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Will Clark,
1st Base, Cotuit Kettleers Player
Sweet-swinging Will Clark enjoyed
a terrific summer for the Cotuit Kettleers in 1983, compiling a
.367 batting average (third in the league) with 10 home runs and
37 RBI. The Mississippi State first baseman had a .454 on-base pct.
and was second with a .653 slugging pct. He started at first base
for the Cape League All-Star team and was a member of the 1984 U.S.
Olympic Team. Will’s summer job with Cotuit was working for
fellow Hall-of-Famer Jim Perkins at his filling station in Osterville.
Clark was a two-time All-American and was named the SEC Athlete
of the Year in 1985. He also won the Golden Spikes Award in 1985.
After being drafted in the first round and signed by the San Francisco
Giants, Clark performed in the major leagues for 16 years, compiling
an impressive .303 lifetime batting average, mostly with the Giants
and Texas Rangers.
A 1990 poll of 65 major league players ranked
Will Clark as the best clutch performer
in baseball. Had his peers been asked to rank the cockiest or most
arrogant player in the game, Clark might well have finished first
as well. Clark's abundance of natural talent earned him the nickname
"The Natural" and the tall first baseman never lacked for confidence.
One of baseball's fiercest competitors, Clark was known for the
fearsome glare he would fix on a pitcher while standing in the batter's
box. "The big thing people say to me is, 'Why don't you ever smile?'"
Clark once remarked. "Well, I'm too interested in trying to beat
somebody right now to smile."
An All-American at Mississippi State, Clark played
a starring role for the 1984 U.S. Olympic team which yielded such
future major leaguers as Barry
Larkin and Mark
McGwire . During the five-game Olympic tournament, Clark
batted .429 with three home runs and eight RBIs. The following year
he won the Golden Spikes Award, given annually to the country's
top collegiate player.
Selected
with the second-overall pick of the June
1985 draft by San Francisco, Clark wasted little time
acclimating himself to life as a professional. Just two days after
signing with the Giants, Clark homered on his first swing in the
minor leagues. Less than ten months later, after just 65 games at
Single-A Fresno, Will "The Thrill" opened the season as the Giants'
regular first baseman. Clark connected for a round-tripper against
future Hall-of-Famer Nolan
Ryan in his first major-league at-bat on April 8th,
and finished his rookie year with a .287 batting average and eleven
home runs despite missing 47 games with an elbow injury resulting
from a base-running collision in mid-season.
Over
the next six seasons Clark would establish himself as the premier
first baseman in the National League. In his first full season,
his smooth left-handed swing produced a .308 batting average and
a career high 35 home runs as the Giants captured the NL West crown.
Inexplicably, the slow-footed Clark attempted 22 steals that year,
and was successful just five times. Though overlooked for All-Star
status that season, Clark was voted the starting first baseman for
the NL All-Star team every season from 1988 through 1992. His finest
hour came in 1989, when he batted .333 (narrowly losing the batting
title to Tony
Gwynn on the final day of the season) with 111 RBIs,
finishing second in the NL MVP voting to teammate Kevin
Mitchell.
The
Giants won their second NL West title in three seasons that year,
and during the NLCS Clark took his game to an even higher level,
sealing his reputation as one of baseball's best clutch hitters.
During San Francisco's five-game triumph over the Cubs, Clark raked
the Chicago pitching staff at a .650 clip while driving in eight
runs. In Game One at Wrigley
Field Clark picked up four hits, launched two circuit
blasts (including a grand slam which left the stadium) and drove
in an LCS-record six runs.
In
the decisive Game Five, Clark faced hard-throwing Cubs reliever
Mitch
Williams with the bases loaded and the score tied in
the bottom of the eighth. Clark smoked Williams' first delivery
back through the box to break the tie and propel the Giants into
the World Series. But in a Fall Classic remembered more for the
devastating earthquake which struck just hours before the scheduled
start of Game Three, the Giants were unceremoniously swept by their
cross-bay rival Oakland Athletics.
Clark
had become quite a durable player since his rookie year injury,
setting a San Francisco record with 320 consecutive games played
from September of 1987 through August of 1989. However, a string
of injuries cut into his playing time in the early '90s and diminished
his production. Clark drove in just 73 runs in 1992 and 1993, the
lowest total since his rookie year.
Clark's
contract ran out after the 1993 season, and although the popular
star had become a fixture in San Francisco baseball, the Giants
were unwilling to offer a long-term contract to a player saddled
with recent injury problems and coming off two straight mediocre
seasons. However, the perennially underachieving Texas
Rangers were willing to take a shot on a player known
as much for his intensity and leadership as for his bat. After contract
talks with incumbent first baseman Rafael
Palmeiro stalled, the Rangers signed Clark to a five
year, $30 million deal to replace his former Mississippi State teammate.
In his first season in the Lone Star State, Clark quickly took a
fancy to AL pitching, posting a .353 average at 1994 All-Star break.
His attitude benefited the Rangers as well. "He's got the will to
win, and knows what is involved in getting it done," said manager
Kevin Kennedy. "Not just some days, every day. It's the kind of
intensity that this organization needed." When the players' strike
hit, Clark ranked fifth in the AL with a .431 on base percentage
and placed seventh in the league with a .329 batting average.
Over
the next four years, Clark maintained a high level of offensive
production, finishing below .300 only in 1996. Injuries continued
to curtail his playing time, however, limiting him to 123, 117 and
110 games from 1995 through 1997. But Texas fans were far from disappointed.
Clark's veteran presence teamed with the booming bat of outfielder
Juan
Gonzalez to lead Texas to its first two AL West titles
in 1996 and 1998. Unfortunately for the Rangers, they faced the
World Series bound Yankees in the opening round of the playoffs
each time and Clark failed to repeat his earlier post-season heroics,
collecting only three hits in 27 at-bats over the two series. The
Rangers managed to win just one game in 1996 and were swept by a
powerful Yankees squad in 1998.
Despite
putting together his most productive season in seven years in 1998
(.305, 23 HRs, 41 2Bs, 102 RBIs) Clark suddenly found himself out
of a job. Palmeiro decided to re-sign with Texas after five years
in Baltimore, effectively ending Clark's days as a Ranger. Reviving
his pas de deux with his old college teammate, Clark responded by
signing a two-year deal with the Orioles.
Clark spent a desultory season-and-a-half with a pair of underachieving
Orioles teams. Injuries plagued him again in 1999, as a fractured
left thumb and a bone spur in his elbow limited him to 77 games
and just 29 RBIs despite a .303 batting average, although he did
manage to collect his 2,000th career hit on June 15th against Kansas
City. The following year a trading deadline deal sent Clark from
Baltimore to St. Louis, where he filled in for first baseman Mark
McGwire, who was limited to pinch-hitting duties by a
case of patellar tendinitis.
Clark's arrival reinvigorated a Cardinals club that led the NL Central
but had treaded water since the loss of McGwire. He homered in his
first at-bat and in each of his first four starts for St. Louis,
and batted a robust .345 with 12 round trippers and 45 RBIs in his
two-month Cardinals' cameo. He added a three-run homer off Braves'
southpaw Tom
Glavine in Game Two of the club's sweep of Atlanta in
the Division Series, but decided to retire less than a month after
St. Louis fell to the Mets in the League Championship Series.
Born
in New Orleans, Louisiana, Clark grew up (and remains) an avid hunter
and fisher. He has been known to practice his archery in empty stadiums
after games and has taped several hunting programs for ESPN.
Text
Courtesy John Garner, Cape Cod Baseball League & Baseballlibrary.Com
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