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Jack Wilson (shortstop)
Jack Eugene Wilson (born December 29, 1977) is an American former professional baseball shortstop and current coach. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Seattle Mariners, and Atlanta Braves. After his playing career, he became a coach and is the manager of the Greenville Flyboys in the collegiate Appalachian League.
Wilson played high school baseball for Thousand Oaks High School in Thousand Oaks, California. He later played for two seasons at Oxnard College, the same baseball program that produced major leaguers Terry Pendleton, Josh Towers, and Paul McAnulty. He was coached by Pat Woods, Jon Larsen, Roger Frash, and Buster Staniland.
The St. Louis Cardinals selected Wilson in the 1998 MLB draft. The Cardinals traded Wilson to the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2000 for Jason Christiansen.
Wilson made his MLB debut in 2001. He had almost identical seasons in 2002 and 2003, hitting .252 with 22 doubles in 147 games and .256, 21, 150, respectively.
In 2004, Wilson set career highs in almost every category. He posted a .308 average; shared the league lead in triples with 12 (Jimmy Rollins); scored 82 runs; hit 41 doubles and 11 home runs; and collected 49 RBI. His 201 hits were 3rd in the league and included 56 multi-hit games. To cap it off he ended the year with a season-high 12-game hitting streak (17-for-46, .370). After hitting eighth in the batting order for most of his career, he became a fixture in the second slot.
He became just the ninth National League shortstop to collect 200 hits in a season; the franchise's first player since Dave Parker (1977), and the first Pirates shortstop since Hall of Famer Honus Wagner (1908). Wilson also became the first Pirate to collect 10 or more doubles, triples, and home runs in the same season since Andy Van Slyke (1992).
Defensively, Wilson led National League shortstops in assists (492), putouts (234), and total chances (743). His 129 double plays led all major league shortstops and broke the club record of 128 set by Gene Alley in 1966. He went 31 straight contests without making an error. Wilson was named to the 2004 All-Star Game and won the Silver Slugger at shortstop. He was also the Pirates candidate for the Roberto Clemente Award.
In December 2004, Wilson was hospitalized for an appendectomy. Despite the setback, he was optimistic at spring training 2005. At 6-foot, 175-pound, Wilson had regained six of the 15 pounds he lost. However, he started the season poorly, hitting just .163 in April and .227 for the first half of the season, and acknowledged that he had not been fully recovered when the season started. Late season improvements to his hitting brought his cumulative season numbers to near his career averages, but still well below the standards he had set in 2004. He finished the year with a .257 batting average, a .299 on-base percentage, and a .363 slugging percentage, compared to his career highs of .308, .335, and .459 respectively the year before.
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Jack Wilson (shortstop)
Jack Eugene Wilson (born December 29, 1977) is an American former professional baseball shortstop and current coach. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Seattle Mariners, and Atlanta Braves. After his playing career, he became a coach and is the manager of the Greenville Flyboys in the collegiate Appalachian League.
Wilson played high school baseball for Thousand Oaks High School in Thousand Oaks, California. He later played for two seasons at Oxnard College, the same baseball program that produced major leaguers Terry Pendleton, Josh Towers, and Paul McAnulty. He was coached by Pat Woods, Jon Larsen, Roger Frash, and Buster Staniland.
The St. Louis Cardinals selected Wilson in the 1998 MLB draft. The Cardinals traded Wilson to the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2000 for Jason Christiansen.
Wilson made his MLB debut in 2001. He had almost identical seasons in 2002 and 2003, hitting .252 with 22 doubles in 147 games and .256, 21, 150, respectively.
In 2004, Wilson set career highs in almost every category. He posted a .308 average; shared the league lead in triples with 12 (Jimmy Rollins); scored 82 runs; hit 41 doubles and 11 home runs; and collected 49 RBI. His 201 hits were 3rd in the league and included 56 multi-hit games. To cap it off he ended the year with a season-high 12-game hitting streak (17-for-46, .370). After hitting eighth in the batting order for most of his career, he became a fixture in the second slot.
He became just the ninth National League shortstop to collect 200 hits in a season; the franchise's first player since Dave Parker (1977), and the first Pirates shortstop since Hall of Famer Honus Wagner (1908). Wilson also became the first Pirate to collect 10 or more doubles, triples, and home runs in the same season since Andy Van Slyke (1992).
Defensively, Wilson led National League shortstops in assists (492), putouts (234), and total chances (743). His 129 double plays led all major league shortstops and broke the club record of 128 set by Gene Alley in 1966. He went 31 straight contests without making an error. Wilson was named to the 2004 All-Star Game and won the Silver Slugger at shortstop. He was also the Pirates candidate for the Roberto Clemente Award.
In December 2004, Wilson was hospitalized for an appendectomy. Despite the setback, he was optimistic at spring training 2005. At 6-foot, 175-pound, Wilson had regained six of the 15 pounds he lost. However, he started the season poorly, hitting just .163 in April and .227 for the first half of the season, and acknowledged that he had not been fully recovered when the season started. Late season improvements to his hitting brought his cumulative season numbers to near his career averages, but still well below the standards he had set in 2004. He finished the year with a .257 batting average, a .299 on-base percentage, and a .363 slugging percentage, compared to his career highs of .308, .335, and .459 respectively the year before.
