Jacoby Ellsbury life and biography

Jacoby Ellsbury picture, image, poster

Jacoby Ellsbury biography

Date of birth : 1983-09-11
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Madras, Oregon
Nationality : American
Category : Sports
Last modified : 2010-10-25
Credited as : Baseball player MLB, outfield with the Boston Red Sox,

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GROWING UP

Jacoby McCabe Ellsbury was born September 11, 1983 in Madras, Oregon. His father, Jim, worked a forester for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. His mother, Margie, was an early-intervention specialist on the Warm Springs Reservation near Madras. Margie, a full-blooded Navajo, descended from a famous 19th century tribal leader, Granado Mucho. She was raised on the Colorado River Reservation on the Arizona-California border—home to the Mohave, Chemehuevi, Hopi, and Navajo tribes—and was educated at a Mormon school in Utah.

Jacoby and his three younger brothers grew up in Madras, which is located on the east side of Mt. Hood. All the Ellsbury boys were talented multisport athletes. They played football, basketball and soccer.

Jacoby was always the fastest runner and best jumper of the three. Once the brothers cornered a young deer in the woods near their home. Jacoby was 11 at the time and was able to run it down and loop a rope around its neck.

High jumping and d eer-roping notwithstanding, Jacoby’s favorite sport was baseball. He played Little League ball in Arizona, where he visited his grandmother during the summers. She taught her grandsons traditional Navajo songs while they stayed with her.

The player who Jacoby idolized was Ken Griffey Jr., the star outfielder for the Seattle Mariners. Jacoby saw Griffey play in the Kingdome several times as a boy. Juniors power, speed and all-around natural ability were mesmerizing.

Jacoby was still a relatively well-kept secret when he enrolled at Madras High School in 1998. The first to notice him was John Reynolds, a guidance counselor who helped out with the football team. He had coached three players who went on to the NFL, so he knew talent when he saw it. When Reynolds watched Jacoby zero in on ball carriers on the gridiron, he could hardly believe the boy’s explosive speed. Jacoby also played basketball at Madras. He was a 6–1 forward who often jumped center for the team—and usually won the tip, even against boys seven or eight inches taller. Jacoby’s mom recalls that her son “electrified people.”

The mixture of Native Americans, Hispanics and Caucasiansat Madras Hish was more or less even. Jacoby was a popular kid who got along with just about everyone. It didn’t hurt that he was the star of the baseball team. Jacoby never ceased to amaze coach Bruce Reese, who let Oregon State baseball coach Pat Casey know that he had a kid who was the real deal. The White Buffaloes were tough to beat when Jacoby was on the field.

There was nothing Jacoby couldn’t do on the diamond. More to the point, he did things that high school players weren't supposed to do. Most notably, he was a flawless baserunner. Reese claims that in four years Jacoby was never thrown out on the basepaths. The coach also has a hard time recalling an instance when Jacoby bothered to stop at third base. His speed and acceleration were completely intimidating.

One of Jacoby’s friends in those early years was Jed Lowrie. They played on the same travel teams and later faced each other in college. Both were drafted by the Red Sox a few years later.

ON THE RISE

In the spring of 2002, Jacoby was offered a full ride to several West Coast schools, including nearby Oregon State. That June, he was also drafted in the 23rd round by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. After weighing his options, he decided to take the scholarship. He would play three years at Oregon State for coach Casey.

Jacoby batted .330 with seven home runs in his first season and earned Freshman All-America honors. That year, Casey told a friend scouting in the area that his star center fielder was the first “bona fide, drop-dead, first-round draft pick” of his coaching career.

After Jacoby’s sophomore year, Casey told the same scout that he had changed his mind. The kid would be a All-Star. That season, Jcoby batted .352 and made First-Team All-PAC 10. Pro scouts were starting to come around to Casey’s way of thinking. In the summer of 2004, Jacoby competed in the Cape Cod League and distinguished himself as a serious blue-chipper. He was named the #17 prospect in the league by Baseball America

That summer, Jacoby made a trip to Boston to watch a Red Sox game. He was blown away by the atmosphere of Fenway Park. He bought a Boston cap and brought it home to Oregon. Later, after the Red Sox made their amazing comeback in the playoffs against the New York Yankees, he started wearing the cap before each game.

Perhaps because of his Cape Cod League exploits, Jacoby was on Boston ’s radar during his junior season at Oregon State. When the team sent a scout to watch the Beavers play San Diego State, the game was rained out. Caoch Casey dragged the guy into the gym, handed Jacoby a basketball and told him to dunk. He did two-handed jams and 360s for the stunned baseball man.

Later, Boston GM Theo Epstein himself traveled to Washington State to watch the Beavers play. Jacoby had a rare hitless day, but he did score from first base on a single. Epstein and the Red Sox loved him; the question was, would he still be on the board when Boston picked at 23?

Jacoby had clearly matured a s a hitter by this point. He worked counts, waited for pitches he could drive, and was comfortable hitting with two strikes. As junior, he batted .415 with six homers, 42 RBIs and a school-record 86 hits in 50 games. Jacoby was perfect in the field, handling 117 chances with no errors. He also stole 21 bases to give him a total of 56 for his three college seasons. Jacoby was named PAC- 10 Co-Player of the Year along with Trevor Crowe of Arizona. The Beavers, meanwhile, set a record for victories and advanced to the College World Series for the first time since 1952.

Jacoby was one of four Beavers who figured to be drafted that June. Andy Jenkins, Nate Fogle and Tyler Graham would all follow him to the pros. In the draft, Jacoby figured to move up the depth charts of most teams. But as luck would have it—especially for the Red Sox—he lasted until Boston’s spot came around.

Jacoby signed for a $1.4 million bonus with the Bosox and began his pro career in July with Lowell of the Class-A New York–Penn League. He gave the Spinners a preview of things to come in his first at-bat, when he worked out a walk, stole second, went to third on an errant throw and came trotting home on a wild pitch. He would swipe nine bags in nine attempts in his first two weeks and finish the short-season schedule with 23 steals. Jacoby batted .317 for manager Luis Alicea and flashed occasional pop. Among Jacoby’s teammates that season were pitcher Clay Buchholz and longtime buddy Lowrie.

Jacoby leapfrogged the standard Low-A stop on the organizational ladder in 2006, beginning the year with the Wilmington Blue Rocks of the Carolina League. He played 61 games with the team, batting .299 with 25 steals and earning a spot on the c’ircuits All-Star team. He was promoted to Class-AA Portland in mid July, where he joined fellow prospects Brandon Moss and Jason Gabbard. Jacoby boosted his average over .300 and swiped 16 more bags.

That showing convinced the Red Sox that Jacoby might be major-league ready in 2007, which in turn earned him a spot in the Arizona Fall League with the Peoria Javelinas. He hit a respectable .276 against first-rate competition with a team-high seven stolen bases. His Peoria teammates included Yunel Escobar, Kevin Kouzmanoff, Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Michael Garciaparra.

After a couple of months off, Jacoby reported to the big club’s spring training camp in Fort Myers. He enjoyed rubbing elbows with the likes of David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez, and then was reassigned to the minor-league camp with the promise that another solid performance would result in a call-up when the club needed a center fielder. The second part of that scenario was likely; since the departure of Johnny Damon, the team had been hurting at the position. Coco Crisp was an adequate player, but he was hardly the table-setter the Red Sox needed at the top of the lineup.

Jacoby returned to Portland for a month and hit .452 before being promotied to Class-AAA Pawtucket. He played flawlessly in the outfield, was a demon on the basepaths and kept his average around .300 against his new level of compeition. As July approached, Jacoby was pleased to learn that he had been selected to play in the Futures Game.

He was even happier to hear later that he wouldn’t be playing in the event. The Red Sox called him up on June 30the when Crisp was injured. Jacoby singled off Robinson Tejada of the Texas Rangers in his first at-bat. A few days later, he stole his first base. In the same game, he hustled all the way home from second base on a wild pitch. Johnny Pesky couldn’t stop raving about the rookie, calling his scamper the greatest play he’d ever seen.

Even with Pesky’s endorsement, Jacoby was returned to Pawtucket three days later when Crisp was ready to re-enter the lineup. In an odd twist of fate, Jacoby now had no roster spot in the Futures Game. Luckily, he was tabbed to replace Cameron Maybin, who was hurt. Jacoby went hitless in four at-bats.

Jacoby picked up right where he left off. He finished the season with Pawtucket batting .298 with 33 stolen bases. He also put together a 25-game hitting streak in August. In the middle of that streak. Jacoby logged one more game in the majors. He was called up to start the second half of a double header, and then immediately shipped back.

Jacoby’s third and final trip to the big leagues came on September 1st. He joined the team for a series against the Baltimore Orioles and hit his first home run the next night against hard-throwing Daniel Cabrera. The ball landed in the Boston bullpen, so he got to keep it as a souvenir. Jacoby played in 26 games for the Red Sox and was a revelation. All told, he batted .353—torching righties and lefties equally. He slugged over .500, with 11 of his 40 hits going for extra bases.

Jacoby was one of three impact rookies for the Red Sox in 2007. Dustin Pedroia batted .317, and Buchholz emerged from the minors and twirled a no-hitter in only his second major-league start. Boston held off a charge by the Yankees to capture the AL East and swept the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the Division Series.

Red Sox manager Terry Francona went with experience over the hot hand, starting Crisp all three games against the Angels. Jacoby saw limited action as a defensive replacement for Ramirez. Crisp was still the man when Boston met the Cleveland Indians in the ALCS. The Red Sox won the opening game but lost the next three. Part of the problem was Crisp, who couldn’t buy a hit. Boston crept back into the series with a 7–1 thrashing of the Tribe in Game 5. Francona then decided to insert Jacoby in the lineup.

In Game 5, a first-inning grand slam by J.D. Drew gave Boston a 4–0 lead, and the= Red Sox piled it on after that, knotting the series with a 12–2 victory. Jacoby contributed a hit, a run and an RBI and earned a Game 7 start.

Jacoby rewarded Francona’s confidence with a second-inning single. The Red Sox led 3–2 in the bottom of the seventh when Jacoby’s speed helped create a miscue by third baseman Casey Blake. Pedroia followed with a homer over the Green Monster for a 5–2 lead. One inning later, Jacoby was walked intentionally and scored on a Pedroia double. The Red Sox cruised to an 11–2 win and their second AL pennant in four seasons.

MAKING HIS MARK

Boston was a different team with Jacoby in the lineup. For the World Series showdown with the white-hot Colorado Rockies, Francona decided to srick with his rookie ooutfielder. Jacoby batted at the bottom of the order, where he was essentially a second leadoff hitter. He was quiet at the plate in the first two games, a 13–1 blowout and a 2–1 nailbiter—both Red Sox wins.

For Game 3, Jacoby found himself batting leadoff. He responded with four hits—including three doubles. In game 4, he collected two more hits, including another. Boston won twice to complete its World Series sweep. Mike Lowell was named the series MVP, but the honor could just as well have gone to Jacoby, who sparked the team with his defense, baserunning and hitting. In 11 postseason games, he batted .360 with nine hits and a couple of stolen bases.

Jacoby was technically still a rookie in 2008, and there was great hope in Boston that he would win Rookie of the Year—especially after he bulked up by 15 pounds over the winter. He started well, enjoying his first multi-homer game against the Angels in April.

Jacoby continued his great play, running his streak to 25 steals from the beginning of his career before he was finally thrown out in a May game against the Milwaukee Brewers. He was just two short of the record set Tim Raines. In June, he had back-to-back three-steal games. The last Boston player to pull a trifecta was Jerry Remy in 1980. Remy was calling the game from the TV booth. It was still June when Jacoby swiped his 32nd base, shattering the rookie mark set a century earlier by Amby McConnel.

Jacoby slowed down as the season wore on, partly because he missed 17 games to a collection of bumps and bruises. He did finish as the league leader with 50 steals, but came up four short of the team record, established by Tommy Harper in 1973. His other numbers were excellent, including a .280 batting average and 98 runs. He finished third in the Rookie of the Year voting behind Evan Longoria and Alexei Ramirez.

The Red Sox faced the Angels again in the Division Series, and Jacoby provided the spark in the four-game victory. He batted .333 average and three stolen bases. In Game 3, he hit a bloop single with the bases loaded and two outs. With the runners in motion, all three scored. It was the first three-run single in postseason history!

The Red Sox faced the surprising Rays in the ALCS, and the magic suddenly disappeared from Jacoby’s bat. He went hitless in the first three games and was benched in favor of Crisp. He watched from the bench as his teammates made an amazing comeback to even the series, but Boston eventually lost in seven games.

Jacoby began 2009 like a man on a mission. The misson? Get the Red Sox back to the World Series, and obliterate the team stolen base mark in the process. One of his steals came against the Yankees in April when he swiped home off Andy Pettitte with the bases loaded. It was the first pure steal of home for a Red Sox player since 1994.

By early August, Jacoby had Harper’s record in his sights. Meanwhile, the Red Sox were struggling to keep the front-running Yankees in range—and hold off the surging Rays. The final two months of the season would test Boston and put Jacoby squarely in the spotlight. He’s never yearned for that attention, but as one of the team’s emerging leaders, he is more than willing to shoulder the load.

JACOBY THE PLAYER

Jacoby is developing into a five-tool player before the Fenway faithful’s eyes. At the plate, he hits to all fields and has started pulling the ball with authority. People who compare him to Johnny Damon are quick to point out that he does not possess his predecessor’s power. In truth, however, Jacoby may have the superior swing. Those homers may start coming in bunches some day.

In the field and on the basepaths, the Red Sox love Jacoby’s full-tilt style. He runs like a gazelle, with extraordinary acceleration. Jacoby reads pitchers wells and gets good jumps on balls off the bat.

In the offseason, Jacoby works hard to improve his baseball body. He uses a system called SPARQ, which stands for speed, power, agility, reaction and quickness. It focuses on muscle groups that relate to specific aspects of baseball.

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