Shane Mack (baseball)
Shane Mack | |||||||||||||||
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Outfielder | |||||||||||||||
Born: Los Angeles, California | December 7, 1963|||||||||||||||
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |||||||||||||||
Professional debut | |||||||||||||||
MLB: May 25, 1987, for the San Diego Padres | |||||||||||||||
NPB: April 7, 1995, for the Yomiuri Giants | |||||||||||||||
Last appearance | |||||||||||||||
NPB: October 24, 1996, for the Yomiuri Giants | |||||||||||||||
MLB: July 30, 1998, for the Kansas City Royals | |||||||||||||||
MLB statistics | |||||||||||||||
Batting average | .299 | ||||||||||||||
Home runs | 80 | ||||||||||||||
Runs batted in | 398 | ||||||||||||||
NPB statistics | |||||||||||||||
Batting average | .284 | ||||||||||||||
Home runs | 42 | ||||||||||||||
Runs batted in | 127 | ||||||||||||||
Stats at Baseball Reference | |||||||||||||||
Teams | |||||||||||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||||||||||
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Medals
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Shane Lee Mack (born December 7, 1963) is an American former professional baseball outfielder in Major League Baseball (MLB).
Career
Mack played for Richard Gahr High School in Cerritos, California, from 1978-1981. Upon graduation, he accepted an athletic scholarship to play for the UCLA Bruins baseball team where he starred from 1982-1984. His career college statistics include a .361 batting average, 29 home runs, 142 runs batted in, 158 runs scored and 44 stolen bases. Mack was the runner-up for the Pac-10 Conference Most Valuable Player (MVP) in 1983. His .419 batting average that year was the seventh best all-time in the Pac-10. Mack was selected to the All-Pac-10 and All-American College Baseball Teams in 1983 and 1984.
Mack was the 11th player selected in the 1st round of the major league draft in 1984. Following college, he played on the U.S. Olympic baseball team which won a silver medal in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Subsequently, he played nine professional major league seasons. His career statistics include a .299 lifetime batting average, 80 home runs, and 398 RBIs in 923 games. Defensively, he recorded a .985 fielding percentage at all three outfield positions. Mack started his career with the San Diego Padres. In 1990, he was selected in the rule 5 draft by the Minnesota Twins where he starred from 1990-1994. Notably, he was a key component of the Twins' 1991 World Series championship team. In 1992 Mack had his best year, hitting .315 (fifth in the American League), scoring 101 runs (seventh in the AL), stealing 26 bases, driving in 75 runs, and hitting 16 home runs.
After playing in Japan for the Yomiuri Giants in 1995 & 1996, he returned to the United States to play ball for the Boston Red Sox in the 1997 season. He then played for the Oakland Athletics and the Kansas City Royals in 1998 before retiring.
Mack was inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame on October 10, 2002.
On March 6, 2006, having been informed of the grave condition of former teammate Kirby Puckett, who had gone blind in one eye a few years before, due to glaucoma, and who had suffered a massive stroke the previous day, Mack flew to Arizona to be with him along with a number of other current and former Twins.
His brother is former major league outfielder Quinn Mack.
External links
- Career statistics from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs
- 1963 births
- Living people
- Major League Baseball left fielders
- Major League Baseball center fielders
- Minnesota Twins players
- San Diego Padres players
- Boston Red Sox players
- Oakland Athletics players
- Kansas City Royals players
- Baseball players from Los Angeles
- African-American baseball players
- American expatriate baseball players in Japan
- Baseball players at the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Yomiuri Giants players
- UCLA Bruins baseball players
- Medalists at the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Olympic silver medalists for the United States in baseball
- Olympic medalists in baseball
- People from Cerritos, California
- All-American college baseball players
- Beaumont Golden Gators players
- Las Vegas Stars (baseball) players
- 21st-century African-American people
- 20th-century African-American sportspeople
- Alaska Goldpanners of Fairbanks players