From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asdrúbal José Cabrera (born November 13, 1985)
is a switch
hitting infielder
for the Cleveland Indians of Major
League Baseball. After coming up through the Seattle
Mariners organization, he was acquired by the Indians on June
30, 2006, in exchange for Eduardo Perez.
Cabrera spent the remainder of the 2006 season at Cleveland's
Triple-A minor league team, the Buffalo Bisons.
Cabrera was a non-roster invitee to the Indians 2007 spring
training, but was reassigned to their minor league camp March
16. He started 2007 at Double-A with the Akron Aeros and was named to the Eastern League mid-season
All-Star team. He was promoted to the Indians' Triple-A affiliate,
Buffalo Bisons July 30 and then to Cleveland August 7. Cabrera made
his major league debut the following night against the White Sox,
starting at second base. He was hitless in three
at-bats
and scored a run after he was hit by a pitch in the sixth inning. Four
days later, Cabrera picked up his first major league hit, a double,
against Mike
Mussina of the New York Yankees. Cabrera's first home run came August 18,
2007, off Jason Hammel of the Tampa Bay Devil
Rays in a 8-1 victory for the Indians. Cabrera eventually
assumed Cleveland's everyday second baseman job despite being a
natural shortstop,
taking over for an ineffective Josh Barfield.
In 2007, Cabrera helped power the Indians to a tie for the best
record in baseball (96-66 with the Boston Red Sox) with his late inning
heroics. Cabrera batted .375 (21 for 56) in the 7th inning or
later.[1] For
good luck, Cabrera wears a white beaded necklace which was made for
him by his wife.[2] In the
2007 postseason, he became the first baseball player named Asdrubal
to ever compete in the American League
Championship Series.[3]
At Progressive Field on May 12, 2008, Cabrera turned
the 14th unassisted triple play in MLB
history against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second game
of a doubleheader. In the fifth inning, with Toronto's Marco Scutaro on first
base and Kevin
Mench on second, Cabrera dove and caught a Lyle Overbay liner,
stepped on second base before leading runner Mench could return,
and then tagged Scutaro who had already passed second base.[4] Ron
Hansen, who had turned an unassisted triple play in 1968, was in
attendance to witness Cabrera's feat.[5]
On June 9, 2008, Cabrera was optioned to Triple-A Buffalo after
hitting a team low .184 with 14 RBI in 52 games. Barfield was called back
up to take his place. During his stay in Buffalo, Cabrera hit .326
in 34 games with 25 runs, seven doubles, four homers and 13 RBI. He
was also named International League Batter of the
Week after hitting .394, going 13 for 33, with three doubles, three
homers and six RBI. Cabrera was called back up to the Indians on
July 18, and has since hit .261 (30 for 115) with 3 homers, raising
his season average (with the Indians) from .184 to .216.
Cabrera hit his first career grand slam against New York
Yankees' pitcher Anthony Claggett to highlight a 14-run
second inning for the Indians on April 18, 2009 at new Yankee Stadium,
and had a career high four hits and five RBI as the Indians went on
to win 22-4. Cabrera resides in Anzoategui, Venezuela with his wife,
Lismar, and his son[6].
References
External
links
| Cleveland Indians current
roster |
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| 40-man roster |
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| Inactive roster |
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| Disabled list |
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| Coaching Staff |
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