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The ball traveled 469 feet , flying past the 'Big Mac Land' sign into the second deck in left field. He held the record until Brandon Moss surpassed that distance four years later. Safely hitting four times in five at bats on August 26 against Cincinnati, he also had four RBI and missed hitting for the cycle by a home run.

In 155 total games, Holliday batted .326 with 196 hits, 45 doubles, 34 home runs, 114 RBIs, 119 runs, 10 stolen bases, 353 total bases, .586 slugging percentage, and .387 on-base percentage. He became just the 19th player ever to meet or exceed 195 hits, 30 home runs, 45 doubles, 115 runs and 110 RBI in one season. He finished in the top five of the National League in batting average, hits, runs, extra base hits, total bases and slugging percentage. After the season, received his first Silver Slugger Award as an outfielder. Holliday's first career multi-home run game came against the Cincinnati Reds on May 18. His first MLB grand slam came against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays on June 12, immediately tying a game in which the Rockies had faced a 5–1 deficit.
Matt Holliday hits magical home run in possible final Cardinals at-bat
He played for the Mesa Solar Sox of the off-season Arizona Fall League in 2002 and 2003, batting .316 with four home runs, 21 RBI and 10 stolen bases in 35 total AFL games. Holliday remained at the AA level for the 2003 season as the everyday left fielder for the Tulsa Drillers of the Texas League, batting .253, 28 doubles, 72 RBI, 132 hits, 45 extra-base hits, and 206 total bases. He earned a spot on the USA Baseball team in the Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Panama.

What had started as Matt Holliday hopes to be back for the playoffs had become Matt Holliday wants to say goodbye. Holliday opened the 2015 season with a 12-game hitting streak that evolved into a sequence of reaching base in each of the first 45 games of the season, breaking Pujols's National League record of 42 games to open a season which he set in 2008. It was the longest such streak in MLB since Derek Jeter garnered 53 in 1999. Dating back to the end of 2014, Holliday's continuity of reaching base spanned 47 games. The venture reached finality on June 2 against the Brewers after umpire Joe West ejected him for arguing a called third strike, the fourth ejection of his career.
The death of the power hitter
Was elected into the Arizona Fall League Hall of Fame in 2014 and inducted in 2016. Known primarily as a reserved figure, Holliday has played for years in the shadows of such franchise icons as Todd Helton and Albert Pujols, which accommodated his demeanor well. However, he has emerged as a veteran presence for the Cardinals willing to assist and entertain younger players and top prospects as they attempt to adjust to a lifestyle of playing baseball. In January 2012, he invited Matt Adams, Ryan Jackson, Charlie Tilson and Kolten Wong for a weeklong stay in St. Louis at the tony Frontenac Hotel. Activities included eating out, hitting, working out and attending a St. Louis Blues game.

The Missouri Athletic Club named Holliday their Sports Personality of the Year for 2012. He finished 16th in the NL MVP voting – including a fourth-place vote – despite playing nearly 100 games in the American League. Both trades involving Holliday were later panned as failures for the A's, as two of the players they dealt away became multiple All-Stars. One was González, who won the 2010 batting title, Silver Slugger and Gold Glove Awards with the Rockies. Jesse Spector of Sporting News augured that the second deal was a "landslide win" for the Cardinals, even if they had never resigned Holliday in his free agency. Full name is Matthew Thomas Holliday…he and his wife, Leslee, have three sons, Jackson, Ethan and Reed, and one daughter, Gracyn.
Postseason Batting
Colorado was gifted a run it probably didn't deserve, but really, it was making up for another run they'd been wrongly denied -- and which would've changed the entire complexion of the game. The second is from down the left-field line -- it certainly seems to give the impression that Barrett blocked Holliday from reaching the plate, but it doesn't allow us to see what went on behind Barrett's left foot, so it's still inconclusive. That's where it remained until the 13th, when Scott Hairston launched a two-run homer to give the Padres the lead. San Diego was at the doorstep yet again, three outs away from the postseason with future Hall of Famer Trevor Hoffman making his way to the mound. But baseball has been around a long time, and in some cases, it can be hard to tell whether those stories are too good to be true. Which is why MLB Mythbusters is here to help -- we'll be diving into some of the game's greatest legends, trying to separate fact from fiction.

The reason Orsillo and Simpson went back to replay to try to explain the play, too, is that Orsillo’s initial reaction to the first replay was, “I’m not sure he ever got the plate,” to which Simpson replied, “I don’t know that he did, either. Barrett looked like he blocked him off the plate.” See, it’s not just me! I honestly didn’t even remember this part, likely because I was too busy storming around my living room yelling at Tim McClelland, but there it is. Barrett planted his leg emphatically, and it’s convenient he did so because we can see that it’s blocking the plate.
In September, Holliday led the NL with 32 RBI, setting a Rockies record for that month. On September 20 against the Padres, he hit two home runs and tied a Rockies' single-game record with eight RBI in a Rockies 20–1 victory, the highest single-game RBI total in the NL in 2005 and second-highest in the major leagues. He ended the season with a seven-game hitting streak and reached base in each of the Rockies' final 22 games.
The Rockies traded Holliday to the Oakland Athletics following the 2008 season for a return that included Carlos Gonzalez. Since that moment, Gonzalez has been one of the Rockies cornerstones. Fittingly, he was in the lineup Saturday, collecting three hits in the victory. Holliday was a three-time All-Star during his first Rockies stint, which began in 2004. He hit the first 128 of his now 315 career home runs in a Rockies uniform, but ended up pricing himself out of their range thanks to his success.
Strike, strike, and then he sent one flying over the fence in right field. "It's something that a lot of people have been involved with," Holliday said of his latest benchmark. "I've had a lot of great coaching and support and teammates. You think about all the people who have been part of your baseball career, and it's pretty cool." Holliday's home run was more of an insurance shot than a game-changer for the Rockies, who went up 7 to 2 over the Dodgers after the blast. He raised the Rockies chances of winning to 93% in the firth inning, and Colorado had the game statistically locked up by the bottom of the seventh.

On August 7, 2006, Bonds smashed a baseball 465 feet off of Chad Billingsley. Nevertheless, the wind was there to help Holliday whether he wanted it to or not. You're destined to gain an edge over your friends with advice from the award-winning FBT crew. Holliday’s solo shot broke a scoreless tie in what had been a fantastic pitching duel. The blast drove Rockies fans into a frenzy, and it woke up Colorado’s bat.
From May 1 until the end of the season – a span of 131 games – he collected 169 hits for a .339 batting average, the fourth-highest in the major leagues. An All-Star selection to the game at PNC Park in Pittsburgh for the first time in his career, Holliday was hitting .339 with 16 home runs and 56 RBI at the time of his selection. In the game, Holliday played right field for the first time as a major leaguer. Matthew Thomas Holliday is an American professional baseball coach and former left fielder who is the bench coach for the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball . He played in MLB from 2004 to 2018 for the Colorado Rockies, Oakland Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals, and New York Yankees. A World Series champion in 2011 with the Cardinals, Holliday played a key role in seven postseasons, including the Rockies' first-ever World Series appearance in 2007 and Cardinals' playoff success in the 2010s.
He built off his first season in 2005, improving his batting average to .307 and his OPS by .029. Holliday entered the game at Dodger Stadium described above with an enormous season in progress, batting .328 and already with 24 home runs under his belt. Pundits and fans have consistently questioned Holliday's durability, and thus his effectiveness as a hitter, into the final guaranteed year of the contract he signed in 2010. However, during each of its first five seasons, he played no fewer than 124 games. In each of the first 11 seasons of his career, including his rookie year, he played at least 121 games. On January 18, 2008, Holliday signed a two-year, $23 million contract with the Rockies, covering his final two years of arbitration.
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