Mike Marshall | |||
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Marshall batting for the Dodgers in 1984
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Right fielder | |||
Born: Libertyville, Illinois |
January 12, 1960 |||
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Professional debut | |||
MLB: September 7, 1981, for the Los Angeles Dodgers | |||
NPB: 1992, for the Nippon Ham Fighters | |||
Last appearance | |||
MLB: August 4, 1991, for the California Angels | |||
NPB: 1992, for the Nippon Ham Fighters | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .270 | ||
Home runs | 148 | ||
Runs batted in | 530 | ||
NPB statistics | |||
Batting average | .246 | ||
Home runs | 9 | ||
Runs batted in | 26 | ||
Teams | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
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Michael Allen Marshall (born January 12, 1960) is an American former professional baseball player and current commissioner of the Pacific Association of Professional Baseball Clubs. He played as an outfielder in Major League Baseball for the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Mets, Boston Red Sox and California Angels from 1981 to 1991. He also played one season in Nippon Professional Baseball for the Nippon Ham Fighters in 1992. Marshall served as president and general manager of the Chico Outlaws of the North American League.
Born in Libertyville, Illinois, Marshall showed considerable promise as a minor league player. He had 24 home runs and 22 steals for Class-A Lodi in the Cal League in 1979. He won the league's Triple Crown in 1981, when he hit .373 with 34 homers, 21 stolen bases, and 137 RBIs for the Albuquerque Dukes, a Triple A club in the Pacific Coast League.
He is one of only two LA Dodger minor leaguers to have two 20/20 minor league seasons (Joc Pederson did it in 2013 and 2014).
In his first major league at bat against the San Francisco Giants in September 1981, he smashed a line drive over the right field wall at Dodger Stadium that bounced sharply off a stairwell and back onto the field. Jack Clark, playing right field, quickly picked up the ball and threw it back to the infield; due to the speed and trajectory of the ball, and Clark's routine actions, the umpires ruled it a double. Clark apparently admitted to Marshall later that it was a homer.