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Gonzalez showed signs of a superstar in the 2009 postseason. |
Yes, the 2007 National League Rookie of the Year runner-up, Troy Tulowitzki, is the face of the franchise, but it's another young player on the rise that caught the attention of the baseball world in 2010. Outfielder Carlos Gonzalez is coming off a breakout season in '10 which was filled with a ton of individual accolades.
Gonzalez won both his first career Silver Slugger and Gold Glove, deeming him one of the three best outfielders in the NL with the bat and glove. Despite Gonzalez not being named to the All-Star Game in Anaheim, California he sure played like it.
This past season was the first chance Gonzalez got to be an everyday player in the big leagues and rewarded manager Jim Tracy's decision. Gonzalez played in a career-high 145 games, topping his previous mark the year before, appearing in only 89 games.
The native Venezuelan recorded 636 at-bats this past season, doubling any amount his previous two seasons. In those 636 at-bats, Gonzalez knocked out 197 hits, 34 of those leaving the ballpark. Gonzalez won the NL batting title, posting a .336 average and finished third in the NL Most Valuable Player voting. He also led the entire major leagues with 351 total bases. Gonzalez is the real deal and looks to have a real bright future ahead of him.
Gonzalez was original signed by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2002 as an amatuer free agent. He was then shipped to the Oakland Athletics for right-hander Dan Haren. He made his Major League debut in May of 2008, but his career in Oakland was short lived, playing in only 85 games for the A's that season. That winter he was dealt to Colorado for the power hitting left fielder Matt Holliday.
Some regard Gonzalez as a once upon time cast off after being traded twice in his career and still only 25.
Look at it this way, Gonzalez has to be highly revered throughout his career even despite being dealt twice. Between Haren and Holliday there is seven All-Star appearances, 183 home runs and 94 career wins. Every team that has traded for Gonzalez has seen his potential and he is finally reaching it in Colorado.
In the 2009 postseason, Gonzalez gave us a glimpse into the future by recording 10 hits in only 17 at-bats which accumulated to a .588 batting average. The Rockies would lose to the eventual NL Champion Philadelphia Phillies, ending his remarkable postseason run five games in.
Gonzalez was rewarded this offseason with a seven-year extension worth about $80 million. The future looks bright in Colorado with Gonzalez and Tulowitzki locked up for the long-haul. Gonzalez wears the No. 5, the number of their beloved former outfielder Matt Holliday, Gonzalez has done his best to put Hollday in the past and capture the love of the fans in Denver.
As his teammates call him, 'Cargo' has finally found a home and it should be a "Rocky Mountain High" soon for the five-tool player.
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