- Major League Baseball pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1992-1993), Montreal Expos (1994-1997) Boston Red Sox (1998-2004), and New York Mets, (2005-).
- Known for having three of the best pitches in baseball: an excellent fastball, an excellent change-up and an excellent curveball. He recently developed a cut fastball as well, adding it to his already impressive repertoire.
- Winner of the MLB Cy Young Award for pitching excellence in 1997 (17-8, 1.90 ERA), 1999 (23-4, 2.07 ERA) and 2000 (18-6, 1.74 ERA). Was also rated the best pitcher in baseball by Total Baseball in 2002 (20-4, 2.26 ERA) and 2003 (14-4, 2.22 ERA), and only missed out on that honor in 2001 because he missed half the season due to shoulder problems.
- His fastball was usually clocked in mid-90s prior to his 2001 shoulder injury, but now often clocks in the low-90s. He can still get it up to 97 mph on the radar gun from time to time, however.
- Followed his older brother Ramon Martinez into Major League Baseball in 1992. Has since become the most dominant pitcher in the league.
- Threw nine perfect innings on June 3, 1995, for the Montreal Expos but the effort was wasted because his teammates failed to score a single run for him. After giving up a double to the first batter he faced in the 10th inning, he was taken out and replaced with a reliever. The Expos eventually won the game 1-0 in 10 innings, with Martinez getting a no-decision. He struck out nine batters in the game.
- Finished the 2004 season with a 16-9 record, 3.90 ERA and 227 strikeouts in 33 games started. It was the first time since 2000 that he reached the 200+ innings pitched plateau and the first time since 1996 that he ended the season with an earned run average above three. Though he went 0-4 in his last four starts of the regular season, his team, the Boston Red Sox, finished the season 98-64, winning the American League wild card spot. In the postseason, he went 2-1 and helped lead the BoSox to their first World Series title in 86 years.
- Agrees to a 4-year, $54 million deal with the New York Mets, officially ending his 7-year tenure with the Boston Red Sox. (December 13, 2004)
- Signed a four year deal with the New York Mets on Wednesday, December 15th, 2004. The deal is reportedly in the neighborhood of $53 million.
- Major League Baseball pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1992-1993), Montreal Expos (1994-1997), Boston Red Sox (1998-2004), and New York Mets (2005-).
- Made major league debut on 24 September 1992 (pitched in 2 games that season).
- Named to Baseball Digest magazine's 1993 Rookie All-Star Team.
- Career numbers as of 2005 (1992-2004, regular season only): 182 wins, 76 losses, a 2.71 ERA and 2,653 strikeouts.
- Has two children from a previous relationship.
- As of the start of the 2007 season has 2998 career strikeouts, which puts him just 2 away from becoming the 15th pitcher to ever hit the 3000 strikeout milestone.
- Martinez went 117-37 as a member of the Boston Red Sox.
- Martínez allowed just 288 hits and 69 walks while recording 597 strikeouts and a 1.90 ERA in 430 innings In the 1999 and 2000 seasons.
- Brother of Ramon Martinez.
- (December 16) Formalized a four-year, $53 million contract with the New York Mets. (2004)
- Inducted into the Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2014.
- In September 1999, he pitched a season high with 17 strike outs against the New York Yankees and only giving up one hit which was a home run by Chili Davis.
- Inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015.
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