Tino Martinez and Tony La Russa had much in common: Both were born and raised in Tampa, graduated from the same high school, went into the major leagues and helped teams get to the World Series.
On Dec. 18, 2001, Martinez joined La Russa on the Cardinals.
A free-agent first baseman, Martinez had been a consistent run producer for the Yankees, who won five American League pennants and four World Series titles in his six seasons with them.
La Russa had managed the Athletics to three American League pennants and one World Series championship before becoming Cardinals manager.
Though La Russa eventually would win three National League pennants and two World Series crowns with the Cardinals, Martinez wouldn’t get to be a part of that success.
Path to majors
A left-handed batter, Constantino Martinez attended Tampa Catholic High School and helped its baseball team win a state championship in 1982.
After his sophomore year, he transferred to Tampa Jefferson High School. More than 20 years earlier, in 1962, La Russa, a classmate of Martinez’s father, had batted .479 as a shortstop for Jefferson High School. La Russa was signed by the Athletics to a package worth $100,000 the same night he received his high school diploma.
Martinez was a first baseman for Jefferson High School. His friend, Luis Gonzalez, was the second baseman. Gonzalez went on to play 19 seasons in the majors as an outfielder, primarily with the Astros and Diamondbacks.
With Martinez and Gonzalez on the team, Jefferson High School reached the state final before losing to Miami Hialeah.
While attending the University of Tampa, Martinez was selected by the Mariners in the first round of the 1988 amateur baseball draft. Martinez entered the big leagues with the Mariners in August 1990. He played six seasons for them, including 1995, when he produced 31 home runs and 111 RBI.
In December 1995, the Mariners dealt Martinez to the Yankees, who needed a first baseman after the retirement of Don Mattingly.
Playing for manager Joe Torre, who joined the Yankees after being ousted by the Cardinals, Martinez generated 105 or more RBI in five of six seasons with the Yankees. His best year was 1997 when he had 44 home runs and 141 RBI.
In 2001, the Yankees played the Diamondbacks in the World Series. The Diamondbacks’ top hitter was Martinez’s friend and former prep teammate, Luis Gonzalez, who had 57 home runs and 142 RBI that year.
With two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning of World Series Game 4, Martinez hit a two-run home against Byung-Hyun Kim, tying the score. The Yankees won in the 10th on Derek Jeter’s walkoff home run versus Kim. Boxscore and Video
In the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7, Gonzalez, playing in his lone World Series, drove in the winning run with a single against Mariano Rivera, giving the Diamondbacks the championship. Boxscore
Match game
After the World Series, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman called Martinez’s agent and informed him the club planned to sign free agent Jason Giambi to be their first baseman in 2002. For the first time in his career, Martinez, a month away from turning 34, also was a free agent.
When first baseman Mark McGwire told the Cardinals he was retiring, Martinez saw an opportunity. “St. Louis was my first choice,” he told the Tampa Tribune.
Before the start of the baseball winter meetings in December 2001, Martinez called Cardinals general manager Walt Jocketty.
“I asked them to consider me in their plans if I’d fit in,” Martinez told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I wanted to make sure I initiated something so they could keep my name in their minds.”
Jocketty recalled, “With him calling like that, it impressed me a lot. He said he really liked what he saw here and what he perceived this organization to be.”
Thrilled by Martinez’s interest, La Russa told the St. Petersburg Times, “I knew his dad. His family knows our family. I know not just what kind of player he is, I know the character of the player. He’d be a great fit for us.”
Meet me in St. Louis
The Cardinals also were bidding for free-agent outfielder Moises Alou. If they got Alou, they planned to put him in left field and shift Albert Pujols to first base. The club budget allowed for the signing of Alou or Martinez, not both.
Martinez drew interest from the Athletics, Braves and Orioles, but he chose the Cardinals when they offered a three-year contract worth $21 million. The deal also included a club option for a fourth year. The Cubs got Alou with a three-year offer worth $27 million.
According to the Tampa Tribune, the first call Martinez got after signing came from Luis Gonzalez. “He was about as excited as I was,” Martinez said.
La Russa told the Post-Dispatch, “He’s going to be good for our players. He’s got his priorities right. It isn’t about stats and money. It’s about competing and winning.”
In an analysis of the signing, columnist Bernie Miklasz noted, “La Russa covets Tino’s presence and a little dose of that Yankees magic,” but also cautioned that Martinez’s “stroke was custom-fitted for the short dimension down the right-field line at Yankee Stadium.”
Production drop
The first signs of trouble showed at spring training. Martinez hit .180 with no home runs and two RBI in Florida Grapefruit League exhibition games. “Scouts say his bat looked slow in spring training,” The Sporting News reported.
When the season began, Martinez hit .198 in his first 116 at-bats. Published reports noted he repeatedly lunged at low off-speed pitches.
Though his hitting improved in the second half of the 2002 season and his fielding was strong, Martinez fell short of expectations. He hit 21 home runs but had his lowest RBI total (75) since the strike-shortened 1994 season. He hit .246 with runners in scoring position and a mere .207 overall versus left-handers.
Martinez later said he played much of the 2002 season with an inflamed left rotator cuff that prevented him from fully extending for outside pitches, The Sporting News reported.
The Cardinals won a division title in 2002, but fell short in their quest for a pennant. In 2003, Martinez produced 15 home runs and 69 RBI. He hit .210 with runners in scoring position. The Cardinals finished third in a six-team division.
After the season, the Cardinals traded Martinez to the Rays, giving him a chance to play for his hometown team.
His finest moment as a Cardinal might have been when he homered twice against the Yankees. From 1995 to 2001 he was one of the best. Till this day you have people in Seattle who consider the Tino Martinez trade to New York one of their worst trades in franchise history. You also have Yankee fans who wish he would have spent his entire career in New York.
Thanks for citing the two home runs Tino Martinez hit in a game for the Cardinals vs. the Yankees. It happened on June 14, 2003, at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees won 13-4. Martinez drove in all 4 Cardinals runs. Martinez was the designated hitter. He hit a two-run homer vs. Andy Pettitte and another two-run homer vs. rookie Jason Anderson. The home run vs. Pettitte was one of two Martinez hit vs left-handers in 2003. The other was against Jimmy Anderson of the Reds: https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/2003/B06140NYA2003.htm
As I recall, after struggling that first month Tino was quoted in the paper that he missed the New York fans because they would get on him and that would motivate him to do better. For St. Louis fans who had been supportive during his slump this was a bit of a slap in the face. My own opinion of him certainly changed at that point.
You have an accurate memory. Tino Martinez made his first visit back to New York when the Cardinals played a series vs. the Mets at Shea Stadium in late April 2002. Martinez told Jon Heyman of Newsday, “St. Louis has great fans. They’ve obviously welcomed me and made me feel very comfortable, but in New York, they’re ready to go every night and they expect performance every night, and I think that brings out the best in players.”
In response, St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist Bernie Miklasz wrote, “So if we subscribe to Tino’s theory, Cardinals fans should quit being so nice to him, become more demanding (hostile?) and perhaps that would improve his hitting. Go figure.”
I loved the Cardinals acquisition of Tino…a crying shame it didn’t work out. I saw Tino at a Johnny Rocket’s in Chicago one night when the Cards were in town. The guy was a class act- shook my hand and gave me an autograph even though he was with his kids. I was a kid at the time too, but today I’d never approach a player in a similar situation as an adult. Another guy was there, but Tino was so recognizable that I glossed over it. Pretty sure I missed requesting an autograph from Scott Rolen!
Despite his STL failures, I’m still glad they made the move and tried. But hearing they had a chance to grab Alou, that is painful.
Thanks for sharing that personal experience. I’m glad to learn he was courteous and kind to you.
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