| Position | Starting Pitcher |
|---|---|
| Team | Chicago Cubs |
| Experience | 22 years |
| W-L Record | 325-193 |
| Age | 40 |
| Height | 6' 0" (1.83 meters) |
| Weight | 180 lb (82 kilograms) |
| Bats | Right |
| Throws | Right |
| Place of Birth | San Angelo, Texas |
| Selection | 2nd round amateur draft, 1984 |
| Drafted by | Chicago Cubs |
| Major League Debut | September 3rd, 1986 |
| Nickname | Mad Dog, The Professor |
Gregory Alan Maddux (born April 14, 1966, in San Angelo, Texas, USA) is a pitcher for the Chicago Cubs baseball team. He is generally thought to be one of the greatest pitchers in the history of Major League Baseball, and is one of only 22 pitchers in Major League history to notch 300 career wins.
During his brief 1986 call-up, Maddux defeated his older brother, Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Mike Maddux, marking the first time rookie brothers had ever pitched against each other. In 1987, his first full season in the Majors, Maddux finished with a disappointing 6-14 record and 5.61 ERA. In 1988, Maddux surprised the league by finishing 18-8 with a 3.18 ERA. This began a streak of 17 straight seasons in which Maddux recorded 15 or more wins. No other pitcher has achieved a streak as long as Maddux's. Cy Young ranks second with 15 straight 15-win seasons.
Maddux established himself as the Cubs' ace in 1989, winning 19 games, including a September game at Montreal's Olympic Stadium that clinched the Cubs' second National League Eastern Division championship. Manager Don Zimmer tabbed him to start Game 1 of the National League Championship Series against the San Francisco Giants. It was a rough postseason debut for Maddux, as he was chased in the fourth inning, the lethal blow being Will Clark's grand slam home run with 2 outs in the fourth.
After strong 1990 and 1991 seasons, Maddux came into his own in 1992, winning 20 games and his first National League Cy Young Award. During the 1992 season, negotiations between him and the Cubs became contentious and eventually broke off. Cubs' general manager Larry Himes claimed that Maddux and his agent, Scott Boras, made unreasonable demands, but Maddux and Boras insist that Himes and Tribune Company executive Jim Dowdle failed to work in good faith with them.
After the 1992 season, Maddux filed for free agency and the Cubs decided to pursue other free agents, including Jose Guzman, Dan Plesac and Candy Maldonado. Maddux signed with Atlanta, and he made his Braves' debut as Opening Day Starter against the Cubs at Wrigley Field. Maddux beat his old teammates 1-0, the losing pitcher being Maddux's good friend Mike Morgan.
Maddux has pitched in 11 Division Series contests, 15 League Championship games and five World Series games, and has a 3.22 ERA in 190.0 post-season innings.
Maddux is also known as the best-fielding active pitcher in the game, having earned 15 Gold Glove Awards, one shy of the major-league record of 16 shared by Jim Kaat and Brooks Robinson. Maddux won 13 straight Gold Gloves from 1990 to 2003.
Maddux is also an eight-time National League All-Star selection.
His career ERA is 3.02, second only to Pedro Martínez among all active starting pitchers. From 1993-1998, Maddux led the National League in ERA four times, and was second the other two seasons. Since the introduction of the "lively ball" in 1920, there have only been five pitchers to have full-season ERAs under 1.65: Luis Tiant and Bob Gibson in the anomalous 1968 season, Dwight Gooden in 1985, and Greg Maddux, twice (1994 and 1995). Maddux has never walked more than 82 batters in any season of his career. He has averaged fewer than 2 walks per game. In 1997, Maddux allowed 20 walks in 232+ innings, or 0.77 per 9 innings. Another strength is his defense, and he is known for his ability to field his position well. On November 14, 2002, he won his 13th straight Gold Glove Award, and added a 14th award in 2004, and a 15th in 2005.
Maddux also won four straight Cy Young Awards from 1992 to 1995, a feat matched only by Randy Johnson. He has finished as high as third in MVP voting, and has been in the top ten several times.
On April 28th, 2006, Maddux began his 21st season, and final under contract with the Chicago Cubs, by winning each of his first five starts. This marked the third time winning five games in a month for Maddux, and the first time in his career that he had ever started a season off 5-0.
In 2003, he earned a salary of $14,750,000. His contract with the Cubs will pay him $8 million in 2004 and includes $8 million per year clauses that automatically go into effect for 2005 and 2006 if he pitches 200 or more innings in those years.
Maddux, whose nicknames include "The Mad Dog" and "The Professor," is an avid golfer.
He graduated from Valley High School in Las Vegas, Nevada and currently maintains his residence there.
During the construction of the Olympic Stadium in Atlanta, which was converted into Turner Field after the 1996 Summer Olympics, the Braves front office challenged the golden trio of Braves starters (Maddux, Glavine, and Smoltz) to win the World Series in 1995 by saying that if they did, a putting green would be installed in the locker room at Turner Field.
A baseball traditionalist, Maddux insists that the Cubs wear their white home jersey on the days that he is their starting pitcher. He also prefers to be called a baseball player, not merely a pitcher; he is a perennial Gold Glove winner and has a reputation as an effective situational batter.
*Maddux falls behind John Franco for the given record. Franco's status is a free agent and not retired; for the purposes of these statistics, Franco is not considered to be active.
Major league players from Texas | 1966 births | Living people | 1988 National League All-Stars | 1992 National League All-Stars | 1994 National League All-Stars | 1995 National League All-Stars | 1996 National League All-Stars | 1997 National League All-Stars | 1998 National League All-Stars | 2000 National League All-Stars | 1995 Atlanta Braves World Series Championship Team | 300 win club | 3000 strikeout club | Atlanta Braves players | Chicago Cubs players | Major league pitchers | Gold Glove Award winners | People from San Angelo, Texas | Greg Maddux | Greg Maddux | グレッグ・マダックス | Greg Maddux
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