Everything about Jason Marquis totally explained
Jason Scott Marquis (born
August 21,
1978), is an
American Major League Baseball pitcher for the
Chicago Cubs.
Marquis is one of only 7 ballplayers who pitched in the NL in 2007 who won at least 12 games in each year from 2004-07, the others being
Carlos Zambrano,
Greg Maddux,
Roy Oswalt,
Tim Hudson,
Derek Lowe, and
Jeff Suppan.
Through 2007, in games that were late and close Marquis held batters to a .229 batting average.
Early life
Marquis, who is
Jewish, was born in
Manhasset, New York. He grew up in
Staten Island, New York's
Arden Heights neighborhood, where he played
Little League Baseball on the South Shore Little League that finished third in the
Little League World Series in
1991. He is one of 25 Little League World Series players to have reached the major leagues.
Marquis pitched the
Tottenville High School Pirates to two consecutive
New York City Public Schools Athletic League titles in
1995 and
1996, at
Shea Stadium and
Yankee Stadium. He also played basketball there and was a member of the
National Honor Society.
The right-hander originally signed a
letter of intent to play for the
University of Miami, but opted out after he was drafted by the
Atlanta Braves in the first round of the
1996 free agent
draft after having graduated from high school. He was the 35th selection overall.
Minor league career
Stats
Marquis tied for most wins (14) in the
South Atlantic League in
1997.
Major league career
Stats
Current as of May 19, 2008.
Atlanta Braves (2000-03)
Marquis made it to the majors with the Braves in September
2000 at the age of 21, the 10th youngest player in the league. He appeared strictly in relief, finishing 7 games in his 15 appearances, and winning 1.
He became a starting pitcher in
2001, joining a celebrated staff with
Greg Maddux,
Tom Glavine, and
Kevin Millwood. In his first year as a starter, Marquis held batters to a .145 batting average when runners were in scoring position, with 2 out. He maintained a spot on the rotation again in
2002 as the fifth starter, behind Maddux, Glavine, Millwood, and
Damian Moss.
In
2003, the Braves revamped their starting rotation with the acquisitions of
Mike Hampton,
Russ Ortiz,
Shane Reynolds, and the promotion of
Horacio Ramírez from AA. Marquis was sent to the bullpen, making only 2 starts in 21 appearances. He was upset about being sent to the bullpen, and requested to be sent to the minors where he could be a starting pitcher, and observed by scouts from other organizations. On December 13,
2003, Marquis was traded to the
St. Louis Cardinals along with
relief pitcher Ray King and rookie prospect
Adam Wainwright for
outfielder J. D. Drew and
catcher Eli Marrero.
St. Louis Cardinals (2004-06)
Marquis became a full-time starter in
2004 with the Cardinals, and posted a career-best 15-9 record, with a 3.71
earned run average and a career-high 138
strikeouts, for the
National League champions. His 15 wins and .682 won-lost percentage were both 9th in the league. He held batters to a .198
Batting Average with Runners in Scoring Position. He stole a base against the
Chicago Cubs off teammate and former mentor
Greg Maddux, who also stole a base in the same game. It marked the first time since
1950 that opposing pitchers stole a base in the same game.
Manager
Tony La Russa tabbed Marquis to start Game 4 of the
2004 World Series. He turned in the best performance of any Cardinals starter in the series, pitching 6 innings and giving up 3 runs. He was bested, however, by Boston pitcher
Derek Lowe, who threw shutout ball for 7 innings to win the series for the Red Sox.
Marquis had an up and down season in
2005. Although he started the season strong, he slid into a personal 7-game losing streak. It ended on
August 27,
2005, when Marquis pitched a 2-hit shutout at
RFK Stadium in
Washington, DC against the
Washington Nationals, for his first career shutout. Overall Marquis posted a 13-14 record, with an 4.13
earned run average in 207
innings pitched. He appeared in 33 games, starting 32, and completing 3 (6th in the NL). He gave up the second lowest percentage of line drives in the NL (17.3%).
Uncharacteristically for a pitcher, Marquis is a very good hitter. He constantly hits off the tee in batting cages. In 2005 he'd 27
hits, posting a .310
batting average with 1
home run and 10
RBIs in 87
at-bats. He was the first pitcher to bat over .300 since
Mike Hampton batted .344 in
2002 (minimum of 50 at-bats). For his excellent work at the plate, Marquis won the
Silver Slugger Award. His hitting ability along with his athleticism makes him a valuable player, in that he's sometimes called on to pinch-hit or pinch-run.
In January
2006, Marquis and the Cardinals agreed to a 1-year contract, avoiding salary
arbitration, for $5.15 million dollars. Marquis, however, followed by having the worst season of his career, and one of the worst in Cardinals history. Pitching in the starting rotation all year, Marquis finished with a 6.02 ERA, the 2nd-worst in baseball among players who qualified for the ERA title (
Joel Piñeiro, of the
Seattle Mariners, finished last with a 6.36). He led the majors in runs allowed (136), and led the NL in losses (16) and home runs allowed (35). He also had the two worst game scores in the NL, a game against the White Sox on June 21st in which he gave up 13 earned runs in 5 innings, and one against the Atlanta Braves 3 weeks later in which he gave up 12 earned runs in 5 innings. On the other hand, in games that were late and close, he held batters to a .188 batting average.
Marquis was on the Cardinals roster for their 1st-round playoff matchup against the
San Diego Padres, but didn't make an appearance in the Series and wasn't included on the roster for the
NLCS against the Mets, or for the
2006 World Series against Detroit, which the Cardinals won.
Chicago Cubs (2007-present)
In December
2006 Marquis signed a 3-year contract with the
Chicago Cubs worth $21 million. With the Cubs, he wears # 21, the same number as former Cubs slugger
Sammy Sosa, who in fact hit his 600th home run against Marquis. This has caused some concern, due to Sosa's accomplishments with the Cubs -- he's the Cubs' all-time home run leader.
On May 9th, Marquis completed a three-hit
shutout against the
Pittsburgh Pirates, defeating them 1-0. He had a
perfect game going into the 6th inning, retiring the first 16 batters he faced, but Pirates shortstop
Don Kelly broke it up with a single. The game only took 2 hours and 6 minutes. Marquis struck out 5, and needed only 109 pitches to complete the game. The win improved Marquis' record to 5-1, and dropped his
ERA to 1.70, 3rd best in the NL. After the game, Marquis highlighted his consistency as being the key to his turnaround. "My delivery is as consistent as it's ever been. I feel like I'm repeating the same delivery over and over again and that's the reason, I really believe, for the success."
Yom Kippur, the Jewish
day of atonement, was September 21st, and Marquis was glad to be slated to pitch the day prior in a day game, as he expected to be done before sundown. "I look at it that religion is an important part of my life, but so is family and baseball," Marquis said. "To me, family takes precedent over all aspects of my life. Baseball and religion fall into place, and I try not to make one more important than the other." Marquis did have to pitch on the holiday when he was with the Braves. It was his turn, and he didn't want to throw the rotation out of order. "I pitched, went to temple the next morning," Marquis said. "It was a day game. Bobby [Cox,Atlanta manager] allowed me to show up late. It turned out well."
(External Link
)Even though, he got tagged with 7 earned runs in 2.2 inning while striking out 1, and walking 1 batter.
In 2007 Marquis had the 5th-lowest batting average in the NL of balls hit into play against him (.280), and the 8th-highest ground ball percentage (49.5%).
(External Link
) He was 12-9, with a 4.60 ERA. He was tied for second in the league in shutouts (1), and was 5th in the league in hit batsmen (13). He kept batters to a .229 batting average in games that were late and close.
On
March 24,
2008, it was announced he'd be the Cubs fifth starter for the 2008 season.
(External Link
)
Batting
One of the best hitting pitchers in the game, in 382 at bats through 2007 Marquis had a .207 lifetime batting average, with 22 doubles, 2 triples, 3 home runs, 42 runs scored, 30 RBIs, and 19 sacrifice hits. He had a .292 career batting average, in 49 plate appearances, with 2 outs and runners in scoring position. In 24 at bats as a pinch hitter, he'd a .250 batting average.
During the 2007 season, in a game on May 19 against the
Chicago White Sox at
Wrigley Field, Marquis connected on a 3-2 pitch from
Javier Vazquez for a two-run home run, his first as a Cub, and his third career homer.
Fielding
Marquis has exhibited a better
range factor at pitcher than the league average every year of his career, through 2007.
Miscellaneous
Marquis attended Hebrew school, and had a bar mitzvah. “My mother was stricter with our Jewish upbringing, given that her parents were Holocaust survivors."
Officials of the Israel Baseball League, for which Dan Duquette is director of player development, hope to compete in the 2009 World Baseball Classic with Marquis.
He is 7th all-time of all Jewish major leaguer pitchers in both wins and strikeouts, trailing among others Sandy Koufax, Ken Holtzman, and Steve Stone in both categories. In 2007 he became only the 6th Jewish pitcher to notch at least 10 victories in four consecutive seasons. The others are Koufax, Holtzman, Stone, Dave Roberts, and Barney Pelty.
He grew up as a Yankee fan.
He plays acoustic guitar on the last track of Nada Surf's album Lucky.Further Information
Get more info on 'Jason Marquis'.
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