Phillies legend Mike Schmidt has top MLB Network’s Prime 9 third basemen

The Phillies’ Hall of Fame infielder remains the best third baseman, 34 years after his retirement. Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia Phillies was named best third To thePhillies legend Mike Schmidt is in the top three for the top spot on MLB Network’s Prime 9.

   The Phillies’ Hall of Fame infielder remains the best third baseman, 34 years after his retirement. Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia Phillies was named best third baseman. To the surprise of most Philadelphia Phillies fans, the team legend was ranked by MLB Network as the third best player since 1947. network “Prime 9” Rankings for each position and the top nine players were calculated, and the third position was announced on December 12. Amazingly, Mike Schmidt became the first player to hold this position since 1947.

   The Phillies selected Schmidt out of Ohio University in the second round of the 1971 draft. After spending two seasons in Double A and Triple A, he made his major league debut on September 17, 1972. Schmidt spent 18 years in Philly and is one of only five players to spend his entire MLB career with the Phillies. During that time, he hit .267/.380/.527 with a .908 OPS. In 10,062 plate appearances in 2,404 games, he has 2,234 hits, 548 homers, 1,595 RBIs, 1,507 walks, an OPS+ of 148 and a career WAR of 106.8, according to Baseball-Reference. 


The third baseman has excelled both offensively and defensively throughout his career. He finished eight seasons as the National League home run leader, six seasons as the OPS+ leader, five seasons as the slugging and OPS leader, and four seasons as the National League RBI leader. He finished his career as a 12-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner, six-time Silver Slugger and three-time National League MVP.

   Helping the team to its first World Series victory in 1980, he hit .381/.462/.714 with an OPS of 1.176 in six games in the Series, hitting two home runs, seven RBIs and four walks. Schmidt, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year on the ballot in 1995, retired in 1989 at age 39 after missing a season with a rotator cuff injury.

   According to Baseball Reference, not only does he lead in WAR among third basemen in the history of the game, but he also owns seven times WAR (58.8), JAWS (82.8) and earned runs above average (73.7). . . Additionally, his nine top-10 MVP wins are the most of any player at the position. And his 548 home runs currently rank 16th among all MLB players in the history of the sport.

   The Hall of Famer ranks first in several categories in Phillies history, including WAR, games played, at-bats, runs (1,506), total bases (4,404), home runs, RBIs, walks and extra-base hits. (1,015), pocket run (108) and walk with purpose (201). Regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, there is no doubt that the accolades are well deserved and Schmidt is regarded as one of the best third backs in football history.urprise of most Philadelphia Phillies fans, the team legend was ranked by MLB Network as the third best player since 1947. network “Prime 9″ Rankings for each position and the top nine players were calculated, and the third position was announced on December 12. Amazingly, Mike Schmidt became the first player to hold this position since 1947.

   The Phillies selected Schmidt out of Ohio University in the second round of the 1971 draft. After spending two seasons in Double A and Triple A, he made his major league debut on September 17, 1972. Schmidt spent 18 years in Philly and is one of only five players to spend his entire MLB career with the Phillies. During that time, he hit .267/.380/.527 with a .908 OPS. In 10,062 plate appearances in 2,404 games, he has 2,234 hits, 548 homers, 1,595 RBIs, 1,507 walks, an OPS+ of 148 and a career WAR of 106.8, according to Baseball-Reference. The third baseman has excelled both offensively and defensively throughout his career.

   He finished eight seasons as the National League home run leader, six seasons as the OPS+ leader, five seasons as the slugging and OPS leader, and four seasons as the National League RBI leader. He finished his career as a 12-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner, six-time Silver Slugger and three-time National League MVP. Helping the team to its first World Series victory in 1980, he hit .381/.462/.714 with an OPS of 1.176 in six games in the Series, hitting two home runs, seven RBIs and four walks. Schmidt, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year on the ballot in 1995, retired in 1989 at age 39 after missing a season with a rotator cuff injury.

   According to Baseball Reference, not only does he lead in WAR among third basemen in the history of the game, but he also owns seven times WAR (58.8), JAWS (82.8) and earned runs above average (73.7). . . Additionally, his nine top-10 MVP wins are the most of any player at the position. And his 548 home runs currently rank 16th among all MLB players in the history of the sport.

   The Hall of Famer ranks first in several categories in Phillies history, including WAR, games played, at-bats, runs (1,506), total bases (4,404), home runs, RBIs, walks and extra-base hits. (1,015), pocket run (108) and walk with purpose (201).

   Regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, there is no doubt that the accolades are well deserved and Schmidt is regarded as one of the best third backs in football history.

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