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* Holds the record for saves by a rookie closer (35 in 2006)
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'''Jonathan Robert Papelbon''' (Born November 23, 1980 in [[Baton Rouge, Louisiana]]) is a [[Major League Baseball]] [[Closer (baseball)|closer]] for the [[Boston Red Sox]]. He bats and throws [[right-handed]]. He is nicknamed "Pap" and "Cinco Ocho."
'''Jonathan Robert Papelbon''' (Born November 23, 1980 in [[Baton Rouge, Louisiana]]) is a [[Major League Baseball]] [[Closer (baseball)|closer]] for the [[Boston Red Sox]]. He bats and throws [[right-handed]]. He is nicknamed "Pap" and "Cinco Ocho." He is a douchebag.


He was the Red Sox closer during most of 2006. In early September, Papelbon injured his shoulder. When the Red Sox were eliminated from playoff contention, he was shut down for the rest of the season to rest. Papelbon was being groomed to be part of the Red Sox starting rotation, but because of his shoulder problems, was later moved back to the bullpen before the start of the season and remained the team's closer.<ref>Boston Red Sox press release: [http://boston.redsox.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070322&content_id=1854433&vkey=spt2007news&fext=.jsp&c_id=bos "Papelbon to return as closer."] Retrieved [[March 22]], [[2007]].</ref> On [[August 21]], [[2007]], Papelbon had his 30th save of the season making him the first Boston pitcher to ever have two 30-save seasons. As of [[July 1st]], [[2009]] Papelbon holds the record of most saves by a Red Sox pitcher, beating [[Bob Stanley|Bob Stanley's]] previous record of 132 saves.
He was the Red Sox closer during most of 2006. In early September, Papelbon injured his shoulder. When the Red Sox were eliminated from playoff contention, he was shut down for the rest of the season to rest. Papelbon was being groomed to be part of the Red Sox starting rotation, but because of his shoulder problems, was later moved back to the bullpen before the start of the season and remained the team's closer.<ref>Boston Red Sox press release: [http://boston.redsox.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070322&content_id=1854433&vkey=spt2007news&fext=.jsp&c_id=bos "Papelbon to return as closer."] Retrieved [[March 22]], [[2007]].</ref> On [[August 21]], [[2007]], Papelbon had his 30th save of the season making him the first Boston pitcher to ever have two 30-save seasons. As of [[July 1st]], [[2009]] Papelbon holds the record of most saves by a Red Sox pitcher, beating [[Bob Stanley|Bob Stanley's]] previous record of 132 saves.

Revision as of 20:26, 16 August 2009

Jonathan Papelbon
Boston Red Sox – No. 58
Relief pitcher
Bats: Right
Throws: Right
debut
July 31, 2005, for the Boston Red Sox
Career statistics
(through August 11, 2009)
Win–Loss14–11
Earned run average1.84
Strikeouts321
Saves141
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • 4x All-Star selection: (2006–2009)
  • World Series Champion (2007)
  • Holds Major League record for most consecutive scoreless innings to start a postseason career (25).
  • Holds the record for saves by a rookie closer (35 in 2006)

Jonathan Robert Papelbon (Born November 23, 1980 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana) is a Major League Baseball closer for the Boston Red Sox. He bats and throws right-handed. He is nicknamed "Pap" and "Cinco Ocho." He is a douchebag.

He was the Red Sox closer during most of 2006. In early September, Papelbon injured his shoulder. When the Red Sox were eliminated from playoff contention, he was shut down for the rest of the season to rest. Papelbon was being groomed to be part of the Red Sox starting rotation, but because of his shoulder problems, was later moved back to the bullpen before the start of the season and remained the team's closer.[1] On August 21, 2007, Papelbon had his 30th save of the season making him the first Boston pitcher to ever have two 30-save seasons. As of July 1st, 2009 Papelbon holds the record of most saves by a Red Sox pitcher, beating Bob Stanley's previous record of 132 saves.

Jonathan is the older brother of twins Josh Papelbon, pitcher for the Salem Red Sox, Single-A advanced affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, and Jeremy Papelbon, pitcher for the Tennessee Smokies, Double-A affiliate of the Chicago Cubs.

Early career

High school

Papelbon was a three-time All-City honoree while playing in high school for Bishop Kenny High School in Jacksonville, FL.[2]

College: Mississippi State

Papelbon was a closer for the Mississippi State Bulldogs. He had a 9–6 record, 13 saves, and 2.90 ERA in his three years on the team in relief. In the summer after his freshman year, Papelbon played with the Silver Spring-Takoma Park Thunderbolts in suburban D.C. The team is a part of a wooden bat league for college players. During the subsequent summers of his college career Papelbon played for the Danville Dans, a summer baseball team located in Danville, Illinois. Soon after arriving in Danville he easily became a crowd favorite and led the team to a CICL championship.[3] Papelbon graduated from Mississippi State in 2003.[4]

Minor leagues

After a 13–10 record for Class-A Lowell Spinners and Sarasota Red Sox from 2003–04, Papelbon was 5–2 in 14 starts for Double-A Portland in 2005. Promoted to Triple-A Pawtucket, he went 1–2 with a 3.57 ERA in four starts, walking two and striking out 21 in 22.1 innings.[5]

Major league career

2003–2005

Papelbon was drafted in the 4th round in 2003, a year after the Oakland Athletics picked him in the 62nd round. He did not sign because he wanted one more year in college to pitch and a chance to get to the College World Series, which his team failed to do.[citation needed] The Philadelphia Phillies had called him in round six to ask if he would sign if they drafted him, but he rejected the offer.[citation needed] Finally, the Red Sox drafted him the next year in the eighteenth round.

Papelbon made his major league debut with the Red Sox on July 31, 2005 against the Minnesota Twins, in which he went 5⅓ innings, struck out seven batters, and issued five walks in Boston's 4–3 victory. He did not receive a decision. He earned his first major league win on September 12, 2005, pitching three scoreless innings in an extra-inning game against the Toronto Blue Jays. In two postseason appearances in 2005, he pitched four scoreless innings against the eventual World Series Champion Chicago White Sox. The Red Sox had plans of slotting Papelbon into their starting rotation prior to the regular season in 2006. However, the incumbent closer, Keith Foulke, proved to be ineffective trying to come back from an injury-plagued 2005.[citation needed]

2006–2007

In April 2006, he changed his hair to a Mohawk style, after Charlie Sheen's character Ricky Vaughn from the film Major League due to a wager with teammate Kevin Youkilis in which they bet whether he could start the season with 10 scoreless innings.[6]

On April 5, the second game of the 2006 season, Papelbon recorded his first career save in Texas. On April 29, 2006, he set a major league record with his 10th save, against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. No rookie in major league baseball history had recorded that many saves in the month of April.[citation needed]

The 25-year-old closer finished 2006 with one of the most dominant seasons ever for a rookie reliever. Papelbon saved 35 games, struck out 75 batters in 68 innings, and held opposing batters to a .167 batting average.

On October 11, 2007, Papelbon was named the 2007 winner of the "DHL Presents the Major League Baseball Delivery Man of the Year Award." Papelbon garnered 39,043 votes out of almost 125,000 votes cast.[7]

Papelbon dancing after 2007 American League Championship Series.

After the Boston Red Sox clinched the American League East title in 2007, Papelbon celebrated the victory by Irish step dancing in the middle of the Fenway Park diamond to the Dropkick Murphys' song "I'm Shipping Up to Boston", a song which he now is introduced to. Following the Red Sox American League Championship Series victory, he repeated his dance performance on the field with members of the band. For a third time, Papelbon did his dance on a flat bed truck with the World Series trophy over his head along with the Dropkick Murphys playing live during the Sox' Championship "Rolling Rally" Parade.[citation needed]

In late 2007 on Dan Patrick's radio show, David Ortiz revealed a friendly clubhouse wager that stated that Papelbon must perform his signature celebratory dance on demand for people wearing Boston Red Sox apparel. Terms of the bet were not disclosed, but it is rumored that Ortiz wagered 20 cases of Vitamin Water against Papelbon's offer of 1 free car from The Westville Motorsports Megastore, a local dealership he endorses.[citation needed] In Game 2 of the World Series Papelbon was brought in with the bases empty and 2 outs in the eight with the Red Sox leading 2–1 to face the Rockies best hitter, Matt Holliday. Papelbon gave up a single to Holliday before picking off Holliday to end the inning. Papelbon pitched a one-two-three ninth for the save.

In Game 4 of the 2007 World Series, he entered in the 8th inning to shut down the Colorado Rockies comeback, and pitched until the 9th where he threw the game-winning strikeout for the Red Sox as they clinched the 2007 Championship.

2008–present

On March 6, 2008, Papelbon agreed to terms with the Boston Red Sox for $775,000. Papelbon's deal set the record for the largest contract for a closer not eligible for salary arbitration, topping Mariano Rivera's previous record by $25,000. Boston was under no obligation to pay Papelbon more than the league minimum of $390,000. [8] On January 20, 2009, Papelbon agreed to a one-year $6.25 million contract with the Red Sox, avoiding arbitration. This is the largest contract for a closer in his first year of arbitration eligibility. [9] Papelbon recorded his 100th career save on July 13, 2008.[10] Among pitchers who have thrown at least 200 innings, Jonathan Papelbon's 0.930 WHIP through 2008 is the lowest in major league history.[11]

Papelbon criticized former teammate Manny Ramirez in the April 2009 issue of Esquire magazine.[12]

On June 29th, 2009, Papelbon gained his 132nd save, in a 4–0 shut out against the Baltimore Orioles, tying Bob Stanley's record for most saves by a Red Sox pitcher. Two days later on July 1st, Papelbon recorded his 133rd save with the Red Sox, starting a new record. On July 5th, 2009, Jonathan was selected to represent Boston at the 2009 All Star Game.

Personal life

His mother, Sheila, played softball at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and his father, John, is the Deputy Director of the Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame in St. Petersburg, Florida.[13]

Papelbon and his wife, Ashley, live in Hattiesburg, Mississippi and Wayland, Massachusetts. On December 29, 2008, Ashley gave birth to the couple's first child, a daughter, Parker Alice.[14]

He appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman on October 31, 2007, after the Red Sox won the 2007 World Series. On December 20, 2007, Papelbon claimed that his dog "Boss," chewed up the ball that recorded the final out of the 2007 World Series.[15]

Achievements

Career statistics

Current as of July 28, 2009

Year Team League G/GS W–L ERA IP SV/SVO R ER BB K
2005 BOS AL 17/3 3–1 2.65 34.0 0/1 11 10 17 34
2006 BOS AL 59/0 4–2 0.92 68.1 35/41 8 7 13 75
2007 BOS AL 59/0 1–3 1.85 58.1 37/40 12 12 15 84
2008 BOS AL 67/0 5–4 2.34 69.1 41/46 24 18 8 77
2009 BOS AL 46/0 1–1 1.96 46.0 27/30 11 10 20 48
Career 245/3 14–11 1.88 273.0 140/158 66 57 73 318

References

  1. ^ Boston Red Sox press release: "Papelbon to return as closer." Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  2. ^ MLB official player profile. Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  3. ^ name="Profile"
  4. ^ Boston Red Sox prospects: Jon Papelbon profile Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  5. ^ The Baseball Cube: Jon Papelbon Statistics. Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  6. ^ Boston Herald: "A hair-raising incident: Papelbon takes wild walk on Mohawk trail." Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  7. ^ "Jonathan Papelbon wins "DHL Presents the Major League Baseball Delivery Man of the Year Award"" (Press release). Major League Baseball. 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2008-07-26.
  8. ^ ESPN: "Red Sox re-sign Papelbon for one year, $775,000" Retrieved March 15, 2008.
  9. ^ "ESPN": Jonathan Papelbon's $6.25M deal with Boston Red Sox makes history"
  10. ^ MLB.com: 100th career save [1]
  11. ^ Chuck, Bill. 100 random things about the Red Sox, Rays, and Yankees, The Boston Globe. Published April 2, 2009.
  12. ^ Papelbon on former teammate Ramirez: 'It's like cancer'. Retrieved on 2009-03-12.
  13. ^ Contact usTed Williams Museum Hitters Hall of Fame. Retrieved 22 July 2008
  14. ^ Red Sox Pitcher Jonathan Papelbon Welcomes Daughter Parker Alice Celebritybabyblog.com, December 30, 2008
  15. ^ MSNBC.com

See also

External links