| Steve Sax |
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Stephen Louis Sax (born January 29 , 1960 in West Sacramento , California ) is a former star Second Baseman in Major League Baseball . He was a right-handed batter for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1981-1988), New York Yankees (1989-1991), Chicago White Sox (1992-1993), and the Oakland Athletics (1994). Sax starred at James Marshall High school (now known as River City High School) in West Sacramento from 1975 to 1978 before being drafted by the Dodgers on June 6th, 1978 in the ninth round of the 1978 Amateur Draft 1978 . Sax was a late season call up in 1981, playing 29 games. Sax broke into the majors as a regular in 1982, earning the National League Rookie Of The Year award, though the decision was controversial. Pirates second baseman Johnny Ray had won The Sporting News Rookie of the Year. The Baseball Writers Association Of America voted for Sax in a close vote. Many ground level baseball fans have long suspected that the Baseball Writers went with Sax because he was an LA media darling. Throughout his career, Sax was on the All-Star team five times and had a Batting Average over .300 in three seasons. He had great success on the basepaths, Stealing over 40 bases in six seasons for a career total of 444 stolen bases. He also set the Yankees team record for most singles in a season (171 in 1989). Steve is the brother of another former Major League Baseball player, Dave Sax , who also played for the Dodgers. Sax has two World Series rings, both with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1981 and 1988. Sax was also a higher-up in the Players Association during his career. He controversially opined that major league players should not speak to or assist anyone who was a Replacement Player during the infamous 1994 Major League Baseball Strike and later joined a club when the strike had ended. He also opined that such players should be denied Pensions by the Union . "STEVE BLASS DISEASE" Though never regarded as one of the top fielding second baseman in the league, Steve Sax inexplicably became incapable of making routine throws to first base in 1983 , committing 30 errors that season. This is referred to in baseball terminology as " Steve Blass Disease ", named after the Pirates pitcher who suffered a similar breakdown of basic mechanics. As his accuracy suffered, fans sitting behind the first base dugout began wearing batting helmets as mock protection. (Teammate Pedro Guerrero , an Outfielder pressed into service at Third Base in 1983, once reportedly stated that his first thought whenever he was in the field was "I hope they don't hit it to me," while his second thought was "I hope they don't hit it to Sax.") By 1989 , however, Sax seemed to be completely "cured", leading the American League in both Fielding Percentage and Double Plays . LIFE AFTER BASEBALL After Steve's playing career ended in 1994 , he has been involved in various ventures, including:
POPULAR CULTURE
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