The Pirates announced a roster move Friday afternoon, which was that utility man Matt Hague was recalled from Triple-A Indianapolis. The corresponding move was to designate Nate McLouth for assignment. This move is largely irrelevant, but it caught my eye because of the downward spiral McLouth's career has taken.
In 2008, McLouth hit .276/.356/.497 with 26 homers, 94 RBI, 113 runs, 23 steals and an NL-best 46 doubles. He was only 26 that season, so it appeared his All-Star selection wouldn't be the only one in his career.
In 2009, McLouth was traded to the Braves. At the time, it caused a wave of overreactions from some, especially those who don't understand what building the foundation of a baseball team meant (they got Charlie Morton in the trade, by the way).
Anyway, after an awful 2010 and a pretty poor 2011, McLouth found himself back in Pittsburgh this season. And after 34 games with a .140/.210/.175 line, McLouth is now being clipped from the roster.
It seems pretty likely McLouth clears waivers and accepts his assignment to Triple-A Indianapolis. From All-Star at age 26 to minor-league at age 30.
Just goes to show how tough it is to be a successful major-league baseball player for an extended period of time.
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In 2008, McLouth hit .276/.356/.497 with 26 homers, 94 RBI, 113 runs, 23 steals and an NL-best 46 doubles. He was only 26 that season, so it appeared his All-Star selection wouldn't be the only one in his career.
In 2009, McLouth was traded to the Braves. At the time, it caused a wave of overreactions from some, especially those who don't understand what building the foundation of a baseball team meant (they got Charlie Morton in the trade, by the way).
Anyway, after an awful 2010 and a pretty poor 2011, McLouth found himself back in Pittsburgh this season. And after 34 games with a .140/.210/.175 line, McLouth is now being clipped from the roster.
It seems pretty likely McLouth clears waivers and accepts his assignment to Triple-A Indianapolis. From All-Star at age 26 to minor-league at age 30.
Just goes to show how tough it is to be a successful major-league baseball player for an extended period of time.
For more baseball news, rumors and analysis, follow @EyeOnBaseball on Twitter, subscribe to the RSS feed and "like" us on Facebook.