José Ramírez (infielder)
José Ramírez | |
---|---|
![]() Ramírez with the Cleveland Guardians in 2023 | |
Cleveland Guardians – No. 11 | |
Third baseman | |
Born: Baní, Dominican Republic | September 17, 1992|
Bats: Switch Throws: Right | |
MLB debut | |
September 1, 2013, for the Cleveland Indians | |
MLB statistics (through April 4, 2025) | |
Batting average | .279 |
Hits | 1,508 |
Home runs | 259 |
Runs batted in | 870 |
Stolen bases | 243 |
Stats at Baseball Reference | |
Teams | |
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Career highlights and awards | |
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José Enrique Ramírez (born September 17, 1992) is a
In 2016, Ramírez achieved then-career highs of .312 batting average, 46 doubles, and 22 stolen bases, while spending time at second base, shortstop, third base, and left field. He helped lead the Indians to their first World Series appearance in 19 years, hitting .310 (9-for-31) in the series, which the Indians ultimately lost in 7 games to the Chicago Cubs.[1]
Ramírez is a six-time selectee to the MLB All-Star Game, a five-time Silver Slugger Award award winner, and a three-time selectee to the All-MLB Team. In 2017, he became the 19th player in history to hit at least 56 doubles in one season, while leading the major leagues. In 2018, he hit 39 home runs and stole 34 bases to enter the 30–30 club.
Early life
Ramírez grew up in poverty in Baní, Dominican Republic.[2] He is the first-born son of Silveria Mateo and Sito Ramirez.[3]
He says that by the age of 13, he was already playing in a league for adults. He looked up to MVP Miguel Tejada, who also grew up in Baní and often returned to do philanthropic work, a legacy Ramírez would grow up to continue. There is now an all-turf field, donated by Ramírez and the Cleveland Guardians, located near Ramírez's childhood home that bears his name.[4][5]
As a teenager, Ramírez played baseball in the Dominican Prospect League.
He signed with the Indians, receiving a $50,000 signing bonus.[2][7]
Career
Cleveland Indians/Guardians
Ramírez sat out the 2010 season and made his professional debut in 2011 with the
2013—2015: Early major league career

The Indians promoted Ramírez to the major leagues on September 1, 2013, and he made his MLB debut that day. He entered the game as a pinch runner during the ninth inning and scored on a game-winning grand slam hit by Mike Avilés.[8] Ramírez recorded his first major league hit on September 9 against the Kansas City Royals, when he lined a single to left field off of Royals starter Ervin Santana during the third inning. Later in that same game, Ramírez also collected his first multiple-hit game in the major leagues, working a single off reliever Wade Davis during the seventh inning.[9]
Ramírez began the
Ramírez began to get regular playing time at shortstop on July 31, 2014, after the Indians traded shortstop Asdrúbal Cabrera.[12] He hit his first home run on August 9, in his first career three-hit game.[13] Ramírez finished the 2014 season by hitting .262 in 237 at-bats. He compiled 62 hits and also had 10 steals, tied for fourth-most on the team.[14]
In 2015, Ramírez made his first Opening Day roster. He started on Opening Day, batting ninth and playing shortstop. He also started the Indians' home opener on April 10. Ramírez went 1-for-4 in the team's first game at newly renovated Progressive Field.[15]
Ramírez and the Indians struggled during the first half of the 2015 season.
2016: World Series appearance

In 2016, Ramírez hit .312/.363/.462.[1] He became the first player during 2016 to hit in every spot in the lineup when he batted fourth on June 28.[19] Ramírez had also played four positions this year: second base, third base, shortstop, and left field. When asked about Ramírez's play, Indians hitting coach Ty Van Burkleo noted that Ramírez "has done a great job all year."[19] He also concluded that with the Indians missing Michael Brantley, Ramírez has really stepped up in the heart of their batting order and has "been a real shot in the arm" for the organization.
As of July 14, Ramírez was third in the American League with a .377 batting average with runners in scoring position.
In the fifth game of the World Series, Ramírez hit a home run, giving Cleveland a 1–0 lead over the Chicago Cubs.[24] He hit .310 (9-for-31) in the World Series, with one each of a walk, home run, and double.[1] The Cubs ultimately prevailed, however, with Cleveland falling one run short in Game 7 in a bid for their first championship since 1948.[25]
The Cleveland chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) selected Ramírez as the Bob Feller Man of the Year Award winner, the equivalent of the club's Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award.[26] He also received consideration for the AL MVP for the first time, placing 17th.[27]
2017: Silver Slugger Award

On March 28, 2017, Ramírez signed a five-year contract extension worth $26 million.[28] In June, he collected nine consecutive multi-hit games, the longest such streak for an Indians player since Roy Hughes in 1936.[29] He was named AL Player of the Week for the first time in his career on June 18, after batting .516 with 16 hits, three home runs, seven RBIs and a stolen base. He raised his average from .265 to .320 over his previous 22 games.[30] When Jason Kipnis sustained a hamstring injury on July 9, the Indians placed him on the 10-day DL,[31] and shifted Ramírez to cover second base to replace him for much of the remainder of the season.[29] Ramírez was selected by fan voting as the starting third baseman for the American League in the 2017 MLB All-Star Game.[32]
On September 3 versus the Detroit Tigers, Ramírez tied a major league record with five extra-base hits, which included three doubles and two home runs. Incidentally, both home runs received "help", as both were catchable. For the first home run, Mikie Mahtook pushed the ball over the fence with his bare hand. On the second, the ball bounced off Alex Presley's glove and touched the yellow stripe of the fence for a home run. That game was also the 11th of a 22-game win streak spanning August 24−September 15, which surpassed the 2002 Oakland Athletics' 20 consecutive wins for the American League record, and was the second longest all-time to the New York Giants' 26 consecutive in 1916. In that streak, Ramírez made the strongest offensive contribution, batting .423/.462/.944.[33] He was named AL Player of the Week on September 5.[34]
In 152 games played in 2017, Ramirez finished with an MLB-leading 56 doubles, a .318 batting average, .957 OPS, 29 home runs, 83 RBIs, and 107 runs scored. He totaled 91
End of season awards for Ramírez included selection as designated hitter on Baseball America's All-MLB Team,
2018: 30–30 club
On May 29, 2018, Ramírez hit his 17th home run of the season in a 9–1 victory versus the Chicago White Sox. He joined Albert Belle as the only hitters in Cleveland Indians to have hit at least that many home runs before the end of May,[40] and for the month had batted .336, 11 home runs and 25 RBIs. He had 18 home runs on the year at that point, second to Belle in 1996 with 21 home runs for most at the end of May in franchise history. Further, Ramírez and Francisco Lindor became the first Cleveland teammates to both hit at least 10 home runs in one month since Jim Thome and Karim García in 2002.[41]
Slashing .292/.395/.590 with 24 home runs, 59 RBIs, and 19 stolen bases, Ramírez was named the starting third baseman for the AL in the
For the season, Ramírez batted .270/.387/.552 and led the major leagues in walks-per-strikeout at 1.33.
2019
Ramírez began the 2019 season continuing the slump that he endured towards the end of the 2018 season. Throughout 102 games beginning August 18, 2018, he batted .189. He was being pitched with much fewer fastballs that he could drive, resulting in more pop-ups with much weaker overall contact. From Opening Day of 2017 to August 18, 2018, he had pulled 42 fastballs for home runs, leading the major leagues. In the 102-game span, he had hit four.[49] He batted .218 with a .308 OBP and .344 SLG in the first half of the 2019 season.[50]
However, Ramírez experienced a resurgence as the season progressed. On August 15, 2019, he hit his first career grand slam in the first inning against the New York Yankees. He hit a two-run home run in his next at-bat as the Indians won, 19–5.[51] After the All-Star break, he was second in MLB with 32 extra-base hits and third with 40 RBIs, when he broke the hamate bone in the right wrist on August 24, requiring surgery.[50] He appeared in 129 games during the season, hitting .255 with 23 home runs, 83 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases.[52]
2020: Silver Slugger Award

The 2020 season began slowly for Ramírez as he dealt with a thumb injury. He batted .230 with six doubles, five home runs, and 18 RBIs for the first month. Starting August 25, he batted .358 with 12 home runs and 28 RBIs.[53] Over a seven-game span in September, Ramírez homered six times to help carry the Indians' playoff run following an eight-game losing streak. On September 22, he hit a walk-off home run in the tenth inning to defeat the Chicago White Sox 5–3, clinching a playoff berth for Cleveland.[54]
Ramírez garnered the AL Player of the Month Award for September, batting .366/.453/.841 with nine doubles, 10 home runs, 24 RBIs, 1.294 OPS, 19 extra-base hits, and 69 total bases. He led MLB for the month in home runs (tied), OBP, SLG, OPS, total bases (tied), and doubles (tied). He was second in batting. Each of his last 11 hits in the regular season went for extra bases. He led the club with 17 home runs during the season.[53]
Ramírez concluded the season batting .292, .386 OBP, and career-highs in OPS (.993), slugging percentage (.607), and OPS+ (163). He also tallied 64 hits, 45 runs scored, 16 doubles, 17 home runs, 46 RBIs, 133 total bases, 34 extra-base hits, 31 walks, and ten stolen bases.
2021: Bob Feller Man of the Year
In 2021, Ramírez was selected to the MLB All-Star Game for the third time of his career. At the time of the announcement, he had batted .265 with a .882 OPS, 54 runs scored, 18 doubles, 18 home runs, 50 RBIs, and six stolen bases. His 6.5 fWAR and 138 wRC+ both ranked second among AL third baseman behind Rafael Devers of the Red Sox.[58] Ramírez produced the highest batted ball pull percentage in the major leagues, at 56.8%.[59] He was chosen as the winner of Bob Feller Man of the Year Award, the second of his career.[60]
The Indians exercised the club option on Ramírez's contract for the 2022 season on November 5, 2021.[61]
2022: Contract extension

On April 6, 2022, Ramírez signed a 5-year, $124 million extension with the Cleveland Guardians. Combined with his contract extension signed in November 2021, Ramírez's new contract guaranteed nearly $150 million through 2028. The largest contract awarded in franchise history, the deal also included a full "no-trade" clause.[62]
In Cleveland's home opener, Ramírez doubled in the ninth inning of a 4–1 defeat to the
In 2022, he led the major leagues with 44 doubles and 20 intentional walks, batting .280/.355/.514 with 29 home runs and 126 RBIs across 685 plate appearances.[67][68]
2023

On June 8, Ramírez notched his first career three-home run game against the
In 2023, he batted .282/.356/.475, led the AL in intentional walks (22) and was second in the AL behind Alex Bregman in walks/strikeout (1.00).[73]
2024
On September 29, when the final game of the regular season against the Houston Astros at Progressive Field was canceled due to rain, he finished the 2024 season batting .279/.335/.537 with 39 doubles, 39 home runs, and 41 stolen bases, falling one home run shy of becoming the seventh player to join the 40–40 club and only one double and a home run short from a 40–40–40 season.[74]
2025
On April 4, Ramírez notched his second career three-home run game against the Angels. His fifth-inning bomb also swung Ramírez into the history books as it marked his 26th career multihomer game, tying the Cleveland franchise record held by Albert Belle and Jim Thome.[75]
Awards and honors
- 3× Bob Feller Man of the Year (2016, 2021, 2022)[26]
- 6× Major League Baseball (MLB) All-Star (2017, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024)
- 5× Silver Slugger at third base (2017, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2024)[76]
- Youth baseball field on the west side of Cleveland named 'José Ramírez Field'.[77]
Milestones
- 2× 30–30 club (2018, 2024)
Statistical league leader
- 2× Doubles (2017, 2022)
- 2× Extra base hits(2017, 2020)
- 2× Intentional bases on balls (2022, 2023)
- 3× Power–speed number (2018, 2020, 2024)
- Runs scored (2020)
- Runs created (2020)
- Sacrifice hits (2014)
- Wins Above Replacement—FanGraphs (2020)[78]
Personal life
Ramírez is married. He and his wife, Rosedith Almonte, have three children: Isabella, Isaell and JJ.[79]
Ramírez has a brother, Hanley Báez Ramírez, who also signed with the Cleveland organization in 2018 at the age of 16.[47]
Owing to his baseball instincts and dedication, former teammate Francisco Lindor has commented that if he were the owner of a team and given the option to sign any player in the sport, it would be Ramírez.[25]
See also
References
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External links
- Career statistics from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet