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Mike Cervenak&o=10616

Mike Cervenak

Michael Christopher Cervenak (born August 17 1976 in Trenton, Michigan) is a corner infielder (1B/3B) for the Philadelphia Phillies of Major League Baseball. Until his call-up in to the Phillies, Cervenak was a career minor leaguer, and the embodiment of a journeyman player, having spent time in three minor league organizations at several levels of play, overseas in the Korean Baseball League, and in an independent league. Having spent an extensive part of his career playing for the Norwich Navigators, residents of the area dubbed him the "Mayor of Norwich.

Playing career

1998–2000: Independent baseball

While a college student, Mike Cervenak played for the Alaska Goldpanners of Fairbanks in , an independent team, as a teammate of Aaron Heilman. He made an appearance in the annual Midnight Sun Game. After graduating from the University of Michigan, Cervenak was not drafted in . This led him to sign with the Chillicothe Paints of the Frontier League, where he played into the season.

2000–2004: The Norwich years

Cervenak was signed out of the Frontier League by the New York Yankees organization, playing 38 games and batting .329 at Single-A Greensboro over the rest of the year. He spent all of and at Double-A Norwich, hitting 21 home runs and tallying 91 runs batted in (RBI) in the last year of his Yankees career. He was selected by the San Francisco Giants in the Rule 5 draft at the end of the 2002 season.

Cervenak remained at Norwich for the and seasons, now a member of the Giants' farm system. He batted .270 with 20 home runs and 91 RBI in 2003 when he was named to the All-Star team, and he won the minor league triple crown in 2004. He led the Giants organization in batting average (.328), home runs (26), and RBI (98) between Norwich and Triple-A Fresno. The Giants sent him to the Arizona Fall League to aid his development at the end of the season. He was named a post-season All-Star for the 2004 season.

2005: A year in Fresno

Cervenak spent the entire season at Fresno, leading the league in RBI with 103. He also batted .338 with runners in scoring position over the course of the 2005 season, had two 11-game hitting streaks in the year, and was named a mid-season All-Star. His overall batting average for the year was .312, and he led the team in games played at third base with 50, though he also played 75 games at first base. Cervenak led the team in games played, at-bats, hits and runs batted in; however, the Giants released him at the end of the season.

2006–2007: Overseas and back to the States

Rather than returning to American affiliated baseball, Cervenak chose to sign with the Kia Tigers of the Korean Baseball League. He opened the season poorly, batting only .224. The Tigers released him, and Cervenak returned to Fresno, batting .413 over his first 12 games. Throughout the year, he managed to play all over the infield, playing first base, second base and third base, and as a designated hitter. Cervenak played for Norfolk, an Orioles affiliate, in , where he batted .283 in 140 games. He hit 15 home runs, batted in 78 runs, and had an OPS of .740. He led the team RBIs and home runs, as well as games played (140), at-bats (554), runs scored (69), and hits (157).

2008: Cup of coffee

Cervenak was first called up to the major leagues on July 10, 2008, to replace J. A. Happ on the Phillies' roster, after spending 1,088 games in the minor leagues. Cervenak's role was to provide an extra bat off the bench, since the Phillies did not need their fifth starter over the All-Star break. He was batting .310 with 7 home runs and 52 RBI at the time of his call-up from Lehigh Valley. He made his major league debut pinch-hitting for J. C. Romero against the Arizona Diamondbacks, but was optioned back to Triple-A on July 21. He was recalled to take Pedro Feliz' place on the roster on July 29, after Feliz sat out three straight games with a back injury. His first major league hit came on August 6, a single to left field against the Florida Marlins, which also notched his first RBI, driving in third baseman Eric Bruntlett. After compiling a total of seven major league at-bats, Cervenak was optioned to the minors on August 16 to make room on the roster for Rudy Seánez. After being brought up on September 1 for roster expansion, Cervenak promptly raised his average to .250 with a pinch-hit single up the middle, his second major-league hit.

References

External links

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