in 1994, he hit only .241 in 32 games, and in {{Baseball year|1995}}, he hit .182 in 107 games.

{{Baseball year|1996}} saw a slight improvement, at least while in Single-A. He hit .257 in 67 games there, but in Single-A Advanced ball that year, he hit only .241.

Great at drawing walks, he walked 106 times and struck out only 85 times in {{Baseball year|1997}}, but he still only hit .252. In {{Baseball year|1998}}, he had a career year in the minors, batting .283 with 105 walks and only 72 strikeouts. That prompted his promotion, and on September 14, {{mlby|1998}}, at the age of 22, he made his big league debut. He went 0-for-1 at the plate. The rest of his season was not impressive, either-overall, he collected only two hits in 23 at bats, for a .087 batting average. He made the best out of his two hits, though-they were both triples. His first one came off Pedro Martínez on September 19, and his second came off Scott Service on September 25.

He spent his entire {{mlby|1999}} season with the White Sox, backing up Brook Fordyce. In 73 games that season, he hit .227 with four home runs and 16 RBI.

He hit .225 in {{mlby|2000}}, this time as the White Sox starting catcher. In 75 games, he hit three home runs with 23 RBI.

{{mlby|2001}} was a career year for Johnson. Even though he spent 55 games in the minors, his Major League season would be the best of his career. He hit .249 with 10 sacrifice hits-good for fourth most in the league.

He hit only .209 in {{mlby|2002}}, and that may have prompted his trade. On December 3, 2002, he was traded with Keith Foulke, Joe Valentine, and cash to the Oakland Athletics for Billy Koch and two players to be named later (who would end up being Neal Cotts and minor leaguer Daylan Holt).

He spent most of his season in the minors in {{Baseball year|2003}}, hitting only .228. In the thirteen games that he played in the Majors, his batting average was .111.

After the 2003 season, he was granted free agency and signed by the Milwaukee Brewers. Like the season before, he spent most of his time in the minors that year, actually breaking the .250 mark and hitting .259. His time in the Majors was again unimpressive-in eleven at bats, he collected only one hit, for a .097 batting average.

After {{Baseball year|2004}}, he was granted free-agency, but was re-signed by the Brewers, who then traded him to the Chicago Cubs for Travis Ezi. He spent {{Baseball year|2005}} entirely in the minors, hitting .266 in 60 games. After the 2005 season, he was granted free agency and picked up by the Brewers again. He spent all of {{Baseball year|2006}} in the minors, hitting only .203 there.

On November 10, 2006, he signed with the Arizona Diamondbacks and spent the entire year in the minors; though Johnson did have the best season hitting for average in his career, with a .320 batting average. In December {{Baseball year|2007}}, he signed a minor league contract with the St Louis Cardinals and was invited to their {{Baseball year|2008}} spring training, but did not make the team. He was called up by the Cardinals in September {{mlby|2008}}, appearing in the majors for the first time in four years.

One source describes him as this: "He has decent gap power, resulting in his share of doubles, as well as a good eye at the plate. Defensively, he calls a good game and gets the ball quickly down to second base."

Although he has never quite lived up to the "gap power", he has shown a fairly good eye at the plate, with 123 walks and 195 strikeouts so far in his career. His defense is also reliable—his career fielding percentage is .993.

That same source goes on to say this about him: "He has very little home run power and is a fairly light hitter on the whole -- even worse against southpaws."

He has averaged just over two home runs a season in the Majors, and his statistics – .217 batting average with 16 home runs and 81 RBI so far in his career – are rather unsavory. In November 2009 Johnson was granted free agency from the Chicago Cubs. On January 20, 2010, Johnson re-signed a minor league contract with the Cubs.

Minor league manager

In 2011, Johnson managed the Boise Hawks, the Cubs' affiliate in the Class A-Short Season Northwest League. In 2013, Johnson was named manager of the Kane County Cougars, the Class A affiliate of the Chicago Cubs. In 2015, Johnson was the manager of the Myrtle Beach Pelicans. He is currently manager of the Tennessee Smokies, an AA affiliate of the Cubs.[2]

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=xJIiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Ha8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=4851,558068&dq=baseball+mark-johnson+draft&hl=en|title=1994 Baseball free-agent draft First-round selections|date=3 June 1994|work=The Item|page=1B|accessdate=19 October 2010}}
2. ^http://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2015/12/17/10446990/cubs-name-minor-league-managers-and-staff{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

External links

{{Portal|Biography|Baseball}}
  • {{Baseball stats |mlb=150322 |espn=3952 |br=j/johnsma02 |fangraphs=240 |cube=1135 |brm=johnso007mar}}
{{1994 MLB Draft}}{{Chicago White Sox 1st round}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Mark}}

24 : 1975 births|Living people|People from Wheat Ridge, Colorado|Baseball players from Colorado|Chicago White Sox players|Oakland Athletics players|Milwaukee Brewers players|St. Louis Cardinals players|Major League Baseball catchers|People from Warner Robins, Georgia|Minor league baseball managers|Gulf Coast White Sox players|Hickory Crawdads players|South Bend Silver Hawks players|Prince William Cannons players|Winston-Salem Warthogs players|Birmingham Barons players|Charlotte Knights players|Sacramento River Cats players|Indianapolis Indians players|Iowa Cubs players|Nashville Sounds players|Tucson Sidewinders players|Memphis Redbirds players

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