Francisco Cabrera | |||
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First baseman / Catcher | |||
Born: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic |
October 10, 1966 |||
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MLB debut | |||
July 24, 1989, for the Toronto Blue Jays | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
September 24, 1993, for the Atlanta Braves | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .254 | ||
Home runs | 17 | ||
Runs batted in | 62 | ||
Teams | |||
Francisco Cabrera (born October 10, 1966) is a former Major League Baseball catcher/first baseman who played five seasons with two different teams, the Toronto Blue Jays and the Atlanta Braves, from 1989 to 1993. He also played in Japan with the Orix Blue Wave in 1994.
Cabrera started his career with the Blue Jays, playing three games with them before being traded to the Braves for Jim Acker in the middle of the 1989 season. Cabrera was a reserve for most of his career and had his best season in 1990 in which he played sixty-three games and had 137 at-bats, getting 38 hits, with seven home runs.
Cabrera is credited with hitting the home run that marked the turning point in the history of the Atlanta Braves. On Wednesday, August 21, 1991, the Braves played the Reds and entered the ninth inning trailing, 9–6. Reds ace reliever Rob Dibble was on the mound with two outs. Cabrera had started the game to give Braves starter Greg Olson a much-needed rest. With two outs, David Justice doubled, and Brian Hunter walked to bring Cabrera to the plate with the tying run. He responded with a three-run homer off Dibble to tie a game the Braves eventually won in 13 innings. The game kept them 2.5 games behind the Dodgers in a race they eventually won by one game. The Braves went 29–12 after Cabrera's home run and eventually reached the World Series before losing to the Twins in seven games.