Mackey Sasser (born August 3, 1962 in Fort Gaines, Georgia) is a former professional baseball catcher, who played from to for the New York Mets, the San Francisco Giants, the Pittsburgh Pirates, and Seattle Mariners.
Sasser is known for the difficulty he regularly encountered in "double clutching" balls to the pitcher that had been thrown to him, although he performed competently as a catcher otherwise. He appeared in 534 games in his career, getting 317 hits with sixteen home runs, 156 RBI and a career .267 batting average.
Early career
Sasser played
college baseball at
Troy University and was drafted in the fifth round of the 1987
Major League Baseball Draft by the
San Francisco Giants. He came up in the
Major Leagues with the Giants on
July 17,
1987 playing in two games before being traded to the
Pittsburgh Pirates with cash for pitcher
Don Robinson where he played 12 games for the remainder of the season.
Mets career
On March 26, 1988, Sasser was traded to the
New York Mets with pitcher
Tim Drummond for former Mets prospect
first baseman,
Randy Milligan and a minor league player. With the Mets he was used as a backup for future
Hall of Fame catcher
Gary Carter for two seasons before playing 100 games in the season. That year he had 83 hits and a .307 batting average. In , he played 96 games for a .272 batting average and in he went back to a backup role where he played in 92 games for only 141 at-bats and a .241 batting average.
Later career
Sasser was granted
free agent status after the season when he signed a two year contract with the
Seattle Mariners. He appeared in 83 games as a backup in the season where he only hit for a .218 batting average. Seattle demoted him to third-string backup catcher after that season, and he appeared in only three games with them in the season, going hitless in three games before getting released. Sasser then signed a contract with the
San Diego Padres on
May 20,
1994 but was released a month later without ever playing a game with them. Sasser re-signed with the Pirates for the season but only played in fourteen games, getting four hits in 26 at-bats before getting released in mid-May and retiring for good.
References
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