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Jim Ellsbury is of English and German descent.
He was activated from the DL and returned to the Red Sox lineup on July 13, and finished the season with a .271 batting average, four home runs, 26 RBI, and 14 stolen bases in only 74 games played. Ellsbury was drafted by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in the 23rd round of the 2002 MLB draft, but did not sign. After having played college baseball for three years at Oregon State University, he was selected by the Red Sox as the 23rd overall pick in the 2005 draft. He made his major league debut for the Red Sox in 2007. He led the American League in stolen bases three times and won World Series championships as a member of the Red Sox in 2007 and 2013. Ellsbury finished the season with career highs in home runs , hits , RBIs , runs , and batting average (.321).
Jacoby Ellsbury Bio
"That at-bat was unbelievable. He fouled off some nasty pitches. He stuck with his plan." "I think the biggest thing is that we didn't abandon the plan," said Farrell. On May 16 at Tropicana Field, the Red Sox were one strike away from defeat, and Will Middlebrooks clocked a three-run double in the top of the ninth. Just 24 hours before Sunday's thriller, Boston had come back from a 4-3 deficit by scoring four in the eighth.

It's a feat that Ty Cobb accomplished 54 times in his career, the most in the history of baseball. Even the great Babe Ruth is one of the 38 players in major league history to steal home at least 10 times. On April 11, Ellsbury collided with Red Sox third baseman Adrián Beltré in a game against the Kansas City Royals, and the collision resulted in hairline fractures to four of his left ribs. He was put on the 15-day disabled list on April 20, and he returned to the Red Sox on May 22. He returned to the 15-day DL on May 28 after playing in only three games due to residual soreness in his ribs from the collision with Beltré. He met with a thoracic specialist who advised him that his ribs should be further along in the healing process before he would be able to play.
Walk-Off Repeat: Jacoby Ellsbury Does It Again Against Indians
Joe Smith was thrust into a tough spot and Ellsbury shortened his swing and ripped his first pitch into the gap in left-center. It one-hopped the scoreboard in left-center to end the game. Drew -- who gave Boston some life with a leadoff triple in the eighth -- drilled a single to right and Gomes raced to third. "I think we felt like we had life in the ninth inning," said Farrell. "But when David hits the double, it certainly elevated it by a notch or two."
He also led the American League in power-speed number (35.2), total bases , and extra-base hits . He won his first Gold Glove Award, and finished as one of only two qualifying players to complete the season with a 1.000 fielding percentage. Jacoby was awarded a Silver Slugger Award for his hitting, joining teammate Adrián González as the only American League players to win both the Gold Glove and Silver Slugger Awards in 2011. Ellsbury was voted the American League Comeback Player of the Year and finished second in the 2011 American League Most Valuable Player Award balloting with 242 points, losing to Justin Verlander .
Professional career
Reggie Jackson is most well-known for swings like the one you see in the photo to the left. He was a power hitter, blasting 563 of homers throughout his career. Willie Davis had a walk off steal of home on September 19, 1964. He got on base in the 16th inning with two outs, stole second, got to third on a wild throw, and then stole home on the next pitch. Had he not stolen home that night, he may not have set the record. In Game 2 of the World Series that year, Fullmer stole home in the first inning of the game.
The Angels would go on to win the game 11-10, so the run was a very important one and if he had got caught stealing, the series may gone a different direction. Carrasco, who had lost five straight starts, was suspended six games and fined $2,500 for throwing at the head of Kansas City's Billy Butler on Friday night. He said he would drop his appeal and begin the suspension after Wednesday night's game. Once Drew singled and stole second, it set the stage for Iglesias, Ellsbury, and a comeback that had the Sox storming the field, piling on top of each other in celebration. Dustin Pedroia started the ninth with a walk, a six-pitch exercise in patience.
He was drafted in the first round of the 2005 MLB draft by the Boston Red Sox as a compensation pick from the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim for the signing of Orlando Cabrera. On April 22, 2014, Ellsbury played his first game at Fenway Park since leaving the Red Sox to join the Yankees. He received an ovation of boos from Red Sox fans.
The 45-year-old knuckleballer, the oldest active player in the majors, retired the first eight batters he faced before catcher Lou Marson reached on a fielding error by Sox shortstop Marco Scutaro with two outs in the third. Thankfully, though, the Red Sox had Jacoby Ellsbury to pick them up. After wasting a leadoff walk in the eight, Darnell McDonald and Marco Scutaro provided quick outs for Joe Smith.
After the 2013 season, Ellsbury signed a seven-year, $153 million contract with the Yankees. He played for the Yankees from 2014 to 2017, but was unable to play in 2018 or 2019 due to injury. With no intentions of helping Perez out of the quicksand, Gomes took a five-pitch walk. But after the Indians added a run in the eighth, Iglesias’s sacrifice fly to left in the bottom half scored Stephen Drew to make it 5-2. When Perez tried another pitch to test how he was feeling, he just about sailed it to the backstop.

Smith got ahead 0-1 with a slider that caught the outside edge, but his next pitch caught just enough of the plate. Ellsbury leaned out just a bit, swung hard, and launched the ball well over Ezequiel Carrera's head and into the stands in dead-away center for the walk-off shot. There were several factors that played into Ellsbury's decision to run. The Yankees' bench had been trying to alert Ellsbury one pitch earlier, when Moore had opted to work from the windup with a 3-1 count on Brett Gardner, a left-handed hitter. "You're trying to score a run, but guys get fired up," Ellsbury said. I'll take the last straight steal of home in the World Series though, as it is one of the most memorable and replayed moments in the game's history.
He finished the season with 50 steals to lead the American League, putting him third on the list of Red Sox all-time stolen base leaders for a single season, behind Tommy Harper in 1973 and Tris Speaker in 1912. Ellsbury finished third in the AL Rookie of the Year voting, behind Evan Longoria of Tampa Bay and Alexei Ramírez of the Chicago White Sox. The 2007 Baseball America Prospect Handbook compared Ellsbury to former Red Sox center fielder Johnny Damon, lauding his speed, hitting and fielding while noting his below-average throwing arm. After Coco Crisp was injured, the Red Sox purchased Ellsbury's contract and he received a call-up on June 30, in which he made his MLB debut in center field and hit ninth against the Texas Rangers at Fenway Park wearing number 46.