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===Colorado Rockies (2009-present)===
===Colorado Rockies (2009-present)===
On January 6, 2009, Marquis was traded to the [[Colorado Rockies]] for pitcher [[Luis Vizcaíno]].<ref>[http://colorado.rockies.mlb.com/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20090106&content_id=3734370&vkey=pr_col&fext=.jsp&c_id=col Rockies complete deal for Marquis]</ref> [[General Manager]] [[Dan O'Dowd]] said "We like (Marquis') athleticism, age and durability."[http://www.silive.com/sports/index.ssf/2009/01/marquis_looking_ahead_to_seaso.html]
On January 6, 2009, Marquis was traded to the [[Colorado Rockies]] for pitcher [[Luis Vizcaíno]].<ref>[http://colorado.rockies.mlb.com/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20090106&content_id=3734370&vkey=pr_col&fext=.jsp&c_id=col Rockies complete deal for Marquis]</ref> [[General Manager]] [[Dan O'Dowd]] said "We like (Marquis') athleticism, age and durability."<ref>[http://www.silive.com/sports/index.ssf/2009/01/marquis_looking_ahead_to_seaso.html]</ref>


During the off-season, Marquis tweaked his delivery to improve his release point by staying over the rubber longer in his balance point, allowing his arm to catch up, resulting in a 2 to 3 inches longer stride, and leaving him throwing downhill.[http://www.silive.com/sports/index.ssf/2009/06/minor_adjustments_yield_major.html] Reporters attributed his first-half success to his new delivery and his high ground ball ratio.[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090619&content_id=5418658&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb][http://mvn.com/upintherockies/2009/06/marquiss-key-to-success-more-grounders.html] By late June, reporters at MLB.com[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090619&content_id=5418658&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb], the ''[[Denver Post]]'',[http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_12597317][http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_12652742] ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'',[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/baseball/mlb/wires/07/01/2010.ap.bbn.nl.capsules.2nd.ld.writethru.1204/] and the ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''[http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/chi-11-cubs-brite-chicago-jun11,0,2856209.story] were speculating as to whether Marquis would be picked as an [[All Star]] in 2009.
During the off-season, Marquis tweaked his delivery to improve his release point by staying over the rubber longer in his balance point, allowing his arm to catch up, resulting in a 2 to 3 inches longer stride, and leaving him throwing downhill.<ref>[http://www.silive.com/sports/index.ssf/2009/06/minor_adjustments_yield_major.html]</ref> Reporters attributed his first-half success to his new delivery and his high ground ball ratio.[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090619&content_id=5418658&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb][http://mvn.com/upintherockies/2009/06/marquiss-key-to-success-more-grounders.html] By late June, reporters at MLB.com[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090619&content_id=5418658&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb], the ''[[Denver Post]]'',[http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_12597317][http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_12652742] ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'',[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/baseball/mlb/wires/07/01/2010.ap.bbn.nl.capsules.2nd.ld.writethru.1204/] the ''[[Chicago Herald]]'',[http://blogs.dailyherald.com/node/2220] and the ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''[http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/chi-11-cubs-brite-chicago-jun11,0,2856209.story] were speculating as to whether Marquis would be picked as an [[All Star]] in 2009.


On June 30 Marquis pitched a 2-hit, 0-walk, 86-pitch shutout to become the first 10-game winner in the NL, in what a reporter for ''MLB.com'' called "one of the best pitching performances in Rockies history".[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090630&content_id=5624192&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb]. He beat the LA Dodgers, which had the best record in the major leagues, and outpitched their ace [[Chad Billingsley]] 3-0 in a matchup of pitchers leading the league in wins. It was the third shutout of his career, and his second complete game of the season. He also drove in two of his team's three runs.[http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i-N0FShyB-DFjiS1lIwsHoXk_-XgD995EGTO0] "That was something special, as good as I have seen in my 7½ years behind this desk," said Rockies manager [[Jim Tracy]].[http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_12728836]
On June 30 Marquis pitched a 2-hit, 0-walk, 17-ground-ball-outs, 86-pitch shutout to become the first 10-game winner in the NL. A reporter for ''MLB.com'' called it "one of the best pitching performances in Rockies history", and [[Rob Neyer]] of ''[[ESPN]]'' described Marquis that night as "[[Bob Gibson]], [[Orel Hershiser]], and [[Greg Maddux]] all rolled into".<ref>[http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090630&content_id=5624192&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb]</ref><ref>[http://myespn.go.com/blogs/sweetspot/0-4-2/Marquis-winning-ground-war.html]</ref> He beat the LA Dodgers, which had the best record in the major leagues, and outpitched their ace [[Chad Billingsley]] 3-0 in a matchup of pitchers leading the league in wins. It was his third career shutout, and his second complete game of the season. He also drove in two of his team's three runs.<ref>[http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i-N0FShyB-DFjiS1lIwsHoXk_-XgD995EGTO0]</ref> He became the fourth pitcher in club history to win 10 games before the All Star break, joining [[Kevin Ritz]] (1996), [[Shawn Chacon]] (2003) and [[Aaron Cook]] (2008).<ref>[http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i-N0FShyB-DFjiS1lIwsHoXk_-XgD995EPH00]</ref> "That was something special, as good as I have seen in my 7½ years behind this desk," said Rockies manager [[Jim Tracy]].<ref>[http://www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_12728836]</ref>


Through July 1, Marquis was leading the NL in wins (10) and [[ground ball]] outs induced (189), 2nd in ground balls induced (219), 3rd in [[ground ball]]/[[fly ball]] ratio (1.38; of all NL pitchers with 80 or more innings pitched), tied for 3rd in [[complete games]] (2), shutouts (1), and [[double play]]s induced (13), and 6th in won-lost percentage (.667) and innings pitched (109.1). He was holding batters to a .200 batting average in games that were late and close.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/marquja01.shtml |title=Jason Marquis Statistics and History|publisher=Baseball-Reference.com |date= |accessdate=2009-07-01}}</ref><ref>[http://colorado.rockies.mlb.com/stats/sortable_player_stats.jsp?teamPosCode=all&statType=2&timeFrame=1&c_id=col&section2=1&sitSplit=&venueID=&statSet2=1&subScope=teamCode&baseballScope=NL&timeSubFrame=2009&&sortByStat=W]</ref> He had a career-low 14.5 pitches per inning, and was holding opposing batters to a career-low .313 OBP and .370 slugging percentage.<ref>[http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx?playerid=105&position=P]</ref> At the plate, Marquis was also tied for the major league lead among pitchers in runs scored (5), and 2nd in RBIs (6).<ref>[http://mlb.mlb.com/stats/sortable_player_stats.jsp?teamPosCode=1&statType=1&timeFrame=1&Submit=Submit&c_id=mlb&subScope=pos&sitSplit=&venueID=&baseballScope=NL&=&=&=&=&timeSubFrame=2009&&sortByStat=RBI]</ref>
Through July 1, Marquis was leading the NL in wins (10) and [[ground ball]] outs induced (189), 2nd in ground balls induced (219), 3rd in [[ground ball]]/[[fly ball]] ratio (1.38; of all NL pitchers with 80 or more innings pitched), tied for 3rd in [[complete games]] (2), shutouts (1), and [[double play]]s induced (13), and 6th in won-lost percentage (.667) and innings pitched (109.1). He was holding batters to a .200 batting average in games that were late and close.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/marquja01.shtml |title=Jason Marquis Statistics and History|publisher=Baseball-Reference.com |date= |accessdate=2009-07-01}}</ref><ref>[http://colorado.rockies.mlb.com/stats/sortable_player_stats.jsp?teamPosCode=all&statType=2&timeFrame=1&c_id=col&section2=1&sitSplit=&venueID=&statSet2=1&subScope=teamCode&baseballScope=NL&timeSubFrame=2009&&sortByStat=W]</ref> He had a career-low 14.5 pitches per inning, and was holding opposing batters to a career-low .313 OBP and .370 slugging percentage.<ref>[http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx?playerid=105&position=P]</ref> At the plate, Marquis was also tied for the major league lead among pitchers in runs scored (5), and 2nd in RBIs (6).<ref>[http://mlb.mlb.com/stats/sortable_player_stats.jsp?teamPosCode=1&statType=1&timeFrame=1&Submit=Submit&c_id=mlb&subScope=pos&sitSplit=&venueID=&baseballScope=NL&=&=&=&=&timeSubFrame=2009&&sortByStat=RBI]</ref>

Revision as of 08:21, 2 July 2009

Jason Marquis
Colorado Rockies – No. 21
Starting pitcher
Bats: Left
Throws: Right
debut
June 6, 2000, for the Atlanta Braves
Career statistics
(through July 1, 2009)
Win-Loss89-75
Earned run average4.50
Strikeouts803
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Jason Scott Marquis (Template:PronEng) (born August 21, 1978, in Manhasset, New York) is an American Major League Baseball pitcher for the Colorado Rockies. He previously pitched for the Atlanta Braves, St. Louis Cardinals, and Chicago Cubs. Marquis is one of only a few major league ballplayers who played in both a Little League World Series and Major League World Series during his career.[11]

Marquis won 11 or more games for five straight years through 2008, and started 29 or more games in each of those years. His 65 wins from the start of the 2004 season through the 2008 season ranked 7th among N.L. pitchers.[12] Through 2008, in games that were late and close Marquis held batters to a .215 batting average.[1] He has also excelled with the bat, earning the Silver Slugger Award in 2005.

Early life

Marquis was born in Manhasset, New York,[13] and grew up in Staten Island, New York's Arden Heights neighborhood, where he attended Paulo Intermediate School 75. He was a New York Yankees fan when growing up, and Don Mattingly was his favorite player.[2] His mother works for the New York City Board of Education, and has a teaching degree, while his father owns a check cashing business in Brooklyn.[2]

Marquis played Little League Baseball on the South Shore Little League team that finished third in the world, and second in the US, in the Little League World Series in 1991.[2][3] His team lost to California on ESPN in the US final, and then beat Canada in the third-place game, as Marquis threw a no-hitter.[2] "Playing in front of that many people at that time in my life made me realize this is what I wanted to do with my life," said Marquis, "and I was going to work my hardest to get it."[2] He is one of 25 Little League World Series players to have reached the major leagues.

Marquis is Jewish,[4] grew up in a Conservative Jewish home, attended Hebrew school, and observes the major Jewish holidays.[5][6] “My mother was stricter with our Jewish upbringing," said Marquis, given that her parents were Holocaust survivors." His bar mitzvah was a baseball theme, as his parents surprised him with a replica scoreboard, 15 or 20 feet wide by 15 feet tall, of the game line from his Little League World Series no-hitter against Canada.[2]

"When I was a freshman I was 5-2, and everyone thought I was too small to play," Marquis said. "But it was always my dream to play major-league baseball, and I've always worked very hard at it."[14] As a 6' 1" junior and senior, however, Marquis, with a 93 mile per hour fastball and a curveball that was nearly unhittable at the high school level, pitched the Tottenville High School Pirates to two consecutive New York City Public Schools Athletic League titles. The first was a Pirates ((22-1) championship in 1995 over the George Washington Trojans (32-3), 3-2 at Shea Stadium, capping a season in which he posted an 11-0 record while striking out 86 batters in 61 innings.[15][16] The second championship was in 1996 when the Pirates were 33-1; again over the George Washington Trojans (41-2), 5-1 in a 7-inning complete game in which he struck out 15 batters and allowed no earned runs, as he himself hit a two-run triple, at Yankee Stadium).[7] That capped a season in which he was 14-1 with a 0.71 ERA, struck out 136 in 82 innings, tied a school season record with 11 home runs, drove in 45 runs, and batted .468.[17] He received the Iron Horse Award as the top baseball player in the PSAL,[18] and was named 1st team High School All-American.[19] He also played basketball at Tottenville, and was a member of the National Honor Society.[8][9] A classmate of his at Tottenville was Chicago Bears defensive end Adewale Ogunleye.

The right-hander originally signed a letter of intent to play for the University of Miami, which offered him a scholarship.[20] The day of the 1996 free agent draft, he was pitching in a high school playoff game, so his mother stayed home to wait for the phone call, and then showed up to the game in the second inning.[2] She relayed the message that he had been drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the first round of the draft, the 35th selection overall.[2] Marquis was excited, and his team won the game and went on to win the city championship.[2] He then opted out of his letter of intent, and signed with the Braves on July 18, 1996.[8]

Minor league career

In 1996 Marquis began his pro career with the Danville Braves (Rookie Advanced) in the Appalachian League, going 1-1 with a 4.63 ERA in 7 games.[21][8] He had a 24/7 K/BB ratio in 23 innings.[22] The next year he tied for the South Atlantic League lead with 14 victories (setting a team record for wins in the process) for the Macon Braves, as he went 14-10 with a 4.38 ERA, tied for second with 28 starts, and was named the Braves' No. 5 prospect by Baseball America.[9][8][23][24] In 1998 he began the season as youngest pitcher in the Carolina League, but won only 2 of 22 starts for Class A Danville 97s, as he went 2-12 and struck out 135 in only 114.2 innings, while walking only 41.[8][9]

In 1999 Marquis began the season at Class A Myrtle Beach Pelicans, where he opened the season by firing 20.0 consecutive scoreless innings.[9] Marquis was named Baseball America Carolina League Player of the week for the period April 15-21, as he posted a 0-0 record pitching 10.0 innings and striking out 11.[25] He allowed only one earned run in 6 starts (3-0, 0.28 ERA) before being promoted to the AA Greenville Braves, and was named the Braves' No. 5 prospect by Baseball America.[26][9] With Greenville he went 3-4, 4.58 in 12 starts. He spent much of the summer on the DL with a sore elbow, tender shoulder, and a pulled oblique stomach muscle.[8][9][27]

In 2000 Baseball America named him the Braves No. 5 prospect, and he split time between AA Greenville (going 4-2 with a 3.57 ERA), the AAA Richmond Braves, and Atlanta (15 games in relief; a 5.01 ERA.[9][28][29] Marquis spent much of 2003 back in the minors, where his overall record at Richmond was 8-4, with a 3.35 ERA in 15 games (all starts).[9]

Stats[10]

Season Team Level G GS CG SHO IP H R ER HR BB SO W L ERA
1996 Danville Braves Rookie 7 4 0 0 23.1 30 18 12 0 7 24 1 1 4.63
1997 Macon Braves A 28 28 0 0 141.2 156 78 69 10 55 121 14 10 4.38
1998 Danville Braves A 22 22 1 0 114.2 120 65 62 3 41 135 2 12 4.87
1999 Myrtle Beach Pelicans A 6 6 0 0 32.0 22 2 1 0 17 41 3 0 0.28
1999 Greenville Braves AA 12 12 1 0 55.0 52 33 28 7 29 35 3 4 4.58
2000 Greenville Braves AA 11 11 0 0 68.0 68 35 27 10 23 49 4 2 3.57
2000 Richmond Braves AAA 6 6 0 0 20.0 26 21 20 2 13 18 0 3 9.00
2002 Richmond Braves AAA 1 1 0 0 5.0 5 2 2 0 1 6 0 1 3.60
2003 Richmond Braves AAA 15 15 3 1 94.0 93 40 35 5 34 75 8 4 3.35

Major league career

Atlanta Braves (2000-03)

Marquis was called up to the majors by the Braves in June 2000, at the age of 21 the 10th-youngest player in the NL,[30] after the Braves demoted struggling closer John Rocker for threatening a reporter.[8] He made his debut on June 6, 2000, in relief of Tom Glavine against the Pittsburgh Pirates.[8] "Getting that first call and running out to the mound," said Marquis, "I promise you I didn't feel my legs at all."[2] He was later sent back down to AAA Richmond, but was recalled again in September. During the 2000 season he appeared strictly in relief, finishing 7 games in his 15 appearances, and winning 1.

He became a starting pitcher in 2001, joining a celebrated staff with Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and Kevin Millwood. In his first year as a starter, Marquis held batters to a .145 batting average when runners were in scoring position, with 2 out. He maintained a spot on the rotation again in 2002 as the fifth starter, behind Maddux, Glavine, Millwood, and Damian Moss.

In 2003, the Braves revamped their starting rotation with the acquisitions of Mike Hampton, Russ Ortiz, Shane Reynolds, and the promotion of Horacio Ramírez from AA. Marquis was sent to the bullpen, making only 2 starts in 21 appearances. He was upset about being sent to the bullpen, and requested to be sent to the minors where he could be a starting pitcher, and observed by scouts from other organizations. On December 13, 2003, Marquis was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals along with relief pitcher Ray King and rookie prospect Adam Wainwright for outfielder J. D. Drew and catcher Eli Marrero. Looking back years later, Marquis said "I was pretty young ... and I think it really shook me, to realize that nothing was forever."[31]

St. Louis Cardinals (2004-06)

Marquis became a full-time starter in 2004 with the Cardinals, and posted a career-best 15-9 record, with a 3.71 earned run average and a career-high 138 strikeouts, for the National League champions. He was 2nd in the NL in ground ball/fly ball ratio (2.17), 6th in pitches per start (104.00), 8th in won-lost percentage (.682), and 9th in wins (15).[9][32] He held batters to a .198 Batting Average with Runners in Scoring Position,[33] and a .163 batting average with 2 outs and runners in scoring position.[34] Marquis strung together a Cardinals' season-high 11-game winning streak from May 31-September 4, the longest by a Cards pitcher since 1985 when John Tudor also won 11 straight games.[9] He stole a base against former Chicago Cubs teammate and mentor Greg Maddux on May 3, who also stole a base in the same game.[9] It marked the first time since 1950 that opposing pitchers stole a base in the same game.[35]

Marquis tossed a scoreless inning of relief in Game 1 of the 2004 World Series at Boston, and Manager Tony La Russa tabbed Marquis to start Game 4. He turned in the best performance of any Cardinals starter in the series, pitching 6 innings and giving up 3 runs.[5][36] He was bested, however, by Boston pitcher Derek Lowe, who threw shutout ball for 7 innings to win the series for the Red Sox.[11]

After the season he was a member of MLB's roster for the Japan All-Star Series from November 5-14, and appeared in two games out of the bullpen, allowing three earned runs in 6.2 innings).[9]

Marquis had an up and down season in 2005. Although he started the season strong, he slid into a personal 7-game losing streak. It ended on August 27, 2005, when Marquis pitched a 2-hit shutout at RFK Stadium in Washington, DC against the Washington Nationals, for his first career shutout. Overall Marquis posted a 13-14 record, with an 4.13 earned run average in 207 innings pitched.[37] He appeared in 33 games, starting 32, and completing 3 (6th in the NL). He gave up the second-lowest percentage of line drives in the NL (17.3%), induced 29 double plays (T-4th in the league), and was 4th with 1.26 GIDP/9 IP.[9] [12]

In 2005 he had 27 hits, posting a .310 batting average with 1 home run and 10 RBIs in 87 at bats. He was the first pitcher to bat over .300 since Mike Hampton batted .344 in 2002 (minimum of 50 at-bats). For his work at the plate, Marquis won the Silver Slugger Award in 2005.

In the postseason he worked out of the bullpen in the NLCS, after not being used in the Division Series, and pitched in three games, finished with a 3.38 ERA.[9]

In January 2006, Marquis and the Cardinals agreed to a 1-year contract, avoiding salary arbitration, for $5.15 million dollars.[13] Marquis, however, followed by having the worst season of his career, and one of the worst in Cardinals history. Pitching in the starting rotation all year, Marquis finished with a 6.02 ERA, the 2nd-worst in baseball among players who qualified for the ERA title (Joel Piñeiro, of the Seattle Mariners, finished last with a 6.36). He led the majors in runs allowed (136), and led the NL in losses (16) and home runs allowed (35). He also had the two worst game scores in the NL, a game against the White Sox on June 21 in which he gave up 13 earned runs in 5 innings, and one against the Atlanta Braves 3 weeks later in which he gave up 12 earned runs in 5 innings. On the other hand, in games that were late and close, he held batters to a .188 batting average.[14]

Marquis was on the Cardinals roster for their first-round playoff matchup against the San Diego Padres, but did not make an appearance in the series and was not included on the roster for either the NLCS or for the 2006 World Series. That dissapointed him. As he put it, the "year was a little bittersweet because you bust your butt for three years for a manager, you give it your all and don't complain, and you contribute so much in the regular season, then to have it taken away in the postseason ... But managers are going to make their decisions. You really can't question them or change them because they're going to do what they want anyway. You have to go out there and work hard and be thankful for what you have."[2]

Chicago Cubs (2007-08)

In December 2006 Marquis signed a 3-year contract with the Chicago Cubs worth $21 million.[5][15] With the Cubs, he wore his favorite # 21, the same number as former Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa, who in fact hit his 600th home run against Marquis.[5] This caused some concern, due to Sosa's accomplishments with the Cubs -- he is the Cubs' all-time home run leader.[16]

On May 9, Marquis completed a three-hit shutout against the Pittsburgh Pirates, defeating them 1-0. He had a perfect game going into the 6th inning, retiring the first 16 batters he faced, but Pirates shortstop Don Kelly broke it up with a single. The game only took 2 hours and 6 minutes. Marquis struck out 5, and needed only 109 pitches to complete the game. The win improved Marquis' record to 5-1, and dropped his ERA to 1.70, 3rd best in the NL. After the game, Marquis highlighted his consistency as being the key to his turnaround. "My delivery is as consistent as it's ever been. I feel like I'm repeating the same delivery over and over again and that's the reason, I really believe, for the success."[17]

Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, was September 21, and Marquis was glad to be slated to pitch the day prior in a day game, as he expected to be done before sundown. "I look at it that religion is an important part of my life, but so is family and baseball," Marquis said. "To me, family takes precedent over all aspects of my life. Baseball and religion fall into place, and I try not to make one more important than the other." Marquis did have to pitch on the holiday when he was with the Braves. It was his turn, and he didn't want to throw the rotation out of order. "I pitched, went to temple the next morning," Marquis said. "It was a day game. Bobby [Cox, Atlanta manager] allowed me to show up late. It turned out well."[18][19] Even though, he got tagged with 7 earned runs in 2.2 inning while striking out 1, and walking 1 batter.

In 2007 Marquis had the 5th-lowest batting average in the NL of balls hit into play against him (.280), and the 8th-highest ground ball percentage (49.5%).[20] He was 12-9, with a 4.60 ERA. He was tied for second in the league in shutouts (1), and was 5th in the league in hit batsmen (13). He kept batters to a .229 batting average in games that were late and close.[38]

On March 24, 2008, it was announced he would be the Cubs fifth starter for the 2008 season.[21] Historically, Marquis' numbers during the second half of the season were not as good as his numbers during the first half, but thanks to smart managing by Lou Piniella, Marquis and Rich Harden, newly-acquired from the Oakland Athletics on July 8, rotated their starts for a time, and Marquis posted a winning month of August, going 3-1 with a 3.90 ERA. It was his second-lowest ERA after a 3.81 ERA in July. He finished the season 11-9, with a 4.53 ERA, and held batters to a .192 batting average with 2 outs and runners in scoring postion.[39]

Jason Marquis (9-4), who has reached the playoffs in all nine of his major league seasons and has no intention of seeing that streak snapped this summer.

On September 26, 2008, the Cubs post-season roster was announced, and Marquis was granted a roster spot as a reliever.[22] Marquis thereby reached the playoffs in all nine of his major league seasons through 2008.[40] He made one appearance against the Dodgers in Game 1 of the National League Division Series, when he pitched the top of the ninth inning. In it he gave up a solo home run to Russell Martin for the Dodgers' seventh and final run of the game -- one they'd win by a final score of 7-2.[23]

Colorado Rockies (2009-present)

On January 6, 2009, Marquis was traded to the Colorado Rockies for pitcher Luis Vizcaíno.[24] General Manager Dan O'Dowd said "We like (Marquis') athleticism, age and durability."[25]

During the off-season, Marquis tweaked his delivery to improve his release point by staying over the rubber longer in his balance point, allowing his arm to catch up, resulting in a 2 to 3 inches longer stride, and leaving him throwing downhill.[26] Reporters attributed his first-half success to his new delivery and his high ground ball ratio.[41][42] By late June, reporters at MLB.com[43], the Denver Post,[44][45] Sports Illustrated,[46] the Chicago Herald,[47] and the Chicago Tribune[48] were speculating as to whether Marquis would be picked as an All Star in 2009.

On June 30 Marquis pitched a 2-hit, 0-walk, 17-ground-ball-outs, 86-pitch shutout to become the first 10-game winner in the NL. A reporter for MLB.com called it "one of the best pitching performances in Rockies history", and Rob Neyer of ESPN described Marquis that night as "Bob Gibson, Orel Hershiser, and Greg Maddux all rolled into".[27][28] He beat the LA Dodgers, which had the best record in the major leagues, and outpitched their ace Chad Billingsley 3-0 in a matchup of pitchers leading the league in wins. It was his third career shutout, and his second complete game of the season. He also drove in two of his team's three runs.[29] He became the fourth pitcher in club history to win 10 games before the All Star break, joining Kevin Ritz (1996), Shawn Chacon (2003) and Aaron Cook (2008).[30] "That was something special, as good as I have seen in my 7½ years behind this desk," said Rockies manager Jim Tracy.[31]

Through July 1, Marquis was leading the NL in wins (10) and ground ball outs induced (189), 2nd in ground balls induced (219), 3rd in ground ball/fly ball ratio (1.38; of all NL pitchers with 80 or more innings pitched), tied for 3rd in complete games (2), shutouts (1), and double plays induced (13), and 6th in won-lost percentage (.667) and innings pitched (109.1). He was holding batters to a .200 batting average in games that were late and close.[32][33] He had a career-low 14.5 pitches per inning, and was holding opposing batters to a career-low .313 OBP and .370 slugging percentage.[34] At the plate, Marquis was also tied for the major league lead among pitchers in runs scored (5), and 2nd in RBIs (6).[35]

Pitching

Marquis relies mostly on his sinker and slider. Even though he throws his sinker harder than most, he gets plenty of movement on the pitch. Marquis also throws a four-seam fastball in the mid to high 90s when in trouble and throws an excellent occasional curve ball and changeup.[8]

He is 6th all-time of all Jewish major leaguer pitchers in strikeouts and 7th in wins, trailing among others Sandy Koufax, Ken Holtzman, and Steve Stone in both categories.[36] In 2007 he became only the 6th Jewish pitcher to notch at least 10 victories in four consecutive seasons. The others are Koufax, Holtzman, Stone, Dave Roberts, and Barney Pelty.[5][37] In 2009 he joined Koufax as the only other Jewish pitcher to have at least 10 victories in six consecutive seasons. When there was talk in the off-season about an Israeli/Jewish team being fielded in the World Baseball Classic, Marquis said if it came about he would definitely be interested in playing to represent his heritage.[5]

Pitching Stats

Current as of June 25, 2009.

Season Team G GS CG SHO IP H R ER HR HBP BB SO W L ERA
2000 Atlanta Braves 15 0 0 0 23.1 23 16 13 4 1 12 17 1 0 5.01
2001 Atlanta Braves 38 16 0 0 129.1 113 62 50 14 4 59 98 5 6 3.48
2002 Atlanta Braves 22 22 0 0 114.1 127 66 64 19 3 49 84 8 9 5.04
2003 Atlanta Braves 21 2 0 0 40.2 43 27 25 3 2 18 19 0 0 5.53
2004 St. Louis Cardinals 32 32 0 0 201.1 215 90 83 26 10 70 138 15 7 3.71
2005 St. Louis Cardinals 33 32 3 1 207.0 206 110 95 29 5 69 100 13 14 4.13
2006 St. Louis Cardinals 33 33 0 0 194.1 221 136 130 35 16 75 96 14 16 6.02
2007 Chicago Cubs 34 33 1 1 191.2 190 111 98 22 13 76 109 12 9 4.60
2008 Chicago Cubs 29 28 0 0 167.0 172 87 84 15 8 70 91 11 9 4.53
2009 Colorado Rockies 15 15 1 0 100.1 105 52 47 9 1 36 48 9 5 4.22

Hitting

Marquis is an excellent hitter for a pitcher; so good in that he is sometimes called upon to pinch hit, something that is extraordinarily rare for a modern day pitcher. He constantly hits off the tee in batting cages.[49] In 441 at bats through 2008 Marquis had a .206 lifetime batting average, with 25 doubles, 2 triples, 5 home runs, 50 runs scored, 40 RBIs, 23 sacrifice hits, and a .306 slugging percentage -- 9th-best of all pitchers with at least 100 at bats.[50] He had a .276 career batting average, in 59 plate appearances, with 2 outs and runners in scoring position. In 26 at bats as a pinch hitter, he had a .231 batting average.

In 2005 he batted a career-high .310 with a career-high .460 slugging percentage, as in 87 at bats he had 27 hits, including 9 doubles, a triple, and a home run as he both scored 10 runs and drove in 10 runs. He was the first pitcher to bat over .300 since Mike Hampton batted .344 in 2002 (minimum of 50 at-bats).[51]

In a game on May 19, 2007, against the Chicago White Sox at Wrigley Field, Marquis connected on a 3-2 pitch from Javier Vazquez for a two-run home run, his first as a Cub, and his third career homer.[38]

In 2008 he hit a career-high 2 homers as he again drove in 10 runs, this time in 59 at bats.[9] During the 2008 season, he belted his fourth home run on September 6th, against Cincinnati's Gary Majewski at the Great American Ballpark, giving the Cubs their 10th run of the game. They went on to win by a score of 14-9.[39] On September 22, he hit his first career grand slam, off of New York Mets rookie Jon Niese at Shea Stadium. That night he was also credited with five RBIs - four of which came with his grand slam - in a career-high performance.[40] It was the first grand slam by a Jewish pitcher since Saul Rogovin of the Detroit Tigers hit one in 1950 off Eddie Lopat of the NY Yankees.[41]

In 2005 he had a career-high league-leading 27 hits, the highest total for a big-league pitcher since Rick Rhoden had 28 in 1984, with 24 coming as a pitcher and three as pinch-hitter. His 10 extra-base hits were the highest extra-base hit total by a pitcher since 1986, when Rhoden had 10.[42]

Hitting Stats

Current as of June 25, 2009.

Season Team G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS OBP SLG AVG
2000 Atlanta Braves 13 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
2001 Atlanta Braves 37 31 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 10 0 0 .091 .032 .032
2002 Atlanta Braves 28 38 6 5 0 0 1 1 8 0 16 0 0 .132 .211 .132
2003 Atlanta Braves 21 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 .500 1.000 .500
2004 St. Louis Cardinals 34 72 6 21 6 0 0 9 27 1 17 1 0 .297 .375 .292
2005 St. Louis Cardinals 43 87 10 27 8 1 1 10 40 2 11 0 0 .326 .460 .310
2006 St. Louis Cardinals 45 78 8 14 4 1 0 5 20 2 14 0 0 .210 .256 .179
2007 Chicago Cubs 39 72 9 10 3 0 1 4 16 1 24 0 0 .151 .222 .139
2008 Chicago Cubs 38 59 8 12 3 0 2 10 21 3 17 0 0 .242 .356 .203
2009 Colorado Rockies 16 29 5 6 1 0 0 4 7 2 4 0 0 .258 .241 .207

Fielding

Marquis has exhibited a better range factor at pitcher than the league average every year of his career, through 2008.[43]

References

  1. ^ Jason Marquis, baseball-reference.com , Retrieved on October 10, 2008
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rosenbloom, Steve (September 24, 2007). "Out loud with Jason Marquis; Cubs pitcher tells Our Guy about his role models, growing up in New York and his bar mitzvah". Retrieved 2009-05-27. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)
  3. ^ World Series may pit former Little League stars against each other, ESPN.com, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  4. ^ Muder, Craig, Hall of Fame celebrates Jewish Players, The Cincinnati Enquirer, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  5. ^ a b c d e f Shupak, Eli (June 25, 2008). "Cubs pitcher plays his best in day games". Retrieved 2009-05-27. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)
  6. ^ Rosen, Harvey (April 10, 2003). "Baseball rosters dotted with players of the Jewish persuasion". Retrieved 2009-05-27. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Glickson, Grant, Marquis Pitches Tottenville To Its Second Straight Title, The New York Times, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Horvitz, Joachim (2001). "The Big Book of Jewish Baseball, p. 277". Retrieved 2009-05-27. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Jason Marquis Biography". Retrieved 2009-05-27. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help); Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Jason Marquis, thebaseballcube.com, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  11. ^ Walker, Ben,Boston 3, St. Louis 0, Yahoo! Sports, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  12. ^ Jason Marquis, FanGraphs.com, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  13. ^ The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: Official Info: Press Release
  14. ^ Jason Marquis, baseball-reference.com, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  15. ^ "Sports news: Latest Chicago sports news on the Cubs, White Sox, Bears, Bulls, Blackhawks, Wolves and more from the Chicago Tribune - chicagotribune.com". Chicagosports.chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
  16. ^ De Luca, Chris, Sosa's 21 a long-distance number, Chicago Sun-Times, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  17. ^ Gano, Rick, Chi Cubs 1, Pittsburgh 0, Yahoo! Sports, Retrieved on June 6, 2007
  18. ^ Notes: Winning an elixir for Lee | MLB.com: News
  19. ^ Shaikin, Bill (2004-10-07). "Hope and Faith - Los Angeles Times". Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
  20. ^ National League Leaderboards » 2007 » Pitchers » Advanced Statistics | FanGraphs Baseball
  21. ^ Ethics - chicagotribune.com
  22. ^ Piniella names Cubs starters for NLDS | cubs.com: News
  23. ^ Dempster baffled by lack of control|cubs.com: News
  24. ^ Rockies complete deal for Marquis
  25. ^ [1]
  26. ^ [2]
  27. ^ [3]
  28. ^ [4]
  29. ^ [5]
  30. ^ [6]
  31. ^ [7]
  32. ^ "Jason Marquis Statistics and History". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  33. ^ [8]
  34. ^ [9]
  35. ^ [10]
  36. ^ http://jewishmajorleaguers.org/crrldrs/crrldrs.html][*[http://www.jta.org/cgi-bin/iowa/news/article/20070307baseballjews.html
  37. ^ "With the glove and the bat, Jews sparkled on the diamond," New Jersey Jewish Standard, 11/16/07, accessed 11/17/07
  38. ^ Cubs' Marquis provides boost with bat | cubs.com: News Chicago Cubs News
  39. ^ Nothing like a slugfest to shatter a skid | cubs.com: News
  40. ^ Marquis simply grand in win over Mets | cubs.com: News
  41. ^ "Plenty of highlights for Jewish Major Leaguers in '08 | New Jersey Jewish News". Njjewishnews.com. 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
  42. ^ "Jason Marquis: Biography and Career Highlights | ColoradoRockies.com: Players". Mlb.mlb.com. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
  43. ^ Jason Marquis Statistics - Baseball-Reference.com

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