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Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez is died at 57

Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez is dead at age 57

News Contributor by News Contributor
February 17, 2020
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The Blue Jays icon, Tony Fernandez, who spent 12 seasons with the Toronto Blue Jays and was a member of Toronto’s World Series-winning team in 1993, has died at age 57, according to various reports, including MLB’s official Spanish-language Twitter account.

Octavio Antonio Fernández Castro born on June 30, 1962, and died on February 15, 2020). He was better known as Tony Fernández, was a Dominican baseball shortstop who played 17 seasons in Major League Baseball for seven teams, most notably the Toronto Blue Jays. Fernández was known for his defensive skills, setting a nine-year record for shortstops with a .992 fielding percentage in 1989, while still holding the single-season fielding percentage record for third basemen with .991 in 1994.

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Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez was hospitalized earlier this year due to complications from kidney disease and put in a medically induced coma. After initially showing signs of improvement, Fernandez suffered a stroke, according to MLB Insider Hector Gomez, and then taken off the life support.

His wife, Clara Fernandez, survive the Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez.

Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez died
Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez is dead at age 57 1

Fernandez leads the Blue Jays in multiple categories, including all-time hits (1,583), singles (1,160), triples (72), and games played (1,450). More than an impressive offensive player, he was known for his defense as well, winning four straight Gold Glove Awards with the Blue Jays from 1986-89.

Fernandez was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in St. Marys, Ont., in 2008.

Fernández first got scouted by the Toronto Blue Jays’ famed Latin America scout Epy Guerrero and was signed as an undrafted free agent in 1979. Promoted to the Blue Jays in 1983, Fernández became the team’s full-time shortstop in 1985,[1] and contributed significantly to the team winning its first division title that year. Fernández continued to star for the Jays for several years afterward. His 213 hits in 1986 were, at the time, a major league single-season record for a shortstop.

Before the 1991 season, He then got traded to the San Diego Padres in a significant deal that also sent Jays star Fred McGriff to San Diego in exchange for Roberto Alomar and Joe Carter. Fernández played well for San Diego for two years and then began the 1993 season with the New York Mets. After a disappointing start, Fernández again got traded back to the Blue Jays. He played well for the remainder of the season and was instrumental in helping the Blue Jays win the 1993 World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies. In that World Series, Fernández drove in nine runs, a record for a shortstop.

Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez is died at 57
Blue Jays icon Tony Fernandez is dead at age 57 2

The Jays icon Tony Fernandez played for the New York Yankees in 1995. It was because of an injury early in the season to Fernández that Derek Jeter got called up to the major leagues for the first time.

In 1997, he reached the World Series again, with the Cleveland Indians, thanks in large part to his game-winning home run against Baltimore in the American League Championship Series. It was the only 1-0 game in postseason history where the run was an extra-innings home run. Playing at second base, he committed an error in the bottom of the 11th inning in Game 7 of the World Series; this broke up a potential double play, and the eventual World Series-winning run was put on the base. He hit a two-run single in the top of the third inning for the Indians’ only runs of the game and would have been credited with the Series-winning hit for Cleveland had they won the game.

In 1998, he rejoined the Blue Jays, and revitalized his hitting, batting over .300 in two seasons there. In 2000, Fernández played for the Seibu Lions in Japan before returning to the majors the following year. When he returned in 2001, he briefly played for the Milwaukee Brewers but returned to Toronto late in the season, and retired at its conclusion.

A skinny man, the Blue Jays icon Tony Fernández had a tilted, wavering batting stance that made it appear as if he might not be strong enough to hold his bat. From early in his career he carried a scar on his right cheek from a pitched ball. Fernández was a noted fitness fanatic; he liked buying unusual home exercise machines and trying them out in the clubhouse.

Early in his career, Fernández was well known for his exceptional defensive skills at shortstop, and was described by Ivan Maisel in a Sports Illustrated article as having “the range of a Texas cattleman”. 

He was especially famous for leaping into the air while simultaneously making an underhanded throw to first base, on balls hit far to his right.

The Jays icon Tony Fernández was awarded four consecutive Gold Glove Awards for his defense, from 1986 to 1989. Fernández was also named to five All-Star teams. He finished his career with a .288 batting average in 2,158 games played and batted .327 in postseason play. Fernandez hit for the cycle as a New York Yankee on September 3, 1995, against the Oakland Athletics.

On October 17, 2016, Fernandez had got inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, where he thanked the fans in Toronto, Ontario, and Canada for embracing him.

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Tags: baseball shortstopIvan MaiselRoberto Alomarscartexas
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