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Christopher Ryan Young (born May 25 1979 in Dallas, Texas) is a starting pitcher for the San Diego Padres of Major League Baseball. He made his major league debut on August 24, 2004 for the Texas Rangers. The 2007 season was Young's fourth in the big leagues and his second with the Padres. He is 6 feet 10 inches (Template:Rnd/b1 m)Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/, and he throws and bats right-handed. He was elected to the 2007 MLB All-Star Game as a first-time All-Star via the All-Star Final Vote.[1]

After a high school career as an athlete and scholar at Highland Park High School in University Park, Texas, Young excelled in both baseball and basketball for Princeton University and became the Ivy League's first male two-sport Rookie of the Year. Selected by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the third round of the June 2000 Draft, he had brief professional experiences in the Pirates, Montreal Expos, and Texas Rangers minor league systems before debuting with the Rangers in August 2004. Young's professional baseball career took off in the 2006 season, when he was the major league leader in opponent batting average, hits per nine innings and road earned run average (ERA) and was named the National League Pitcher of the Month for June. Additionally, he extended his streak of consecutive undefeated games started as a visiting pitcher to 24, and secured the only Padres win in the team's 3–1 series loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in the 2006 National League Division Series.[2] In 2007, he defended his opponent batting average and hits per nine innings titles, but instead of winning the road ERA title he won the home ERA title.

High school[]

Young attended Highland Park High School where he played basketball and baseball.[3] He lettered three times in basketball in a career in which he scored over 1,000 points, accumulated 500 rebounds and 200 blocks. He was a two-year letterman in baseball, compiling a 14–3 record with 180 strikeouts. During his senior year, he was a first-team All-State selection in basketball and baseball. In basketball he averaged sixteen points, twelve rebounds and three blocked shots a game, and in baseball he had an 8–3 record with a 1.70 ERA and 95 strikeouts in 80 innings pitched. He was District Most Valuable Player in basketball as a senior and he led his baseball team to the state championship the same year.[3]

Collegiate[]

In his freshman season, Young was the first male athlete to be named Ivy League Rookie of the Year in two sports—basketball and baseball—and was a unanimous selection for both awards.[4][5] In addition to being named Rookie of the Year, Young was named second-team All-Ivy in basketball and was basketball Rookie of the Week each of the final six weeks and seven weeks overall.[5] His season was capped with Ivy League Player of the Year and freshman All-America honors from Basketball Weekly. Statistically, Young set Princeton freshman records for points (387) and rebounds (160) by averaging 12.9 points and 5.3 rebounds a game. He also had 39 points, 19 rebounds and 15 assists in three games at the Rainbow Classic basketball tournament, hosted by the University of Hawaii.[5][6][7][8] He posted a season-high 24 points in an National Invitation Tournament win against the NC State Wolfpack.[9] In baseball, Young led Princeton and the Ivy League with a 2.38 ERA. During this performance he allowed only one home run over the course of 150 batters faced, and was twice named Ivy League Rookie of the Week.[5]

Young concluded his college basketball career by starting every game of the 1999–2000 season.[10] Among his accomplishments that season were 22 double-digit scoring games, breaking his own single-season school record for blocked shots with 87, and leading the team with 13.8 points per game, 6.3 rebounds per game, 87 blocked shots and 40 steals.[10] He was also second on the team with 105 assists. Young had the highest rebounding average of any Princeton player since 1978 and was also the thirteenth player in school history to record 100 assists in a season.[10] For his college basketball career, Young accumulated 801 points, 350 rebounds, and 142 blocks.[10] His best game performances included a 20-point game on the road against the 11th-Coaches Poll Kansas Jayhawks,[11] a career-high 30 points against Harvard,[12] and a school record of nine blocked shots against the Ohio Bobcats.[13]

During his sophomore baseball season in 2000, Young was the Ivy League's leading pitcher with a 1.82 ERA overall and a 1.05 figure in conference games.[10] He compiled a perfect record of 5–0 in eight appearances, with 52 strikeouts in 49⅓ innings.[10] Young was a unanimous first-team All-Ivy League baseball selection, and he led the Tigers to their first Ivy League title since 1996.[14] Young pitched a complete game and struck out seven batters in the 5–2 win in the championship series opener against Dartmouth.[14]

Young was selected by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the third round of the 2000 amateur draft and signed a $1.65 million contract with Pittsburgh on September 6 after holding out until he gained assurances that he would be able to complete his collegiate education.[14] His athletic career was not entirely on hold as an upperclassman, and he was able to get some low minor league experience before completing his degree at Princeton in politics in June 2002 and becoming a full-time professional athlete.[14][15] He played in the class A minor leagues after his junior year.[14] Young then completed his senior thesis, entitled "The Impact of Jackie Robinson and the Integration of Baseball on Racial Stereotypes in America: A Quantitative Content Analysis of Stories about Race in the New York Times" while commuting on minor league buses as a player for the Hickory Crawdads.[14][15] Young was also offered a two-year guaranteed contract to play basketball for the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association in 2002 by fellow Princeton alum and Kings president Geoff Petrie.[14][15]

Professional baseball career[]

File:20070616 Chris Young visits Wrigley (5).JPG

Chris Young warms up between innings

Young was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 3rd round of the 2000 amateur draft.[16] He was signed to a deal on September 6. After a few years of minor league service, he was traded to the Montreal Expos' organization. The Expos traded him to the Texas Rangers, for whom he eventually made his major league debut. After less than two seasons with the Rangers he was traded to the San Diego Padres.[16]

Minor leagues[]

In 2001, Young went 5–3 with a 4.12 ERA in 12 starts for the Hickory Crawdads in the Class-A South Atlantic League, including two complete games.[17] In 2002, Young helped the Crawdads to the league title with a 11–9 record and 3.11 ERA in 26 starts. Young earned decisions in fifteen straight starts from April 16 and July 4. He allowed more than three earned runs in just two of 26 starts. Opposing batters batted .234. He was traded to the Montreal Expos with Jon Searles for pitcher Matt Herges in a postseason trade.[18] Young began the 2003 season on the disabled list before joining the Brevard County Manatees of the Florida State League towards the end of April.[19] He posted a 5–2 record with a 1.62 ERA, and held opposing batters to a .150 batting average in eight starts.[19] His season was highlighted by an eight-inning, one-hit, no-walk, eight-strikeout performance against the Fort Myers Miracle on May 11.[20] This capped a 3–0, 0.47 ERA start to the season.[19]

In June 2003, Young was promoted to the Harrisburg Senators of the Double-A Eastern League. He went 4–4 with a 4.01 ERA in 15 starts. In July, he went 3–0 and finished with an ERA of 3.03 over five starts. His season was highlighted by an eight-strikeout final outing on August 30 against the Norwich Navigators and a win on July 27 against the Reading Phillies in which he threw seven shutout innings.[19][21][22] He was traded by the Montreal Expos to the Texas Rangers organization on April 3, 2004 in a preseason deal along with Josh McKinley for Einar Diaz and Justin Echols.[23][16] He started the 2004 season with the Frisco RoughRiders of the Texas League where he went 6–5 with a 4.48 ERA in 18 starts.[23] The only two home runs he allowed in his final 12 starts and 61 innings with the RoughRiders occurred on July 3, against Round Rock.[23][24] He struck out a season-high eight batters on May 9 against El Paso.[23][25]

Young was promoted to the Triple-A Oklahoma RedHawks of the Pacific Coast League in late July and went a perfect 3–0 with a 1.48 ERA in five starts.[23] During this brief stint he allowed only nine walks while compiling 34 strikeouts, and held opposition batters to a .189 average.[23] He posted four quality starts, and in his fifth start he only allowed two runs. The club was 4–1 in his PCL starts. The only loss was due to a blown save with a 4–2 ninth-inning lead on August 7 against the Tacoma Rainiers in a game in which Young allowed no earned runs.[26] He was named Pacific Coast League Pitcher of the Week for August 16 to August 22 after his last start on August 18 against the Memphis Redbirds.[23][27] Young took a no-hitter into the sixth inning of his second Triple-A start on August 2 against the Sacramento River Cats.[28]

2004 season[]

Young debuted with the Rangers on August 24, 2004 against the Minnesota Twins. He pitched 5⅔ innings, giving up four hits and three earned runs, while striking out four and walking three batters.[29] Young exited the game trailing 3–0, but was rescued by a comeback walk-off 5–4 win.[23]

This debut made Young the first Princeton baseball player to start a major league game at any position since Dave Sisler (son of Hall of Famer George Sisler and brother of Dick Sisler) gave up six earned runs in just over four innings on August 27, 1961 in the second game of a doubleheader against the Detroit Tigers.[4] The game also marked the first appearance in a major league game by a Princeton baseball player since Robert Tufts played his final game for the Kansas City Royals on May 6, 1983.[4][30] Other Princeton baseball players who have recorded either 50 innings pitched or 130 at bats (the requirements to qualify for Rookie of the Year) in the major leagues are Moe Berg, Homer Hillebrand, King Lear, Dutch Meier, Dutch Sterrett, and Bobby Vaughn.[31] Young has been joined in the major leagues by Princtonian Ross Ohlendorf who debuted for the New York Yankees on September 112007.[32] Another Princetonian, Tim Lahey, was on the Philadelphia Phillies roster from the team's Opening Day on March 312008 until April 52008 without making an appearance.[33][34]

The debut, which occurred in a home game at Ameriquest Field in Arlington, served as a homecoming for Young who grew up in nearby Dallas, Texas and went to Highland Park High School.[4] With his debut, Young became the second-tallest player in Major League Baseball, only an inch shorter than the Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSon2Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/on Jon Rauch.[35] Three other current and previous pitchers—Randy Johnson,[36] Andrew Sisco[37] and Eric Hillman[38]—are also 6 feet 10 inches (Template:Rnd/b1 m)Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/. He became the tallest pitcher in Rangers history, surpassing the Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSon2Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/on right-handed pitcher Mike Smithson.[23] After becoming part of the starting rotation, he made seven starts and compiled a 3–2 record with a 4.71 ERA.[16] Young signed a three-year contract through 2007 on November 19.[23]

Young's first major league decision came during his second start in an August 29 loss to the Baltimore Orioles.[23][39] His first win came in his third start on September 4 against the Boston Red Sox.[23][40] His fifth start was a six-inning performance in a 1–0 win against the Anaheim Angels on September 19.[41][42] This was the first Ranger 1–0 victory since August 25, 2000 against the Toronto Blue Jays,[43] a stretch of 669 games.[23] The club went 5-2 during his starts in his brief 2004 stint with the club.[23]

2005 season[]

Young was one of three rookies on the Opening Day roster.[44] He made 31 starts in 2005 with the Rangers, compiling a 12–7 record with a 4.26 ERA.[16] His twelve victories tied Kevin Brown's record for most wins by a Rangers rookie.[45] His season started slowly, with seven earned runs allowed in 7⅓ innings pitched (8.59 ERA) over his first two starts.[44][46][47] However, over the course of 11 starts from April 17June 13, he lowered his ERA to a season-low 2.78 by going 6–2, 2.18 in 70⅓ innings pitched over that stretch.[44] This included the month of May when he went 3–0 in five starts with a 1.42 ERA that was third-best among all qualifying major leaguers for the month.[44] This included his season-high 13⅔ scoreless innings recorded from May 3May 9.[48][49] He had subsequent hot and cold streaks, with a record of 2–4 and a 9.07 ERA in nine starts from June 20August 2, followed by a 2.53 ERA over his final nine starts.[44] He closed out the season by winning his final four decisions, which was a personal best.[44]

May 9 was one of two times Young came within an inning of a shutout by pitching eight scoreless innings; August 17 against the Cleveland Indians was the other.[50][51] Young recorded a personal-best eight strikeouts in a seven-inning no-decision on June 2 at Detroit.[52][53] The closest Young came to a no-hitter was 5⅔ innings of hitless pitching in a road game against the Houston Astros on June 25 before allowing a Craig Biggio single in the sixth inning.[54][55] Over the course of the season, Young was the beneficiary of the second-highest run support in the majors, trailing only David Wells of the Boston Red Sox.[44] However, he surrendered three runs or less in 22 of 31 starts.[44] After a 2005 season when he went 5–0 with a 3.47 ERA in 11 games during the day and 7–7 with a 4.71 ERA in 20 games at night, he had a career 8–1 record with a 3.31 ERA in 15 day games and 7–8 with a 5.05 mark in 23 games at night.[44]

In his rookie season, Young ranked in the top five among qualifying major league rookies in several statistical categories: strikeouts (second, 137), wins (tied for third, 12), ERA (fourth, 4.26), starts (fifth, 31) and innings pitched (fifth, 164⅔).[44] He also tied Rangers rookie club records: wins (12, Edwin Correa in 1986 and Kevin Brown in 1989) and pre All-Star break wins (8, Jeff Zimmerman in 1999 and Jose Guzman in 1986).[44] Young ranked fifth among all American League pitchers with 7.5 strikeouts per 9 innings.[44] Despite this success, however, he was a key part of an offseason trade that also sent Terrmel Sledge and Adrian Gonzalez to the San Diego Padres for starting pitcher Adam Eaton, middle reliever Akinori Otsuka and minor-league catcher Billy Killian.[56]

2006 season[]

2006 marked Young's breakout season. His ERA continued its downward trend, falling to 3.46 over 31 starts, good enough for sixth best in the National League, and he recorded a career-high 169 strikeouts. He finished with an 11–5 record,[16] led all major league pitchers with a 2.41 road ERA,[57][56] allowed a league-leading 6.72 hits per 9 innings pitched, and a .206 opponent batting average.[16][56] During the season, Young won a National League Pitcher of the Month award, took a no-hitter into the sixth inning or beyond three times, and extended his undefeated road start streak to 24 games.[56] This streak made Young one of only three pitchers in major league history to have gone at least 23 straight road starts without a loss; Allie Reynolds set the record at 25 straight road starts spanning the 1948 and 1949 seasons, with Russ Meyer falling one short, going undefeated in 24 straight road contests spanning the 1953 and 1954 seasons.[56]

In his first six starts after Memorial Day, he improved from a 3–3 with a 4.32 ERA to 7–3 with a 2.97 ERA, by allowing only four earned runs over 38⅔ innings. He was named one of five candidates from the National League for Major League Baseball's "All-Star Final Vote" to determine the final official selection for the 2006 Major League Baseball All-Star Game; however, Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Nomar Garciaparra was elected.[58] Nonetheless, his strong June performance – during which he allowed 16 hits and 13 walks over 30⅔ innings, maintained a 1.17 ERA and struck out 34 – earned him the National League Pitcher of the Month award.[45][56] His five starts in June were highlighted by a career-best 12-strikeout performance on June 9 against the Florida Marlins and a June 21 win over his former team, the Texas Rangers.[45][59][60][61][62]

On September 22, Young had a no-hitter through 8⅓ innings of the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates before pinch hitter Joe Randa hit a two-run home run.[63][64] This would have been the first no-hitter in Padres history.[63] It was the first time a Padre had taken a no-hitter into the ninth inning since Andy Ashby on September 5, 1997 vs. the Atlanta Braves.[56][65] Young had been on pace for a perfect game through 5⅔ innings.[66] Young also took a no-hitter into the eighth inning on May 30 against the Colorado Rockies as a prelude to his June performance.[63] In that game, which marked the first time a pitcher took a no-hitter into the eighth inning during the 2006 season,[3] he surrendered a double to Brad Hawpe on his first pitch of the eighth inning and 99th of the game.[67][68] During Young's next start on June 4 at Pittsburgh, he did not allow a hit for the first 5⅓ innings,[69][70] making him one of only two pitchers (Steve TrachselJune 20–25, 2002)[71][72] to have consecutive starts with at least five hitless innings since the 2000 season.[3][73]

He ended the season by winning his only career postseason start; on October 7, he earned a 3–1 victory in Game 3 of the 2006 National League Division Series against the St. Louis Cardinals.[74] He pitched 6⅔ shutout innings, struck out nine, walked two and allowed four hits.[74] It remains the Padres' only victory in ten post-season games against the Cardinals. The Padres lost the series three games to one. Young's 6–0 road performance in 2006 was one of 49 undefeated road seasons with at least five victories by a pitcher since post-season play began in 1903. However, it was the first to be followed by a postseason road victory.[75]

In November, he traveled to Japan to take part in the Major League Baseball Japan All-Star Series.[76][77] Young was the starter in an exhibition game against the Yomiuri Giants, which was memorable for the major leaguers' three-run ninth-inning rally to earn a tie.[78] This game was the prelude to the five-game series which began with three games at the Tokyo Dome and was followed by games in Osaka and Fukuoka.[79] Young pitched the fourth game of the series. Young also blogged on behalf of mlb.com about daily life during the trip. He detailed visits with United States Ambassador to Japan Tom Schieffer, time in the Harajuku, and travels on the Bullet Train.[76]

2007 season[]

File:20070616 Chris Young visits Wrigley (8).JPG

Chris Young during delivery

File:20070616 Chris Young visits Wrigley (11).JPG

Chris Young batting against Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Carlos Zambrano shortly before the brawl on June 16, 2007

In his season debut on April 4 against the San Francisco Giants, Young became the 435th different pitcher to surrender a home run to Barry Bonds when he surrendered Bonds' first of the season and 735th of his career.[80] The game marked Young's 25th consecutive road start without a loss.[80] Young was 9–0 during the streak, which ended in his subsequent road start on April 15 at Dodger Stadium in a 9–3 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.[57][81] The last of the nine other pitchers to go 20 consecutive road starts without a loss was Greg Maddux who went 22 starts without a loss during 1997 and 1998.[82] Young's streak began on June 25, 2005.[57][82][83]

On April 10, Young signed a four-year extension with the Padres through the 2010 season, reportedly worth $14.5 million with a club option for 2011.[84]

On June 16, Young threw a pitch that hit Chicago Cubs All-Star first baseman Derrek Lee on the back of the upper left arm.[85] The day before the fracas, Alfonso Soriano homered off David Wells, and the Padres believed Soriano showed poor sportsmanship by admiring and celebrating his home run.[85] The pitch nicked Lee's left hand near his surgically repaired wrist.[86][87] When Lee began walking towards first base, both he and Young exchanged words, and a bench-clearing altercation ensued.[87] Both Young and Lee were ejected from the game, along with Jake Peavy and Cubs bench coach Gerald Perry. On June 18, Young and Lee were suspended five games each for their roles in the brawl, and Perry was suspended three games. All suspended parties were fined, as were Peavy and Brian Giles.[88] Young and Lee appealed their suspensions, which were to begin the following day.[89][90] At the time of the scuffle in the fourth inning, both pitchers were working on no-hitters. Young was ejected in the game, and he earned a no-decision in the game which the Padres ultimately won 1–0.[91]

On June 24, Jake Peavy surrendered three earned runs in five innings, which caused his ERA to rise from 1.98 to 2.14.[92] This gave Young, who had a 2.08 ERA, the National League-leading average for one day. The next day, Brad Penny allowed only one earned run over eight innings to take the lead with a 2.04 ERA.[93]

On July 1, Young was nominated as a candidate for the All-Star Final Vote, contending against Tom Gorzelanny, Roy Oswalt, Brandon Webb and Carlos Zambrano.[94] In a bid for the final spot on July 4, Young posted seven scoreless innings in a 1–0 victory over the Florida Marlins to not only retake the National League ERA lead, but also assume the major league lead over Brad Penny by a slim margin (1.9968 to 1.9970).[95] The voting ended on July 5, with Young defeating the four opposing pitchers to earn his first career All-Star Game selection.[1] The selection made Young the sixth Ivy League athlete named to the All-Star team (joining Lou Gehrig, Red Rolfe, Ron Darling, Brad Ausmus and Mike Remlinger).[96]

Young entered the All-Star break with the major league lead in ERA and opponent batting average as well as an undefeated streak extending back to a May 12 loss to the Cardinals.[97][98] Prior to the announcement of his election, Young dropped his appeal of the five-game suspension.[99] Young served his suspension during the final four games before the All-Star break and the first game afterwards, yet was allowed to play in the All-Star Game at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California.[100] In the fifth inning of the 5–4 American League victory for which Young was the losing pitcher, he surrendered the first inside-the-park home run in All-Star game history to Ichiro Suzuki.[101]

He was placed on the disabled list after he incurred a strained oblique muscle during the third inning of his July 24 start.[102] On August 9, he was activated off the disabled list to make a scheduled start. He took a 12-start (five-decision) undefeated streak,[103] dating back to a May 12 loss to the Cardinals,[104] into his first start off the disabled list, but he took the loss in a 5–0 defeat, which was again against the Cardinals.[105] Young ended the 2007 season as the major league leader in opponent batting average and hits per nine innings. He battled injuries late in the season and surrendered the ERA leadership to Jake Peavy in his August 30 start.[106]

2008 Season[]

Young started the season in the second spot in the Padres rotation between ace Peavy and Maddux. He pitched his first three turns from the second spot in the rotation. On April 18th, he missed his turn and Maddux moved into the second spot in the rotation. Young has since been pitching in the third spot in the rotation.[107][108] The number three spot in the rotation is the only one that was not scheduled to start during the Padres visit to Wrigley Field May 1215, 2008. Young, thus, did not make a start against the Cubs with whom he had an altercation in 2007. On May 21 2008 in a game against the St.Louis Cardinals, Young was hit in the face by a line-drive from Albert Pujols. Young was sitting on the ground for several minutes but was able to leave the field under his own power as he only sustained a nasal fracture and a laceration on his nose. Later in the same inning, Pujols would also sprain the ankle of Padres catcher Josh Bard while sliding into home plate.[109] Young returned to the mound on July 29 with five shutout innings against the Arizona Diamondbacks.[110]

Pitching style[]

Young is not a traditional power pitcher. He is said to be a control pitcher in a 6 feet 10 inches (Template:Rnd/b1 m)Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/ power pitcher's body in the sense that his pitching style is more like Greg Maddux' instead of the well-known five-time Cy Young Award winner and World Series co-MVP Randy Johnson, who shares the same height and stature as Young.[111] Young has been traded three times in his career partly because of the low velocity of his fastball, which is in the 85–90 miles per hour (136.8–144.8 km/h) range and which did not give his employers an indication of his likely effectiveness. Young has learned how to use precise location to make his fastball effective. He has also been compared to another control pitcher, Jim Palmer, because Young induces popups and fly ball outs with deceptive late movement on his high fastballs much like Palmer.[112] Over 50% of the balls put in play against him are fly balls.[113] 3.8% of the flyballs hit off Young in 2007 were home runs.[114] while the average is about 11%.[113] From 2003 to 2006 the best single-season percentage was 6.2% by Dontrelle Willis in 2005.[113]

Young's repertoire includes fastballs, curveballs, sliders and changeups. His curveball is a slow curveball and his {{rnd/bExpression error: Unexpected < operator.|Expression error: Unexpected < operator.|Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[".|Expression error: Unexpected < operator.}} miles per hour (Template:Convert/km/h)Template:Convert/track/abbr/Template:Convert/track/disp/Template:Convert/track/adj/ fastball has been described by former teammate and catcher Mike Piazza as having late life and late movement that seems to jump. His curveball is used to keep the hitters off balance so that they don't jump on his low-velocity fastball.[115] Former Ranger pitching coach Orel Hershiser says Young has the ability to throw his fastball to all locations effectively which gives him a chance at success. Hershiser describes Young's pitches as sneaky fast because his methodical delivery and size give him deception.[116]

Batting[]

As of the end of the 2007 Major League Baseball season, Young has a career .124 batting average and only thirteen hits, four of which were extra base hits (three doubles and one triple). He has yet to either hit a home run or record a stolen base. The only Princeton players who have hit a home run or recorded a stolen base at least once during their careers are Moe Berg, Dutch Sterrett, Homer Hillebrand, Dutch Meier, Ted Reed and Bobby Vaughn; Berg is the most recent player to have accomplished either of these feats.[31]

Career statistics[]

Year Ag Tm Lg W L G GS CG SHO IP H R ER HR BB SO HBP WP BFP BK ERA WHIP OBA H/9
2004 25 TEX AL 3 2 7 7 0 0 36⅓ 36 21 19 7 10 27 2 1 158 0 4.71 1.266 .250 8.92
2005 26 TEX AL 12 7 31 31 0 0 164⅔ 162 84 78 19 45 137 7 3 700 0 4.26 1.257 .252 8.85
2006 27 SD NL 11 5 31 31 0 0 179⅓ 134 72 69 28 69 164 6 6 735 1 3.46 1.132 .206 6.72
2007 28 SD NL 9 8 30 30 0 0 173.0 118 66 60 10 72 167 7 7 705 4 3.12 1.098 .192 6.14
2008 29 SD NL 4 3 9 9 0 0 51.7 46 25 24 8 29 49 0 2 225 1 4.18 1.452 .235 8.01
Totals: 39 25 108 108 0 0 605.0 496 268 250 72 225 544 22 19 2523 6 3.72 1.192 .221 7.38
  • Template:Legend
  • Template:Legend
  • Template:Legend
  • Through 2008-05-17.[16][117][118]

Personal[]

Young's wife, Elizabeth Patrick, is the granddaughter of Lester Patrick, who was the namesake of the National Hockey League's Patrick Division and the Lester Patrick Trophy.[3] She was also a member of the Princeton University class of 2002, and she attends law school in Washington, D.C.[14] On March 4 2008, she was induced into labor four days before her due date to deliver a girl named Catherine Elizabeth.[119][120]

References[]

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  2. 2006 NL Division Series - STL vs. SDP. Sports Reference, Inc.. Retrieved on May 8, 2007.
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  11. Princeton vs. Kansas. USAToday.com (1999-12-22). Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
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  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 14.6 14.7 Orland, Rachel (2006-12-07). The Top 20 Greatest Athletes. dailyprincetonian.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-31. Retrieved on April 9, 2007.
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  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Player Profile: Chris Young 32 (2003 Career Highlights). MLB.com (2007). Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
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  23. 23.00 23.01 23.02 23.03 23.04 23.05 23.06 23.07 23.08 23.09 23.10 23.11 23.12 23.13 Player Profile: Chris Young 32 (2004 Career Highlights). MLB.com (2007). Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
  24. Round Rock vs. Frisco. USA TODAY (2004-07-03). Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
  25. El Paso vs. Frisco. USA TODAY (2004-05-09). Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
  26. Tacoma vs. Oklahoma. USA TODAY (2004-08-07). Retrieved on 2007-06-02.
  27. Oklahoma vs. Memphis. USA TODAY (2004-08-18). Retrieved on 2007-06-02.
  28. Oklahoma vs. Sacramento. USA TODAY (2004-08-02). Retrieved on 2007-06-02.
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External links[]

Preceded by:
Roger Clemens
NL hits per nine innings
2006, 2007
Succeeded by:
TBD
Preceded by:
Roger Clemens
NL opponent batting average
2006, 2007
Succeeded by:
TBD
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