May/20/08 09:01 PM
After failing to land a job with any Major League teams
in 2008, Mike Piazza announced his retirement today,
reports the NY Post. Piazza ends a 15 year career that
included stints with the Dodgers, Marlins, Mets, Padres
and A's.
'After discussing my options with my wife, family and
agent, I felt it is time to start a new chapter in my
life,' he said in a statement released by his agent,
Dan Lozano. 'It has been an amazing journey.'
Piazza is walking away from the game almost a sure-fire
first ballot Hall of Famer; his numbers are impressive
alone, but from the catcher position, his production
should lock him into Cooperstown.
He retires sporting a .310/.377/.545 line with 427
career homers and 1,335 RBI. He hit 40 taters twice,
during his last full season in Los Angeles (1997) and
his first full season in New York (1999).
Oddly enough, Piazza was the center of a reasonable
amount of controversy. What sticks most in the minds of
baseball fans was the out-of-nowhere
assertion/assumption that he was a homosexual based on
some hypothetical media questions. Piazza addressing
this issue, needless to say, riled up the media. He was
also on the receiving end of Roger Clemens' psychotic
bat throw incident during the Subway Series in 1999.
The Post mentions that he hit a home run during the
first game back from 9/11, and that seems significant,
if only because it shows New York's attachment to the
10 time All Star, and the likelihood that he will hit
the Hall in a Met uni.
(aolsports.com)